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Rabi' al-Awwal 15,1427/April 14, 2006  #25
IRAN
U.S. Facing No-Win Situation as it threatens Nuclear War
by Kaukab Siddique
I can write about Iran with some assurance. I met 
Imam Khomeini twice, once in Qum and once in Tehran, 
during the first years of the Islamic revolution. After 
he passed away, I visited his grave to pay my respects. 
I differed with the Iranian regimes post-Khomeini. However, 
I have kept an eye on developments there and have written 
extensively on Iran, often critically. Here are my thoughts 
on the current situation [April 2006].
In spite of Iran's cooperation in Iraq and Afghanistan, 
the U.S. government is threatening military action 
against the Islamic Republic. The Zionist/corporate/liberal 
media are fanning the flames of possible war. Seymour 
Hersch has gone to the extent of claiming that the U.S. 
will use nuclear weapons against Iran. He might be in the 
know or he might be trying to embarrass the 
Bush administration.
. Let us look at the arguments and options under debate:
1. The Zionists would like the U.S. to carry out "regime 
change" in Iran which implies the use of force to unseat 
an elected government. [Radical warmongers such as 
Christopher Hitchins have gone to the extent of claiming 
that the Iranian goverment is not an elected government!]
The U.S. government is encouraged in its desire for "regime 
change"  by Chalabi-type Iranians who claim that large numbers 
of young people in Iran love America and hate the "mullahs." 
This kind of fantasy is possible for people who visit North 
Tehran and meet westernized [gharabzadah] Iranians. 
Also, Iranians generally like to argue with and criticize 
their government. This creates the incorrect impression 
of disunity.
Any attempt to overthrow the Islamic government would 
be swamped by the massive response of the Iranian people. 
The anniversary of the revolution in February which drew 
huge crowds should have warned people who do not live 
outside reality. Regime change from within is nothing 
more than a fantasy. Ahmedinejad has mass support and 
has been able to mobilize public opinion.
2. Regime change from outside too is a fantasy because 
the U.S. military is stuck in Iraq and is in no 
condition to invade Iran. The Islamic Republic has 
strategic depth and vast quantities of weaponry 
available for popular resistance. IRAQ, through three 
years of resistance, may well have saved IRAN from the 
military clutches of the U.S.
3. BOMBING by the U.S. AIR FORCE, including nuclear 
strike, is the only option open to the U.S. This could 
do severe damage to Iranian military capacity and at 
least some damage to its nuclear project. It could kill 
20,000 to 40,000 Iranians in a matter of days. However, 
this won't work for a variety of reasons:
3a. Iran is capable of absorbing punishment. In the city 
of Bam, an earthquake killed 30,000 people in one day. 
Iran did not ask anyone for help and swiftly took care 
of the damage done.
3b. Iran's MARTYRDOM COMPLEX is very different from that 
of Al-Qaidah and Taliban. While Al-Qaidah operates to hit 
and hurt opposing forces, often the most vital economic 
structures as happened in 9.11, Iran is good at dealing 
with hurt inflicted on itself. This attitude is best 
symbolized in the self-flagellation ceremonies in memory 
of Imam Husain. The Iranians are at their best when they 
are being hurt by the enemy. Saddam Husain did not 
understand this and invaded Iran when Iran had disbanded 
its regular forces because of their loyalty to the Shah.
3c. When the Iranians tried to take Basra at the end of 
Iran-Iraq war, they lost 10,000 young people in a couple 
of days as the Iraqis hit them with heavy artillery from 
dug-in positions. Losses do not deter Iran. If the U.S. 
succeeds in killing large number of Iranians in a nuclear 
strike or heavy bombing from the air, the ensuing war will 
probably be open-ended.
4. If the U.S. attacks, it is no exaggeration to stipulate 
that the entire Iranian nation will rally to support the 
Islamic government. IMAM KHOMEINI's Line will be empowered 
as never before. The Imam had taught Iranians that their 
real enemy is the U.S. [whom he called the "Great Satan."] 
