Mischance, Slander and Revolt
Poor Iran, it is to weep with frustration over the hard place Tehran finds itself in. Life can be so utterly unfair. But what can a righteous Islamic Republic do, after all, when the most domineeringly bitter nations of the world decide to create a common front and compromise the country's best interests to their own view of a required subservience to their dreadful agenda? Thank paradise for the good auspices of other, equally powerful agents; friends like China and Russia.As for the opposition led by traitors such as Mir-Hossein Mousavi, creatures of the enemies of Iran, supported, encouraged, paid by the interests of Western countries, they are a disgrace to their country and their Maker. Allah will surely smite them. Failing that, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei will assist in their earned destruction. Anti-government demonstrations cannot be tolerated, they are an abomination in the sight of Allah. Nor can the administration tolerate the aberrant insult to Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini, blessed be his name.
"They are openly violating the law; they insulted Imam Khomeini" (thus spake) Ayatollah Khamenei. Mahmoud Ahmadinejad insists on an apology, as abject as possible "the people are angry at those who carried out such an act". The people? Which people would that be? The oppressed of the Republic of Iran, the repressed population insisting that it is beyond time their lives rise out of the ashes of the Revolution? Mr. Mousavi, for his part, resists the reality that his supporters violated the memory of the late, venerated Ayatollah Khamenei, the hero of the Iranian Revolution. "Very suspicious", he said.
Clerical counter-demonstrators have come out in full force, in support of the administration, chanting "Death to America", and "Death to opponents of the supreme leader", a familiar old refrain, consolidating the Republic of Iran's position as an arbiter for world peace, dedicated to fellowship and good will among nations. A position well known and appreciated by the West, in fact. Who have expressed trust in the ongoing attestations by Tehran that the nation's quest for nuclear power is for peaceful civil purposes only. An energy strategy.
The confidential intelligence documents in the hands of The Times (London) aside, a travesty of the truth, an evil concoction of intrigue purporting to have emanated from scientific circles in Iran. In reality a horribly nasty plan hatched by the Great Satan and its incestuous Little Satan. Notes from Iran's military nuclear project? Not likely. Describing a four-year scenario to test a neutron initiator for a nuclear bomb? What an intolerable calumny!
Independent experts confirming that uranium deuteride has no possible civilian or military use other than for a neutron source for a nuclear weapon? Absurd. The same uranium deuteride used in Pakistan's bomb? Our friends in Pakistan whose rogue nuclear scientist magnanimously shared its nuclear blueprint with Iran? Highly improbable, obviously unlikely, an American-issued slander; propaganda whose purpose is to shame the Great Republic.
"Although Iran might claim that this work is for civil purposes, there is no civil application", (thus said) David Albright, physicist and president of the Institute for Science and International Security in Washington, after its analysis of the Iranian documents. "This is a very strong indicator of weapons work." Ha! Equivocation! And what can one anticipate but blame-puffery of the worst type emanating from the devil's workshop in Washington?
Manouchehr Mottaki, foreign minister of Iran, simply reminded the international community that Iran has concluded it requires up to fifteen nuclear power plants before it can be satisfied it will be able to meet its future energy needs. Iran's huge oil and gas reserves, after all, will not last forever, will they? Not at the rate they're being pumped and sold to the highest bidder, be it Russia, China, Britain - or any other country eager and willing to bid for the precious fuel.
Perhaps it is time to disarmingly, and with good will, meet American President Barack Obama's outstretched hand of friendship with earnest dialogue connoting trust and future co-operation? Iran could offer greater refining opportunities to energy-anxious America, and the current mistrust put to rest? After all, the experts in American intelligence took it upon themselves to deny the Little Satan's reports on Iran's capability, content to believe that Tehran had brought nuclear weapons preparation to a halt. Did they not, before their U-turn?
As for that fellow, Mark Fitzpatrick, at the International Institute for Strategic Studies in London, who claimed: "The most shattering conclusion is that ... this was an effort that began in 2007 ... If Iran is working on weapons, it means there is no diplomatic solution". Who in their right mind is prepared to believe such trash? However, Iran's friends at the International Atomic energy Agency will peruse the documents transferred to them, and in the final analysis pronounce them to be fakes.
It is a shame that a fundamentally God-given country like Iran with its majestic traditions and brilliant heritage could fall under such untoward and unwarranted suspicion. This is a tragedy that the good must shoulder; the distrust and suspicion thrust upon them by lesser countries of the world which the divine light of Islam refuses to fall upon.
Labels: Middle East, Technology, Terrorism, Traditions
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