Everyone should be “irked” over such incredible stupidity on the part of the
Administration.
 
Bruce
 
 
"'This administration is doing terrible damage to itself by talking
hawkishly and acting dovishly. This earns them the hatred of the doves for
talking like hawks, and the contempt of the hawks for acting like doves.'"
 
http://www.nysun.com/article/38963
Solons Irked Over Visit Of Khatami
BY ELI LAKE,   Staff Reporter of the Sun,  1 September 2006
 
 
WASHINGTON - The State Department's decision to grant a visa to Iran's
former president is sparking a rebellion among Republican members of
Congress who seek a tougher line on the rogue country as it flaunts the
latest U.N. deadline on its nuclear program.
 
Yesterday afternoon, the chairman of the House Subcommittee on the Middle
East and Central Asia, Ileana Ros-Lehtinen, a Republican from Florida, began
collecting signatures in Congress for a letter that she plans to send next
week to Secretary of State Rice expressing "grave concerns" about the visa
for Muhammad Khatemi that will allow him to speak before audiences at the
National Cathedral, Harvard University, and the Council on American-Islamic
Relations.
 
The letter says that allowing Mr. Khatemi to visit America
 
"undermines U.S. national security interests with respect to Iran and the
broader Middle East."
 
It also says permitting Mr. Khatemi's
 
"unrestricted travel through the United States runs contrary to U.S.
priorities regarding homeland security."
 
Not to be outdone, Senator Allen, a Republican of Virginia, facing a tough
challenge to his seat this election cycle, tied the visa for Mr. Khatemi
directly to Iran's efforts to acquire nuclear weapons.
 
"The actions of the Iranian government under President Khatemi include the
expenditure of billions of dollars on nuclear reactors and sophisticated
weapons and the failure to implement reforms that are necessary for Iran to
abide by its treaty obligations,"
 
the senator wrote in a letter to Ms. Rice yesterday.
 
"Granting this travel visa gives support to the current Iranian strategy of
stalling action while it builds its nuclear capabilities and dividing the
tentative coalition of states opposing Iran's nuclear weapons program."
 
Senator Brownback, a Republican from Kansas who authored the amendment in
2003 that created the first installment of federal funding for Iranian
dissidents inside Iran, said yesterday that he also opposed the visa.
 
"Allowing a Khatemi visit signals that the United States is willing to
ignore concerns about nuclear weapons, terrorism, and human rights - the
very building blocks of our policy toward Iran,"
 
he said in a statement provided from his office.
 
"I urge the Administration to ensure that U.S. policy remains focused on
defending our national interests and upholding our values."
 
While the decision to grant what is known as a G-4 visa to the former
Iranian president is not the most significant policy disagreement that Iran
hawks have had in recent months with the Bush administration, its timing and
the high profile public relations victory it gives the Islamic Republic has
unleashed the ire of the president's base this election year. The decision
not only means that Mr. Khatemi will be meeting, among other luminaries,
conservative bête noire Jimmy Carter, but that the State Department will
afford a diplomatic security detail to guard the ex-president and his
entourage.
 
The editor of National Review Online, Kathryn Jean Lopez, sensed the hawk's
opposition to the visa on Tuesday, when her website ran a symposium that
included Senator Santorum, the third ranking Republican in the Senate,
trashing the visa decision from the State Department.
 
On it, Mr. Santorum, who has cut his deficit against his Senate challenger
in Pennsylvania to single digits, wrote that he should be granted a visa
only if Iran allows their people to hear "free American voices."
 
Mr. Santorum wrote:
 
"We should insist, at a minimum, that the Iranian people can hear free
American voices. Iran is frightened of freedom. They are jamming our radio
and television broadcasts and tearing down television satellite dishes in
all the major cities of the country. It seems only fair that we be able to
speak to the Iranians suffering under a regime of which Muhammad Khatemi is
an integral part."
 
"Folks, and I hope not just conservatives, feel a sense of urgency when it
comes to Iran, and it is key, of course, to the whole war against
Islamofascism,"
 
Ms. Lopez said in an email yesterday.
 
"This administration needs to project a similar sense of urgency, and
quickly, or increasing numbers of critical conservatives will be the least
of its new problems. This White House - and well, State Department in a big
way - has long had a clarity problem in this war, communications never its
forte. This Khatemi visit certainly doesn't help matters."
 
Another contributor to National Review Online and scholar at the American
Enterprise Institute, Michael Ledeen, summed up his frustration as follows:
 
"This administration is doing terrible damage to itself by talking hawkishly
and acting dovishly.  This earns them the hatred of the doves for talking
like hawks, and the contempt of the hawks for acting like doves."
 


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