Who Benefited and How From Ahmadinejad's Visit?

Sam Donaldson on who benefited and how from Ahmadinejad's U.S. visit.

ByABC News
September 26, 2007, 11:42 AM

Sept. 26, 2007 — -- Homicide detectives ask, "Who benefits and how?" when they set out to solve a crime. So let's adopt that technique when we look at the visit to the United States this week by Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad.

The great cry of outrage that greeted Ahmadinejad in New York City -- and by press coverage extension throughout the world -- put him on everyone's front page, on everyone's evening and morning news and on everyone's radio talk show.

In this country, Ahmadinejad was roundly criticized, booed and denounced to his face. The New York Daily News put his picture on the front page with the slug "The Evil has Landed." And columnists and commentators roundly condemned his views and, in some cases, his very existence.

Perhaps the strangest episode occurred at Columbia University. Ahmadinejad was invited to speak in the name of free speech. But when he came, Lee Bollinger, under heavy criticism from some quarters for extending the invitation at all, felt called upon to read his guest the riot act using ad hominem invective we might expect from the likes of Hugo Chavez, not the president of Columbia University.

All right, who benefited from all this hue and cry?

Did we Americans benefit?

Surely we Americans already reject Ahmadinejad's views that Israel must be destroyed, that God will cause the United States to cease to exist, that his country is the most democratic of nations with its women citizens enjoying more freedom than its men, and that Iran has no homosexuals among its population.

That last point drew hearty laughter from the Columbia students, their common sense telling them otherwise. And when it comes to the rights of Iranian women, the eminent American scholar Haleh Esfandieri, who went to Iran to visit her 93-year-old mother only to be thrown in prison for four months and accused of spying, is testimony to the way the regime treats men and women it doesn't like in that country. And are there people in the United States who buy Ahmadinejad's claim that Iran with its hundreds of centrifuges working at top speed is not trying to develop a nuclear weapon? Surely not.