The Secret Dealings of Israel, Iran, and the United States
January 16, 2008 by sunnairan
In a speech at Columbia University, Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad defended Iran’s right to nuclear power but denied Iran was seeking to build nuclear weapons. Ahmadinejad’s appearance sparked widespread protests at Columbia. We speak with Trita Parsi, author of “Treacherous Alliance: The Secret Dealings of Israel, Iran and the United States” and Baruch professor Ervand Abrahamian, co-author of “Targeting Iran.”
- Ervand Abrahamian, Iran expert and CUNY Distinguished Professor of History at Baruch College, City University of New York. He is the author of several books on Iran and the co-author of a new book from City Lights called “Targeting Iran.”
- Trita Parsi, President of the National Iranian American Council (NIAC), the largest Iranian-American organization in the US. He is the author of “Treacherous Alliance: The Secret Dealings of Israel, Iran, and the United States.”
AMY GOODMAN: For more on Ahmadinejad’s visit, we’re joined by two guests. Ervand Abrahamian is an Iran expert and CUNY Distinguished Professor of History at Baruch College here at the City University of New York. He’s the author of several books on Iran, co-author of a new book from City Lights called Targeting Iran. And joining me from Washington, D.C. is Trita Parsi. He’s the president of the National Iranian American Council, the largest Iranian American organization in the United States, author of Treacherous Alliance: The Secret Dealings of Israel, Iran and the United States.
First, Ervand Abrahamian, can you talk about the president’s visit? Did anything he said — this is Mahmoud Ahmadinejad — surprise you?
ERVAND ABRAHAMIAN: Well, I was surprised because he didn’t really use the opportunity to try to lower the tempo, the serious problem we have now, which is we’re at the abyss of war, basically. And there are people pushing for war in the next few months. And this would have been a very good opportunity to try to smooth things over, try to calm the tempo down.
And it’s not just he who missed the opportunity. I think Bollinger missed the opportunity. In fact, Bollinger’s speech was like a drumbeat for war. And most of the questions from the audience missed the opportunity. They dealt basically with important identity questions, but they didn’t really deal with the issue that we are really on the abyss of war. And this is a far more serious issue than, you know, either ethnic or gender issues.
And he, actually, I think — although he made some statements about Iran is not interested in nuclear weapons, he could have been more forthright and more categorical about the policies of Iran in terms of the nuclear project.
AMY GOODMAN: Does this remind you of Saddam Hussein before the war?
ERVAND ABRAHAMIAN: It does. In fact, Ahmadinejad didn’t say it last night — yesterday, but his policy is that there is no likelihood of war, because no one in their right senses would think of invading or attacking Iran. And that’s the premise he works on, which is, I think, a completely wrong premise, because he doesn’t seem to understand American politics, the same people who gave us the war on Iraq, the same people who are running foreign policy now. But he begins from the premise that no one in their right senses would think of attacking Iran.
AMY GOODMAN: Trita Parsi, you have written a very interesting book, Treacherous Alliance: The Secret Dealings of Israel, Iran and the United States. Can you take us back in time and talk about the relationship, the secret dealings, between these three countries?
TRITA PARSI: Israel has for a very long time been a critical factor in America’s formulation of a policy vis-à-vis Iran. But what’s really interesting is that the influence of Israel has gone in completely different directions, if we just go back fifteen years. During the 1980s, in spite of the Iranian Revolution, in spite of Ayatollah Khomeini’s many, many harsh remarks about Israel, far, far worse than what anything Ahmadinejad has said so far, Israel at the time was the country that was lobbying the United States to open up talks with Iran to try to rebuild the US-Iran relations, because of strategic imperatives that Israel had. Israel needed Iran, because it was fearing the Arab world and a potential war with the Arabs.
After 1991, ’92, that’s when you see the real shift in Israeli-Iranian relations, because that’s when the entire geopolitical map of the Middle East is redrawn. The Soviet Union collapses. The last standing army of the Arabs, that of Saddam Hussein, is defeated in the Persian Gulf War. And you have an entirely new security environment in the Middle East, in which the two factors, the Soviets and the Arabs, that had pushed Iran and Israel closer together suddenly evaporate. But as their security environment improves, they also start to realize that they may be ending up in a situation in which they can become potential threats to each other. And that’s when you see how the Israelis shift 180 degrees. Now the Israeli argument was that the United States should not talk to Iran, because there is no such thing as Iranian moderates.
