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أضف موقعنا لمفضلتك ابحث في الموقع الرئيسة المدير المسؤول : زهير سالم

الاثنين 19/02/2007


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كلام مباشر حول إيران  (E)

هيرالد تريبيون - 13/2/2007

Straight talk on Iran

Before things get any more out of hand, President George W. Bush needs to make his intentions toward Iran clear. And Congress needs to make it clear that this time it will be neither tricked nor bullied into supporting another disastrous war.

How little this administration has learned from its failures is a constant source of amazement. It seems the bigger the failure, the less it learns.

Consider last weekend's supersecret briefing in Baghdad by a group of U.S. military officials whose names could not be revealed to the voters who are paying for this war with their taxes and their children's blood. The briefers tried to prove the White House's case that Iran is shipping deadly weapons to Shiite militias in Iraq .

Unlike Colin Powell's infamous prewar presentation on Iraq at the UN, this briefing had actual weapons to look at. And perhaps in time, the administration will be able to prove conclusively that the weapons came from arms factories in Iran .

But the officials offered no evidence to support their charge that "the highest levels of the Iranian government" had authorized smuggling these weapons into Iraq . Nor could they adequately explain why they had been sitting on this evidence since 2004.

We have no doubt about Iran 's malign intent. Iran is defying the Security Council's order to halt its nuclear activities, and it is certainly meddling inside Iraq . But we are also certain that the Iraq war has so strained the U.S. military and so shattered this president's credibility that shrill accusations and saber rattling are far more likely to frighten the allies America needs to contain Iran's nuclear ambitions than to change Tehran's behavior.

If Bush is truly worried about Shiite militias killing Americans in Iraq — and he should be — he needs to start showing this evidence to Iraq 's prime minister, Nuri Kamal al-Maliki. He needs to demand that Maliki stop protecting the militias and make it clear that there will be serious consequences if he continues to refuse.

If Bush is truly worried about Iran fanning Iraq's civil war — and he should be — he needs to stop fantasizing about regime change and start trying to find a way to persuade Iran's leaders to help rein in the chaos.

And if Bush is worried that Americans no longer believe him when he warns of mortal threats to the country — and he should be — he needs to start proving that he really understands who is most responsible for the Iraq disaster. And he needs to explain how he plans to extricate U.S. troops without setting off a bigger war.

That's the briefing the American people need to hear. And they need to hear it from the most senior U.S. official of all, George Walker Bush.

http://www.iht.com/articles/2007/02/13/opinion/ediran.php

 


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من حق الزائر الكريم أن ينقل وأن ينشر كل ما يعجبه من موقعنا . معزواً إلينا ، أو غير معزو .ـ