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Veteran journalist warns of imminent war with Iran

Issue date: 3/6/08
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Journalist Stephen Kinzer spoke at Hopkins about the threat of war in Iran.
Media Credit: Laura Bitner
Journalist Stephen Kinzer spoke at Hopkins about the threat of war in Iran.

The threat of American military action in Iran is real, according to veteran New York Times correspondent Stephen Kinzer, who spoke to a small audience in Shriver Hall last night.

Hopkins is one of the last stops on a 22-city tour by Kinzer and a panel of other Middle East experts who are promoting a cooperative relationship with Iran.

Speaking before an enthusiastic crowd from the Hopkins community, Kinzer highlighted the reasons for his strong opposition against war on Iran.

"Many people in the U.S. currently assume that the U.S.-Iranian relations began and ended with the hostage crisis of 1979, but the hostage crisis didn't just come out of nowhere. It occurred for a reason," he said.

For Kinzer, the Iranian hostage crisis of 1979 was almost a direct consequence of America's previous intervention and support for the Shah, the Iranian dictator put in power by the United States in 1953.

The consequences of American intervention usually emit a much larger and influence on future politics, Kinzer argued.

The nationwide tour series is a response to President George W. Bush's singling out of Iran for its illegal nuclear proliferation programs in his most recent State of the Union address.

Suspicions about Iran's alleged nuclear weapons program have resurfaced in recent months, as the United Nations Security Council unanimously voted for further sanctions on the Middle Eastern nation this Monday.

At the same time, recent intelligence reports from the CIA and other U.N. member nations question the validity of such allegations.

Kinzer argued that peaceful relations with Iran would contribute to certain American interests, like providing a stabilizing force in the conflicted Middle Eastern region. The United States could work as partners with Iran to cooperatively extract Iran's crude oil and other rich natural resources.

As a last remark, Kinzer encouraged students to become more informed about relations with Iran and to become more informed about relations with Iran and to approach these issues through an objective, rational mentality.
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Michael Steven Jeffers

posted 3/17/08 @ 8:33 PM EST

Speaking of Iran's oil and resources; I do not think them to be vitally essential to America any longer. Even in ancient times there were other sources of energy, grand sources of energy, which lit up cities. (Continued…)

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