Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad was welcomed at the
What the Iranian President was subjected to instead was an all-out attack by the University President, attending students, American policymakers and the media. In his introduction, Bollinger would go on to refer to the Iranian President as a "petty and cruel dictator" that lacked “intellectual courage.”
The American media was not quite as kind. Headlines that greeted President Ahmadinejad included “The Evil Has Landed” and “Little Man on Campus.” Indicative of these headlines, the coverage was harsh on the Iranian President and overtly unfair. Known inconsistencies and past errors in reporting were repeated with alarming consistency and vigor throughout the media. The infamous desire for Ahmadinejad to “wipe
"Ahmadinejad did not say he was going to wipe
Similarly, his infamous words about the holocaust have also been said to be mistranslated and construed as the media wanted them to appear: hateful, intolerant, and flippant. Monday would be the Iranian President’s chance to clarify his statements and set his words straight.
However,
"He's the head of a state sponsor of terror,” said President Bush. “Yet, an institution in our country gives him the chance to express his point of view, which really speaks to the freedoms of the country.”
Ahmadinejad was quick to see the hypocrisy of this freedom of speech.
"In
Luckily for Ahmadinejad, he was not arrested for voicing his opinions publicly, unlike American citizens have been under the Bush administration. One such incident took place September 18th of this year, when Leah Bolger, David Barrows, Christine Rainwater, Anne Kitridge, and Anne Katz, who was reciting the Constitution, were arrested by Capitol Police while attending a rally sponsored by Veterans for Freedom in Upper Senate Park on Capitol Hill where U.S. Senators Joe Lieberman, John McCain and Lindsey Graham spoke.
A popular critique of Ahmadinejad’s appearance was his supposed dodging of the questioning, especially on the issues of nuclear war, terrorism, and his views on the holocaust. Yet his answers resonated clearly.
“If someone comes and explodes bombs around you, threatens your president, members of the administration, kills the members of the senate or congress, how would you treat them… The Iranian nation is a victim of terrorism. For 26 years ago where I worked, close to where I work, in the terrorist operation, the elected president of the Iranian nation and the elected prime minister of
We need to address the root causes of terrorism and eradicate those root causes.
live in the
We've been victims of terrorism ourselves, and it's regrettable that people who argue they're fighting terrorism, instead of supporting the Iranian people and nation, instead of fighting the terrorists that are attacking them, they're supporting the terrorists and then turn the fingers to us. This is most regrettable.”
Media pundits cleverly pointed out the lack of a specific reference to a terror organization. A moment of reflection easily illuminates this organization as the American government and specifically, covert operations conducted through the
On the topic of nuclear war, Ahmadinejad had this to say:
“Our nuclear program, first and foremost, operates within the framework of law, and second, under the inspections of the IAEA, and thirdly, they are completely peaceful. The technology we have is for enrichment below the level of 5 percent level, and any level below 5 percent is solely for providing fuel to power plants. Repeated reports by the IAEA explicitly say that there is no indication that
The International Atomic Energy Organization -- Agency has verified that our activities are for peaceful purposes. But there are two or three powers that think that they have the right to monopolize all science and knowledge. And they expect the Iranian people, the Iranian nation, to turn to others to get fuel, to get science, to get knowledge that's indigenous to itself -- to humble itself. And then they would of course refrain from giving it to us too. So we're quite clear on what we need. If you have created the fifth generation of atomic bombs and are testing them already, what position are you in to question the peaceful purposes of other people who want nuclear power? We do not believe in nuclear weapons, period. It goes against the whole grain of humanity. So let me just tell a joke here. I think the politicians who are after atomic bombs or are testing them, making them -- politically they are backward, retarded.”
Though not addressed at the speech, Ahmadinejad clarified his nation’s stance on war. "
He also believed that the
Another point of contention in the Iranian leader’s dialogue was his statement about homosexuals in
“In
Another suggested interpretation of this statement is that he was referring to the homosexual culture that has gained legitimacy and been embraced in American society, not that
Perhaps the most contentious issue, however, is the Iranian leader’s views on the holocaust, which he has been accused of denying altogether. He had this to say about his belief:
“Can you argue that researching a phenomenon is finished forever, done? Can we close the books for good on a historical event? There are different perspectives that come to light after every research is done. Why should we stop research at all? Why should we stop the progress of science and knowledge? You shouldn't ask me why I'm asking questions. You should ask yourselves why you think that it's questionable, why you want to stop the progress of science and research. Do you ever take what's known as absolute in Physics? We had principles in mathematics that were granted to be absolute in mathematics for over 800 years, but new science has gotten rid of those absolutisms, come forward other different logics of looking at mathematics and sort of turned the way we look at it as a science altogether after 800 years. So we must allow researchers, scholars to investigate into every phenomenon, God, universe, human beings, history, and civilization. Why should we stop that? I'm not saying that it didn't happen at all. This is not that judgment that I am passing here. I said in my second question, granted this happened, what does it have to do with the Palestinian people?
When criticized by the person asking the question that research into the facts of the holocaust would represent a denial that something terrible occurred in
“Allow me. After all, you're free to interpret what you want from what I say, but what I'm saying with full clarity. In the first question, I'm trying to actually uphold the rights of European scholars. In the field of science and research, I'm asking, there's nothing known as absolute. There's nothing sufficiently done, not in physics for certain. There's been more research on physics than it has on the holocaust, but we still continue to do research on physics. There's nothing wrong with doing it. This is what man wants. They want to approach a topic from different points of views. Scientists want to do that, especially an issue that has become the foundation of so many other political developments that have unfolded in the
While Ahmadinejad was grilled by American citizens, American citizens have not been as rigorous in questioning their own leaders. A report released Sunday by Newsweek stated that former Cheney Middle East adviser David Wurmser told a small group several months ago that Cheney was considering asking
It is telling that Americans now are more critical of foreign leaders than their own. While Ahmadinejad is subjected to intense scrutiny, Bush administration officials have been given a virtual free pass to trample on our constitution, arrest dissenters, and even legitimized the use of martial law without any oversight.
The founding fathers expected we the people to subject our leaders to this same type of inquiry into their positions and policies and we have failed them. James Madison said it best, “The means of defense against foreign danger historically have become the instruments of tyranny at home."
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