How Iran’s tragedy became food for the EU’s political sharks
By: Rachel Marsden
The helicopter crash that killed Ebrahim Raisi became a stage for European officials’ rhetorical gymnastics
Spare a thought for poor Janez Lenarcic, the European Union’s commissioner
for humanitarian aid and crisis management.
Normally, Lenarcic just rides shotgun, chiming in as EU chief diplomat Josep
Borrell pops off, most recently on the humanitarian crisis in Gaza. But when
Iranian President Ebrahim Raisi’s helicopter dipped out over a mountain range
near Iran’s border with Azerbaijan, he seized the opportunity to come out of the
dugout and into the spotlight. The Iranian government had asked the EU for help
with the rescue mission. So, Lenarcic stepped up to the plate and battered up
for what seemed to be a gift of a pitch, right across the plate, and an easy
home run.
“Upon Iranian request for assistance we are activating the EU’s Copernicus rapid
response mapping service in view of the helicopter accident reportedly carrying
the President of Iran and its foreign minister,” Lenarcic wrote on X. Seems
straightforward enough, right? After all, if the EU’s Copernicus satellite
system has the bandwidth to spend time spying on the crops of farmers that feed
the EU to ensure that they haven’t been cheating on the paperwork submitted to
bureaucrats, then surely it could temporarily deploy to help rescue eight people
in a helicopter crash.
But then, with a single hashtag at the very end of his social media post,
Lenarcic triggered a whole lot of EU officials: “#EUSolidarity.” Apparently, the
humanitarian crisis guy can’t even act in a straightforward humanitarian crisis
without being bombarded by virtue-signaling.
Dutch MEP Assita Kanko promptly launched into a rant about Iranian women that
tested the X platform’s character limit. “I am sad that Mahsa Amini and so many
women and their supporters were killed by the Iranian regime. I am shocked that
Lenarcic posted a message on behalf of the EU proposing to activate EU
solidarity to save the Iranian president. Was this truly our priority?
Solidarity with whom? The killer or the victims?”
Sounds like some folks figured that a helicopter crash would be a convenient way
to just enact capital punishment on the Iranian president in the absence of any
due process. Because that’s effectively what it would mean to have the ability
to facilitate a rescue but refuse to do so. Is that a European value now? Kanko
alleges arbitrary punishment of women in Iran. Is the solution for the EU to
then just arbitrarily execute the country’s president through negligence?
“It is an absolute mystery to me how the EU Commission can show EU solidarity
with Iran. What a miserable hashtag, what a mockery of the brave fighters for
human rights in Iran. I expect an explanation for this,” wrote German Bundestag
member and EU parliamentary candidate, Marie-Agnes Strack-Zimmermann, on the X
platform.
Lenarcic took a stab at an explanation. “The provision of a Copernicus satellite
mapping upon request for facilitating a search and rescue operation is not an
act of political support to any regime or establishment. It is simply an
expression of the most basic humanity,” he said. Yeah, well, the most basic
humanity comes after narrative and virtue signaling for these jokers. It’s
almost like he forgot which clown tent he’s helping to run and made the mistake
of figuring that the most basic common sense would fly.
The crash ended up turning into a de-facto contest to see who could make a
straightforward disaster into a spinoff for their own pet causes. “How about
ensuring Human Rights Defenders and other victims of this regime in need of
assistance get emergency visas for EU? Or more support to civil society and
human rights organizations as an expression of EU solidarity with Iran?” German
MEP Hannah Neumann said on X. Because a real emergency isn’t the crash, it’s
some folks who need priority visas because they adhere to the EU’s narrative on
Iran. And EU solidarity should apparently be reserved for the bloc’s “civil
society” regime-change partners in Iran.
The award for best virtue signaling in an aviation disaster goes to Lithuanian
Foreign Minister Gabrielius Landsbergis, who managed to make it all about
Ukraine. “I don’t feel comfortable sending condolences while Iran is sending
drones that are used against civilians in Ukraine,” he said.
The EU should lobby France to add rhetorical gymnastics as a new event at this
summer’s Olympic Games in Paris. France chose breakdancing as the new event that
it gets to introduce as the host this year, but Landsbergis would really sweep
any competition with his Iran-to-Ukraine sympathy shift low-bar routine.
All these EU officials sound like they’re auditioning for a Real Housewives of
Brussels reality show. The way they whine and snipe, you’d think that the EU
crisis and humanitarian commissioner had invited the Iranian president and his
entourage to a party in Josep “Jungle” Borrell’s EU garden, and that their noses
were out of joint about it – not that there were human lives on the line.
COPYRIGHT 2024 RACHEL MARSDEN