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Iran Heads “Axis of Terror
4-21-2006
Hatred of the
West is fueling the formation of a Middle East alliance spearheaded by Iran.
A “new axis of terror” has emerged, Israel’s United Nations envoy
Dan Gillerman stated April 18, the day after a devastating suicide bombing
outside a Tel Aviv restaurant. The terror attack, killing nine Israelis and
wounding dozens, was claimed by the Palestinian terror group Islamic Jihad,
which is funded and supported primarily by Iran.
The “axis of terror” taking shape in the Middle East, reported Nicholas
Blanford of the Christian Science Monitor, is a loose anti-Western
alliance that presents new obstacles for America’s ambitions in the region.
“Centered on Iran, this alignment has hardened in recent months, analysts say,
with Tehran shoring up old alliances and strengthening ties with countries
(Syria and Iraq) and with groups (Hezbollah, Hamas and Islamic Jihad) that share
its hostility toward Israel and the U.S.” (April
20). Israel’s UN envoy described the collaboration of Iran, Syria
and the Palestinian Hamas-led government as a “dark cloud … looming above
our region.”
As the Trumpet has extensively written
about, Iran is the driving force behind efforts to unite Arab nations
and terror groups against the West. This fact, perhaps not evident to most when
the Trumpet first wrote about it, is now obvious to anyone viewing the
Middle East with an open mind. “The alliance that is emerging in this part of
the world is a creation of Iran,” says Sami Moubayed, a Syrian political
analyst. “It wants to bolster its position by allying itself with countries or
groups that can temporarily enhance its regional role and influence” (ibid.).
Recognizing the strengthening position of Iran—reflected by its military and
nuclear advancements and its blatant belligerence toward the West—Syria, the
Shiites in Iraq, the terror group Hezbollah in Lebanon, and various Palestinian
terrorist groups and the Palestinian Authority itself, are eager to reinforce
their ties with Iran. Thus, all parties benefit: Iran’s position is
strengthened even as the other members of this alliance reap the benefits of
Iranian support.
The election of firebrand Mahmoud Ahmadinejad as president of Iran last August
gave new life to Syrian-Iranian relations. Emboldened by Iran, Syria began to
stand up to the West. It is becoming even more confident now as international
pressure on it lifts in response to fears it will provoke a collapse of the
ruling regime and throw the country into chaos. “Almost everybody in Syria is
praising [Syrian President Bashar] al-Assad’s alliance with Iran as a very
smart move,” said Moubayed.
Hezbollah, in turn, has benefited from the growing belligerence of its two
benefactors, Iran and Syria. The Shiite organization has cemented its influence
in Lebanon, both as a political force and a terrorist group. By more or less
blackmailing the government, Hezbollah succeeded in legalizing
its military wing even while being considered a legitimate political
entity.
Ties between Palestinian terror groups and Iran are also being reinforced
following Hamas’s victory in Palestinian parliamentary elections in January. A
week ago, Iran hosted a three-day conference supporting the new Palestinian
government and Palestinian terrorist organizations. Tehran pledged $50 million
to the Palestinian Authority to help make up the shortfall created by withdrawal
of Western aid.
Of course, over the past couple years, Iran has also strengthened ties with
Iraq, both overtly and covertly. Elections in December were dominated by Shiite
parties with close ties to Iran. Moqtada al-Sadr, popular Iraqi political figure
and head of the militant Mahdi Army, has pledged
military support of Iran.
Clearly, in large part, it is the U.S.’s presence and action in the region
that are catalyzing the formation of this Iran-led alliance against the West.
America’s promotion of democracy in the region has brought populist terrorist
groups and, in Iraq, Iran-friendly Shiites to the forefront of politics. Its
ousting of the Taliban in Afghanistan and Saddam Hussein in Iraq—Tehran’s
enemies to its east and west—opened the way for Iran’s rise to prominence in
the region.
Tehran continues to reach out to its neighbors, with Defense Minister Mostafa
Mohammad Najjar stating April 11 that Iran is ready to sign nonaggression pacts
with countries in the region and hold joint military exercises with them (Stratfor,
April 11).
A Damascus summit in mid-January attended by the newly elected Ahmadinejad along
with representatives of Hezbollah and a range of Palestinian terrorist
organizations was seen as “an affirmation of the anti-Western axis” by
analysts, according to Blanford. A Lebanon newspaper reported that the meeting
between the Iranian and Syrian leaders amounted to “a joint warning to the
world” that the alliance would become stronger.
This alliance encompasses more than diplomacy, rhetoric and vows of military
support. In February, Iran and Syria concluded wide-ranging economic and trade
agreements, including one to establish energy and transportation links between
the two countries via Iraq. The Christian Science Monitor reported that
Iran and Syria are looking to Asia as an economic partner to replace the West.
Joshua Landis, a Syria expert and professor of history, stated: “Syria and
Iran are thinking they can build Iraq into their northern tier, building gas and
oil pipelines across the region.”
The formation of an axis of terror in the Middle East, led by Iran in defiance
against the West, is a striking fulfillment of Bible prophecy. An article
in our May Trumpet details how the ascension of Iran as the leader of the
Islamic Middle East fulfills two major prophecies: 1) the rise of a “king of
the south” as prophesied in Daniel 11:40; and 2) the breaking of America’s
national will as prophesied in Leviticus 26:19 and demonstrated by its failure
to stop Iran in its tracks.
Fueled by anti-Americanism across the Middle East and abetted by U.S. weakness,
the Iran-led alliance will continue to strengthen. Although some of the Sunni
Arab states in the region, such as Saudi Arabia and Egypt, are growing fearful
of Iran’s increasing influence and strength in the region, particularly in
relation to Iraq, Bible prophecy indicates that they will shortly either join
with Iran or, in any case, will be in no position to thwart Iran. Specific
countries that prophecy reveals will likely ally with the king of the south are Egypt
and Algeria. Watch for Iran to continue to shore up its position in
the Middle East while at the same time presenting a mounting threat to the West. 
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