Iran and Hezbollah - The Devil and the Dirty Work
Read that the dramatic destruction of the Argentinian Jewish Community Center back in the 1990's has now been traced to the Iranian Embassy in Buenos Aires. Seems like Iranian masterminds sent a Hezbollah suicide bomber to the Center with a truck packed full of explosives to level the building and terrorize the Buenos Aires Jewish community, one of the largest in South America. The bomb leveled the 7 story building, killing 85 and injuring an additional 100 people. The identity of the bomber was recently discovered after Argentinian police tracked down the bomber's relatives in the US and got a confirmation of his identity from them and the FBI. Seems like the Iranians tried to cover this up by saying the person who carried out the attack was a Hezbollah fighter killed in an Israeli attack in Southern Lebanon. There are now indictments for high level Iranian and Hezbollah officials on the block. Interestingly enough a few years earlier, someone blew up the Israeli embassy where 29 people died, a tragic crime that has yet to be solved.
It seems strange that peaceful Jews in Argentina, a Jewish community just minding its own business, would be targeted twice in a relatively short period of time by two different parties, especially by the means of explosives. It would seem that these two events would have a pretty likely high chance of being related to the same group or group of hate-filled individuals who were just interested in killing Jews for the sake of killing Jews. These terrorists did not wage war on the Israeli army, but picked instead on a group of Jews living peacefully in a country far from the battle front. So from what has been presented to date, it looks like Iran had a large hand in the planning and execution of the attack, using Hezbollah to do its dirty work and to give it cover.
If this is pursued to its natural end, and it is found without shadow of a doubt that Iran was involved in ANY way with this attack in Argentina, the Argentinians should expel the Iranian embassy from its country, and other countries should flow suit. There should be solidarity of nations against rogue states who are willing and able to plot and carry out acts of terror on foreign soil. As always, Tehran denies the charges, but if it is proven to within even a reasonable doubt that they were involved, then they should not be given the benefit of the doubt. Their embassies should be expelled unilaterally from every nation that believes in the rule of law. It will not only teach Iran a lesson, but will also set them up as an example as to what can happen if a country does not play by the rules and keep its radicalism within the confines of its own country.
It seems strange that peaceful Jews in Argentina, a Jewish community just minding its own business, would be targeted twice in a relatively short period of time by two different parties, especially by the means of explosives. It would seem that these two events would have a pretty likely high chance of being related to the same group or group of hate-filled individuals who were just interested in killing Jews for the sake of killing Jews. These terrorists did not wage war on the Israeli army, but picked instead on a group of Jews living peacefully in a country far from the battle front. So from what has been presented to date, it looks like Iran had a large hand in the planning and execution of the attack, using Hezbollah to do its dirty work and to give it cover.
If this is pursued to its natural end, and it is found without shadow of a doubt that Iran was involved in ANY way with this attack in Argentina, the Argentinians should expel the Iranian embassy from its country, and other countries should flow suit. There should be solidarity of nations against rogue states who are willing and able to plot and carry out acts of terror on foreign soil. As always, Tehran denies the charges, but if it is proven to within even a reasonable doubt that they were involved, then they should not be given the benefit of the doubt. Their embassies should be expelled unilaterally from every nation that believes in the rule of law. It will not only teach Iran a lesson, but will also set them up as an example as to what can happen if a country does not play by the rules and keep its radicalism within the confines of its own country.



