This ass sits on a freedom chair?

Cheers Ken Hanly


New York Sun   March 19, 2003

After Baghdad, Tehran, Damascus, Riyadh

Michael A. Ledeen*

The battle for Iraq is about to begin, and in all likelihood it will involve
us in the broader war about which the president has been speaking ever since
September 11, 2001. Once upon a time, it might have been possible to deal
with Iraq alone, without having to face the murderous forces of the other
terror masters in Tehran, Damascus, and Riad, but that time has passed. We
have given them more than a year to prepare for this moment, and they are
ready.

The Iranian, Syrian, and Saudi tyrants know that if we win a quick victory
in Iraq and then establish a free government in Baghdad, their doom is
sealed. It would then be only a matter of time before their peoples would
demand the same liberation we brought to Afghanistan and Iraq. Thus, they
must do everything in their power to tie us down in Iraq, bleed us on the
ground, frustrate our designs, and eventually break our will.

This strategy has been developed in months of frenetic discussions among the
political, military, and intelligence chieftains of the key countries, with
outside participation from the North Koreans. Our military and intelligence
services know that Iran has sent hundreds of suicide bombers into Iraq,
along with battle-tested Hezbollah fighters armed with whatever nasty
weapons the Iraqi, Syrian, and Iranian laboratories have been able to
produce. Terrorists from Al Qaeda, Islamic Jihad, Hamas, and the others have
infiltrated Iraq, both north and south, and they will move against American
and British targets of opportunity once we are on the ground. Kamikaze
pilots have been trained to fly the old Iraqi jets that were moved into Iran
during the first Gulf War, and will be sent against land and sea targets,
and some of those aircraft have been transformed into guided missiles,
packed with chemical and biological agents.

This broader context has been lost in the long obsession with Saddam
Hussein, and the two diplomatic diversions--first the Saudi "peace plan" and
then the United Nations' gambit--that have cost us a full year in the war
against terrorism. Indeed, some of our top diplomats are willfully ignorant
of the nature of the war: Just a few weeks ago, Deputy Secretary of State
Armitage pronounced in an interview with the Los Angeles Times that Iran was
"a democracy." By this standard, Stalin, Hitler, and Mussolini would also
qualify as model democrats. In recent interagency discussions, State
Department officials have dismissed concerns about the movements of
Hezbollah terrorists into Iraq on the grounds that they are going to defend
Iraqi Shi'ites.

If we understand this war correctly, the Iraqi Shi'ites will fight alongside
us against the Iranian terrorists, for the Iraqis want freedom, and they
know they will not get any from the mullahs in Tehran. But our diplomats and
intelligence analysts have long insisted that there is an unbridgeable chasm
between Shi'ites and Sunnis, even when there is overwhelming evidence of
intimate cooperation of the sort that has been going on ever since
Afghanistan. Just two weeks ago, for example, Hezbollah's founder,
Mohtashemi Pour, traveled to Beirut and Damascus to coordinate the terror
strategy, and then returned to Tehran where he met with Iraqi
representatives. The terror network today is right out of The Godfather. The
heads of the five families have met and agreed upon a war strategy.

It would be a terrible humiliation for America and Britain to fall prey to
needless bloodshed because we blinded ourselves to the larger war in which
we are now engaged. Iraq is a battle, not a war. We have to win the war, and
the only way to do that is to bring down the terror masters, and spread
freedom throughout the region.

Rarely has it been possible to see one of history's potential turning points
so clearly and so dramatically as it is today. Rarely has a country been
given such a glorious opportunity as we have in our hands. But history is
full of missed opportunities and embarrassing defeats.

We'll know soon which destiny we will achieve.

* Michael A. Ledeen holds the Freedom Chair at the American Enterprise
Institute, the right-wing militarist downtown Washington think-tank where
George W. Bush delivered his televised speech about the Middle East a few
weeks ago.




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