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Ron Paul: Iran Deal Boosts Peace

DEFEATS NEOCONS … || By RON PAUL || Last week’s successfully concluded Iran agreement is one of the two most important achievements of an otherwise pretty dismal Barack Obama presidency. Along with the ongoing process of normalizing relations with Cuba, this move shows that diplomacy can produce peaceful, positive changes….

DEFEATS NEOCONS …

ron paul|| By RON PAUL || Last week’s successfully concluded Iran agreement is one of the two most important achievements of an otherwise pretty dismal Barack Obama presidency. Along with the ongoing process of normalizing relations with Cuba, this move shows that diplomacy can produce peaceful, positive changes. It also shows that sometimes taking a principled position means facing down overwhelming opposition from all sides and not backing down. The president should be commended for both of these achievements.

The agreement has reduced the chance of a US attack on Iran, which is a great development. But the interventionists will not give up so easily. Already they are organizing media and lobbying efforts to defeat the agreement in Congress. Will they have enough votes to over-ride a presidential veto of their rejection of the deal? It is unlikely, but at this point if the neocons can force the US out of the deal it may not make much difference. Which of our allies, who are now facing the prospect of mutually-beneficial trade with Iran, will be enthusiastic about going back to the days of a trade embargo? Which will support an attack on an Iran that has proven to be an important trading partner and has also proven reasonable in allowing intrusive inspections of its nuclear energy program?

However, what is most important about this agreement is not that US government officials have conducted talks with Iranian government officials. It is that the elimination of sanctions, which are an act of war, will open up opportunities for trade with Iran. Government-to-government relations are one thing, but real diplomacy is people-to-people: business ventures, tourism, and student exchanges.

I was so impressed when travel personality Rick Steves traveled to Iran in 2009 to show that the US media and government demonization of Iranians was a lie, and that travel and human contact can help defeat the warmongers because it humanizes those who are supposed to be dehumanized.

As I write in my new book, Swords into Plowshares:

Our unwise policy with Iran is a perfect example of what the interventionists have given us—60 years of needless conflict and fear for no justifiable reason. This obsession with Iran is bewildering. If the people knew the truth, they would strongly favor a different way to interact with Iran.

Let’s not forget that the Iran crisis started not 31 years ago when the Iran Sanctions Act was signed into law, not 35 years ago when Iranians overthrew the US-installed Shah, but rather 52 years ago when the US CIA overthrew the democratically-elected Iranian leader Mossadegh and put a brutal dictator into power. Our relations with the Iranians are marked by nearly six decades of blowback.

When the Cold War was winding down and the military-industrial complex needed a new enemy to justify enormous military spending, it was decided that Iran should be the latest “threat” to the US. That’s when sanctions really picked up steam. But as we know from our own CIA National Intelligence Estimate of 2007, the stories about Iran building a nuclear weapon were all lies. Though those lies continue to be repeated to this day.

It is unfortunate that Iran was forced to give up some of its sovereignty to allow restrictions on a nuclear energy program that was never found to be in violation of the Non-Proliferation Treaty. But if the net result is the end of sanctions and at least a temporary reprieve from the constant neocon demands for attack, there is much to cheer in the agreement. Peace and prosperity arise from friendly relations and trade – and especially when governments get out of the way.

Ron Paul is a former U.S. Congressman from Texas and the leader of the pro-liberty, pro-free market movement in the United States. His weekly column – reprinted with permission – can be found here.

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6 comments

Tom July 20, 2015 at 9:31 am

On this rare occasion I agree with Ron. If only his idiot son was as honest on this point, instead of towing the Fox News/NeoCON line; that if Obama did it, it must be bad. The war drums from the right are strong.

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Tazmaniac July 20, 2015 at 9:39 am

Just when I start warming up to some of Paul’s positions he goes off the deep end. About the only thing I can agree on is we are demonizing an entire Country for the actions of a few religious whack jobs. It is comparable to having Fred Phelps as our POTUS and the rest of Westboro in his cabinet. I do not believe the BS about sanctions being an act of war.

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Bible Thumper July 20, 2015 at 10:33 am

…but rather 52 years ago when the US CIA overthrew the democratically-elected Iranian leader Mossadegh and put a brutal dictator into power. Our relations with the Iranians are marked by nearly six decades of blowback.

2015 minus 1953 is 62 years not 52. I would chalk it up as a typo if not for the “nearly six decades” error also. This is not a mistake Paul would make, given he has spoken on this issue many times before. This leads me to believe that this article is primarily the product of an assistant. That is not that unusual, but he should at least carefully check and approve the final draft.

Paul is very selective on his history. Everything that was wrong, of course, is America’s fault. No mention of the British. How can such a synopsis of Iran’s recent history not include the hostage taking of our embassy staff by Iranian “students” and support by the government. Paul conveniently leaves out Iran’s support of terrorist organizations like Hamas and Hezbollah.

Paul uses technicalities of the Non-Proliferation Treaty to obscure the universally held opinion that Iran had a nuclear weapons program and the fact acknowledged by Iran that they are hiding details of it’s nuclear program.

With reservations, I agree that we must support the deal with Iran, because even though this deal doesn’t remove the possibility of war or Iran getting the bomb, regecting this deal makes one of those outcomes more likely.

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Rocky July 20, 2015 at 10:38 am

He’s correct. With the lifting of sanctions, Iran will see a boost in economic growth and integration with the West. The biggest winners in Iran will be the growing middle class, which are decidedly more moderate. That’s Israel’s greatest fear. If Iran moderates even more, the strategic value (which is negligible now anyway) of Israel will decline further, and Iran’s strategic importance will increase. Ask yourself this – who’s fighting ISIS with use besides the Europeans. Iran or Israel?

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Lone Ranger July 20, 2015 at 6:20 pm

Sticks and stones may break my bones but now this one thing
we all universally know

Ron AND Rand Paul and Obama are proof that the Indians slept
too close to the buffalo !!!

Reply
idcydm July 20, 2015 at 7:51 pm

Bet one of Paul’s heroes, Neville Chamberlain.

Reply

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