Can Obama ignore murder of Neda in Tehran?

Washington Times Editorial:

It was the sniper shot heard round the world. One moment, a young woman is standing on the sidewalk, watching the Iranian people stand up to the state. A second later, she crumbles to the sidewalk, blood pumping uselessly out of the gunshot wound in her chest. A faceless police sniper has killed Neda Agha Soltan, but also made her immortal. Her murder was videotaped and sent worldwide. Her death is now the defining image of the 2009 Iranian revolution.

For 30 years the world has tolerated this cruel and calculating regime, as it took hostages, paid terrorists and built bombs meant for allied troops in Iraq. Now the people of Iran are pleading their case before the world. While events are still unfolding, some lessons can be drawn regardless of how the revolution ends.

As recently as a month ago, many Americans doubted that the Iranian people wanted democratic change. That debate is over. No one can credibly claim that the West is foisting the ideals of freedom on Iran's millions. They are telling us through their actions that these truths are self evident and not limited to any culture, time or place. To paraphrase Thomas Jefferson, they are placing before mankind the common sense of the subject in terms so plain and firm as to command their assent.

The phony democracy the Iranian clerics had erected to legitimize their rule is crumbling down on them. For a time, Iranians bought into the idea that their voices counted even in a system in which the vote was manipulated by theocrats handpicking the eligible candidates. But the 2009 election was an outright fraud. Attempts to explain it away have insulted the intelligence of Iranians and the world. The mullahs are offering many insulting rationalizations - there were too many votes for fraud to have worked, that the number of fake ballots would not have changed the final result, or that since vote fraud is illegal in Iran it could not have happened. This is reminiscent of embattled President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad saying there are no homosexuals in Iran even as Iranian courts condemn gays to death. Iran's Guardian Council has admitted there was widespread fraud and that the total votes cast in 50 cities exceeded the number of registered voters. They attempted to downplay this finding on the grounds this occurred in fewer of the 170 cities in which there were claims of fraud, a pitiful example of spin.

But the debate over the election is simply a catalyst. The uprising has moved well beyond the ballot issue. We are witnessing 30 years of frustration pouring into the streets....

And in their wake, they have left the tattered claims of the cultural relativists.

...
There is much more.

Obama has shown a stubborn streak of avoiding the will of Americans on issues like Gitmo. He may try to do so again on negotiations with Iran, but any such move would be a futile waste of time while this evil regime continues to build weapons to exterminate all who disagree with its weird religious beliefs which it uses as an excuse for murder most foul.

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Should Republicans go ahead and add Supreme Court Justices to head off Democrats

Is the F-35 obsolete?

Apple's huge investment in US including Texas facility