Wahhabis And Khomeinists – The
Death Is At Our Doorsteps
Friday, November 4, 2005
By: Tashbih Sayyed
If the world needed any further proof of Khomeinism's Fascist and
Nazi traits, Ahmadinejad's call for Israel's destruction has provided
it. Addressing a conference in Tehran, entitled "The World without
Zionism", Ahmadinejad declared, "To those who doubt, to
those who ask is it possible, or those who do not believe, I say
accomplishment of a world without America and Israel is both possible
and feasible." Ahmadinejad said Wednesday (October 26, 2005)
that Israel is a "disgraceful blot" that should be "wiped
off the map." Confirming the power of anti-Israel ideology and
anti-American state of mind in the Islamist controlled Muslim world,
a Palestinian homicide bomber blew himself up in an Israeli market,
killing five people in the deadliest attack in the country in three
months.
Iranians staged multiple protests in the capital, Tehran, and other
cities holding banners carrying anti-Israeli and pro-Palestinian
slogans. "Death to Israel, death to America," read many
placards. The demonstrations are being held as part of annual al-Quds
- Jerusalem - Day protests, which were first held in 1979 after Shiite
Muslim clerics took power in Iran. After Khomeini toppled the pro-Western
Mohammad Reza Shah Pahlavi in 1979, he declared the last Friday of
the Muslim holy month of Ramadan as an international day of struggle
against Israel and for the liberation of Jerusalem. The Iranian government
organizes a central demonstration annually in Tehran, while other
rallies demanding Israel's destruction are held around the world.
Iranian Foreign Minister Manouchehr Mottaki said the massive demonstrations
illustrate the anger of the Islamic world over the Jewish state's
existence. "The comments expressed by the president are the
declared and specific policy of the Islamic Republic of Iran," Mottaki
told state-run television. "We don't recognize the Zionist
regime and don't consider it legitimate."
Iran's seven state-run TV stations devoted coverage Friday to
programs condemning the Jewish state and praising the Palestinian
resistance since the 1948 creation of Israel. Then again on Sunday
(October 30, 2005), Ahmadinejad said his comments represented Iran's
long-standing policy toward the Jewish state enunciated by the
late Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini, who led the 1979 revolution. "These
words are the same ones that the late imam [Khomeini] said," he
said, explaining that he only added one sentence about "the
powers of arrogance," seen as a reference to the US.
Iran does not recognize the existence of Israel and Khomeini had
repeatedly called for its destruction. Ahmadinejad said, "Once,
his eminency Imam [Ruhollah] Khomeini - leader of the 1979 Islamic
revolution], stated that the illegal regime of the Pahalvis must
go, and it happened. Then he said the Soviet empire would disappear,
and it happened. He also said that this evil man Saddam [Hussein]
must be punished, and we see that he is under trial in his country.
His eminency also said that the occupation regime of Quds [Jerusalem,
or Israel] must be wiped off from the map of the world, and with
the help of the Almighty, we shall soon experience a world without
America and Zionism, notwithstanding those who doubt."
Many find it difficult to understand the rationale behind the
timing of such a statement which is certainly going to isolate
Iran in the international community. They believe that in view
of the rising international pressure on Iran to abandon its nuclear
program, Ahmadinejad's anti-Israel declaration has been the most
stupid. The UN Security Council condemned the remarks, "The
Security Council condemns the remarks about Israel attributed to
Mr. Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, president of the Islamic republic of Iran," said
a press statement read by Romanian UN Ambassador Mihnea Ioan Motoc,
whose country holds the council presidency for October.
Council members also expressed support for UN Secretary-General
Kofi Annan's statement Thursday, which noted that "under the
United Nations Charter, all members have undertaken to refrain
from the threat or use of force against the territorial or political
independence of any state."
Israeli UN envoy Dan Gillerman told reporters that his country
welcomed the council's condemnation of the remarks by the Iranian
president. "We're very satisfied that after so many national
condemnations, we have heard a clear condemnation by the UN through
the Security Council. We feel that Iran, in its present state and
with its present leadership, should take this condemnation very,
very seriously," Gillerman said.
But what the international community needs to know is that such
customary and routine condemnations have never stopped a Fascist
or Nazi power from advancing its totalitarian goals. What Ahmadinejad
said was only a reflection of his faith in Khomeini ideology and
underscores the fact that there is no difference between Saudi
Arabian Wahhabism and Iran's Khomeinism.
Wahhabism and Khomeinism represent the two fundamental ideologies
fueling international Islamist terrorism. Al-Qaida state of mind
primarily is a product of Wahhabi doctrine that believes in either
converting all humanity to the totalitarian Wahhabi beliefs or
exterminating all those who refuse to convert. Hezbollah and Islamic
Jihad are the offspring of Khomeinism, which in the words of Mahdi
Ahouie, believes that the defeat and 'removal' of Israel is integral
to the ultimate success of the Islamic movement, regionally and,
ultimately, globally.
Khomeinism does not believe that there is any room for a Jewish
State in the Islamist world. It is driven by a conviction that "As
an externally inauthentic manifestation in the area, and the 'illegitimate
offspring' of superpower arrogance and hegemonism, Israel would
have to be defeated and Jerusalem liberated before the Iranian
revolution itself could run its full course."
