December 30, 2006Carrots and SticksI found this interview of Javad Zarif, the Iranian Ambassador to the U.N., of interest, particularly this snippet: As far as U.S. polices are concerned and the aftermath of the Baker-Hamilton report, what is needed is a change in the approach of the U.S. towards Iran, towards Iraq, and towards the region. What has brought all these miseries to the region is that the U.S. has dealt with the region based on wrong perceptions and a totally erroneous approach. The U.S. must come to realize that other countries have interests, have concerns, have anxieties. The U.S. must deal with these anxieties, concerns and interests, and not be concerned with only its own. Of course any country in any situation will try to maximize its national interest. That’s a given. But, you have to address any situation based on a recognition that the other side also has these similar national interests.(Hat Tip: Nikolas Gvosdev) Posted by Gregory at December 30, 2006 03:39 PM Comments
yes indeed. we trivialize their concerns and act imperialistic at every turn. Then we wonder why they resent us. Posted by: majkia at December 30, 2006 04:53 PM | Permalink to this commentThe appeal to "Orientalism" is unnecessary; the Bush administration deals with Europe and Latin America in precisely the same fashion. Posted by: Mike Schilling at December 30, 2006 07:30 PM | Permalink to this commentOur leaders are fools. The government's policies have not only failed in regard to Iran: Cuba, North Korea, and so on, they have strengthened those regimes versus their own citizens. When perchance will we learn form our own experience? Posted by: Tom Perry at December 30, 2006 11:59 PM | Permalink to this comment |
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