3894 items (0 unread) in 14 feeds
That's the topic of my op-ed in today's Crimson, which you can read here:
Give it a read and let me know what you think.
(I'm relatively happy that the number of unwanted grammatical "corrections" that editors typically apply before publishing was kept to a minimum, though there were still a couple that I didn't want.)
Also, here is an article I was sent yesterday by ISI from The American Conservative magazine that makes a number of points that support what I had to say about the party's current foreign policy. Caveat - This piece goes a lot farther than I can support, implying that the Gulf War was bad and was fought for Israel (um, what?), and implicitly opposing humanitarian intervention in Kosovo etc, but the more general thematic elements are still well-taken. Ultimately what it says has more resonance for the Iraq War than for the other wars. (Note: This article is long and tedious and keeps referencing "core" conservative writers that I've never even heard of - so just FYI, it makes all of the important points in the first 7 paragraphs and the last paragraph).
The last paragraph sums up this piece's argument best:
No single work by Kirk or Weaver or even Robert Nisbet—whose last books, Conservatism: Dream and Reality and The Present Age are strongly anti-militaristic—makes a comprehensive case against preventive war and interventionism. A casual acquaintance with the conservative canon wouldn’t change any College Republican’s mind. But students who seek a fuller knowledge will find little in the conservative intellectual tradition that accords with George W. Bush’s view of the world and America’s place in it. Increasingly, conservatives over the age of 65—including George Will, Milton Friedman, Jeffrey Hart, and Bill Buckley himself—have come to see the Iraq War as folly. If students critically engage the works of the wisest men of an even older Right, they too may be forced to conclude that George W. Bush is no conservative all—or else that Kirk and Weaver, like James Lawrence, are really leftists.
Finally, this piece in today's NYT is an important read. It describes the intra-party blame game that is already taking place among activists of different stripes who anticipate a major defeat in 3 weeks. Most relevant to the topic of this post is that it appears that David Keene and Grover Norquist agree with me on this issue (I'm happier about Keene's agreement than Norquist's, for a variety of reasons that I won't get into here, except to say that I'm disappointed Norquist doesn't support border security first.)
[Note: Anonymous posting has been re-enabled.]
According to Robert Novak, if nothing changes between now and Election Day, Democrats will pick up 21 Republican House seats, 6 more than necessary to control the House. If my math is right, that would put them up 12 seats.
Novak's Senate predictions (not shown here) have Democrats picking up 4 Senate seats, leaving Republicans with a slight majority there. It is important to note that the Senate is always (by design) resistant to political waves, since only 1/3 of its members are up for election at any given time. There is no reason to believe that Republicans would not lose the Senate as well if every seat were up for reelection this year.
For some reason, this week's issue of the Evans-Novak Political Report has not been posted online yet, so I have copied and pasted the most relevant part from the email below.
***
Election Outlook: For Republicans, the worst-case scenario we have described over the last few weeks seems to be shaping up. Democratic challengers in several districts once believed to be safe -- such as those of Chris Chocola (R-Ind.) and Charles Taylor (R-N.C.) -- were already holding on to solid leads even as the Foley situation took all the comeback momentum away from Republicans. Now things are even worse.
The upshot is that Democrats are holding their early leads and now reaching across the chart and putting more Republican races into play. The Foley Affair has started a current that runs against the GOP all over the country. In fact, given the current situation, we are re-examining all of the close races now, and assuming that in the current environment Democrats should be given the benefit of the doubt over Republicans. The game is now the Democrats' to lose.
In Minnesota's 6th District, conservative state Sen. Michele Bachmann (R) holds on to the slimmest of leads over child safety advocate Patty Wetterling (D) in what is normally solid Republican territory. Districts such as that of Rep. Heather Wilson (R-N.M.), always closely divided, cannot be counted on to perform as in the past, given that the tide running away from the GOP right now.
Some districts now merit Democrats' efforts and resources in a way they never could have just two weeks ago. Republicans are on the defensive all across the map, and the map keeps getting bigger. The one race where Republicans have any serious chance of a pickup -- against Rep. Melissa Bean (D-Ill.) -- could prove a disappointment in today's political climate, particularly given the decades of neglect shown by former Rep. Phil Crane (R-Ill.) toward the local party and the tools and organization it needs -- and lacks -- to win tough, close elections there.