Owing to short sighted policies of junior leaders in Iran, 
who took over during his illness, IRAQ came to be seen as 
the enemy of Iran. It was a strategic blunder by the 
post-Khomeini Iranian government. An AMERICAN ATTACK would 
create tremendous ideological focus for the Iranians.
5. If the U.S. attacks, the entire Muslim world [the masses] 
will rally to support Iran. Thus the Shia-Sunni divide will 
be bridged. Already Islamic movements in Pakistan and the 
Arab world [including the Ahle Hadith, "wahhabis,"] are 
showing outright support for Iran regardless of 
sectarian differences.
6. Whether the U.S. attacks alone or is supported by 
Israel, the Muslim world will see it as the Israeli 
hand coming out of the American sleeve. Gone are the 
days when Israel could attack the Iraqi nuclear 
facility and succeed. There was no Islamic movement 
to challenge Israel.
6a. Israel-type attack cannot succeed because Iranian 
nuclear facilities are said to be decentralized and 
underground. The chances of direct hits and 
substantial damage are low.
6b. If ISRAEL ATTACKS, all the "front" regimes the U.S. 
has installed to create a buffer between Israel and the 
Islamic masses will come under internal pressure and 
probably collapse.
6c. If it attacks, Israel will have signed its death 
warrant. No project for peaceful dismantling of Israel 
will get a hearing in the Muslim world. According to 
Islamic Hadith narrations, if and when a final battle 
takes place, the Jews will find no place to hide. Even 
the rocks themselves will cry out if a Jew is 
concealed behind them.
WHAT COULD IRAN DO:
1. Shut down its own oil production.
2. Hamper or put a stop to the transportation of oil 
through neighboring waterways.
3. Actvate Hizbullah against Israel.
4. Fire missiles into "Saudi" Arabian oil installations.
5. Iran could, if things get really bad, hook up 
with al-Qaidah and even the Taliban. Reactive support 
for the Taliban could lead to a swift Taliban 
victory in Afghanistan.
6. An Islamic victory in Afghanistan would activate 
Islamic forces in Pakistan and bring about the 
overthrow of General Musharraf with whom the Iranians 
are now cooperating in the "war on terror."
DOES IRAN HAVE THE RIGHT TO NUCLEAR WEAPONRY?:
American analysts agree that the enrichment of uranium 
announced by Iran does not mean that it can now have a 
nuclear weapon. That will not be possible for several 
years. There is NO INDICATION AT ALL that Iran is going 
for a nuclear weapon. It certainly does not have the 
capacity at this time.
By contrast ISRAEL already HAS a NUMBER OF NUCLEAR BOMBS 
at its facility at Dimona. Thus the U.S. and UK have 
created a situation in the Middle East in which the 
gangster regime in Tel Aviv has nuclear weapons while 
Muslim countries  face military action if they show even 
the inclination for such an effort.  The Middle East is 
being systematically DISARMED to make it subservient to Israel.
Within that context, Iran definitely has the right to have 
nuclear weapons to defend itself against Israel. So, what's  
the moral outrage all about in the Zionist media? People 
like Christopher Hitchens should be in an institute for 
the mentally disturbed rather than giving out political 
advice on corporate media TV screens.
Research Paper Documents Zionist Control of U.S. 
Foreign Policy but most Americans will not not know 
about it because .....
Two learned professors recently wrote a research paper in 
which they documented the Israeli factor in U.S. foreign 
policy as well the Zionist hand behind the Iraq war. The 
corporate media are trying to discredit the paper. Here 
is a letter the editor of New Trend wrote to the 
Philadelphia Inquirer in response to one such attempt.
Subj: Re: "Attacking the 'Israel Lobby.' " [Inquirer April 3]
Date: 4/5/2006 8:44:21 AM Eastern Daylight Time
From: KSidd37398
To: inquirer.letters@phillynews.com
Dear Editor
Max Boot's hatchet job on a serious critique of the 
Israel lobby takes away from analysis of an issue which 
has skewed American foreign policy. John Mearsheimer 
[University of Chicago] and Stephen Walt 
[Harvard University's John F. Kennedy School of Government] 
certainly have better academic credentials than Max Boot.  
