What Has Iran Done To Provoke New Sanctions?

Irregular Question:

What has Iran actually done to deserve getting the additional sanctions passed by the U.S. House of Representatives today?

Irregular Answer:

Iran sent Mahmoud Ahmadinejad to speak at Columbia University and the United Nations.

———–

No War Against Iran black bumper stickerMahmoud Ahmadinejad is not a person worthy of admiration. However, he is not the entire Iranian nation.

As a nation, Iran is actually cooperating with the IAEA, the international body set to ensure that international proliferation of nuclear weapons is kept under control. The IAEA says that progress is being made. It makes no sense to reward this progress with new sanctions against Iran.

The new sanctions Congress approved today among to punishment against the nation of Iran for one man’s speeches at Columbia University and the United Nations. For that matter, the new sanctions did not even punish the content of the speeches, given that they were drawn up before the speeches were even made. The new sanctions are punishment just for the fact that Ahmadinejad’s speeches took place at all.

For Congress to take this extreme action with such tiny provocation is beyond irresponsible. It’s ridiculous.

About Peregrin Wood

A shortened northern American wrapped warmly in his cloak, scanning the world for irregular news.
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4 Responses to What Has Iran Done To Provoke New Sanctions?

  1. Tom says:

    Hopefully Ahmahdinejad won’t return the “favor” and cut oil consumption. With the dollar weakening so fast, Bush better stop overplaying “our” hand.

  2. Tom says:

    “consumption” was supposed to be “production” back there (sorry)

  3. Vynce says:

    i hope he does cut production. the only way we’re going to wean ourselves is by necessity, and the more gradually that happens the less catastrophically.

  4. Iroquois says:

    I notice you don’t provide any links so here is one. You’ll notice it’s just a tweaking of a law already in place, giving Dubya less discretion.

    http://money.cnn.com/news/newsfeeds/articles/djf500/200709251353DOWJONESDJONLINE000585_FORTUNE5.htm

    you don’t seriously believe…never mind,…you understand…it’s not the holocaust denying stuff, it’s the threat Iran’s nuclear capability would pose to the region, particularly Israel, but the Sunni countries aren’t too happy either. Here’s the latest little spat between “Arab brothers” from a moderate Arab press:

    http://jordantimes.com/index.php?news=2427

    Kingdom offers no haven for Iran opposition group – Judeh

    AMMAN (JT) – Jordan on Monday rejected as “utterly baseless” news reports that it has granted asylum to members of an Iranian opposition group.

    The Kingdom “did not receive any leader or member of Mujahedin-e Khalq, and does not allow the organisation to operate on Jordanian soil as claimed by Iranian news reports”, Government Spokesperson Nasser Judeh said in remarks to the press.

    Judeh expressed shock at such allegations as well as the media campaign targeting Jordan “with the aim of attacking the Kingdom and casting doubts on its stands”.

    He added that such reports come despite efforts exerted by His Majesty King Abdullah to build brotherly relations between the two countries based on mutual respect and understanding.

    Mujahedin-e Khalq, or the People’s Mujahedin of Iran, is an Islamic socialist organisation that advocates the overthrow of Iran’s government.

    The group, which was harboured by the former Iraqi regime, is designated as a terrorist group by the US, Canada and the EU.

    Jordan and Iran restored diplomatic ties in the early 1990s after the two states severed their relations in 1980 following the outbreak of the eight-year Iran-Iraq war.

    The King paid an historic visit to Tehran in September 2003.

    25 September 2007

    snarl, hiss.
    and here’s an excerpt from the 9/25 editorial:

    http://jordantimes.com/index.php?news=2414

    Hot times in the region

    The drums of war are beating once again in the Middle East. At least the rhetoric seems to have gone on high pitch.

    Iran parades its military prowess. At a recent ceremonial parade commemorating the 1980 war with Iraq, it displayed its latest models of military hardware, including a missile capable of reaching targets over 1,800 kilometres away and a new military plane.

    If anything, the Iranian leaders’ rhetoric seems provocative and threatening to the US, Israel and all countries considered to be aiding the US militarism in the region.

    The Iranian leader’s speech in New York stating he would not attack any country was also quoted in the paper (without the holocaust-denying stuff) not on the front page above the fold like the other two articles, but nested in several layers of indexing.

    Oh, yes, the Sunni countries, especially the ones seen to cooperate with the U.S.–are quite nervous.

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