On Attacking Iran, Lally Weymouth Won’t Take No For an Answer

I don’t follow the politics of the Washington Post’s Graham family, but Lally Weymouth (daughter of Philip and Katherine, mother of Katharine Weymouth, the newspaper’s current publisher) specializes in touring the globe, performing exclusive interviews with consequential world leaders, publishing them in Newsweek, for which she is a senior editor, and the Post, and thus helping to define conventional wisdom in Washington. Almost as much as her brother Donald, so far as I understand, she has contributed to the steady rightward drift of the Post’s editorial line over the past two decades, a drift that, in my view, made the paper one of the most influential, if often overlooked, “enablers” of Bush’s first-term neo-conservative foreign-policy trajectory in Washington.

It now appears that Weymouth is trying to “enable” an attack on Iran. Consider her latest interview with Jordan’s King Abdullah published in the Sunday Post’s “Outlook” section. While the king repeatedly warns that the failure of the Israeli-Palestinian peace process poses the greatest threat to stability and moderation in the region, Weymouth seems impervious to this analysis and instead keeps returning to Iran throughout the interview. To almost comical effect, she simply won’t take no for an answer. Consider the three Qs and As:

Q. Is [the] Annapolis [peace process] dead?

A. I’m actually very concerned since President Bush’s visit to the region, to Israel, Saudi Arabia and Egypt. I think the peace process has lost credibility in people’s minds in this area. Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice has been in the region and is working very closely with the Israelis and the Palestinians to move the process forward. . . . We’re all very pessimistic at this stage.

Q. Do you view Iran as the number one threat in this region?

A. I think the lack of peace [between Israel and the Palestinians] is the major threat. I don’t see the ability of creating a two-state solution beyond 2008, 2009. [And] I think this is really the last chance. If this fails, I think this is going to be the major threat for the Middle East: Are we going to go for another 60 years of “fortress Israel,” or are we going to have a neighborhood where Israel is actually incorporated? That is our major challenge, and I am very concerned that the clock is ticking and that the door is closing on all of us.

Q. But aren’t you concerned that Iran is a threat both to your country and to other countries in the region?

A. Iran poses issues to certain countries, although I have noticed over the past month or so that the dynamics have changed quite dramatically, and for the first time I think maybe I can say that Iran is less of a threat. But if the peace process doesn’t move forward, then I think that extremism will continue to advance over the moderate stands that a lot of countries take. We’ve reached a crossroads, and I’m not too sure what direction we’re heading in.

But she’s clearly not satisfied with the king’s answers, and, after a few questions about intra-Palestinian politics, Iraq, Jordan’s own economic challenges, and the region’s interest in nuclear power, she returns to her bete noire, even as Abdullah insists on the primacy of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict.

Q: I remember a couple of years ago, you warned against the danger posed by Iran to moderate Arab regimes. Aren’t Iran and Syria the big winners today in this region?

A: If we look at what happened in Lebanon [last month when Hezbollah routed government-backed forces in street fighting to win major political concessions], I think the perception here is that that round was won by Iran and her proxies. We just have to be careful as to what happens in round two. Again, this is why I am so concerned about the peace process.

Then, after a few more questions about Hamas and Lebanon and whether Saudi Arabia might reduce the price of oil, she abruptly returns to and concludes with her idee fixe, like a moth to flame:

Q: So you’re not in favor of military action against Iran?

A: I am not in favor of military action against Iran. I think you’d be playing with Pandora’s box.

Q: So you’re willing to live with a nuclear Iran?

A: What do we mean by nuclear Iran? Some people are saying they have a nuclear weapons program, and some people are saying they don’t. The latest American intelligence estimate released a couple of months ago was that their nuclear program has diminished or stopped. Now the British-Israeli view of that is not as positive as the American one, so I’ve been told.

Q: The American view was that the military program was diminishing in 2003, but not that it had stopped. [Ed’s note: This, of course, is a very debatable assertion, since the U.S. intelligence community concluded last December that the military program had indeed stopped in 2003 and since re-iterated that view.]

A: I think that you need to engage with the Iranians. A military strike in Iran today will only solicit a reaction from Iran and Iranian proxies, and I don’t think that we can live with any more conflicts in this part of the world.