To call their work "nutty" indicates that Boot is trying 
to smear them.
The two scholars have thoroughly researched Israel's role 
in the subversion of America's foreign policy interests, 
with 41 pages of references. Boot has not been able to deal 
with any of the points they made. Name calling certainly 
does not help in serious debate.
Boot's process of reasoning is faulty. He tries to 
compare the Israel Lobby with other lobbies but conveniently 
forgets that Social Security, the Second Amendment and 
Roe v. Wade supporters do not deal with foreign policy. 
He is comparing "apples with oranges" and trying to get 
away with it.
Mearsheimer and Walt don't need to call the invasion of 
Iraq a "Zionist Plot." Wolfowitz, Perle, Feith, Leiberman 
have not concealed their inclinations. They are blatant 
supporters of Israel and of the war against Iraq.
U.S.  support for Israel has turned the entire Muslim world 
against us. As a result, the U.S. has to spend billions of 
dollars to prop up oppressive regimes in Egypt, Jordan, 
Pakistan, Saudi Arabia, Tunisia, Algeria and now in Iraq, 
to stop the emergence of global opposition to Israel.
Iraq under Saddam never harmed the U.S. in any way. Our 
expensive war there emanates from the Israeli lobby. The 
people whom Boot is trying to discredit, astute 
researchers, have shown in a very scholarly fashion 
that the hand of Israel behind the war is a fact, 
not a conspiracy theory.
Sincerely
Kaukab Siddique, Ph.D
Associate Professor of English
AFGHANISTAN
Why are Afghans Welcoming the Upsurge of the Taliban?
'He cried out "Allah, Allah" and everyone thought it was funny.'
[These are excerpts from an extensive report published in the 
New York Times last year. We cannot publish it in full 
owing to copyright restrictions. The prisoner being mistreated 
by the U.S. in this report was not a Taliban fighter but an 
average middle class Afghan, a taxi driver. It's not difficult 
to imagine the fate of actual Taliban captured by the U.S. on 
the field of battle. Also, in that case it would not have been 
published in the NY Times - Editor]
"For Mr. Dilawar, his fellow prisoners said, the most 
difficult thing seemed to be the black cloth hood that 
was pulled over his head. "He could not breathe," said 
a man called Parkhudin, who had been one of 
Mr. Dilawar's passengers.
Mr. Dilawar was a frail man, standing only 5 feet 9 
inches and weighing 122 pounds. But at Bagram, he was 
quickly labeled one of the "noncompliant" ones.
When one of the First Platoon M.P.'s, Specialist Corey 
E. Jones, was sent to Mr. Dilawar's cell to give him some 
water, he said the prisoner spit in his face and started 
kicking him. Specialist Jones responded, he said, with 
a couple of knee strikes to the leg of the shackled man.
"He screamed out, 'Allah! Allah! Allah!' and my first 
reaction was that he was crying out to his god," 
Specialist Jones said to investigators. "Everybody heard 
him cry out and thought it was funny."
Other Third Platoon M.P.'s later came by the detention 
center and stopped at the isolation cells to see for 
themselves, Specialist Jones said.
It became a kind of running joke, and people kept showing 
up to give this detainee a common peroneal strike just 
to hear him scream out 'Allah,' " he said. "It went on 
over a 24-hour period, and I would think that it 
was over 100 strikes."
In a subsequent statement, Specialist Jones was vague 
about which M.P.'s had delivered the blows. His estimate 
was never confirmed, but other guards eventually 
admitted striking Mr. Dilawar repeatedly. 
Many M.P.'s would eventually deny that they had any 
idea of Mr. Dilawar's injuries, explaining that they 
never saw his legs beneath his jumpsuit. But Specialist 
Jones recalled that the drawstring pants of Mr. 
