Sunday, January 12, 2020

Muslim Scholar: ‘This regime, for the first time ever, is seriously threatened’



Image result for pictures of iranian protests


Article by Elizabeth Vaughn in "RedState":

Dr. Qanta Ahmed is a physician, a commentator, an author and a contributor to The Spectator, The Jerusalem Post and The Huffington Post. She is also a member of the Council on Foreign Relations.

In an appearance on Sunday morning on “Fox and Friends,” Ahmed discussed the student protests which began on Saturday in response to Iran’s admission late Friday that they had unintentionally shot down Ukraine Airlines Flight PS752 shortly after it had taken off from Tehran. This occurred just hours after Iran had launched missiles at Iraqi military bases which housed American troops. Iranian President Hassan Rouhani tweeted on Friday that it had been a “great tragedy and unforgivable mistake” and he blamed “human error.”

In between the crash and Rouhani’s admission on Friday night, however, Iran denied responsibility, refused to turn over the airplane’s black boxes and then bulldozed the crash site.

The protests on Saturday began with the demand that Ayatollah Khamenei resign and have since turned into protests against the regime.

Ahmed, a Muslin scholar, said “this regime, for the first time ever, is seriously threatened and is in its most fragile and precarious time probably since 1979.” This is the first time I’ve heard such a strong statement about the Iranian government.

She explained:

They’ve had a disastrous outcome to their attempt of intimidating the United States, their attempts on the embassy in Baghdad failed, they’ve had Qassem Soleimani [figuratively] decapitated, they had to admit that they shot down their own commercial airliner, killing hundreds of people, 83 Iranians, many Iranians have lost multiple family members.
I think the Iranians have to ask themselves what else have they [the regime] concealed.
It wasn’t just the error. They denied it at first, then finally they’re admitting it, now they want to know what other falsehoods have been fed.
1500 people were killed in recent protests in Iran before the Qassem Soleimani execution, so they are finally able to voice what they’ve suspected all along and we must not ignore those voices.

Ahmed praised President Trump’s words of support for the Iranian people saying that, “President Trump made a wonderful statement on Twitter in Farsi, and in English, that the United States is with the people of Iran.”

To the brave, long-suffering people of Iran: I've stood with you since the beginning of my Presidency, and my Administration will continue to stand with you. We are following your protests closely, and are inspired by your courage.

When asked if Iran will agree to negotiations, she answered, “I can’t imagine it because the more they threaten the more Promethean their grip. They would have to completely deny their origin, this regime. I do think this regime, for the first time ever, is seriously threatened. People are saying the United States is not our enemy, our regime is our enemy. Our enemy is not here in the U.S., it is here where we are in Tehran and that kind of explicit speech I’ve never encountered.”

I posted several days ago that current conditions make this a vulnerable time for Iran’s leadership. The regime is reeling from the death of a key leader, their economy is a shambles, and their Supreme leader is aging and possibly seriously ill. There may not be a better time than right now for a revolution.

Where the protests will lead from here is anyone’s guess. Is this the start of a new revolution? Or will it be crushed? Will the government kill protestors?

The Gateway Pundit has just reported that a woman was allegedly shot in the head by a “Basij.” (Note: The Basij is an Iranian paramilitary organization. It is one of the five forces of the IRGC.) The story and video can be viewed here.

Meanwhile, in the Iraqi city of Basra, Fox foreign correspondent Trey Yingst reports that Iraqi journalist Ahmed Abdul Samad and his cameraman, Safaa Ghali, were assassinated after covering anti-government demonstrations.

Breaking: Iraqi journalist Ahmed Abdul Samad assassinated by unidentified gunmen after covering anti-government demonstrations in Basra

https://www.redstate.com/elizabeth-vaughn/2020/01/12/muslim-scholar-this-regime-for-the-first-time-ever-is-seriously-threatened/ 



The rule of law, the abuse of..

The rule of law, 

the abuse of power, 

and justice denied

The film Just Mercy opened this week.  It is the story of a man, Walter McMillan, who was convicted of murder in Alabama,1987. The trial was a sham, all exculpatory evidence hidden, the one witness a felon who traded his false testimony for a shorter sentence.  This gross miscarriage of justice happened because the power in the town -- the sheriff, the police and the DA -- all conspired to convict McMillan in order to bring closure to the community for the murder of a young girl.  

Enter Bryan Stevenson,  a young Harvard-trained lawyer who founds the Equal Justice Initiative to help those on death row, most of them having had little or no legitimate representation.  Without totally revealing the most important details of the story, suffice it to say that those most guilty of illegality, those who were complicit in the railroading of an innocent man, suffer no consequences for their participation in their crimes that sent that man to prison; he was sent to death row a year before his trial!

Watching the story unfold, it is hard not to see the parallels between the McMillan case and the Russia collusion hoax to destroy Donald Trump.  None of the many persons involved in the coup attempt have yet to suffer any consequences for their treasonous actions.  

