Apakah ini benar atau satu lagi dari cara untuk melaga-lagakan...

*** There is an attachment in this mail. ***

_____________________________________________________________
-------------------------------------------

All the intelligence of the internet 
http://www.intelbrief.com

_____________________________________________________________
Select your own custom email address for FREE! Get [EMAIL PROTECTED] w/No Ads, 6MB, 
POP & more! http://www.everyone.net/selectmail?campaign=tag
--- Begin Message ---
Join our newsletter! Receive articles from Emperor's Clothes. 
http://emperors-clothes.com/f.htm

Please send this text or the link to a friend.
http://emperors-clothes.com/docs/helping.htm 

www.tenc.net [Emperor's Clothes
 
========================================================

War Sirens Herald Iran's Hour of Revenge
By Khairallah Khairallah
(London) Financial Times
March 24, 2003

Note from Emperor's Clothes: You can read a comment on the following text  by TENC 
editor, Jared Israel, at http://www.tenc.net/docs/helping.htm 

========================================================

Financial Times
March 24

It may be part of George W. Bush's axis of evil; some predict it will be next on the 
list for US pre-emptive action; but Iran is the only one of Iraq's neighbours that 
wholeheartedly supports regime change in Baghdad, even if via a US-led invasion. 

Getting rid of Saddam Hussein and his government is one of the few objectives on which 
the various factions of the Tehran regime agree. Since becoming convinced that the 
Bush administration is indeed determined to effect forcible change in Iraq, Tehran has 
been egging on Washington, albeit in private. Whenever the US has needed Tehran's 
help, the Iranians have been more than happy to oblige. 

Take last December's London conference of Iraqi opposition groups. That gathering 
would not have been possible had Iran not encouraged its Shia cats-paw, the Supreme 
Council for the Islamic Revolution in Iraq (Sciri), to attend. Iran strong-armed 
Abdulaziz al-Hakim, the Sciri representative, to adopt positions similar to those 
espoused by Zalmay Khalilzad, the US government representative. In exchange for its 
efforts, Iran was rewarded with a political statement from the conference that - for 
the first time in modern Iraqi history - spoke of a "Shia majority" in Iraq. This 
meant the US was no longer able to ignore the sectarian reality of Iraq. Iran, keen 
for change in Iraq, realised early on that this could be achieved only with US 
military involvement. 

Iranian interference angered many liberal Shia who warned Washington that, by 
supporting Sciri, they would be committing the same mistake they made when they 
encouraged Pakistan and Saudi Arabia to back the Taliban not that many years ago. They 
warned the Americans that Sciri would cause even more damage to Iraq's relatively 
open, multicultural and multi-ethnic society than the Taliban managed to inflict on 
Afghanistan. America, they predicted, would regret having backed Sciri, just as it now 
regrets helping the Taliban. 

Liberal Iraqi Sunnis, meanwhile, protested that the Iranians had succeeded in 
hijacking the Iraqi opposition by entering into a secret alliance with the Kurds and 
the Americans. One of the main reasons Tehran wants the Hussein regime out of the way 
is because it has realised it is the biggest obstacle standing in the way of Iran's 
attempts to increase its influence in the region; especially in Iraq proper, which 
cannot conceivably retain its old character after the US is done with it. 

Any new regime in Iraq - whatever its character - will have to take the country's Shia 
majority into consideration. Should the US fail to reshape Iraq into a prototype for 
neighbouring countries, Iran (which would in this case become one of the biggest 
operators in Iraq) would then succeed in sowing more confusion and forcing Washington 
to involve itself even more in Iraq. As a result, the Americans would increasingly 
need Iran. 

Even the hardline conservative faction in Iran believes there are benefits in the US 
war on Iraq. This faction calculates that by having the US army on Iran's border, it 
would be able to justify its repressive domestic policies. What better reason for 
maintaining a hardline stance than having the "Great Satan" on your doorstep? 

Overthrowing the Ba'athist regime in Iraq has been an Iranian objective since the days 
of the Shah. Yet Iran's attempts to change the regime have failed despite its support 
for various Iraqi opposition movements, including the Kurds, for more than 30 years, 
the 1980-1988 war between the two countries and more than 12 years of sanctions. 

Tehran therefore came to the conclusion that the only way it could get rid of its old 
enemy would be through a third party - in this case, the US. Contrary to popular 
belief, the Iranians have learnt how to co-exist with the Americans, as the experience 
of Afghanistan has demonstrated. 

Whether Iraq manages to remain whole, or civil war breaks out, Iran has been preparing 
itself for some time to play a role in both the US-led war and in post-Hussein Iraq. 

In fact, the only unanswered question is whether Iranian military intervention will be 
direct or indirect. Will the Badr brigade, Sciri's military arm, which includes large 
numbers of Iranian Revolutionary Guards, cross over into Iraq in military or civilian 
garb? 

In either case, it seems that the hour of revenge is at hand for the Iranians. Tehran 
believes it is time to redraw the political map of the Middle East, giving the Shias a 
bigger role everywhere, from Afghanistan to the Gulf to south Lebanon. 

The writer is a London-based Lebanese political analyst 

(C) 2003 The Financial Times Limited Financial Times (London) 
Posted for educational use only 

Financial Times; March 24, 2003, Monday Usa Edition 1; Section: Comment & Analysis; 
Pg. 17; Headline: War Sirens Herald Iran's Hour Of Revenge; By Khairallah Khairallah

***

To read a comment on this article by Emperor's Clothes Editor, Jared Israel, please go 
to 
http://www.tenc.net/docs/helping.htm

========================================================

Emperor's Clothes Urgently Needs Your Help!

======================================================== 

We at Emperor's Clothes work hard to bring you important information and analysis. 
Often we are the first to expose misinformation and lies about US foreign policy and 
the media. We are beholden to no one. We state our sources, so you can check them. And 
we post important documents when possible.

We feel *privileged* to be involved with this Website. The work is its own reward. But 
we also have to pay the bills.

Our financial resources vary from slim to none; right now, none. We depend on 
donations from our readers. Otherwise we will fold.

Our articles are *free* and may be freely reposted. They reach hundreds of thousands 
of people. Therefore, by donating some of your hard-earned money, you will be *doing 
something useful* to combat the lies of the powerful.

$25, $50, $100, $1000 - every donation helps.

Our best is yet to come...

Here's how you can help...

* By credit card at our secure server
https://emperor.securesites.com/transactions/index.php

* Using Paypal  (Visa & Mastercard) https://www.paypal.com/xclick/[EMAIL 
PROTECTED]&no_shipping=1

* Mail a check to Emperor's Clothes,
P.O. Box 610-321
Newton, MA 02461-0321 (USA)

* Or by credit card over the phone. 1 (617) 916-1705

Thank You!

Send the link to this text to a friend. If you're reading this reposted or in email, 
send the text or this link to a friend:
http://emperors-clothes.com/docs/helping.htm 

Subscribe to the Emperor's Clothes newsletter and receive texts posted on Emperor's 
Clothes. http://www.emperors-clothes.com/f.htm

Emperor's Clothes * [ www.tenc.net ]
This Website is mirrored at http://emperor.vwh.net/ 

To unsubscribe, which can only be done from an email address which is actually 
subscribed, click or send an email to [EMAIL PROTECTED]

--- End Message ---

Kirim email ke