Showing posts with label America. Show all posts
Showing posts with label America. Show all posts

Wednesday, November 7, 2012

UK leads calls to 'shape' Syria opposition - Al Jazeera

Very interesting development within hours of Barack Obama's re-election: the UK is now saying it will "deal directly with rebel military leaders" in Syria. Is this the right move for the West? Should Western governments escalate the conflict there? Were Western nations simply waiting for the US election to finish before deciding their next move? 

The answer to the latter question seems obvious, as NATO allies (such as the UK) are now openly advocating for an escalation of support for Syrian rebels. The question is: what is the West's end game in Syria? After Assad is toppled, who will take control? Will they take control? Are the "rebels" people that the West can trust? What about the extremist factions within the Syrian rebellion?

My fear is that, like Iraq, the West will entrench itself in another intractable sectarian conflict, one that this time borders Israel. This is certainly a story to watch. - R.O.

UK leads calls to 'shape' Syria opposition - Al Jazeera

British Prime Minister David Cameron said UK and allies should do more to open direct communication with rebel leaders.

Western efforts to oust Syrian President Bashar Assad have shifted dramatically, with Britain saying it will deal directly with rebel military leaders and Turkey saying NATO members have discussed protecting a safe zone inside Syria with Patriot missiles.

The developments came within hours of President Barack Obama's re-election on Tuesday, which US allies said they have been waiting for before implementing new strategies to end the deadlocked civil war that has killed more than 36,000 people over the past year and a half.

British Prime Minister David Cameron, visiting a camp for Syrian refugees in Jordan, said the US, Britain and other allies should do more to "shape the opposition'' into a coherent force and open channels of communication directly with rebel military commanders.

Previously, Britain and the US have acknowledged contacts only with exile groups and political opposition figures inside Syria.

And a Turkish official said Turkey and allies, including the United States, have discussed the possibility of using Patriot missiles to protect a safe zone inside Syria.

The foreign ministry official, who spoke on condition of anonymity because of ministry prohibitions on contacts with the news media, said planning for the safe zone had been put on hold pending the US election.

He said any missile deployment might happen under a "NATO umbrella'', though NATO has insisted it will not intervene without a clear United Nations mandate.

"There is an opportunity for Britain, for America, for Saudi Arabia, Jordan and like-minded allies to come together and try to help shape the opposition, outside Syria and inside Syria,'' Cameron said. "And try to help them achieve their goal, which is our goal of a Syria without Assad.''

International pressure
Cameron is currently on a tour of the Middle East and speaking on Obama's re-election said: "I am hearing appalling stories about what has happened inside Syria so one of the first things I want to talk to Barack about is how we must do more to try and solve this crisis.”

The news comes as the Syrian National Council's (SNC) general assembly of nearly 420 members met on Wednesday to choose two leadership bodies and a president during a conference in the Qatari capital Doha.

Syria's main opposition bloc has succumbed to intense international pressure from critics and begun electing new leaders to appease critics who say the exile-dominated group does not represent those risking their lives on the frontlines to oust the regime.

The SNC, largely made up of exiles, has been criticised as ineffective and out of touch with those trying to topple Assad.

The US has called for a more unified and representative opposition, suggesting an end to the SNC's leadership.

SNC officials say the internal election may not be enough to deflect such criticism and halt US-backed efforts to set up an alternate leadership group.

Al Jazeera's Omar Al Saleh, reporting from Doha, said: "The new leadership will discuss an initiative given by an opposition member who is also a current of the SNC.

"That initiative is backed by the international community, France, US as well as Qatar, KSA and other countries. According to that initiative, a new council might emerge," he said

"The SNC fears that that council might be a replacement to them and this is for the political wrangling and negotiations will be decisive for the fate of the Syrian revolution" he added.

Wednesday, August 15, 2012

Israel: Diplomacy with Iran has "failed"

This is the first time an Israeli Minister (Danny Ayalon) has gone on the record to say that diplomatic talks with Iran have "failed." Hugely significant statement, one certainly only made with the approval of Prime Minister Netanyahu. While many times in the past Israel has made threats that it was prepared to take "action" against Iran, this is the first time that Israeli leaders have asked the international community to declare that diplomacy has run its course - implicitly stating that the time for military action has in fact finally arrived. If Ayalon's statement were to be accepted, there are of course very few alternatives to stopping Iran short of targeted air strikes in conjunction with massive cyber attacks against Iranian nuclear and military infrastructure. Intriguing and foreboding development... - R.O.
UPDATE (16/08): Now Michael Oren, Israeli Ambassador to the U.S., has also gone on the record stating that diplomacy has "failed". This is now officially the Israeli government's public position.


