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  • Peace Seems To Trump War In The Middle East

    PEACE SEEMS TO TRUMP WAR IN THE MIDDLE EAST

    EDITORIAL | DECEMBER 3, 2013 5:45 PM
    ________________________________

    By Edmond Y. Azadian

    The Middle East is a tinderbox ready for a conflagration when hit by
    any spark. The Bush-Cheney administration not only failed to avoid
    triggering that spark but it deliberately and recklessly began a war
    against Iraq which continues to be a bloodbath to this day. We have
    yet to see the day Mr. Cheney's prediction comes true - that Iraqi
    people would embrace the aggressors with flowers.

    All in all, the war initiated on a lie by the above-named warmongers,
    murdered more civilians than the dictator Saddam Hussein could have
    ever slain.

    Additionally, that war cost the lives of 4,500 young Americans, besides
    the 50,000 injured and maimed veterans, suffering from physical and
    mental ailments who have become dependent on US taxpayers for a living.

    The war in Iraq cost $3 trillion, bringing the US economy to its knees.

    The war hatched by Paul Wolfowitz and his neocon allies was waged
    primarily to eliminate a threat to Israel. Saddam Hussein had not
    threatened - nor was he in the position to threaten - the US.

    It is believed that Mr. Cheney's plan was to expand the war to Iran and
    Syria had the Iraqi adventure proved to be a success, as he imagined.

    While awaiting the flowers to shower his way, Mr. Cheney vacated his
    bunker at the White House.

    It was left to President Obama to clean up the mess. President Obama
    has been trying to make good on his campaign pledge to create more
    peaceful situations in the troubled regions of the world. Yet almost
    halfway in his second term, he has yet to claim victories in his
    domestic policies: Obamacare is in trouble, the immigration bill is
    still fuzzy and the rest of the domestic agenda still in the works.

    Reneging on his campaign promise to recognize the A Genocide will
    not impact on his image of a peacemaker, though it will disillusion
    the Armenian community.

    Mark Laudler writes in the New York Times: "Deep war wariness of
    the Americans has reinforced Mr. Obama's instinct for negotiated
    settlements over unilateral action. While the White House officials
    suggest that the president always planned to arrive at this moment and
    that everything that came before it - from troop surge in Afghanistan
    to the commando raid that killed Osama Bin Laden was cleaning up
    after his predecessors."

    Through intense shuttle diplomacy, Secretary of State John Kerry was
    able to bring the Israelis and Palestinians to the negotiation table,
    while West Bank settlements are continuing inexorably, contrary to
    his admonition to Israelis to freeze the settlement expansion. No
    one knows where these negotiations could lead, but at least parties
    are talking to each other, after a long and fruitless hiatus.

    Jodi Rudoren writes in his "Memo from Jerusalem" (New York Times,
    November 25): "Benjamin Netanyahu's self image first and foremost
    is shaped by wanting to lead Israel out of the shadow of the Iranian
    bomb. His image is not driven by being the peacemaker, creating two
    states and dividing Jerusalem," which means that negotiators can spin
    their wheels endlessly to no avail.

    But on the other hand the US administration has ceased two
    opportunities to bring breakthroughs to two intractable problems,
    which could cause region wide devastation, if left unchecked: one is
    negotiations on Iran's nuclear facilities and the other convening
    a conference on the war in Syria. These two issues vitally impact
    Armenians in the Middle East.

    President Ruhani of Iran launched a charm offensive when he attended
    the UN General Assembly last September, and after a series of dramatic
    sorties, he finally talked to President Obama over the phone and
    that conversation kept the diplomatic ball rolling until an interim
    agreement was reached between Iran and five major countries of the UN
    Security Council. After a six-month period, the parties will negotiate
    a final deal, which, if successful, will give a clear foreign policy
    victory to the Obama administration.

    This agreement calls for Iran to keep its uranium enrichment to no more
    than 5 percent and convert its stock of nearly 20-percent-enriched
    uranium to 5 percent, halt construction at a planned heavy water
    reactor and also allow intrusive international inspections, which
    can detect any cheating or non-compliance of the agreement at an
    early stage.

    The international community, in return, will ease some sanctions on
    Iran, allowing the use of $4 billion in frozen assets and $30 billion
    from the sale of oil and petrochemical products, which will boost
    Iran's sagging economy.