If there is any lesson to be learned from the Foley Affair, it is that campaigns and elections can take very unpredictable turns and that trends often fail to play out as expected due to big news events. If it weren't for the Democrats' lack of funds, a tsunami-like gain would be a certainty. As matters stand, there may be time to avert the disaster that we currently see rolling toward the GOP Congress. Democrats +21, Republicans -21.
Republican-Held House Seats In Play | |||
Likely Republican Retention | Tossup | Likely Democratic Takeover | |
Leans GOP | Leans Dem | ||
AZ-1 (Renzi) | CO-4 (Musgrave) | CT-2 (Simmons) | AZ-8 (Open) |
AZ-5 (Hayworth) | CT-5 (Johnson) | CT-4 (Shays) | CO-7 (Open) |
CA-11 (Pombo) | IL-6 (Open) | FL-22 (Shaw) | IN-2 (Chocola) |
CO-5 (Open) | KY-3 (Northup) | IA-1 (Open) | IN-8 (Hostettler) |
FL-8 (Keller) | MN-6 (Open) | IN-9 (Sodrel) | FL-16 (Open) |
FL-13 (Open) | NV-2 (Open) | KY-4 (Davis) | NC-11 (Taylor) |
NV-3 (Porter) | NY-24 (Open) | NM-1 (Wilson) | NY-26 (Reynolds) |
NY-20 (Sweeney) | OH-1 (Chabot) | OH-18 (Open) | TX-22 (Open) |
TX-23 (Bonilla) | OH-2 (Schmidt) | PA-6 (Gerlach) |
|
WY-AL (Cubin) | OH-15 (Pryce) | PA-7 (Weldon) |
|
| PA-8 (Fitzpatrick) | PA-10 (Sherwood) |
|
| WA-8 (Reichert) | VA-2 (Drake) |
|
|
| WI-8 (Open) |
|
Democrat-Held House Seats In Play | |||
Likely Democratic Retention | Tossup | Likely Republican Takeover | |
Leans Dem | Leans GOP | ||
IL-17 (Open) | GA-8 (Marshall) |
|
|
LA-3 (Melancon) | GA-12 (Barrow) |
|
|
OH-13 (Open) | IA-3 (Boswell) |
|
|
OH-6 (Open) | IL-8 (Bean) |
|
|
PA-12 (Murtha) | SC-5 (Spratt) |
|
|
| TX-17 (Edwards) |
|
|
| VT-AL (Open) |
|
|
| WV-1 (Mollohan) |
|
|
Colorado-5: This race does not belong on the chart, and it should be a cause for alarm among Republicans that it is even considered competitive. This district is the stereotypical solid GOP district, home of the Air Force Academy and the social-conservative group Focus on the Family. State Sen. Doug Lamborn (R) suffers somewhat from the enmity of the man he would succeed, Rep. Joel Hefley (R). His opponent, Jay Fawcett (D), is a military veteran.
It must be noted, however, that the recent Mason-Dixon poll showing this race in a tie is one in a series of worthless polls this company has conducted of 400 registered (not likely) voters in some of the state's congressional districts. Likely Republican Retention.
Indiana-9: A rare case of rising Republican strength right now is the apparent resurgence of Rep. Mike Sodrel (R), whom we have long held to be a goner. A Sodrel staffer has dedicated a 527 group to his continued survival in office, and Sodrel is wealthy enough to keep his campaign in the hunt no matter what.
Polling in the district suggests that the Foley scandal is not reaching this corner of Indiana -- likely because freshman Sodrel has no real connection to it, and his opponent, former Rep. Baron Hill (D), is basically as much of a Washington incumbent as he is, having been defeated just in 2004.
Of all things, Sodrel is suddenly in the best shape of the three endangered Indiana incumbent Republicans. But that isn't saying much. Hill is still favored to win. Leaning Democratic Takeover.
New York-26: Just how bad is it looking for National Republican Congressional Committee Chairman Reynolds? He now trails his opponent, millionaire businessman Jack Davis (D), by double digits. Given his (albeit minor) involvement in the page scandal, Reynolds's need to save himself also takes away from Republican efforts elsewhere. His staff remains hopeful that he can turn things around.
