Michael Ledeen on President Carter
Act on
By
MICHAEL A. LEDEEN
Jimmy Carter, the pacific man of the moment, may soon find a difficult period of his presidency under scrutiny. The Bush administration's national security team has been embroiled in a heated debate over
The president has rejected the State Department's long-standing efforts to work with the handful of self-proclaimed "reformists" in
It would be proper for us to help the freedom seekers in
Instead it seems that Mr. Carter's ghost roams the White House, insisting that we appease Khomeini's successors. Opponents of a more vigorous Iran policy -- notably Colin Powell and Richard Armitage --
have invoked a clause in Mr. Carter's 1981 deal that produced the release of the American hostages a few minutes before Ronald Reagan was inaugurated: "It is and from now on will be the policy of the United States not to intervene, directly or indirectly, politically or militarily, in Iran's internal affairs.." But contrary to these protestations, the deal is what is known as a "sole executive agreement," and can be abandoned at any time the president wishes. There was no congressional role, so no congressional action is required to undo it.
While we're dithering, Iran-sponsored terrorists have assassinated Americans, and
This triumph of legalism over common sense is a fitting legacy for
Mr. Carter, who famously viewed Khomeini's 1979 revolution as an improvement over the
Shah
,
at least until the hostage crisis doomed his political career. It is hardly worthy of endorsement by an administration that is waging a global war on terrorism.
Mr. Ledeen, a scholar at the American Enterprise Institute, is the author of "The War Against the Terror Masters"(
Updated
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