Source: Global Research.ca
Kourosh Ziabari
Kourosh Ziabari
When Hillary Clinton doesn't make sense
U.S. President Barack Obama will be a lame duck next
year and the officials in his administration, especially his Secretary
of State Hillary Clinton are hilariously doing their best to make sure
that they haven't spared any effort to intervene in the internal affairs
of other countries and sabotage the stability and security of those
whom they call "enemies", like Iran.
On October 27, Hillary Clinton gave an exclusive
interview to the UK's state-funded, state-run BBC Persian TV and in an
attempt aimed at reaching out to the Iranian nation, made bombastic
remarks which have certainly infuriated the Iranian nation and
demonstrated that the hostile behavior and antagonistic stance of the
U.S. government toward the Iranian nation is a manifestation of the
idiom "the leopard can't change its spots."
At the beginning of the interview, Clinton referred
to the sanctions imposed against Iran by the U.S. and its European
allies and said that these sanctions are targeted at forcing the Iranian
government into abandoning its nuclear program which she called is an
effort to construct nuclear weapons and not for civilian purposes.
Forgetting the detrimental impacts of economic sanctions against the
ordinary people, Clinton talked of the United States as a friend of the
Iranian people, and said that she wanted to reaffirm her country's "very
strong support for and friendship toward the people of Iran." She
further added that the behavior of the United States towards the Iranian
government is different from its behavior toward the Iranian people,
and by saying that, she clearly paraded her diplomatic naiveté and
artlessness. How do you justify enmity with a government which is
democratically elected by a group of people which you claim of being
supportive of?
Secondly, maybe Mrs. Secretary has forgotten that the
U.S. itself is the largest possessor of nuclear weapons in the world.
How can such a police state which has so far killed millions of people
around the world, from Nagasaki and Hiroshima to Baghdad and Kabul,
boast of its concerns about the development of nuclear bombs by a
country which is the most pacifist country in a boiling and tumultuous
region such as Middle East and hasn't ever invaded nor attacked any
country in the past century?
A Reuters report quoting U.S. officials revealed in
May 2010 that the U.S. has an arsenal of 5,113 nuclear warheads. It is
the only country which has used nuclear weapons in the warfare and the
only nation that has conducted around 1,054 nuclear tests and developed
many long-range weapon delivery systems. So, who is really entitled to
be concerned? Shouldn't the international community be anxious about the
nuclear arsenal of the self-proclaimed superpower, the U.S.? Who may
guarantee that the U.S. won't use its nuclear weapons in the prospective
wars which it will be waging in the future? If the criterion of
imposing financial sanctions is the possession of nuclear weapons and
pursuing the development of them, why shouldn't the U.S. or its Middle
East client state, Israel, which is the sole possessor of nuclear
weapons in the Middle East, be the target of sanctions? A report by
Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis showed that between 1940 and 1996,
the U.S. spent at least $8.15 trillion in present day terms on nuclear
weapons development. Which country can be pinpointed on the world map
which has invested in nuclear program, even for peaceful purposes, so
enormously?
But it was not only Clinton's deceptive bluffs on
Iran's nuclear program that seemed perplexing and ridiculous. She lived
beyond her means by claiming that the international community is angry
at what Iran is today and wants a better future for its people!
"But I would ask you to put yourself in the position
of the international community and those who seek a better future inside
Iran. If you do not want to have a conflict, if you do not want to just
give way to behavior that is very reckless, as we saw in this recent
plot against the Saudi ambassador, potentially dangerous, sanctions is
the tool that we have at our disposal to use," she said.
Clinton went on to raise the issue of the alleged
terror plot against the Saudi ambassador in Washington and attributed
this plot to Iran. She, however, certainly remembers that they were the
agents of CIA, MI6 and Mossad in Iran that assassinated four Iranian
nuclear scientists immediately after their name was put on the UNSC
sanctions list. Wasn't the assassination of Dariush Rezaei, Massoud
Alimohammadi or the foiled assassination plot against Fereydoon Abbasi a
conspicuous sponsorship of terrorism by a government which calls itself
the number one defender of democracy and peace? Wasn't awarding the
2009 Nobel Peace Prize to the President of such a country which murders
and kills people with impunity some kind of degrading and humiliating
this prestigious award?
But an interesting juncture in Clinton's interview
with BBC was where a recorded video containing a question by one of the
viewers of BBC was aired. The viewer asked Hillary Clinton about
America's perpetual adherence to double standards, its support for
repressive regimes such as Saudi Arabia and Bahrain, its backing of the
dreadful coup d'etat against the democratic government of Iran's then
Prime Minister Mohammad Mosaddegh in 1953 and its heinous shooting down
of the Iran Air Flight 655 on July 3, 1988 which claimed the lives of
290 innocent passengers including 254 Iranians. Clinton was apparently
taken aback by the question as her awkward response showed that the U.S.
government has never found any way to account for its hypocritical
policies and actions: "we have consistently spoken out about Bahrain and
we have pushed the government to do more, and we support the
independent investigation… We know that everything we have done in the
course of our 235-plus year history is going to appeal to or be
supported by everyone, and we take our history seriously. So, for
example, we've expressed regret about what was done in 1953… And then we
also have tried to point out that the tragedy of the shooting down of
the airline is something that we deeply are sorry for, and we have said
that repeatedly."
Isn't it ludicrous? Shooting down a civilian
aircraft, killing all the 290 people aboard and then simply saying that
we are sorry? Overthrowing a democratic government which reflected the
communal will of a nation and then simply saying that we are sorry?
Waging wars and imposing sanctions which hurt the daily life of the
ordinary people and saying that we are sorry?
Of course Hilary Clinton's interview with BBC Persian
was a fiasco and a political debacle. She just showed her lack of
political finesse and once again brought to mind that the wolf may lose
his teeth, but never his nature. Clinton is the representative of a
country which throughout the history has repeatedly betrayed the Iranian
nation. Perhaps expressing deepest apologies to the Iranian nation and
changing their hostile attitude can be the first step which the American
politicians should take in order to have the bitter memories of their
mischievousness wiped off the minds of Iranian people.