Iranian President Ahmadinejad’s Speech at the UN General
Assembly on September 23 was titled The End of Capitalism, more
brusquely titled on the YouTube clip: Greedy
Capitalism Has Failed And Will Be Swept Away.
He proceeded, quite fairly I might add, to scour the US for
its political, financial, colonial, war-making policies.
Starting by criticizing discrimination, lack of equality and
respect for the human community, he spoke of two conflicting outlooks in our
world, one based “on the predominance of materialistic interests through
spreading inequality and oppression, poverty and deprivation, occupation and
deception,” which “tends to bring the entire world under its control and impose
its will on other nations. “This outlook has produced nothing but frustration,
disappointment and a dark future for the entire humanity.”
Ahmadinejad mentioned specifically the US economy. “It is no
longer possible to inject thousands of billions of dollars of unreal wealth to
the world economy simply by printing worthless paper assets, or transfer
inflation as well as social and economic problems to others through creating
severe budget deficits.” In fact, he said, “The engine of unbridled capitalism
with its unfair system of thought has reached the end of the road and is unable
to move.” I would say that is an opinion shared by any number of economists.
He elaborated, “The era of capitalist thinking and
imposition of one’s thoughts on the international community, intended to
predominate the world in the name of globalization and the age of setting up
empires is over. It is no longer possible to humiliate nationals and impose
double standard policies on the world community.”
He talked, too, about the people of this country and the
world “waiting for real and profound changes,” not the ersatz brand we’re
presently experiencing. He went on to discuss the injustices heaped on
Palestine that have forced and continue to force the entire population out of their
country for the last 60 years, through force and coercion, attacking
Palestinians with all kinds of weapons, “denying them of their legitimate right
of self-defense, while much to the chagrin of the international community
calling the occupiers the peace-lovers, and portraying the victims as
terrorists.”
This was tough stuff. No punches were pulled, whether on the
recent 22-day deconstruction of Palestine, the violation of human rights,
allowing genocide to take place and “the heaviest economic blockade being
denied of their basic needs, food, water and medicine.” He went on to say, “It
is no longer acceptable that a small minority would dominate the politics,
economy and culture of major parts of the world by its complicated networks,
and establish a new form of slavery, and harm the reputation of other nations,
even European nations and the U.S., to attain its racist ambitions.”
He said, “It is no longer possible to bring a country under
military occupation in the name of fight against terrorism and drug trafficking
while the production of illicit drugs has multiplied, terrorism has widened its
dimensions and has tightened its grips, thousands of innocent people have been
killed, injured or displaced, infrastructures have been destroyed and regional
security has been seriously jeopardized; and those who have created the current
disastrous situation continue to blame others. How you can talk about
friendship and solidarity with other nations while you expand your military
bases in different parts of the world, including in Latin America.”
Ahmadinejad even lambasted communism though he predicted
capitalism would meet with the same fate: “By the grace of God, Marxism is
gone. It is now history. The expansionist capitalism will certainly have the
same fate. Because based on the divine traditions referred to as a principle in
the Holy Quran, the wrong like the bubbles on the surface of water, will
disappear. There remains only what that can be used forever towards the
interest of human societies. We must all remain vigilant to prevent the pursuit
of colonialist, discriminatory and inhuman goals under the cover of the slogans
for change and in new formats.”
He continued with the change theme so often elaborated by
our own president: “The world needs to undergo fundamental changes and all must
engage collectively to make them happen in the right direction, and through
such efforts no one and no government would consider itself an exception to
change or superior to others and try to impose its will on others by
proclaiming world leadership. All problems existing in our world today emanate
from the fact that rulers have distanced themselves from human values, morality
and the teachings of divine messengers.”
”Regrettably,” he said, “in the current international
relations, selfishness and insatiable greed have taken the place of such
humanitarian concepts as love, sacrifice, dignity, and justice. The belief in
the One God has been replaced with selfishness. Some have taken the place of
God and insist to impose their values and wishes on others. Lies have taken the
place of honesty; hypocrisy has replaced integrity and selfishness has taken
the place of sacrifice. Deception in interactions is called foresight and
statesmanship; looting the wealth of other nations is called development
efforts; occupation is introduced as a gift towards promotion of freedom and
democracy, and defenseless nations are subjected to repression in the name of
defending human rights.” Whether you believe in god or not, there is a great
deal of truth in these words that applies to your own US conundrum.
