And this is what we (yes "we") are faced with in Iran. As Sun Tzu wrote, the first and least remembered of his aphorisms in Art of War, his message to those for whom peace is a higher priority, and today for those who seek "a peaceful solution" between the factions who, make no mistake, are now engaged in a fight to the death:
"It is a matter of life and death, a road either to safety or to ruin. Hence it is a subject of inquiry which can on no account be neglected."
Other translations are no less explicit. War must be studied, if you want to live. There are few things so peaceful as a mass grave.
Above, which you will not see on American television, perhaps for the "best of reasons," to somehow protect children from the truth, is typical in Iran. It's going to get worse, too.
A young Persian woman dies before our eyes, the victim not of a fellow Iranian, a police officer, most of whom are unwilling to shoot on their fellow citizens. She was shot and killed by a Bahij, an Arab shi'ite militant member of Hezbollah, brought into the country by the wicked regime who still possess out sovereign embassy, after thirty years.
Their leader Ahmed Aminjad, an assassin and member of the Revolutionary Guard , was also a leader of the "students" who seized our embassy in 1979.
"It is a matter of life and death, a road either to safety or to ruin. Hence it is a subject of inquiry which can on no account be neglected."
Other translations are no less explicit. War must be studied, if you want to live. There are few things so peaceful as a mass grave.
Above, which you will not see on American television, perhaps for the "best of reasons," to somehow protect children from the truth, is typical in Iran. It's going to get worse, too.
A young Persian woman dies before our eyes, the victim not of a fellow Iranian, a police officer, most of whom are unwilling to shoot on their fellow citizens. She was shot and killed by a Bahij, an Arab shi'ite militant member of Hezbollah, brought into the country by the wicked regime who still possess out sovereign embassy, after thirty years.
Their leader Ahmed Aminjad, an assassin and member of the Revolutionary Guard , was also a leader of the "students" who seized our embassy in 1979.
