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Kerry Argues for Talks with Short Round
As President Bush commemorated Israel's 60th anniversary by attacking Barack Obama from overseas, here at home he found an all-too-frequent ally: John McCain.

When Bush accused "some" -- including Obama, Bush aides explained -- of "the false comfort of appeasement," McCain echoed this slander. "What does he want to talk about with [Mahmoud] Ahmadinejad?" McCain asked, fumbling to link Obama to the Iranian president's hateful words. Soon, a GOP talking point was born.

Lost in the rhetoric was the question America deserves to have answered: Why should we engage with Iran?

In short, not talking to Iran has failed. Miserably.

Bush engages in self-deception arguing that not engaging Iran has worked. In fact, Iran has grown stronger: continuing to master the nuclear fuel cycle; arming militias in Iraq and Lebanon; bolstering extremist anti-Israeli proxies. It has embraced Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki and spends lavishly to rebuild Afghanistan, gaining influence across the region.

Instead of backing Bush's toxic rhetoric, McCain should have called George H.W. Bush's secretary of state, James Baker. After years of stonewalling, the administration grudgingly tested the Baker-Hamilton report's recommendation and opened talks with Iran -- albeit low-level dialogue restricted to the subject of Iraq. Is James Baker an appeaser, too?
Yes, John, he is. Does it shock you that Trunks can be appeasers, too? I think there is more drivel at the link...
Steve Chapman of the Chicago Tribune argues that we should talk to Short Round because Iran "is not a threat" to the U.S. While indeed the conventional military forces of Iran are laughable, Mr. Chapman ignores 1) that Iran believes in and is engaged in asymmetrical war with us, and 2) that Iran has plans. It's one thing to look at what a country is today, but one should always consider where a country plans to be in ten years.

Posted by: Bobby 2008-05-24
http://www.rantburg.com/poparticle.php?ID=239861