My continuing to quote his speech is my concern that you may
not have heard or read it. I want you to get a sense of the man, his concerns
and his candor. Ahmadinejad pointed out that “Our country [Iran] has been a
main victim of terrorism and the target of an all-out military aggression
during the first decade of the revolution. All through the past 30 years we
have been subject to hostile attitudes of those who supported Saddam’s military
aggression and his use of chemical weapons against us, and then they took
military action in Iraq to get rid of him,” which is all true, including the
ongoing embargos, the war we fomented between Iraq and Iran for eight years,
arming Saddam, even the Iranians, and causing losses of life and human
displacement on both sides that ran in the millions.
Skipping to his conclusion, I find it surprisingly
religious, spiritual, and hopeful: “Therefore, we emphasize that: the only path
to remain safe is to return to Monotheism (believing in the Oneness of God) and
justice, and this is the greatest hope and opportunity in all ages and
generations. Without belief in God and commitment to the cause of justice and
fight against injustice and discrimination, the world architect would not get
right.” Whether you believe in a deity or not, he followed that with a purely
humanistic connection . . .
“Man is at the center of the universe. The man’s unique
feature is his humanity. The same feature which seeks for justice, piety, love,
knowledge, awareness and all other high values. These human values should be
supported, and each and every fellow human should be given the opportunity to
acquire them. Neglecting any of them is tantamount to the omission of a
constituting piece of humanity. These are common elements which connect all
human communities and constitute the basis of peace, security and friendship . .
. The divine religions pay attention to all aspects of human life, including
obedience to God, morality, justice, fighting oppression, and endeavor to
establish just and good governance.”
Having inserted the religious traditions into political
affairs, Ahmadinejad goes on to unite the traditions: “Prophet Abraham called
for Oneness of God against Nimrod, as Prophet Moses did the same against
Pharaohs and the Jesus Christ and Prophet Muhammad (Peace be upon them) did
against the oppressors of their own time. They were all threatened to death and
were forced out of their homelands. Without resistance and objection, the
injustices would not be removed from the face of the earth . . . Dear friends
and colleagues; the world is in continuous change and evolution.
”The promised destiny for mankind is the establishment of
the humane pure life. Will come a time when justice will prevail across the
globe and every single human being will enjoy respect and dignity. That will be
the time when the Mankind’s path to moral and spiritual perfectness will be
opened and his journey to God and the manifestation of the God’s Divine Names
will come true. The mankind should excel to represent the God’s ‘knowledge and
wisdom,’ His ‘compassion and benevolence, His ‘justice and fairness,’ His ‘power
and art,’ and His ‘kindness and forgiveness’ . . .
”They [religious prophets] will come to put an end to war
and aggression and present the entire knowledge as well as spirituality and
friendship to the whole world. Yes; indeed, the bright future for the mankind
will come. Dear friends, in waiting for that brilliant time to come and in a
collective commitment, let’s make due contributions in paving the grounds and
preparing the conditions for building that bright future. Long live love and
spirituality; long live peace and security; long live justice and freedom.
God’s Peace and blessing be upon you all.”
With the exception of my removing a few simple typos, which
probably occurred in the translation transcription, and my omitting a number of
passages for brevity’s sake, this is the substance of Ahmadinejad’s speech.
Albeit grounded in religion, it is a call for justice, fairness, equality for
all, to help make a better world. Ahmadinejad is obviously the president of a
theocracy and not a democracy as know it and such as it is, but this is not
Khrushchev banging an angry shoe on the table at the UN.
No, this is the president of Iran, which country again has
been accused of a nuclear weapons program. Yet even the usually conservative
New York Times reports in A
Nuclear Debate: Is Iran Designing Warheads?, “When President Obama stood last week with the leaders of Britain and
France to denounce Iran’s construction of a secret
nuclear plant, the Western powers all appeared to be on the same page.
“Behind their show of unity about Iran’s clandestine efforts
to manufacture nuclear fuel, however, is a continuing debate among American,
European and Israeli spies about a separate component of Iran’s nuclear
program: its clandestine efforts to design a nuclear warhead.
“The Israelis, who have delivered veiled threats of a
military strike, say they believe that Iran has restarted these ‘weaponization’
efforts, which would mark a final step in building a nuclear weapon. The
Germans say they believe that the weapons work was never halted. The French
have strongly suggested that independent international inspectors have more
information about the weapons work than they have made public.
“Meanwhile, in closed-door discussions, American spy
agencies have stood firm in their conclusion that while Iran may ultimately
want a bomb, the country halted work on weapons design in 2003 and probably has
not restarted that effort — a judgment first made public in a 2007 National
Intelligence Estimate.
“The debate, in
essence, is a mirror image of the intelligence dispute on the eve of the Iraq
war [italics mine].”
This is a more than veiled comparison to using a flawed
premise to start a war with Iran as we did with Iraq over its so-called weapons
of mass destruction, which were supposedly about to be used immediately.
