11-28-09
"Jewish Roots" Ahmadinejad Visits Venezuela's Chavez As Israeli "Nuke Buyer" Ambassador
Since it became common knowledge that Irans's Ahmadinejad is Jewish (Ahmadinejad is Jewish because he was born Jewish, and Jewish is one's ethnic race, obtained through birth, not a choice of one's religion.) one should look at what Ahmadinejad does as helping israel, not hurting Israel. Iran's Ahmadinejad is visiting Venezuela's Chavez which hurts Iran's chances of not getting nuked because Chavez is about as popular in the United States as Iran is in Israel. Ahmadinejad cussed israel through Chavez when Chavez called israel " a murderous arm of the Yankee empire." Ahmadinejad visit to Venezuela will work to justify Israel and the USA nuking Iran. In my opinion Iran would be well served to hang Ahmadinejad or at least an Iranian patriot should assassinate Ahmadinejad. Israel has a ring in the nose of Ahmadinejad and Iran pulling him around is setting up Iran to be nuked. Logic dictates Ahmadinejad knows he is helping israel and is doing so because he hates the people in Iran who are not sympathetic to zioni$m and Ahmadinejad wants Iran nuked.
We know the Rothschilds/Rockefellers want to Holocaust Jewish people again. We know the Rothschilds/Rockefellers have a ring in Israel's nose. So it is really the Rothschilds/Rockefellers who are behind Ahmadinejad's Latin American trip and the Rothschilds/Rockefellers are up to no good. Actually it is Israel which is giving Iran its nuclear bomb capabilities. Actually it is Israel which is the world nuclear proliferater. Logic dictates it is Israel which gave Brazil their nuclear capacity. Except Brazil and Israel may have worked together to develop their nuclear capabilities as many of Hitler's cronies and scientists went to Brazil and Latin America after WWII. One can bet Israel and Brazil are giving Iran nukes and Ahmadinejad is all to happy to accept them if it leads to Iran getting nuked since Ahmadinejad is sympathetic to zioni$m and its agenda.
The bottom line is Israel has manipulated Ahmadinejad to travel to Latin America to buy nukes from Israel. Of course there will layers of subterfuge hiding Israel as being the seller. A country, like Russia, will be blamed as the country selling Iran nukes. ( Pakistan got its nukes from Israel. Valerie Plame was about to expose israel as supplying Pakistan with nukes. comrade Little George blew Ms. Plame's cover to keep her from exposing israel as the supplier of nukes to Pakistan.) Ahmadinejad and Iran will get caught red handed getting nukes. The world catching Iran getting nukes will give israel and the USA an excuse to nuke Iran. While israel and the USA are nuking Iran they will get the urge to nuke and nuke Russia at the same time. Ahmadinejad is a willing partner helping Israel nuke Iran because Ahmadinejad has Jewish roots and he is a closet supporter of zioni$m. Iran would be well served if it hanged Ahmadinejad for treason yesterday.
Today, December 3, 2009, there is a post which Admadinejad allegedly says "Israel could not do a "damn thing" to stop the Islamic state's nuclear program." This AP article is especially weird because the phrase "damn thing" is an American expression, so AP is editing Admadinejad to speak to the American people. AP and Admadinejad are helping Israel and the USA justify nuking Iran, so again Admadinejad is showing his zioni$t leanings and his desire to hurt Iran and help the Rothschild/Rockefeller agenda to expand wars to weaken people and countries. Its easier for the bad guys to conquer a country which is weakened by the destruction of war. Once again Admadinejad is showing his support of zioni$m.
Iran's leader makes inroads in Latin America
http://wire.antiwar.com/2009/11/25/irans-leader-makes-inroads-in-latin-america-7/
Iran's Ahmadinejad deepens alliance with Venezuela's Chavez, extends reach in Latin America
IAN JAMES
AP News
Nov 25, 2009 18:13 EST
Iranian leader Mahmoud Ahmadinejad sought to expand Tehran's influence in Latin America and deepen his alliance with Venezuela's Hugo Chavez on Wednesday in a visit that offered him a platform to defend his country's nuclear program.
Both leaders roundly denounced U.S. "imperialism," and Chavez also called Israel "a murderous arm of the Yankee empire."
Chavez rebuked Israeli President Shimon Peres for his recent prediction that the people of Venezuela and Iran will soon make their leaders disappear.
"What the president of Israel said, we take it as a threat," Chavez said, standing beside Ahmadinejad outside the presidential palace.
Ahmadinejad's visit triggered small protests and was condemned by Chavez opponents and Venezuela's Jewish community. Students protested outside a Caracas hotel where Ahmadinejad was thought to be staying, and another group outside the Iranian Embassy shouted, "We don't want him, go away!"
Chavez welcomed Ahmadinejad saying both countries are withstanding threats from "the same empire" — the United States. Ahmadinejad praised Chavez saying he is "withstanding the aggrens of imperialism like a mountain," and that the countries are like two soldiers in the same battle trench.
"We feel at home here and among our brothers," Ahmadinejad said through an interpreter. "We're going to be together until the end."
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Chavez's enthusiastic embrace of Iran has made Venezuela a gateway for the Iranian government to make diplomatic inroads in Latin America.
Chavez and Ahmadinejad were expected to discuss cooperation in energy, investments, trade and other areas. Venezuela was the final leg of the Iranian leader's three-country goodwill tour of Latin America, after stops in Brazil and Bolivia.
Iran has already helped Venezuela set up factories that assemble cars, tractors and bicycles, and Iranian businesses have sent crews to build public housing under contracts with Venezuela.