The overall point of below is that it looks like both the House and Senate are slowly slipping away from Republicans. Both are still in play and could be retained, but Republicans are very much teetering on the edge and are in need of further recovery. The past week has been filled with supposedly good news, but it hasn't been good enough for the races that matter.
In case you haven't heard of it before, I'd recommend subscribing to the Evans-Novak Political Report, or reading it online when you can. It's a very honest and accurate look at the political climate, and contains a lot of valuable information/analysis you probably won't hear elsewhere.
This week's issue is particularly interesting in its analysis of the House races:
Evans-Novak are currently predicting that Democrats will net 14 House seats, picking up 15 and losing 1. The chart shown is just of Republican held seats. A chart of Democratic seats in play is here, but is mostly irrelevant since so few Democratic seats are in play.
Democrats do need 15 to win, but based on previous charts, things seem to be sliding slowly but surely the Democrats' way. More and more Republican seats are in play, including seats that should not ordinarily be in play, like Jean Schmidt's (OH) and Marilyn Musgrave's (CO) seats. The continued +14/-14 prediction masks the fact that, over the past week alone, 1 more Republican seat moved to "leans Republican" from "likely Republican," 1 more seat was added "in play" as "likely Republican," (from "strong Republican" off-chart) and 1 seat moved from "leans Democrat" to "likely Democrat."
As that chart grows in length (13 Republicans are now on the edge just beyond the 15 likely pickups), the prospects of a Democratic takeover become increasingly likely, since there are more and more opportunities for that single necessary seat to fall by chance. After all, nothing can be predicted with absolute certainty.
Note also Novak's comments about how Howard Dean may spoil Democrats' chances of taking back the House. If I were a Democrat, I'd be pretty pissed at him for his stupid "50 state strategy" or lack thereof. In a season this close, the DNC's irrelevance could be pivotal.
Meanwhile, it looks like the Senate is no longer completely beyond Democrats' reach, though I would still say Democrats only have an outside chance there, especially because of Kean in NJ.
I'm still trying to wrap my head around Harvard's decision to end its Early Action program. Harvard's claim that their decision was based on a desire to make the admissions process more "fair" for poor applicants who, because of their limited accesss to advising systems, would be less able to take advantage of such EA programs, seems highly suspect to me. I am not convinced that Harvard cares about this, nor do I think that they should. Harvard's purpose is the advancement of education, not the general social welfare. The idea that they are pursuing the interests of the poor to their own detriment is laughable; the idea that they ought to is, I think, misguided.
So how can we read into this decision some reaction that benefits Harvard? I haven't really talked about this very much with other people, so my idea is pretty tentative and I'd be very interested to hear other suggestions, but allow me to suggest one possible scenario.
Other things equal, it benefits a school to have an early action or early decision application process. Early Decision, obviously, is helpful because it locks in all applicants who apply through it and are accepted. Early Action is less decisive, but, probably, applicants who are accepted through Early Action are less likely to apply to schools that they might otherwise have been interested in, even preferred (due to their secure position, the stress of filling out apps, gratitude to the institution that accepted them, and desire not to alienate their friends/classmates by "taking their spots" in the regular process).
However, other things equal, it may also be advantageous for relatively elite universities that other universities not have early programs. If early programs elsewhere lock students into a school, Harvard would probably prefer that top students, who may not apply to Harvard because they are forced to choose one school and may fear Harvard's low acceptance rate, not be sucked in by other schools' ED/EA programs.
So what to do? It would seem that the best situation for Harvard would be to have an ED program, and have all competitors not have ED/EA programs. But other institutions would hardly go along with this plan.
So... Perhaps Harvard has calculated
A) The benefit of having an ED/EA program is outweighed by the cost of other schools having ED/EA programs.
B) That by ending EA and claiming that it is doing it to help disadvantaged students, it can win some PR capital and perhaps through shame and its leadership position in higher education persuade other schools into ending their ED/EA programs, thus potentially losing less top applicants to other schools.
Thoughts?
I wanted to write a note about Harvard's recent decision to drop its Early Action program - it seems that a lot of people have bought into the move on the assumption that this will help disadvantaged students, and that it is therefore good. However, the reasons given by the admissions office were not just that it would help disadvantaged students - the admissions office also claimed that Early Action and Early Decision programs increase the stress that applicants feel, and that that also had to be combatted.
