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East
Iranian president speaks at Columbia University amidst media
frenzy
By Joe Kay
25 September 2007
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Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad spoke at New Yorks
Columbia University on Monday amidst a massive campaign in the
US political and media establishment to demonize the government
of Iranthe likely next target for a US military attack.
The media frenzy began last week, when it was revealed that
Ahmadinejad was planning to pay his respects to the victims of
the September 11 attacks by visiting the former location of the
World Trade Center buildings. The New York police decided to refuse
his request after a public campaign from political figures from
both the Democratic and Republican parties.
The growing crescendo of denunciations was accompanied by a
repetition of the various pretexts being developed by the US government
to justify any future military intervention. In a 60 Minutes
interview broadcast on Sunday, correspondent Scott Pelley insisted
that Ahmadinejads visit to the World Trade Center would
be insulting to many, many Americans.
Pelley also declared, the American people believe that
your country is a terrorist nation and that it is
an established fact now that Iranian bombs and Iranian know-how
are killing Americans in Iraq. You have American blood on your
hands. Why? On several occasions, Ahmadinejad felt compelled
to ask whether Pelley was functioning as a journalist or as a
representative of the American government.
On Monday, the New York tabloids vied with each other for the
most provocative and lurid headlines. The New York Daily News
declared, The Evil has Landed, while the New York
Post countered, Madman Iran Prez Catches Flak as Guest
of Dishonor.
The right-wing media in the US directed fire also at Columbia
University for inviting Ahmadinejad to speak. An editorial appearing
Monday in the Wall Street Journal targeted Columbia University
President Lee Bollinger in particular, denouncing him for not
canceling the event while refusing to allow the militarys
ROTC program access to Columbia students.
This media campaign was the backdrop to the ugly spectacle
at the event itself. Columbia University came under intense pressure
last year when a similar invitation was extended to Ahmadinejad.
It was later canceled on the grounds that adequate security preparations
could not be put in place in time.
This time around, Columbia did not cancel the event, but Bollinger
bent over backward to demonstrate his own support for the campaign
of aggression directed at Iran. His comments made a mockery of
the attempt by the university to present itself as a proponent
of free speech by extending the invitation in the
first place.
Bollinger said those arguing that the event should never have
taken place were reasonable. He insisted, however,
that the event had nothing to do with the rights of the
speakerwho he termed a petty and cruel dictatorbut
was rather motivated by the maxim that one should know thine
enemies and should have the intellectual and emotional
courage to confront the mind of evil.
Bollinger then listed a number of the reactionary aspects of
the Iranian regime, including its crackdown on student activists
and Ahmadinejads penchant for questioning the Holocaust.
These statements were conflated with a repetition of the justifications
being developed by the US government for a war against Iran. He
denounced what he called Irans proxy war against the
United States troops in Iraq. Many Columbia students and
alumni are in the military, he said, and they rightly see
your government as the enemy. He then asked, referring to
Irans alleged nuclear weapons program, Why does your
country continue to refuse to adhere to international standards?
Bollinger concluded by denouncing Ahmadinejads fanatical
mindset, saying that the modern civilized world [is]
yearning to express the revulsion at what you stand for.
It is not necessary to support the Iranian governmenta
right-wing bourgeois nationalist regime that is constantly on
the lookout for a deal with American imperialismto recognize
the utter cowardice and hypocrisy in Bollingers statements.
It can be said without a doubt that such an introduction would
never be given to the leader of a US allythe representative
of the government of Saudi Arabia or Pakistan, for exampleno
matter how dictatorial that government might be. And of course
if President Bush were to speak at Columbia, one would hear no
mention from Bollinger of the attack on democratic rights in the
US, or the enormous atrocities committed by the US military in
the Middle East.
The American governmentthe modern civilized world
for which Bollinger speakshas become associated in the minds
of the worlds population with the bloody occupation of Iraq,
the torture at Abu Ghraib, the prisons of Guantánamo Bay,
a complete contempt for international law, and a relentless campaign
of military aggression.
As for Ahmadinejad, his remarks combined statements about the
hypocrisy of the American government with a repetition of certain
reactionary foundations of the Iranian regime.