And ever since, the Israelis and the pro-Israel interest in the United States have lobbied to make sure that there is no dialogue or there’s no rapprochement between the United States and Iran. And the Iranians have done similar things. They have undermined every US foreign policy initiative in the Middle East that they feared would be beneficial to Israel. So the real shift in Israeli-Iranian relations come after the Cold War, not with the revolution in 1979.
AMY GOODMAN: But I also do want you to go right back to 1948 and talk about that period up to 1991. What were the secret relationships?
TRITA PARSI: Well, immediately after Israel was founded, Iran was actually one of the states on the committee at the UN who was preparing a plan, and they were against the partition. They were against the idea of creating two states. And Iran, at the time, said that this would lead to several decades of crisis. But once Israel was a fact, the Iranian government felt that because it was facing a hostile Arab world, as well as a very hostile Arab ideology, Pan-Arabism, Israel was a potential ally for the Iranians, particularly as Israel started to shift closer and closer to the Western camp and the United States. So throughout the ’50s, ’60s and ’70s, the Iranians and the Israelis were working very, very closely together, had a very robust alliance.
They tried to keep it secret. It wasn’t necessarily very secret, but Iran never recognized Israel de jure. They recognized it de facto. They had an Israeli mission in Tehran, but they never permitted it to be called an embassy. They had an Israeli envoy to Tehran, but they never called him an ambassador. When the Israeli planes were landing at the Tehran airport, they created — they built a specific tarmac off the airport for Israeli planes to land, so that no one would really see that there are so many El Al planes flying to Tehran. And the reason why the Iranians were doing this is because, on the one hand, they needed Israel as an ally because they were fearful of the Arab world, and, on the other hand, they felt that if they got too close to Israel, they would only fuel Arab anger towards Iran.
AMY GOODMAN: Trita Parsi, you have a number of revelations in your book. One of them is that the Iranian prime minister asked Israel permission to assassinate Khomeini. Describe the circumstance.
TRITA PARSI: Circumstances was right before the revolution, in which the Israelis were very, very concerned. They were fearful that the new regime would be very hostile to Israel, and they weren’t certain that they would be able to build the same type of secret relations with Iran as they had during the time of the Shah. It later on turned out that they actually did have that ability, not to the same extent, but they still could do it.
But the Iranian prime minister was eager to be able to get rid of Khomeini, fearing — thinking that by Khomeini being eliminated, the revolution would be able to move in a different direction. And he asked the Israelis if they could do it, because Khomeini at the time was in Paris; the Iranians did not have the ability to do anything, but they thought that perhaps the Israelis would. The Israeli answer was apparently that this is not Israel’s job and that Israel is not the policemen of the world.
AMY GOODMAN: What about Israel reaching out to Saddam Hussein after the Gulf War?
TRITA PARSI: After the first Persian Gulf War, there was a thinking in Israel at the time that Saddam had now been weakened, he was no longer a real threat, and at the end of the day the real potential threat in the future, the rising power, was Iran. So the Israelis were trying to find different ways of being able to find some sort of a modus vivendi with Saddam Hussein.
This significantly angered the Clinton administration, that was pursuing a policy of isolating both Iran and Iraq at the same time, and they were very annoyed that the Israelis were trying to find some sort of a relationship with Saddam in the midst of all of that.
Now, the Israeli initiative didn’t go anywhere, but it was guided by the thinking that Iran was going to be the major threat. And even though Iran at the time really was not a threat to Israel, Israel already at that time treated it as an actual threat.
AMY GOODMAN: The United States foiling Iran’s plan to withdraw support from Hamas and Hezbollah.
TRITA PARSI: We talked about that before, that there was a 2003 proposal that the Iranians sent over to the United States trying to find a larger accommodation between the United States and Iran, in which they basically put all the different issues on the table, including an offer, within the framework of the negotiations, to disarm Hezbollah and turn it into a mere political organization — had that happened, there would probably not have been a war last year between Israel and Lebanon — secondly, to end all support for Islamic jihad and Hamas and encourage the Palestinians to go a political route, rather than military route, in their dealings with Israel.
