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Iran and Latin America:
The Zionist Western Media States Its Case
By Ramzy Baroud
ccun.org, January 24, 2010
Should the United States be concerned about Iran’s determined
efforts to reach out to Latin America? Or, as was suggestively described
in the Economist, by the Ayatollahs’ strategy of cozying up to Latin
America? The US continues to see the world as its own business.
It gives itself and its allies, most notably Israel,
the right to geopolitical maneuverability. Iran, on the other hand, is
censured, derided and punished for even its own internal policies, within
its own borders. Thus, an Iranian move into Latin America is naturally
viewed as unwarranted, uncalled for and most definitely dangerous as far
as the US is concerned. But Iran is not invading America
geopolitical space per se. It is neither financing a terrorist group, nor
involved in the ongoing narcotic war. More, there is no historical
connection between an interventionist Iran and the bloody past of Latin
America, including its former dictators and brutal juntas. In fact, Iran’s
‘cozying up’ to Latin American merely began in 2005. Since then, Iran has
opened embassies in several Latin American countries and launched
important joint projects that provided funds and work opportunities for
thousands of ordinary people. There is no Iranian equivalent to the School
of the Americas. So why the alarm? Paul
McLeary of Aviation Week gives us a clue. Iran’s move “has set off a proxy
conflict between Iran and Israel in South America, with the presidents of
both countries logging frequent-flier miles to win friends in the region.
One cause for concern among many analysts is the weekly flight between
Caracas and Tehran (with a stop in Damascus) that Iran Air has flown for
two years.” He quotes Frida Ghitis: “Flight manifests are kept
secret, so neither cargo nor passenger information is well known …one
Israeli report suggested that Venezuela and Bolivia are supplying uranium
to Iran.” Two questions emerge. One, is it required of Caracas
and Tehran to provide a detailed report of the cargo and passengers to the
US and Israel, and perhaps also cc-ed to a list of their friends and
allies? The second pertains to Israel itself. Why is the media
most concerned by Iran’s ‘suspicious’ behavior in Latin America, despite
the fact that its presence is welcomed by various countries in the
hemisphere, while Israel - whose bloody involvement has wrought much chaos
to South America - is simply unquestioned, and even cited as a
credible source? There is no evidence to link Iran to death squads, or any
Iranian firm with “an archive and computer file on journalists, students,
leaders, leftists, politicians and so on” to be hunted down, killed or
simply made to ‘disappear’ under brutal regimes. Israel’s own history in
Latin America seems to inspire little commentary by the ever-vigilant
‘many analysts’. McLeary, Ghitis and others need to do their homework
before leveling accusations against others. The book Dangerous Liaison:
The Inside Story of the U.S.-Israeli Covert Relationship may be a good
place to start. Back to the lurking Ayatollahs in America’s
backyard, Susan Kaufman Purcell is also raising questions, this time about
Brazil. In Brazil President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva welcomed his Iranian
counterpart, president Ahmadinejad late November 2009. In the January 7
Wall Street Journal, Purcell claimed: “Until recently, the Obama
administration assumed that Brazil and the United States were natural
allies who shared many foreign policy interests, particularly in Latin
America. Brazil, after all, is a friendly democracy with a growing market
economy and Western cultural values.” Purcell suggests that Brazil’s
various achievements – largely beneficial to the US – qualified the
country to become “more like us”. The article infers, however,
that Brazil is actually “not like us”. The fact that it dares to be
different - by pursuing a Brazilian-centered foreign policy - shows the
audacity of the deceivingly loveable Lula. The Brazilian president is
apparently going rouge simply by deviating from Washington’s regional and
international priorities. Amongst his many crimes: “Instead of expressing
concern over Iran's activities in Latin America, Brazil is drawing closer
to Tehran and hopes to expand its $2 billion bilateral trade to $10
billion in the near future.” Another: “He reiterated his support
for Iran's right to develop nuclear technology for peaceful uses, while
insisting that there is no evidence that Iran is developing nuclear
weapons.” And of course, Purcell doesn’t fail to remind us of “the weekly
flights between Caracas and Tehran that bring passengers and cargo into
Venezuela.” Western media is indeed
rife with all sorts of unfounded accusations, baseless speculations and
superfluous insinuations. They evoke in the reader and viewer a dread and
fear, based in this case on the doomsday scenario whereby fanatical Latin
Americans and radical Muslims gang up on America, and ultimately Israel.
Now consider these appalling insinuations by the Economist. First
it claims that the Brazilian President “offered support for Iran’s work on
nuclear technology for (supposedly) peaceful use.” Note the word
“supposedly”. Then: One of the “instruments” of destabilizing
Latin America is Iran’s production of “news programmes and documentaries
for Bolivian television, no doubt to give a fair and balanced view of the
Great Satan.” Note the writer’s insertion of the little irrelevant term
“Great Satan” to convert the act of TV production that challenges Western
mainstream media’s narrative into a menacing endeavor. More:
Brazil president talked “about Israel’s right to stay just where it is on
the map.” Of course, Lula didn’t phrase it that way. This is the writer’s
attempt to remind us of the claim that Iran has threatened to wipe Israel
off the map. Still, more: “…protesters waved banners reminding Mr
Ahmadinejad that the Holocaust had indeed taken place”. This provides the
big climax - the claim that Iran’s president has denied the Holocaust.
But why the charged, exaggerated commentary? A seemingly
random Economist ‘advertisement’ box
embedded with the article, and another long side column at the magazine’s
website reminds readers of “The Economist Debate Series – January 11-18.”
The topic of the week, presented with an image of a warplane radar zooming
in on the Iranian map, asks the question: “Is It Time to Strike Iran?”
After reading such unsubstantiated, yet disquieting analyses, how
would most readers respond? - Ramzy Baroud (www.ramzybaroud.net)
is an internationally-syndicated columnist and the editor of
PalestineChronicle.com. His latest book is "My Father Was a Freedom
Fighter: Gaza's Untold Story" (Pluto Press, London), now available on
Amazon.com.
***** Check out this short film (in
English and
Arabic) about my
latest book: My Father was a Freedom Fighter: Gaza’s Untold Story (Pluto
Press; Palgrave Mcmillan, 2010). The book is available at
Pluto
Press (UK) and
Amazon.
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