Sunday, 19 05 2024
Sunday, 19 05 2024
Ararat Mirzoyan and the President of the CE Congress exchanged thoughts on regional developments
Ararat Mirzoyan had a meeting with the CE human rights commissioner
16:04
The deputy mayor of Paris received the members of the Yerevan Municipality delegation
Armenia is taking clear steps towards democratic reforms. Mirzoyan to the Minister of Foreign Affairs of the Netherlands
15:26
The head of the IAEA will visit Russia
Alen Simonyan met with the President of the Canadian Senate and the Deputy Speaker of the Qatari Parliament in Geneva
14:48
Rain and thunderstorms are expected, with possible hail
The effectiveness of the reforms implemented in Armenia was emphasized
14:10
Hajiyev and Biden’s advisor discussed issues of Armenian-Azerbaijani settlement
The EU welcomes the process of demarcation of the Armenia-Azerbaijan border
The German Foreign Ministry urges Armenia and Azerbaijan to continue the dialogue
The foreign ministers of Armenia and Germany discussed RA-Azerbaijan relations
The delegation led by the Mayor of Yerevan visited the Esplanade of Armenia in Paris
Armenia and Turkey discussed the restoration of the historical bridge of Ani
12:16
Azerbaijan resumes the work of its embassy in Iran
“Armenia and Azerbaijan have finally started border demarcation works.” Mirzoyan
“No one can question the legitimacy of the government.” Khandanyan
The complete construction of “Cascade” according to the imagination of a prestigious French architect
11:00
This work to protect rights through politically independent processes is essential. US Embassy
10:41
“Fico is between life and death.” Orban
Cannes Film Festival red carpet
10:03
For the first time in the 2 years of the war, no brigade complains about the lack of ammunition. Zelensky
18:55
Rocket Line – now for 60 months: Idram and IDBank
RA Foreign Minister met with PACE President
18:17
Russian forces advanced 10 km in the direction of Kharkiv. Zelensky
17:58
Putin and Xi discussed the issue of Ukraine in a tete-a-tete format
Alen Simonyan and Sahiba Gafarova met in Geneva
17:20
Russia has opened a new front. A problematic year awaits Ukraine
17:01
Hajiyev and the US Deputy Secretary of State discussed the Armenian-Azerbaijani peace process
16:42
The US has built a temporary port on the Gaza coast

What Must They Think In Tehran?

Elliott Abrams from Council on Foreign Relations touched upon recent developments around Iran. Find the full article below

On November 1st, Iranian warplanes attacked a US drone over international waters in the Persian Gulf. CNN had the story, which has been confirmed. In a separate CNN story, a Pentagon spokesman said this:

The reality is that we have a wide range of options, as I said before, to protect our assets and our forces in the region, and we’ll do so when necessary. The United States has communicated to the Iranians that we will continue to conduct surveillance flights over international waters, over the Arabian Gulf, consistent with longstanding practices and our commitment to the security of the region.
Three comments seem appropriate today.
First, the Obama administration withheld this information–hid it, if one wishes to use a tougher term–in the days before the presidential election. That alone must suggest to the government of Iran that politics, not national security, comes first in Washington.
Second, what in fact has been the American response to what we are calling an unprovoked attack in international air space? Nothing. We sent a message. The Pentagon spokesman said we have lots of options, and among them it seems we have selected none. Because this attack is only the latest in decades of Iranian attacks on Americans and American assets, and has elicited the usual non-response, the government of Iran must conclude that we will go to extreme lengths to avoid any confrontation and to protect our rights. And what if the drone had been shot down? Would we have reacted? Does the protection of our rights depend on Iranian marksmanship? Next time will we send a more strongly-worded message? If we are trying to persuade Iran that it must negotiate on its nuclear weapons program or face possible military action, the U.S. government’s handling of this incident is counter-productive–to say the least.
Third, what do the Iranians make of the apparent fact that the President’s chosen negotiator for new, secret talks is Valerie Jarrett. Ms. Jarrett’s background in foreign policy is this: “Jarrett has held positions in both the public and private sector, including the chairwoman of the Chicago Transit Board, Chicago’s commissioner of planning and development and deputy chief of staff for Chicago Mayor Richard M. Daley. She also practiced law with two private law firms.” She is a political adviser to Mr. Obama, and it is reported that she opposed the strike that killed Osama bin Laden. What must they think in Tehran? Again, that politics dominates national security policy and that we seek to avoid a confrontation at all costs.

All of this will make a negotiated solution more difficult, and a bad outcome–either caving into accept an Iranian nuclear weapons program, or having to bomb Iran to avoid this–far more likely. In fact, if Mr. Obama really means it when he says that an Iranian nuclear weapon is unacceptable, these erroneous moves are bringing a military confrontation steadily closer.

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