One of the most remarkable things about the interview is that Weymouth fails to ask Abdullah a single question about his views regarding the Turkish-mediated talks between Israel and Syria and whether he believes that Damascus can be persuaded to distance itself from Tehran if given sufficient concessions by Israel. After all, if she is persuaded that Iran poses the greatest threat to U.S. interests in the region, then Israel’s engagement with Syria — which could result in an unprecedented summit between Olmert and Assad in Paris next month — could be critical to reducing that threat. But she doesn’t even raise it.

Visit Lobelog.com for the latest news analysis and commentary from Inter Press News Service’s Washington bureau chief Jim Lobe.

Author: Jim Lobe

Visit Lobelog.com for the latest news analysis and commentary from Inter Press News Service's Washington bureau chief Jim Lobe.

11 thoughts on “On Attacking Iran, Lally Weymouth Won’t Take No For an Answer”

  1. Q. So your willing to live with a nuclear Iran?

    Why not? He’s already living with a nuclear Israel. Has been for a long time. What makes a Jewish bomb better then a Persian one?

    1. As I understand it, the princess fits more the template of an extreme leftist gone extreme rightist and has no need for returning Jesuses. She’s sort of a Pinky besides The Brain. Narf!

  2. “Do you view Iran as the number one threat in this region? ”

    A:No.We view Israel and the US as the number one threat in the region.

  3. The Americans want to attack Iran and have no desire for Mideast “peace” (i.e. ending the ongoing colonial projects), so is it any surprise they aren’t interested in listening to anyone who advocates the latter instead of the former? I’ll assume every discussion on this topic, in and around the American government, follows the same pattern.

  4. Lally Weymouth is certaily bad news. Thanks to Jim Lode for above pointing this out, and I so hope that her attempts to misshape the truth fail.

  5. Doesn’t Weymouth also answer the question of why the MSM seems so sanguine about Bush’s Mideast Redevelopment Project? Namely: Media ownership favors regime change for all Israel’s enemies. The Washington Post isn’t exactly a minor player in the American information industry. And when we think of other media giants – from the New York Times to Viacom – we perceive a religious/ethnic dimension to those propagating the Mideast Imperium. How long are we going to continue denying this? How long are we going to be intimidated into silence by phony charges of anti-Semitism?

  6. when you have the American-israeli-EU in control of the so called “MIDEAST PEACE” bulls**t, they keep using it to give israel more time to take over the middle east , as they (American and EU) suck the oil and blood of that region , they are using the peace plan to bring the dumb arab leaders on their side to wage war on Iran.
    THEY CAN TAKE THEIR PEACE FARCE AND SHOVE IT WERE THE SUN DON’T SHINE (as they have done before).
    ALL I HAVE TO SAY: IRAN PLEASE MAKE THE BOMB, MAKE SURE YOU MAKE AS MANY BOMB’S AS THEY HAVE, STAY STRONG AND BE READY TO FIGHT THE SAVAGE ARMYS OF DEATH, JUST LOOK AT WHAT THEY HAVE DONE IN PALESTIAN, LEBANON AND LOOK AT WHAT THE SAVAGE KILLERS HAVE DONE TO IRAQ, THE SAVAGE’S ARE AT YOUR DOOR, AND WHEN THEY COME FOR YOU FIGHT THEM WITH ALL YOU HAVE.

  7. Guys, guys, guys!!
    Stop getting sarky with each other!
    This is ridiculous. U’re here to give ur comments, not hand out sarcasm on a plate.
    I live in Iran, too. I work at a news agency, so I’m dealing with what officials and politicians all over the world say every day on a daily basis. I don’t want to see my country attacked either. But making fun of Americans or getting into a verbal war with them won’t change a thing. WE HAVE NOTHING AGAINST U, but it seems our governments can’t just leave each other well enough alone! And I’m sick of it! I have a brother who’s doing his military services (It’s mundatory in Iran) and I don’t want him to get into a damn stupid war (because that’ll happen if ever there is a war) and I’m sure my fiance would be dragged in as well, not to mention how many people will be victims of such stupidity. No, I can’t use eloquent pretty-sounding words, but from a purely selfish outlook I’d like u to leave us be. I DON’T WANT TO BE MY MOTHER talking about an American attack the way she talks about THE Iraqi attack.

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