Gonzaga Debate Institute 13 Hegemony Core Brovero/Verney/Hurwitz



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Iran Rising Now – Cuba




Iran-Cuba relations are high now – they share similar ideologies.


Franks, Bureau Chief Reuters News Havana, 12

(Jeff, 1/12/2012, Reuters, “Iranian leader says Cuba, Iran think alike,” http://www.reuters.com/article/2012/01/12/us-cuba-iran-idUSTRE80B1KC20120112, Accessed 7-9-13, RH)


Reuters) - Iran's President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad said on Thursday both Cuba-Iranian relations and Fidel Castro were in good shape after he met with the former Cuban leader and his younger brother President Raul Castro during a one-day visit to the communist island.

He said the two countries, similarly at odds with the United States though half a world apart, were closely aligned on many issues and would continue to fight "to demand the rights of the peoples."

"Our positions, versions, interpretations are alike, very close. We have been good friends, we are and will be, and we will be together forever. Long live Cuba," Ahmadinejad said through an interpreter at the Havana airport as he departed for Ecuador, the final stop in his Latin American tour.

Such shows of solidarity were the main purpose of Ahmadinejad's trip to four leftist-led countries as Iran seeks support amid rising international opposition to its nuclear activities. He visited Venezuela and Nicaragua before coming to Cuba on Wednesday.

The leader of the Islamic Republic said he discussed many different issues in a meeting with Fidel Castro, 85 and mostly retired, and that he was happy "to see commandante Fidel safe and sound." A recent flurry of rumors on social media claimed that Castro had died.

"We see that he follows all the national and international affairs in detail and with much pleasure," he said.

President Raul Castro told reporters his brother had met with Ahmadinejad for two hours and did most of the talking. The meeting was held on Wednesday.

"It shows that he is very well, really very well," said the younger Castro, who succeeded his brother as president four years ago and is himself 80.



About his own talks with Ahmadinejad, Castro said, "It was a good visit, we discussed quite a lot, we analyzed quite a lot, we finished very late."

Cuba-Iran relations are high – numerous meetings and economic integration


Monella, Italian reporter and investigative journalist, 12

(Lillo Montalto, May 30, 2012, The Argentina Independent, “Cuba: State Visit Deepens Relations With Iran,” http://www.argentinaindependent.com/currentaffairs/cuba-state-visit-deepens-relations-with-iran/. Accessed 7-9-13, RH)


With the second Iranian state visit to Cuba, the vice-president of Iran seeks to give a further boost to the already-friendly bilateral relations between two of the fiercest US enemies.

Alì Saeed Lou arrived yesterday in Havana for the second state visit on the island led by the communist regime of Raul Castro.

The laconic note released by the Foreign Ministry of Cuba underlines the “common will of improving relationships between the two countries and increasing the trade volume.”

Local media reports that Saeed Lou invited Castro to the XVI Meeting of Not-Aligned Countries that will be held in Tehran on the next 30 and 31st of August.

During his visit, “the distinguished guest will have official conversation with comrade José Ramón Machado Ventura, first vice-president of the State Council and Minister of the Republic of Cuba, and will be occupied with other activities,” stated the official note released by Cuban authorities.

During his Latin American tour, Saeed Lou will also visit Nicaragua, Venezuela and Ecuador.



In January, Mahamud Ahmadinejad first came to Havana to meet president Raul Castro and his brother Fidel.

Not only an anti-US and anti-imperialistic alliance: Cuba and Iran may soon be united also by oil and gas-related businesses.

As the Italian newswire PangeaNews reports, recent exporations in the Caribbean seas helped discover new oil reserves. ”The fact that both are now petro-powers, and both share the same anti-imperialist feelings, could help creating an hydrocarbon axis. With the addition of Venezuela, it would certainly cause much discomfort to the White House.”



Cuba was amongst the few countries to express support to the Iranian nuclear progam, strongly criticised by the UN and US President Obama.

In September 2010, the two countries met in Havana to discuss a €500million credit line to help Cuban industries, commerce, the energetic development sector and the local health system.



Fidel Castro also warned that Iran coud be the next in line for a Israeli-US-led war ‘against terror’.

Iran Rising Now – Mexico




Iran is expanding into Mexico – they use embassies and peaceful relations as a cover-up for Hezbollah and other terrorist groups.


Bensman, Counterterrorism Law Enforcement Agent and Journalist, 9

(Todd, April 9, 2009, Global Post, “Iran Reaches Out to Mexico,” http://www.globalpost.com/dispatch/mexico/090407/iran-reaches-out-mexico, Accessed 7-9-13, RH)


SAN ANTONIO, Tex. — While U.S. leaders remain fixated on Mexico’s drug war, Iran has quietly sought to establish closer ties to Mexico, with almost no notice.