New York Times: Israeli Minister Asks Nations to Say Iran Talks Have Failed
By JODI RUDOREN
Published: August 13, 2012

JERUSALEM - Amid intensifying Israeli news reports saying that Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu is close to ordering a military strike against Iran's nuclear program, his deputy foreign minister called Sunday for an international declaration that the diplomatic effort to halt Tehran's enrichment of uranium is dead.

Referring to the Iran negotiations led by the five permanent members of the United Nations Security Council plus Germany, the minister, Danny Ayalon, told Israel Radio that those nations should "declare today that the talks have failed." After such a declaration, if Iran does not halt its nuclear program, "it will be clear that all options are on the table," Mr. Ayalon said, not only for Israel, but also for the United States and NATO.

Asked how long the Iranians should be given to cease all nuclear activity, Mr. Ayalon said "weeks, and not more than that."

The comments came after a frenzy of newspaper articles and television reports over the weekend here suggesting that Mr. Netanyahu had all but made the decision to attack Iran unilaterally this fall. The reports contained little new information, but the tone was significantly sharper than it had been in recent weeks, with many of Israel's leading columnists predicting a strike despite the opposition of the Obama administration and many military and security professionals within Israel. Articles in Sunday's newspapers also examined home-front preparedness for what experts expect would be an aggressive response not just from Iran but also its allies, the militant groups Hezbollah and Hamas.

"Lord help us, would you just do it already and be done with it?" wrote Ben Caspit, a columnist for the newspaper Maariv, referring to the Israeli leadership. "When one looks around the impression received is that it isn't only in Israel that they aren't being taken seriously any longer, but the world refuses to get worked up over them either."

"Maybe they'll bomb Iran in the end just to prove that they're serious," Mr. Caspit added.

Mr. Netanyahu and his top ministers have been saying for weeks that while the sanctions against Iran have hurt its economy, they have not affected the nuclear program, which Iran's leadership insists is for civilian purposes. On Sunday, Deputy Prime Minister Silvan Shalom called on the United States to enact "even more extensive and even more comprehensive sanctions which could overwhelm the Iranian regime and possibly even topple it, or bring it to make the decision to abandon the nuclear program."

The mixed messages from Mr. Shalom and Mr. Ayalon came two days after Mr. Netanyahu called Ban Ki-moon, the secretary general of the United Nations, and urged him not to go to Iran for a meeting scheduled for the end of this month of the so-called nonaligned nations (countries that were not allies of either the United States or the Soviet Union during the cold war).

"Even if it is not your intention, your visit will grant legitimacy to a regime that is the greatest threat to world peace and security," Mr. Netanyahu told Mr. Ban, according to a statement released by his office Friday night. "Not only does it threaten countries throughout the Middle East, not only is it the greatest terrorism exporter in the world, but it is impossible to exaggerate the danger it presents to Israel."

"Mr. Secretary General, your place is not in Tehran," Mr. Netanyahu added.

At a cabinet meeting on Sunday, Mr. Netanyahu seemed to be trying to rebut the Israeli newspaper articles questioning domestic preparedness as he bid farewell to the current home-front defense minister, who is becoming ambassador to China.

"There has been a significant improvement in our home-front defense capabilities," Mr. Netanyahu said, according to a transcript released by his office. "One cannot say that there are no problems in this field because there always are, but all of the threats that are currently being directed against the Israeli home front pale against a particular threat, different in scope, different in substance, and therefore I reiterate that Iran cannot be allowed to have nuclear weapons."

Friday, July 27, 2012

1948, 1967, 1973 ... 2012?

Israel Hayom | 1948, 1967, 1973 ... 2012?
The decision that will change everything
There are those who deem this critical argument that is being waged now as “the campaign of our lives,” and there are indeed various signs which attest to the fact that the moment in which a decision on the Iranian issue must be made is fast approaching.
Nadav Shragai
A ballistic missile is launched in a demonstration of Iranian military might.
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Photo credit: Reuters
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Monday, July 23, 2012

Hillary Clinton: The Art of Smart Power

New Statesman - The art of smart power
An impressive summation of American foreign policy today and the overwhelming burden of leading the free world. A worthy read for anyone interested in geopolitics. -R.O.

