Jim
Bramlett
(21 July 2007)
"Ahmadinejad says he will
march into Israel in coming months!"
Is this merely the insane babbling of a tyrannical megalomaniac, or does
it signal Iran's real, near-term intentions. If sincere, Allah had
better start preparing those 72 virgins because Ahmadinejad will soon be
there. (I have heard that those 72 virgins all resemble either
aging journalist Helen Thomas or Hillary Clinton.)
From debka.com:
______________________________
“This summer will see Muslim victories in the region and the
defeat of our enemies!” – Ahmadinejad in Damascus
Debka.com
July 20, 2007, 10:56 PM (GMT+02:00)
The Iranian president trumpeted Iran’s intentions for the Middle East
when he arrived in Damascus Thursday, July 19. DEBKAfile’s
Middle East sources reveal that behind the braggadocio, his conversation
with Iran’s closest ally, Syrian president Bashar Assad, was acrimonious.
In fact, he warned Assad he had better stop signaling his willingness for
peace talks with Israel because this behavior
was hampering Iran’s plans for a war this summer.
Ahmadinejad reminded Assad that Tehran had spent almost a year on
detailed preparations for a summer war and would not tolerate the Syrian
ruler sabotaging this effort. Assad was reminded of his huge debt to the
Islamic Republic. In the last few months alone, Iran put up hundreds of
millions of dollars for Syria’s arms purchases from Russia; Syria gets
its oil gratis and raw materials and finished goods at subsidized
prices.
Assad replied that with all due respect and appreciation for his Iranian
brother’s assistance, he is obliged to look after his country’s
interests, while of course cherishing his friendship with Tehran.
Ahmadinejad pointed out that the Israeli prime minister Ehud Olmert’s
condition for talks was the severance of Damascus’ ties with Tehran.
Far from pleasant too was the Iranian president’s conversation with
Hizballah’s secretary-general Hassan Nasrallah, who drove to the Syrian
capital from Lebanon in a heavily secured convoy. Nasrallah, who lives in
fear of any Israel attack, rarely leaves his bunker hideout. Ahmadinejad
asked Tehran’s protégé to try and understand that his government was
financially squeezed by its preparations for war and was therefore unable
at the moment to remit the one million dollars promised to repair the war
damage suffered by South Lebanon last year.
The Hizballah leader said that, while he fully understood Tehran’s
difficulty, he too was weighed down by the heavy cost of his pledges to
the inhabitants of southern Lebanon.
Ahmadinejad had an easier time with the heads of eight of the nine
Palestinian terrorist leaders hosted in the Syrian capital. With them he
was upbeat.
Israel is a lot weaker than it pretends, he said, and a concerted
struggle with Syria could easily bring down the Zionist state. He
recalled Hizballah’s “victory” last year as demonstrating that the
Palestinians would be able to crush Israel without recourse to a large
army. The coming months, he boasted, would see
him marching into Israel shoulder to shoulder with the Palestinian
brothers.
After meeting the group, the Iranian president held face to face
interviews with each of the hard-line Palestinian leaders and heard their
requests for armaments and funding. Before flying home, he left a group
of Revolutionary Guards al Qods Brigade officers with instructions for
the missions to be assigned to each of the Palestinian terror chiefs in
the forthcoming summer war.