Over the last year, Iran has been pushing for an expansion of trade and diplomatic ties between the two countries.



The efforts mirror those Iran's leaders have made in Latin American countries such as Venezuela, Bolivia and Nicaragua, whose leaders employ anti-U.S. rhetoric. Iran's close relationships with those three countries have prompted alarms to ripple through the U.S. national security establishment in recent years.

Some foreign policy experts see nothing nefarious in Iran's reaching out to another oil producing state, while some counterterrorism experts believe the U.S. should be more vigilant in monitoring any Iranian attempt to establish closer ties with Mexico.



It's just too close, they argue, not to pay careful attention.

In late February, Iran’s ruling Islamic clerics quietly sent emissaries to Mexico City with a proposal to expand relations in the “political, economic and cultural arenas” for the first time since the Shah was overthrown in 1979. According to a Feb. 27 press release posted online by Mexico’s department of foreign relations, Secretary Maria Lourdes Aranda Bezaury met with Tehran’s deputy foreign minister for the Americas, Ali Reza Salari.



More meetings are planned.

The response to Iran's actions in the region weren't always so muted. Past Iranian overtures elsewhere in Latin America — most recently in Nicaragua — drew quick U.S. condemnation, along with publicly aired suspicions that Iran's motives included the desire to project a terrorism threat in America's backyard.

In contrast, Iran's outreach in Mexico has proceeded with scarcely any public mention. The overtures took place (by design or not) amid the distractions of visits to Mexico by high-ranking U.S. officials, including Secretary of State Hillary Clinton and Homeland Security Department Secretary Janet Napolitano, to discuss supporting Mexico in its war against rampaging drug cartels.

"This is the first I've probably ever heard about this," said a State Department official closely involved in bilateral diplomacy and high-level American visits to Mexico. "And to tell you the truth it's probably something that's not going to come up (during the official U.S. diplomatic visits) — unless it's somehow forced onto the agenda."

Andy Lane, a State Department spokesman in Washington D.C., appeared unaware of the Iranian proposal when a Global Post reporter called on the eve of Clinton's Mexico visit.

After seeking the administration's response, Lane called back: "Many countries in the hemisphere have relations with Iran, and it is their sovereign right to pursue relations with any country that they choose." Lane said he was not authorized to elaborate.

The response may reflect President Barack Obama's desire for a different approach to Iran than his predecessor. The Obama administration's approach has been marked so far by diplomatic outreach to dissuade the clerical regime from pursuing a nuclear program that Europe and many of Iran's neighbors, including Israel, fear is aimed at producing nuclear weapons.

From the perspective of the U.S., Iran is different from other countries seeking acceptance in the region.

Since Iran was tied to the 1980s bombings of a U.S. Marines barracks and an embassy complex in Beirut, every American president since Ronald Reagan has continued Iran's designation as a state sponsor of terror. And the United Nations Security Council has implemented three rounds of economic sanctions on the grounds that Iran has broken promises about its nuclear program.

Foremost on the minds of national security experts who worry about Iran's forays into Latin America are the 1992 and 1994 bombings in Argentina of a Jewish center and the Israeli embassy, which killed 115 people and wounded 500. In 2007, Argentina indicted top Iranian diplomats and government officials for conspiring with Hezbollah operatives about the bombings.

"Iran wants to expand its presence in the western hemisphere. And as the 1994 terrorist attack in Argentina confirmed, when you have Iran in your country that always means you have the Quds Force and Hezbollah, too," said Michael James Barton, until recently a White House Middle East policy advisor to the Bush administration.

Last year, the Bush administration declared Iran's paramilitary secret police force, the Revolutionary Guard Corps, a terrorist organization on grounds that its operatives used the diplomatic cover of Iran's embassy in Iraq to help insurgents kill American troops.

But not everyone sees nefarious intent in the Iranian push to build embassies through Latin America into Mexico.

Gary Sick, a Columbia University School of International and Public Affairs professor, said Iran is merely breaking its UN-imposed isolation as any persecuted country would — by reaching out to oil-producing or oil-consuming nations in Africa, India, China and, quite naturally, Latin America.

"The outreach to Mexico doesn't strike me as dramatically different from many of the things they've been doing," Sick said. "It's obviously in their interest to have relations with other oil producers."

But former intelligence officials and counterterrorism experts note that Iran is well known for using its foreign embassies as a cover for the movement of Revolutionary Guard and Hezbollah operatives, as it did in Argentina.

Oliver "Buck" Revell, a retired associate deputy director in charge of FBI counterintelligence and international affairs, downplayed the threat of any direct Iranian attack mounted from Mexico.

But that doesn't mean there aren't concerns, he said. "They could create back channels and cells, get more capability, more contacts and more resources," Revell said. "There are many, many opportunities if they get a foothold in Mexico that could be harmful to both Mexico and the U.S."




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