Tehran suffers fatal arrogance
By: Ahmed Al-Jarallah
Editor-in-Chief, the Arab Times
Posted on 9/4/2006 9:31:33 AM
IT appears Iran has opened three fronts in the eastern part of the Middle East
and is increasing or decreasing the heat in Iraq, Lebanon, and the Gulf region
depending on the pressure on its nuclear program. Currently all these fronts are
on high alert as Iran’s confrontation with the international community has
reached a peak and the deadline for imposing sanctions and punishment has come
close.
Tehran’s battlefront in Iraq extends all the way to the south. The recent firing
along Kuwait’s borders with Iraq, coinciding with the visit of UN
Secretary-General Kofi Annan to Tehran and his warning to Iranian President
Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, is raising suspicions. Ahmadinejad’s choice of the Cold War
language indicates Iran’s internal situation is dangerous because of its
economy, which is in crisis.
With his extremist methods and by creating international and regional disputes
the Iranian President is trying to divert the attention of his people from the
internal crisis. This was evident when Ahmadinejad accused Gulf states of
standing with the international community and threatened to burn the entire Gulf
region if people of the region dared to stand in the way of Tehran’s nuclear
program.
Ahmadinejad has no right to accuse Gulf states or impose his authority over
them. We see his threats as a “killing arrogance,” which will eventually end
him, because these cannot be considered a politically noble or a wise move. All
of us remember how the Gulf states stood against the Shah of Iran when he was
trying to play the role of a regional policeman. We also remember how the
Ayatollah Ali Al-Khomeini’s Islamic revolution ended the Shah’s dreams.
Now Ahmadinejad wants to play the same role while trying to convince us that the
Islamic Revolution in Iran was not meant to implement the aggressive and greedy
policies of Tehran to expand its influence all over the Gulf. Ahmadinejad, who
represents the peak of Persian ambitions, is acting the role of a regional
policeman with such arrogance that he has challenged US President George Bush to
a debate. The President of Iran wants to debate the issue of reforming the
international system when he is incapable of reforming the system in his own
country.
We say these words because Iran is an important neighboring country, which
should play a cooperative role in tune with the importance of this strategic
region. We don’t want Iran to become a victim of its own arrogance and meet the
same fate of Japan, which was defeated in the World War II following the
dropping of atomic bombs on Hiroshima and Nagasaki. Iran should know even a
small spark can ignite a huge fire. World War I was the result of the
assassination of the Austrian Crown Prince and World War II was sparked by the
ambitions of Adolf Hitler.
We don’t want Ahmadinejad’s name to be included in the list of those, who caused
the killing of their own people or participated in crimes against humanity. We
are sorry to note that in such an important region, which is rich in oil and
natural gas, some adventurous leaders are willing to jeopardize peace by
accusing others of being agents without any proof. These leaders must remember
arrogance is a very dangerous disease.
e-mail: ahmedjarallah@hotmail.com
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