But what’s revealed in the book, as well, that has not been out in the media a lot is that prior to giving this proposal to the United States, the Iranians were fishing it around in Europe, trying to create some support for it. And, most importantly, they went to places that they knew Israelis were going to be. And they were presenting the framework, the concept of this grand bargain, and they wanted to make sure that the Israelis felt that this would not be something that would come at their expense, because they were concerned that the Israelis would try to undermine it. So they were basically sending a signal: Look, if we can have this accommodation with the United States, we will disentangle and basically not be so involved in the Israeli-Palestinian issue anymore.
AMY GOODMAN: Trita Parsi is author of Treacherous Alliance: The Secret Dealings of Israel, Iran and the United States. Our guest also, Ervand Abrahamian, Iran expert, Distinguished Professor at Baruch College. I wanted, Professor Abrahamian, to read from Juan Cole’s piece, who says, talking about Ahmadinejad, “He has been depicted as a Hitler figure intent on killing Israeli Jews, even though he is not commander in chief of the Iranian armed forces, has never invaded any other country, denies he is an anti-Semite, has never called for any Israeli civilians to be killed, and allows Iran’s 20,000 Jews to have representation in Parliament,” that Khamenei is the one with the real power.
ERVAND ABRAHAMIAN: He is right on target, yes. I think Juan Cole sums it up. And the question is, then, why is basically in American politics so much focused on Ahmadinejad? I think he serves the function that Saddam Hussein played. He’s an easy person to demonize. And yesterday’s Bollinger’s introduction, when he described him as a dictator, I think, shows how little people like Bollinger really know about the Iranian political system. One can call Ahmadinejad many things, but a dictator he is by no means. He can’t even — he doesn’t even have the power to appoint his own cabinet ministers. It’s a presidency with very limited power. And to claim that he is in a position to threaten the United States or Israel is just bizarre, frankly. I think someone like Bollinger should know more about Iran before they sling around smears like terms such as “dictator.”
AMY GOODMAN: Well, talk about Khamenei, then, if he is the one with real power.
ERVAND ABRAHAMIAN: Here, again, he is, you can say, the Supreme Leader, but the Iranian system is actually very sort of a collective leadership. The foreign policy is made in a council, where the Supreme Leader appoints those members, but there are very different views there. And Ahmadinejad does not run that committee. Someone like Rafsanjani has a great deal of influence. The former President Khatami has a great deal of influence. And they are much more willing to negotiate.
In fact, they were, I think, the people who offered this grand bargain in 2003 to settle all the issues with the United States. And for reasons that are not clear, the White House just basically brushed it aside. They were not interested in pursuing this. And this is why it leads me to think that this administration is adamant in resolving the nuclear problem by military force, because if it was interested in resolving it through diplomacy, there were offers made to them to follow that route, and they have very consciously decided not follow the diplomatic routes. So if you don’t follow the diplomatic route, the only other route there is is the military route. And, of course, it’s only a question of time when they decide on air strikes.
AMY GOODMAN: I wanted to ask you, Trita Parsi, about this Newsweek magazine report that says that Vice President Cheney considered provoking an exchange of military strikes between Iran and Israel in order to give the US a pretext to attack Iran. A few months before he quit, the Middle East Adviser to Cheney, David Wurmser, told a small group of people that Cheney had been mulling the idea of pushing for limited Israeli missile strikes against the Iranian nuclear site at Natanz and perhaps other sites, in order to provoke Tehran into lashing out. Citing two knowledgeable sources, Newsweek put out this report. Your response?
TRITA PARSI: I think it’s definitely a plausible scenario, because one thing that we know for certain, with great certainty, is that the Israelis lack the military capability to take out Iran’s nuclear program. They can attack it, but they cannot destroy it. And the only thing that it would result to is some sort of Iranian retaliation, which would then suck the United States right into the conflict, because the United States would not be able to stand without it — outside of it, and obviously many elements in the White House would probably prefer to immediately get into it.
