“The US is updating contingency plans for a strike to
cripple Iran’s atomic weapon program if international diplomacy fails. . . . The
plan calls for a rolling, five-day bombing campaign against 400 key targets,
including 24 nuclear-related sites, 14 military airfields and radar
installations, and Revolutionary Guard headquarters.” Ian Bruce,
“US spells out plan to bomb Iran,” The UK Herald
The Bush administration has no intention of peacefully
resolving the nuclear dispute with Iran. They have consistently blocked all
attempts by Iran to negotiate in good faith or to establish diplomatic channels
for discussion. The current offer by Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice to talk
directly with Iran is less a departure from the normal US’ belligerence than it
is a means of enlisting support from Russia and China for future punitive
action. In one particularly ominous comment, Rice said that the negotiations
would give Iran “one last excuse” to resist American demands. This tells us
that US diplomacy is a just a smokescreen for the eventual hostilities.
It took the United States months of behind the scenes
wrangling to persuade the UN Security Council to even consider Iran’s “alleged”
nuclear weapons programs. Iran tried to prevent this by offering to allow
surprise inspections on any facility suspected of covert nuclear activity. Iran
is not required to do this under the terms of the NPT, but volunteered as a way
of building confidence among the member states. The Bush administration, which
made this a vital part of earlier demands, rejected the offer outright saying
that Iran’s concession would not be enough to end the standoff.
A similar incident took place just weeks earlier when Iran
was finalizing the details of an agreement with Russia to enrich uranium
outside of the country. Iran figured that this would allay US fears that it was
secretively developing nuclear weapons.
Again, the Bush administration rejected this “good will”
gesture as insufficient, while Condi Rice scoffed at the idea as a trick. These
are just the latest examples of Iran’s efforts to find a peaceful way to
placate Washington. The administration is not interested in concessions or
settlements. It is simply building the case for punitive action or war.
Despite growing pressure from the administration, the
Security Council has not agreed on a resolution condemning Iran’s nuclear
programs. So far, Iran has cooperated fully with the IAEA and there’s simply no
evidence of noncompliance. It took an enormous effort by the Bush
administration to push a feeble “non-binding presidential statement” through
the council. The statement neither endorses economic sanctions nor military
action. It is a toothless declaration that is utterly meaningless except for
its use in fueling the propaganda campaign against the Islamic regime.
The administration has hit a roadblock at the Security
Council. Their appeal for decisive action is going nowhere.
Last week, Secretary of State Rice said, “Security
guarantees for Iran were off the table.” Her announcement reveals the true
depth of America’s inflexibility and the unlikelihood of a peaceful solution.
If the United States refuses to sign a “non-aggression pact,” then what incentive
is there for Iran to abandon its nuclear programs? After all, Iran has
the “inalienable right” to enrich uranium under the NPT. Shouldn’t that at
least be a bargaining chip for negotiations with the US?
The administration’s hardnosed approach precludes any future
compromise. Their stubbornness only makes sense if the ultimate objective is
war, which appears to be where Washington is headed.
If we compare the present situation to the lead up to the
war in Iraq, we can assume that the war plans are already
underway. The maneuverings at the UN are just a facade to conceal the movement
of military hardware and troops. Once the logistical work is done, the
administration will create a pretext for attacking Iran just as it did with
Iraq. Rice's globe-trotting diplomacy means nothing; it's Cheney and
Rumsfeld who will decide when the time is right.
The administration sees non-aggression treaties as a sign of
weakness unworthy of a superpower. As stated in its National Security Strategy
(NSS) the United States reserves the right to attack any nation that may
challenge its national interests or its global supremacy. Iran is the next
domino to establishing permanent American hegemony. Controlling the oil
resources of the Caspian Basin and removing regional rivals to Israel remain
the fundamental goals of Bush’s global resource war. This makes a military
confrontation with Iran inevitable. It is absurd to expect the Bush
administration will seriously negotiate when their final purpose is regime
change.
In a recent article in Counterpunch, “Embedded Journalism and
the Disinformation Campaign for War on Iran,” Gary Leupp notes that the
same cadres of neocons who misled the nation into war with Iraq have been
reassembled in the Pentagon to repeat their success against Iran. Under the
rubric of “The Office of Iranian Affairs,” Abram Shulsky, Elizabeth Cheney and
other far-right hawks fill out a roster of pro-war advocates. Their task is to
prepare the country for war by generating fear and suspicion of Iran’s
imaginary weapons programs. The group's influence is probably similar to
that of Judith Miller who was allowed to spout her bogus claims about Iraqi WMD
from headlines across the country. In this case, however,
the intention is to omit the critical facts about Iran’s
activities rather than simply inventing false allegations.