Yes, Bill Barr and John Durham are allegedly hard at work on the deep investigation of the origins of the hoax, the many constitutional transgressions committed by too many people in positions of power.  

But, as time goes by it becomes increasingly easier to believe that none of them will be ever charged with the any of their bad acts against the country.  The IG Report on FISA abuse has yielded nothing but a too-late-to-be-meaningful scathing letter from FISA judge Rosemary Collyer and an email this week from current FBI director Wray about some "policy changes," along with better training and new protocols.  The DOJ just hired David Kris, an Obama/Holder-era member of the hoax team whose job it was to smear Devin Nunes.  

Why on earth would Barr stand for this if his job is to root out corruption and get to the bottom of the coup attempt?  

Why is Bruce Ohr still employed? He was one of the top tier orchestrators of the collusion hoax.  Why has Rod Rosenstein not been indicted?  We now know that he led the illegal intrusion into then-CBS correspondent Sharyl Attkisson's computers.   

Yes, the gears of justice grind slowly, but this is ridiculous.  More and more Americans, especially those of us who support President Trump, are losing hope that anyone will be held responsible for the most horrific political scandal in U.S. history.  It seems to have become the rule that those who attain bureaucratic power get to keep it no matter how appalling the nature of  their crimes.  The virulent racists, from the cops to the DAs, who sentenced numerous innocent men to death row in the South all kept their jobs and most likely continued their evil ways just as our high-profile traitors at the CIA, FBI and DOJ have kept theirs.  The sheriff who knowingly charged McMillan with murder in 1987 was re-elected six times after his wrongdoing was revealed; rather like Biden's re-election after numerous ethical lapses, plagiarism the least of them.  Peter Schweizer's new book is likely to expose much more serious crimes of the Biden family. 

Those of us who grew up in America, were educated in public schools, were taught the Constitution, the glory and wisdom of the Founders as well as the scourge of slavery, the Civil War fought to end it at the expense of 600k lives, and the success of the Civil Rights Movement of the 1960s, are not surprised to learn of the many betrayals of the Constitution and the Bill of Rights; those breeches are part and parcel of our history.  

What is distressing is to be reminded how long those betrayals continued and continue to this day.  To learn that what happened to men like McMillan and other men like him was still happening in the late 1980s and early 1990s is shocking though probably not to the people who live there.  That people like James Brennan, James Comey, Peter Strzok and Lisa Page, Bruce Ohr and Nellie, et. al. are all still free as birds and tweeting their days away, maligning President Trump day after day after day is monstrous, an insult to our rule of law.  The film Just Mercy is difficult to endure but is a thirty-two year-old reminder that far too many of the people who rise to power over others egregiously abuse it.  If Barr and Durham do not indict those who nearly succeeded in overturning an election, who are still trying to destroy Trump's presidency, the grand experiment that is America will be over for it will demonstrate that we are no longer a nation of laws but a third world country run by crooks and thugs.  

Nationalism Is Looking Pretty Normal Right Now



The movement threatens to explode the myths that “normalize” immigration, fruitless foreign wars, the deracination of the American people, and the disintegration of their culture.

The recent troubles with Iran highlight the problem with America First nationalism: it would mean placing the interests of regular people at home before transnational “interests” like foreign wars that have no bearing on middle-American life. Put another way, real people living in a real country with real interests of their own have a real problem with really stupid government and the real Stupid Party, otherwise known as the Republicans, that enables bad government while pretending to stand against it.

Americans generally have no desire to see the blood of their children spilled on the altar of the foreign policy establishment. Not so “democracy” can be spread around the globe, whatever that means, and certainly not so that sovereign states may be compelled into “acting like a normal country,” as Secretary of Defense Mark Esper has said of Iran—not least of all when “normal” is defined by a government that provides millions in taxpayer funds for abortion and to inject children with puberty-suppressing, opposite-sex hormones, rendering them permanently infertile.

“Normal” is denouncing the destruction of invaluable cultural sites by ISIS, such as the ancient Roman structures in Palmyra, an act explicitly intended as a rejection of nationalism—then claiming it is somehow different when we threaten to do the same. If Notre Dame had been deliberately burned to the ground by the Danes in anger, would it have been less of a loss for civilization, than if it had been razed by the Saudis?

Not until every country in the world has become so “normal” as to offer SWAT, FBI, and U.S. Marshall protection for drag queen story hour, it seems, will Esper sleep soundly beneath his rainbow quilt. Concerned mothers around the world beware.

“Normal,” as defined by the government and the self-appointed experts of the academic and think-tank class, is the imperative of keeping America in the Middle East in the name of “stability,” while doing nothing about growing instability at home. Democrats in Virginia have threatened military actionagainst law-abiding gun owners and police who resist mass disarmament. They’ve even increased the state’s corrections budget in anticipation of putting gun owners and cops who refuse to enforce gun control behind bars. Meanwhile, the very “normal” Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, and Firearms recently announced that it will include a non-binary gender option on firearm purchase forms.