For me the jury is out on the issue of disadvantaged students, since Harvard has always claimed - and I believe them - that the standards for Early Action are not more lax than for Regular Action. People keep pointing to the statistics that a far higher percentage of EA students have been admitted than RA students, but that is almost certainly due not only to the quality of the applicant pool, but also to the fact that Harvard only takes students in EA that they would take in regular admission anyway. After all, if Harvard isn't absolutely sure that they want to admit a student EA, they have never had much to lose by deferring a decision. Moreover, the claim that EA favors students who don't need financial aid is also seriously suspect, since EA (unlike binding Early Decision) implies no commitment on the applicant's part. If the nonbinding Early Action program hurts disadvantaged students, the impact can't be great, and in any case it rings hollow to hear the Admissions Office make such claims as long as they continue to openly favor (on the margin) legacies, and implement a Z-list. At most this is a sort of guilty way of avoiding those bigger issues, and I am just not convinced that a drastic change like this was a better choice than simply addressing the issue directly. Not that they haven't been doing that already, by the way, with the low/middle income initiative and major recruiting efforts. The facts just don't add up.
But the thing that I really can't understand is the claim that this will reduce the stress level of high school seniors considering applying to Harvard. Really? Because it seems to me that if adopted nationwide, this policy would DRAMATICALLY increase high school seniors' stress levels.
Right now, nonbinding Early Action programs provide students with the opportunity to have a sure "in" at a specific school before they even send in their applications for other schools. The practical significance of that policy is to substantially reduce the number of applications that a student admitted under an EA system has to submit. One girl I know who just matriculated to Harvard was admitted to one of her other favorite schools in a nonbinding EA round, and subsequently decided to only submit applications in the RA round to the 5 other schools (including Harvard) that she might conceivably choose over that first school. She was admitted to Harvard and declined to matriculate to the first school. But had she been rejected by the first school, or not been given the option to apply early in the first place, she probably would have applied to at least a dozen other schools, in order to have several options at each level of competitiveness. Because nothing would have been certain by the time she applied RA, she would have had to go all-out in order to feel confident that she would be able to attend the best school (according to her) that would accept her.
In sum, Harvard's policy, if adopted by many other schools, seems likely to dramatically increase the number of applications that students send to colleges. Given the already obscene volume of such applications, I fail to see how this could be a positive development, for either admissions offices or for their applicants.
I do oppose binding Early Decision programs (ED) (as distinct from Early Action, EA), because they cut off a student's options entirely and would seem to favor students who are willing to commit at that early date without seeing other options. That clearly benefits students who don't have to worry about financial aid considerations, and whose guidance counselors (if they even have them) have their act together. It also seems to be a tool to increase schools' US News "yield" scores, which could be the topic for an entirely separate post. But ED is completely different from EA, and it is disingenuous for Harvard to imply that they are the same policies.
Ultimately, I think that the reaction of the rest of the higher education world to this decision has probably been similar to their reaction to the Curricular Review - Is Harvard continuing to show leadership as a university, or is it simply blundering around without a clear sense of purpose or adequate attention to all sides of the issues it addresses? My vote would be for the latter.
HARVARD REPUBLICAN CLUB WHITE PAPER ON MOHAMMAD KHATAMI
Contact: Stephen Dewey
gop@hcs.harvard.edu
Saturday, September 9, 2006
For Immediate Release
The Harvard Republican Club calls on its members and all sensible people in the Harvard community to challenge Mohammad Khatami on his distorted view of Middle Eastern international relations during his visit to the Kennedy School tomorrow. Tell Khatami the world cannot afford to trust Iran until it suspends its nuclear enrichment program, verifiably closes the door to any and all nuclear weapons, and stops meddling in Lebanon and Iraq.
Much of the recent controversy over Khatami's visit has centered on his past policies, but we are primarily concerned about the future now that Ahmadinejad is at the helm. What worries us is Khatami's tacit and occasionally explicit support for Ahmadinejad's policies, including the latter's sinister anti-Americanism and anti-semitism, cynical support for terrorism in Lebanon and Iraq, and gravely disturbing brinksmanship on the nuclear issue. For Khatami to deliver Sunday's speech without distancing himself from these policies of Ahmadinejad would be unconscionable.
