This is my personal view and comments on the issues and events that I feel a need to talk about or express my view. You don't have to agree, but lets carry on a adult, discussion and maybe you will see it the right way, mine. ;)
What a surprise! I would never have guessed...
Published on February 12, 2006 By ShadowWar In War on Terror

Article published Feb 12, 2006
Iran Blames U.S., Europe in Cartoon Crisis

TEHRAN, Iran Iran's hard-line president on Saturday accused the United States and Europe of being "hostages of Zionism" and said they should pay a heavy price for the publication of caricatures of the Prophet Muhammad that have triggered worldwide protests.

Denmark - where the drawings were first published four months ago - warned Danes to leave Indonesia, saying they faced a "significant and imminent danger" from an extremist group and announced it had withdrawn embassy staff from Jakarta, Iran and Syria.

Yemen announced that three chief editors of privately owned Yemeni papers will stand trial for printing the Danish cartoons and their publishing licenses suspended. They Information Ministry officials said the editors are charged with offending the prophet of Islam and violating religions.

Earlier this month, two Jordanian editors were put on trial for reprinting the Danish caricatures of Muhammad.

Saudi Arabia's top cleric said in a Friday sermon that those responsible for the drawings should be put on trial and punished.

Muslims in several European and Asian countries, meanwhile, kept up their protests, with thousands taking to the streets in London's biggest demonstration over the issue so far.

Last week, demonstrators in tightly controlled Iran attacked the Danish, French and Austrian embassies with stones and firebombs and hit the British mission with rocks.

Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, who is at odds with much of the international community over Iran's disputed nuclear program, launched an anti-Israeli campaign last fall when he said the Holocaust was a "myth" and that Israeli should be "wiped off the map."

In a speech marking the 27th anniversary of the Islamic Revolution Saturday, Ahmadinejad linked his public rage with Israel and the cartoons satirizing Islam's most revered figure.

"Now in the West insulting the prophet is allowed, but questioning the Holocaust is considered a crime," he said. "We ask, why do you insult the prophet? The response is that it is a matter of freedom, while in fact they (who insult the founder of Islam) are hostages of the Zionists. And the people of the U.S. and Europe should pay a heavy price for becoming hostages to Zionists."

The drawings - including one that depicts the prophet with a turban shaped like a bomb with a burning fuse - were first published in September and recently reprinted in other European publications that said it was an issue of freedom of speech.

Islam widely holds that representations of the prophet are banned for fear they could lead to idolatry.

Iran, a predominantly Shiite Muslim country, has seized on the caricatures as a means of rallying its people behind a government that is increasingly under fire from the West over its nuclear program.

Shiite Muslims do not ban representations of the prophet and some in Iran's provincial towns and villages even carry drawings said to be of Muhammad. But Tehran said the newspaper caricatures were insulting to all Muslims.

Austrian Foreign Minister Ursula Plassnik said on behalf of the European Union that Ahmadinejad's remarks should not be silently accepted.

"These remarks stand in complete contradiction to the efforts of numerous political and religious leaders who after the events of the past few days are campaigning for a dialogue between cultures that is marked by mutual respect," Plassnik said.

Plassnik was referring to appeals for calm made in recent days by Arab governments, Muslim clerics and newspaper columnists who fear the sometimes deadly violence has only increased anti-Islamic sentiment in the West.

Norway's ambassador to Saudi Arabia apologized on Saturday for the "offense" caused when a Norwegian newspaper published caricatures of the Prophet Muhammad.

Denmark, which has been stunned by the wave of protests over the caricatures that first appeared in the Danish newspaper Jyllands-Posten in September, urged its citizens on Saturday to leave Indonesia as soon as possible, saying they were facing "a significant and imminent danger" from an unnamed extremist group.

The warning came hours after the ministry said it withdrew Danish staff from Indonesia, Iran and Syria.

The Danish ambassador to Lebanon left last week after the embassy building in Beirut was burned by protesters.

Jyllands-Posten has apologized for offending Muslims but stood by its decision to print the drawings, citing freedom of speech.

The newspaper's culture editor, Flemming Rose, who was in charge of the drawings, went on indefinite leave Thursday, but many Muslims said that would do little to quell the uproar.

The paper has denied that Rose was ordered to go.

"He was not forced out," the paper's spokesman Tage Clausen told The Associated Press in Copenhagen. "He's on vacation, that's all."