“Normal” is playing up failed states as existential threats, all the while, as Wayne Isaac wrote in these pages, “drug trafficking in America by Mexican and Chinese nationals and mendacious pharmaceutical players like the Sackler family kill Americans on a scale no Islamic terrorist group could even dream of achieving.” Qasem Soleimani’s body count is, in fact, dwarfed by the number of Americans killed by the Sackler’s opioid profiteering. Of course, Soleimani wasn’t clever enough to ally himself with the American Enterprise Institute and Purdue Pharmaceuticals.

And finally, when an Oklahoma family returning from Mexico is attacked by gunmen just south of Texas for merely driving on the wrong highway and their 13-year-old is murdered, and this elicits nothing more than tough talk and condolences from the same government that just the other day threatened annihilation against a country on the other side of the globe for less, you will know that you have arrived in the Elysian fields of a very “normal” regime.

The New Normal 

Last month, before our government found another pretext to flirt with “normalizing” the world, Kim Holmes, the executive vice president of the Heritage Foundation, observed correctly, if unhappily, that nationalism suggests a real people identifying with a particular place, language, religion, culture, and ethnicity.

This is the stuff not easily reduced to a “universal creed” for the consumption of immigrants and foreign countries in need of becoming at once “normal” and partaking in “American exceptionalism,” as our government and luminaries understand it.

If America was a real place where nationalism could take root, it might resist internationalist imperatives to “normalize” the world by the sword. If America was home to a specific religion, thus a particular set of mores, the little people with pitchforks might come for the ruling class that has foisted on them, against their faith and will, abortion, same-sex marriage, and gender ideology.

If this country had a specific language, Americans might be able to induce immigrants to speak it without having to fear the federal lash of the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission, which has actively worked to outlawGeorge Washington’s native tongue since its inception.

A country with a specific culture would not tolerate the destruction of its historical monuments, the renaming of its streets after minority “heroes,” the plowing under of its traditional art, literature, and tastes in favor of strange “diverse” ones. Perhaps it is because our government cares so little for our culture that it makes no bones about reducing culture elsewhere to ash.

If America were based entirely on abstractions, people like Holmes wouldn’t have to try so hard to avoid serious discussion of Federalist 2. They would not have to ignore Benjamin Franklin, when he asked “why should Pennsylvania, founded by the English, become a colony of aliens,” who “will never adopt our language or customs any more than they can acquire our complexion?” Or Hamilton, when he warned that diverse immigrants “tend to produce a heterogeneous compound; to change and corrupt the national spirit; to complicate and confound public opinion; to introduce foreign propensities.”

If America were just an abstraction, Holmes would not have ignored what was, in effect, our first immigration law and why it limited naturalization to “free white person[s] . . . of good character.” It seems we owe it to serendipity herself that America was more or less culturally and ethnically homogeneous from 1790—when the national character was 80 percent British, 60 percent ethnically English, and 98 percent Protestant—right up until the Hart-Cellar of 1965 that abolished all national origin, race, and ancestry bases for immigration in the name of being “normal.”

Intolerable Normality

Sure, America’s Founders could believe in natural right and still exclude or include anyone—on whatever basis—as a rule, while still making exceptions. The Founders understood that people from wildly disparate cultures could only assimilate under certain conditions. It happened then, and under the right conditions, it can still happen today.

But, as a practical matter, it was and is unlikely to occur without limits on immigration. As equal citizens exercising their consent, the founders had the right to establish the parameters for immigration and naturalization in their time in line with what they thought prudent—just as we had the right to change them later and have the right today to reconsider those changes. In seeking to determine what is actually prudent, we might look to the founders, rather than a caricature of them, for wisdom and courage in navigating the issues of our time with eyes wide open.

The real problem with nationalism, the kind that President Trump campaigned on, is that it offers true and therefore intolerable normality in a clown world. It is normal to want to stay out of foreign wars, to preserve your religion, language, people, and culture.

And it was telling that Tucker Carlson, that nationalist gadfly, invoked the ire of so many conservative intellectuals when he called the president away from war, away from escalation, demanding that Trump hold to the things he campaigned on in 2016—which altogether were taken as America First nationalism.

It has been the purpose of government since before I was born to engineer the conditions for nationalism out of existence, and the role of the ruling class—Democrat and Republican, liberal and conservative—to gaslight Americans into accepting the new “normal.” Nationalism threatens to explode the myths that “normalize” immigration, fruitless foreign wars, the deracination of the American people, and the disintegration of their culture.

And that kind of normal just won’t fit the clown shoes.