Dilawar's orange prison suit fell down again and again 
while he was shackled.
"I saw the bruise because his pants kept falling down 
while he was in standing restraints," the soldier told 
investigators. "Over a certain time period, I noticed 
it was the size of a fist."
As Mr. Dilawar grew desperate, he began crying out more 
loudly to be released. But even the interpreters had 
trouble understanding his Pashto dialect; the annoyed 
guards heard only noise.
"He had constantly been screaming, 'Release me; I don't 
want to be here,' and things like that," said the one 
linguist who could decipher his distress, Abdul Ahad Wardak. 
The Interrogation
On Dec. 8, Mr. Dilawar was taken for his fourth 
interrogation. It quickly turned hostile.
The 21-year-old lead interrogator, Specialist Glendale 
C. Walls II, later contended that Mr. Dilawar was 
evasive. "Some holes came up, and we wanted him to 
answer us truthfully," he said. The other interrogator, 
Sergeant Salcedo, complained that the prisoner was 
smiling, not answering questions, and refusing to stay 
kneeling on the ground or sitting against the wall.
The interpreter who was present, Ahmad Ahmadzai, 
recalled the encounter differently to investigators.
The interrogators, Mr. Ahmadzai said, accused Mr. 
Dilawar of launching the rockets that had hit the 
American base. He denied that. While kneeling on the 
ground, he was unable to hold his cuffed hands above 
his head as instructed, prompting Sergeant Salcedo to 
slap them back up whenever they began to drop.
"Selena berated him for being weak and questioned him 
about being a man, which was very insulting because of 
his heritage," Mr. Ahmadzai said. 
When Mr. Dilawar was unable to sit in the chair position 
against the wall because of his battered legs, the two 
interrogators grabbed him by the shirt and repeatedly 
shoved him back against the wall.
"This went on for 10 or 15 minutes," the interpreter 
said. "He was so tired he couldn't get up."
"They stood him up, and at one point Selena stepped on 
his bare foot with her boot and grabbed him by his beard 
and pulled him towards her," he went on. "Once Selena 
kicked Dilawar in the groin, private areas, with her 
right foot. She was standing some distance from him, 
and she stepped back and kicked him.
"About the first 10 minutes, I think, they were actually 
questioning him, after that it was pushing, shoving, 
kicking and shouting at him," Mr. Ahmadzai said. "There 
was no interrogation going on."
The session ended, he said, with Sergeant Salcedo 
instructing the M.P.'s to keep Mr. Dilawar chained 
to the ceiling until the next shift came on.
The next morning, Mr. Dilawar began yelling again. At 
around noon, the M.P.'s called over another of the 
interpreters, Mr. Baerde, to try to quiet 
Mr. Dilawar down. 
"I told him, 'Look, please, if you want to be able to 
sit down and be released from shackles, you just need 
to be quiet for one more hour."
"He told me that if he was in shackles another hour, 
he would die," Mr. Baerde said.
Half an hour later, Mr. Baerde returned to the cell. 
Mr. Dilawar's hands hung limply from the cuffs, and 
his head, covered by the black hood, slumped forward.
"He wanted me to get a doctor, and said that he needed 
'a shot,' " Mr. Baerde recalled. "He said that he didn't 
feel good. He said that his legs were hurting."
Mr. Baerde translated Mr. Dilawar's plea to one of the 
guards. The soldier took the prisoner's hand and pressed 
down on his fingernails to check his circulation. 
"He's O.K.," Mr. Baerde quoted the M.P. as saying. "He's 
just trying to get out of his restraints."
By the time Mr. Dilawar was brought in for his final 
interrogation in the first hours of the next day, Dec. 
10, he appeared exhausted and was babbling that his 
wife had died. He also told the interrogators that he 
had been beaten by the guards.
"But we didn't pursue that," said Mr. Baryalai, the interpreter.
Specialist Walls was again the lead interrogator. But 
his more aggressive partner, Specialist Claus, quickly 
took over, Mr. Baryalai said.
