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Politics : WAR on Terror. Will it engulf the Entire Middle East? -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Haim R. Branisteanu who wrote (14857)8/5/2006 12:14:35 PM
From: DeplorableIrredeemableRedneck  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 32591
 
The time to act is now.

These are among the truest words ever written.



To: Haim R. Branisteanu who wrote (14857)8/5/2006 12:24:21 PM
From: DeplorableIrredeemableRedneck  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 32591
 
Ghostly Shadows

By JOHN BATCHELOR
August 4, 2006

nysun.com

How bloody-minded are the tyrants of Tehran? How far will they go in supporting their Hezbollah and Hamas legions against the Jewish State? Will they fight to the death of Lebanon and Gaza, or will they see the grave risk in their imperial overreach, using their uncertain ally Syria (and secret dupe Egypt) as an arms depot, and negotiate an armistice with the U.N. Security Council's proxies, the European legions?

The answer is not in the headlines, it's in the drama and history of the Shiites of the ummah known as the Twelvers. They believe profoundly and mystically in heroic martyrdom to gain Paradise. The legend of the self-sacrifice of the seventh century warlord Husayn at Kufa, the Lord of the Martyrs, Sayyid al-Shuhada, is well known. More up to date is a frightening tale from late in 1980, when secular Iraq occupied Iran's oil-rich Khuzistan province at the start of the eight-year long Iran-Iraq war.

The Khomeini-inspired revolution had purged Iran's officer cadre. The Tehran regime was without resources internally, and no help was coming from Europe or America because of the embassy hostage crisis. Desperation made the regime send tens of thousands of poorly armed volunteers to the front lines to face Iraqi armor. Catastrophe was imminent, and still Tehran would not relent or negotiate. Instead, the Council of Guardians — a governance invented by Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini — approved theatrics based upon Shia faith. Actors dressed in white robes rode white horses around the Iranian encampments late at night, and the pious recruits saw this display as proof of their commitment to martyr themselves.

The white-robed horseman was a vision of the Twelfth Imam, Muhammed al-Mahdi, who died, or vanished, at age five in the ninth century. The Twelfth, or Invisible, Imam is prophesied to return in times of extreme ruin to lead the faithful to paradise. And so the young men rose up at dawn and threw themselves like human torches at the Iraqi fortifications and, dying in the tens of thousands, drove heavy Soviet and American supported divisions out of Iran.

Worshippers of the Twelfth Imam are knows as the Twelvers; and chief among them is Ahmadinejad and the leadership of the Iranian Revolutionary Guard. Before the revolution, Ahmadinejad belonged to a messianic cult known as Hojjatieh, later disbanded, which believed that chaos will hasten the return of the Mahdi. Today, such extreme conviction is shot through the Tehran regime, especially among the privy council called the Partisans of the Mahdi; and the televising of the combat on the Lebanon front looks to vindicate the prophesy.

When Ahmadinejad says, "Lebanon is the scene of an historic test, which will determine the future of humanity," he is speaking not in the hyperbole of a tyrant but in the language of messianic faith.

What this means now is that the Tehran regime is neither surprised nor intimidated by the scale of the Israeli response to the provocations in Gaza and Lebanon. Tehran expects that the missiles they have deployed in Syria and Lebanon, once they walk them like a barrage onto Tel Aviv, will force the Israelis into bombing the launchers and depots in Syria. The Iranians expect that when Syria is attacked, the other Arab states, such as Shia- dominated Iraq or Bahrain or Shia-fraught Saudi Arabia, will bend to their will. (And the secular, non-Shia tyrannies such as Egypt and Pakistan, will heed the call of alliance from the Egyptian al-Zawahiri.) Tehran expects that America will not be able to remain out of the fighting once Israel is battered and isolated, once the United Nations Security Council is provoked by Iran's expected quitting of the Non-Proliferation Treaty, perhaps in August.

When you read of the overwhelming IDF combined arms force thrown against the Hezbollah fortifications along the Lebanon border, do not be heartened that all is contained, do not think that ten more days of this will bring Iran and its servants to the negotiating table. Instead look for ghostly shadows on the night vision surveillance images around the Hezbollah, Iraqi, Saudi, Iranian, Chechen encampments on the Lebanon front. See the white robes on the white horse? Ahmadinejad sees, the Partisans of the Mahdi see, the Twelvers see, and they will get up in the morning and throw themselves like torches on Israel and America.

Mr. Batchelor is host of "The John Batchelor Show" on the ABC radio network. The show airs in New York on 770 AM from 10 p.m. to 1 a.m.



To: Haim R. Branisteanu who wrote (14857)8/5/2006 8:01:48 PM
From: DeplorableIrredeemableRedneck  Respond to of 32591
 
These guys got baitsim:

Israel holds Palestinian Speaker

news.bbc.co.uk

Israeli forces had twice before surrounded Mr Dweik's home
Israeli forces have detained the Speaker of the Palestinian parliament at his home in the West Bank.
Aziz Dweik, also a key member of Hamas, which controls the government, was held after 20 Israeli vehicles surrounded his home in Ramallah.

The Israeli military confirmed the detention, saying Mr Dweik was a legitimate target as a Hamas leader.

Palestinian Prime Minister Ismail Haniya condemned the action, accusing Israel of "piracy".

He said: "We urge all Arab and international parliamentarians to condemn and denounce this crime and to secure the release of Aziz Dweik and all jailed ministers and lawmakers."

Israel detained eight members of the Hamas-led government and 20 MPs on 29 June. Palestinians called that an act of war.


Israel has launched a number of strikes in Gaza in recent days

The detentions followed the capture of an Israeli soldier by Palestinian militants in June.

An Israeli army spokesman, confirming Mr Dweik's detention to Reuters news agency, said: "Since Hamas is a terrorist organisation, he is a target for arrest."

Israeli forces had twice previously surrounded Mr Dweik's home but had not arrested him.

Mr Dweik's wife told Reuters on Saturday: "We were sitting home peacefully, normally. Then we heard knocking on the door.

"He went down because the army was there. He opened the door. They saw him in his pyjamas and asked him to go with them."

Red Cross request

Israeli soldiers and tanks moved back into the south of the Gaza Strip three days ago, conducting searches for its detained soldier, Cpl Gilad Shalit.

Seventeen Palestinians have been killed, mainly in air strikes, in that time.

On Saturday, Hamas issued a statement rejecting a Red Cross request for a visit to Cpl Shalit, saying it was "not appropriate at a time when more than 10,000 Palestinian families are denied to visit their prisoners".

Israeli Cabinet minister Ophir Pines said: "We allow people to see Palestinian prisoners... people know where they are and we allow access by international organisations".