Tel Aviv - Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad represents a phenomenon similar to Nazi dictator Adolf Hitler, and is not being taken seriously enough by the world, Israeli President Shimon Peres said in remarks published Wednesday.
Comment: Let's see, Hitler corralled a lot of people into small spaces, denied them their rights and dignity as human beings and slaughtered them at will. Point for point, who does that sound like? Israel and their treatment of the Palestinians!
"I identify a phenomenon similar to Hitler, and the world is once again indifferent. I can't say for sure he would behave like Hitler, but the world is taking him lightly," Peres told the Ha'aretz daily in an interview to mark Israel's 60th anniversary, which begins Wednesday night.
Comment: Yes, a phenomenon similar to Hitler definitely is happening in the Middle East and world world definitely is indifferent once again. The phenomenon in this case is not centered in Iran, however, it is centered in Israel.
Israel sees Iranian attempts to acquire nuclear weapons as its biggest existential threat, given Ahmadinejad's repeated statements that the Jewish state should be erased off the map.
Comment: Firstly, there is no evidence beyond the claims of the United States and Israel that Iran is attempting to acquire nuclear weapons. Period. And we should already see clearly what that is worth from the bogus claims of WMD in Iraq.
Secondly, Ahmadinejad has never called for Israel being wiped off the map, let alone made such repeated statements. He did call for regime change by stating, "The regime occupying Jerusalem must vanish from the page of time." This is the statement that has been falsely portrayed as saying Israel should be "wiped from the map." Peres is fully aware of this. The fact that he would continue to push this blatant lie is also like Hitler and his Propaganda Minster, Joseph Goebbels.
Thirdly, what about the fact that Israel already has nuclear weapons?
The veteran Israeli statesman said he regarded Israel's biggest missed opportunity as the failure of a 1987 deal which would have restored the West Bank to Jordanian control.
"To this day I have no doubt it was our biggest diplomatic mistake," he says of the failure to implement the agreement he pushed for when foreign minister, and which was blocked by then-Premier Yitzhak Shamir.
"I thought the option should be Jordanian, although that, too, was not without its problems," he said.
"The question was, who would rule, (Palestinian leader Yasser) Arafat or (King) Hussein (of Jordan.)"
Peres, one of the architects of the ground-breaking 1993 Oslo interim peace accords, which saw Israel and the Palestine Liberation Organization recognise each other for the first time, said peace talks with the Palestinians should take priority over negotiations with Syria.
"Even if we have to speak to everyone who wants to talk to us, and although the Syrian issue seems easier, the Palestinian issue comes first. Even if only because the Syrian situation is static and the Palestinian is dynamic," he said.
Israel and the Palestinian Authority resumed peace talks at the turn of the year, after a seven-year hiatus. Israel has also been holding secret contacts with Syria with a view to resuming negotiations, which broke off in early 2000 and have not yet been revived.





















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Comment: If Israel is really so keen on peace with Palestine, perhaps they should begin by discontinuing the torturing of their children, bombing and shooting of their press, firing upon them with weapons that are banned internationally and simply let them live their lives in peace. That might make a good start.