Both Wahhabism and Khomeinism are united in their global jihad
against the Judeo-Christian civilization. The dreadful part of
this alliance is that both of these ideologies are cast in religious
terms receiving a level of holiness. They are backed by the two
most influential and powerful Muslim states – Saudi Arabia
and Iran – which are committed to the establishment of a
global Islamist State in the world.
Saudi Arabia and Iran both have contributed in one form or the
other in the rise and perpetuation of anti-Semitism, anti-Americanism
and Islamist extremism all over the world. If Saudi Arabia was
responsible for all the Arab wars against Israel and the establishment
of Taliban Emirate of Afghanistan, Iran contributed heavily in
the destruction of Lebanon by festering the fires of civil war
there and empowering Hezbollah and Islamic Jihad in the Middle
East. Khatami, in the first official visit to Syria by an Iranian
president, hailed Hezbollah as an "ideological and humanitarian
movement" that was trying "to liberate Lebanese territory
from Israeli occupation" and "to protect the unity and
independence of Lebanese territories".
Khatami also met in Damascus with leaders of major militant Palestinian
factions opposed to the peace process and pledged support for them.
Syria and Iran called in a statement for an end to Israeli occupation
of Arab territories, including an unconditional troop pullout from
southern Lebanon. Iran also emphasized on the right of the Palestinian
refugees who are living outside Palestine – mostly in Syria,
to come back to their homeland and to participate in the decision
making for the future of Palestine.
Iran has also been a constant factor in the homicide bombings
aimed at the killing of Israelis. Many believe that Iran is still
harboring a very significant portion of Al-Qaeda leaders in and
around its region of Baluchistan bordering Afghanistan and Pakistan's
province of Baluchistan.
The only difference between Wahhabism and Khomeinism is in their
tactics. Whereas Saudi Arabia feigns innocence and blames others
for the terrorist attacks carried out by its citizens, "claiming
that whatever happens is because of America or the Israeli -Palestinian
conflict," Iran has never tried to hide its hatred for either
Israel or the US.
According to Mahdi Ahouie, "Long before Ayatollah Khomeini
and his followers came to power in Iran, they had already set in
motion their Islamic ideology and a powerful propaganda campaign
against the spread of Jewish influence and especially 'Zionism'
in the region and in the world. Thus during his exile Ayatollah
Khomeini supported all struggle against Israel throughout the world
and forged relationship with Palestinian groups, from left to right
and from Islamic to Marxist.
Immediately after assuming power, Khomeini regime denounced the
relations with Tel Aviv and turned over the Israeli mission in
Tehran to the Palestine Liberation Organization. "Iranian
leaders contended that Israel's existence was illegitimate, because
it came about as a result of the destruction of Palestine. Therefore,
Iran advocated eradicating Israel and reconstituting Palestine.
Even those Arabs who advocated compromise with Israel, such as
Anwar Sadat of Egypt, were excoriated as traitors.
Iran's hostility to Israel continued after the death of Ayatollah
Khomeini as strongly as in the Khomeini era. The Iranian disapproval
of the political resolution on the Arab-Israeli conflict is based
on this fundamental assumption that Israel has basically no right
to exist and that its destruction is a desideratum.
Iranian supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khomeini said as far back
as October 21, 2000, that the only way to resolve the Middle East
crisis is by eradicating Israel. "The only way to end the
crisis in the Middle East is to dry up its roots. What is at the
roots of this crisis? It is the Zionist regime that has been imposed
on the region," Khomeini told some 100,000 Basij Islamic militia
members gathered on the outskirts of Tehran for military exercises.
Khomeini also called on Arab leaders to help "clean Holy
Quds (Jerusalem) of Zionists," and said those responsible
for killing Palestinians in clashes with Israeli forces should
be tried by Arab or Islamic courts.
Khomeini, according to a Reuters report, called on Iranians to
donate money to help Palestinians "even though we cannot send
weapons now and it is not possible for this nation's youth to go
there." The Iranian leader called for the militant Palestinian
groups Hamas and Islamic Jihad to unite with radical members of
the mainstream Fatah, saying deals made at the Sharm al-Sheikh
summit would not curb anti-Israeli unrest.
"Shameful agreements at Sharm al-Sheikh and other such summits
will have no effect other than bringing disrepute on those who
make such accords," said Khomeini.
Ahmadinejad has reconfirmed that Khomeinism represents the same
anti-civilization forces that have always controlled and guided
Islamist Imperialism. Islamist totalitarian mentality considers
all non-Muslims as a second class citizen and all non-Arab cultures
and civilizations as belonging to dark ages. That's why wherever
Islamists went, they destroyed the local culture, forced their
subjects to give up their history, language, customs and civilization
and imposed their Bedouin way of life - everything under an Islamist
crescent had to be Arab. Iran under Khomeinism is trying to do
the same thing by rejecting Iran's own history as represented by
Cyrus the Great, who after liberating the enslaved Jews in the
Kingdom of Babylon in 534 BC, allowed them to return to their promised
land.
