by Caroline Glick
In
 his speech on Tuesday before the UN General Assembly, Prime Minister 
Binyamin Netanyahu tried to get the Americans to stop their collective 
swooning at the sight of an Iranian president who smiled in their 
general direction.
"Ladies and gentlemen," the 
premier warned, "I wish I could believe [President Hassan] Rouhani, but I
 don't because facts are stubborn things. And the facts are that Iran's 
savage record flatly contradicts Rouhani's soothing rhetoric."
He might have saved his breath. The Americans weren't interested.
Two
 days after Netanyahu's speech, US Secretary of Defense Chuck Hagel 
issued a rejoinder to Netanyahu. "I have never believed that foreign 
policy is a zero-sum game," Hagel said.
Well, maybe he hasn't. But the Iranians have.
And they still do view diplomacy - like all their dealings with their sworn enemies - as a zero-sum game.
As a curtain raiser for Rouhani's visit, veteran New York Times war correspondent Dexter Filkins wrote a long profile of Iran's real strongman for The New Yorker.
 Qassem Suleimani is the head of the Revolutionary Guard Corps. It is 
the most powerful organ of the Iranian regime, and Suleimani is Iranian 
dictator Ayatollah Ali Khamenei's closest confidante and adviser.
Rouhani doesn't hold a candle to Suleimani.
Filkin's
 profile is detailed, but deeply deceptive. The clear sense he wishes to
 impart on his readers is that Suleimani is a storied war veteran and a 
pragmatist. He is an Iranian patriot who cares about his soldiers. He's 
been willing to cut deals with the Americans in the past when he 
believed it served Iran's interests. And given Suleimani's record, it is
 reasonable to assume that Rouhani - who is far more moderate than he - 
is in a position to make a deal and will make one.
The
 problem with Filkin's portrayal of Suleimani as a pragmatist, and a 
commander who cares about the lives of his soldiers - and so, presumably
 cares about the lives of Iranians - is that it is belied by the stories
 Filkins reported in the article.
Filkins 
describes at length how Suleimani came of age as a Revolutionary Guard 
division commander during the Iran-Iraq War from 1980 to 1988, and how 
that war made him the complicated, but ultimately reasonable, (indeed 
parts of the profile are downright endearing), pragmatist he is today.
As
 the commander of the Revolutionary Guards, Suleimani commands the 
Syrian military and the foreign forces from Iran, Hezbollah and Iraq 
that have been deployed to Syria to keep Bashar Assad in power.
Filkins
 quotes an Iraqi politician who claimed that in a conversation with 
Suleimani last year, the Iranian called the Syrian military "worthless."
He then went on to say, "Give me one brigade of the Basij, and I could conquer the whole country."
Filkins
 notes that it was the Basij that crushed the anti-Islamist Green 
Revolution in Iran in 2009. But for a man whose formative experience was
 serving as a Revolutionary Guards commander in the Iran-Iraq War, 
Suleimani's view of the Basij as a war-fighting unit owes to what it did
 in its glory days, in that war, not on the streets of Tehran in 2009.
As
 Matthias Kuntzel reported in 2006, the Revolutionary Guards formed the 
Basij during the Iran-Iraq War to serve as cannon fodder. Basij units 
were made up of boys as young as 12.
They were 
given light doses of military training and heavy doses of indoctrination
 in which they were brainwashed to reject life and martyr themselves for
 the revolution.
As these children were being 
recruited from Iran's poorest villages, Ayatollah Khomeini purchased a 
half million small plastic keys from Taiwan.
They
 were given to the boys before they were sent to battle and told that 
they were the keys to paradise. The children were then sent into 
minefields to die and deployed as human waves in frontal assaults 
against superior Iraqi forces.
By the end of the war some 100,000 of these young boys became the child sacrifices of the regime.
When
 we assess Suleimani's longing for a Basij brigade in Syria in its 
proper historical and strategic context - that is, in the context of how
 he and his fellow Revolutionary Guards commanders deployed such 
brigades in the 1980s, we realize that far from being a pragmatist, 
Suleimani is a psychopath.
Filkins did not 
invent his romanticized version of what makes Suleimani tick. It is a 
view that has been cultivated for years by senior US officials.
Former
 US ambassador to Iraq Ryan Crocker spoke at length with Filkins about 
his indirect dealings with Suleimani through Iranian negotiators who 
answered to him, and through Iraqi politicians whom he controlled.
Crocker
 attests that secretary of state Colin Powell dispatched him to Geneva 
in the weeks before the US invasion of Afghanistan in 2001 to negotiate 
with the Iranians. Those discussions, which he claims involved the US 
and Iran trading information about the whereabouts of al- Qaida 
operatives in Afghanistan and Iran, could have led to an historic 
rapprochement, Crocker claims. But, he bemoans, hope for such an 
alliance were dashed in January 2002, when George W. Bush labeled Iran 
as a member of the "Axis of Evil," in his State of the Union address. 
