Iran,  Israel

Israel at War Watch: Iran’s President Ahmadinejad Presses for Israeli- Hezbollah Cease-Fire

israelATWARweb

AP: Ahmadinejad calls for Lebanon cease-fire

Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad called for a cease-fire in Lebanon and criticized U.S. policy in the Middle East on Wednesday, saying Washington wants to “recarve the map” of the region with Israel’s help.

Ahmadinejad’s nation is a major backer of Hezbollah and a sworn enemy of Israel, but he denied that Tehran provides military support to the militant group.

Ahmadinejad is a LIAR too. Iran has sold or given Hezbollah hundreds, if not thousands of Katyusha rockets that have been used to shell Israel. And there were elite Iranian military involved in the Hezbollah missile attack upon one of Israeli ships.

In addition to a cease-fire, Ahmadinejad called for talks on the Lebanon crisis without conditions and demanded Israel compensate the country and apologize for its actions.

He said Iran only supports Hezbollah politically and morally.

israeljuly26ajpgweb

Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, gestures in Dushanbe, Tajikstan Wednesday, July 26, 2006. Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad on Wednesday opened an Iranian-financed tunnel improving connections between Tajikistan’s north and the capital region. The opening came amid Ahmadinejad’s two-day visit to the impoverished former Soviet Central Asian republic, which also is to include a meeting with visiting Afghan President Hamid Karzai on Wednesday.

Right, as if this will ever happen.

Ahmadinejad bloviates more and contributes what?

Oh, yes, volunteer jihadists……

However, more than 60 Iranian volunteers set off from Iran on Wednesday in what they called a holy war against Israeli forces in Lebanon.

The volunteers — ranging from teenagers to grandfathers — plan to join about 200 others on the way to the Turkish border, which they hope to cross Thursday. They plan to reach Lebanon via Syria on the weekend.

Organizers said the volunteers are carrying no weapons, and it was not clear whether Turkey would allow them to pass.

A Turkish Foreign Ministry official, speaking on condition of anonymity, would not say Wednesday if Turkey would allow them to cross. Iranians, however, can enter Turkey without a visa and stay for three months.

Iran says it will not send regular forces to aid Hezbollah, but apparently it will not attempt to stop volunteer guerrillas. Iran and Syria are Hezbollah’s main sponsors.

This must be of great comfort to Nasrallah and the Hezbollah fighters in southern Lebanon. But, since their Syrian re-supply lines have been bombed by the Israelis these volunteers are about all they will get unless Ahmadinejad puts his money/military where his mouth is.

Stay tuned…..

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One Comment

  • john Carey

    Flap: Iran gave the Chinese C-802 “Silkworm” anti-ship missiles to Hezbollah. Either that or China is to blame. Not too many bad boys in the world have goodies like that so it is one or the other….

    A Few Questions for Kofi Annan
    By John E. Carey
    July 26, 2006

    As often occurs in the tricky world of international relations, President George Bush and the United States find themselves viewed by the rest of the world as supporting the wanton killing of innocent civilians right now.

    And Hezbollah is to blame.

    Using the most despicable trick known to man: hiding behind innocent civilians including women and children, the terrorists Hezbollah nation (you heard me right: “nation”) has found a way to antagonize Israel to such a point that the Israeli’s feel compelled to respond. And when they do respond with F-16s armed with precision guided weapons, innocents get killed.

    So then Hezbollah drags mindless newsmen and women to the scene and screams, “Look what the bloodthirsty Jews are doing to us!!”

    And the mindless news people even get a big time ally: Kofi Annan of the UN, to agree. Without the benefit of any investigation, today the leader of the world’s largest peace-loving organization, accused a sovereign member state of murdering peacekeepers intentionally. I find that deplorable.

    Then we see a stampede of everyone who likes to knife the United States speaking out: like Jacque Chirac of France saying the Israeli response is “not proportional.” Hey, I’d like to see the French reaction to angry Arabs shooting unguided rockets into downtown Paris. In fact, we know exactly the French reaction when unhappy Arabs merely speak out about unemployment in France: they face hundreds of armed policemen.

    Hezbollah brilliantly antagonized Israel to such a point that the Israeli’s sent their defense forces into Lebanon in an effort to get the Hezbollah to stop shooting rockets into Israel: rockets that have no guidance systems and kill indiscriminately.

    So Israel, using many precision, laser guided bombs and other high tech equipments supplied by the United States, has gone into Lebanon. And much of the world blames, who else? The United States.

    Well, I don’t mind saying I blame the Hezbollah, their backers in Syria and Iran, and the United Nations.

    Blaming Hezbollah seems pretty straightforward. Hezbollah’s leader Sheik Hassan Nasrallah is on the record:“This state [Israel] was established on the basis of occupation….I say that this is a state based on occupation, that has usurped the rights of others…. I don’t believe in the State of Israel as a legal state because it was founded on occupation.”