Kimia Alizadeh: Iran's only female Olympic medallist defects

Iran's only female Olympic medallist, Kimia Alizadeh, says she has defected.
Alizadeh, 21, posted on social media that she had left Iran because she didn't want to be part of "hypocrisy, lies, injustice and flattery".
She described herself as "one of the millions of oppressed women in Iran".
Alizadeh did not say where she was, amid reports that she has been training in the Netherlands. She made history for Iran in 2016 when she won a bronze medal in taekwondo at the Rio Olympics.

But in her social media posts she said authorities in the Islamic republic had used her success as a propaganda tool.
Her defection comes as Iran is gripped by protests - stemming from the accidental shooting down of a Ukrainian airliner on Wednesday, in middle of a major confrontation with the US.

Officials 'humiliated me'

"I am one of the millions of oppressed women in Iran whom they've been playing for years," she wrote.
"I wore whatever they told me and repeated whatever they ordered. Every sentence they ordered I repeated. None of us matter for them, we are just tools."
She added that although the government would exploit her sporting success politically, officials would humiliate her with comments such as: "It is not virtuous for a woman to stretch her legs."

Alizadeh denied she'd been invited to Europe or given a tempting offer and did not confirm which country she had gone to.
Iranians reacted with shock last week when news of Alizadeh's disappearance first emerged.
Iranian politician Abdolkarim Hosseinzadeh accused "incompetent officials" of allowing Iran's "human capital to flee".
On Thursday, the semi-official Isna news agency carried a report that said: "Shock for Iran's taekwondo. Kimia Alizadeh has emigrated to the Netherlands."
The agency reported that Alizadeh was hoping to compete at the 2020 Tokyo Olympics but not under the Iranian flag.
Announcing her intention to leave Iran, the sportswoman did not mention her plans but said she would remain "a child of Iran" wherever she is.
https://www.bbc.com/news/world-middle-east-51084620

Kerry Argues Iran Deal Contained Rather Than Enabled Iran, Mike Doran Has a Few Things to Say



Former Secretary of State John Kerry wrote an opinion piece for the NY Times on Thursday blaming President Donald Trump for “conflict and turmoil with Iran,” arguing that “diplomacy was working until Trump abandoned it. 

There’s a lot we could dispute and but let’s just take a look at a couple of things.
Here’s what Kerry says about IRGC terrorist leader Qasem Soleimani.
Let’s get one straw man out of the way. General Suleimani was a sworn, unapologetic enemy of the United States, a cagey field marshal who oversaw Iran’s long strategy to extend the country’s influence through sectarian proxies in the region. He won’t be mourned or missed by anyone in the West. Occasionally, when American and Iranian interests aligned, as they did in fighting ISIS, we were the serendipitous beneficiaries of his relationships and levers, as were the Iraqis. But this was a rare exception.
That underscores the tragic irony of Mr. Trump’s decision to abrogate the nuclear agreement: It played into General Suleimani’s hard-line strategy by weakening voices for diplomacy within the Tehran regime. What Iranian diplomat would be empowered by a skeptical supreme leader to explore de-escalation with a country that broke its word on a historic agreement and then, in their words, “martyred” arguably Iran’s second most powerful figure?
So the Iran Deal was about diplomacy and helping the moderates against the hardliners like Soleimani, according to Kerry. He acknowledges Soleimani was a sworn enemy (although he doesn’t use the word terrorist despite the fact he was officially designated as such and the IRGC a terrorist organization) and Trump is playing into the hands of the hardliners. 

But what happened under the Iran Deal? The Iran Deal reportedly released sanctions that had personally existed on Soleimani and other IRGC terrorist leaders. It released reportedly $150 billion to Iran, although Kerry argued that it was effectively less than that. He acknowledged that some of the money would go to terrorists. Well, of course, when you lift sanctions on those terrorists. So who was “appealing to hardliners?” The ones doing an airstrike to stop their attacks or the ones releasing money to them? 

Michael Doran is a senior fellow at Hudson Institute. He specializes in Middle East security issues. During the administration of George W. Bush, he served as a senior director in the National Security Council. One of his responsibilities was dealing with issues related to Iran. 

He was clearly not happy with Kerry’s little revisionist article.


Well, well, well. Please feel free to share.






Sounds like there’s a lot more there, deserving of attention. Pass the popcorn. 

Paging President Trump for the declassification…

HT: Twitchy

John Kerry Claims the Obama Administration Just Gave Iran ‘a Little Bit of Money’



After the missile attacks on U.S. forces in Iraq by Iran, both President Donald Trump and Secretary of State Mike Pompeo pointed out that the Obama administration cut Iran a lot of money as part of the Iran Deal. 

It’s not hard to wonder where Iran might be if the the mullahs hadn’t gotten that infusion of money given the state of their economy and the Iranians who have protested repeatedly. Not to mention whether the very money given to them in cash and in sanctions relief is now being used against us. 

