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Which Is Most Important For Today's NATO - Afghanistan Or Iran?

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  • Which Is Most Important For Today's NATO - Afghanistan Or Iran?

    WHICH IS MOST IMPORTANT FOR TODAY'S NATO - AFGHANISTAN OR IRAN?
    Karine Ter-Sahakyan / PanARMENIAN News

    PanARMENIAN.Net
    November 12, 2010

    If the Afghan problem has already become a kind of a home assignment
    quite impossible to complete, it is much more difficult for NATO to
    deal with its new problem, Iran.

    At just another NATO summit there will be discussed the issue of
    Afghanistan, i.e. what to do with it in the foreseeable future. To
    leave the country or still try to bring the situation under control.

    It is clear that no summit will ever solve this problem; everything
    is too complicated and confusing. Afghanistan is a black hole for
    the countries trying to either conquer it or lay hands on it.

    And for some reason no one remembers the British, who after a long
    and exhausting war at the beginning of the past century declared that
    Afghanistan is impossible to defeat. They said it and left. Then came
    the Soviet Union, ready to pay any price for the victory against
    the Afghans. But they failed too. Since 1979 the country was lost
    in chaos. And then stepped in the NATO, i.e. the U.S., and the chaos
    became uncontrollable despite the presence of President Karzai, who
    on the one hand supports the U.S., on the other is against it. So,
    the Afghan problem has to be somehow settled at the summit, or roughly
    speaking, either the way to narcotics must be blocked, or the latter
    must be brought under control.

    But if the Afghan problem has already become a kind of a home
    assignment quite impossible to complete, it is much more difficult
    for NATO to deal with its new problem, Iran. Iran is a country more
    predictable and stronger than Afghanistan and the Ayatollahs' regime,
    no matter the world likes it or not, is quite stable. One way or
    another, Iran will have a nuclear bomb, be it this year or next, and
    the development of military industry may present NATO with the fait
    accompli that Iran is well-armed and can give an adequate response
    in case of attack. That is why Lisbon will put pressure on Turkey so
    that she installs in her territory the anti-missile defense system as a
    shield for Israel, to call a spade a spade. Iranian missiles will not
    reach the United States, but they will reach Israel. That's the whole
    calculation of the Alliance. However, Turkey stands on the way of the
    agreement. Turkish media reported on November 6 that Ankara will agree
    to deploy the anti-missile defense elements of NATO on its territory,
    if her three conditions are met. First, the Turkish authorities
    advocate the creation of NATO and not American missile defense system.

    Secondly, it must be aimed at ensuring the security of all member
    states of NATO, and, thirdly, it must not turn Turkey into a flank
    country, as it was at the time of the "Cold War".

    Turkey is in her usual role - threats, blackmail, requirements to get
    the impossible, but finally she gets what she wanted at the beginning.

    Most likely, the Alliance will come to an agreement which, as it was
    the case with the OSCE, will remain just a piece of paper. Iran will
    be improving her military power, so that by spring, when planning a
    military expedition NATO completes the aerodrome in Kutaisi, Tehran
    could be booted and spurred. And obviously Iran succeeds. And we, i.e.

    Armenia, will have a military base on Mount Ararat, which will threaten
    Armenia and the Armenian people.




    From: A. Papazian
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