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The leaders of Iran… — 6 Comments

  1. The “Left” in Iran? Really? What made them Leftist except, insofar as this piece goes, opposition to theocracy?
    By extension then, the Ayatollah regime is “Rightist”.

    These labels don’t make a whole lot of sense in non-Western settings, IMHO. Tyrants are tyrants.

  2. Don Carlos:

    They were the left, all right.

    Before the 1979 revolution, Iran was a fairly westernized place. The leftists thought they could use the Islamists to further their cause, but it turned out to be the other way around.

    I remember the 1979 revolution, and I remember thinking at the time “what on earth is the left allying itself with the theocrats for?” (I was young and foolish). However, it was quite well known at the time that the left were major players in overthrowing the Shah.

  3. I stand corrected. Maybe a Leftist Iranian state would have been less terrible, and maybe not.

  4. Iran, more and more not just lefties problem its more and bigger than that.Iran a lasting diesis for US and others in the region.

    Iran regime left with its sins all along from 1979 till today, there were no real stand off to this regime and his tools of infiltrated in the region or around the world making a lot of troubles, keep blaming one side that not can fix Iran regime problem, let stop the blame by starting to work and get real what you should do with this Axis of Evil Regime.

    What Obama did in the past very similar with those in congress who sent a letter of hypocrisy to the regime’s head who is the evil himself?

    Let read how this regime and how US use or deal with this regime who become more and more a factor dominate US policy in ME.

    the Iranian General Qasem Soleimani, the head of the Quds Force of the Revolutionary Guard Corps. Iran’s official news agency last week confirmed Western media reports that Gen. Soleimani is “supervising” the attack against Islamic State.

    This is the same general who aided the insurgency against U.S. troops in Iraq. Quds Force operatives supplied the most advanced IEDs, which could penetrate armor and were the deadliest in Iraq. One former U.S. general who served in Iraq estimates that Iran was responsible for about one-third of U.S. casualties during the war, which would mean nearly 1,500 deaths.

    Iran Occupies Iraq
    As the U.S. leads from behind, Tehran creates a Shiite arc of power.

    Let’s try for a moment to put ourselves in the mind of Brig. Gen. Qassem Soleimani, the commander of the Quds Force of Iran’s Revolutionary Guard. For it is the soft-spoken Soleimani, not Iran’s bombastic president, Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, who plays a decisive role in his nation’s confrontation with the United States.

    Soleimani represents the sharp point of the Iranian spear. He is responsible for Iran’s covert activities in Iraq, Lebanon, Afghanistan and other battlegrounds. He oversees the regime’s relations with its militant proxies, Hezbollah and Hamas. His elite, secretive wing of the Revolutionary Guard is identified as a terrorist organization by the Bush administration, but he is also Iran’s leading strategist on foreign policy. He reports personally to Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, and his budget (mostly in cash) comes directly from the supreme leader’s office.

    At the Tip of Iran’s Spear
    By David Ignatius, Sunday, June 8, 2008

    By late 2007, contrary to the official Iraq legend, the al-Maliki government and the Bush administrationwere both publicly crediting Iran with pressuring Sadr to agree to the unilateral ceasefire — to the chagrin of Petraeus.
    Al-Maliki launched the attack on Mahdi Army forces in Basrah in March 2008 in the knowledge that Iran would back him against Sadr. And when it went badly, he turned to Gen. Qassem Soleimani, the Iranian Islamic Revolutionary Guard official in charge of day-to-day Iraq policy, to force a ceasefire on Sadr. Soleimani told Iraqi President Talibani that Iran supported al-Maliki’s efforts to “dismantle all militias”, and Sadr agreed to a ceasefire within 24 hours of Iran’s intervention.
    So it was Iran’s restraint — not Petraeus’s counterinsurgency strategy — that effectively ended the Shi’a insurgent threat.
    It was Soleimani who had presided over the secret April 2006 meeting of Shi’a leaders that had chosen al-Maliki as Prime Minister, after having been smuggled into the Green Zone without telling the Americans. And that was only one of a several trips Soleimani made to the Green Zone over a two-year period without U.S. knowledge.
    But Biden doesn’t want to know this and other historical facts that contradict the official narrative on Iraq. For the Democratic foreign policy elite, staying ignorant of the real history of the Iraq War allows them to believe that deploying U.S. military forces in Muslim countries can be an effective instrument of U.S. power.

    Myth Of The Surge

  5. The “Left” in Iran? Really? What made them Leftist except, insofar as this piece goes, opposition to theocracy?
    By extension then, the Ayatollah regime is “Rightist”.

    Neo brings up the right tone and correction.

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