http://www.americandaily.com/article/17654

 

Washington's Make-Believe Policy on Iran 
By Ayn Rand Institute: <http://www.americandaily.com/author/157>  (02/12/07)
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The  <http://www.americandaily.com/article/17654> Bush administration claims
to have a way to deter the militant theocracy of Iran from acquiring nuclear
weapons--and thwart its ambition to bring "death to America."
<http://www.americandaily.com/article/17654> Washington's plan aims to
pressure Teheran, financially and psychologically. The idea is to cut off
Iran's nuclear program from banks and businesses in other nations, and to
undermine the confidence of Iranian officials. The right amount of pressure,
we are told, can induce Teheran to give up its
<http://www.americandaily.com/article/17654> nuclear program. 

In fact this policy is a pathetic sham. It is a cover-up for Washington's
abdication of the responsibility to protect American lives.

When you consider the plan in detail, it is incredible that anyone thinks it
could thwart Iran. The financial "pressure" so far includes a prohibition on
the Iranian Bank Sepah from completing transactions in U.S. dollars. That
bank is "the financial linchpin of Iran's missile procurement
<http://www.americandaily.com/article/17654> network," according to a
Treasury Department official. The ban means Bank Sepah can no longer
facilitate sales of oil in dollars--but Teheran has announced that it is now
selling oil in euros.

To extend its financial "pressure" overseas, Washington hopes to persuade
<http://www.americandaily.com/article/17654> foreign governments,
international banks and companies not to lend Iran money or sell it
technology or nuclear expertise. This entails groveling before the likes of
<http://www.americandaily.com/article/17654> France and
<http://www.americandaily.com/article/17654> Germany, keen appeasers of
Iran, and Russia, which gutted the already toothless U.N. sanctions against
Iran. Even if some companies or countries, like Japan, agree to reduce some
of their trade with Iran--the regime is about to open a brand new
Russian-built reactor believed capable of producing weapons-grade nuclear
material, and apparently begin industrial-scale efforts to produce uranium.

Washington's scheme also calls for undermining the self-assurance of Iran's
zealous  <http://www.americandaily.com/article/17654> leadership by
responding "firmly" to Iranian hostility. In one notable case, four Iranian
officials were detained in Iraq on suspicion of abetting insurgents, but
after protests from Teheran and
<http://www.americandaily.com/article/17654> Baghdad, the officials were
promptly released. Preposterously, this catch-and-release scheme is
allegedly "precisely the type of thing that will
<http://www.americandaily.com/article/17654> chip away at their confidence,"
as one European diplomat approvingly confided to the New
<http://www.americandaily.com/article/17654> York Times. Recently, U.S.
forces detained other Iranian operatives (releasing some of them) and raided
an Iranian consular office in Iraq. While our troops are now permitted to
kill Iranian operatives in  <http://www.americandaily.com/article/17654>
self-defense, these measures, in sum, are but pinpricks.

How could such a feeble policy fail to encourage Iran's belief that it is
free to pursue its hostile goals with impunity?

This plan is not some mistaken or naive attempt to deal with Iran. It is an
evasion of Iran's nature and goals--an evasion of the need to eliminate the
Iranian menace.

Iran's nuclear quest (like its funding of insurgents who slaughter our
troops in Iraq) is just the latest in a series of hostilities stretching
back to the 1979 invasion of our
<http://www.americandaily.com/article/17654> embassy. To protect American
lives, we must recognize Iran as an enemy stained with U.S. blood and assert
ourselves militarily to make it non-threatening. This does not mean an
Iraq-like crusade to bring them elections; it means protecting U.S. lives by
destroying Iran's militant regime. But that is precisely what our leaders
refuse to do.

Washington has resigned itself to the emergence of a nuclear Iran (and an
endless insurgency in Iraq), because our leaders do not believe we have the
moral right to stop it. To do that would be self-assertive: it would mean
putting America's interests first. Today's prevailing ethical standard
condemns such action as selfish, and therefore immoral. Washington's moral
premise rules out as illegitimate the dedicated pursuit of American
self-defense. But wishing to evade the self-destructive implications of
their moral principle, our leaders concoct a plan that creates the illusion
of their commitment to our defense.

The squeeze-Iran policy is a ruse that must be repudiated as impractical
because immoral. We, the people of America, have a moral right to pursue our
happiness in freedom. We owe it to ourselves to demand that our government
actually fulfill its obligation to defend our freedom--not merely pretend
to.



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