Hillary’s Hypocritical Comments in South Asia
Recently, the U.S. Secretary of
State Hillary Rodham Clinton visited Bangladesh . It was a short visit.
She flew into Dhaka from China
after convincing Chinese leaders to free blind
dissident Chen Guangcheng. The stop in Bangladesh
was "personal" to renew
old friendships with Bangladesh . Two
of her “favorite men” in the world are Bangladeshis – Nobel Laureate Professor Muhammed
Yunus, a pioneer in providing microcredit to the poor, and Sir Fazle Hasan
Abed, founder of the world's largest development organization - BRAC.
Since 1995 when she
visited Bangladesh with her
daughter Chelsea, Ms. Clinton has been
something of a household name in Bangladesh . That was quite obvious from the throngs of
people that stood four to five rows deep along the motorcade route to welcome
her recently. A sign along the motorcade route read, "Heartiest
congratulation to our beloved U.S.
foreign minister Hillary Clinton." Many in Bangladesh
hopes that she would one day return to Bangladesh
in Air Force One as President of the USA .
During
her visit, Secretary Clinton met with Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina Wazed and
the Opposition Leader Khaleda Zia. The U.S. State Department has not been
pleased with Hasina Government’s treatment of Professor Yunus over the past 18
months. Talks between Secretary Clinton and Foreign Minister Dipu Moni focused
on Bangladesh ’s
potential to become an economic powerhouse. Goldman Sachs has listed Bangladesh
among its “Next 11” countries that have potential to become major economies.
Ms. Dipu Moni urged Ms. Clinton to assist Bangladesh
in lowering U.S.
tariffs on Bangladeshi imports while they explored a long-term trade and
investment agreement. Ms. Clinton expressed hope that this visit will
illustrate the U.S. ’s
commitment to Bangladesh ’s
transition to a peaceful democracy.
In India ,
Ms. Clinton stopped in Kolkata, a first for a U.S. Secretary of State, and met
with West Bengal ’s chief minister Mamata
Banerjee. During her trip she cajoled India 's
leaders to reduce oil imports from Iran . She was asked why she was not
tougher on Israel ,
which has its own undeclared nuclear arsenal. She tried to refute the premise and defend U.S. government policies. She
called the prospect of a nuclear-armed Iran
"the principal threat" and said that U.S.
ally Israel
had “legitimate” worries.
"I
think that Israel is very worried that if Iran were to get a nuclear weapon,
there might be a decision by some future leader and that would be
devastating," Clinton said. Israel , she said, must protect itself from Iran — "a regime that has a
history of aggressive behavior, and I don't think you deal with aggressors by
giving in to them." She stressed that the United States
has no quarrel with the Iranian people.
After
the loss of India , Britain 's new
prime minster, Winston Churchill, was committed to stopping his country's
empire from unraveling further. The U.S. President Eisenhower and his secretary
of state, John Foster Dulles, were dedicated to rolling back communism and
defending democratic governments threatened by Moscow 's “machinations”. In Iran 's case,
with diplomacy having failed and a military incursion infeasible (the Korean
War was underway), they decided to take care of "madman Mossadeq" through a covert
action under the supervision of the secretary of state's brother, Director of
Central Intelligence (DCI) Allen W. Dulles.
Allen Dulles approved $1 million
on April 4, 1953 to be used "in any way that would bring about the fall of
Mosaddeq." They found a traitor Gen. Fazlollah Zahedi as the man to
spearhead a coup to topple Dr. Mosaddeq. And the rest is history!
On August 19,
1953, Dr. Mosaddeq was removed in that CIA-sponsored coup and Gen. Zahedi was
appointed Prime Minister. Dr. Mosaddeq was arrested at the Officers' Club and
transferred to a military jail shortly after. On
August 22, the Shah returned from exile. Dr. Mosaddeq was sentenced to death,
which was later commuted to three years’ solitary confinement in a military
prison; he later died while in house arrest in 1967. His supporters were
rounded up, tortured and killed.
Zahedi's new
government soon reached an agreement with foreign oil companies to form a
consortium and "restore the flow of Iranian oil to world markets in
substantial quantities", giving the U.S.
and Great Britain the lion's
share of Iran 's
oil. In return, the U.S.
massively funded the Shah's resulting government, including his army and the
notorious secret police force, SAVAK. Over the next several years tens of
thousands of Iranians were killed by the agents of the Savak, which was created
under the guidance of American and Israeli
intelligence officers in 1957.
The puppet regime of the Shah was
overthrown in a popular
revolution in 1979, thus ending a quarter-century long history of Iranian hostage-taking
by the U.S.
government, courtesy of the CIA. And as the later evidences revealed from the
documents seized in the U.S. Embassy in Tehran ,
the Carter Administration was involved in a conspiracy to unseat and sabotage
the new revolutionary government.