This white paper is divided into three sections:
1. KHATAMI'S DISTORTED AND DANGEROUS INTERNATIONAL VIEWS
2. MISCONCEPTIONS OF KHATAMI'S DOMESTIC POLICIES
3. ADDITIONAL COMMENTS
***Khatami's Distorted and Dangerous International Views***
Khatami's views on international relations in the greater Middle East leave much to be desired, including common sense and honesty. Khatami has become very skilled at political spin on such issues, insisting he wants rapprochement with the United States while opposing the necessary steps to achieve that, stating he does not seek Israel's destruction while supporting Hezbollah's "resistance," and blaming President Bush for Middle Eastern terrorism while turning a blind eye to his own government's support of Iraqi and Lebanese terrorist groups.
Khatami will claim in his speech at the KSG Forum that Iran's nuclear weapons program is entirely peaceful. It is important, then, that Harvard students come armed with the facts of the situation. Here are a few such facts:
Iran's contemporary nuclear program began under Khatami's presidency (Aug. 1997-Aug. 2005), during which period Iran took steps that the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) has determined violated the Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT). [1] This included covertly purchasing 1.8 tons of nuclear material from China, and running a secret uranium conversion program, a necessary precondition of the enrichment cycle. [2] While the safeguards agreement by which Iran was governed at the time allowed its pursuit of peaceful applications of nuclear technology (i.e. nuclear power plants), it also required Iran to report such activities so that the IAEA could verify it was not siphoning off nuclear materials for less benign purposes. [3] The fact that Iran declined to do so, coupled with the discovery of previously unknown enrichment and heavy water plants around the same time (at Natanz and Arak) [4], raises a serious red flag about Iran's intentions.
To make matters worse, that same year IAEA inspectors discovered traces of highly enriched uranium (HEU) at one of the previously hidden plants (Natanz), a grade of uranium that is used in nuclear weapons, and would never be necessary for the nuclear power plants Iran claims to be pursuing. [5] At best, this highly enriched uranium was present because Iran covertly purchased nuclear reactor materials from the A.Q. Khan network, run by the developer of Pakistan's dangerous nuclear weapons program, who sold them parts of centrifuges used by Pakistan to develop its own nuclear weapons, which then remained contaminated by such activities. [6] According to the Council on Foreign Relations, Khan is also known to have sold nuclear weapons technology to North Korea and Libya. [7]
Sunday's attendees should ask the hard questions that Khatami would rather not answer: If Iran's intent is purely peaceful, why did Iranian officials conceal the existence of the plants at Natanz and Arak from the IAEA and the world community until they were exposed by an Iranian dissident group in Paris? [8] The NPT guarantees peaceful applications of nuclear technology to all signatories - so what did Iran have to hide? And why did it feel compelled to seek support from the A.Q. Khan black market rather than from a legitimate state supplier? Khatami has a lot of explaining to do.
Khatami's position on politics in the eastern Medterranean region may actually be worse. When asked to distance himself from Ahmadinejad's support for the destruction of the state of Israel and denial of the Holocaust, Khatami is quick to point out that he does not share those views. But it is difficult to take such statements seriously when he endorses Hezbollah as a legitimate "resistance group," telling Al-Arabiyya TV last year that "We [Iranians] love Hezbollah." [9]
Sunday's attendees should ask Khatami - against what, exactly, does he believe Hezbollah is legitimately "resisting"? The "occupation" of Shebaa Farms? What right has Hezbollah as a Lebanese group to repeatedly inject itself into the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, to the detriment of both sides? Hezbollah is perhaps the Middle East's greatest tragedy, responsible for the deaths not only of hundreds of Israelis, but also of thousands of Lebanese. For Khatami to praise them, and to fail to condemn his government's responsibility for arming them, militarizing the region and goading them into endless war, is completely disgusting.
In particular, the combination of Khatami's founding of Iran's nuclear development program and his support for an armed-to-the-teeth Hezbollah makes us very concerned about his views on the state of Israel. Actions speak louder than words, and the actions Khatami has taken and endorsed are exactly what his maniacal successor, Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, needs to fulfill his dream that Israel be "wiped out from the map." [10]
We stand with decent-minded people everywhere in condemning Ahmadinejad for those intentions, in condemning Khatami's provision of the necessary means for their accomplishment, and in expressing our support for the state of Israel in this difficult time.
