Is Iran's President Really a ............
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Is Iran's President Really a ............
Is Iran's President Really a Jew-hating, Holocaust-denying Islamo-fascist who has threatened to "wipe Israel off the map"?
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- Basra-
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I got to really meet upclose & personal with the Iranian President in CBS's 60 minutes, a while ago.My perception of him --is that he seems to be a very demured, soft spoken intellectual.He is very unlike any other Arab or Muslim leaders.First-- he comes out to be cool, calculative & calm.And that courtesy smile has the potential of disarming opponent anytime.Mike Wallace who was interviewing him seem like an angry Arab more than this president did.In fact- he turned the tables on Mike, making him seem like a lunatic angry reporter.Certainly he is very smart-- i dont know his education credentials --but i have a feeling he ivy league educated.There is a liberality of demeanor resonating from him that is only achieved from liberal advanced schools.Also let us not forget the three page letter he wrote BUSH in which it was never replied & also mentioned in the interview.This president is smart enough to 'attempt' making buddis with Bush to put the US president in an uncomfortable position. Bush never ansewered the letter because that would certainly anger the Israels.Bush is a Cowboy-dude- he is not equiped in the fine art of artificial falsehood civility--where people dont 'mean' what they say.He can never play cool in the midst of deep rooted unDISCLOSED hate. Now--if it were Clinton--that would have been an easy thing to do.Clinton was the epitomy of false civility. It was no secret he hated Arafat yet he was charming & deceiving in his company.He is a charmer & a master of saying things he never meant.(A trait i admire thoroughly...
) A clear quality that this US president lacks & a distinction that makes him closer to savage Bush era than to the Sophisicate Metropolitan lifestyle.So Naturally, Bush chose not to answer the letter at all.But the president of Iran is certainly a very smart person & it also helps that he is also- not armed with the arab synonymous characteristics; that obnoxious large concetration of testosterone that makes them prone to impulsive violent outbreak.This Iranian president is calm, demured, almost very shy---with a little gentile smile that screams a sensitive man!
So... to answer your question--is this Calm shy calculative president of Iran going to Wipe Jews off the earth?? Well -- yes & no. First of all - No he will not throw a nuclear bomb at a whim. But he will systematically influence the rest of the arab in a smart -behind the doors deal where he can make another person do the dirty job--all he has to do is arm them or finance them secretly. In the end, the result will be the same-Jews will be Wiped off the face fo the earth.
On refreshing positive note: i think this president is all about making Iran a better place. He is all about fixing Iran-- arming it with prosperity & money .Yes on the downside-- Essentially making it easy for the next Iranian president who joins office to be powerful & God knows--fanatic enough to misuse this power.

So... to answer your question--is this Calm shy calculative president of Iran going to Wipe Jews off the earth?? Well -- yes & no. First of all - No he will not throw a nuclear bomb at a whim. But he will systematically influence the rest of the arab in a smart -behind the doors deal where he can make another person do the dirty job--all he has to do is arm them or finance them secretly. In the end, the result will be the same-Jews will be Wiped off the face fo the earth.



On refreshing positive note: i think this president is all about making Iran a better place. He is all about fixing Iran-- arming it with prosperity & money .Yes on the downside-- Essentially making it easy for the next Iranian president who joins office to be powerful & God knows--fanatic enough to misuse this power.

- fagash_killer
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no not really, their are alot of jews living in iran, he is against jews who believe in zionism, what ahmadjinad did was just an response to the prophet muhammed cartoon, and he just wanted to piss of alot of jews, well he sucdeed just read this
Last update - 22:10 02/09/2006
Annan: Patience, not sanctions, will solve Iran nuclear dispute
By News Agencies and Haaretz Service
Iran's foreign minister offered UN Secretary-General Kofi Annan his country's full cooperation over a Security Council resolution on the truce between Israel and Hezbollah, a UN spokesman said Saturday after talks in Tehran.
Annan also met with Iran's chief nuclear negotiator, Ali Larijani, describing the meeting as "constructive."
Iranian Foreign Minister Manouchehr Mottaki told Annan he could count on his "full cooperation" on resolution 1701, Ahmad Fawzi, a spokesman for Annan said. "We are pleased to hear that."
"There was a reference to paragraph 15 of the resolution, which deals with the arms embargo. The secretary-general did refer to paragraph 15," Fawzi said.
Asked about Iran's specific response on the arms embargo, Fawzi said: "I can't go any further than that."
The European Union agreed on Saturday to try to clarify Iran's stance on halting uranium enrichment within two weeks.
