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Dueling messages on Iran

U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton gives a speech at the APEC CEO Summit 2001 meeting, part of the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation (APEC) summit in Honolulu, Hawaii on November 11, 2011. The United States is hosting this year's APEC forum for the first time since 1993, with leaders from the 21 member economies convening on the island of Oahu on November 12-13.

Eugene Tanner, AFP/Getty Images

Hillary Clinton spoke Friday at APEC, the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation Summit, which the US is hosting this year in Honolulu. She looks bedraggled– tough week. And Reuters reports she “demanded..Iran respond within days” to the [already debunked here and here] IAEA report and said “Washington was consulting allies on further steps to pressure Tehran.”

Meanwhile across the globe in Vienna at a technical meeting for the International Atomic Energy Agency, Ali Asghar Soltanieh, Iran’s Ambassador to the IAEA , looks cheerful. The contrast speaks volumes.

Iran's Ambassador to the International Atomic Energy Agency, IAEA, Ali Asghar Soltanieh laughs before the start of a technical meeting of the IAEA, at the International Center in Vienna, Austria, Friday, Nov. 11, 2011. Photo: Ronald Zak / AP

  • AP reporting:

    “[N]obody would dare” to provoke such a confrontation with Tehran. Ali Asghar Soltanieh says Iran’s foes “should have learned a lesson” from the way his country fought Saddam Hussein’s army to a standstill after it invaded the Islamic Republic in 1980.

    He told reporters Friday that if there is an attack now, Iran would “respond immediately.”

    That’s an improvement over the rhetoric of a few days ago:

    Also on Wednesday, an Iranian army general warned Israel that any attack against Iranian nuclear sites would not only be met with the “destruction” of Israel, but would invite a reaction that spread beyond the Middle East.

    Deputy armed forces chief Massoud Jazayeri did not further elaborate, but said that the Dimona nuclear site in Israel could be targeted by Iran if Israel attacked it.

    Here is more from  AFP:

    “Iran has a long history of deception and denial regarding its nuclear program and in the coming days we expect Iran to answer the serious questions raised by this report,” [Clinton] said.

    Israeli President Shimon Peres said on Saturday that air strikes against Iran’s nuclear facilities were becoming “more and more likely.”

    But US Defense Secretary Leon Panetta warned Thursday of the risks of a military strike on Iran, saying it could have a “serious impact” on the region without halting Tehran’s nuclear program.

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How did this get posted as journalism?

“debunked”, where?

Are you talking about the report itself, or the varying interpretations of the report and political significance?

I know this off topic but it’s about another debunked narrative. Christianity Today posted yesterday a story which promotes the narrative of archeological spade in one hand and the Bible in the other, talking about Israeli archeologist Dr. Eilat Mazar. It then discussed that propaganda park, the alleged City of David.

http://www.christianitytoday.com/ct/2011/november/archaeology-rebel.html

When the ribbon was cut to dedicate Jerusalem’s newest archaeological attraction last summer, Eilat Mazar stood among the dignitaries like a proud parent.

The 56 year-old Israeli archaeologist didn’t just direct the final excavation that prepared the Ophel City Wall site for visitors. She also linked the silent stones with one of the Bible’s most eminent and holy kings: Solomon.

What the article failed to mention and as I pointed out in the comments was that just last month Dr. Mazar had a falling out with the City of David over its well-known shoddy scientific practices.

http://forward.com/articles/144184/#ixzz1aobqgb5K

An archaeologist who worked with the Elad association in Jerusalem’s City of David claims that the association and the Antiquities Authority are carrying out excavations “without any commitment to scientific archaeological work.”

Dr. Eilat Mazar – a Hebrew University archaeologist who worked in close cooperation with Elad over past years, and who is considered one of the most productive researchers in Jerusalem and in the City of David area in particular – has castigated Elad for the excavation of a large subterranean pit, called “Jeremiah’s Pit,” at the entrance to the City of David visitors’ center complex.

In a sharply worded letter she sent 10 days ago to Prof. Ronny Reich, chairman of the Archaeological Council, Mazar demanded an urgent discussion of the excavations, which she says are being carried out in violation of accepted procedures.

Mazar’s claims against Elad are being leveled at a crucial time as a proposed law to privatize public parks is being considered. If approved, the bill will enable Elad, a private association which excavates, maintains and conducts tours of the City of David, to maintain control of the historic site – situated in the predominantly Arab village of Silwan, adjacent to the Old City.

“To my astonishment I discovered that for over a year Elad, together with the Antiquities Authority, has been secretly planning a tourism gimmick called the ‘Jeremiah’s Pit Project,” writes Mazar in her letter, noting that the excavation is only two meters away from the excavation area that she directed between 2005 and 2008. She says that she wanted to continue digging in the present area, but was prevented from doing so “for logistical reasons, since north of the site the Antiquities Authority permitted Elad to build a special events hall,” and because of the area’s proximity to a residential building and a road.

Mazar claims that the excavation in the area of the pit contravenes several accepted practices in archaeology, among them, the digging up of an unusually small area of a mere “two squares,” or 10 square meters, which makes it difficult to analyze the findings in relation to the overall area. An excavation of this size, claims Mazar, is made only in situations where there is no other choice.
Mazar is also critical of the diggers’ intention to destroy the wall of the pit, which has not been properly investigated. She also notes that the dig “interferes with the nearby excavations,” which will undermine her ability to complete the research in the area. She claims that it is not acceptable to transfer an area being excavated by one archaeologist to another one, without the former’s consent.

Mazar raised these complaints to the director of the Jerusalem area in the Antiquities Authority, Dr. Yuval Baruch. He conveyed them to Antiquities Authority director Shuka Dorfman, who in turn rejected the complaints and approved the continuation of the excavation.

Antiquities Authority personnel said yesterday that Mazar, who asked to excavate the site and was turned down, received the status of a consultant to the excavation, but she wasn’t satisfied with that and turned to the council. An official reply from the Antiquities Authority said that “the excavation is a rescue dig for the purpose of tourism and the development of the national park. Near the site several archaeological excavations have been conducted, including that of Dr. Mazar. It seems that Dr. Mazar is trying to appropriate the site to herself and we regret that.”

Elad officials explained that it is not the association, but the Antiquities Authority that decides which archaeologist will conduct an excavation. Elad also claims that for several years Mazar has been aware of the project, which was designed to enable groups of tourists to visit the pit, and that she even promised not challenge it.

Pity, no one at State has told her. All the I/P firsters keep her isolated.

The duel makes Hillary Clinton look like an idiot.

And like Ronny Cox in Deliverance, she should know to surrender before she is totally toast, and ask Iran to teach her how to play the banjo.