Thursday, November 13, 2008

Iran setting the stage

This past week Senator Biden, running mate of Hussein, indicated that Hussein would certainly be tested within the first six months of taking office (LINK). Today, Hussein himself echoed this sentiment. I do not think anyone is in disagreement with these statements. I read the press release from Iran, stating their conditions for negotiations, and I begin to get a sense of where the testing will occur. Who doubts that Hussein, as President, will fold up like a cheap tent on a rainy night when forced to make a decision when Iran reveals it has missiles pointed at Tel-Aviv and orders Syria into Israel? How long will it take Hussein to pull every last U.S. troop out of the middle east and end U.S. support for our Jewish allies? With no U.S. presence in the middle east I wonder what the result will be? Without U.S. backing I wonder how long Israel will survive? I think I know the answer to these questions.


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Iran's Preconditions

So much for Obama's diplomacy.

Barack Obama's declaration that, if elected, he would be willing to sit down and talk to Iran "without preconditions" has been widely discussed in this country. It's a key policy difference between him and John McCain, who rejects unconditional talks with Tehran.

So what does the Islamic Republic think? The enterprising reporters at the state news agency recently asked a high-ranking official for his opinion on talks with the U.S. As it turns out, Iran has its own "preconditions" and they don't suggest a diplomatic breakthrough, or even a summit, anytime soon.

Mehdi Kalhor, Vice President for Media Affairs, said the U.S. must do two things before summit talks can take place. First, American military forces must leave the Middle East -- presumably including such countries as Iraq, Qatar, Turkey and anywhere else American soldiers are deployed in the region. Second, the U.S. must cease its support of Israel. Until Washington does both, talks are "off the agenda," the Islamic Republic News Agency reports. It quotes Mr. Kalhor as saying, "If they [the U.S.] take our advice, grounds for such talks would be well prepared.

Iran is one of the toughest and most urgent foreign policy problems the new U.S. Administration will face. If Mr. Obama ends up in the Oval Office on January 20, he may find that solving it will take more than walking into a room and talking to Iranians "without preconditions."

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