
Ahmadinejad's Message to "Noble Americans"
Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, the president of Iran, suspected hostage-taker in the 1979 444-day seige of the U.S. Embassy in Tehran, and crackpot Holocaust-denier, is feeling the holiday spirit. On Nov. 29, Ahmadinejad posted an open letter (see below) on the Web site of Iran's mission to the United Nations that invited "Noble Americans" to share "responsibility to promote and protect freedom and human dignity." He wants us out of Iraq.
Iran's leader "detest[s] darkness, deceit, lies and distortion" and feels, despite the "unnecessary restrictions of U.S. authorities" and "negative ramifications" of U.S. "activities" in his part of the world, that ordinary Americans are "God-fearing, truth-loving, and justice-seeking." He is silent on the nuclear buildup near Tehran. "We all condemn terrorism," he writes, but there's no discussion of Iran's support for Hezbollah. Maybe he'll take up those topics next year.
Got a Hot Document? Send it to . Please indicate whether you wish to remain anonymous.
|
Did the NYT Just Call Joe Biden the Second Most Powerful Vice President Ever?
Meet the TV Genius Behind Jon & Kate, Table for 12, and the Duggars
Does the Health Reform Bill Really Restrict the Rights of Gun Owners?
Don't Fall for Best Buy's Scam To "Optimize" Your New Macintosh
Would Sen. Obama Approve of President Obama's Afghanistan Plan?
How Roald Dahl's Stories for Children Eclipsed His Fiction for Adults