One of the things that I describe in the book that I think is extremely important is that when you take a look at how Iran has made its decisions vis-à-vis Israel, it’s actually been geopolitical and strategic factors that have been driving their decisions. It’s not been ideology. And I think this is a critical point, because right now you have a metaphor being presented by Bibi Netanyahu, the leader of the Likud Party, in which he’s saying that it’s 1938 and Iran is Germany. And then he goes on to imply that Ahmadinejad is Hitler. If we accept that premise, that it is 1938, that Iran is Germany and Ahmadinejad is Hitler, then who, which leader, in his or her right mind, would want to play the role of Neville Chamberlain? It’s a metaphor whose premise basically puts us in a situation in which conflict is completely inevitable. And there’s no other way, because negotiations and diplomacy simply cannot be pursued.
Fortunately, this is a false premise. Iran and Israel and the United States and Israel are not engaged in an ideological zero-sum game battle. This is a strategic rivalry. It is solvable, but it requires a tremendous amount of diplomacy to be able to find a way out of it. And unfortunately, right now, diplomacy is the last thing that one can describe the foreign policies of these countries, particularly the Bush administration.
AMY GOODMAN: I interviewed exiled Iranian activist Azar Derakhshan earlier this summer. She’s the editor of the Women of March 8 magazine and helped organize the 2006 European march against anti-women laws in Iran. I just want to play an excerpt from my conversation with her. This is Azar Derakhshan.
- AZAR DERAKHSHAN: I have seen a portrait in the media, Western media. In the media, there is two sides. There is the United States and government of Iran. There are clashes. And the people, the voice of people is absent completely. And the opinion of — foreigner opinion, they think that this thing, the future of Iran is going to be decided by these two powers. I try to tell to the people in foreigner countries, in European countries, it’s not true, this portrait. There is another fact, very important. The people of Iran, the movement, they are going to take the future. They are not forced to choose between neither the United States, neither the government of Iran. There is another force in Iran. If really somebody wants to prevent the war, the clashes, should be support this movement, this movement for equality, for freedom.
We don’t need United States to liberate us. First of all, we are here, and this is our legitimate to liberate ourselves. We want to decide about our future ourselves. We want to fight our native enemy by ourselves. We don’t need — that’s first. Second one, we already have seen, because Afghanistan and Iraq, they are neighbor of Iran. And the women of Iran, they can see it. Maybe before, not, but right now it’s really — it’s enough to know what kind of program they have for the people of Iran.
AMY GOODMAN: Iranian dissident, Azar Derakhshan. Professor Abrahamian, your response?
ERVAND ABRAHAMIAN: Well, I think she’s right in that there are — Iran is a very complicated society. There are very different political movements. And the idea that somehow it’s a frozen system, that it’s not going to change, already precludes any type of possibility of negotiations and changes. In fact, the Iranian system has an electoral system — is and electoral system. We are going to come up with elections very soon. There is no guarantee that Ahmadinejad would be re-elected again. It’s very possible that reformers, liberals, would get in into power again.
AMY GOODMAN: When is the election?
ERVAND ABRAHAMIAN: In less than two years’ time. And the base, in fact, of Ahmadinejad’s — I would say the core base — is very similar to Bush’s core base. It’s about 25%. For him to get re-elected, he has to stretch out and find independents and others, and this is going to be very hard. If the reformers can actually rally around one candidate, as they did in the 1990s, they could have landslide victories, in which over 70% of the electorate was voting for liberals and reformers.
AMY GOODMAN: And what direction would a US attack on Iran push the election?
ERVAND ABRAHAMIAN: Oh, it would play right into the hands of Ahmadinejad, because you would have a national emergency. He would declare, basically, the country’s in danger. Everyone would have to rally around the flag. People who disliked him would keep their mouth shut. At a time of when the existence of the state is in question, you don’t mess around with the leaders. He would basically be able to act as a much more of a strongman national leader.
AMY GOODMAN: Trita Parsi, you’ve had unusual access to US decision makers, Israeli decision makers, Iranian leaders. What is your sense of a strike, the US or Israel, on Iran? Is it imminent?
TRITA PARSI: Well, I don’t think an Israeli strike is imminent, unless there is some sort of coordination with the United States with the aim of being able to draw the US into the conflict. I do believe that some sort of a conflict between the United States and Iran is quite probable right now, mindful of the lack of diplomacy that is taking place.