The Obama administration not only gave Iran “pallets of cash,” with over a billion being sent, but they also got sanctions relief which meant a release of Iran of $150 billion as part of the Iran deal. Reportedly, they specifically released sanctions on IRGC terrorist leader Qasem Soleimani and some of his IRGC leaders which means they knew money would be flowing into their pockets. At the time, Kerry even admitted that money would be going to terrorists but he basically downplayed it as “oh well, stuff happens.” 

We reported that Mike Doran says there are letters between the Obama administration and Soleimani that he thinks maybe people should be taking a look at now. 

CNN apparently decided to give Kerry the opportunity to respond to Trump and Pompeo during an interview this weekend. But Kerry probably would have been better served if he just stayed home. Because once again, he showed that quality he has – open mouth, insert foot.



According to Kerry, who is married to a fortune from wife, Theresa Heinz, all those billions were just “a little bit of money.” 
“We gave them a little bit of money that was released in that period of time, not as part of the nuclear arrangement,” Kerry said during an interview on CNN. “But the fact is the [Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps] had all the money it wanted. The IRGC wasn’t starving at that point in time, and in fact, Iran owed billions upon billions of dollars. Most of that money went to pay off their debts and to facilitate their economic initiatives.”
The Iranian people who are in the streets tonight protesting against the government would beg to differ, Mr. Kerry. 
He even seems to suggest giving Iran the money was actually saving American taxpayers money. Oh please, talk about ridiculous spin. 
When asked about whether some the $150 billion in sanctions relief to Iran would go to terrorist groups, Kerry reiterated that, after settling debts, Iran would receive closer to $55 billion. He conceded some of that could go to groups considered terrorists, saying there was nothing the U.S. could do to prevent that.
“I think that some of it will end up in the hands of the IRGC or other entities, some of which are labeled terrorists,” he said in the interview in Davos, referring to Iran’s Revolutionary Guard Corps. “You know, to some degree, I’m not going to sit here and tell you that every component of that can be prevented.”
But he added that “right now, we are not seeing the early delivery of funds going to that kind of endeavor at this point in time.”
The money in cash that was delivered in at least two payments included a $400 million then another payment of $1.3 billon. Some folks on the left have argued that that money was owed to them because of a legal finding. But there are a few problems with that argument. Yes, it’s true. But what’s also true is that it was owed to the prior government, not the mullahs, from before 1979. But we also managed to avoid giving it to them for 40 years, because, d’uh, terrorists. Somehow that calculation was lost on the Obama administration. But perhaps the critical point that always gets lost in the discussion of the cash is that American victims of Iranian terrorism had about $53 billion in legal claims against the government of Iran. So there was every argument as to why you should hold that money and never give it to Iran, if for no other reason than not to cheat the American victims who had already suffered so much. But they got tossed under the bus completely. 
“A little money.” A lot of damage, all around.




US Deterrence Is Key to Preventing War With Iran


 US Deterrence Is Key to Preventing War With Iran


 Article by Steve Sherman in "Townhall":

Deterrence is the best protection against a future war with Iran. Peace through strength is founded on deterrence. America’s strength has allowed the United States to remain relatively peaceful over the past few decades. Our military is undisputedly the world’s most powerful force. That power prevents our enemies from attacking the homeland.

There are several facets to deterrence. One is the power aspect that comes with having the most powerful military and the wide range of war fighting ability that most other nations do not possess. The second is the actual initiation of conflict with nations like the former Taliban government in Afghanistan. That occasional use of force shows that we have a powerful military and we’re not afraid to use it. Those two things create the deterrence factor.

Deterrence puts fear in the hearts of the leaders of nations who talk a tough game against the U.S. yet fear the consequences of actually attacking America.  Deterrence is in the back of the minds of our enemies when they have to map out the consequences of attacking American citizens or U.S. troops.

The most significant example is the peace between the United States and Russia, formerly the Soviet Union. The fact that both the United States and Russia have huge arsenals of nuclear weapons provides the capacity to retaliate if attacked. The nuclear threat is overwhelming because it can completely extinguish a nation if used. This provides a deterrent for states to use a nuclear weapon as a weapon of war, because the retaliation would be crippling and the nation starting the war would not “win” in any sense.  Deterrence has been a stable part of U.S. foreign policy in a post WWII world.

Intimidation is another piece of deterrence. It is the functional equivalent of muscle flexing when the U.S. deploys military hardware and aircraft to intimidate an opponent. According to a December 29, 2019 report by NBC News, U.S. Air Force F-15 Strike Eagles “carried out airstrikes against five locations in Iraq and Syria on Sunday, targeting multiple weapons and munitions depots linked to Iran, two U.S. officials said. The weapons and lethal aid stored at the sites had been used in a series of recent attacks on bases of the U.S.-led coalition fighting the Islamic State group in Iraq and Syria, the officials said.” Those strikes show Iran and other nations that the United States will hit munitions storage as a way to deter a future war and show that the United States is not afraid to act when necessary.

