Iran and Israel
by Thierry Meyssan on 17 Oct 2024 0 Comment

We are making a serious mistake in thinking that all of Iran is opposed to Israel’s colonization of Palestine. A group of Iranians, albeit a minority, still hopes to revive trade with the West at the cost of an agreement with the genocidal regime of Benjamin Netanyahu.

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Most of us think that the Islamic Republic of Iran is primarily against Israel. This is a failure to understand the teaching of Imam Khomeini and an ignorance of the many relations between the two countries. Ruhollah Khomeini was an anti-imperialist in a country that suffered first from the United Kingdom and then from the United States.

 

It is unknown in the West, but during the First World War, Iran suffered a terrible famine that decimated a third, if not half, of its population, making it one of the main victims of this conflict [1]. This catastrophe has hardly been studied in the West and is generally not mentioned in works on the Great War. In any case, Iranians are convinced that this genocide was caused by the requisition of crops to feed the British army against the Ottomans and the Russians.

 

Subsequently, in 1953, the United Kingdom joined forces with the United States to overthrow Prime Minister Mohammad Mossadegh, who had nationalized oil at the expense of the Anglo-Persian Oil Company, and to impose the Nazi Fazlollah Zahedi as his successor[2] . The latter then established a sadistic political police force, the SAVAK[3], with the help of a group of revisionist Zionists delegated by Yitzhak Shamir, then head of a branch of the Israeli Mossad.

 

This is why Ayatollah Khomeini’s writings are always first directed against the United States and the United Kingdom (“the great and the little Satan”), with Israel being presented only as the expression of the Anglo-Saxons and not as an independent power.

 

However, the Persian Empire’s close ties with Israel never ceased. Even today, the Eilat-Ashkelon oil pipeline, built in 1968 under the Shah, is still operated by a company half-owned by Israel and half by Iran. Any publication about the owners of this pipeline is punishable by 15 years in prison in Israel[4] .

 

These points having been made, it is appropriate to recall the importance of the Iran-Contra affair in the history of the Islamic Republic.

 

This operation of the US secret services was conceived by the SS-Hauptsturmführer, Klaus Barbie, who had organized the dictatorship of Hugo Banzer in Bolivia and the Medellín cartel. It was a question of supplying weapons to the pro-US mercenaries who were fighting against the revolution claiming to be Augusto Sandino (the “Sandinistas”). However, Barbie was arrested and extradited to France. Colonel Oliver North, who led a secret team of assassins within the National Security Council, took over the case. He imagined a much more complex operation: to free the US civilians taken hostage during the Lebanese civil war in exchange for weapons to the Islamic Republic of Iran so that it could defend itself during the war imposed by Iraq and overthrow President Saddam Hussein. These weapons were allegedly taken by Israel from those supplied by the United States and transferred to Iran. But some of them allegedly reached the Nicaraguan Contras. This project obtained the support of the assistant to the Secretary of State, the revisionist Zionist Elliott Abrams.

 

Contact was therefore made with an Iranian deputy, Hassan Rohani, whom the US services knew from the time of the Shah. He introduced them to the speaker of the Majlis (parliament), Hashemi Rafsanjani. The operation was so important that the commissions paid to the latter allowed him to become the richest man in his country.

 

Despite all the official investigations that have been conducted into this dark affair, the most important things remain secret. In any case, it is clear that Hassan Rouhani (who became president from 2013 to 2021) and Hashemi Rafsanjani (who became president from 1989 to 1997) were collaborators of the team of Oliver North and Elliott Abrams.

 

In 2006-2007, Elliott Abrams—still him—co-directed with Liz Cheney (daughter of Vice President Dick Cheney) the Syria Policy and Operations Group; a cross-functional institution of the Bush Jr. administration, with a top-secret budget. She oversaw aid to the Iranian opposition and to all those fighting against the “mullahs’ regime” wherever they were.

 

Oliver North is no longer active, but Elliott Abrams organized Benjamin Netanyahu’s last election campaign, his alliance with the Kahanists (Itamar Ben-Gvir’s Jewish Force and Bezalel Smotrich’s Jewish Home) to reform the revisionist Zionist movement (of the fascist Zeev Jabotinsky[5] ) and his transformation of Israeli constitutional laws (what the opposition and many commentators have called a “coup d’état”).

 

The Iranians do not want to destroy their rivals. So they have gotten into the habit, when two groups come into conflict, of creating a commission to reconcile them. Since it usually fails to do so and, on the contrary, itself comes into conflict with another institution, they create a fourth and so on. In the end, they end up with a very complex organizational chart in which the slightest decision requires a dozen signatures that no one ever manages to gather all of them. The system has thus blocked itself.