The Iranian president denounced Bollingers comments as
an insult to information and the knowledge of the audience
attending the event. Referring to the American government without
naming it, he said there were certain states that tap telephone
calls and try to control their people. [They] create an insecure
psychological atmosphere in order to justify their war-mongering
acts against the world. He noted that it was certain Western
powers that were continuing to build nuclear, chemical and
biological weapons.
Ahmadinejad insisted on the right of Iran to pursue a nuclear
energy program as part of its membership in the International
Atomic Energy Agency. He also denounced the US for supporting
Saddam Hussein during the Iran-Iraq War in the 1980s, and US support
for groups that have carried out terrorist attacks in Iran. He
was referring here to the Peoples Mujahideen of Iran (MEK),
now based in Iraq.
Pressed on the question of the Holocaust, Ahmadinejad insisted
that all he wanted was to encourage scientific research
that can approach the Holocaust from different perspectives.
Last year, the Iranian government organized a Holocaust conference
that included the likes of David Duke, former Imperial Wizard
of the Ku Klux Klan.
The nationalist regime in Iran has sought to bolster its declining
support within Iran by cultivating anti-Semitism and posturing
as an arch-opponent of Israel. In response to a question on reports
of executions of homosexuals in Iran, Ahmadinejad made the laughable
statement, There are no homosexuals in Iran.
Perhaps more significant than what Ahmadinejad said was what
he did not say. He was notably muted on the growing preparations
for war against Iran. He was speaking for an Iranian bourgeoisie
that would still like a deal with American or European imperialism
as it moves to repress social discontent within Iran. Ahmadinejad
voiced hope for peace and stability. In his interview
with 60 Minutes, he insisted, Its wrong
to think that Iran and the US are walking towards war.... There
is no war in the offing.
In fact, US military preparations for war are well under way,
though the American media has done its best to keep this fact
from the American people. An article in this weeks British
Sunday Times reported that the US Air Force has set
up a highly confidential strategic planning group tasked with
fighting the next war as tensions rise with Iran.
The group, responsible for planning the first war against Iraq
in 1990-91, was reestablished in June.
Previous articles appearing in the British press reported that
plans have been drawn up to bomb thousands of targets in Iran,
while sections of the American government, particularly in the
office of Vice President Dick Cheney, are supporting the use of
bunker-busting nuclear weapons.
In the October 1 issue of Newsweek magazine, reporters
Don Ephron and Mark Hosenball note that Cheney has been the most
vocal supporter of military action. Citing two knowledgeable
sources, Newsweek reports that a few months before
former Cheney Middle East adviser David Wurmser quit last month,
he told a small group of people that Cheney had been mulling
the idea of pushing for a limited Israeli missile strike against
the Iranian nuclear site at Natanzand perhaps other sitesin
order to provoke Tehran into lashing out. The Iranian reaction
would then give Washington a pretext to launch strikes against
military and nuclear targets in Iran.
Newsweek said that any decision on military action will
be made by early 2008, and therefore would take place prior to
the end of the Bush administration.
In recent days, US military officials have escalated their
accusations that Iran is supplying weapons to insurgents in Iraq.
These charges would likely be used as a further pretext for military
intervention.
This is the context of Ahmadinejads visit to Columbia
University. The US ruling elite has already launched two brutal
wars over the past six years. The Iraq war is estimated to have
killed over 1 million people, turning over 4 million Iraqis into
refugees, and devastating an entire advanced society.
The greatest danger to the worlds population is not the
Iranian government, but American imperialism. Having launched
the Iraq war on the basis of lies, the political establishment
and its media arm are now attempting the same time-tested methods
to prepare for the next war.
See Also:
UN General Assembly meets under shadow
of US threats against Iran
[24 September 2007]
On eve of UN general assembly, US military
arrests Iranian official in Iraq
[22 September 2007]
Israel's air raid on Syria: another threat
to Iran
[18 September 2007]
Israeli air raid in Syria heightens Middle
East tensions
[17 September 2007]
Bush administration consolidates plans
for war against Iran
[17 September 2007]
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