Wednesday, November 9, 2011

The Death of Truth: Dangerously Doubting the IAEA Report on Iran's nukes

By: Robert D. Onley

Fallout from the misleading intelligence that led to the 2003 War in Iraq is now leading the international community into dangerous, reactive scepticism of the IAEA's damning report on Iran’s now exposed nuclear weapons program.

This ill-founded scepticism extends to American allegations last month of an Iranian government-backed plot to assassinate the Saudi Arabian ambassador to the United States.

Despite the comprehensive, wide-ranging IAEA Report on Iran’s covert nuclear arms research, Russia and China have already rejected the possibility of increasing punitive sanctions against Iran, arguing on disingenuous grounds that the UK, France and US will use sanctions as an “instrument for regime change in Iran.”

Major news outlets across the world and particularly in the Middle East are similarly casting complete doubt on American and Israeli claims that Iran is actively working on nuclear weapons. 'The Americans are lying once again,' is the commentators’ chorus.

There is no arguing that the release of the IAEA Report was preceded by loud sabre-rattling from the American and Israeli political establishments, with leaked pronouncements that Israel’s Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu is allegedly preparing Israel for unilateral air strikes against Iran’s nuclear sites.

The timing of the release of these statements was certainly no accident, designed both to spark global discourse on Iran prior to the IAEA Report and concurrently to intentionally expose the Israeli government’s willingness to undertake military action.

But since his election in 2009, Netanyahu has repeatedly stated Israel’s deep existential fears about the Iranian nuclear weapons program. As such, none of his recent statements should in any way discredit the catastrophic implications of the IAEA Report, which sets out in unprecedented detail the extent of Iran’s covert nuke research and experimental nuclear detonator testing.

Some critics have been quick to point out that Iran’s research into the design of nuclear weapons is not in-and-of itself a breach of the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT), of which Iran is a signatory state and is thus internationally bound not to “manufacture” or otherwise “acquire” nuclear weapons. However, such a suggestion completely misses the point, and highlights the dangerous naivety of the international community’s reactive scepticism toward intelligence on Iranian nukes.

In contrast, the indisputable facts about Iran’s covert nuclear weapons research are as follows. According to the November 8, 2011 report by the IAEA, since 2003 the Government of Iran has:

1. Repeatedly, openly claimed its nuclear program is for “peaceful” purposes only, while it simultaneously…
2. Conducted covert research into nuclear weapons designs
3. Continued development of intercontinental ballistic missiles
4. Covertly constructed numerous weapons-related facilities, notably the Fordow uranium enrichment facility – built inside of a mountain, itself inside a military base – revealed by US President Obama in September 2009.

Finally, and most importantly, the Government of Iran did all of the above while blatantly obfuscating and lying about its nuclear intentions, in an obvious effort to stall for time and thus deliberately impede all hope of progress during years of nuclear negotiation efforts with Western powers (namely the P5+1).

Apparently burned by the botched intel that justified war with Iraq, Russia and China (and many in the West) have dismissed the IAEA report as a manufactured casus belli to attack Iran, and have painted Yukiya Amano, the head of the IAEA, as a pro-Western dupe.

Despite the fact that their own intelligence services likely also possess damning evidence of the Iranian nuke project, Russia and China are firmly backing Iran, with Russia's Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov warning the United States and Israel that attacking Iran would be “a very serious mistake.” The West can only guess as to what this warning could mean.

The most tragic casualty in all of this misguided scepticism is the truth itself. The fact that a 25-page report from the IAEA – the one global institution tasked with protecting the planet from the proliferation of nuclear weapons – can so blithely and reactively be dismissed as a lie, emphasizes the abject depravity of the international community’s moral core.

A country – the Islamic Republic of Iran – with a president who openly, repeatedly and callously denies that the Holocaust ever occurred, is now at the threshold of possessing the very weaponry that could cause the Second Holocaust.

In the face of this utterly malignant, horrifying historic juncture, the international community’s instinctive reaction is to render the IAEA’s years of painstaking intelligence gathering on this nuclear threat not as a terrifying truth, but rather as an unremitting lie.

Beset with widespread protests, a faltering global economy, and a Middle East already in turmoil, hesitation to green-light another conflict in the region is wholly understandable, and certainly with merit.

