Divest terror

Urge Utah Senate to divest terror

Christopher Holton, the Vice-President of the Center for Security Policy, writes:

State Representative Julie Fisher of Utah has taken the divest terror movement on her shoulders and done heroic work in her state in the current legislative session. Working against great odds, through cunning and persistence she has pushed Utah’s Divest Iran bill through the Utah House of Representatives singlehandedly.

Now she needs our help.

Due to some VERY questionable, but monied, interests, including interests with possible ties to the Islamic Republic of Iran, the deck is stacked against her bill in the Utah Senate.

We need a wave of action to overcome. Please take 3 minutes to view the YouTube video at the link below. It does an outstanding job of putting this issue in perspective. If I could, I would make this video the flagship for the initiative nationwide.

Look at the video, forward it to everyone you know–EVEN IF YOU AREN’T FROM UTAH. We need to create a national buzz about this. If you have a web site, please embed this video on that web site. If you have contacts in the blogosphere, please forward this email to them. If you know any talk radio hosts, please forward this video to them.

And, again, even if you are not from Utah, I urge you to contact the Senators in that video. Email them. Call them. Those of you who are in the Guard and Reserve and are members of military families especially. OUR PUBLIC INVESTMENT DOLLARS ARE BEING USED TO INVEST IN FOREIGN COMPANIES THAT PROVIDE CORPORATE LIFE SUPPORT TO THE WORLD’S NUMBER ONE STATE SPONSOR OF TERRORISM–IRAN. IRAN IS ALSO THE COUNTRY THAT IS SUPPORTING INSURGENTS IN IRAQ WITH ADVANCED IEDS, AS WELL AS TALIBAN FORCES IN AFGHANISTAN.

Here is more on the bill.

We pay the enemy and America’s corporations profit

Virtually any US firm doing business in Saudi Arabia or with Iran is helping the enemy. Every American should read ex-CIA officer Robert Baer’s book, ‘Sleeping With the Devil.’ America and its corporations are so corrupt and venal, that they put corporate greed above the lives of our men and women in uniform, above the international community’s attempts to stop a new race for nuclear weapons.

Money is fungible. A percentage of all multi-million-dollar projects end up as graft in the pockets of Saudi royals. When we’re talking about tens of thousands of members of the royal family that have to be kept in the style of living to which they’re accustomed, what are the odds that some of it is going to al Qaeda coffers through “charities?” Then there are the madrassas the Saudi Wahhabis are building all over the world, including the US.

Saudi Arabia, which gave us 15 of the 19 hijackers on 9/11, is also supplying the vast majority of foreign fighters to the war in Iraq and Afghanistan. They have a huge unemployment problem of young men under 30. Most university degrees in Saudi colleges are “Islamic Studies.” Yeah, that’s usable in the real world.

We will not rid ourselves of this problem until America ends its dependency on foreign oil. (See www.setamericafree.org) Imagine a world in which oil plummets to $15 bucks a barrel. Imagine what the Middle East would look like deprived of the money to finance Hamas, Hezbollah, al Qaeda, and all the other terrorist groups. Imagine what would happen if resentment and hatred of the US which props up these repressive regimes were redirected to the regimes themselves.

General Electric has admitted that it has contracts in Syria and Iran for electric power plants, oil and gas, lighting, and medical equipment (that latter is humanitarian stuff not subject to sanctions and no one is citing them). GE claims that none of it is being used for military purposes by “Iranian forces” or “Syrian forces.” Here is an excerpt from GE’s response to a 2006 inquiry by the SEC, Office of Global Security Risk:

“In addition to diagnostic, monitoring and life science medical products, our products and services that are sold or otherwise distributed include power generation systems and parts, oil & gas equipment, power control/supply and lighting products in Iran, each of which is sold or distributed pursuant to legal obligations entered into prior to February 2005. We sell our products and services directly and through distributors located in Iran and elsewhere. Our customers include private companies, government-owned electrical utilities and refineries, the Ministry of Oil, public/private hospitals and universities. To the best of our knowledge, none of the products or services we provide has been, or could be, employee in any military application or used by the armed forces of Iran for strategic, tactical or training purposes.”

How about the foreign insurgents financed by Iran, flying into Damascus, being trained in Syrian camps and crossing through the Syrian-Iraq border, what our troops call the “rat line?”

Apparently, General Electric either does not get or care that Iran has been violating international law for 30 years with impunity. Iran has engaged in proxy wars through its terrorist arm Hezbollah and through its Revolutionary Guards. It has kidnapped and killed American citizens and the citizens of its neighbors. It has provided foreign fighters, arms, and money to fight the US and Coalition forces in Iraq and Afghanistan. It defies the international community in its pursuit of nuclear weapons. It declared war on the US — its enemy — and advocates its destruction, along with Israel.

The purpose of economic sanctions against Iran is to provide the world community with some leverage, to let the ayatollahs know that their murderous, outlaw conduct comes with a price, that there will be consequences. When companies like GE, an iconic American company founded by Thomas Edison, find legal loopholes to do business with the people who call America and its allies their sworn enemies, that not only gives comfort and life support to the ayatollahs, that sends a signal that America and its allies do not even have the support of their own people.

Some time ago, GE changed its corporate slogan from “We bring good things to life,” to “Imagination at work.” The latter is a good description of the mendacity of GE’s lawyers, who told the SEC Office of Global Security that GE’s old contracts were okay. Yet President Bill Clinton put US sanctions against Iran in place in 1995, more than twelve years ago.

When we see Mahmoud Ahmadinejad calling for “death to America” and watch Iranian fast boats charging US Navy ships, we see the enemy. General Electric sees a customer in good standing.