Iran Opinion: A Response to Foreign Minister Salehi's "Wisdom and
Providence" on Syria
Thursday, August 9, 2012 at 9:28
Josh Shahryar in Ali Akbar Salehi, EA Iran, EA Middle East and Turkey,
Iran, Middle East and Iran, Syria, Washington Post

Ali Akbar Salehi with Turkish Foreign Minister Ahmet Davutoglu

When an opinion piece begins with "We humans...", it is meant to appeal to
our collective sense of the values we hold dear. But when the writer is
Iranian Foreign Minister Ali Akbar Salehi, it may be seen more as an
attempt to mask the inhumane face of the regime whom the author is serving.

When I read Salehi's seemingly innocent and well-meaning comments in *The
Washington Post*, offering the Islamic Republic's
assistance<http://www.washingtonpost.com/opinions/stepping-up-to-aid-syria/2012/08/08/e3f64588-e0bb-11e1-8fc5-a7dcf1fc161d_story.html>in
solving the crisis in Syria, my first thought was: How dare you?

We live in a strange world in which the spokesperson for a regime which has
been fostering discord in other countries lectures the rest of us about
peace in the Middle East. It is a world in which a country that brutally
suppressed a genuine reform movement informs us that it supports such
movements elsewhere.

It is a world where Salehi preaches:

*"Some world powers and certain states in the region need to stop using
Syria as a battleground for settling scores or jostling for influence." *

So "some world powers" must "stop using Syria as a battleground" but
another --- Iran --- can use it as a transit hub for support to groups in
Lebanon and the Palestinian Territories.

*"The only way out of the stalemate is to offer Syrians a chance to find a
way out themselves."*

Where was Iran "offering Syrians a chance" during the past 17 months of
protests, when it gave one-sided support to President Bashar al-Assad
against those labelled foreign-supported "terrorists"?

"Why should seeds of discord continue to be planted when the situation can
be resolved rationally, through wisdom and providence?"

Was it wisdom when the Islamic Republic massacred thousands of its own
people in the 1980s? Was it rational to kill scores and imprison and abuse
thousands more in 2009? Let me ask you bluntly, Mr. Salehi: was it God that
told you to ask grieving families of young Iranians for money to get the
bodies of their sons and daughters back? You can't preach what you don't
practice at home.

Two years ago, the Islamic Republic's security forces picked up and
detained many opposition leaders to maintain the Supreme Leader's power.
Yet here is Mr. Salehi telling the rest of the world how his government can
bring peace in Syria by inviting like-minded countries to the negotiating
table:

*Taking [Kofi] Annan’s six-point plan into consideration, Iran looks
forward to bringing like-minded countries together to implement three
essential points: Ensure an immediate cease-fire to stop the bloodshed,
dispatch humanitarian aid to the Syrian people and prepare the ground for
dialogue to solve the crisis.*

*I hereby announce Iran’s readiness to host a meeting of countries
committed to immediately implementing these steps in hopes of ending the
violence. As part of our commitment to resolve the crisis, I also reiterate
our willingness to facilitate talks between the Syrian government and the
opposition and to host such a dialogue.*

Nowhere in this fluff-a-thon full of name-dropping and moral high-grounding
is there even the slightest hint that Iran is ready to accept any
responsibility for its dirty deeds in Syria.

I believe Mr. Salehi when he asserts that the Islamic Republic is not part
of the problem in Syria. I think it may be the *heart* of the problem. The
Islamic Republic's continued assistance to Bashar al-Assad's regime for its
manoeuvres over Israel, the Palestinian Territories, and Lebanon is a key
reason why Damascus has had the strength to withstand internal opposition
for so long.

The fact that Mr. Salehi is out literally begging everyone --- anyone ---
to find a solution to the problem diplomatically is pretty much an
admission of the Islamic Republic's inability to keep the balance of power
in favor of Assad and his inner circle.

A while back, this might have had some impact, when most of the world still
gave Mr. Salehi's bosses the benefit of the doubt and accepted them as the
legitimate government of Iran.

That was before 2009. It is evident now that Salehi represents a political
mafia that is trying to save one of its capos from being forcefully removed
from his turf. That is no condition for diplomacy, and it is certainly no
ground to preach to us about "wisdom and providence".
Article originally appeared on EA WorldView (http://www.enduringamerica.com/).


[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]



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