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Saturday, August 18, 2012

Ahmadinejad challenges Israel, and 'cancer


Back to the inflamed rhetoric of the Iranian leadership against Israel, once again pointed out by President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad - the square of Tehran before coming together for the 'Day of Al Quds' (Jerusalem) - as "a cancer" will disappear. A goal that even the Lebanese Hezbollah brothers say they are ready to strike if attacked, boldly claiming to ship if "hell tens of thousands" of Israelis. Conceived at the time Ayatollah Khomenini to claim Jerusalem to Islam in the Shia world and ride the complaint to the occupation of Palestinian territories from the hated 'Zionist enemy', the anniversary - which coincides with the last part Ramadan - has been marked every year by anti-Israeli demonstrations in Iran, Lebanon, Afghanistan and among the Shiite minority in Saudi Arabia, as well as in the Gaza Strip controlled by Hamas. And Ahmadinejad has offered to the right to challenge the Jewish state - whose government, according to the tam tam media, consider a military strike against Iran's nuclear programs close - but also to mock Middle Eastern politics of the West in light of the Syrian crisis."The Zionist regime is a cancerous tumor and the countries of the region will soon put an end to the Zionist presence on Palestinian land," thundered the president in front of a large array of protesters gathered at Tehran University after Friday prayers. The Western - has continued with an indirect reference to Syria, ally of Iran stands to lose when Bashar al-Assad should fall - "say they want a new Middle East. We also want a new Middle East, but in our not are traces of the Zionists. " It is not the usual condemnation of a hypothetical (and now remote) peace agreement between Israel and the Palestinian National Authority (PNA) on the two-state solution, evoked as "a hoax" hatched by the U.S.. "The Zionists will leave and American dominance in the world will end," he concluded, as the crowd shouted 'Death to Israel, Death to America. The tone of Ahmadinejad - not at all unusual in such circumstances - are modeled on similar terms handed down yesterday by Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei. It found immediate echo in the grim words spoken today in an interview with Hasan Nasrallah, leader of the Lebanese Shiite pro-Iranian Hezbollah. If Israel attacks us, he threatened Sheikh, Hezbollah will respond with its arsenal of missiles "capable of hitting targets limited but hell can send tens of thousands of Israelis." And to make "hundreds of thousands" life impossible

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