http://www.iht.com/articles/2007/09/25/africa/25iran.php


Ahmadinejad, at Columbia, parries and puzzles


By Helene Cooper 


Published: September 24, 2007He said that there were no homosexuals in Iran - 
not one - and that the Nazi slaughter of six million Jews should not be treated 
as fact, but theory, and therefore open to debate and more research.

Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, the president of Iran, aired those and other bewildering 
thoughts in a two-hour verbal contest at Columbia University Monday, providing 
some ammunition to people who said there was no point in inviting him to speak. 
Yet his appearance also offered evidence of why he is widely admired in the 
developing world for his defiance toward Western, especially American, power.

In repeated clashes with his hosts, Ahmadinejad accused the United States of 
supporting terrorist groups, and characterized as hypocritical American and 
European efforts to rein in Iran's nuclear ambitions.

"If you have created the fifth generation of atomic bombs and are testing them 
already, who are you to question other people who just want nuclear power," 
Ahmadinejad said, adding, pointedly: "I think the politicians who are after 
atomic bombs, politically, they're backwards. Retarded."

His speech at Columbia, in advance of his planned speech Tuesday at the United 
Nations, produced a day of intense protests and counterprotests around the 
campus. It was a performance at once both defiant - he said Iran could not 
recognize Israel "because it is based on ethnic discrimination, occupation and 
usurpation and it consistently threatens its neighbors" - and conciliatory - he 
said he wanted to visit ground zero to "show my respect" for what he called "a 
tragic event."

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And he said that even if the Holocaust did occur, the Palestinians should not 
pay the price for it.

He began the afternoon on the defensive.

Lee Bollinger, the president of Columbia, under intense attack for the 
invitation - one protester outside the campus auditorium where Ahmadinejad 
spoke passed out fliers that said, "Bollinger, too bad bin Laden is not 
available" - opened the event with a 10-minute verbal assault.

He said, "Mr. President, you exhibit all the signs of a petty and cruel 
dictator," adding, "You are either brazenly provocative or astonishingly 
uneducated."

The Iranian president, who was seated 10 feet away from him on the stage, wore 
a frozen smile. The anti-Ahmadinejad portion of the audience, which looked to 
be about 70 percent of it, cheered and chortled.

Bollinger praised himself and Columbia for showing they believed in freedom of 
speech by inviting the Iranian president, then continued his attack. He said it 
was "well documented" that Iran was a state sponsor of terrorism, accused Iran 
of fighting a proxy war against the United States in Iraq and questioned why 
Iran has refused "to adhere to the international standards" of disclosure for 
its nuclear program.

"I doubt," Bollinger concluded, "that you will have the intellectual courage to 
answer these questions."

Ahmadinejad did not directly answer the questions, but he did address them. 
Before doing so though, he said pointedly:

"In Iran, tradition requires when you invite a person to be a speaker, we 
actually respect our students enough to allow them to make their own judgment, 
and don't think it's necessary before the speech is even given to come in with 
a series of complaints to provide vaccination to the students and faculty."

He added, to some cheers, "Nonetheless, I shall not begin by being affected by 
this unfriendly treatment."

Ahmadinejad's much-talked-about appearance at Columbia was the opening act of a 
week of dramatic theater here as the United Nations General Assembly opened its 
annual session. He and his nemesis, President George W. Bush, are scheduled to 
address the General Assembly Tuesday.

Bush, asked about Columbia's decision to invite Ahmadinejad, told Fox News that 
it was "O.K. with me," but added that he might not have extended the invitation 
himself.

"When you really think about it," Bush said, "he's the head of a state sponsor 
of terror, he's - and yet an institution in our country gives him a chance to 
express his point of view, which really speaks to the freedoms of the country. 
I'm not sure I'd have offered the same invitation."

Ahmadinejad is allowed under international law and diplomatic protocols to 
travel freely within a 25-mile radius of Columbus Circle. But the police said 
last week that he would not be allowed near ground zero.

Inside the auditorium, the Columbia students laughed appreciatively when 
Ahmadinejad pushed back against the attempts by Dean John H. Coatsworth, the 
event's moderator, to get him to stop rambling and answer questions directly.

"Do you or your government seek the destruction of the state of Israel?" 
Coatsworth asked.

"We love all people," Ahmadinejad dodged. "We are friends of the Jews. There 
are many Jews living peacefully in Iran." He went on to say that the 
Palestinian "nation" should be allowed a referendum to decide its own future.

Coatsworth persisted: "I think you can answer that question with a simple yes 
or no."

Ahmadinejad was having none of it. "You ask the question and then you want the 
answer the way you want to hear it," he shot back. "I ask you, is the 
Palestinian issue not a question of international importance? Please tell me 
yes or no."

For that, he got a round of applause from the students, who had lined up four 
hours before the speech to get into the auditorium. Online tickets evaporated 
in 90 minutes last week, they said, almost on par with a Bruce Springsteen 
concert.

"I'm proud of my university today," said Stina Reksten, a 28-year-old graduate 
student from Norway. "I don't want to confuse the very dire human rights 
situation in Iran with the issue here, which is freedom of speech. This is 
about academic freedom."

It remains unclear whether Columbia's leaders were able to mollify critics 
through their critical treatment of Ahmadinejad. But they made some headway: 
the American Israel Public Affairs Committee sent out an e-mail message shortly 
after the speech with the subject line, "A Must Read: Columbia University 
President's Intro of Iran's Ahmadinejad today."

Inside was a transcript of Bollinger's introduction.

Steven Lee Myers contributed reporting.


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