Akbar Ganji’s Release: Mullah Window Dressing
Sunday, March 19th, 2006By Andrew L. Jaffee
Just as a coincidence — all sarcasm intended — Iran’s terrorist, Islamist rulers have released Akbar Ganji, “Iran’s most prominent dissident.” Some coincidence. This just happens to be a time when Iran’s leaders are facing international pressure for their “alleged” nuclear weapons program, and the country’s President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad is shooting his bellicose mouth off about annihilating Israel. Token gestures or not, Iran is a serious threat for which no amount of appeasement (”engagement”) will cure.
The BBC was kind enough to point out that:
…many Iranians thought Ganji, 46, would never be freed from jail, even though his sentence was due to end.
The release comes days before the United Nations Security Council is due to discuss Iran’s stand-off with Western nations over the country’s nuclear programme.
The problem is that the West, most likely Europe and Canada, will buy this cynical move by Iran’s mullahs. It will give the trembling, weak hands of their political elite yet another excuse to put off referral of Iran to the Security Council for consideration of punitive sanctions.
This misguided placators of the International Herald Tribune believe Iran is not really that much of a threat, and that the Bush administration should play nice with the crazy mullahs:
…it’s time for Washington to call Ahmadinejad’s bluff by playing the card the hard-liners fear most: a dramatic U.S. offer of reconciliation, including a security guarantee like that offered North Korea. Such a move would expose the rifts in the regime, deny the hard-liners the confrontation they court, and deprive the bankrupt revolutionaries of their Great Satan.
Bold moves have never been a part of Washington’s game plan toward Tehran. But a power play like rapprochement may be the best chance to deal a new deck that includes mutual respect rather than the same old cards of mutual confrontation.



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