Saudi Sheik Abdul Rahman al-Seedes, the imam of the Grand Mosque in Mecca, called on Muslims to reject apologies for the "slanderous" caricatures.

"Is there only freedom of expression when it involves insults to Muslims? he said in his sermon, which was published Saturday in the Al Riyad daily.

Noisy but peaceful rallies also were held in Turkey, Indonesia, the Netherlands, Germany, France, Switzerland and elsewhere, although the Middle East was largely calm.

Indonesian President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono said the caricatures were damaging attempts to blend the Muslim faith with democracy.

"It sends a conflicting message to the Muslim community: that in a democracy it is permissible to offend Islam," the U.S.-educated leader wrote in a commentary that appeared Saturday in the International Herald Tribune.

Does anyone feel surprise that they are now blaming the US. LOL I knew it was only a matter of time. Threats, blame, next??

Don't forget to check out my NEW Audioblog!!


Comments
on Feb 12, 2006
The US is blamed for everything. No matter that it gives the most aid to countries all over the World. No matter that if someone is in deep crappola, uncle George will bail him out. This is something that continues to amaze me as a non-citizen. If people can't be thankful for their daily bread, cut it off. Let them feel how it is to cut a hungry throat. At Christmas we say thanks for presents---many third World countries spit at the grain bags, then eat, or sell, the grain. It's like saying to Santa Claus: Thanks buddy, but go **** yourself--my mouth is full of your food.

I am so sick of the have-nots accepting gifts and kicking the giver in the backside!

As for the cartoons: It's time they went to bed. Enough is enough. Could we please get back to normality? The offended have a point. The offenders have taken the point (we hope). Let it rest.
on Feb 12, 2006
This isn't directly related to your post. I saw the link to your audioblog. While I don't agree with most of what you say there, I wanted to let you know I thought you did very well. It was very nicely done.
on Feb 12, 2006

Reply By: davad70Posted: Sunday, February 12, 2006
This isn't directly related to your post. I saw the link to your audioblog. While I don't agree with most of what you say there, I wanted to let you know I thought you did very well. It was very nicely done.

davad70, why thank you that is very nice of you.!! And its nice we can agree to disagree..

on Feb 12, 2006

They're pathetic.

If Americans behaved like the Islamic world, the Middle East would have a smooth glass surface by now.

on Feb 12, 2006
Yeah, since Denmark is one of our stooges, we forced them to publish the cartoon. They are like putty in our hands.

I'm not suprised that the arab world has tried to hang this on the US. Everything is our fault according to them. Apparantly they chose to disregard the fact that dubya was the first world leader to condem it.

Yeah, thats right....I gave dubya a prop. So shoot me! ::
on Feb 12, 2006

Islam widely holds that representations of the prophet are banned for fear they could lead to idolatry.


Well, didn't that backfire nicely?

What with all the Muslims telling us how they adore the prophet, how they love him and admire him, how they revere him, I can honestly say that I have never seen quite as bad a case of idolatry in action since I last read about North Korea's dictator.
on Feb 12, 2006

I thought this part was very interesting, and I did not know this:

Iran, a predominantly Shiite Muslim country, has seized on the caricatures as a means of rallying its people behind a government that is increasingly under fire from the West over its nuclear program.

Shiite Muslims do not ban representations of the prophet and some in Iran's provincial towns and villages even carry drawings said to be of Muhammad. But Tehran said the newspaper caricatures were insulting to all Muslims.

Hmmm so it depends on which Muslim you are. They are as bad as us Christians..

on Feb 12, 2006
It's just a matter of time. The sad part is we are stalling while Iran rushes to get nuclear capabilities. I am very afraid that we will allow them the time to make weapons that will devestate Israel when we finally decide to crush their evil society.
on Feb 12, 2006
Ironic that they would lump us in with countries where denying the holocaust is a crime. In the US, denying the holocaust is most definitely NOT a crime, although it's as ridiculous as arguing that the earth is flat or that slavery never happened.
on Feb 12, 2006

Islam widely holds that representations of the prophet are banned for fear they could lead to idolatry.


