Home » The Nobel Peace Prize: Fighting Wars in the Name of Peace

The Nobel Peace Prize: Fighting Wars in the Name of Peace

by خانم هاشمی

Since the end of World War II—with the dropping of the atomic bomb and America’s brutal occupation of Japan—the world vowed to entrust peace to a global institution, so that the treasure of life would no longer be paid for by war and bondage. But that was not the end of the story.

✍|by Ms. Maryam Orduoei


Peace as a Tool to Sustain War

This time, “peace” has become the keyword for the continuation of war. It started with the World Peace Council, extended into pacifist feminism, and eventually culminated in awarding peace through the Nobel Prize. Feminist movements aligned themselves with global forums so that, by narrating the suffering of women and children in wars, they could invite the wounded human to peace—and turn the pages of war in favor of warmongers, so that the war stage could instead be managed.


The Shameful Turn of the Nobel Peace Prize

More pathetic than those endeavors was the Nobel Peace Prize initiative. Alfred Nobel bequeathed that this award should go “to the person who shall have done the most or the best work for fraternity between nations, for the abolition or reduction of standing armies, and for the holding and promotion of peace congresses.” But evidently, the mission of this prize—like all those well-meaning efforts of the United Nations—became to manage war.

War is waged against nations seeking to rise from under the oppressive chains of a savage West. The whip of war is delivered on the backs of peoples who aspire to independence and liberation from the yoke of oppressors. They are whipped so that they may make peace.


Machado, the Latest Awardee

For instance, they have given this prize to Ms. María Corina Machado. Someone whose mission is the soft overthrow in Venezuela in favor of warmongers. Machado herself says: “If we succeed, we will move the Venezuelan embassy to Jerusalem to support Israel.”

The secret of peace is friendship with Israel—the killing machine that, under the slogan “only and only weapons are effective,” entered existence and built its fake regime on the corpses of the Palestinian people.

Israel needs this peace so it can realize its dream of a “Greater Israel” from the Nile to the Euphrates with backing from the United Nations. Before Machado, this prize had been awarded to Aung San Suu Kyi, who passively watched the genocide of 700,000 Rohingya Muslims and, by her silence or consensus, endorsed the atrocities committed by the military.


The Iranian Recipients

In this largesse of Nobel awards, Iranian women did not remain unrewarded. Shirin Ebadi was the first Iranian woman to receive this prize. A jurist who, with the cooperation of some human rights lawyers, was able—under the reformist government—to establish the Human Rights Lawyers Association, tarnish Iran’s image under the name of human rights activism, and sell her lies to Western intelligence agencies.

After Shirin Ebadi, the privilege of receiving this blood-stained prize went to Narges Mohammadi. She, molded by Ebadi at the human rights lawyers’ association, became a lawyer without having formally studied law, and with the help of that association, passed off terrorist elements as political and labor activists.

Abdulmalek Rigi, the notorious criminal whose hands were stained with the blood of thousands of Iranians, was introduced—for the first time—by the Human Rights Lawyers Association on Voice of America as a political and human rights activist.

This was not Mohammadi’s only credential for the prize. For years, alongside Ebadi and in the manner of the People’s Mujahedin of the 1960s, she gathered intelligence and sent news from Iran to Mossad and the CIA, purchasing sanctions for Iran. Mohammadi was so devoted to the Mujahedin cult that in the format of the magazine Khat-e Solh! in Canada, she promoted them. The secret of her affinity for the murderous cult is revealed by her husband, Taghi Rahmani: “Narges’s family are all Mujahedin; some were executed in the 1980s, and others sympathized with the group before the revolution.”

The Nobel Peace Prize goes to those who are at war with their own nation, masquerading as peacemakers.

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