What Netanyahu said
and what’s behind it
In a speech of rebuttal by Israel Prime Minister Benjamin
Netanyahu a day later, there is no mention whatsoever of Israel’s nuclear reactor and facility at Dimona in the Negev desert,
, which has existed since the mid-50s, built with the help of the French, in
return for their own nuclear facility built with the help of Israeli
scientists. It wasn’t until 1986 that whistleblower and then orthodox Jew
Mordechai Vanunu, a technician at the plant, exposed the fact with words and
pictures in the London Times that the Israelis stocked between 200 and 400
nuclear warheads. His reward was 18 years in solitary confinement, and house
arrest when he came out for speaking to a reporter.
It is the unmitigated hysteria of hypocrisy of Israel that
glares most from Netanyahu’s speech, never even mentioning his country’s
long-standing involvement with nuclear weapons, dating back to 1948, the first
searches and finding of nuclear material in the Negev under then Prime Minister
David Ben Gurion. As early as 1945, Golda Meir and Ben Gurion realized what a
potent stone in the slingshot the nuclear bomb would make for themselves as a
David facing the Goliaths of the world. This was just as the US exploded two
nuclear bombs on Japan, one on Hiroshima, one on Nagasaki, singling out people
of color for the opening of this Pandora’s box. Yet, the US joins adamantly in
the hypocrisy to buttress its little big buddy Israel against Iran’s dubious nuclear
weapons. And what is Netanyahu’s speech about?
Wayne Madsen reports in his article that Netanyahu
equates Iranian government and Hamas with Nazis, “In a speech before the UN
General Assembly on September 24, Israeli Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu
invoked the Nazi holocaust to launch a blistering attack on Iran and Hamas.
Netanyahu said that 62 years ago, the UN recognized the right of the Jewish people
to a state of their own in Israel, which he emphasized is a ‘Jewish state.’” Of
course, his statement wasn’t true. Israel was supposed to be a ‘two-state’
nation, even as illegal and compromised as that was.
Madsen goes on, “Netanyahu told the General Assembly, minus
the delegation of Iran, which had walked out prior to his arrival, that the
previous day the president of Iran ‘spewed anti-Semitic rants.’ Netanyahu
produced copies of the Nazi minutes from the Wansee meeting which outlined how
the Nazi government would carry out the extermination of the Jewish people. He
also held up the concentration camp plans for the Auschwitz-Birkenau
concentration camp that were signed by Heinrich Himmler.
“Thanking those delegations that walked out on Iranian President
Mahmoud Ahmadinejad’s speech, Netanyahu criticized those who gave the Iranian
leader a hearing, declaring, ‘Have you no shame, no decency? What a disgrace!’
Netanyahu added that delegations that listened to Ahmadinejad were making ‘a
mockery of the UN Charter.’ But he of course is not. Here
is the complete text of Netanyahu’s speech.
The truth is, it is Netanyahu who makes a mockery of the
truth. Robert Parry noted in What Did
Ahmadinejad Really Say?: “Press TV quoted
Ahmadinejad as saying, ‘If the Holocaust, as you claim, is true, why don’t
you allow a probe into the issue?’ Press TV added that Ahmadinejad was ‘calling
the Zionist regime a symbol of lies and deception founded on “colonialist”
attitudes. The Iranian president also asked why Palestinians had to pay for the
genocide of Jews at the hands of Europeans.’
“So what did Ahmadinejad really say?”
Parry continues, “In the English-language account
of the speech published on the official Web site of the Iranian president,
Ahmadinejad calls the ‘pretext’ for founding the state of Israel ‘a lie,’ but
he doesn’t spell out precisely what he means by ‘pretext.’ In the context, the
word seems to refer to the Holocaust, but arguably his reference to ‘a lie
which relies on . . . a mythical claim’ could be about Biblical claims to the
land of Palestine that Zionist organizations cite.
“As Press TV says, Ahmadinejad frames his skeptical comments
about the Holocaust within Western hostility toward the scholarship of some
European and American Holocaust skeptics (often called ‘deniers’) who dispute
details such as the estimated number of six million Jews killed by the Nazis.
“But some of that supposed scholarship has been widely
viewed as an excuse by neo-fascists and anti-Semites to diminish the horror of
the Nazi extermination campaign against Jews and other groups considered
undesirable by Adolf Hitler and his German Third Reich.
“Though interpretations of Ahmadinejad’s words can be
debated, two things appear undeniable. First, Ahmadinejad continues to make
provocative statements that are offensive to many people around the world.
“And second, the New York Times and other Western news
organizations are failing to live up to their own principles of objectivity,
apparently out of an intense animosity toward Iran’s president.
