Friday, March 17, 2006

Ayatolloah Khameini Told Spanish PM, Iran's #1 Priority is "Setting Israel on Fire"

Thank God Aznar is now telling the world about this horrific discussion he had:


Former Spanish prime minister Jose Maria Aznar said Tuesday that Iran’s Ayatollah Ali Khamenei told him five years ago that “setting Israel on fire” was the first order of business on the Iranian agenda.

Aznar, in Israel as the guest of the Interdisciplinary Center in Herzliya, related the story to Major General (Res.) Professor Yitzhak Ben-Israel, who later confirmed to Haaretz that the remarks had been made. Aznar’s aides refused to give Haaretz the exact quote, but mentioned an article Aznar has written in the past on his meeting with Khamenei.

“He received me politely,” Aznar wrote, “and at the beginning of the meeting he explained to me why Iran must declare war on Israel and the United States until they are completely destroyed. I made only one request of him: that he tell me the time of the planned attack.”


Imagine you are a world leader, the PM of a major Eurpean country, and your staff ushers another world leader into your office, for a sitdown and some diplomacy. Sure, you might expect some tough talk, some tense negotiations on trade, or human rights. But would you ever expect to hear this?

It's like bringing Sonny Corleone in to meet the frickin' Dalai Lama.

I know we can't expect a man like Aznar to be anything other than diplomatic in the face of such behavior from Khameini, but I'll bet you even he wished that just for once he could get up and kick the shit out of this guy.

2 comments:

Cubed © said...

One nice, big bunker buster down that well that the Mahdi is supposed to come climbing out of should do the trick!

Kiddo said...

Ha. I'm reading While Europe Slept at the moment. Maybe this'll help wake up one of the sleepiest of all, Aznar. Of course the goal of destroying Israel is old rhetoric, but is the threat from Iran? This is a new dimension. Let's hope that the world puts the government of Iran (and the Madhi) firmly in their places.