Lastly, Khatami would like to believe that President Bush is responsible for all the violence in the Middle East [11], but he conveniently ignores his country's own role in perpetuating the insurgency in Iraq. By now it is clear that Iran is deliberately providing improvised explosive devices (IED's) to Iraqi insurgents, who then use them to kill American troops with roadside bombs. [12] These IED's are lethal, can penetrate tank armor, and are hard for us to guard against. Iran's goal is to increase American casualties enough to force us out of the country, so it can profit from the power vacuum that will result. This has mostly occurred after Khatami left office, but it clearly contradicts his self-righteous view of Iran's peaceful role in the broader Middle East.
Sunday's attendees should ask Khatami to denounce his country's own role in fanning the flames of Middle Eastern violence, by supplying weapons to both Hezbollah and Iraqi insurgents.
***Misconceptions of Khatami's Domestic Policies***
Khatami's disastrous foreign policies notwithstanding, he does have a record of attempting to curb the power of Iran's oppressive and unelected Guardian Council and Supreme Leader, moves we support. He did also attempt to introduce some domestic reforms promoting democracy, freedom of expression, rule of law, free markets and women's rights. [13] Unfortunately, the Islamic fundamentalist Guardian Council found both reform proposals threatening and blocked them, a common theme in Iran, and the reason for the country's current political backwardness. Meanwhile, Islamic hard-liners allied with the Guardian Council beat, arrested and killed Khatami's own supporters on a regular basis, many of the violations of human rights that some are now inappropriately laying at Khatami's own feet. [14]
Claims that Khatami "presided over" human rights abuses ignore the fact that Khatami's office was little more than a figurehead. As The Economist points out, Khatami's conservative opponents had control of the military, the state security forces, the "morals police," the volunteer paramilitaries and the judiciary, and had veto power over Parliament. [15] Virtually the only power Khatami did have was the bully pulpit. How Khatami can be blamed for the actions of political opponents who had de facto executive powers and greatly outpowered him is difficult to understand.
In the end, Khatami's reformist supporters in the Iranian Parliament were actually thrown out of office in an election rigged by Ahmadinejad's hardliner wing in cooperation with the Guardian Council, paving the way for Ahmadinejad's election. [16] Khatami and Ahmadinejad are far from political allies.
The CIA acknowledges as much. From the CIA's World Factbook: "Following the elections of a reformist president [Khatami] and Majlis in the late 1990s, attempts to foster political reform in response to popular dissatisfaction floundered as conservative politicians prevented reform measures from being enacted, increased repressive measures, and made electoral gains against reformers. Parliamentary elections in 2004 and the August 2005 inauguration of a conservative stalwart as president [Ahmadinejad], completed the reconsolidation of conservative power in Iran's government." [17]
Or consider the following report from the independent group Human Rights Watch, which addresses the issue in great detail: [www.hrw.org] [18]
We want to emphasize that we do not even come close to supporting every domestic policy, action or pronouncement that Khatami made during his tenure. His gradualist approach frequently led him to make compromises that many would consider unacceptable. In the end, ironically, his moderate approach and attempts to work with Islamic hardliners may have doomed his reform efforts by preventing him from defending his allies from intimidation, coercion and imprisonment. But that does not make him guilty of such crimes.
We also want to emphasize that we have no special desire to protect Khatami from any legitimate criticism that might be leveled at his domestic policies. If our analysis of the domestic situation under his presidency is wrong, then we will gladly retract this portion of our statement and join in such criticism.
Until then, however, the evidence contradicting the claims currently leveled at Khatami's domestic policies is too overwhelming and widespread to ignore, and the sources we have cited attest to that. Even a cursory inspection of such claims reveals that their basis is suspect, and our respect for the truth does not allow us to ignore that reality.
We do, of course, unequivocably and emphatically deplore the domestic policies of Khatami's Islamic hardliner opponents, of the Guardian Council, of the Supreme Leader, and of current President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad. Unlike Khatami, Ahmadinejad uses his influence to provide cover for the activities of Iran's "legal" and extra-legal statist thugs who use violence to crush all dissent to their implementation of an Islamic theocracy. Ahmadinejad marches in lockstep with the Guardian Council and the Supreme Leader Ayatollah Khamenei, the folks who really run the show.
