OpinionIran in the World PressIran's Islamic influence in the Mideast

Iran’s Islamic influence in the Mideast

-

Christian Science Monitor: Call it the Pyongyang ploy. Hold out for direct talks with America and its allies, thus bolstering your international position, while budging not an inch on your nuclear aspirations. If North Korea seemed unimpressed by a package of inducements and unfazed by the threat of United Nations sanctions, Iran seems to be even less so. The Christian Science Monitor

By Daniel Schorr

WASHINGTON – Call it the Pyongyang ploy.

Hold out for direct talks with America and its allies, thus bolstering your international position, while budging not an inch on your nuclear aspirations.

If North Korea seemed unimpressed by a package of inducements and unfazed by the threat of United Nations sanctions, Iran seems to be even less so.

The reason is not hard to find. Iran sees itself at the forefront of a new pan-Islamic movement.

The day of pan-Arabism, when a secular Syria joined with Egypt in a United Arab Republic, is long since gone. A young Egyptian is quoted by The New York Times as saying, “I have more faith in Islam than in my state.”

A Congressional report says, “There is a lot about Iran that we do not know.” That’s for sure. But we do know that the Iranian mullahs, flush with oil revenues, are putting their imprint on a large part of the Middle East.

There is reason to believe that Iran encouraged Hizbullah to open hostilities against the Israelis. And a Jordanian newspaper says that what it calls “the Hizbullah victory” will have “earthshaking regional consequences.”

The mullahs in Iran have undoubtedly made the calculation that fading superpower America has expended its armed might in Iraq and is unable to mount another significant military action in the Middle East.

Meanwhile, recent battles in the Middle East, the emergence of Hizbullah in Lebanon and Hamas in Gaza, the sectarian war in Iraq, even recent reverses for the American-backed regime in Afghani- stan, all point to Islamic empowerment.

This is the atmosphere in which Iran feels powerful enough to thumb its nose at the countries that would deny Iran an Islamic nuclear bomb.

If the confrontation in the Middle East is between radical Islam and democracy, it looks as though, at the moment, radical Islam has the upper hand.

* Daniel Schorr is the senior news analyst at National Public Radio.

Latest news

Iran’s Regime Inches Toward Nuclear Weapons

Iran’s regime is once again at the center of a dangerous escalation of the proliferation of nuclear weapons. A...

US Congress Expresses Support for Iranian People’s Quest for a Democratic, Secular Republic

Several bipartisan members of the U.S. House of Representatives have presented a resolution (H. RES. 100) supporting the Iranian...

Wave Of Poisoning Attacks Against Schools Leave Hundreds Sick

Iran has been shaken for three months by serial poisoning attacks against all-girls schools, which has left more than...

Iranian Security Forces Beat Baluch Doctor To Death

On Thursday, February 23, activists in Sistan and Baluchestan provinces reported the news of the death of Dr. Ebrahim...

World Powers Should Hear The Voice Of Iranians, Not Dictators And Their Remnants

Iran’s nationwide uprising continues despite its ups and down. The clerical system’s demise no longer seems a dream but...

The Rial Continues To Sink, Hits Record 500,000 Marks Against The Dollar

The US dollar increased in price by more than 11 percent in February and grew to more than 500,000...

Must read

Anti-Ahmadinejad protesters gather outside UN

AFP: Protesters gathered outside the United Nations on Wednesday...

US May Have Downed Second Iranian Drone in Gulf

By Jubin Katiraie The US Navy warship that reported...

You might also likeRELATED
Recommended to you