    We have several complaints about this. First, by denying the legitimacy of a UN state, Hezbollah allows itself to treat the citizens of that state with distain. Hezbollah has been murdering innocent Jews for years. Second, why doesn’t Kofi Annan set the record straight on the legitimacy of Israel, which was created by UN mandate?

    Why do we blame Syria and Iran? Because they admit guilt. In fact, they are proud of their bloodthirsty ways and want to eliminate the State of Israel, a State they do not recognize as “legitimate.”

    “Iran is standing by the Syrian people,” Iran’s foreign ministry spokesman Hamid Reza Asefi proudly told reporters.

    Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad boasted that Israel was not tough enough to counter Iran and also warned against an attack against Syria.”Thanks be to God, despite its criminal and savage nature, the Zionist regime and its supporters in the West do not have the power to look in the same way towards Iran,” the fiercely anti-Israeli president wailed.”If Israel commits another act of idiocy and aggresses Syria, this will be the same as an aggression against the entire Islamic world and it will receive a stinging response,” Ahmadinejad said in a telephone conversation with his Syrian counterpart Bashar al-Assad.

    Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad famously described Israel as a “disgraceful blot” that should be “wiped off the face of the earth”. Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, who is more hard-line than his predecessor, told students in Tehran that a new wave of Palestinian attacks would be enough to finish off Israel. This in October 2005. Did we listen? Kofi?

    This is the same Mahmoud Ahmadinejad proudly defying the UN and building a nuclear bomb. Kofi? You have anything to add on this?

    And why do we blame the UN? Because the UN has been watching Hezbollah take over southern Lebanon, fortify itself, and attack Israel repeatedly for years. Officially called the United Nations Interim Force in Lebanon, commonly called Unifil, these “peacekeepers” have been between Lebanon and Israel for 28 years at a cost of about one hundred million dollars a year.

    We deeply mourn the loss of UN soldiers in the current fighting. But, we ask, what were they doing there? They are “observers,” “noncombatants,” and “peacekeepers.” Why didn’t Kofi Annan have them removed to safety when the fighting erupted? Kofi?

    And what have they been doing for 28 years?”They [Unifil] are barely able to take care of themselves,” said Timur Goksel, referring to the UN peacekeepers. “How can you expect them to do their work?”The blue-helmeted UN Unifil soldiers include a moderately trained and semi-disciplined Irish brigade. These Irish UN troops were routinely referred to as the “whisky army” by both Islam and Jewish observers who came into contact with them. The Israeli-backed Christian militiamen – known by the Unifil acronym LAUIs (Lebanese Armed and Uniformed by Israel) countered any effort by the Irish troops to stray far from their base at Camp Shamrock.

    And I hate to throw red meat to red necks but who is commanding Unifil just now? The French.

    Finally, why do we refer to Hezbollah as a “nation”? Because they have all the trappings of a nation.

    Hezbollah controls its own media, including a TV station al-Manar (“The Beacon”), runs hotels and restaurants, and operates a thriving economy in southern Lebanon. Hezbollah provides social services that the government of Lebanon cannot afford to supply. It controls some 25% of the Lebanese land mass and almost half a million people. It runs its own schools, elderly centers, clinics, hospitals and libraries.

    Hezbollah’s headquarters is called “The Embassy” by locals the in the part of Beirut called Dahiya, a crowded Shiite neighborhood where the Hezbollah has its seat of government.

    Hezbollah has seats in Lebanon’s governing councils too. But more importantly, Hezbollah owns southern Lebanon and is the law in that region near Israel.

    But what makes Hezbollah very different, in fact unique in the history of stateless terror groups to date, is its access to very sophisticated missiles and other weapons. When did any group but a nation have Chinese-made C-802 “Silkworm” missiles capable of hitting an Israeli warship before? Kofi?

    Note that Iran’s preident denied today that he sent any military hardware to Hezbollah. So how did they get Chinese anti-ship cruise missiles? From China?

    How else is Hezbollah more like a “state” than a terror group? According to Israel’s Dr. Boaz Ganor, the deputy dean of the Lauder School of Government, Diplomacy and Strategy and the founder of the Institute for Counter Terrorism in Israel said, “The Hizbullah has succeeded in creating a situation in which it deters Israel more than Israel deters it. It is unprecedented for a terrorist organization to deter a state and not vice versa.”

    For the last 50 years deterrence meant nuclear weapons.

    Is that next for Hezbollah? Kofi?

    We do not know, and may never know, if Hezbollah possesses or has access to weapons of mass destruction or really long-range ballistic missiles. But certainly Israeli military planners fear and are at least somewhat deterred by Hezbollah because of what they have done in the past and what they may yet do in the future.

    http://peace-and-freedom.blogspot.com/