Iran has been allied with al-Qaeda since 1995.  The Guardian, blinded by
leftist ideology, rarely gets it right.
 
B
 
 
http://eursoc.com/news/fullstory.php/aid/1620/National_Suicide_.html

National Suicide? 


The Guardian leads today
<http://www.guardian.co.uk/Iraq/Story/0,,2085192,00.html> with US reports
that Iran is planning to team up with al-Qaeda and Sunni militants for a
"summer offensive" designed to force the US out of Iraq.

Most US sources and many in the British military argue that Tehran is
already behind a series of attacks on allied troops in Iraq. However, the US
officials quoted in the Guardian's story say that the campaign will be
stepped up over the next few months with the intention of causing "political
mutiny in Washington and a US retreat."

It is also claimed that Iran has reversed its anti-Taliban policy in
Afghanistan and was now actively supporting Taliban attacks against NATO
forces there.

Commentators generally agree that while Tehran, al-Qaeda and Iraq's numerous
Shia and Sunni militias share a fierce anti-Americanism, their differences
make it unlikely that they would unite in jihad against US forces except on
an informal basis. This may underestimate anti-US feeling and Iran's desire
for regional dominance: It also ignores the "fluid relationships" that have
emerged from the chaos of Iraq.

But what to make of these stories? There is little doubt Iran is testing its
luck in Iraq, well aware that the US is not spoiling for another war in the
region. However, a concerted effort, in allegiance with al-Qaeda, to force
the Americans out, seems to underestimate US resolve. It is true that many
Americans are tired of the war and hope to see an end to it. But to infer
from this that American nerves would shatter in the face of an al-Qaeda /
Iran assault strikes me as an extreme example of wishful thinking.

If anything, it would strengthen US resolve, and strengthen the position of
hard-liners in Washington who want to escalate rather than wind down the
Iraq effort. It would place Democratic opponents of the Iraq War in a
difficult position. Leaving a hopeless situation is one thing; running from
a fight you didn't pick quite another. Americans might believe that the
invasion of Iraq was a mistake, but few would argue that a robust reponse to
al-Qaeda (and Iran, if it chooses to ally itself with the terrorist network)
would be unmerited - especially if they are engaged in an all-out assault on
US forces in Iraqi territory.

Indeed, such a move by Iran would almost certainly put a hawk in the White
House at the end of next year. Is that what Tehran would want - if there was
anything left of the city by then?

EURSOC is surprised the Guardian hasn't used the unnamed source's claims as
evidence that the US is planning strikes on Iran: This was the big hysteria
earlier this year in the liberal press, but the claims soon subsided. If the
Americans really did want to flatten Iran, linking Tehran explicitly with
al-Qaeda would be a good way to warm up the public.

 



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