***Additional Comments***
There is already a media circus surrounding Khatami's visit, and it is only likely to increase throughout tomorrow. Everybody seems to want to use Khatami's visit as an excuse to promote their own views on the Iranian crisis, American foreign policy, and, of course, Harvard University.
This has inevitably resulted in a round of commentary on Khatami's mere presence at the IOP Forum, even though it is well known here that the IOP regularly seeks out controversial and even unsavory speakers to complement its lineup, and doesn't even come close to endorsing them.
Are the IOP's critics aware that that the Forum has hosted such conservative speakers as Karl Rove, Pat Robertson, Ken Mehlman (twice), William Kristol (8 times), Irving Kristol (twice), Jerry Falwell (twice), Ralph Reed (twice), Sen. McCain (twice), Doug Feith, N. Gregory Mankiw, Andrew Sullivan, and Phyllis Schlafly, among many others? Does anybody imagine that Harvard thought that it was endorsing such speakers when it invited them? Obviously not. We think this has become yet another opportunity to take an easy shot at Harvard without giving the University any reasonable benefit of the doubt.
We would encourage students to think critically about the issues raised by Khatami's visit and not participate in the sideshow of political posturing that is currently afoot. Consider the facts we've provided above as well as what you will hear from all sides on Sunday, and come to your own conclusions, as informed citizens should. We do think the views we have expressed above will hold merit in such an environment.
***References***
1. "Implementation of the NPT Safeguards Agreement in the Islamic Republic of Iran". International Atomic Energy Agency. Adopted by IAEA board on 11-26-2003. Accessed 9-9-2006. [www.iaea.org]
2. "Iran: Nuclear Overview." Nuclear Threat Initiative. Accessed 9-9-2006. [www.nti.org]
3. c.f. note 1.
4. c.f. note 2.
5. c.f. note 2.
6. "A.Q. Khan & Iran". GlobalSecurity.org . Accessed 9-9-2006. [www.globalsecurity.org]
7. "The Legacy of A.Q. Khan." Council on Foreign Relations. September 5, 2006. Accessed 9-9-2006. [www.cfr.org]
8. c.f. note 2.
9. Transcript of interview on Al-Arabiyya TV, July 14, 2005. Translated and provided by MEMRI (the Middle Eastern Media Research Institute) in Special Dispatch Series - No. 1279. [www.memri.org]
10. "Iranian leader: Wipe out Israel". CNN.com. October 27, 2005. Accessed 9-9-2006. [www.cnn.com]
11. "Ex-Iranian leader blames Bush policies for terrorism". CNN.com. September 4, 2006. Accessed 9-9-2006. [www.cnn.com]
12. "Iraq Weapons -- Made in Iran?" ABC News. March 6, 2006. Accessed 9-9-2006. [abcnews.go.com]
13. "Profile: Mohammad Khatami". BBC Middle East. June 6, 2001 (just prior to re-election). [news.bbc.co.uk]
14. "Iranian reformist MPs complain of wave of death threats". Agence France Presse - English. International News. June 24, 2003.
LexisNexis Link:
[web.lexis-nexis.com.ezp2.harvard.edu]
For those without Harvard Library access:
[www.harvardgop.org]
See also:
"Iranian radicals beat up reformist member of parliament". Agence France Presse - English. International News. December 6, 2003.
LexisNexis Link:
[web.lexis-nexis.com.ezp2.harvard.edu]
For those without Harvard Library access:
[www.harvardgop.org]
15. "God's rule, or man's?". The Economist. January 16, 2003. [www.economist.com]
16. "Iranian clerics ban reformists from polls". Daily Telegraph. December 1, 2004. [www.telegraph.co.uk]
See also:
"Profile: Mohammad Khatami [updated 2 years later]". BBC Middle East. June 30, 2003. [news.bbc.co.uk]
17. "Iran: Introduction". The World Factbook, published by the Central Intelligence Agency of the United States. Accessed 9-8-2006. [https:]
18. "Stifling Dissent: The Human Rights Consequences of Inter-Factional Struggle in Iran". Human Rights Watch. Accessed 9-9-2006. [www.hrw.org]