Supposedly
 in a rage, Suleimani pulled the plug on cooperation with the Americans.
 As Crocker put it, "We were just that close. One word in one speech 
changed history."
Crocker told of his attempt 
to make it up to the wounded Suleimani in the aftermath of the US-led 
overthrow of Saddam Hussein's regime in Iraq in 2003. Crocker was in 
Baghdad at the time setting up the Iraqi Governing Council. He used 
Iraqi intermediaries to clear all the Shi'ite candidates with Suleimani.
 In other words, the US government gave the commander of Iran's 
Revolutionary Guards control over the Iraqi government immediately after
 the US military toppled Saddam's regime.
Far 
from convincing Suleimani to pursue a rapproachment with the US, 
Crocker's actions convinced him that the US was weak. And so, shortly 
after he oversaw the formation of the governing council, Suleimani 
instigated the insurgency whose aim was to eject the US from Iraq and to
 transform it into an Iranian satrapy.
And yet,
 despite Suleimani's obvious bad faith, and use of diplomacy to entrap 
the US into positions that harmed its interests and endangered its 
personnel, Crocker and other senior US officials continued to believe 
that he was the man to cut a deal with.
The 
main take-away lesson from the Filkins profile of Suleimani is that US 
officials - and journalists - like to romanticize the world's most 
psychopathic, evil men. Doing so helps them to justify and defend their 
desire to appease, rather than confront, let alone defeat, them.
Suleimani
 and his colleagues are more than willing to play along with the 
Americans, to the extent that doing so advances their aims of defeating 
the US.
There were two main reasons that Bush 
did not want to confront Iran despite its central role in organizing, 
directing and financing the insurgency in Iraq. First, Bush decided 
shortly after the US invasion of Iraq that the US would not expand the 
war to Iran or Syria. Even as both countries' central role in fomenting 
the insurgency became inarguable, Bush maintained his commitment to 
fighting what quickly devolved into a proxy war with Iran, on the 
battlefield of Iran's choosing.
The second 
reason that Bush failed to confront Iran, and that his advisers 
maintained faith with the delusion that it was worth cutting a deal with
 the likes of Suleimani, was that they preferred the sense of 
accomplishment a deal brought them to the nasty business of actually 
admitting the threat Iran posed to American interests - and to American 
lives in Iraq and Afghanistan.
Expanding on 
Bush's aversion to fighting Iran, and preference for romanticizing its 
leaders rather than acknowledging their barbarism, upon entering office 
Barack Obama embraced a strategy whose sole goal is engagement. For the 
past five years, the US policy toward Iran is to negotiate. Neither the 
terms of negotiation nor the content of potential agreements is 
important.
Obama wants to negotiate for the sake of negotiating. And he has taken the UN and the EU with him on this course.
It's
 possible that Obama believes that these negotiations will transform 
Iran into a quasi-US ally like the Islamist regime in Turkey. That 
regime remains a member of NATO despite the fact that it threatens its 
neighbors with war, it represses its own citizens, and it refuses to 
support major US initiatives while undermining NATO operations.
Obama
 will never call Turkey out for its behavior or make Prime Minister 
Recep Erdogan pay a price for his bad faith. The myth of the US-Turkish 
alliance is more important to Obama than the substance of Turkey's 
relationship with the United States.
A deal 
with Iran would be horrible for America and its allies. Whatever else it
 says it will do, the effect of any US-Iranian agreement would be to 
commit the US to do nothing to defend its interests or its allies in the
 Middle East.
While this would be dangerous for
 the US, it is apparently precisely the end Obama seeks. His address to 
the UN General Assembly can reasonably be read as a declaration that the
 US is abandoning its position as world leader. 
The
 US is tired of being nitpicked by its allies and its enemies for 
everything it does, he said. And therefore, he announced, Washington is 
now limiting its actions in the Middle East to pressuring its one 
remaining ally, Israel, to give up its ability to protect itself from 
foreign invasion and Palestinian terrorism by surrendering Judea and 
Samaria, without which it is defenseless.
Like 
his predecessors in the Bush administration, Obama doesn't care that 
Iran is evil and that its leaders are fanatical psychopaths. He has 
romanticized them based on nothing.
Although 
presented by the media as a new policy of outreach toward Tehran, 
Obama's current commitment to negotiating with Rouhani is consistent 
with his policy toward Iran since entering office. Nothing has changed.
From
 Obama's perspective, US policy is not threatened by Iranian bad faith. 
It is threatened only by those who refuse to embrace his fantasy world 
where all deals are good and all negotiations are therefore good.
What
 this means is that the prospect of Iran becoming a nuclear power does 
not faze Obama. The only threat he has identified is the one coming from
 Jerusalem. Israel the party pooper is Obama's greatest foe, because it 
insists on basing its strategic assessments and goals on the nature of 
things even though this means facing down evil.
Caroline Glick
Source: http://www.carolineglick.com/e/2013/10/america-and-the-good-psychopat.php
Copyright - Original materials copyright (c) by the authors.
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