GOOTS:
I think many of the PC crowd want to believe that the arab mindset is similar to the western. I don't think it is. Look at Myanmar(not arab but illustrates my point).
This is such a totally awesome statement.
Listen. You can't claim to speak with authority on a foreign state of mind by referencing a third state of mind and then somehow leaping to the assumption that this completely unrealted reference supports your initial point. It makes no sense.
Interestingly, though, Myanmar does support my point (however PC you wanna call it).
Myanmar is run by a small group of people, like N. Korea and Zimbabwe and other shitholes. Nations like this can be quite unpredictable, as they do not have the natural controls that internal political competition provides. If Kim Jong Il wants to hold a National Underwear party and Rabbit Stew Cookoff, it happens. If he wants to nuke Japan, it happens unless an internal political obstacle appears - say a deputy who is a PETA member or a general who is sane enough not to nuke Japan. This hypothetical internal political obstacle could affect change in any number of ways. Assasination? Sure. Legislative reform? Less likely, but sure.
Iran is different in many ways. First, there is its pre-revolution history of connections with the west. Sure, the revolution happened thirty years ago, but there are many Iranians still alive who remember this period and what it took to get rid of the Shah - independent thinking in Iran is stronger than most of us realize. Also, Iran is not an Arab country. Sure some Arabs live there but not many. Iran is predominantly Persian but hosts a wide variety of ethnic groups. Most of the country is Muslim (and most of those Shi'a) but the percentage of Muslims in Iran is not much greater than the percentage of Christians in the US. Also, did you realize that there are actually elections for the presidency of Iran and that in 2005, there was a runoff between Ahmadwhatever and Rafsanjani that was somewhat competitive? Not terribly so, I'm sad to say, because American involvement in Iraq inspired a wave of nationalist fervor that brought that jerkoff of a Tehrenian mayor to replace the comparatively progressive Khatami.
Isn't it interesting that since the American invasion of Iraq (that is, since Bush and Co. began stirring the pot), elections in the Middle East have provided us with leadership positions for hard-liners in Iraq, the Palestinain Authority and a resurgent Hezbollah?
If an American president wants to talk to Iran, he/she won't just find mouth-frothing knuckle draggers and zealots. There is a rich political and intellectual history there. You just have to want to recognize it.