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From: Juan Cole <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>

I just saw this campaign ad for Rudy Giuliani's presidential campaign.
He says that Iran held US embassy hostages for 444 days. Then they
were released within one hour. That was the hour after Ronald Reagan
was inaugurated as president, succeeding Jimmy Carter. Giuliani goes
on to tell us that this incident shows how you deal with "Islamic
terrorists." You get tough on them and don't back down.

The problem with this assertion is that it is not true, and indeed the
opposite is true. Gary Sick showed in October Surprise that:

' Piercing the shadowy netherworld of international espionage, Sick
has written one of the most controversial and disturbing accounts of
political intrigue to appear in recent years. In 1980, William Casey,
then campaign manager of the Reagan-Bush ticket, without the knowledge
or approval of the legitimate government, arranged a deal with the
Iranian government that in return for military equipment, the Iranians
would not release the 52 American hostages until Ronald Reagan was
safely inaugurated. '

So the hostages weren't released because Reagan was tough on the
Iranian regime. They were released because Casey promised that the
Republicans would sell Khomeini weapons if they kept the hostages for
an extra couple of months and denied Jimmy Carter the sort of
diplomatic coup that might have rescued his presidency.

Not only was Reagan not in fact 'tough' on the ayatollahs in Tehran,
he later on stole Pentagon weaponry from the warehouses, illegally
sold this US military materiel to a terrorist regime (that of
Khomeini), then pocketed the money from the illegal arms sales to
'Islamic terrorists' and laundered it through shadowy bank accounts,
sending it to far rightwing death squads in Nicaragua of the sort that
killed nuns.

Besides, they aren't "Islamic" terrorists because Islam forbids
terrorism. They might be Muslim terrorists, but then not very good
Muslims. When will Giuliani denounce the "Catholic terrorism" of some
prominent priests who were active in the Irish Republican Army? Would
he talk about "Jewish terrorism" in regard to the blowing up the King
David Hotel in Jerusalem?

As for Iran-contra, I feel a golden oldie coming on:

"And, Schultz told both Rumsfeld and Saddam that the US was trying to
curb weapons flows to Iran. Yet it is well known that Israel was
supplying Iran with weaponry in return for Iranian oil. Only a little
over a year later, Schultz double-crossed Saddam by getting on board
with the Iran-Contra weapons exchange, which was suggested by the
Israelis in the first place. The White House illegally sold Iran
hundreds of powerful TOW anti-tank and HAWK anti-aircraft weapons
[which Reagan came on television and told us were shoulder-launched
weapons!], for use against Washington's newfound ally, the Iraqis, who
were being assured that the US was trying hard to "prevent an Iranian
victory . . ."

These weapons sales contravened US law, under which Iran was tagged as
a terrorist nation. (Even today I can get into trouble for so much as
editing a paper by an Iranian scholar for publication in a US
scholarly journal, but it was all right for the Republicans and
Neocons to send Khomeini 1000 TOWs!) Not only that, but Reagan's team
then turned around and used the money garnered from these
off-the-books sales to support the contra death squads in Nicaragua.
In the US Constitution, how to spend government money is the purview
of Congress, and Congress had told Reagan "no" on funding the death
squads. So Reagan's people essentially stole weapons from the Pentagon
storehouses, shipped them to Israel for transfer to Ayatollah
Khomeini, and then took the ill gotten gains from fencing the stolen
goods and gave them to nun-murderers in Latin America.

Here's the timeline:

1985

July -- An Israeli official suggests a deal with Iran to then-national
security adviser Robert McFarlane, saying the transfer of arms could
lead to release of Americans being held hostage in Lebanon. McFarlane
brings the message to President Reagan.

Aug. 30 -- The first planeload of U.S.-made weapons is sent from
Israel to Tehran. Two weeks later the first American Hostage is
released.

Dec. 5 -- Reagan secretly signs a presidential 'finding,' or
authorization, describing the operation with Iran as an
arms-for-hostages deal.

1986

Jan. 17 -- Reagan signs a finding authorizing CIA participation in the
sales and ordering the process kept secret from Congress.

April -- Then-White House aide Oliver North writes a memo outlining
plans to use $12 million in profits from Iran arms sales for Contra
aid. "

Oh, yeah, that Reagan was tough on Khomeini. Why, he even sent him a
Bible and a cake, to go along with those nice TOW's he gave him. That
will teach those terrorists to mess with the Republican Party!

--
Jim Devine / "The conventional view serves to protect us from the
painful job of thinking." -- John Kenneth Galbraith

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