IranÂ’s Operative in the White House: NICHOLAS KRISTOF 
- Dick Cheney                                               THE COMPLETE ARTICLE
THE NEW YORK TIMES
OP-ED COLUMNISTIranÂ’s Operative in the White House By NICHOLAS D. 
KRISTOFPublished: March 20, 2007
 
 Is Dick Cheney an Iranian mole?


f an 18-year-old American soldier were caught slipping obscure military 
paperwork to Iranian spies, he would be arrested, pilloried in the news media 
and tossed into prison for years. 
But in fact thereÂ’s an American who has provided services of incalculably 
greater value to Iran in recent years. So you have to wonder: Is Dick Cheney an 
Iranian mole?

Consider that the Bush administrationÂ’s first major military intervention was 
to overthrow AfghanistanÂ’s Taliban regime, IranÂ’s bitter foe to the east. Then 
the administration toppled IranÂ’s even worse enemy to the west, the Saddam 
Hussein regime in Iraq. 
 You really think thatÂ’s just a coincidence? That of all 193 nations in the 
world, we just happen to topple the two neighboring regimes that Iran despises?
 Moreover, consider how our invasion of Iraq went down. The U.S. dismantled 
IraqÂ’s army, broke the Baath Party and helped install a pro-Iranian government 
in Baghdad. If IranÂ’s ayatollahs had written the script, they couldnÂ’t have 
done better — so maybe they did write the script …
 We fought Iraq, and Iran won. And thatÂ’s just another coincidence?
--MORE--
http://mparent7777.blogspot.com/2007/03/irans-operative-in-white-house-nicholas.html

Tuesday, March 20, 2007                                                         
   When Less Is Best: RORY STEWART - Afghanistan                                
              THE COMPLETE ARTICLE
THE NEW YORK TIMES
GUEST COLUMNIST
When Less Is Best By RORY STEWARTPublished: March 20, 2007
 The United States needs to be honest about what it wants from Afghanistan and 
what it can achieve.

Why are we in Afghanistan? Vice President Cheney talks terror, Britain focuses 
on narcotics. The European Union talks ‘state-building,’ others gender. On a 
different day, the positions seem interchangeable. Five years ago, we had a 
clear goal. Now we seem to be pursuing a bundle of objectives, from 
counterinsurgency to democratization and development, which are presented as 
uniform but which are in fact logically distinct and sometimes contradictory.

Finance officers in Kabul and shepherds in Kandahar want to know what we did 
with the $10 billion we spent in the last four years. So do any number of 
commentators on Afghan TV and radio. And when Helmand villagers see soldiers 
from countries thousands of miles away carrying guns and claiming to be only 
building schools, they donÂ’t believe them.

I have noticed that many Afghans now simply assume we are engaged in a grand 
conspiracy. Nothing else in their minds can explain the surreal gap between our 
language and performance. The United States needs to be honest about what it 
wants from Afghanistan and what it can achieve.

--MORE--
http://mparent7777.blogspot.com/2007/03/when-less-is-best-rory-stewart.html


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