At Least Those Iranian Nukes Will Make for Some Lovely Mushroom Clouds
Michael Ledeen:
Actually, Michael, the teacher's union abolished history in favor of a survey course called "Why All Other Cultures Are Superior To Our Own". As a result, you'll find a mere handful of public-school educated Americans who know anything at all about history.
Were it not for The History Channel, we wouldn't have anyone under the age of 30 who could tell you a blasted thing about WWII.
I'm afraid the information hoarders in this Administration will indeed succeed, at least until the first mushroom cloud blossoms over an American city.
This is the pattern that led us straight to 9/11. For that matter, it got us to Pearl Harbor and to Khobar Towers, and to the Beirut bombings of our embassy and the Marine barracks. It is a pattern of denial and self-deception, driven by an absolute conviction that the truth must not be passed on to people whose view of the world differs from your own. And so our kids get blown up in Iraq, while the Bushes, Rices, Rumsfelds, Cambones, Tenets, Negropontes, and their cohorts deny that we know who’s doing it. Deputy Secretary of State Burns, the architect of our failed Middle East mission, goes to Israel to thump his chest and talk about getting tough with Iran, meaning tough talk and a few symbolic gestures, certainly not regime change. Such people talk about “insurgency” as if the shattered remnants of Saddam’s ruined state were capable of mounting the terror war we face, when common sense points in the direction of professional intelligence services in Tehran and Damascus.
We are not alone in this suicidal self-deception. Our friends across the water, those tough-minded Englishmen who have recently decided to abolish the Royal Navy for all intents and purposes, have been frenetically seducing us into one diplomat failure after another with regard to Iran for many years now. It is no surprise, then, that the London Times yesterday quoted British officials are denying there is a “smoking gun” to show Iranian support for terrorists in Iraq. I think the unnamed officials who are saying that are either out of the intelligence loop or lying. American intelligence has known for at least a year and a half that the frightful shaped charges that have killed and maimed so many American soldiers were manufactured in Iran — they traced the serial numbers back to the Iranian manufacturer — and it is inconceivable that we would have failed to share that fact with our British allies.
I can well imagine the debates now raging inside the Bush administration over what is apparently a substantial trove of devastating information about Iranian activities in Iraq, and perhaps also Afghanistan. American officials long opposed to any serious challenge to Iran pronounced the information “a bombshell,” and some of them now say they have changed their minds about going after the mullahs. So those who still want to take the diplomatic route, and continue to appease Tehran, must set up a series of obstacles: first try to keep the intelligence bottled up; if that fails, discredit it; and if all else fails join the “war is not the answer” crowd, whose credibility rests on the hope that nobody in America has read any history.
Actually, Michael, the teacher's union abolished history in favor of a survey course called "Why All Other Cultures Are Superior To Our Own". As a result, you'll find a mere handful of public-school educated Americans who know anything at all about history.
Were it not for The History Channel, we wouldn't have anyone under the age of 30 who could tell you a blasted thing about WWII.
I'm afraid the information hoarders in this Administration will indeed succeed, at least until the first mushroom cloud blossoms over an American city.
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