The same idea of deterrence was used against the Turks in Syria last fall.  A Fox News reporter tweeted on October 15, 2019, “U.S. military sends F-15 fighter jets, Apache gunships in ‘show of force’ to disburse Turkish-backed forces who came ‘very close’ to U.S. troops west of Ain Issa, Syria. Turkish-backed fighters ‘violated a standing agreement’ not to threaten American troops: U.S. official.” Shows of force are frequently used to remind countries, even allies, that there are consequences if U.S. troops are harmed.

The initiation of war in Afghanistan is a further deterrent, because it shows that if a line is crossed, the U.S. will go to war. Our forces went into Afghanistan because the government was harboring terrorist organizations who did not think they had anything to lose for the 9-11 attacks, but the Taliban government in Afghanistan payed a high price for that miscalculation. Nations will look at the U.S. wars in Afghanistan and Iraq to show that there are serious consequences for nations who cross certain thresholds.

Most Americans are worn out with the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq, and therefore don’t want to see a new one in Iran. The show of force that culminated in the U.S. taking out Iran’s Qassem Soleimani sent a clear message that America was not interested in regime change or a major war with Iran, but it would not hold back in taking out one of the most feared and renowned terrorists the world has ever known if given the chance. Iran got the message loud and clear.

Targeted strikes such as the Soleimani hit or munitions bombings have proven a deterrent to Iran taking more aggressive actions against the U.S. and may end up actually preserving the peace. Deterrence is the most important tool the American people have today to preserve the peace and avoid another war in the Middle East.

https://townhall.com/columnists/stevesherman/2020/01/12/us-deterrence-is-key-to-preventing-war-with-iran-n2559357

Iranian Protests Against Regime Cast a Stark Contrast


Protests against the regime of Ayatollah Khamenei erupted today in Tehran following the government admission of shooting down Ukraine Airline Flight 752. In scenes that look familiar to the 2010 ‘green movement’, thousands of Iranian protestors, many young women, have gathered to express their opposition to the dictatorial government.
Stunningly, it has been reported that the U.K. Ambassador in Tehran was arrested for filming the protests.

(Via Daily Mail) Iranians have gathered in the streets of Tehran to demand the resignation of Ayatollah Seyed Ali Khamenei after the regime admitted it had mistakenly shot down a civilian passenger plane.
Angry crowds gathered on Saturday night in at least four locations in Tehran, chanting ‘death to liars’ and calling for the country’s supreme leader to step down over the tragic military blunder, video from the scene shows.
What began as mournful vigils for Iranian lives lost on the flight soon turned to outrage and protest against the regime, and riot police quickly cracked down, firing tear gas into the crowd.
‘Death to the Islamic Republic’ protesters chanted, as the regime’s security forces allegedly used ambulances to sneak heavily armed paramilitary police into the middle of crowds to disperse the demonstration. (read more)








Dems May Find Themselves Torn Between Newfound ‘Sympathy for the Devil’ and Acknowledging the Suffering Iranian Regime Inflicts on its Citizens

 
 
 Article by Elizabeth Vaughn in "RedState":

According to Agence France-Presse (AFP), Iranian Olympic medalist Kimia Alizadeh announced on Saturday she has defected. Fed up with the regime’s “hypocrisy, lying, injustice and oppression of women,” the Taekwondo bronze medalist wrote (on Instagram) that she has permanently left the country to pursue “a life of security, happiness and freedom.”

Alizadeh said “she wore everything the government asked her to wear, referring to the head covering all Iranian female athletes must wear, and wrote she “repeated everything they told me to say…None of us matter to them.”

, Iran’s only female Olympic medalist, has rejected the regime’s oppression of women. She has defected for a life of security, happiness, and freedom. will continue to lose more strong women unless it learns to empower and support them.


AFP reported:
Iranian MP Abdolkarim Hosseinzadeh, meanwhile, demanded answers, accusing those he described as the “incompetent officials” of allowing Iran’s “human capital to flee” the country.
He drew a comparison between Alizadeh and Iranian chess prodigy Alireza Firouzja who won the grandmaster title at age 14, two years after winning the Iranian chess championship, and who now lives in France.

Most Iranians who have a choice to flee the country, meaning the money and the opportunity, do so. Few citizens would choose to endure the increasingly miserable living conditions and Iran’s repressive political climate, if given the choice.

A June 2019 Gallup poll found that, “a record-low 12% of Iranians rated their lives positively enough to be considered “thriving,” and a record-high 34% rated their lives poorly enough to be considered “suffering.”

The U.S. strike on Soleimani has suddenly thrust Iran onto the international stage, shining a light on living conditions inside the Islamic Republic. Although the world has long understood that the Iranian government’s unrelenting repression of their citizens has led to a pretty miserable quality of life, the recent hostilities with the U.S. have forced the country’s humanitarian crisis onto the front page.

