Iran's Majnun-in-Chief

Iran

            

Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, Iran’s President: what a loathsome lout. Former diplomat Martin Indyk of the Brookings Institute described him aptly: wily, ignorant, smarmy, and not mad, just crazy like a fox. Ahmadinejad ignored CNN’s Anderson Cooper’s question (admittedly easy to do; that girl’s a mess) as to his wipe-Israel-off-the-map routine. Instead, he fixed his dead, beady eyes on the coy Cooper, and shot back with this: “the Zionist regimeâ€?—why can’t anyone criticize it in the US?â€? gormless git. Has he never visited his buds at The American Conservative, Antiwar.com, Counterpunch, A.N.S.W.E.R, Congresswoman Cynthia McKinney, and other tinfoilers, whose views at their tamest represent maybe 13 percent of American opinion? (See this poll from the Phew Research Center. “The Hebraic Bondâ€? will help provide a deeper understating of Americans’ moral affinities. That, and suicide bombings.)
Next, smirking as though he’d come up with something super smart, Iran’s Majnun-in-Chief asked the inept Anderson, “Why don’t they allow more research and studies to be done about [the Holocaust]?â€? For Pete’s sake, hasn’t this fool, with his Ph.D. in traffic and transportation engineering and planning, had an invitation from the Institute for Historical Review, our premier Holocaust denial coven of kooks? They can rattle off reams of “researchersâ€? who’ve dedicated themselves to proving the gas chambers were really Jacuzzis (the sum-total of Fred Leuchter’s “scholarship, for instance).
Or does Ahmadinejad think he’s on to something?

3 thoughts on “Iran's Majnun-in-Chief

  1. james huggins

    He can say what he says and get away with it because: 1) The average American hasn’t the backbone to stand up to the guy; and 2) The average American probably doesn’t know the answer to his baloney anyway.

  2. Robert Rupard

    Iran’s president is both a ghoul and a war criminal. Hitler is alive and well in Iran.

  3. Carolus

    He’s really quite a case, isn’t he? Truly dangerous and truly fanatical. I highly recommend Srdja Trifkovic’s recent piece over at Chronicles for a very good run-down of the “twelver” school of Shiite theology he represents. The background Trifkovic provides here is very helpful in getting an idea of the ideology that drives this character, and his broad base of supporters in Iran.

    Here is the link.

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