Bolton and Ledeen appeared at the briefing "Who is the Real Rouhani?" at the U.S. Capitol Visitor Center. The Endowment for Middle East Truth (EMET), described by its founder and president Sarah Stern as "unabashedly pro-American and pro-Israeli," sponsored the event. Stern introduced Bolton and Ledeen by discussing how Hassan Rouhani had appeared to American media as a "great moderate" following his June 14, 2003, election to the presidency of the Islamic Republic of Iran.
Yet Ledeen described the "big difference" between Rouhani and his predecessor, Mahmoud Ahmadinejad as being "exactly the same as the difference between Pepsi Cola and Coca Cola." In contrast to Ahmadinejad, Rouhani "is more charming," his "face is prettier," and "he knows the West" due to his Western education. Such attributes, though, simply reminded Ledeen of how some Western observers had expectantly noted Yuri Andropov as a "jazz fan" after this KGB chief succeeded Leonid Brezhnev as the Soviet Union's leader in 1982. Rouhani's exposure to the West, rather than moderating his views, seems to have instilled anti-Western vitriol in Rouhani, just as other Islamist leaders like the Muslim Brotherhood's (MB) ideologue Sayyid Qutb "learned to hate America in America."
Ledeen also rejected speculation of Rouhani being part of a "cunning scheme" to present an "apparent moderate." Ledeen believed that Rouhani's election was a "surprise" in an "honest vote" within the Iranian theocracy. Here again the difference between Rouhani's "moderation" and Ahmadinejad was minimal, for the latter could also "buy endless time" in negotiations over Iran's nuclear program.
In such dictatorships "you are dealing with a regime" that has "core policies," Ledeen argued. "It doesn't matter who the person is." Rouhani, moreover, has personally been "fully committed...fully engaged" during his career in Iran's terrorism and nuclear programs, central concerns for the international community. Citing the former Soviet dissident Natan Sharansky, Ledeen considered a dictatorship's domestic behavior indicative of foreign policy. "The way they treat their own people is the way they want to treat us."
Bolton as well saw no moderation in Rouhani, Iran's chief nuclear negotiator during 2003-2005. This background meant that "Rouhani could not be a better public face" for Iran now. Reflecting upon his negotiating experience, Rouhani had subsequently often "boasted" of his success in shielding Iran's nuclear program from interference.
Bolton attributed the origins of these negotiations to a European desire in 2003 for "showing up the United States" after its Iraq invasion. With the controversial Iraqi regime change as a backdrop, "we suave and sophisticated Europeans" sought to tame the Iranian nuclear program. The European concept then was a "macro-solution" following an Iranian enrichment freeze and today "they are still pursuing the same elusive goal."
Iranian stalling tactics in the following negotiations recognized, Bolton observed that weapons proliferators "need time and they need legitimacy." Iran, moreover, was "scared to death" after American invasions not only in Iraq but Afghanistan as well brought American troops to Iranian borders on opposing sides. Thus Iran has had no hesitation in suspending enrichment in the past, especially when temporary technical difficulties made the issue moot. Looking to the future, Bolton considered it "clear beyond dispute that the Europeans are getting ready to be suckered again."
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