"Josh had a rule that the detainee had to look at him, 
not me," the interpreter told investigators. "He gave 
him three chances, and then he grabbed him by the shirt 
and pulled him towards him, across the table, slamming 
his chest into the table front."
When Mr. Dilawar was unable to kneel, the interpreter 
said, the interrogators pulled him to his feet and pushed 
him against the wall. Told to assume a stress position, 
the prisoner leaned his head against the wall and 
began to fall asleep.
"It looked to me like Dilawar was trying to cooperate, 
but he couldn't physically perform the tasks," 
Mr. Baryalai said.
Finally, Specialist Walls grabbed the prisoner and 
"shook him harshly," the interpreter said, telling 
him that if he failed to cooperate, he would be shipped 
to a prison in the United States, where he would be 
"treated like a woman, by the other men" and face the 
wrath of criminals who "would be very angry with anyone 
involved in the 9/11 attacks." (Specialist Walls was 
charged last week with assault, maltreatment and failure 
to obey a lawful order; Specialist Claus was charged 
with assault, maltreatment and lying to investigators. 
Each man declined to comment.) 
A third military intelligence specialist who spoke some 
Pashto, Staff Sgt. W. Christopher Yonushonis, had 
questioned Mr. Dilawar earlier and had arranged with 
Specialist Claus to take over when he was done. Instead, 
the sergeant arrived at the interrogation room to find 
a large puddle of water on the floor, a wet spot on Mr. 
Dilawar's shirt and Specialist Claus standing behind 
the detainee, twisting up the back of the hood that 
covered the prisoner's head.
"I had the impression that Josh was actually holding the 
detainee upright by pulling on the hood," he said. "I 
was furious at this point because I had seen Josh tighten 
the hood of another detainee the week before. This behavior 
seemed completely gratuitous and unrelated to 
intelligence collection."
"What the hell happened with that water?" Sergeant 
Yonushonis said he had demanded.
"We had to make sure he stayed hydrated," he said 
Specialist Claus had responded.
The next morning, Sergeant Yonushonis went to the 
noncommissioned officer in charge of the interrogators, 
Sergeant Loring, to report the incident. Mr. Dilawar, 
however, was already dead.
The Post-Mortem
The findings of Mr. Dilawar's autopsy were succinct. 
He had had some coronary artery disease, the medical 
examiner reported, but what caused his heart to fail 
was "blunt force injuries to the lower extremities." 
Similar injuries contributed to Mr. Habibullah's death.
One of the coroners later translated the assessment at 
a pre-trial hearing for Specialist Brand, saying the 
tissue in the young man's legs "had basically been pulpified."
"I've seen similar injuries in an individual run over 
by a bus," added Lt. Col. Elizabeth Rouse, the coroner, 
and a major at that time.
After the second death, several of the 519th Battalion's 
interrogators were temporarily removed from their posts. 
A medic was assigned to the detention center to work night 
shifts. On orders from the Bagram intelligence chief, 
interrogators were prohibited from any physical contact 
with the detainees. Chaining prisoners to any fixed 
object was also banned, and the use of stress 
positions was curtailed.
In February, an American military official disclosed 
that the Afghan guerrilla commander whose men had 
arrested Mr. Dilawar and his passengers had himself 
been detained. The commander, Jan Baz Khan, was 
suspected of attacking Camp Salerno himself and then 
turning over innocent "suspects" to the Americans in 
a ploy to win their trust, the military official said.
The three passengers in Mr. Dilawar's taxi were sent 
home from Guantánamo in March 2004, 15 months after 
their capture, with letters saying they posed "no 
threat" to American forces.
They were later visited by Mr. Dilawar's parents, 
who begged them to explain what had happened to 
their son. But the men said they could not bring 
themselves to recount the details.
"I told them he had a bed," said Mr. Parkhudin. "I 
said the Americans were very nice because he had 
a heart problem."
