If Ahmadinejad’s point still isn’t clear, he elaborates:

“Using the excuse for the settlement of the survivors of the Holocaust, they encouraged the Jews worldwide to migrate and today a large part of the inhabitants of the occupied territories are non-European Jews. If tyranny and killing is condemned in one part of the world, can we acquiesce and go along with tyranny, killing, occupation and assassinations in another part of the world simply in order to redress the past wrongs?”

The question is not whether the holocaust happened or not, rather, it is how that horrendous tragedy has been exploited in order to justify the establishment of a “Jewish State” in Palestine and rob indigenous Palestinians of their own rights to self-determination. The issue is not to call history into question, but rather to explore the consequences of historical acts.

Furthermore, Ahmadinejad has always made a stark distinction between Jewish people and Zionists. He has said on numerous occasions that his opposition to a Jewish State is a political and ideological one, and not to be confused with a violent ultimatum or military threat to the Israeli people. Ahmadinejad has repeatedly said that Iran has “no problem with people and nations” and that Iran does “not have any confrontation with anyone. We seek relations based on respect and justice.” Even more specifically, in a 2008 CNN interview with Larry King, he stated quite clearly that “we don’t have a problem with the Jewish people.”

Just to be extra clear, Ahmadinejad declared, “We are opposed to the idea that the people who live there should be thrown into the sea or be burnt,” reiterating his belief in self-determination of all people based upon elections: “We believe that all the people who live there [in Israel and Palestine], the Jews, Muslims and Christians, should take part in a free referendum and choose their government.”

Even during his widely lambasted Durban II speech, Ahmadinejad clearly demarcated the distinction between the 19th century colonial ideology of Jewish nationalism and the Jewish religion, stating, “The word Zionism personifies racism that falsely resorts to religion and abuses religious sentiments to hide their hatred and ugly faces.”

Despite the fact that Ahmadinejad called for an “end to Zionism,” countless news agencies erroneously reported that he sought the “destruction of Israel,” and numerous commentators, including British ambassador Peter Gooderham, called these remarks “anti-Semitic.”

In his piece about Ahmadinejad’s 9/11 statement on Saturday, The New York Times‘ Robert Mackey, reminded his readers about comments made by the Iranian President during an International al-Quds (Jerusalem) Day rally on September 18, 2009, a national celebration in solidarity with the Palestinian people and in opposition to Zionism. Mackey, who refers to Quds Day as “Iran’s annual anti-Israel day,” writes that Ahmadinejad told the crowd that “The pretext for the creation of the Zionist regime is false…It is a lie based on an unprovable and mythical claim.” Again, the pretext of the holocaust is not at all the same thing as a lie.

The holocaust, as an historical occurrence admitted to by its own perpetrators in Europe and widely described as the systematic and mechanized murder of millions of Jews, is not being called a lie in this statement. Considering that the indigenous people of Palestine bear no responsibility for the atrocities committed by the Nazis, the consequences of the holocaust, however, as it was used to justify the creation of Israel in Palestine, is what Ahmadinejad states is based on a “mythical claim.” This becomes quite clear by listening to the very next line of Ahmadniejad’s speech, unreported by Mackey or anyone else in the Western press: “The occupation of Palestine has no connection with the issue of the holocaust.”

Later in the Quds Day speech, Ahmadinejad once again made sure to distinguish between Judaism and Zionism:

“The Zionists have no faith. It is a big lie that the Zionists should be considered tantamount to the Jews or the Christians. Zionists are not Jews nor Christians, and, rather, the Zionists seek to destroy all the values brought about by the divine prophets…the basis of Zionism is to destroy human culture and human values and the values of all nations.”

Iran itself has an ancient community of over 25,000 Jews, the second largest Jewish population in the Middle East after Israel itself. Along with Ahmadinejad, Siamak Morsadegh, the Jewish Iranian legislator and community leader, has criticized Israel’s policies towards Palestinians, especially in Gaza, saying it showed “anti-human behavior…they kill innocent people,” and continuing that the Jewish community in Iran does “not recognize a government or a nation for the Zionist regime.”

“A New Pearl Harbor”

That Ahmadinejad – along with millions and millions of others around the world – would find the official story of 9/11 suspicious is not without good cause.

A year before the September 11, 2001 attacks, neocon think tank Project for a New American Century, published a 90-page manifesto for a imperially dominant American Empire, urging “that America should seek to preserve and extend its position of global leadership by maintaining the preeminence of U.S. military forces.” Among its aims, the report, entitled Rebuilding America’s Defenses: Strategies, Forces, and Resources For a New Century, calls for the United States to “fight and decisively win multiple, simultaneous major theater wars” and achieve “a global security order that is uniquely friendly to American principles and prosperity.”

PNAC’s members, including Dick Cheney, Donald Rumsfeld, Eliot Abrams, Zalmay Khalilzad, Paul Wolfowitz, Bill Kristol, Robert Kagan, Norman Podhoretz, John Bolton, Scooter Libby, and Richard Perle, believed that “the process of transformation, even if it brings revolutionary change, is likely to be a long one, absent some catastrophic and catalyzing event – like a new Pearl Harbor.” Maybe those many PNAC members who, later that year, were subsequently appointed to top level positions in Bush’s new administration didn’t want to wait that long for such a galvanizing moment in order to pursue their own agenda of unilateral preemptive invasions of Middle Eastern countries.

When Ahmadinejad speaks of 9/11 as involving a “complicated intelligence scenario and act,” shouldn’t the media perhaps contextualize his statement by discussing the exaggerated and manipulated 1964 Gulf of Tonkin incident which was largely responsible for launching the American military campaign in Vietnam, the 1954 Israeli false flag operations known as the Lavon Affair conducted against Egypt, or the planned, but never implemented, Operation Northwoods scheme in 1962 concocted by the U.S. Department of Defense to instigate a war with Cuba (one of the plans consisted of hijacking an airplane and blaming the new Castro regime).

IranAffairs‘ Cyrus Safdari reminds us of “Emad Salem, an undercover FBI informant who had infiltrated the group that carried out the first WTC bombing back in 1993. He was smart enough to record his conversations with the FBI. Turns out, he specifically warned the FBI of the bombing, and offered to replace the bomb material with a harmless substance, but the FBI said no.” What about the completely bogus, but thoroughly hyped, “Newburgh bomb plot” to bomb synagogues in Riverdale, NY and fire a missile at a US military jet, which was entirely set up by FBI informant Shahed Hussain.

What about the 2007 statement by National Medal of Science laureate Lynn Margulis in which she referred to 9/11 as a “new false-flag operation, which has been used to justify the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq as well as unprecedented assaults on research, education, and civil liberties”? Or former CIA Middle East operative Robert Baer, who has written, “Until we get a complete, honest, transparent investigation – not one based on ‘confession’ extracted by torture – we will never know what happened on 9/11.” Or former senior CIA official Bill Christison, who wrote that there is a “strong body of evidence showing the official US government story of what happened on September 11, 2001 to be almost certainly a monstrous series of lies.” What about the other CIA officials who question the official story?