Annan's visit to Iran takes place two days after the UN nuclear watchdog, the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA), reported Tehran had failed to meet the UN Security Council's August 31 deadline to suspend sensitive work.
After meeting with Ali Larijani, the top Iranian nuclear negotiator, Annan said, "I have just had very good and constructive discussions with Mr. Larijani."
"As you can imagine we discussed the nuclear issue and many other issues of concern to Iran and to the United Nations," he said.
Larijani said the secretary-general's "stance for solving the nuclear problems is positive."
"Both sides agreed that problems to be solved through negotiations," he added.
Larijani is scheduled to hold talks with EU foreign policy chief Javier Solana early next week.
The UN spokesman said Annan held a telephone conversation with Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad prior to the visit. He is due to meet Ahmadinejad on Sunday.
"(Ahmadinejad) had told him that while he had some reservations over some articles in the resolution, he would nevertheless cooperate in it's implementation," Fawzi said, without giving details about Iran's reservations.
Annan said in a newspaper interview before arriving that he hoped for a diplomatic solution that would "avoid another conflict in a region already subjected to a great stress at this moment."
Asked about indications that the United States wants to move to sanctions, he told the French daily Le Monde, "I do not believe that sanctions are the solution to all problems."
"There are moments when a bit of patience produces lots of effects. I think that is a quality we must exercise more often," he said in the interview, published Saturday.
Annan told Le Monde he wants Iran to work with the international community, using its influence so Hezbollah can be disarmed in accordance with the UN cease-fire resolution.
"I am here to discuss implementation of resolution 1701, which deals with the situation in Lebanon, and I will also discuss issues of concern in this region to the international community," Annan told reporters shortly before heading into talks with Mottaki.
The secretary-general arrived in the Iranian capital two days after the UN nuclear watchdog, the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA), reported Tehran had failed to meet the UN Security Council's August 31 deadline to halt uranium enrichment.
Ahmad Fawzi, a spokesman for Annan who has been on a week-long Middle East trip to bolster the truce, said the main purpose of the visit was to discuss Lebanon.
But Fawzi said: "Certainly the issue of the (Iranian) nuclear program will be visited."
Iran is one of the main backers of Hezbollah, and Annan is expected to urge a commitment to a ban on exporting arms to the guerrillas as demanded by a Security Council resolution that ushered in the August 14 truce.
Although Iran funded and armed Hezbollah in the 1980s, it now says its support is primarily moral and political. But analysts say Hezbollah is equipped with Iranian arms and used them in the 34-day war against Israel.
Annan has already visited Lebanon, Israel, Syria (another Hezbollah ally), and Qatar, the only Arab state currently with a seat on the UN Security Council. In Damascus, Annan said Syria promised to enforce the arms embargo on Hezbollah.
Before Annan began his tour, UN spokesman Stephane Dujarric said: "It is clear that Iran has an influence on certain parts of Lebanese society, and we would hope to use that influence positively."
Analysts say Iran may have been emboldened in its nuclear standoff by the Lebanon conflict, which Tehran declared a victory for Hezbollah. Iran insists its atomic plans are civilian but Western governments suspect it intends to develop nuclear bombs.
Jewish organization asks Annan to protest Iran's Holocaust cartoons
The American Jewish Committee has asked Annan to speak out against Iran's Holocaust cartoon exhibition in his visit Saturday to Tehran.
In a letter circulated on Friday, the committee said Annan should use the opportunity to speak out "publicly and privately" about the exhibit. The AJC lobbies against anti-Semitism and for pluralism.
The exhibit's organizers say that the more than 200 entries from Iran's International Holocaust Cartoons Contest are aimed at challenging Western taboos about discussing the Holocaust, which Iran's president has called a "myth" open to debate.
"While we understand there are many vital issues on your agenda during your meetings in Iran, failure to address this government-endorsed and encouraged anti-Semitism would be seen, both inside and outside of Iran, as either acquiescence or worse, endorsement," the AJC letter said."
"Such an interpretation would be especially dangerous given the context of President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad's comments calling for Israel's destruction," wrote AJC's executive director, David Harris, and its president, Robert Goodkind.
The AJC letter said that Annan's visit would probably coincide with an announcement expected Sunday of the winners of the contest.
It also expressed appreciation for Annan's "prior statements about the bigotry of Holocaust denial and the importance of not using free speech as a pretext for hateful incitement."
Iran's best-selling newspaper Hamshahri in February launched a competition to find the best cartoon about the Holocaust in retaliation for last September's publication of caricatures of Muhammad in Danish and other European newspapers.
Those images of the prophet sparked attacks on European embassies in Muslim nations, including missions in Iran.