    The agreement has worried Israel, which wants to settle for nothing
    less than bombing Iran's nuclear facilities.

    Prime Minister Netanyahu himself has been leading a campaign against
    the agreement, calling President Obama naïve and weak against a wily
    Iran. Of course, the Israeli lobby is in action to derail the deal.

    The Wall Street Journal even had published a picture of Neville
    Chamberlain signing his agreement with Hitler in 1938, an appeasement
    policy that led nowhere at that time and allowed Hitler precious time
    to prepare his strategic plans.

    Anyone questioning Mr. Obama's resolve should bear in mind that he just
    ordered B-52 bombers to the area disputed between Japan and China -
    and China is a world power, not a regional one.

    It is ironic that while the Obama administration was negotiating
    the deal, the US congress was drafting a bill for stricter sanctions
    against Iran. And there was a bipartisan coalition supporting the bill,
    with Democratic Sen. Chuck Schumer spearheading the movement with
    the cooperation of Harry Reid, Senate majority leader, also a Democrat.

    While the debate is raging about the merits or the dangers of the
    deal, the Economist states: "Bombing would probably set Iran back by
    only a few years but it would certainly remake the Middle East in a
    very different way. Nobody knows whether the gamble with Iran will
    pay off. But it is already clear that the risks are low, the prize
    is potentially vast and the alternative is dire."

    The other breakthrough came about the war in Syria.

    After the debacles of Iraq and Libya - under the nose of Russia and
    China - Syria proved to be a tough nut to crack. President Obama
    was pushed into a corner to bomb Syria, accusing the Assad regime of
    using chemical weapons against its population.

    As a reluctant warrior, he referred the issue to the US Congress,
    while losing the support of a close ally, Britain, which had been
    badly burnt previously in Iraq, falling prey to former Prime Minister
    Tony Blair's lies and verbal gymnastics in support of the Bush-Cheney
    line. Russia provided the fig leaf the Obama administration needed,
    by proposing to dismantle Syria's chemical weapons stockpile, which
    has since been carried out successfully.

    While international negotiations were moving forward, Assad's forces
    gained ground in the battlefield with outright support from Russia and
    Iran. The factions fighting Assad's government sometimes neutralized
    each other but they mostly raised the specter of another extremist
    Islamist regime in the region, alarming the West.

    The opposition was mostly composed of mercenaries, hired by Qatar,
    Saudi Arabia, Turkey and Jordan, the same concoction which had been
    sent to Libya to overthrow Col. Muammar Qaddafi.

    Now a meeting is scheduled for January 22 in Geneva. The New York
    Times says, "Regime change in Iran and even in Syria is out; cutting
    deals with former adversaries is in."

    Under Hafez al-Assad and his son, Bashar al-Assad, Syria has been one
    of the countries in the Middle East - along with Iraq - where politics
    and religion have been separate. Besides, Assad has been extremely
    benevolent toward Christian minorities, including Armenians. Aleppo
    has been the last bastion of Armenian culture and literature,
    even in recent years. Besieged Armenians in Aleppo today enjoy the
    government's protection and receive food supplies. His opponents have
    already destroyed Armenian churches, or have replaced the crosses
    with their black flags.

    In peacetime, Syria has been a friendly nation to Armenia.

    In Iran, the stakes were even higher for the Armenians. Had Iran
    been bombed, Armenia would have lost one of its reliable lifelines
    to the outside world. Besides, the West always harbors plans to use
    any occasion to compromise Iran's territorial integrity, by gifting
    northern Iran to Azerbaijan, which would increase the population of
    the Aliyev dynasty-led Azerbaijan by 20 million, spewing words of hate,
    on Armenia's border.

    The peace prospect is beneficial for the region and in particular,
    for Armenia. On the other hand, US businesses are gearing up for
    hefty deals with Iran.

    After suffering so much from wars, extremism, terrorism and
    colonialism, the nations in the region deserve peaceful and safe times,
    which after all, will deliver a well-deserved diplomatic and economic
    victory to the US.

    - See more at:
    http://www.mirrorspectator.com/2013/12/03/peace-seems-to-trump-war-in-the-middle-east/#sthash.R57aCgaY.dpuf


    From: Baghdasarian
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