And I also do believe that this is not necessarily something that will go away automatically just because there’s going to be a change of government in the United States within the next two years. Many of the decisions that are made right now have the impact of limiting the maneuverability of future administrations. We’re making it more and more difficult, not only for this administration, but also for future administrations, to pursue diplomacy.
And what we’re seeing in the Middle East right now is not necessarily just a conflict over what’s going on in Iraq or about Iran’s nuclear program. This is a conflict that, at the end of the day, is about two powerhouses in the region, and it’s a conflict about hegemony, for lack of a better word.
And these type of shifts, with the United States currently declining and finding itself in a more and more difficult situation in Iraq and with Iran finding itself in a stronger position and acting very, very confidently, these type of shifts historically do not take place peacefully, unless there is a tremendous amount of diplomacy. And again, we’re not seeing that right now.
And I’m very concerned that even if we manage to avoid war for the next two years, the next US administration may find itself in a position in which its maneuverability is so limited that the military option once again becomes a very viable one for them.
AMY GOODMAN: Could Ahmadinejad be playing a game like Saddam Hussein, where if it is clear he doesn’t have nuclear weapons, he’s weaker, the US would be more likely to attack? He looks at the example of North Korea, where they do have nuclear weapons, and now the US is just pursuing a diplomatic option?
TRITA PARSI: I think there’s a combination of two. On the one hand, I think a lot of his statements and his behavior is aimed to be a deterrent against the United States. He’s acting confident, and he’s talking about the United States not being able to attack. This is a way of saying that the US can’t do it, and if you do it, you will face a tremendously difficult situation. So he’s doing this partly, too, as a deterrence. It has the negative impact of scaring the daylights out of a lot of people, including a lot of Iran’s neighbors that are now gravitating towards the United States’s position, because they are very fearful of what Ahmadinejad may be capable of doing.
At the same time, I do believe that, to a certain extent, but not fully, he has actually convinced himself that Iran is in such a strong position, the United States is in such a weak position, that it can’t do it. But I think it’s a combination of these two. And I think it’s important to keep in mind that most of the belligerence that he’s doing is probably for the purpose of deterrence, not necessarily as an offensive strategy.
AMY GOODMAN: Iran’s role in Iraq?
TRITA PARSI: Sorry?
AMY GOODMAN: Iran’s role in Iraq?
TRITA PARSI: I think the Iranians have played a game in Iraq in which they basically have invested in every potential faction in Iraq, making sure that whoever comes up on top is going to be a player who has strong relations with Iran, because it’s in Iran’s hardcore national interest to make sure that Iraq never again becomes a hostile state, so they never have to experience the eight-year war that they had with Iraq in the 1980s. So, again, I think we’re seeing a policy by the Iranian government there that is quite independent of whether Ahmadinejad is in power or not. It’s probably something that another Iranian government would be pursuing, as well, at least under this regime that we’re having in Iran right now.
And I think the only way for the United States to be able to find a way out of Iraq is not only to talk to the Iranians, but really include all of the other neighbors of Iraq into the process, giving these neighbors not only a stake in the outcome, but also a stake in the process itself. We have a tremendous amount of problems with what the Saudis are doing in Iraq and also what the Jordanians are doing. We’re not talking about that at all. On the contrary, we’re just focusing on Iran’s role.
AMY GOODMAN: Saudi’s role, very briefly?
TRITA PARSI: Saudi’s role — well, a military report just came out about two months ago — it was leaked in the LA Times — that showed that about 45% of all the suicide bombers in Iraq are Saudi nationals. We’ve known for quite some time that there’s a lot of money flowing into Iraq from Saudi Arabia that is going to the Sunni insurgents, because their belief is that they’re fighting a war against Sunnis and Shiites in Iraq. We’re not talking about that.
On the contrary, Saudi Arabia got praised by Ambassador Crocker during his testimony. And I think it’s a very one-sided way of looking at the problems we’re facing in Iraq. And as long as we pursue a very political perspective on the Iraqi situation, then I fear that we will continue to be in a rather difficult mess over there.
AMY GOODMAN: Trita Parsi, I want to thank you very much for being with us.
TRITA PARSI: Thank you so much for having me.
AMY GOODMAN: Your book, Treacherous Alliance: The Secret Dealings of Israel, Iran and the United States. And a final question for Professor Abrahamian: Are you afraid for your people? Are you afraid for the people of Iran?
