An
"Act Of War"
Congressman Ron Paul
Speaks On The "Obsession With Iran"
Must Watch -Video
Texas Congressman Ron Paul says the US is “obsessed with” keeping Iran under illegal sanctions, while pushing for furthering the embargoes in, what he calls, an "act of war" against the Islamic Republic. Continue
Must Watch -Video
Texas Congressman Ron Paul says the US is “obsessed with” keeping Iran under illegal sanctions, while pushing for furthering the embargoes in, what he calls, an "act of war" against the Islamic Republic. Continue
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Central Bankers
Agenda: Obama Sanctions Against Iran Over
Gold
By Susanne Posel
Obama has made his position clear. He is using the might of the US military to stop Iran from further devaluation of the US dollar. Continue
By Susanne Posel
Obama has made his position clear. He is using the might of the US military to stop Iran from further devaluation of the US dollar. Continue
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Sanctions:
Diplomacy’s Weapon of Mass Murder
By Soraya Sepahpour-Ulrich
By Soraya Sepahpour-Ulrich
On August 6 and 9, 1945, the United States of America dropped two atomic bombs on the cities of Hiroshima
and Nagasaki immediately killing 120,000 civilians.
The final death
toll of the horrendous bombings has been conservatively estimated at
well over 200,000 men, women, and children. To this day, the world
continues to be shocked and horrified by the visual images that
captured the death and destruction caused by the bombs.
The negative
impact prompted America to devise a different weapon of mass murder – sanctions.
Unlike the shock and horror which accompanied the atomic bombs dropped on Japan, there were no images of the 500,000 Iraqi children whose lives were cut short by sanctions to jolt the world into reality. Not only has America taken pride in the mass killing
of innocent children, but encouraged by silence and the surrender to
its weapon of choice, it has turned diplomacy’s weapon of mass murder on
another country – Iran.
There
has been little resistance to sanctions in the false belief that
sanctions are a tool of diplomacy and preferable to war. Enforcement of
this belief has been a major victory for American public diplomacy.
The reality is otherwise.
Sanctions kill indiscriminately – they are
far deadlier than “Fat Man” and “Little Boy” – the two atomic bombs that
took the lives of over 200,000 people.
In the case of Iraq, the United Nations estimated 1,700,000 million Iraqi civilians died as a result of sanctions. 1.5 million more victims than the horrific atomic bombs dropped on Japan. Diplomacy’s finest hour.
Even
though Denis Halliday, former Assistant Secretary General of the United
Nations, and many other top officials resigned from their posts in
protest to the sanctions saying: "The policy of economic sanctions is
totally bankrupt. We are in the process of destroying an entire society. It is as simple and as terrifying as that",
the murders continued.
In 1999, seventy members of Congress appealed
to President Clinton to lift the sanctions and end what they termed "infanticide masquerading as policy." But America continued its lead with its diplomatic death dance.
America,
a morally bankrupt nation and the self-appointed global morality
police, obeying the wishes of the pro-Israel lobby groups, has for years
now pointed its deadly weapon of mass murder at Iran
-- sanctions disguised as diplomacy.
The misinformed and misguided
global community indulges itself in the false belief that war has been
avoided, without thought to suffering and death.
In
fact, the notion that economic sanctions are always morally preferable
to the use of military force has been challenged by Albert C. Pierce,
Ethics and National Security professor at the National Defense University.
His analysis showed that economic sanctions inflict great pain,
suffering, and physical harm on the innocent civilians--so much so that
small-scale military operations were sometimes preferable (Ethics and International Affairs,1996).
But America
prefers not to engage in battle. Not only would military confrontation
bring global condemnation, but history has shown us that while America can win battles, it cannot win wars (Vietnam, Iraq, Afghanistan…..).
It therefore resorts to sanctions - a coward’s ruthless “diplomacy”
tool in order to disguise its role as the enemy with the purpose of
depriving the target nation of self-defense against such horrendous
aggression.
Sanctions, the warfare by an enemy unidentified by a
military uniform is intended to eliminate resistance, to attack women
and children, the weak and the old, to being about regime change,
without fear of retaliation or censure by the ‘peace-loving’ community.
In
this election year, as in the past, appeasement of the pro-Israel
lobbies takes precedent to humanity, to the well-being of Americans, and
to the security of the global community.
A 2005 report developed by economists Dean DeRosa and Gary Hufbauer demonstrates that if the United States lifted sanctions on Iran the world price of oil could fall by 10 percent translating into an annual savings of $38-76 billion for the United States alone. The current global recession would dwarf the figures cited.
At war even with itself to please the lobbies, House passed H.R. 1905 - Iran Threat Reduction and Syria Human Rights Act. Putting aside the oxymoron of sanctions and human rights for now, America
is demanding that the world community not only partake in deadly
sanctions, but to do so in direct opposition to the national interests
of each and every sovereign nation. This is a sharp departure from the
arguments presented by AIPAC in 1977 in response to the Arab league
boycott.
AIPAC successfully defined the Arab League boycott as " harassment and blackmailing of America,
an interference with normal business activities ... that the boycott
activities were contrary to the principles of free trade that the United
States has espoused for many years … and the Arab interference in the
business relations of American firms with other countries is in effect
an interference with the sovereignty of the United States."[i]
However, the United States
has successfully blackmailed other nations to be its accomplice in
suffering and mass murder - diplomacy’s weapon of choice.
To believe
that Iran (or Syria)
is the only target of these sanctions is as naïve as believing that
sanctions are diplomacy put in place to avoid war. The global impact
of the lethal weapon – sanctions -- is simply cushioned in diplomacy; a brilliantly and ruthlessly executed diplomatic coup.
Soraya
Sepahpour-Ulrich is a Public Diplomacy Scholar, independent researcher
and blogger with a focus on U.S. foreign policy and the role of lobby
groups. She can be reached at sorayau@earthlink.net
[i] H. Alikhani, Sanctioning
Iran, Anatomy of a Failed Policy,
New York, 2000, p.321
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The Western drive against Syria follows the breakdown in the international order caused by the 2011 Libyan intervention.
“There’s
no semblance of international law since what was decided in Libya last
year. The maneuvering and the wording of UN resolution 1973, authorizing
war – a no-fly zone was actually war – against Libya. That was the end
of international law as we know it. Nation-states don’t matter anymore.
If you are a neo-colonial power, like Britain or France, or an empire
like the US, you can trample on nations’ sovereignty anywhere, anyhow,
anyplace, and this is exactly what’s happening. That’s why Russia has
been opposed to it from the start, because Moscow sees that as the end
of the sovereignty of nation-states.”
Syria's disintegration into a weak – or failed – state is part of Israel’s long-term designs on Iran.
“The
battle of Aleppo could become an extended [rerun of] Lebanon in the
1970s. This is the ‘Lebanonization ‘of whole tracts of Northern Syria,
in fact. And this, by the way, is the Israeli strategy. Israel wants a
‘Lebanonized’ and ‘Somalized’ [Syria], like the new Somalia in Libya; a
very weak country with sectarian strife… an overextended army, and of
course, innocuous against Israel. So this means opening the way for an
Israeli attack against Iran in the next few months or perhaps in 2013.”
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