All of this may present a dilemma for Democrats who will find themselves torn between their newfound support for the clerical regime’s leaders and their ability to recognize the suffering these “sympathetic” figures have inflicted on the Iranian people.

The left has overwhelmingly condemned President Trump’s decision to kill terrorist Qassem Soleimani. Unanimously, Democrats claim that he had no right to order the strike. House Speaker Nancy Pelosi herself said that killing Soleimani would be like killing the second most important person in the USA.

Because the same ruthless men whom the Democrats have legitimized over the last week murdered 1,500 (according to Reuters) of their own citizens during the November protests. And refused to release the bodies of the dead unless the families promised not to hold funerals. And shut down the internet for five days afterward.

They also forced their citizens to take to the streets to “mourn” the death of the country’s beloved martyr, Qassem Soleimani. The media was collectively “moved” by the crowds who showed up for the funeral of a “man revered by many here.” ABC’s Martha Raddatz, reporting from Iran, donning a headscarf, described the scene: “Soleimani’s image everywhere. The impact of his death profound. The crowds are massive and emotional. There are many tears here, many signs with Soleimani’s picture on them, but the message is also very clear. These people want revenge…Inside the funeral service, the emotion just as powerful.”

That’s just beautiful Martha. He was cut down too soon, wasn’t he?

The Iranian people, who live the reality of the mullah’s cruelty and repression every day, are growing restless. After new protests broke out on Saturday night, President Trump tweeted (in Farsi) a message of encouragement and support to the protestor’s. According to The Washington Examiner, it was the “most liked Persian tweet’ in the history of Twitter.


 
به مردم شجاع و رنج کشیده ایران: من از ابتدای دوره ریاست جمهوریم با شما ایستاده‌ام و دولت من همچنان با شما خواهد ایستاد. ما اعتراضات شما را از نزدیک دنبال می کنیم. شجاعت شما الهام بخش است.


His message read: “To the brave and suffering Iranian people: I have stood with you since the beginning of my presidency and my government will continue to stand with you. We are following your protests closely. Your courage is inspiring,”

The Democrats have a choice to make. Who will they support, the murderous leaders whom they tell us have been dealt with unfairly? Or the long-suffering people of Iran who have lived without freedom for over 40 years?

https://www.redstate.com/elizabeth-vaughn/2020/01/12/soleimani-strike-has-thrust-irans-leadership-into-the-global-spotlight-will-the-revelations-incite-revolution/

Has President Trump Forgotten The Declassification Material He Delayed then Deferred?



credit: sundance at CTH

President Trump asks:
Are these “dirty cops” going to pay a big price for the fraud they committed?”  


However, the only person who can honestly answer that question is the person in the mirror when President Trump brushes his teeth.   Perhaps forgotten…

In the spring of 2018 a group of congressional reps led by Devin Nunes, Mark Meadows, Jim Jordan, Matt Gaetz, Louie Gohmert, Lee Zeldin and Bob Goodlatte, asked President Trump to declassify a series of documents so the public could see how former officials in the DOJ & FBI abused their offices and conducted political surveillance.

In September of 2018, Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein asked President Trump not to declassify those same documents until after the Mueller probe was complete.  Rosenstein informed the President (confirmed in later POTUS interviews) that declassifying the material could be interpreted as impeding the Mueller investigation.

Two months later, in November 2018, the mid-term election took place.  Republicans lost the House and their committee chairs.  Many people suspected (I concur) the mid-term election was the real motive for the Sept. 2018 request from Rosenstein.  Four months after the mid-term, March 2019, the Mueller investigation of President Trump ended.

Two months after the Mueller probe ended U.S. Attorney General Bill Barr, a profoundly supportive voice for DAG Rosenstein, asked President Trump to grant him unilateral declassification authority to assist the purposes and intents of his DOJ effort.  President Trump granted U.S. Attorney General Bill Barr with the authority to declassify on May 23rd, 2019; granting access to the same documents requested by congress a year earlier.
May 23, 2019:


Each time President Trump has come close to declassifying the material someone from the DOJ intercepts the anticipated action and blocks the release.  In 2018 it was DAG Rod Rosenstein. In 2019 it was AG Bill Barr…. Both motives identical.