 

In 1993-1994, the Revolutionary Guards sent soldiers to fight alongside NATO in Bosnia and Herzegovina. They came to the aid of President Alija Izetbegovic. At that time, there was no opposition between the Islamic Republic of President Hashemi Rafsanjani and the Anglo-Saxons. Saudi Arabia and Osama bin Laden’s Arab Legion participated in this joint operation.

 

In 2005, a massive press campaign was launched against the new Iranian president, the anti-imperialist Mahmoud Ahmadinejad. Reuters invented a statement by President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad to make people believe that he wanted to wipe Israel off the map. This false quote provoked a condemnation from the United Nations Security Council before the intoxication was realized and Reuters wrote a denial[6]. President Ahmadinejad had simply said that the State of Israel, like the Soviet Union, would be swept away by time, not that its population should be thrown into the sea. No matter: the false quote is now included in many books as an established fact.

 

It was also at this time that the Anglo-Saxons began a campaign to make people believe that Iran wanted to acquire nuclear weapons to crush Israel. They hoped to justify an attack on Iran after those on Afghanistan and Iraq[7]. However, it was the Shah who wanted to equip himself with an atomic bomb; a project solemnly abandoned by Imam Ruhollah Khomeini in 1988, and never revived since.

 

In 2009, the United States attempted a colour revolution during the re-election of nationalist President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad. Washington then clearly relied on former President Hashemi Rafsanjani. They finally managed, in 2013, to negotiate with envoys of the Supreme Leader, Ayatollah Ali Khameni, the ouster of Ahmadinejad’s group from the presidential election and the appointment of Hassan Rohani.

 

In 2011, the Iranian counterintelligence official tasked with combating Mossad infiltration who was appointed was… an Israeli agent. He remained in his position until 2021 and now lives in Israel. He surrounded himself with a team of about twenty people who fled with him to Israel. They were the ones who organized the assassinations of the nuclear scientists and the theft of the archives exhibited by Benjamin Netanyahu.

 

Under these conditions, it is not surprising that an Iranian source informed Israel of the places and times when it could assassinate Hezbollah leaders one by one. Especially since the Supreme Leader is currently negotiating with the Biden administration with the idea of ??reaching an agreement before November 5, the date of the US presidential election. That is to say, the pro-US are today more powerful than ever in Tehran.

 

The main problem in Iran is not the opposition between conservatives and renovators, as the Western press claims (the conservative Mahmoud Ahmadinejad was in favour of the freedom to wear the veil and the beard, while the renovator Mir Hossein Moussavi was against the freedom of homosexuals), but in the paralysis of institutions. There is certainly an anti-Jewish current in Iran, just as there was a Nazi party, but the Jewish community is represented in the Majlis (parliament). Iranian political life can rather be explained in a sociological manner: the bourgeoisie of Tehran and Isfahan draws its wealth from international trade and therefore aspires to the abolition of borders, while the common people of the countryside remember the famine that decimated their families under the inflexible gaze of the Anglo-Saxons.

 

The bottom line:

• A small Iranian minority is pro-Western and pro-Israel. President Rafsanjani sent soldiers to fight under NATO command in Bosnia-Herzegovina.

• It is not impossible to hold an anti-Israeli discourse while doing business with Tel Aviv: the two states still jointly operate an oil pipeline that is essential to the Israeli economy.

• Pro-Israel people have held important positions in the Islamic Republic. It is no wonder that it was Iranian officials who betrayed Hassan Nasrallah.

 

Notes

[1] The Great Famine and Genocide in Iran: 1917-1919, Mohammad Gholi Majd, University Press of America (2013).

[2] “CIA declassifies more of “Zendebad, Shah!” – internal study of 1953 Iran coup”, National Security Archives, February 12, 2018.

[3] “SAVAK: A Feared and Pervasive Force”, Richard T. Sale, Washington Post, May 9, 1977. Debacle: The American Failure in Iran, Michael Ledeen, Vintage (1982).

[4] “Israel and Iran jointly operate the Eilat-Ashkelon pipeline”, Voltaire Network, 2 January 2018.

[5] Zeev Jabotinsky is a fascist in the full sense of the term. He was an ally of Benito Mussolini and established his militia, the Betar, in the suburbs of Rome under his protection. Until his death, he supported the Axis against the Allies.

[6] “How Reuters participated in a propaganda campaign against Iran”, Voltaire Network, November 14, 2005.

[7] “Who is afraid of Iranian civil nuclear power?”, by Thierry Meyssan, Voltaire Network, June 30, 2010.

 

Courtesy Thierry Meyssan

https://www.voltairenet.org/article221331.html 

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