"If" this is actually true then they better start looting/burning a "bunch" of museums starting with those in the middle east. Because there are a "pile" of representations of the "prophet" around the world in museums.
on Feb 13, 2006

Yeah, thats right....I gave dubya a prop. So shoot me! :

As soon as I pick my jaw up off the floor!

on Feb 13, 2006
I am personally tired of hearing about these muslim Gov'ts talking about having to serverely punish everyone else simply because of these cartoons. I don't care how offesive these cartoons were, death and/or destruction are not a right. Who are they to dictate that someone should die or property should be destroyed over some stupid cartoons? This is beyond rediculous and I think it's time to put these muslims back into their place. It is a shame for any Gov't to take any of these words or actions sitting down and doing nothing about it.

If they want to conmdem the world over some cartoons then we should condem then for all of the terrorist attacks done by them and by the constant wording of wanting to destroy an entire race. It makes me boil to hear such stupidity from them, I have lost all respect I had for any muslim. If any of them trully believe that what the muslim race is doing is wrong, it's time for them to step up to the plate and show the world that they are not as bad as we believe them to be.
on Feb 20, 2006
Go Figure! Muslim Anger Over Cartoons Increasingly Directed at US
By Patrick Goodenough
CNSNews.com International Editor
February 20, 2006

(CNSNews.com) - Muslims protesting the publication in European media of cartoons depicting Mohammed have once again directed their anger at the United States despite the fact most American mainstream newspapers have not reproduced them.

Sentiment about the allegedly blasphemous cartoons appears increasingly to be blurring into a broader anti-U.S. feeling in some parts of the world, with some angry Muslims using President Bush's scheduled tour to India and Pakistan early next month as a rallying point.

In the Indian city of Lucknow, protestors decried the cartoons but also demanded that Prime Minister Manmohan Singh's government cancel its invitation to Bush.

A senior cleric addressing the demonstration in the city of 2.2 million also declared he would no longer attend functions where Coca Cola or Pepsi, beverages associated with the U.S., were served.

In Jakarta, Indonesia, the U.S. rather than Europe was targeted again, when hundreds of Muslims marching behind a banner reading "We are ready to attack the enemies of the prophet" tried unsuccessfully to storm the U.S. Embassy on Sunday.

Protestors burned a poster of Bush and American flags, and smashed windows of a guardroom. The embassy in a statement called the incident "thuggery" and said it was "pre-meditated" for the benefit of television cameras.

In Pakistan, a small demonstration was allowed in central Islamabad after police set up checkpoints around the capital to prevent a planned mass march.

The protestors, led by the leader of an opposition coalition of Islamist parties, the Muttahida Majlis-e-Amal (MMA), chanted slogans saying that any friend of America was a traitor, an apparent reference to President Pervez Musharraf.

Defying a government ban, the MMA has vowed to continue protests against the cartoons, culminating in a nationwide shutdown it has called for March 3, around the time Bush is supposed to be visiting.

In both Pakistan and India, Muslim leaders have publicly offered large rewards to anyone who kills any of the 12 cartoonists who penned the caricatures that were first published by Denmark's Jyllands-Posten daily last September, and have since appeared widely on the Internet, in newspapers across Europe, and in several other parts of the world.

In several Muslim countries, publications that reprinted one or more of the cartoons are facing difficulties.

The media freedom lobby group Reporters Without Borders says it knows of seven journalists under arrest in Yemen, Syria and Algeria for reprinting the caricatures; another 12 who are facing prosecution, including two in Jordan charged with encouraging disorder; and 13 publications shut down permanently or temporarily in Algeria, Morocco, Jordan, Yemen, Malaysia and Indonesia.

"Whatever one thinks of the cartoons or whether they should be published, it is absolutely unjustified to jail or prosecute journalists, threaten them with death or shut down newspapers for this reason," the group said.

In Russia, a newspaper partly owned by the city administration of Volgograd, was shut down after publishing a cartoon that was not one of the Danish dozen, but was intended as an editorial commentary on the controversy, and portrayed Mohammed, Moses, Jesus and Buddha.

The Committee to Protect Journalists condemned the decision to shut down the Gorodskiye Vesti, a step the city's mayor said was designed to prevent the incitement of religious hatred.
on Feb 20, 2006
The Committee to Protect Journalists condemned the decision to shut down the Gorodskiye Vesti, a step the city's mayor said was designed to prevent the incitement of religious hatred.


There's a bit of irony for ya... I guess all those people marching with signs saying "Behead those who offend Islam," those burning embassies & demanding the death of cartoonists are not engaged in the "incitement of religious hatred."