Last update - 22:10 02/09/2006
Annan: Patience, not sanctions, will solve Iran nuclear dispute
By News Agencies and Haaretz Service
Iran's foreign minister offered UN Secretary-General Kofi Annan his country's full cooperation over a Security Council resolution on the truce between Israel and Hezbollah, a UN spokesman said Saturday after talks in Tehran.
Annan also met with Iran's chief nuclear negotiator, Ali Larijani, describing the meeting as "constructive."
Iranian Foreign Minister Manouchehr Mottaki told Annan he could count on his "full cooperation" on resolution 1701, Ahmad Fawzi, a spokesman for Annan said. "We are pleased to hear that."
"There was a reference to paragraph 15 of the resolution, which deals with the arms embargo. The secretary-general did refer to paragraph 15," Fawzi said.
Asked about Iran's specific response on the arms embargo, Fawzi said: "I can't go any further than that."
The European Union agreed on Saturday to try to clarify Iran's stance on halting uranium enrichment within two weeks.
Annan's visit to Iran takes place two days after the UN nuclear watchdog, the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA), reported Tehran had failed to meet the UN Security Council's August 31 deadline to suspend sensitive work.
After meeting with Ali Larijani, the top Iranian nuclear negotiator, Annan said, "I have just had very good and constructive discussions with Mr. Larijani."
"As you can imagine we discussed the nuclear issue and many other issues of concern to Iran and to the United Nations," he said.
Larijani said the secretary-general's "stance for solving the nuclear problems is positive."
"Both sides agreed that problems to be solved through negotiations," he added.
Larijani is scheduled to hold talks with EU foreign policy chief Javier Solana early next week.
The UN spokesman said Annan held a telephone conversation with Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad prior to the visit. He is due to meet Ahmadinejad on Sunday.
"(Ahmadinejad) had told him that while he had some reservations over some articles in the resolution, he would nevertheless cooperate in it's implementation," Fawzi said, without giving details about Iran's reservations.
Annan said in a newspaper interview before arriving that he hoped for a diplomatic solution that would "avoid another conflict in a region already subjected to a great stress at this moment."
Asked about indications that the United States wants to move to sanctions, he told the French daily Le Monde, "I do not believe that sanctions are the solution to all problems."
"There are moments when a bit of patience produces lots of effects. I think that is a quality we must exercise more often," he said in the interview, published Saturday.
Annan told Le Monde he wants Iran to work with the international community, using its influence so Hezbollah can be disarmed in accordance with the UN cease-fire resolution.
"I am here to discuss implementation of resolution 1701, which deals with the situation in Lebanon, and I will also discuss issues of concern in this region to the international community," Annan told reporters shortly before heading into talks with Mottaki.
The secretary-general arrived in the Iranian capital two days after the UN nuclear watchdog, the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA), reported Tehran had failed to meet the UN Security Council's August 31 deadline to halt uranium enrichment.
Ahmad Fawzi, a spokesman for Annan who has been on a week-long Middle East trip to bolster the truce, said the main purpose of the visit was to discuss Lebanon.
But Fawzi said: "Certainly the issue of the (Iranian) nuclear program will be visited."
Iran is one of the main backers of Hezbollah, and Annan is expected to urge a commitment to a ban on exporting arms to the guerrillas as demanded by a Security Council resolution that ushered in the August 14 truce.
Although Iran funded and armed Hezbollah in the 1980s, it now says its support is primarily moral and political. But analysts say Hezbollah is equipped with Iranian arms and used them in the 34-day war against Israel.
Annan has already visited Lebanon, Israel, Syria (another Hezbollah ally), and Qatar, the only Arab state currently with a seat on the UN Security Council. In Damascus, Annan said Syria promised to enforce the arms embargo on Hezbollah.
Before Annan began his tour, UN spokesman Stephane Dujarric said: "It is clear that Iran has an influence on certain parts of Lebanese society, and we would hope to use that influence positively."
Analysts say Iran may have been emboldened in its nuclear standoff by the Lebanon conflict, which Tehran declared a victory for Hezbollah. Iran insists its atomic plans are civilian but Western governments suspect it intends to develop nuclear bombs.
Jewish organization asks Annan to protest Iran's Holocaust cartoons
The American Jewish Committee has asked Annan to speak out against Iran's Holocaust cartoon exhibition in his visit Saturday to Tehran.
In a letter circulated on Friday, the committee said Annan should use the opportunity to speak out "publicly and privately" about the exhibit. The AJC lobbies against anti-Semitism and for pluralism.