Venezuela's opposition accused Chavez of developing a "dangerous alliance" by growing close to Ahmadinejad, citing concerns about the nuclear program and the Iranian president's record on women's rights, crackdowns on dissent and his denials of the Holocaust.
"We reject the presence of someone who would carry out a program of enriching uranium without being subject to international controls," leading opposition parties said in a statement.
The Venezuelan Confederation of Israelite Associations also criticized the government's reception of Ahmadinejad, calling the Iranian president an "ominous character" and expressing concern his tour may help legitimize his government.
Chavez has drawn closer to Iran while increasingly clashing with Israel. His government has accused Peres of trying to disrupt Iran's growing ties with Latin America when the Israeli leader said last week that Chavez and Admadinejad will disappear from the political scene before long.
Peres spokeswoman Ayelet Frisch quoted the Israeli president as saying Chavez and Ahmadinejad do not give their people any hope, and therefore Venezuelans and Iranians will replace them by democratic means. She said Peres did not threaten anyone, but expressed facts as they are.
Chavez broke off diplomatic ties with Israel in January to protest its military offensive in the Gaza Strip.
Both Chavez and Bolivian President Evo Morales, meanwhile, have offered support for Iran's nuclear program, saying it is peaceful and not aimed at developing nuclear weapons as the U.S. and European nations fear.
In Bolivia on Tuesday, Morales and Ahmadinejad signed a joint declaration supporting "the right of all nations to the use and development of nuclear energy for peaceful means" — a stance shared by Chavez, who hopes to start a nuclear energy program.
Venezuela said last month that an aerial survey of its mineral deposits backed by Iran uncovered uranium deposits that could eventually be used for atomic energy.
Ahmadinejad's visit to Latin America — especially the first stop in politically moderate Brazil — appeared designed to provide a new measure of international legitimacy as his nation refuses to back down on the nuclear issue.
It is Ahmadinejad's fourth visit to Venezuela, and Foreign Minister Nicolas Maduro says the countries have signed about 270 cooperation agreements in areas ranging from energy to scientific projects.
Chavez's close ties with Iran have drawn alarm in Washington and Israel as officials warn Iran could use the relationship to support weapons programs or terrorism.
U.S. National Intelligence Director Dennis Blair said in a February Senate briefing that Venezuela "is serving as a bridge to help Iran build relations with other Latin American countries."
Chavez said Latin American countries are now building ties to Iran due to their growing independence from U.S. influence.
The lefist leader also said he had just returned from an unannounced visit to Cuba, where he met with his mentor Fidel Castro as well as President Raul Castro.
"They asked me to give you a hug for them," Chavez told Ahmadinejad.
___
Associated Press writer Fabiola Sanchez, in Caracas, contributed to this report.
Ahmadinejad: Israel can't do 'damn thing' to stop Iran nuclear program
Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad said on Wednesday Israel could not do a "damn thing" to stop the Islamic state's nuclear program, which the West suspects is a front to build bombs.
"The Zionist regime (Israel) and its (western) backers cannot do a damn thing to stop Iran's nuclear work," Ahmadinejad said in a televised speech in the central city of Isfahan.
Ahmadinejad rejected on Wednesday as "illegal" a UN nuclear watchdog resolution over the country's disputed nuclear activities, state television reported.
"Under pressure of a few superficially powerful countries ... the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) passed an illegal resolution against the Iranian nation," Ahmadinejad said in a televised speech in the central city of Isfahan.
The IAEA passed a resolution on Friday censuring Iran for covertly constructing a second enrichment plant near the holy city of Qom, in addition to its IAEA-monitored one at Natanz, and demanding a construction halt.
Tehran said on Sunday it would build 10 more uranium enrichment sites in retaliation for the resolution, which sailed through with unusual Russian and Chinese support.
Ahmadinejad says Iran will enrich its uranium to a higher level in direct contravention to an international call to halt the process.
Ahmadinejad expressed frustration with negotiations over a U.N.-backed deal to swap Iran's low-enriched uranium for higher-enriched fuel rods to power its medical research reactor.
He told a crowd of thousands Wednesday in the southern city of Isfahan that Iran will produce 20 percent enriched uranium and anything it needs for its nuclear program.
Ahmadinejad said on Tuesday his country did not have to tell the United Nations nuclear agency about its plans to build nuclear sites unless it used imported technology.
"We are not obliged to inform the International Atomic Energy Agency about our plans to build nuclear sites unless the technology is imported," Ahmadinejad told state television.
The Iranian leader's comments came after the International Atomic Energy Agency said Tuesday that it would demand Tehran clarify its announcement made earlier this week regarding intentions to expand its uranium enrichment program.
Ahmadinejad added that international sanctions over the Islamic Republic's nuclear work would have no effect and any aggression against the Islamic state would be regretted.
"Sanctions will have no effect. Aggressors will regret their action as soon as they put their finger on the trigger," he said.
The United States said on Tuesday it prefers to continue what it called the "engagement route" but warned that it would "go down the second track" if Iran did not cooperate.
"We think that we've made some very good proposals that will address their concerns, and will help them reap some rewards for their own civilian nuclear program, reap rewards in the sense of greater cooperation, integration with the international community," said State Department spokesman Ian Kelly. "But if they continue not to give us a positive answer, then they'll leave us with no other choice but to go down the second track."
Kelly added that the U.S. is also concerned about Iran providing support to terrorist organizations.
"We do have concerns about Iran providing support - material support - to terrorists," said Kelly. "We have a number of sanctions in place already with Iran. And part of those sanctions addressed just this, the shipment of weapons out of Iran."
Kelly conitnued, "We're hoping that they will help us address these concerns...by engaging with us. We haven't closed the door on this engagement. But time is running out."