However for these same nations to then simply ignore the threat of another country gaining nuclear weapons capability, out of fear of causing temporary instability in the Middle East, is to abandon the world’s future to the enemies of peace. Moreover, if Iran develops the Bomb, the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty will effectively be destroyed, instigating a nuclear arms race in the world’s most volatile region.

Israel, the one nation most directly threatened by the potential of a nuclear-armed Iran, is today at the greatest of geopolitical crossroads since coming into existence.

If Israel decides to undertake unilateral military action against Iran, Netanyahu must convene with the United Nations Security Council and reveal all of Israel’s intelligence on Iran's nuke program. Now is the time to irrefutably prove to the world that Iran is developing nuclear weapons and thus represents a threat to the peace and future stability of the world.

The truth on this matter cannot be left in any doubt, because the truth -- about Iran’s nuclear weapons program and the threat from Iran’s theocratic Shia 'Twelver' leadership -- is Israel’s only ally in the longstanding fight for its very survival as the world’s sole, immovable, Jewish State.
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By: Robert David Onley

Thursday, August 18, 2011

Published by the Prince Arthur Herald

Very pleased to report that my latest article "The Socially Networked Future of International Diplomacy" has just been published by the Prince Arthur Herald in Montreal. Click here to read it.
Always appreciate feedback. Hope you enjoy! - R.O.

Friday, August 12, 2011

The Socially Networked Future of International Diplomacy

By: Robert D. Onley
In a world enveloped by unsolvable crises, national leaders of the Boomer Generation continue to practice politics and diplomacy using methods little changed over the centuries. Responding to their stasis, a new flock of 20-something student leaders – the “Facebook Generation” – are spearheading efforts that will forever reshape the dynamics of international diplomacy and global governance.

This stark contrast in methods was seen as one Middle Eastern government after another fell to popular uprisings this spring. Arab leaders who had viewed Facebook and Twitter as mere "websites" were blindsided by the organizing and unifying power of social networks.

But the inherent ability of these networks to mobilize people into action came as no surprise to the Facebook Generation, whose young leaders deployed the networks' tools as digital weapons and brought down the dictators.

While the Arab Spring will be remembered for the Internet’s effectiveness in instigating short-term ground-level political change, the long-term transformation of international diplomacy and the networked future of global governance was on display at the 2011 G8/G20 Youth Summit, held in Paris, France in early June.

At the Youth Summit, aspiring world leaders from the most economically powerful nations on earth met each other, exchanged ideas, and debated serious global problems in a professional, high-profile setting. Unlike the upbringings of their forebears, these young leaders are digitally connected, instantaneously communicating, and constantly updating each other on their personal, political and educational progress.

Critically, they have established permanent online networks of highly engaged, driven students who seek to bring change to the world, and who remain connected long after the Youth Summit is over. It is this transformative reality that is far more potent than the Arab Spring protests; a diplomatic sea change which will have deep ramifications for the future global order.

Chambre de commerce et d'industrie de Paris
Renaissance 
Paris, June 2011.

160 university students from all over the world gather at the École Supérieure de Commerce de Paris for the 2011 G8/G20 Youth Summit. The event, organized by a French non-profit initiative aptly called 'Youth Diplomacy', was planned entirely by undergraduate and graduate students.

The 5th annual Youth Summit sought to cultivate global dialogue between youth leaders through intensive negotiations over international affairs. Among the keynote speakers opening the event were the newly appointed Managing Director of the International Monetary Fund, Christine Lagarde, as well as an address by Christophe de Margerie, the President and CEO of Total S.A., one of the world's largest oil companies. Adding a layer of geopolitical credibility, Youth Diplomacy secured formal sponsorship for the Youth Summit from the Office of the French President Nicholas Sarkozy.

Beyond simply mimicking their respective national government's policies, the organizers encouraged delegates to propose their own innovative solutions. By week’s end the delegates had collaboratively drafted a consensus “Final Communiqué” of realistic proposals, a 54-page document which was then presented to the French Presidency and the actual leaders of the G8.

A Universe of Change
While international youth leadership events are nothing new, unlike any other era, social networking websites allow today's brightest youth to continue their dialogue, share their knowledge, and interact together on a daily basis. All of this is happening now, well before any of them enter into positions of real political power.