In the
post-revolutionary years, the US
government "began to look more favorably toward Saddam Hussein as a
potential counterweight to the Ayatollah Khomeini,” says Zbigniew Brzezinski,
National Security Advisor to President Carter. Even Iraq ’s
invasion of Iran could not
possibly have taken place without the US involvement. In his book, Saddam
Hussein: The Politics Of Revenge, Said K. Aburish says that during Saddam
Hussein’s visit to Amman , Jordan in 1979, there is "considerable
evidence that he (Saddam Hussein) discussed his plans to invade Iran
with the CIA agents."
During
the Iran-Iraq war the Reagan Administration removed Iraq from a list of State Sponsors
of Terrorism so that the Dual-use technology could be sold. It also supported Iraq with several billion dollars worth of
economic aid, non-U.S. origin weaponry, military intelligence, Special
Operations training, and direct involvement in warfare against Iran .
President
Ronald Reagan announced that the US
"could not afford to allow Iraq
to lose the war to Iran ",
and that it “would do whatever was necessary to prevent Iraq from losing the war with Iran .” He
dispatched Donald Rumsfeld in 1983 and 1984 as his personal emissary to Saddam
Hussein. The CIA Director William Casey personally spearheaded the effort “to
ensure that Iraq
had sufficient military weapons, ammunition and vehicles to avoid losing the
Iran-Iraq war… The United
States also provided strategic operational
advice to the Iraqis to better use their assets in combat. For example, in
1986, President Reagan sent a secret message to Saddam Hussein telling him that
Iraq should step up its air
war and bombing of Iran .
This message was delivered by Vice President George H. W. Bush who communicated
it to Egyptian President Mubarak, who in turn passed the message to Saddam
Hussein. Similar strategic operational military advice was passed to Saddam
Hussein through various meetings with European and Middle Eastern heads of
state” (quoted from the sworn court declaration of former NSC official Howard
Teicher, dated 1/31/95, regarding 'Iraqgate’).
At the height of war
with Iran, the US government exported 70
shipments (including Bacillus
anthracis) of pathogenic (i.e.,
'disease producing'), toxigenic (or 'poisonous'), and other biological research
materials to Iraq
pursuant to application and licensing by the U.S.
Department of Commerce. The U.S. Centers for Disease Control (CDC) sent Iraq 14 separate agents "with
biological warfare significance," according to Senator Riegle's
investigators. It did not matter to the US
government that Saddam Hussein was using 101,000 chemical munitions against Iran . When the
Iraqi military turned its chemical weapons on the Kurds in 1988, killing
approximately 5,000 people in the town of Halabja
and injuring thousands more, the Reagan administration actually sought to hide
Iraqi leadership culpability by suggesting that the Iranians might have carried out the
attack.
The
U.S. Navy cruiser USS Vincennes shot down Iran Air Flight 655 within Iranian airspace which killed all
290 civilian passengers and crew on July 3, 1988. The United States has never formally apologized for
the attack, and instead in 1990, Captain William Rogers was awarded the Legion
of Merit by President George W. Bush for his service as the Commanding Officer
of the Vincennes .
Even after all
these years with Saddam Hussein killed, and the Iranian revolution 33 years
old, the relationship between the USA
and Iran
has not improved an iota. The USA
continues to provide material support for terrorist activities inside Iran and has been at the forefront of its
all-out economic war, at the behest of Israel ,
against Iran ,
falsely accusing that the latter is trying to develop nuclear weapons. This charge is absurd given the fact that Iran ’s uranium enrichment program is for
peaceful purposes and that both Israeli and US intelligence agencies have
concluded that Tehran
is not developing a nuclear bomb.
The Iranian
leaders, since at least 1997, have maintained that they are not after nuclear
bombs. In 2006 President Ahmadinejad declared that “Nuclear weapons have no
place in Iran ’s defense
doctrine and Iran
is not a threat to any country.” In his
interview with NBC’s Brian Williams he said, “We are against atomic bomb.” In
2009 the Iranian supreme leader Ayatullah Ali Khamenei declared, “We
fundamentally reject nuclear weapons and prohibit the use and production of
nuclear weapons.” He even issued a fatwa.
Can Ms. Clinton
cite a single such statement from any of the Israeli leaders about their own
nuclear program? The State of Israel from day one of her illegitimate birth has
been an aggressor and at war with all her neighboring countries. Who is
threatening whom?
And yet, despite
many such clear denouncements of nuclear weapons by Iranian leaders and
repeated assurances, along with the unequivocal assessment by her own
government’s intelligence agencies, Secretary Clinton had no bite of conscience
to repeating lies against Iran .
During
her visit to Bangladesh , Ms.
Clinton advocated for “non-interference” in
Grameen Bank, urging the Bangladesh
government not to hamper the internal operations of the bank. One simply wishes
if she is ready herself to walk the talk when it comes to Iran . Her
behavior can be summed up by a single word - Hypocrisy!
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