Ex-US Ambassador:
Iranian regime intends to incorporate Iraq, Syria and Lebanon
Former U.S. Ambassador to Morocco and White
House Middle East Adviser, Marc Ginsberg, writes in the Huffington Post (The
World Post) that the Iranian regime’s plan is to destabilize Iraq.
Ambassador Ginsberg argues that Iran’s regime has become more
immoderate following the nuclear agreement last July: "The record of
meddlesome, terror-laden interference throughout the Middle East by Tehran is
growing longer by the day." In addition, he argues, the regime’s current
President Hassan Rouhani is hanging more people than the "notorious Ahmadinejad."The list of Iranian threats to international
security is long: increased funding of Hezbollah and Hamas; a proxy war in
Yemen against the U.S. and Saudi-backed government; ballistic missile tests in
violation of existing Security Council resolutions; and "massively"
deploying the Revolutionary Guard inside Syria to defend Assad. However, for
Ginsberg, the focus of his main concern is Iranian action in Iraq.For the mere ten-year postponement of an
Iranian nuclear weapon, Ginsberg believes the West has paid an unconscionable
price. In defending that deal, decision-makers are logically forced to turn a
blind eye to the excesses of the regime, or, worse, defend it. The following is
typical of administration rationalisations, he argues: "the regime...will
inevitably bend to the winds of globalization and confront the exigencies
required of a “proper” nation state."Ginsberg illustrates the trap into which the
West has been driven by the nuclear deal. The U.S. Secretary of State has
recently commented that Iran’s presence in Iraq could be “helpful” to American
attempts to combat ISIS. However, U.S. commanders "stationed on the ground
in both the battles to liberate Falluja and Ramadi from ISIS forces have
expressed alarm that rogue Iranian-commanded Shiite militias (aka The Popular
Mobilization Units (PMUs)) are moving into these towns after their liberation
and committing sectarian abuses against Sunnis, thus making refugee and
displaced persons more sympathetic to the remnants of ISIS operatives in the
region." Ginsberg also points out The New York Times' recent report that a
Shiite militia leader was videoed "rallying his men with a message of
revenge against the imprisoned civilians of Falluja, whom they accuse of being
sympathizers of ISIS."In addition, Iran’s regime is using the cover
afforded by ISIS atrocities to kill its opponents: "Iran-backed Shiite
militiamen (often with the connivance of the Iraqi leadership) have used the
growing chaos inside Iraq to launch a series of attacks against Iranian
adversaries in Iraq, including a heinous attack...against innocent civilian
Iranian dissidents imprisoned against their will at Camp Liberty."
Wounding more than 40, "this attack, as previous ones on Camp Liberty, is
the work of Iranian controlled forces operating virtually at will, both
covertly and overtly in Iraq," writes Ginsberg.
While Iran might present itself as the "savior of the truncated Iraqi
state," this is "deviousness:" The Iranian regime does not mean
to be "helpful" to the West, he argues. Ginsberg continues, "the
awful, painstaking battles being waged to liberate Iraqi territory from ISIS
are intended eventually by Iran to gain more control north of Baghdad at the
expense of Iraqi sectarian reconciliation and U.S. national security interest."
"Incorporating Iraq and Syria (as well as Lebanon) into a Shiite Crescent
under the thumb of Tehran is so evident it’s as if the Ayatollah has hung out a
neon light declaring it so," he declares.
Ginsberg implies that we have ISIS because we first had the Iranian regime's
"loathsome" meddling - the purposeful creation of instability by
terror - in Iraq and Syria.
There is a battle of wills in train - both between the regime and its people
and between Tehran and the West. In the latter contest, Ginsberg believes Obama
has already capitulated, leaving the U.S. without a regional strategy and,
worse, abandoning the field to the Iranian regime. http://www.ncr-iran.org/en/news/iran-resistance/20667-ex-us-ambassador-iranian-regime-intends-to-incorporate-iraq-syria-and-lebanon
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