Wednesday, September 26, 2007

AHMADINEJAD TAKEN OUT OF CONTEXT IN ISRAEL

This is a common propaganda stunt of the Zionists. They intentionally take things out of context and disseminate those intentional fabrications and lies as truth. This use to work like the preverbial charm. Now, however, in the age of information exchange, it don't work so well. The Zionist can no longer hide their lies - they are revealed for all to see. Read this posting and the posting below of the complete UN speech.

The zionists are in a frenzy over the speech just delivered to the UN General Assembly by Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad. They proved that not only are they blind to reality, they also suffer from selective hearing...

Yes, he said all the things that are reported below in the three major English language news services on Israel... but he said other things as well. He spoke for forty minutes, hitting on issues such as world poverty, hunger, and scores of other issues facing the population of the world.

A video of the entire speech can be found in
THIS article just posted on MSNBC...But.... the following 3 articles from Israel focused on what they wanted to hear.... as always. They seem to forget that there is a whole world out there that heard and saw the entire speech.... Desert Peace

***********************************************************
From Ynet

Ahmadinejad: Nuclear issue of Iran is now closed

Iranian president declares in speech to UN General Assembly that his country will leave monitoring of its nuclear activity to IAEA. Ahmadinejad also slams Israel, US for occupation of Palestine and Iraq, violating human rights

Associated Press
Published: 09.25.07, 23:41 / Israel News

Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad announced Tuesday that "the nuclear issue of Iran is now closed," but the leaders of France and Germany vowed to thwart what they believe are Tehran's ambitions to build nuclear weapons.

The Iranian president also slammed "the brutal Zionist regime" for violating the Palestinians' human rights.

Addressing world leaders at the UN General Assembly, Ahmadinejad said Iran will leave the monitoring of its nuclear program to the UN nuclear watchdog, the International Atomic Energy Agency, and will "disregard unlawful and political impositions by the arrogant powers."

Ahmadinejad said Western powers had insisted on politicizing the Iranian nuclear issue.

"But today, because of the resistance of the Iranian nation, the issue is back to the agency (IAEA), and I officially announce that in our opinion the nuclear issue of Iran is now closed and has turned into an ordinary agency matter."

"Of course Iran has always been and will be prepared to have constructive talks with all parties," he added.

The Iranian leader spoke hours after French President Nicolas Sarkozy warned the assembly that allowing Iran to arm itself with nuclear weapons would be an "unacceptable risk to stability in the region and in the world." Earlier, German Chancellor Angela Merkel threatened tougher sanctions against Iran if the country remains intractable on the dispute over its nuclear program.

'Occupation by illegal Zionist regime'

The president restated his claim that the State of Israel has been given to the Jewish people as compensation for the Holocaust, and that as a result the Palestinians have been living under "heavy occupation" for the last 60 years.

"For more than 60 years, the Palestinians have been under occupation by the illegal Zionist regime. Palestinians are under siege, deprived of water and electricity, all for the sin of asking for freedom. Terrorists are organized to attack the people, with the blessing of the politicians and diplomats," he said.
Ahmadinejad railed against what he called the violation of human rights and traditional values.

"Today we are witnessing an organized invasion of values, by world powers who are promoting lewdness, violence and breaking the boundaries of chastity and decency," he said.

***************************************************
From HaAretz

Ahmadinejad: The Iran nuclear issue is closed By Shlomo Shamir, Haaretz Correspondent, Haaretz Service and News Agencies

In a 40-minute address to the United Nations General Assembly on Tuesday, Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad declared the Iran nuclear issue "officially closed".

Ahmadinejad praised the International Atomic Energy Association for dealing with doubts about Iran's nuclear objectives on a legal level, and said Iran complies with the IAEA, but it has been deprived of technical assistance by "the arrogant powers".

He added that sanctions imposed on Iran by "the arrogant powers" are illegal and said that despite them Iran has achieved "by the grace of God" industrial scale fuel production capacity, which it intends to use for peaceful purposes.
A major theme of the president's speech was the "fulfillment of God's promise", which Ahmadinejad said would occur when world powers left the "path of Satan" and returned to monotheism and divine values. He described the "end of dark era" as the return of prisoners to their homes, and the "liberation of Palestine and Iraq".

In an expected tirade against Israel, Ahmadinejad called it "brutal" and its soldiers "terrorists."

"The brutal Zionists carry out targeted assassinations," he told the world leaders who gathered in New York for the 62nd General Assembly, "and terrorists are decorated with medals of peace."

"People have been displaced and are under economic pressure. Occupiers are protected and praised, while Palestinians are deprived of water, electrity and medicine," the Iranian president continued.

Ahmadinejad spoke at the UN General Assembly after his controversial address at Columbia University on Monday.

Though he did not name the United States specifically, the beginning of Ahmadinejad's speech was clearly aimed at the superpower, whom he blamed for "widespread violations of human rights, terrorism and occupation." He blamed the nameless "power" for secret prisons, abductions, secret trials and wiretappings.

Several hours earlier, in his address to the General Assembly, U.S. President George W. Bush said that the UN unfairly criticizes Israel, but he avoided other issues that took center-stage in his speeches in former years.

