- Feb 17, 2004
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I thought this was real interesting, how they have seminars and attract and sign up suicide bombers at a university. And I'm not surprised it happened in Iran, a supporter and exporter of terrorism. I think it shows how in some Islamic countries that terrorism, suicide bombings, is starting to become an accepted norm where it doesn't draw as much criticism from its leaders.
....
Mohammad Ali Samadi, spokesman for Esteshadion, or Martyrdom Seekers, boasted of having hundreds of potential bombers in his talk at a seminar on suicide-bombings tactics at Tehran's Khajeh Nasir University.
"With more than 1,000 trained martyrdom-seekers, we are ready to attack the American and British sensitive points if they attack
Iran's nuclear facilities," Samadi said.
"If they strike, we have a lot of volunteers. Their (U.S. and British) sensitive places are quiet close to Iranian borders," Samadi said.
Samadi reviewed the history of suicide bombing as a weapon, praising it as the most effective Palestinian tactic in their confrontation with
Israel.
The organizers showed video clips of suicide attacks against Israelis, including one in the Morag settlement near Rafah in Gaza strip in February 2005. One settler, three Israeli soldiers and the two attackers were killed in the attack....
I thought this was real interesting, how they have seminars and attract and sign up suicide bombers at a university. And I'm not surprised it happened in Iran, a supporter and exporter of terrorism. I think it shows how in some Islamic countries that terrorism, suicide bombings, is starting to become an accepted norm where it doesn't draw as much criticism from its leaders.