Critically, these up-and-coming world leaders understand that the influence of street-level social unrest only goes so far. What is needed is the genuine decision-making authority that comes with political office. These aspiring statesmen and women recognize that combining the organizational capability of social networks with their global networks of fellow young leaders will altogether reshape the future of global power and diplomacy, by equipping leaders with extraordinary communication tools.

The result is that social networks will soon become, in and of themselves, an additional lever of diplomatic power to world leaders. Tomorrow’s leaders, who today are establishing genuine international relationships through simulated diplomatic environments, will be able to leverage relationships from their youth that they cultivated over the coming decades.

Think about that for a moment. What if Barack Obama and Muammar Gaddafi had met 25 years ago and had been Facebook friends ever since?

Knowledge as power
The likelihood of such a scenario may be slim, but the plausible by-products of a such a relationship are as follows.

Tomorrow's world leaders will know more about each other than ever before. Like no other time, regular users of Facebook are provided – free of charge – with a deluge of personal, social and educational information about anyone they have ever added as a friend on the network. In many cases, this information is available for everyone that they have effectively ever met. (If you have added someone on Facebook that you only met once, raise your hand.)

Whether it is the latest degree, achievement, or new employer, Facebook allows for the completely legal “monitoring” of friends’ professional developments. By using Facebook just as the typical user does, sharing periodic life updates, Facebook Friends can know effectively everything that you, and concurrently, they, are doing and have done.

Intelligence briefing notes, the product of exhaustive research and once an indispensable primer for international negotiations with rival diplomats, could wind up becoming redundant relics of the pre-social-networked era of diplomacy.

Accordingly, relationships will be nurtured outside of regular diplomatic circles. Delegates at the 2011 G8/G20 Youth Summit in Paris warmly greeted returnees from the previous year's Summit in Vancouver. Like old friends, they had kept abreast of each other’s latest news, published articles and global travels – all through Facebook and Twitter.

Many of today's young leaders, including almost all of those who aspire to political office, are members of the jet-setting, globe-trotting crowd. Some delegates in Paris had even met up in far-off locales during the year in between Youth Summits – yet another externality facilitated by cheap travel and immediate communication tools.

While other delegates had not physically seen each other in over a year, the steady communal, ongoing dialogue enabled by social networks helped create a comfort and familiarity that only deepened the genuineness of their now renewed personal interactions in Paris.

Mental, digital shift
Empowering all of this is the fact that Facebook is effectively hard-wired into the day-to-day existence of tomorrow’s future leaders. Teenagers and 20-somethings possess a fundamental grasp of how Facebook “participates” in their daily lives.

Facebook’s all-pervasiveness is manifest in the hyper-connected reality of perpetual communication with --and information from-- anyone they have ever known. The social networks’ infiltration into the lives of the 'Facebook Generation' is due primarily to that fact that the Generation has literally grown up with the unprecedented power of instantaneous digital interaction.

For today's crop of young leaders, Facebook launched at the beginning of their undergraduate studies, allowing the sharpest among them to utilize the Groups feature to great effect when organizing campus events, clubs and parties.

But it is the omnipresence and ease-of-use of these technologies that will also enhance international dialogue in the near future. Facebook and Twitter are apps on every smartphone, and this will increasingly be the case as smartphones inevitably become ‘normal phones’. Facebook’s recently released Messenger app for iPhone and Android allows any user, anywhere in the world, to immediately contact anyone they have in their social network. And unlike international text messaging, Messenger’s chat feature is completely free.

Beyond Facebook, Twitter’s unique ability to #hashtag ideas, Tweet @ other users and their followers (thus bringing the Tweet to the attention of the 'targeted' user) is an instant accountability mechanism that today’s Boomer leaders are late to recognize, but one that tomorrow's leaders innately grasp. As these websites evolve and expand, so too will their abilities.

Gala dinner at UNESCO Headquarters in Paris
Hacker's delight
There are undeniably serious concerns regarding the security and privacy of Facebook, the legitimacy of social news outlets like Twitter, and their overall vulnerability to hacking. Recent scandals and security breaches have emphasized this, most notably the abhorrent hacking by Rupert Murdoch's "News of the World" paper.

However, the social networks are no more vulnerable than any other website. In fact, neither has ever been publicly hacked or catastrophically exploited. Broadly, every website on the Internet is subject to potential attack. The ongoing efforts of the hacking group ‘Anonymous’ to knock out the websites of major transnational corporations emphasize this ruthless reality.