Motivated by Ahmadinejad's remarks about 300 Khomeinists turned
up Sunday at the offices of the Headquarters for Commemorating
Martyrs of the Global Islamic Movement to volunteer for suicide
bomb attacks against Israel. Presidential adviser Mojtaba Rahmandoust
attending the gathering said, "The Iranian nation wants this
regime removed from the world map," Rahmandoust told the gathering
held at a building owned by the semiofficial Martyr Foundation.
A spokesman for the group said it had signed up more than 45,000
volunteers to undergo training for suicide attacks since it began
recruiting in June 2004. "More than 1,000 of them have already
been trained. Many of them don't need training since they are already
members of the elite Revolutionary Guards and paramilitary Basij
forces."
Iran's foreign policy today is a combination of Islamist ideological
preferences, careful exploitation of regional and global aspirations
of former super power Russia, aspiring superpower India and the
superpower in the making People's Republic of China and playing
up European Union's insecurities and historical anti-Semitism against
the United States of America. By maintaining a strong relationship
with Syria and continued support and sponsorship of terrorist organizations
like Hezbollah and Islamic Jihad it wants to continue the war of
attrition against the Jewish State and retain some leverage in
its future encounters with the West.
All these different strands of Iran foreign policy are woven together
by a subtle and sometimes not so subtle Islamist anti-Semitism
and are designed to impress upon the world of Khomeinisms power
and ability to influence world politics with a particular emphasis
on the Middle East.
There is another reason for Ahmadinejad's so "un-diplomatic" outburst;
the movement in many Muslim countries toward some kind of contacts
with Israel. Pakistan, Afghanistan, Indonesia, Morocco, and Tunisia
have all expressed their readiness, albeit conditional, for establishing
relationship with Tel Aviv. In September, Bahrain announced it
was ending a decades-old law banning trade ties with Israel. Earlier
this month, Qatar said it was donating US$6 million to help build
a soccer stadium for a mixed Arab-Jewish team, the first such financial
assistance by an Arab state for any town inside Israel.
This change in the political and diplomatic climate in the Muslim
world does not bode well for Iran – it will eventually isolate
Iran. In a world in which major Muslim states do not consider the
Jewish State as their enemy, there will not be any room for a revolutionary
Islamist vision that draws its energy from the anti-Israel passion.
Such a pro-Israel Muslim world will undermine the destructive power
of Wahhabism and Khomeinism.
That's why Ahmadinejad also attacked those Muslim states who are
seeking to break new ground in their relations with Israel. "Anybody
who recognizes Israel will burn in the fire of the Islamic nation's
fury; any (Islamic leader) who recognizes the Zionist regime is
acknowledging the surrender and defeat of the Islamic world," state-run
television quoted Ahmadinejad as telling thousands of students
during a Tehran conference called "The World without Zionism."
Ahmadinejad and other radical Islamists know that such a pro-Israel
environment will be their undoing and they cannot allow this to
happen. The only way to keep the Muslim world from becoming friendly
to Israel is to somehow keep the fires of anti-Semitism burning.
That can only happen if Israel and the US are forced to act in
a manner that may infuriate the Muslims in the extreme.
Afghanistan, Guantanamo, Iraq, Abu Garaib, desecration of Quran,
the Muslim holy book and the death and destruction brought on by
the natural disasters have created a fertile ground in the Muslim
world for any radical theory that is laced with anti-Semitism to
be accepted readily. Ahmadinejad, in my view, is trying to force
the US and Israeli hand to commit just such an act. He is in need
of a violent conflict between the US and a Muslim state that can
be translated as another attack on Islam.
The international community will have to find a way to punish
Khomeinists without angering the Muslim masses. The trap is well
thought out and time tested.
Ahmadinejads reference to the US along with the Jewish Israel
reflects Khomeinist conviction that without destroying all chances
of any rapprochement with the US, they will not be able to implement
their revolutionary foreign policy objectives of exporting Khomeinist
revolution and the destruction of Israel. For Ahmadinejad, the
protracted hostage crisis in November 1979 furnishes a good example
how to prevent the moderates from re-establishing relations with
the US. The seizure of the American embassy in Tehran was very
skillfully exploited by the radicals to kill all chances of normal
relations with the US and Ahmadinejad wants to create some kind
of a similar situation today.
It is now up to the civilized world to stop this mad man from
achieving his destructive goals. Ahamdinejad's statement has made
the world aware of the permanent nature of Khomeinism's anti-Semitism.
It has also betrayed the real rationale behind Tehran's nuclear
program. Iran does not need nuclear power for peaceful purposes.
It needs it to wipe the Jewish State from the face of this earth.
Now the question is will the world allow Khomeinism or Wahhabism
to plunge it into the third world war?
The typical condemnations will not be good enough this time. The
international community will have to accept that they cannot save
humanity by being politically correct or embarking on another campaign
of appeasement. The time for dialogue and discussion has passed.
Only a determined and focused action plan to prevent Iran from
realizing its anti-American and anti-Semitic dream will save the
world from total annihilation.
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