Reading Rouahani

Mahmoud Ahmadinejad was one of the Iranian “students” who held American hostages in Iran for 444 days, until the inauguration of President Reagan in January 1981. Mark Bowden’s invaluable Guests of the Ayatollah tells the story, complete with a photo of former hostages Barry Rosen and Kevin Hermening protesting Ahamedinejad’s 2005 visit to the UN.

I would like to think that Rosen and Hermening turned up again to greet Ahmadinejad in 2007 when he accepted the university’s invitation to speak there. Thanks for nothing, President Bollinger.

Iran is the world’s foremost sponsor of terror and Ahmadinejad was an appropriate face of the regime. Current frontman Hassan Rouhani seeks to project a different image, purring liberal bromides about“constructive engagement” in the Washington Post for the consumption of Team Obama and its left-wing supporters. “Constructive engagement” is catnip for them.

I took a look at Rouhani’s column here and Paul took a look here. Rouhani’s column is a sick joke. I know Rouhani and his masters hate the United States, but they also think we’re stupid. Unfortunately, it’s not hard to dupe those who want to be gulled.

Rouhani recently appointed one Hussein Dehghan as defense minister. Who is Dehghan? He does not appear in Bowden’s account of the hostage crisis, but he also appears actively to have participated in it. But wait! There is more.

According to Shimon Shapira’s illuminating Jerusalem Center for Public Affairs post, Dehghan has a voluminous amount of American blood on his hands. Here is the heart of Shapira’s post:

Brig. Gen. Hossein Dehghan spent his entire military career in the Revolutionary Guard, which he joined immediately after it was established in the last months of 1979. He came to the capital, Tehran, from his hometown of Shaharda in Isfahan Province, and until 1982 was commander of the Revolutionary Guard in the capital.

After the Israeli invasion of Lebanon in the summer of 1982, Dehghan was sent to Lebanon. He served as commander of the training corps of the Revolutionary Guard, first in Syria and soon after in Lebanon. This role made him responsible for building up the military force of Hizbullah, which also was established at that time. After most of the Revolutionary Guard force returned from Lebanon to Iran, and the force’s commander, Ahmad Motevasselian, was kidnapped along with three other Iranians in the summer of 1982 by the Christian militia – the Lebanese Forces, Ahmad Kanani was appointed commander of the Revolutionary Guard force in Lebanon.

About a year later Hossein Dehghan replaced Kanani in that position. One of his first goals was to set up a central command for the Iranian force, which at that time was scattered among small towns and villages in the Baalbek region. At the beginning of September 1983, Hizbullah, with the help of the Revolutionary Guard headed by Dehghan, took over the Sheikh Abdullah barracks, which was seized in the course of a procession led by three Hizbullah sheikhs: Abbas Mussawi, Subhi Tufayli, and Muhammad Yazbek. It had been the main base of the Lebanese army in the Beqaa Valley and now became the Imam Ali barracks, the main headquarters of the Revolutionary Guard.

It was from this headquarters that Iran controlled Hizbullah’s military force and planned, along with Hizbullah, the terror attacks on the Beirut-based Multinational Force and against IDF forces in Lebanon. The attacks were carried out by the Islamic Jihad organization, headed by Imad Mughniyeh, which was actually a special operational arm that acted under the joint direction of Tehran and Hizbullah until it was dismantled in 1992.

Instructions for the attack on the Multinational Forces were issued from Tehran to the Iranian ambassador to Damascus, who passed them on to the Revolutionary Guards forces in Lebanon and their Lebanese Shiite allies. According to the U.S. Marine commander, the U.S. National Security Agency (NSA) intercepted the Iranian orders to strike on September 26, 1983. It is difficult to imagine that such a high-level directive to the Revolutionary Guards in Lebanon would be transmitted without the knowledge of their commander, Hossein Dehghan.

On October 25, 1983, a Shiite suicide bomber detonated a water tanker at the U.S. Marine barracks in Beirut, killing 241 Marines; simultaneously, another Shiite suicide bomber blew up the French paratroopers’ barracks in Beirut, killing 58 soldiers. It was Mughniyeh who dispatched both bombers. The order to carry out the attacks was transmitted, and the funding and operational training provided, with the help of the Revolutionary Guard in Lebanon under the command of Hossein Dehghan.

Via Adam Kredo/Washington Free Beacon.

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