Amir Taheri

October 28, 2020 | Benjamin Weinthal |

See No Evil: Europe Supports Genocidal Regime in Iran

Swiss and German economic deals might be aiding Iran’s illicit nuclear weapons program…. The Swiss firm Ceresola TLS reached an agreement [in 2010] with the Rahab Engineering Establishment...

May 3, 2020 | Benjamin Weinthal |

Paper of Iran’s leader accuses Germany of terrorism in antisemitic tirade

“Holocaust was a fraud,” screams Khamenei paper

July 23, 2018 | Benjamin Weinthal |

German intelligence contradicts Merkel on Iran’s nuclear drive

A German intelligence report from the city-state of Hamburg said Iran’s regime is continuing to seek weapons of mass destruction, delivering another intelligence agency blow to Chancel...

December 1, 2015 | Michael Ledeen |

The Iran Deal’s Slow Death

Back when the negotiations were still under way for The Deal between Iran and the P5+1, I accurately forecast the outcome would be a “No Deal Deal.” I described it this way:...

October 19, 2015 | Benjamin Weinthal |

Analysis: Why the German Foreign Minister’s Iran Trip Flopped

German Foreign Minister Frank-Walter Steinmeier’s trip to Iran on Saturday turned the clock back to the Federal Republic’s pre-sanctions pro-Iran policies by showing an indifferent po...

September 8, 2015 | Benjamin Weinthal |

Analysis: Iran Sanctions Relief Will Feed Europe’s Syrian Refugee Crisis

While Germany and Austria are in a celebratory mood about absorbing Syrian refugees, European politicians have ignored Iran’s role in producing the waves of desperate Syrians fleeing to Eur...

August 12, 2015 | Michael Ledeen |

The Ayatollah’s Message to the World

The supreme leader of Iran has published a book entitled Palestine.  As you would expect, it is a call to the Muslim world to destroy Israel and establish control over its territory...

January 12, 2015 | Benjamin Weinthal The National Review

Can France Regenerate Itself to Fight Radical Islam?

The nation of France imploded last week. Heavily armed Islamic extremists ran amok, massacring police officers, cartoonists, and shoppers at a kosher supermarket. The overall death toll reached 1...

October 14, 2014 | Benjamin Weinthal |

Analysis: If Iran Can’t Hold Human Rights Pledges, How Can it Abide by Nuke Deal?

BERLIN – The award of this week’s Nobel Peace Prize to Taliban victim...

October 3, 2013 | Clifford D. May |

Iran’s Rulers and the Art of the Deal

“I assure you nobody ends up being more war-weary than me.” — President Barack Obama, August 30, 2013 Imagine you’re Iranian president Hassan Rouh...

July 2, 2013 | Benjamin Weinthal

Egypt and the US

The last few days of mass protests in Egypt show that broad swaths of Egypt’s population reject the Islamic dominated government of President Mohammed Morsi – a former politician...

June 16, 2012 | |

Stay Out of Syria

A response to Clifford D. May.

June 6, 2012 | Clifford D. May |

The Battle of Syria

Assad’s survival would be a victory for Iran – and a defeat for the U.S.

June 13, 2011 | World Defense Review

Troubled Paradise: The Mixed Success of the African Union’s Intervention in the Comoros

Located at the northern end of the Mozambique Channel off the east coast of the Africa, the Comoros Islands – Ngazidja (Grande Comore), Mwali (Mohéli), Nzwani (Anjouan), and Mahor&ea...

January 25, 2011 | National Review Online

Iran Talks and Repetitive Motion Disorder

 Berlin — The nuclear negotiations between Iran’s regime and the Obama administration, including U.S. global partners Russia, France, China, the United Kingdom, and Germany, have...

January 20, 2011 | Commentary

Tunisia’s Anti-Israel Eliza Doolittle

Christian Ortner, a commentator for the Austrian dailies Wiener Zeitung and Die Presse, picked up a golden journalistic nugget about Leila Trabelsi, the wife of Tunisia’s former authoritari...

August 7, 2008 |

Islamist Extremism’s Rising Challenge to Morocco


Morocco has long enjoyed a well-deserved reputation as an oasis of moderation and relative tranquility amid the whirl of religious extremism and violence that passes for politics in most of the Muslim world, especially its Arab lands. Moroccan leaders are wont to remind their American interlocutors that Morocco's Sultan Mohammed III was, in 1777, the first foreign sovereign to recognize the independence of the United States. Subsequently, a 1786 treaty established diplomatic relations between the two countries, the oldest such ties between America and any Middle Eastern country. Renegotiated in 1836, the accord is still in force, making it the United States' longest unbroken treaty relationship. In June 2004, after notifying Congress and in recognition of the country's strategic support for the war on terrorism, President George W. Bush
formally designated Morocco a "Major Non-NATO Ally of the United States," making one of only fourteen states to be accorded that privileged status. And while it does not have full diplomatic relations with Israel, the Sharifian Kingdom has maintained high-level contacts with representatives of the Jewish state since 1986, when the late King Hassan II became only the second Arab ruler to openly host a senior Israeli leader, inviting then-Foreign Minister Shimon Peres to the royal palace at Ifran for formal talks. Just last week, on the ninth anniversary of his accession to the throne, King Mohammed VI conferred the Royal Order of Al-Alaoui on several prominent Jews of Moroccan origin, including Dr. Dominique Strauss-Kahn, managing director of the International Monetary Fund; Dr. Yehuda Lancry, former Israeli ambassador to the United Nations; and Rabbi David Messas, chief rabbi of Paris. Thus it is more than disconcerting to note the rising tide of Islamist extremism and concomitant menace of terrorist violence in Morocco.

 

October 11, 2006 | National Review Online

Take Ten: A decade’s worth of analysis.

Editor's Note: In the last ten years, how has the world changed, and how has it remained the same? As we mark our tenth anniversary here at National Review Online, we asked a group of commen...

February 14, 2006 | Clifford D. May Opinion Duel

Were the Danish Cartoons “An Unnecessary Affront”?

Co-authored by: Hugh Hewitt Speech is not free if you have permission only to say things no one could find unobjectionable or offensive.   Freedom of speech n...