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Wednesday, June 17, 2009

Iran - the Armenian example is not hopeful 

All sorts of conflicting theories about events in Iran and what might be happening.

Basically there are similarities to what happened in Armenia in March 2008 when the incumbent President Serzh Sarkisian blatantly stole an election and remained in power because the authorities were willing to mow down protesters in the streets. Armenia and Iran are neighbours and have very good relations - Sarkisian and Ahmedinejad 'work well' together. There is a large Armenian minority in Iran which has substantial priviledges.

Over in A Fistful of Euros Douglas Muir paints a sombre picture. The shades of Tien An Men seem likely for Iran.

Hoping that the green Proetsers succeeed but not optimistic

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Comments:
The Georgian example suggests something diferent. he western media & "N"GO observers got het up at the guys we supported not winning & insisted on a rerun organsised by our condiate. e won allegedly getting 96% - a figure which our media had no trouble swallowing. Later the thug invaded South Ossetia attempting to recreate the genocide we had so enthusiasticly supported in Krajina & got his head handed to him.

Clearly our media will scream foul at any election which our thugs don't win while enthusiasticaly endorse the most blatant corruption by "our" thugs. Mr Dinnerjacket won by 12 million votes, same as last time. End of.
 
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Thursday, January 29, 2009

Iran and USA difficult pasts 

For Iran and the USA the difficult times of talking get under way. The leak of the US President’s (alleged) draft letter to the Iranian President matches to the public demand from Iran for apologies for past US actions against Iraq.

It might be easier for Obama if the key past events were all the relics of Republican administrations. However Iran is likely to be aware of this action under the Presidency of Democratic President Jimmy Carter, as reported by Robert Fisk, interviewing a notable German arms dealer in 1987:

So it was true, I asked him, that he had given the CIA’s intelligence on the Iranian army to the Iraqi government?

“Mr Fisk… at the very beginning of the war in September 1980 I was invited to go to the Pentagon. And there I was handed the very latest US satellite photographs of the Iranian front lines. You could see everything on the pictures … the Iranian gun emplacements … the lines of trenches on the eastern side of the Karun river, the tank emplacements … all the way up the Iranian side of the border towards Kurdistan .. and I travelled with these maps (via Germany) to Baghdad. The Iraqis were grateful.

Robert Fisk in his book “The Great War for Civilisation” page 940 in my paperback edition

Which in turn no doubt helped that arms trader to do business in Iraq. Iraq attacked Iran on 21 September 1980.

The 1981 onwards Reagan administration of course became extremely explicit in its support of Iraq.

Much dirty linen of all kinds lurks in the shadows of hidden washbaskets.

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