by Boaz Bismuth
Hat tip: Jean-Charles Bensoussan
Imagine that the U.S. buys a nuclear weapon from Iran. Sounds crazy? Maybe not. When it comes to the Obama administration and Iran, it is like Pablo Picasso once said: "Everything you can imagine is real."
The relationship between the Obama
administration and the Islamic Republic of Iran continues to live in the
theater of the absurd. If William Shakespeare had not died 400 years
ago, he could have penned new successful plays with titles such as
"Obama and Khamenei" (a modern version of "Romeo and Juliet") and "The
Merchant of Tehran" (a remake of "The Merchant of Venice," with Iranian
President Hassan Rouhani playing the role of Shylock).
Over the weekend, The Wall Street Journal
reported that the U.S. would buy 32 tons of heavy water from Iran for
$8.6 million. The main problem here is not the amount of money. Rather,
it is the fact that the U.S. is rewarding Iran for the sale of a key
component in the production of nuclear weapons.
The U.S. is not boycotting Iran, it is not
destroying Iran's nuclear program and it is not worried about
third-party deals with Iran that will have negative consequences for the
Middle East. The U.S. is showing that it has turned a new page in its
relationship with Iran. And the turning of that page began in November
2008, when Barack Obama was elected president.
A play about this absurdly comical saga could
begin with the mishandling of the talks in Turkey, Switzerland, Iraq and
Kazakhstan. Or perhaps it could start with the final nuclear deal
itself, which in effect legitimized Iran as a future nuclear power. We
could also focus on the fact that international trade with Iran is
returning to normal, as if we have gone back in time to the era when the
shah was in power. Money is flowing into Iran, despite the fact that
the Iranian regime is a certified pimp of terrorism. And we could
further enrich the absurdness of the play by mentioning that the nuclear
deal includes a clause that world powers, including the U.S., must
defend Iran's nuclear sites from attack (maybe even from Israeli
planes).
In other words, there is no lack of comedic
material here. But why hurry to write the play now? It is very likely
that the peak of the absurdity is still ahead of us. Imagine that in a
few years the U.S. buys a nuclear weapon from Iran. Sounds crazy? Maybe
not.
A decade ago, we would have read this script and thought
it was written by a science fiction author like Bruce Sterling or
Stephen Baxter. But when it comes to the Obama administration and Iran,
it is like Pablo Picasso once said: "Everything you can imagine is
real."
Boaz Bismuth
Source: http://www.israelhayom.com/site/newsletter_article.php?id=33307&hp=1
Copyright - Original materials copyright (c) by the authors.
No comments:
Post a Comment