Bush heaped criticism on the UN Human Rights Council in Geneva, which he said attacks Israel regularly but withholds criticism on other major human rights violators around the world.

However, Bush did not address the war in Iraq, the Iranian nuclear threat or the war on terror - all cornerstone issues in most of his foreign policy speeches.

Bush also urged other nations to support the struggle for democracy in Afghanistan, Iraq and Lebanon, and labeled Belarus, North Korea, Syria and Iran "brutal regimes."

"The people of Lebanon and Afghanistan and Iraq have asked for our help, and every civilized nation has a responsibility to stand with them," Bush said.

"Every civilized nation also has a responsibility to stand up for the people suffering under dictatorship," the president said. "In Belarus, North Korea, Syria and Iran, brutal regimes deny their people the fundamental rights enshrined in the Universal Declaration of the United Nations," he continued.

The president originally intented to make spreading democracy the theme of his second term, but refocussed his efforts on the war in Iraq. His handling of that conflict has made him increasingly unpopular at home and abroad as he heads into his final 15 months in office.

Bush was the first to speak at the 62nd General Assembly, and primarily focused on what he called the United States' humanitarian contributions to the world.

French President Nicolas Sarkozy, however, directly addressed Iran's nuclear program when he addressed the General Assembly for the first time since becoming president in May.

Sarkozy said allowing Iran to arm itself with nuclear weapons would be an "unacceptable risk to stability in the region and in the world."

"There will not be peace in the world if the international community falters in the face of the proliferation of nuclear arms," Sarkozy said. "The Iranian crisis will only be resolved if firmness and dialogue go hand-in-hand."

The U.S. and many of its allies, including France, have been pressuring Iran to suspend its controversial nuclear program, which they believe is cover for weapons development - a charge Iran denies. Bush has refused to take military action off the table if Iran does not comply.

Sarkozy's comments came after German Chancellor Angela Merkel threatened tougher sanctions against Iran if Tehran remains intractable on the dispute over its nuclear program.

Merkel said she intends to make clear in her address to the General Assembly later Tuesday that an Iranian nuclear bomb would have devastating consequences not only for Israel and the whole of the Middle East, but for Europe and the rest of the world.

In a stinging defense of Iran, Nicaragua's leftist President Daniel Ortega chastised the U.S. for seeking to restrict Tehran's right to enrich uranium.

In his speech to the General Assembly, Ortega said the United States, as the only country in the world to have dropped nuclear bombs on innocent people, had no right to question the right of Iran and North Korea to pursue nuclear technology for peaceful purposes.

"And even if they want nuclear power for purposes that are not peaceful, with what right does (the U.S.) question it?" he added.

Ortega has promised to maintain ties with Washington since taking office again in January, but also has signed a series of accords with Iran.

About a dozen anti-war protesters were arrested during a peaceful demonstration of Bush's speech near the United Nations. Many in the crowd of about 400 people wore orange jumpsuits in solidarity with detainees being held at the U.S. military prison at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba.

While Bush was in New York, the U.S. Congress called for tighter sanctions against Ahmadinejad's government and the designation of his military as a terrorist group.

The rebuke reflected lawmakers' long-held nervousness surrounding Tehran's aggression in the region, particularly toward Israel. To become law, the House bill would have to be reconciled with any legislation the Senate may pass before going to Bush for signature.

UN chief pledges to push for peace in Mideast
UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon on Tuesday took the podium for the first time as UN chief and called for an internal climate of change at the world body to address the growing number of issues requiring collective action.

"Looking to the coming year and beyond, we can foresee a daunting array of challenges to come," he told the General Assembly. They are problems that respect no borders - that no country, big or small, rich or poor, can resolve on its own.

Ban said peace in the Middle East is vital to the stability of the region and the world.

"We know what is required: an end to violence, an end to occupation, the creation of a Palestinian state at peace with itself and Israel, and a comprehensive regional peace between Israel and the Arab world," he said.

**************************************************
From the Jerusalem Post

Ahmadinejad slams "brutal zionists"
By DAVID HOROVITZ AND AP
Early in his address to the UN General Assembly on Tuesday, Iran's President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad repeated and elaborated on the charges he had levelled at Columbia University on Monday against Israel - which he called "the illegal Zionist regime."

He told the assembled world leaders that the people of Palestine had been punished for 60 years for what had happened in Europe. They had been held "under occupation of the illegal Zionist regime," he said. "The Palestinian people have been displaced," he went on, "incarcerated under abhorrent conditions." They were being deprived of water and medicine "for the sin of asking for freedom."

Ahmadinejad accused Israel of terrorism and castigated "the brutal Zionists" for carrying out targeted assassinations.

He also described immigration to Israel as the gathering "of Jews from around the world" with false promises, and their enforced settlement "in the occupied territories" where there were induced "to malevolence against the Palestinian people."

The Iranian leader also used the forum to announce that "the nuclear issue of Iran is now closed," and said that Iran will leave the monitoring of its nuclear program to the UN nuclear watchdog, the International Atomic Energy Agency, and will "disregard unlawful and political impositions by the arrogant powers."

Source: Desert Peace

No comments: