Soleimani’s Only Public
Interview
January 18, 2020
© Photo: Wikimedia
Qasem Soleimani’s only
recorded interview — his only extensive public statement — was issued online by
Iran’s Government, translated into English, the very day it was broadcast,
October 1, 2019, but U.S.-and-allied (propaganda) ’news’-media ignored it; and,
so, here, for the first time, is that interview, along with my summary of what
strike me as being the key statements in it. I also will define the key terms
and persons that Soleimani is referring to in his presentation, so that
Westerners, and others who might not know his cultural references, will be able
to understand what he is saying:
“Untold facts on [2006]
Israel-Hezbollah war in an interview with Major General Qassem Soleimani”
1 October 2019 interview
Soleimani w. English translation.
Simultaneously, the website
of Iran’s Supreme Leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, issued the complete
text of the English translation, in the hope that offering it both ways (video and
transcript) would cause the interview to be covered in The West, but it was
not.
Pro-U.S. background on the
2006 34-day Israeli invasion of Lebanon is provided here:
Large-scale fighting between
Israel and Hezbollah in mid-2006 complicated U.S. policy toward Lebanon.4 In a
broader sense, the conflict jeopardized not only the long-term stability of
Lebanon but presented the U.S. government with a basic dilemma. On one hand,
the United States was sympathetic to Israeli military action against a
terrorist organization. On the other hand, the fighting dealt a setback to U.S.
efforts to support the rebuilding of physical infrastructure and democratic
institutions in Lebanon. The fighting also served as a reminder of ongoing Syrian
and Iranian support to proxies in Lebanon and the possibility of a larger,
regional war.
Wikipedia’s account
further says:
Both sides used cluster
bombs during the conflict. Israel fired 4.6 million submunitions into dozens of
towns and villages in southern Lebanon in 962 separate strikes, circa 90%
within the final 72 hours of the war, when the conflict already had been
largely resolved by UN Security Council Resolution 1701.[170] Entire towns were
covered in cluster bombs. The unguided and imprecise rockets were fired from
mobile rocket launching platforms. To compensate for the inaccuracy of the
rockets, the areas were flooded with munitions.[171] Israel claimed to have warned
civilians prior to a strike, and that firing was limited to open areas or
military targets inside urban areas.[172] Israel used advanced cluster
munitions produced by Israel Military Industries, and large numbers of older
cluster bombs, some produced in the 1970s, purchased from aging American
stockpiles. These were fired by multiple rocket launchers, 155mm artillery
guns, and dropped by aircraft. As many as 1 million submunitions failed to
explode on impact, lingering as land mines that killed or maimed almost 200
people since the war ended.[173] As of 2011, munitions were still causing
casualties and being cleared by volunteers.[174]
Hezbollah fired 4,407
submunitions into civilian-populated areas of northern Israel in 113 separate
strikes, using Chinese made Type-81 122mm rockets, and Type-90 submunitions.
These attacks killed one civilian and wounded twelve.[175]
Human Rights Watch “found
that the IDF’s use of cluster munitions was both indiscriminate and
disproportionate, in violation of IHL, and in some locations possibly a war
crime” because “the vast majority [were dropped] over the final three days when
Israel knew a settlement was imminent.”[170] After the ceasefire, parts of
southern Lebanon remained uninhabitable due to Israeli unexploded cluster
bomblets.[176]
Also phosphorus shells were
used by the IDF to attack civilian areas in Lebanon.[177]
Soleimani’s account in the
video starts here:
3:50 Israel was trying to
”alter the demography” in southern Lebanon and “force Palestinians to evacuate
southern Lebanon to settle in various refugee camps.” He describes there an
ethnic-cleansing operation by the Israeli regime. He describes the “massacres”
to achieve this end. He says that Condoleezza Rice, when the Israeli massacres
of Palestinians were in progress, “described it as the ‘birth pangs’ of the
Middle East.” The U.S. Government 100% backed what Israel was doing.
8:00 “We [Iran’s Quds Force and
Lebanon’s Hezbollah] had prepared ships for the migration of the people.”
Israel expanded their war “to completely change the demography” of southern
Lebanon, so as to eliminate not only Palestinians (including not only Shia but
also Sunni Palestinians) but also to eliminate non-Palestinian Shia
who were living there.
12:05 Israel’s goals were
“obliterating Hezbollah and changing the demography of southern Lebabnon.”
(That’s commonly called “ethnic cleansing.”)
16:00 Imad Mughniyeh accompanied Soleimani in Lebanon, and was a
Hezbollah commander or general
Mughniyeh is described this way by Wikipedia:
According to former CIA
agent Robert Baer, “Mughniyah is probably the most intelligent, most capable
operative we’ve ever run across, including the KGB or anybody else. He enters
by one door, exits by another, changes his cars daily, never makes appointments on a telephone, never
is predictable. He only uses people that are loyal to him that he can fully
trust. He doesn’t just recruit people.”[31] …
U.S. and Israeli officials have
implicated Mughniyeh of many terrorist attacks, primarily against American and Israeli targets.
These include 18 April 1983 bombing of the United States embassy in Beirut,
Lebanon, which killed 63 people including 17 Americans whom among them were 7
CIA officers which included Robert Ames, the head of the Near East Division.
Agreement is not entirely universal on Mughniyeh’s involvement, and Caspar
Weinberger, the Secretary of Defense at the time of the attack, told PBS in
2001, “We still do not have the actual knowledge of who was directly behind and
responsible for the bombing of the American Embassy in Beirut, Lebanon and we
certainly didn’t then.”[24]
Mughniyeh was also accused
of planning and organising the 23 October 1983 truck bombings against French
paratroopers and the U.S. Marine barracks, attacks which killed 60 French
soldiers and 240 Marines.[35][36] While a student at the American University of
Beirut (AUB) on 18 January 1984, Mughniyeh allegedly assassinated Malcolm H.