The exhibit's organizers say that the more than 200 entries from Iran's International Holocaust Cartoons Contest are aimed at challenging Western taboos about discussing the Holocaust, which Iran's president has called a "myth" open to debate.
"While we understand there are many vital issues on your agenda during your meetings in Iran, failure to address this government-endorsed and encouraged anti-Semitism would be seen, both inside and outside of Iran, as either acquiescence or worse, endorsement," the AJC letter said."
"Such an interpretation would be especially dangerous given the context of President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad's comments calling for Israel's destruction," wrote AJC's executive director, David Harris, and its president, Robert Goodkind.
The AJC letter said that Annan's visit would probably coincide with an announcement expected Sunday of the winners of the contest.
It also expressed appreciation for Annan's "prior statements about the bigotry of Holocaust denial and the importance of not using free speech as a pretext for hateful incitement."
Iran's best-selling newspaper Hamshahri in February launched a competition to find the best cartoon about the Holocaust in retaliation for last September's publication of caricatures of Muhammad in Danish and other European newspapers.
Those images of the prophet sparked attacks on European embassies in Muslim nations, including missions in Iran.
Last edited by fagash_killer on Sat Sep 02, 2006 2:23 pm, edited 1 time in total.
- SAIFULLAH_1
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basra history is not ure strongest point i see
alluring excetly not all iranians are persians, and not all persians are iranians

alluring excetly not all iranians are persians, and not all persians are iranians
Last edited by fagash_killer on Sat Sep 02, 2006 2:31 pm, edited 1 time in total.
- SAIFULLAH_1
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- Grant
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Fagash-killer,
Check out this link:
http://www.haruth.com/JewsIran.html
There are 25,000 Jews in Iran, down from 80,000 in 1979. The website is not specific, but states they are only able to teach some parts of their religion.They are forbidden to teach Hebrew, their liturgical language. The cemetery is essentially full, and negotiations for a new area have not yet been fruitful. There have been two recent executions and 13 additional arrests for spying for Israel.
The situation doesn't look either comfortable or stable to me.
Check out this link:
http://www.haruth.com/JewsIran.html
There are 25,000 Jews in Iran, down from 80,000 in 1979. The website is not specific, but states they are only able to teach some parts of their religion.They are forbidden to teach Hebrew, their liturgical language. The cemetery is essentially full, and negotiations for a new area have not yet been fruitful. There have been two recent executions and 13 additional arrests for spying for Israel.
The situation doesn't look either comfortable or stable to me.
[quote="Grant"]Fagash-killer,
Check out this link:
http://www.haruth.com/JewsIran.html
There are 25,000 Jews in Iran, down from 80,000 in 1979. The website is not specific, but states they are only able to teach some parts of their religion.They are forbidden to teach Hebrew, their liturgical language. The cemetery is essentially full, and negotiations for a new area have not yet been fruitful. There have been two recent executions and 13 additional arrests for spying for Israel.
The situation doesn't look either comfortable or stable to me.[/quote]
Grant
That is a Jew source. Never take for true the story of one side of the two party in hostile. If you want to know the truth search for 3rd party source
Check out this link:
http://www.haruth.com/JewsIran.html
There are 25,000 Jews in Iran, down from 80,000 in 1979. The website is not specific, but states they are only able to teach some parts of their religion.They are forbidden to teach Hebrew, their liturgical language. The cemetery is essentially full, and negotiations for a new area have not yet been fruitful. There have been two recent executions and 13 additional arrests for spying for Israel.
The situation doesn't look either comfortable or stable to me.[/quote]
Grant
That is a Jew source. Never take for true the story of one side of the two party in hostile. If you want to know the truth search for 3rd party source

- Grant
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Moslima,
That was your link!
You will please notice in my post that I carefully chose facts and not any of their interpretation. I have read at random in the links below and found the facts and figures consistant:
Jews of IranCyber encyclopedia of Jewish history and culture that covers everythingfrom anti-Semitism to Zionism. It includes a glossary, bibliography of web sites and ...
www.jewishvirtuallibrary.org/jsource/an ... njews.html - Similar pages
Jews of Persia / IranTERUA, The History of Contemporary Iranian Jews · Arrests hang over Iran's small Jewish community · The Scribe - Journal of the Babylonian Jewry ...
www.haruth.com/JewsIran.html - Similar pages
Jews in Iran Describe a Life of Freedom Despite Anti-Israel ...Jews in Iran Describe a Life of Freedom Despite Anti-Israel Actions by Tehran.
www.csmonitor.com/durable/1998/02/03/intl/intl.3.html - Sep 1, 2006 - Similar pages
Persian Jews - Wikipedia, the free encyclopediaPersian Jews have lived in the territories of today's Iran for over 2700 years ... Jews in Iran are not allowed to communicate with Jewish groups outside of ...
