Quote Originally Posted by Psycho4Bud
Blair said Ahmadinejad's comment was "completely and totally unacceptable."

In a joint statement, the E.U. leaders "condemned in the strongest terms" the Iranian president's call, saying it "will cause concern about Iran's role in the region and its future intentions." President Jacques Chirac of France told reporters that Ahmadinejad risked Iran "being left on the outside of other nations."

Russia's foreign minister, Sergei Lavrov, in Israel, called the Iranian president's statement "unacceptable."

The statement was widely reported in the Arab world; leaders there reacted for the most part with silence. Most Arab countries have no diplomatic relations with Israel. But the Palestinian negotiator, Saeb Erekat, said, according to the Associated Press: "We have recognized the state of Israel and we are pursuing a peace process with Israel, and . . . we do not accept the statements of the president of Iran. This is unacceptable."
World Leaders Condemn Iranian's Call to Wipe Israel 'Off the Map'

Nobody in the Western world, Russia, or the Middle East knows how to translate the Iranian language?

Have a good one!:s4:
All I see here is that the statements are "unacceptable", and they would be considered as such when the very regime Ahmadinejad wants gone is an ally of these nations. The main point of the article here is that Ahmadinejad did not say he wanted to whipe Israel off the map. That this lie is constantly perpetuated is an exceptionally disgraceful form of propoganda.
Gandalf_The_Grey Reviewed by Gandalf_The_Grey on . The Biggest Lie Told To The American People: Ahmadinejad's Alleged Remarks On Israel Sam Sedaei As the Bush Administration beats the drums for another war of choice with another country that had nothing to do with 9/11, they are using another series of fabricated facts to indoctrinate the American people into thinking that Iran poses a serious threat to our security. At the core of these fabrications is the claim that on October 25, 2005, during a speech at the Ministry of Interior conference hall, the then newly-elected President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad remarked that "Israel Rating: 5