“Shortly after Iran’s disputed presidential election in
June, a ‘news
analysis’ coauthored by New York Times executive editor Bill Keller opened
up with an old joke about Ahmadinejad looking into a mirror and saying ‘male
lice to the right, female lice to the left,’ a reference to his rise from the
street and his conservative Islamic religious views. Later, the Times editors
joined defeated candidate Mir-Hossein Mousavi in rejecting the notion of a vote
recount by Iran’s Guardian Council, which oversees elections. The Mousavi camp
instead demanded an entirely new election, which they failed to get. ‘Even a
full recount would be suspect,’ the Times wrote in an
editorial. ‘How could anyone be sure that the ballots were valid?’
“But the resistance of Mousavi and his backers to a partial
or complete recount prevented the uncovering of solid evidence that might have
proven that Ahmadinejad did rig the election, a point that has become
conventional wisdom in the Western media but which lacks solid proof (unlike,
for instance, the widespread evidence of fraud in the recent Afghan election.)
“Mousavi’s rigging case rests primarily on the argument that
Ahmadinejad ran up large majorities in poor districts because he had
distributed food and raised pay, tactics that may be criticized as the workings
of ‘a political machine,’ but normally don’t fall under the definition of
electoral fraud. [For more on the Iranian election, see Consortiumnews.com’s ‘Taking Sides on Iran.’]
“As tensions with Iran mount, it is easy for U.S. news
organizations to cast aside journalistic principles in favor of looking tough
and patriotic. In a similar context, when America’s top enemy was Iraq’s dictator
Saddam Hussein, the Times and other major U.S. news outlets helped whip up a
war fever and contributed to a political climate that equated questioning U.S.
government claims with a lack of patriotism and even sympathy for Hussein. The
chief consequence of that violation of journalistic standards was an aggressive
war that has left more than 4,300 U.S. soldiers dead and hundreds of thousands
of dead Iraqis.”
I agree with Parry that Ahmadinejad should avoid provocative
Holocaust statements that seem to skirt denying them. I understand that
Ahmadinejad understands these statements press a hot button that will never
fail to flash red lights and sound sirens. In a way, it’s foolish to do this.
Ahmadinejad would be wiser simply to point to the Jewish Holocaust as horrific
as it was, and point out that Israel now has a like and ongoing Holocaust in
Palestine. That is an indisputable fact.
In fact, as Jacques Hersh reports in the Monthly Review in
his Inconvenient Truths about ‘Real Existing’ Zionism, “The celebrations on the occasion of
the sixtieth anniversary of the founding of the state of Israel brought forth
mixed feelings for those of us who survived the Holocaust. The reason for this
ambivalence is that, while the survivors of the Nazi genocide celebrated the
creation of a Jewish state in 1948, few were aware at the time of the human
costs and injustices that had been, were being, and would be perpetrated
against Palestinian Arabs in our name. The slogan ‘Never Again,’ which was the
dominating thought in the Jewish psyche in those years, was mostly concerned
with the fate of European Jews.” In Hersh’s opinion it should have applied to
the Palestinians.
The fact is Hersh believes that Zionism itself was a
philosophy of compromise that offered European countries the option of continuing anti-Semitism with the
option also of having a place to send “their Jews,” Palestine. That is, so long
as that land swindle could be swung with the political and military backing of
the Imperial power of Great Britain and its Balfour Agreement and, post 1967,
with the aid of the military colossus of the United States. This deal would
provide both empires with a Western-style force to guard against “Asian”
incursions.
As Hersh writes, “the thesis of the ‘Clash of Civilizations’
placed a new paradigm of international politics on the agenda that was readily
adopted by neoconservatives in the United States and the Likud Party in Israel.
Theoretically and ideologically the thesis drew a fault line between the ‘West
and the rest’! In this projection, the West is considered to be the repository
of Judeo-Christian civilization and thus includes the Jewish State.” And thus
excludes Iran, Palestine, and the Muslim world.”
And so, there is the tale of two speeches at the center of
Israel’s hypocritical aggression and Iran’s irritating responses. It is one of
the most volatile scenarios in the world today. I believe it could be settled
if Jews and Israelis around the world who frown upon Israel’s long-standing
offenses against Arabs and Muslims would join with a more focused, tempered
Hamas to become the political majority to turn out the Zionists and the Likud
followers. This could bring about a lasting peace for all in Palestine. The
pursuit of a militaristic/religious Zionist policy will only lead to more
strife and disaster. Some combination of the sane on both sides ultimately will
have to rise up and claim that peace before the current chaos becomes the
world’s.
Jerry Mazza is a freelance writer living in New York
City. Reach him at gvmaz@verizon.net. His new book, “State Of
Shock: Poems from 9/11 on” is available at
www.jerrymazza.com, Amazon or Barnesandnoble.com.