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Persian_Jews - Similar pages
Jews in contemporary IranLife for Jews in Iran is by no means free, but Iran's Jews have reached a modus vivendi with the Islamic Republic. In Isfahan, 300 Jews walk into the ...
www.iranian.com/BTW/Aug97/Jews/index.html - Similar pages
KOSHER AND JEWISH IRAN - JEWS: BACKGROUNDIn 1986 there were an estimated 50000 Jews in Iran, a decline from about 85000 in ... Over the centuries the Jews of Iran became physically, culturally, ...
www.kosherdelight.com/Iran.htm - Similar pages
Independent Online Edition > Middle EastIran's Jews struggle in the shadow of Holocaust denials. ... "It is the practical point of interaction between us and non-Jews in Iran. We help anybody. ...
news.independent.co.uk/world/middle_east/article549814.ece - Similar pages
The History Of Jews In Persia/Iran"The purpose was to educate the Jews of Iran in modern sciences, because previously they had studied Biblical subjects. But the doors of the schools were ...
www.parstimes.com/history/jews_persia.html - Similar pages
IRAN: Life of Jews Living in IranBefore the revolution, Jews were well-represented among Iran's business elite ... Testimony from Jews who have left Iran suggests more serious problems than ...
www.sephardicstudies.org/iran.html - Similar pages
Breaking the Silence: Frank Nikbakht and the Iranian JewsBy 1995, Jews were accused of bringing AIDS into Iran and causing economic chaos. ... Now they know that these 30000 Jews in Iran have the support of the ...
www.jewishjournal.com/old/nikbakht.5.5.0.htm - Similar pages
Result Page: 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Next
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That was your link!

You will please notice in my post that I carefully chose facts and not any of their interpretation. I have read at random in the links below and found the facts and figures consistant:
Jews of IranCyber encyclopedia of Jewish history and culture that covers everythingfrom anti-Semitism to Zionism. It includes a glossary, bibliography of web sites and ...
www.jewishvirtuallibrary.org/jsource/an ... njews.html - Similar pages
Jews of Persia / IranTERUA, The History of Contemporary Iranian Jews · Arrests hang over Iran's small Jewish community · The Scribe - Journal of the Babylonian Jewry ...
www.haruth.com/JewsIran.html - Similar pages
Jews in Iran Describe a Life of Freedom Despite Anti-Israel ...Jews in Iran Describe a Life of Freedom Despite Anti-Israel Actions by Tehran.
www.csmonitor.com/durable/1998/02/03/intl/intl.3.html - Sep 1, 2006 - Similar pages
Persian Jews - Wikipedia, the free encyclopediaPersian Jews have lived in the territories of today's Iran for over 2700 years ... Jews in Iran are not allowed to communicate with Jewish groups outside of ...
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Persian_Jews - Similar pages
Jews in contemporary IranLife for Jews in Iran is by no means free, but Iran's Jews have reached a modus vivendi with the Islamic Republic. In Isfahan, 300 Jews walk into the ...
www.iranian.com/BTW/Aug97/Jews/index.html - Similar pages
KOSHER AND JEWISH IRAN - JEWS: BACKGROUNDIn 1986 there were an estimated 50000 Jews in Iran, a decline from about 85000 in ... Over the centuries the Jews of Iran became physically, culturally, ...
www.kosherdelight.com/Iran.htm - Similar pages
Independent Online Edition > Middle EastIran's Jews struggle in the shadow of Holocaust denials. ... "It is the practical point of interaction between us and non-Jews in Iran. We help anybody. ...
news.independent.co.uk/world/middle_east/article549814.ece - Similar pages
The History Of Jews In Persia/Iran"The purpose was to educate the Jews of Iran in modern sciences, because previously they had studied Biblical subjects. But the doors of the schools were ...
www.parstimes.com/history/jews_persia.html - Similar pages
IRAN: Life of Jews Living in IranBefore the revolution, Jews were well-represented among Iran's business elite ... Testimony from Jews who have left Iran suggests more serious problems than ...
www.sephardicstudies.org/iran.html - Similar pages
Breaking the Silence: Frank Nikbakht and the Iranian JewsBy 1995, Jews were accused of bringing AIDS into Iran and causing economic chaos. ... Now they know that these 30000 Jews in Iran have the support of the ...
www.jewishjournal.com/old/nikbakht.5.5.0.htm - Similar pages
Result Page: 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Next
Search within results | Search Tips
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©2006 Google
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