Kerr (father of former NBA player/current coach Steve Kerr), the school’s
president. On 20 September 1984, he is alleged to have attacked the US embassy
annex building.
The United States indicted
Mughniyeh (and his collaborator, Hassan Izz al-Din) for the 14 June 1985
hijacking of TWA Flight 847, in which he tortured and murdered the U.S. Navy
Seabee diver Robert Stethem.[37] Mughniyeh and his men allegedly tortured
Stethem for hours, before killing him and dumping his body onto the airport
tarmac.[31]
U.S. and Israeli officials
have also alleged that Mughniyeh was involved in numerous kidnappings of
Americans in Beirut during the 1980s, most notably the kidnapping of Terry
Anderson, Terry Waite, and William Francis Buckley, who was the CIA station
chief in Beirut.
Largely because of
Soleimani’s close association with Mughniyeh in the 2006 Israel-Lebanon war,
American officials have hated Soleimani.
Soleimani then abruptly
changes to praising one of Mughniyeh’s heros; he says that Mughniyeh had said
(17:25) “For me, Malik was like a prophet.” “Malik” is Malik al-Ashtar, who was
praised in an article, dated 25 February 2018, by Iran’s Supreme Leader,
Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, titled “Learn
patience and sympathy for society from Malik Ashtar”. Malik was a contemporary and follower of Muhammad
and rose to lead, in the year 650, fellow-Muslims who were petitioning against
the tyrannical ruler of Kufa, whom they called corrupt. Their pleas were
rejected by Muawiyah, the first caliph of the Umayyad Caliphate. Malik al-Ashtar asserted that the ruled have rights, not only
the ruler does. He was pushing for some degree of democracy, in an era that had
virtually none.
Perhaps Soleimani is raising
Malik’s example in relation to the rights, independence, and freedom, of the
Palestinian people — not only Shia but also Sunni — whose parents and
grandparents, and ancestors going back thousands of years, had been almost the
total population of that land, until Hitler and many other Christians began in
1938 (Krystallnacht) their ethnic-cleansing of them from Europe. Muslim Arabs, in Palestine, were now being demonized
by Christian Europeans and Americans, who wouldn’t accept Christian Europe’s
Jewish refugees. The hypocrisy of that is so blatant, but neither Christians
nor Muslims nor Jews wish even to acknowledge this crucial historical fact. The
precise reason why Soleimani brought up Malik’s name here isn’t certain. In the
article from Khamenei, Malik is praised for his tolerance, kindness, and
respect for the rights of the people against a tyrannical government.
Soleimani goes on to say
that “Imad,” referring to Mughniyeh, was a modern version of Malik.
From here on, the video
won’t be referred to but instead the quotations will be from the transcript
(since it’s a long interview and contains lots of repetitions):
Soleimani says “[The goal
was to] get rid of Hezbollah forever, and the prerequisite was to get rid of a
big part of the Lebanese people who lived in a significant part of the
country.”
The interviewer asked
whether there was 100% agreement among Iran’s leadership to back Hezbollah and
to beat back Israel’s attempted ethnic cleansing. Soleimani went off onto a
side-issue, and then the interviewer, much later in the interview, asked yet
again:
Were there disagreements
among the officials or was everyone in accordance?
General Soleimani: At that
period of time, there were no oppositions or differences of opinions. That is
to say, all of the authorities shared the same view, and unanimously agreed
that Iran should support Hezbollah in various aspects, including spiritual and
material support (i.e. by providing arms, equipment, facilities) media-related
support and all that was in the disposition of the Islamic Republic — within
the system, no one hesitated about it; at least at that time. Even when I was
in Lebanon I heard there was no worry with this regard. There was complete unity
in the Islamic Republic, in terms of supporting Hezbollah and trying to help
Hezbollah win the war.
Because the main advocate of
this support was the Supreme Leader and thus there was no hesitation in Iran
regarding directing this cause, discerning the expediency of the Islamic
Republic, Islam, and the Islamic scholars. Of course, even now there may be
differences of opinions on certain matters. However, regarding Hezbollah, we
have had consensus on all levels.
Soleimani repeatedly refers
now to “Sayyid,” honorifically speaking about Hassan Nasrallah as being
descended from the Islamic prophet Muhammad through Muhammad’s grandson Husain
ibn Ali. Soleimani discusses how “Sayyid” and “Imad” Mughniyeh and Soleimani
coordinated their planning with one-another, and won the war and drove the
invaders out.
The Wikipedia article on
this war says:
On 12 September [2006], former defense minister Moshe Arens
spoke of “the defeat of Israel” in calling for a state committee of inquiry. He
said that Israel had lost “to a very small group of people, 5,000 Hezbollah
fighters, which should have been no match at all for the IDF”, and stated that
the conflict could have “some very fateful consequences for the future.”[323]
Disclosing his intent to shortly resign, Ilan Harari, the IDF’s chief education
officer, stated at a conference of senior IDF officers that Israel lost the
war, becoming the first senior active duty officer to publicly state such an
opinion.[324] IDF Major General Yiftah Ron Tal, on 4 October 2006 became the
second and highest ranking serving officer to express his opinion that the IDF
failed “to win the day in the battle against Hezbollah.”
This was a humiliating
defeat for Israel.
When Donald Trump
assassinated Qasem Soleimani on January 3rd, it was Israel’s revenge.
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