ERVAND ABRAHAMIAN: Yes. I’m very much concerned that in the next few months there will be air strikes. I think what we saw before with Iraq, we are having a rerun of that, very much the same rhetoric. The same type of people are pushing for war and using even the same sort of arguments that often — unsubstantiated arguments blown out of proportion. For instance, the constant drumbeat that Iran is actually supplying weaponry to the insurgents that are killing Americans, this is basically saying that Iran has already declared war on the United States. When you try to actually pin down what is the evidence for that, it boils down to the yellowcake stories and the stuff about Saddam Hussein being behind al-Qaeda. Until the United States actually gets real evidence that Iran is providing lethal weapons to the insurgents, I would not accept any of those arguments at face value.
AMY GOODMAN: Professor Abrahamian, thank you, as well, for being with us. Ervand Abrahamian is author of the book Targeting Iran.
http://www.informationclearinghouse.info/article18476.htm

اللهم إنّي اعوذ بك أن أشرك بك وأنا أعلم، واستغفرك لما لا أعلم، من قال ذلك أذهب الله عنه كبار الشرك وصغاره.
خدايا! بتو پناه ميبرم از اينكه دانسته بتو شرك ورزم، و از آنچه كه نميدانم و انجام ميدهم از تو طلب مغفرت و بخشش ميطلبم.
Allahumma inni a'uthu bika, an ushrika bika, wa anaa a'lamu wa astaghfiruka limaa laa a'lamu
Translation:
"Oh Allah. I seek refuge in You lest I associate anything with You knowingly, and I seek Your forgiveness for what I do unknowingly." (Ahmed 4/403, Sahih al Jami As-Saghir 3/233)

"خـداوند ما را به اسلام عزت داده است اگر عـزت را در جای ديگر جستجو کنيم،خداوند ما را خـوار می گرداند".
Omar ibn Al-Khattab [ra] said: "...Allah made us mighty with Islaam. So when we seek mightiness in other than Islaam, Allah humiliates us and brings us low."

hi
I was great to know for first time that there is an ensglish site informing the world about the harms of shia and i need your dire help in this regard i hope you link my blog as
http://ummesalma.blogfa.com/
in your fruit ful site it is mannaged by your sisters in islamic ummesalma school
may allah help all muslims
good wishes!!
as salamo 3alaiki khahare azeez !
MashaAllah an Iranian Sunni school for sisters ! Man Farsi baladam khahare gerami va EnshaAllah site shoma ra dar Linkestanam ezafe mikonam !
akhe kesafate sahyoonist ,iran ke doshmane 1-amrikast wa doshmane1 israele shod israeli oon waght keshwar haye sag sonni ke hamashoon ba israel doostan shodan khoob?>
raees jomhoore iran adame badie chon ba yahoodi haye zedde israel dast dade wali mahmood abbaso mobarako male haye saudio kinge jordano ….ke hhame ba busho olmerto barako sharon axe daran wa dustan shodan klhoob? iran ke tanha hamie hezbollah wa hamase shod bad,wa rafezi baad shoma ke tarafdare israel wa ommalesh hastin shodinkhoob?sa3d haririe amricaee shod khoob?ja3ja3e salibi shod khoob?
la3nate khoda bar shoma i din haye ferghe parast
«السلام علي من اتبع الهدي ».
الحمد لله و الصلاه و السلام علي رسول الله و علي آله الطيبين و اصحابه الاخيار
در پاسخ به رافضه الضاله عليه من الله يستحق
باز اين بچه لات رافضي خميني در اين بخش خاك باد كرده )
مثل اينكه شرم ندارد
اين طور معلوم ميشود كه اينقدر از جيب و آخور خميني ملعون خورده كه مجال فكر كردن را هم نداره ، يعني مجال فكر كردن را هم از او گرفته اند
بنده خيلي به حال تو و همفكرانت متأسفم
انگار آدم بشو نيستي
باذن الله کشف کنيم
اما بزار بازم دروغهاي تو را
اولا که بازهم داري پشتي از علي گداي شيره يي خامنه اي مشرک رافضي و احمدي نژاد (کاسه داغتر از آش) کافر ميگري ؟؟؟
انگاري كه شما هم از جيره خواران دولت باشيد ، چطور ؟؟؟
كيف كنيد با مال و جان اين ملت ايران و هر مطلبي را كه به خورد ايشان بدهيد اين بيچاره ها هم چشم گفته و به نام قربان آقا برم قبول ميكنند
افسوس و صد افسوس از خدا بترسيد !!!
