The Bush Administration's policy (insistence on zero enrichment of uranium, regime change and isolation of Iran) and the policy of the radicals around President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad (unlimited civilian nuclear capability, selective inspections and replacing the United States as the region's dominant power) have set the two countries on a collision course. Yet the mere retirement of George W. Bush's neocons or Ahmadinejad's radicals may not be sufficient to avoid the disaster of war.
The ill-informed foreign policy debate on Iran contributes to a paradigm of enmity between the United States and Iran, which limits the foreign policy options of future U.S. administrations to various forms of confrontation while excluding more constructive approaches.
A successful policy on Iran must begin by reassessing some basic assumptions:
3 comments:
Monte, do you have a stalker from seminary? :P
Thanks for reminding me about Clipper. I signed up for it, but then I forgot to us it.
In a post at my blog on Persopolis, the new movie, I argued that one should oppose any invasion by the US of Iran, at the same time give no political support to the Islamist regime.
I support revolution from below, with no help from US, which is also an oppressor.
We answered Ahmedinajad here: "Judaism and Islam: Missing the Point of Christ."
Post a Comment