Lest Anyone Be Fooled…
…by the rosy figures of speech Mahmoud Ahmadinejad uses to hide the stench of the anti-Semitism behind Iran’s ‘Holocaust Conference’, Anne Applebaum provides a welcome corrective:
On Monday, the Iranian foreign ministry held an international conference. There’s nothing unusual in that. Foreign ministries hold conferences, mostly dull ones, all the time. But this one was different. For one thing, the International Conference to Review the Global Vision of the Holocaust dealt with history, not current politics. Instead of the usual suspects—deputy ministers and the like—the invitees seem to have included David Duke, a former Ku Klux Klan leader; Georges Thiel, a Frenchman who has called the Holocaust “an enormous lie”; and Fredrick Töben, a German-born Australian whose specialty is the denial of Nazi gas chambers. The guest list was selective: No one with any academic eminence, or indeed any scholarly credentials, was invited. One Palestinian scholar, Khaled Ksab Mahamid, was asked to come but was then barred because he holds an Israeli passport—and also perhaps because he, unlike other guests, believes that the Holocaust really did happen.
…Unfortunately, Iran is serious—or at least Iran’s president, Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, is deadly serious. Holocaust denial is his personal passion, not just a way of taunting Israel, and it’s based in his personal interpretation of history. Earlier this year, in a distinctly eerie open letter to German Chancellor Angela Merkel, he lauded the great achievements of German culture and assaulted “the propaganda machinery after World War II that has been so colossal that [it] has caused some people to believe that they are the guilty party.” Such views hearken back to the 1930s, when the then-Shah of Iran was an admirer of Hitler’s notion of the “Aryan master race,” to which Persians were meant to belong. Ahmadinejad himself counts as a mentor an early revolutionary who was heavily influenced by wartime Nazi propaganda. It shows.
…[T]his week’s event has some new elements, too. This is, after all, an international conference, with foreign participants, formal themes (“How did the Zionists collaborate with Hitler?” for example), and a purpose that goes well beyond a mere denunciation of Israel. Because some former Nazi countries have postwar laws prohibiting Holocaust denial, Iran has declared this “an opportunity for thinkers who cannot express their views freely in Europe about the Holocaust.” If the West is going to shelter Iranian dissidents, then Iran will shelter David Duke. If the West is going to pretend to support freedom of speech, then so will Iran. Heckled for the first time in many months by demonstrators at a rally yesterday, Ahmadinejad responded by calling the hecklers paid American agents: “Today, the worst type of dictatorship in the world is the American dictatorship, clothed in human rights.” The American dictatorship, clothed in human rights spouting falsified history: It’s the kind of argument you can hear quite often nowadays, in Iran as well as Russia and Venezuela, not to mention the United States.
Well said (would that my ‘progressive’ friends and rivals would take heed and think twice about some of their more excessive rhetorical flourishes, knowing as we do how easily they are manipulated by fools such as Ahmadinejad and Chavez)…

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