Except given that ‘Anonymous’ concurrently supports opposition movements around the globe by hacking “enemy” government websites, it seems unlikely that the world’s highest profile hacking group would target the very social networks that pump oppressed protestors with the lifeblood needed for their movements to survive.

Move Beyond Sharing, into Shaping
The challenge for Facebook and Twitter is to move beyond merely lumping people into an interconnected universe filled with massive Groups and Events. Simply providing pages with common interests does little to push regular users to do anything more than read articles, watch videos and look at photo albums.

But Facebook can and must create legitimate social change, simply because it has the capability to instigate genuine discussion on global issues. What is required is motivated thinking.

In order to evolve beyond merely 'sharing', users should have the ability to opt-in to a "Dialogue" channel, one where "Strangers" (not Friends) with similar interests all over the world can comment on identical articles, ideas and proposals which have been mutually shared by several different people.

Often incredibly insightful comments and ideas on shared articles are forever “lost” on the Walls of Facebook users, whose ideas will never escape the restrictive confines of their profile's individual security settings. These lost ideas represent a tragedy for the progression of collective global discourse, and are untapped resources in the pursuit of tangible, results-oriented dialogue.

OneMidEast.org is an excellent example of a platform for constructive cross-cultural debate, featuring opposing views on contentious issues, presented on equal footing. Google's recently launched "Ideas" think-do-tank (in Google parlance) is another effort at encouraging discussion on intractable, real world matters.

The great advantage Facebook has in developing a similar platform, of course, is that it can exploit its exponentially larger userbase. With so many deeply troubling global problems requiring immediate action (just read the news), Facebook's competitive advantage cannot be wasted by simply staying complacent as an outlet for sharing silly YouTube videos and gawking at friends’ party pictures. Future generations cry out that Facebook’s 750,000,000+ users do far better than this with their time.

Facebook has already invaded the entire Internet, allowing users to log-in on practically every website imaginable, letting users "Like" pages and comment publicly on news articles using their personal profile. Such an unrivalled, ever-present platform for constructive communication with strangers can be taken a full step further, through the establishment a permanent think-tank structure for global dialogue, one that is operated within and populated by the entire Facebook universe and all of its shared content.

Only then can the overwhelmingly inane, narcissistic nature of Facebook today, be overhauled into a substantial, altruistic vehicle for shaping solutions to the myriad issues plaguing the planet.

Start now
Indeed with great power comes great responsibility. Possessing the largest, most influential websites in the world, Mr. Zuckerberg and his friends at Twitter and Google are burdened with, and challenged to begin, establishing a positive, lasting legacy using the very behemoths they now control.

Tomorrow's future leaders are ready to join them in this effort, today. Indeed, as the G8/G20 Youth Summit showcases, they have begun this dialogue by establishing influential networks of student leaders who are already initiating change. These young minds have been raised in an era where technological limits simply do not exist.

One spark and one Tweet started a revolution that is still sweeping the Middle East. The capacity to achieve has never been greater. Let’s get to work.
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Robert D. Onley represented Canada as the Minister of Defence at the 2011 G8/G20 Youth Summit. Robert is a UTSC graduate (Honours Bachelor of Arts, 2009) and a freelance writer in Toronto. He is the President of the Students' Law Society at the University of Windsor, Faculty of Law. Follow @RobertOnley on Twitter.

© 2011 Robert Onley, World Assessor.com


Click here for the Official G8/G20 Youth Summit Website.

Monday, February 7, 2011

Iranium - The Documentary

Check out Iranium, a documentary about Iran and its nuclear weapons program released today.

"In approximately 60 minutes, Iranium powerfully reports on the many aspects of the threat America and the world now faces using rarely-before seen footage of Iranian leaders, and interviews with 25 leading politicians, Iranian dissidents, and experts on: Middle East policy, terrorism, and nuclear proliferation.

Iranium documents the development of Iran's nuclear threat, beginning with the Islamic Revolution of 1979 and the ideology installed by Supreme Leader Ayatollah Khomeini.
Iranium tracks Iran's use of terror as a tool of policy, beginning with the 444 day seizure of the U.S. Embassy in Tehran, through Iran's insurgent actions in Iraq and Afghanistan.
Iranium details the brutal nature of the Iranian regime to its own citizens, and the Iranian people's desire to rejoin the international community.
Iranium outlines the various scenarios the greater Middle East and the Western world may face should Iran cross the nuclear threshold."