kenberg, on 2012-April-11, 19:53, said:
Earlier Santorum was mentioned. But we are not speaking of President McConnell or President Santorum, and while some people may think what Obama says is crazy or at least wrong-headed, people are not saying "Oh, it doesn't matter what outrageous things he says because he has no power anyway". The analogy holds no water at all.
I really do not understand this total resistance to the simple acknowledgement that when the President of a country that is pursuing enriched uranium (for power grids of course) announces that Israel must be wiped from the face of the Earth and denies that the Holocaust happened, this should be seen as a rather worrisome feature of the country. I am not saying we need to bomb them, only that we acknowledge that such rhetoric makes it more difficult to negotiate a reasonable accommodation. One usually has to read the global warming thread to find such resistance to acknowledging reality.
Mitch McConnell is about as relevant to Foreign Policy of American as Ahmadinejad is to Iran's. Actually he's probably
more relevant because he reflects the feelings of a faction that might actually come to power. Israel, the US and Iran are packed with hardliners that say mean things about each other all the time. I used Mitch because he was the one to most recently make a completely preposterous remark about bombing Iran.
What I don't understand is why you are identifying Ahmadinejad as a key player in the problem? Both sides are big on inflammatory rhetoric (remember the Axis of evil speech?). Ahmadinejad is just a bit player - like Mitch McConnell or Santorum. He could have the title of 'Supreme Emperor of all Iran' and it wouldn't make his statements any more or less relevant.
I mean yes, it would be nice if people didn't say mean things about each other, but this isn't going to happen. I think you are overrating the significance of his remarks because his title is 'President' but that title isn't worth 2/5ths of bugger all. It's purely ornamental. Literally the only difference between him and the previous reformist is now that Guardian council doesn't need to veto stuff.
It's even more puzzling because both sides are actually engaged in a proxy war (in Iraq) and a covert war (in Iran) with each other in which people are actually dying. Pretty sure funding anti US militas and political parties and assassinating government researchers makes dialogue more 'difficult' than any contribution from Ahmadinejad.