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07 July 2010
By Kourosh Ziabari
The world countries are competing with each other in
imposing new financial sanctions against Iran. While
the Iranian people still hasn't forgotten the bitter
memory of 8-year war with the Baathist Iraq which was
masterminded and fostered by the United States and its
European allies, new rounds of crippling sanctions
directed against the most strategic industries of Iran
come after one another in what is claimed to be the
international movement of preventing Tehran from
acquiring nuclear weapons.
Although the International Atomic Energy Agency and
the G5+1 have so far failed to put forward hard
evidence that demonstrates the deviation of Iran in
its nuclear activities towards military purposes, the
fourth round of United Nations Security Council
sanctions was agreed on June 9, 2010, targeting a
number of Iranian companies and individuals who have
allegedly participated in Iran's nuclear and missile
program.
The Iranian people still remember the painful days of
war with Iraq under the late dictator Saddam Hussein
who was armed and equipped by the United States and 14
European countries. The First Persian Gulf War cost
the lives of more than 500,000 Iranians and imposed
some US $500 billion damage on Iran.
On June 9, 1992, Ted Koppel reported on ABC's
Nightline program that Saddam Hussein received much of
its financing, intelligence and military help from the
United States and the administration of George H.
Bush. In 1982, Iraq was removed from the U.S. list of
State Sponsors of Terrorism and this enabled the
Reagan Administration to transfer a huge amount of
dual-use technology to Iraq. According to a May 1994
report by the U.S. Senate Banking Committee,
pathogenic (disease producing), toxigenic (poisonous),
and other biological research materials were exported
to Iraq [during the 8-year war with Iran] pursuant to
application and licensing by the U.S. Department of
Commerce.
The United Kingdom, Soviet Union, Netherlands, Italy,
France and Germany also played their own role in
helping Saddam massacre and slaughter the Iranian
people. Britain was said to have exported thiodiglycol
(a mustard gas precursor) and thionyl chloride (a
nerve gas precursor) to Iraq in 1988 and 1989.
France sold first-line Mirage F-1
fighter-bombers to Iraq, as well as providing Super
Etendard attack aircraft. Between 1977 and 1987, Paris
contracted to sell a total of 133 Mirage F-1 fighters
to Iraq. In 1984, Italy's state-owned Agusta
helicopter manufacturer sold $164 million worth of
helicopters to Iraq. In early 1987, Moscow delivered a
squadron of twenty-four MiG-29 Fulcrums to Baghdad.
Soviet Union also helped train the Iraq's infantry and
delivered a number of surface-to-air missiles,
air-to-air missiles, helicopters and interceptors to
Baghdad.
The erosive war was claimed to be a
counterbalance to the post-revolutionary Iran which
was experiencing the first years of extrication from
the monarchy of a U.S.-backed Shah. It was declared to
be a battle against the newly-established government;
however, it paralyzed the economy of the country,
killed thousands of innocent civilians, immersed the
nation into a long period of social crisis and
aggravated the daily lives of ordinary people.
Seemingly, the history is being
repeated once again. The western leaders send
sympathetic messages to the Iranian people and declare
that they want the well-being of our nation. They
express their understanding of the status of Iranian
people and assert that they want to empower the
"subjugated" and "oppressed" Iranians. In a March 2010
televised message directed at Iran, the U.S. President
Barack Obama stated the willingness of his country
to provide the Iranians with the facilities of
a more hopeful future. He said that his country
believes in the dignity of every human being. He vowed
the pursuance of diplomatic efforts to incorporate
Iran into the international community and expressed
hopes that his country can reach out to the Iranian
people in peaceful, constructive ways.
"Our offer of comprehensive diplomatic contacts and
dialogue stands," Mr. Obama said in the video.
"Indeed, over the course of the last year, it is the
Iranian government that has chosen to isolate itself
and to choose a self-defeating focus on the past over
a commitment to build a better future.
However, the United States and its European allies, in
long with their past trajectory, are recurrently
failing to practice what they preach. The financial
sanctions which have been imposed on Iran by the UNSC,
U.S. and EU tend to worsen the daily life of ordinary
Iranians whose are inextricably dependent on the state
revenues of oil and gas industry. Already stricken
with the consequences of continued domestic failures
in economy and growing inflation, the new sanctions
will harm the Iranians by doubling the prices and
reducing their purchasing power.
The new sanctions against Iran have nothing to do with
the government of Iran which the western leaders are
entangled in a tedious and uninteresting conflict
with. These sanctions, and any kind of unpremeditated
actions like this, will only injure the ordinary
people of Iran who should suffer from the effects of
power game between the governments. - Kourosh Ziabari is an Iranian freelance journalist and media
correspondent. He has interviewed political commentator and linguist Noam
Chomsky, member of New Zealand parliament Keith Locke, Australian politician Ian
Cohen, member of German Parliament Ruprecht Polenz, former Mexican President
Vicente Fox, former U.S. National Security Council advisor Peter D. Feaver,
Nobel Prize laureate in Physics Wolfgang Ketterle, Nobel Prize laureate in
Chemistry Kurt Wüthrich, Nobel Prize laureate in biology Robin Warren, famous
German political prisoner Ernst Zündel, Brazilian cartoonist Carlos Latuff,
American author Stephen Kinzer, syndicated journalist Eric Margolis, former
assistant of the U.S. Department of the Treasury Paul Craig Roberts,
American-Palestinian journalist Ramzy Baroud and the former President of the
American Motion Picture Arts and Sciences Sid Ganis. |