IRAN WATCH: |
May 11, 2006
Wiesenthal Center: Jakarta Crowds Cheering Ahmadinejad's Call For Israel's Annihilation, Reminiscent Of Hitler’s Rallies
The Simon Wiesenthal Center expressed shock and disgust over today's rally in Indonesia capitol of Jakarta when students cheered Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad when he vowed that Israel would soon be “annihilated” and again questioned the genocide of 6 million Jews during the Nazi Holocaust.
“Such behavior is ominously reminiscent of the Nazi rallies of the 30s when Germans and Austrians embraced Hitler's racist and genocidal vision that eventually plunged the world into history’s bloodiest conflict,” said Rabbis Marvin Hier and Abraham Cooper, Founder & Dean and Associate Dean (respectively) of the Jewish human rights group.
“Those cheering crowds and the silence of the world's leaders emboldened Hitler to launch WWII and the Final Solution against the Jewish people,” the Wiesenthal Center officials continued. “Today’s rally in Jakarta along with the failure of moderate religious and political leaders throughout the Moslem world to rebuke Ahmadinejad empowers the Iranian President to pursue his reckless course that further destabilizes the Middle East and ultimately threatens world peace,” they concluded.
The Simon Wiesenthal Center is one of the largest international Jewish human rights organizations with over 400,000 member families in the United States. It is an NGO at international agencies including the United Nations, UNESCO, the OSCE, the OAS and the Council of Europe and has presented historic exhibits throughout Asia, including China, Japan and India.
For more information, please contact the Center's Public Relations Department, 310-553-9036.
•Iran Threatens Israel if U.S. Attacks
Revolutionary Guards Commander Says Israel Will Be Iran's First Target if Attacked by U.S.
By ALI AKBAR
The Associated Press
TEHRAN, Iran - A Revolutionary Guards commander said Tuesday that Israel would be Iran's first retaliatory target in response to any U.S. attack, aprovocative threat that reinforced the Iranian president's past call for Israel to be "wiped off the map."
"We have announced that wherever (in Iran) America does make any mischief, the first place we target will be Israel," the Iranian Student News Agency quoted Gen. Mohammad Ebrahim Dehghani as saying.
Dehghani, a top commander of the elite Revolutionary Guards, also said Israel was not prepared to go to war against Iran.
"We will definitely resist ... U.S. B-52 (bombers)," Dehghani was quoted as saying.
On Tuesday, Israeli elder statesman Shimon Peres called on Iran to scrap its nuclear program and warned: "Remember that Israel is exceptionally strong and knows how to defend itself."
President Bush has said a military option remains on the table if Iran does not agree to international demands for it to stop enriching uranium and open its nuclear program to inspections. However, Bush said he wants to solve the dispute through diplomacy.
Dehghani, who served as a spokesman during Revolutionary Guards war games last month, said the exercises were held ahead of schedule to send a message to the U.S. and its allies against any plans for a military strike.
"We were due to organize the maneuvers in May but because of timing conditions and issues related to nuclear energy and upon the recommendation of Mr. Larijani, it was held 40 days sooner than planned," he said. Ali Larijani is Iran's top nuclear negotiator.
Friday marked the deadline set by the U.N. Security Council for Iran to freeze its uranium enrichment program. Council members are now considering the next steps, which could include punishing sanctions though Russia and China are on record as opposing that option.
The semiofficial student news agency gave no further details on Dehghani's remarks or where he made them.
Israel's army chief, Lt. Gen. Dan Halutz, said in an interview published Tuesday that the world has the military might to prevent Iran from developing a nuclear weapon. He also said that if Iran does obtain nuclear capability, it will constitute a threat to Israel's existence.
When asked if the world can, militarily, stop Iran's nuclear program, Halutz told the Maariv newspaper "Yes, yes. Regarding whether or not the world can, the answer is yes."
Questioned on whether Israel would be involved in such a military operation against its top enemy, Halutz said "We are part of the world."
Copyright © 2006 ABC News Internet Ventures/The Associated Press