ايران دشمن آمريکاست ؟ اي بيچاره اين داستانهلي علي گدا را باور ميکني ؟ همه ي جهان ميدانند که اين يک دکان ولايت مطلقه رافضه است
ماجرای ایران - کنترا را فراموش کردي http://fa.wikipedia.org/wiki/%D8%A7%DB%8C%D8%B1%D8%A7%D9%86_-_%DA%A9%D9%86%D8%AA%D8%B1%D8%A7
؟؟؟ اصلا کدم حمله اي و ضربه اي ايران به آمريکا زد ؟ بجز شعار مگر چيزي از دست اين آخوندهاي مشرک رافضي بر آمد ؟
اين مسول اسرائيل هم يهود ضد اسرائيليست ؟؟؟ بارو ابلحان را در روضه خان فريب ببزن:
http://kasralsanam.com/imageHandler.ashx?id=gallery/kha9.gif
اهل سنت ايران حکومت ايران را مثل زن فاحشهاي ميدانند که هرکس به او نزديک شود بيآبرو ميشود
کجاست کمک ايران رافضي به مردم چچن ؟؟؟ يا مردم کشمير يا صمال ؟ هر بچه ي ايراني ميداند که شيعه يان رافضي کينه به مقدسات 1 بليون اهل سنت دارن و فقط از طرف سياست که به نفع خدشان (تبليغات رافضي گري، فريب زدن مسلمانان، کنترل منطقه اهل سنت،) کمک به فلسطيني ها ميکنند !
ما اهل دروغ مثل شما اولاد هاي تقيه نيستيم ! اين هم مدرک صريح که جمهوري رافضي پشت سحنه با اسرائيليان همکاري ميکنند: !!!!!
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ببين تو رافضي گرامي عزيز ، چي كه به زبان خودت نمي آوري ، هر چه دلت خواست در زبانت مي آوري و ميندازي آخه کدم ابلح به تو رافضي فرمود که اين طاغوتهاي عرب و غيره عرب امامان سني ها هستند ؟؟؟ مگر در طول 500 سال حکومتگران شاهان شيعه ايراني مثل امثال شاه محمد رضا پهلوي نمونه و رهبران اهل شيعه را تشکيل ميکردند ؟؟؟ مگر شما حزب الشيطاني هاي رافضي نميفرماييد که زمان شاه زمان طاغوت ميباشد ؟ پس چطر به خدت اجازه ميدهي اين طاغوت هاي عصر را که فقط و فقط سني زاده هستند به عنوان رهبران اهل سنت تشکيل بفرماي ؟؟؟
صدقت شيخ الاسلام ابن تيميه اذ يقول
اينها از دروغگوترين افراد در نقليات و از جاهلترين افراد در عقليات هستند، از نقليات اموري را باور ميكنند كه علما و دانشمندان در باطل بودن آنها شكي ندارند، و اموري را كه كاملاً واضح و روشن است و درميان امت به صورت بزرگترين تواتر نسل به نسل منتقل شده است، تكذيب ميكنند.
—–منهاج السنة
درست است كه اينها خود را سني معرفي ميكنند ، اما اينها سني نيستند و درست است كه خميني و همفكرانش خود را دنباله رو سيدنا علي معرفي ميكنند ، اما اينها كدام يكي شان رد رو سيره مقبول علي مرتضي هستند
راستي اينو هم ببينين بد نيست. اين آقاي حكيم دست پرورده ايران كه روز و شب پيش دوست عزيزش آقاي بوشه!
مگر نمي بيني كه چطور با هم كنار آمده اند و ابراز احساسات مي كنند.
