| A Message From Iran |
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| Tuesday, 24 June 2008 02:49 | |
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Reuters reports: Iran has withdrawn around $75 billion from Europe to prevent the assets from being blocked under threatened new sanctions over Tehran"s disputed nuclear ambitions, an Iranian weekly said. "Part of Iran"s assets in European banks have been converted to gold and shares and another part has been transferred to Asian banks," Mohsen Talaie, deputy foreign minister in charge of economic affairs, was quoted as saying. Ever since the Islamic revolution under the Ayatollah Khomeini in 1979 and the ensuing American Embassy hostage crisis that helped sweep Ronald Reagan into office, Iran and the United States have been bitter enemies. Regular anti-American parades and holidays support thriving sales of American flags (for burning, natch) in the markets of Tehran; and for our part, our government freezes any assets in the U.S. which are found to be Iranian-owned. Over the years, a key part of American strategy has been to isolate that country and its mullahcracy from the world financial and trade community. Thus, for instance, most aircraft flying in Iran are meticulously-maintained antiques dating from the 1970s, since they aren"t allowed to buy new ones from Boeing (being American) or Airbus (containing American parts.) For all this time, Europe has gleefully done the business with Iran that American companies are forbidden to do. This has occasionally been a bone of contention between the U.S. government and our nominal allies across the pond; large parts of Iran"s nuclear program, a major foreign-policy concern worldwide, came about because European companies were willing to illegally sell the advanced equipment required. Iran calls the U.S. the "Great Satan" and Israel the "Little Satan", but generally is much more polite to continental Europe. Although traditionally crude oil has been valued in dollars, Iran pressures its customers to pay in anything but, and has made attempts to help make the euro a world reserve currency in replacement. Compared to the volume of world trade, Iran"s efforts are a drop in the bucket, but the recent collapse of dollar values has certainly made Iran look prescient.
Why, then, is Iran suddenly moving away from the European banking system? Something must have changed. America has tried to convince the Europeans to freeze Iranian assets and cut off trade for forty years; and for forty years, they haven"t. Does Iran believe that Europe is finally taking seriously Ahmadinejad"s threats to destroy Israel, and his clear progress toward making a working nuclear bomb available to the world"s foremost state supporter of terrorism? Meanwhile, the clock is ticking on both the Bush Administration and Iran"s nuke. Will Iran get the Bomb while Bush is still in office? He"s given every reason to indicate that, no matter what, he won"t let that happen. This month"s large, ostentatious diplomatic carrot - Western assistance in building a civilian nuclear plant, in exchange for total transparency and inspections - was flatly rejected. There really isn"t much left to talk about: the Western offer is as generous as it"s possible to imagine, and Iran didn"t even feel it was worthy of discussion and negotiation. Clearly, no meeting of the minds is pending.
That leaves... what? Israel is already planning a military strike to take out Iran"s nuclear capability on their own. It"s being reported that advisers of both Obama and McCain recognize the need for the U.S. to talk with Israel about this - and if Iran does actually pull a mushroom cloud out of the hat, it"s very difficult to imagine America standing idly by while Israel fights for its life. Our upcoming presidential election may be about to become even more momentous than it already was. |


