Ali Larijani, the chairman of Iran's Supreme National Security Council, denied in an interview with Newsweek that Iran was providing arms to the Hamas. He admitted, however, that his country was funneling finances to the Islamic group, as well as to Hizbullah. "We do support Hizbullah and Hamas, that is right," Larijani said. "But these two are not terrorist groups. These are the two groups that are defending their own land."There's a post to be written about Newsweek letting a terrorist supporter rationalize his terrorist supporting ways in their august pages (we recall how during WWII Mussolini was regularly interviewed by American press outlets "to help the American people understand", right?) But that's a post for a different time. For now: it turns out that Sunnis and Shiites do work together. Who knew?
[Cross-posted to Mere Rhetoric]
Sunnis and Shi'ites have a major theological disagreement with each other akin to Protestants and Catholics (centering around the infallibility of a religious leader).
ReplyDeleteThese disagreements exist in regions of the world where lower educational standards mean differences of religious opinion can be exaggerated in practice.
However, for the Iranians and Hamas it is a case of "your enemy is my enemy so you are my friend."