To anyone with unblinkered eyes, it becomes clearer every day that Iran is a bear the likes of which we have not seen since communism's collapse.

It heavily influences the Shiites in Iraq. It maintains Hezbollah in Lebanon, there to threaten and harass the dread Israel. It funds the Hamas terror regime overseeing the Palestinians. It trains and equips groups threatening to destabilize other governments throughout South Asia and the Middle East. It is a major producer of oil, on which the world lives. Its leaders profess a hatred of Israel, America and the West - in roughly that order. And - for insistently "civilian uses," of course - it has mobilized a host of its manifold resources to build a nuclear bomb.

When someone repeatedly professes hatred for you and threatens to kill you, prudence suggests taking him seriously in the interest of your future well-being. Yet old Europe, having fits about the rise of jihadism in its midst, has responded by changing the subject, or chatting up diplomatic incentives and "new initiatives" to coax for instance Iran toward right reason, or - please sit down for this one - rewriting the dictionary: The European Union, its member countries having endorsed in December guidelines for politically correct official parlance, is working on a "non-emotive lexicon . . . to avoid linking Islam and terrorism."

But how to deal in rhetorical niceties with those forthright about their malign ambitions?

We have the most bloodthirsty statements from the convicted would-be bomber of the White House - Zacarias Moussaoui; from al-Qaidist Abu Musab al-Zarqawi, terrorizing Iraq; from Osama bin-Laden and his No. 2 - Ayman al-Zawahiri; from Abdullah Barghouti, the unrepentant mastermind of Hamas' grimmest suicide bombings; and from the bone-chilling audiotape of the thwarted jihadist hijackers driving United Flight 93 into the ground.

Consider these from leading Iranians:

- Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad terms America a "second Israel" and warns that Tehran will unleash holy war and "cut off the hand of any aggressor."

- Ahmadinejad again, on U.N. resolutions calling upon Iran to curb its nuclear program: "The Iranian nation won't give a damn about such useless resolutions. . . . Nuclear energy is a national demand and by the grace of God today Iran is a nuclear country."- Iranian Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, on Iran's response to any attacks over its refusal to curb its nuclear program: "If the U.S. ventures into any aggression against Iran, Iran will retaliate by damaging U.S. interests worldwide twice as much as the U.S. may inflict on Iran."