| Clinton Pressures China to Toughen Iran Sanctions | | Print | |
| Written by Warren Mass | ||||
| Monday, 01 February 2010 16:05 | ||||
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Clinton said that she and other diplomats who favor additional sanctions on Iran for refusing to meet Western demands for more transparency in conducting its nuclear program are lobbying China to back new UN sanctions against Iran. “China will be under a lot of pressure to recognize the destabilizing effect that a nuclear-armed Iran would have” in the Persian Gulf, “from which they receive a significant percentage of their oil supply,” the New York Times quoted Clinton as saying in her address at École Militaire, a French war college. "We understand that right now it seems counterproductive to you to sanction a country from which you get so much of the natural resources your growing economy needs. But think about the longer-term implications," the Los Angeles Times reported Clinton as also saying. A commentary posted at antiwar.com on January 29 speculated: “China’s reported plans to veto additional sanctions against Iran may irk the US, but as permanent members of the security council there is little the US can ultimately do about them. Secretary Clinton’s comments may in fact push China even further into opposition of the sanctions, as any support they gave it now would be seen as capitulation to US demands.” As to why the United States is responsible for defending the entire Middle East against Iran is an interesting question. Perhaps it is because the United States was responsible for removing the only force in the region strong enough to wrestle Iran to its knees — the Iraqi military apparatus once commanded by Saddam Hussein. Iran and Iraq engaged in a large-scale war from September 22, 1980 through August 20, 1988, and the two sides were so evenly matched that half a million Iraqi and Iranian soldiers died in the conflict until both sides exhausted their human and other resources to continue. The conflict ended in stalemate. Saddam Hussein may have been an insufferable bully, but sometimes it is better if two bullies have each other to keep occupied and in check, so they ignore their weaker neighbors. U.S. meddling, as it usually does, upset the balance of power in the region. But if our role in the Middle East was a blunder, pressuring China — of all nations — to adhere to sanctions against Iran, is ludicrous. Which nation is the greater threat to world peace? Iran, a nation of 75 million people headed by a fanatical (but still God-fearing) regime, has about 945,000 active military personnel, and a small arsenal of missiles, the most advanced of which, the Sajjil 2, has a potential range of 1,200 miles. As noted, Iran’s war with Iraq essentially ended in a draw, whereas, U.S. forces rolled over Iraq with about as much opposition as the Germans received from little Belgium during World War II. Though the exact size of China’s nuclear arsenal is unknown, current best estimates are that China has about 280 strategic weapons, and a smaller number — about 120 — of tactical weapons. The weapons are based on ICBMs and strategic bombers, with a naval component under research. China has also acquired and improved upon the Russian S-300 surface-to-air missile systems, which are considered to be among the best aircraft-intercepting systems in the world. The question remains: Given the vast difference in each nation’s military-strike capabilities, why is Iran perceived as the greater threat — against which we are soliciting China’s help? Is it because China has a long track record as a peace-loving nation, a bastion of freedom and human rights, and a candidate for a universal good-neighbor award? Anyone familiar with the history of the communist regime that captured mainland China under Mao Tse tung in the early 1950s and its successor regimes knows that communist rule has brought death to an estimated 60,000,000 Chinese. Nor is the harm done by Chinese communism entirely domestic. It also supported the aggression of North Korea and North Vietnam in two wars against the United States and its allies, and brought death to over one million Tibetans. Even more pertinent to any consideration of enlisting China’s help to sanction Iran is that for many years, China has been a the leading weapons supplier of nations associated with terrorism (including Iran, Syria, and North Korea) and has assisted so-called Islamist (but in reality, communist) terrorist groups such as Hamas and Hezbollah. Iran is but another whipping boy among many used by our State Department in its long history of covering up for the real source of terrorism in the world — openly communist China and “formerly” communist Russia. Photo: AP Images
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Will Grigg
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Moats, Beams, and Blowback How many countries does China or Russia presently occupy? Zero. Washington can't say the same, can it? The U.S. military budget is roughly six times that of China; it exceeds that of Russia by an even greater margin. In fact, the Pentagon spends more than nearly the combined military budgets of the rest of the world. For decades the CIA actively cultivated the worst elements within the Muslim world; we're enjoying the bloody harvest of its efforts in the form of terrorist blowback. Blaming Russia and China for this borders on derangement. As Rep. Ron Paul recently pointed out, "The CIA runs everything, they run the military. They're the ones who are over there lobbing missiles and bombs on countries...." Despite all of this, we're supposed to believe that Russia and China are the greatest "threat to world peace" and "the real source of terrorism"? This stuff plays well with reality-deprived mouth-breathers of the sort who consider Sean Hannity a "Great American" and Sarah Palin a statesman. Is that the constituency you people believe is going to save America? |
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VOA News reported on January 29 that Secretary of State Hillary Clinton — who was in Paris meeting with senior French officials — said that China is under pressure to join in new sanctions against Iran over Tehran's refusal to reveal details of its nuclear-fuel enrichment program. Iran has consistently denied that it is developing nuclear weapons.