Amid the twists and turns many people have forgotten about the material congress asked President Trump to declassify two-years-ago.  Additionally there has been some material cited that just seemingly slipped away without follow-up.  Consider:
  • Whatever happened to the forty pages of Lisa Page and Andrew McCabe text messages that Catherine Herridge noted nine months ago?  Herridge only published four of the pages in March 2019.
  • Why are the Lisa Page and Peter Strzok text messages still redacted two years after their original release (December 1st, 2017)?
  • Where’s the release of the Susan Rice inauguration day memo to the file?
  • Why didn’t the DOJ/FBI release all of the Bruce Ohr 302’s without redaction?  Will those fully unredacted 302’s be part of the IG report release?
  • Where’s the unredacted David Archey FBI declarations that were previously ordered to be released by a DC judge?
  • The Mueller investigation ended 9 months ago.  Why are we still not able to see the  unredacted three authorization memos that Rosenstein gave to the special counsel on May 17th, August 2nd and October 20th, 2017?
Those simple questions (and releases) are in addition to the original list that congress provided to President Trump back in the spring of 2018.  A declassification list that DAG Rod Rosenstein asked President Trump not to release until after the Mueller investigation.
  • All versions of the Carter Page FISA applications.
  • All of the Bruce Ohr 302’s filled out by the FBI. [Without redactions]
  • All of Bruce Ohr’s emails. All supportive documents and material provided by Bruce Ohr to the FBI. [Without redactions]
  • All relevant documents pertaining to the supportive material within the FISA application.
  • All intelligence documents that were presented to the Gang of Eight in 2016 that pertain to the FISA application used against U.S. person Carter Page; including all intelligence documents that may not have been presented to the FISA Court. Presumably this would include the revealed State Dept Kavalac email; and the FBI transcripts from wiretaps of George Papadopoulos (also listed in Carter Page FISA). [AKA ‘Bucket Five’]
  • All unredacted text messages and email content between Lisa Page and Peter Strzok on all devices.
  • The originating CIA “EC” or two-page electronic communication from former CIA Director John Brennan to FBI Director James Comey that started Operation Crossfire Hurricane in July 2016.
Additionally, since the 2018 list was developed, more information surfaced about the underlying material.  This created the tell-tale sign of a document trail that is easily followed:

♦ The August 2nd, 2017, two-page scope memo provided by DAG Rod Rosenstein to special counsel Robert Mueller to expand the fraudulent Trump investigation, and initiate the more purposeful obstruction of justice investigation. Also the October 20th, 2017, third scope memo that expanded the investigation again, and targeted additional people including Michael Flynn’s family. The Scope Memos are keys to unlocking the underlying spy/surveillance cover-up. [SEE HERE and SEE HERE]

♦ The July 31st, 2016, Crossfire Hurricane counterintelligence operation originated from a scheme within the intelligence apparatus.  The CIA operation  created the originating “Electronic Communication” memo. Declassify that two-page “EC” document that Brennan gave to Comey.  [The trail is found within the Weissmann report and the use of Alexander Downer – SEE HERE]

♦ Release and declassify all of the Comey memos that document the investigative steps taken by the FBI as an outcome of the operation coordinated by CIA Director John Brennan in early 2016.  [The trail was memorialized by James Comey – SEE HERE]  Release and declassify the declarations of FBI Agent David Archey that describe the purpose of the Comey memos:


♦ Reveal the November 2015 through April 2016 FISA-702 search query abuse by declassifying the April 2017 court opinion written by FISC Presiding Judge Rosemary Collyer. Show the FBI contractors behind the 85% fraudulentsearch queries. [Crowdstrike? Fusion-GPS? Nellie Ohr? Daniel Richman?]  This was a weaponized surveillance and domestic political spying operation. [The trail was laid down in specific detail by Judge Collyer – SEE HERE]

♦ Did anyone question former DOJ-NSD (National Security Division) head John Carlin, and get his testimony about why he hid the abuse from the FISA court in October 2016; why the DOJ-NSD rushed the Carter Page application to beat NSA Director Admiral Mike Rogers to the FISA court; and why did John Carlin quit immediately thereafter?

♦ The Carter Page FISA application (October 2016) was fraudulent, and likely based on deceptions to the FISA Court. Declassify the entire document, and release the transcripts of those who signed the application(s); and/or depose those who have not yet testified. The creation of the Steele Dossier was the cover-up operation. [SEE HERE]  What version of the FISA application will be released (if at all)?

♦ Release all of the Lisa Page and Peter Strzok text messages without redactions. Let sunlight pour in on the actual conversation(s) that were taking place when Crossfire Hurricane (July ’16) and the FISA Application (Oct ’16) were taking place.  The current redactions were made by the people who weaponized the intelligence system for political surveillance and spy operation.  This is likely why Page and Strzok texts were redacted!

♦ Release all of Bruce Ohr 302’s without redactions.  And FBI notes from interviews and debriefing sessions, and other relevant documents associated with the interviews of Bruce Ohr and his internal communications. Including exculpatory evidence that Bruce Ohr may have shared with FBI Agent Joseph Pientka. [And did anyone get a deposition from this Pientka fella?] Bruce Ohr is the courier, carrying information from those outside to those on the inside.

If President Trump genuinely wants to deal with the FBI issue… All he has to do is remind himself what congressional allies wanted almost two years ago; and release the requested documentation… everything after that becomes much easier.