In late August of last year, shortly before the Army 
completed its inquiry into the deaths, Sergeant 
Yonushonis, who was stationed in Germany, went at 
his own initiative to see an agent of the Criminal 
Investigation Command. Until then, he had 
never been interviewed.
"I expected to be contacted at some point by 
investigators in this case," he said. "I was 
living a few doors down from the interrogation 
room, and I had been one of the last to see 
this detainee alive."
Sergeant Yonushonis described what he had witnessed 
of the detainee's last interrogation. "I remember 
being so mad that I had trouble speaking," he said.
He also added a detail that had been overlooked in 
the investigative file. By the time Mr. Dilawar was 
taken into his final interrogations, he said, "most 
of us were convinced that the detainee was innocent."
(In accordance with Title 17 U.S.C. Section 107, 
this material is distributed without profit.)
RAPE AWARENESS A MUST FOR Muslim WOMEN IN AMERICA
As Salaamu Alaikum Community,
Please contact Baitul Salaam if you want to do a 
Sexual Assault Awareness training or just bring in 
a speaker to your community.  It does not take much 
planning.  We have the resources and contacts.  Just 
call us if you want to make this subject part of a 
Ta'leem or Halaqah in your community.  It is 
easy to do, insh'Allah.
This is not an easy subject to discuss however 
it is necessary.  In our community we have this 
problem of sexual assault at many levels.  It is 
not only just one or two people that we have heard 
about or that some type of public action has been 
taken (reports to the police and in one case a 
trial may happen any day).
We must train ourselves to project ourselves on all 
levels.  The best protection is education.  What you 
don't know can hurt you and members of your family.
Here are some myths in our community about sexual 
abuse and sexual misconduct.
1.  Your Hijab protects you from sexual assault.
Wrong!  Your Hijab lets those in the thinking world 
know you are not a part of the everyday hype of 
showing bare skin in public, etc.  However you are 
not protected from a rapist due to rape is not about 
sex it is about power.  If you get in the sight of a 
rapist your Hijab may even be a trigger.  So beware 
and be cautious.  Also know that most women are raped 
by people they know in some way this is called 
acquaintance rape.  Many women are raped in their 
homes by their husbands, fathers, cousins and 
sometimes sons, neighbors or the friendly man who 
always helped you with taking your groceries from 
your car, etc.  Women can be abusers in general and 
women can be sexual abusers and predators so be aware 
of who you are around at all times.
2.  If you don't go out at night you will not be raped.
Wrong again!  Now not going out at night may help 
decrease the possibility in some way.  We should not 
be at night alone unless we just have too at anytime.  
However many women are raped at home during the day by 
intruders and again those they know, relatives, the 
friendly neighbor and or the husband.
3.  If you don't speak to men, etc.
WRONG!  This may be a trigger for a rapist.  We of course 
do not have any unnecessary conversation with men or 
anyone for that matter.  However not ever speaking to 
men will not keep you from being raped.
As one who works with our families who are struggling 
with abuse I hear and have medical reports in the Baitul 
Salaam files of various types of sexual abuse to adults 
and children.  It is not just a few misguided Muslims it 
is happening in some of our most respected families and 
to people who are doing all they can to live this Deen 
in honesty and with truth.  It is happening in Atlanta 
and every other major city.  It is happening in 
small towns and villages.
It is happening around us and in many cases to some of us.
I am sending this as a warning and hopefully people will 
pay more attention to the social ills that are happening 
in our community with the desire to see them not happen 
or at least that our community stop lying to itself.  
We must come out of the state of denial on issues such 
as sexual assault.  We need leaders who will not only 
just talk but take action.
Please pass this on to all (male and female) young and old.
If you have any comments just remember what Prophet 
Muhammad said to the early community about how to approach 
each other and you will get an open objective ear.
May Allah forgive all of us for our shortcomings.
ma salaam
Hadayai Majeed
Administrator
Baitul Salaam Network, Inc.
www.baitulsalaam.net
2006-04-13 Thu 21:34:55 cdt
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