به زودي عكس حكيم را با بوش در وبلاگ قرار مي دهم.و عكسهايي از آخوندهاي كله گنده شيعه با خاخام هاي يهودي كه …
در پايان:
http://bagnewsnotes.typepad.com/bagnews/images/Bush-Hakim-Jan04.jpg
لعنة الله علي المشركين و الصليبيين و اليهود
اين هم از ضد آمريكاي پوچ ولايت شركي رافضي - : سید عبدالعزيز الحكيم آخوند كافر رافضي و دوست عزيزش بوش اين هم از حكومت صليببيه رافضي صفوي كه دولت ايران رافضي ازش همايت ميكند . اين هم برهان كه همتون يك گهي هستد لعنت بر شيعه رافضه و دوست پشت پردشان يهوديان خبيث
دولت رافضي ايران فقط هاميه فتنه است و بس !
شيعه و سني هاي عراق تا وقتي که ايران در کشورشان دخالت نکرد با هم جنگ نداشتن از وقتي که ايران در آنجا دخالت کرد آنها هم دشمن هم شدند . حقيقتا شيعي ايران يک مسلک سياسي شبه فاشيست است که مثل هيچ کدام از ساير شيعه ها (عراق-يمن-افغان-حتي لبنان ) نيست . به نظر مي رسد شيعه در ايران ابزار ظلم و تعدي به ساير مسلمانها شده است . از مشخصه هاي ديگر آن نفاق است در حرف وحدت طلب و در عمل تشتت طلب.
عجيبه اين آقاي رافضي خودشون بهتر مي دوننن عراق از وقتي که به اشغال آمريکايي ها در آمد به اين روز افتاد. و هيچ اشاره اي هم به اين نمي کنند که چه کساني شب و روز در گوش بيکانگان مي خواندند که بايد به عراق حمله کرد! و اينکه آقاي حکيم آخوند رافضي که ايران ازش همايت ميکند ! پاشنه کاخ سفيد رو دراورد از بس رفت پيش بوش!
مجاهديني که در عارق براي خارج کردن اشغالگر دارن مي جنگند از اين اتهامات بري هستند. اينها کار خود آمريکايي هاست که خيلي راحت مردم عراق رو به هم مشغول کنند تا کسي با اونا نجنگه.
دم از حزب الشيطان لبنان ميزني !!!!! اين عروسک ايران اين مفتخر حيف …. حيف بر اون نفت ملت ايران که آخوندهاي خمس خرت جيب اين مشرکان را پر ميکنند ! حال تو حزب اللاتي به ما توضيح بده مگر چي از دست اين حزب بر آمد ؟ بجز ايني که ملت لبنان زيره انفجار يهوديان خبيث سقط شود ؟ اين حزب الشيطان دشمن اهل سنت است بلکه همان عقايد پوچ خميني گري و رافضي گري را ذر خد قرار گرفتن. ضمن همه ي اين قضيه حزب اللات لبنان و دشمني با اسرائيل يک کلک رافضي است و هيچ حقيقتي ندارد ! و اين حرف بي مدرکي نيست حتي حرف خده ما نيست بلکه
لعنت بر اسرايل و شيعه رافضه و نظام رافضي مجوسي ايران که ان شاء الله شر تان را از ايران و اسرائيل پاك خواهيم كرده…..
خده رئيس بازنگشت حزب اللات ميفرمايد كه حزب الله لبنان حاميه مرزهاي اسرائيل ميباشد !!!!!: http://www.fnoor.com/media%5Cfn001.ram
من واقعا براي توي شخص بي ارزش متاسفم
چون از اسلام ناب محمدي و راه راست بي بهره مانده و راه ضلالت و گمراهي و شيطاني را در پيش گرفته و الحق که همون راه شيطاني شايسته اون و اون شاييسته راه شيطانيه. آخه بدبخت ! بيچاره ! رافضي مشرک فکر اون دنيا رو هم کردي که بايد چه عذابي به خاطر اين چرندياتت و عقايد کفريت بکشي ؟؟؟! .
من به صفت يك مسلمان به تو ميگويم كه دست از اين عقيده ي انحرافي خودت بردار و به كتاب خدا و سنت رسول برگرد و خودت را از اين بيشتر هلاك نكن
مطلعه کن و آگاه شو> http://www.hizbulfurqan.org http://www.ahlesonnat.com
درورد هميشگي خدا بر امهات مومنين بر خلفاي راشديين وبقيه اصحاب کرام.
والسلام علي من اتبع الهدي ورحمة الله وما أريد إلا الإصلاح وما توفيقي إلا بالله».