For example, the media invariably excludes the important
details about Iran’s programs that would allow American’s to form an educated
opinion. These are:
1 The IAEA has consistently said that there is “no
evidence” that Iran has a nuclear weapons program or is diverting nuclear
material from its research.
2 Iran has been in full compliance with all its
treaty obligations for three years and has undergone the most intensive
inspection regime in the history of the IAEA.
3 The UN Security Council reaffirmed Iran’s “inalienable
right” to develop nuclear energy for peaceful purposes and did not order Iran
to suspend nuclear enrichment as was falsely reported in the news.
4 The United States has violated its obligations under
the NPT by developing a new regime of “bunker busting” low yield nuclear
weapons.
5 That the United States is violating the UN Charter by
unilaterally threatening a sovereign nation that is not in breach of any UN
resolution.
These are the fundamental facts that the American people
need to know to make an informed judgment about the present confrontation.
Instead, the media simply reiterates the specious claims of government
officials without regard to either international law (NPT) or the findings of
the UN watchdog agency, the IAEA. We must assume that the media is working with
high-ranking officials in The Office of Iranian Affairs to produce news that is
so obviously skewed in favor of the administration. After all, their entire
raison d’etre is to create the rationale for moving the country to war.
A growing number of American elites are uneasy with the
precipitous decline of American prestige as well as the reckless approach to
foreign policy. Henry Kissinger has joined Madeleine Albright, Zbigniew
Brzezinski, Chuck Hagel and other CFR (Council on Foreign Relations) luminaries
to pressure the Bush administration to open a direct dialogue with Iran. Until
today, Bush showed no sign that he would do so. Despite the many setbacks in
Iraq, the “war president” still appears to be entirely under the spell of VP
Dick Cheney and Sec-Def Donald Rumsfeld. Regrettably, there’s no indication
that Rumsfeld or Cheney are the least bit affected by the widening divisions in
elite opinion. They are in complete control of the policy making apparatus and
should be expected to execute their war plan regardless of its unpopularity or
its long-term consequences.
In a recent article by Gareth Porter, “Iran Proposal to
US Offered Peace With Israel,” the author reports that in 2003 Iran not
only offered “to accept peace with Israel and cut off material assistance to
Palestinian armed groups” but made a “two-page proposal for a broad US-Iran
agreement covering all the issues facing the two countries.” The secret
document that was provided to IPS proves that Iran is neither committed to the
destruction of Israel nor to the continued sponsorship of terrorist groups.
.
“What
the Iranians wanted in return,” Porter says, “ was an end to U.S. hostility and
recognition of Iran as a legitimate power in the region” They want to see a
“halt in hostile US behavior and rectification of status of Iran in the US” as
well as "recognition of Iran's legitimate security interests in the region
with according defense capacity.” (ISP)
Respect
and security; the same demands that one expects from any reasonable sovereign
nation.
“In
2003, Bush refused to allow any response to the Iranian offer to negotiate an
agreement that would have accepted the existence of Israel.” (IPS)
This
implies that the decision to attack Iran must have been made in the earliest
years of the Bush administration. (Perhaps, even before Bush took office as
indicated in the Project for the New American Century)
Will there be a war with Iran?
The UK Herald reported two weeks ago (“US spells out plan to
bomb Iran,” Ian Bruce) that “the US is updating contingency plans for a strike
to cripple Iran’s atomic weapon program if international diplomacy fails. . . .
The plan calls for a rolling, five-day bombing campaign against 400 key
targets, including 24 nuclear-related sites, 14 military airfields and radar
installations, and Revolutionary Guard headquarters.”
If there is an invasion it will probably be limited to
securing the region of Khuzestan, which is adjacent to Iraq’s southern flank
and contains 90 percent of Iran’s oil wealth as well as much of its natural
gas. This could be achieved with as little as 15,000 to 20,000 combat troops,
plus a backup of Special Forces. The rest could be accomplished by aerial
bombardments of military installations, radar, artillery placements, missile
silos, nuclear sites and Republican Guard facilities. Needless to say, there
are not “400 nuclear targets” in Iran. The Herald article implies that the
Pentagon is anticipating a “Serbia-type” attack which disrupts major industry,
oil production and civilian infrastructure. This strategy has been
described in great detail by author John Pilger in his article “Calling the
Kosovo Humanitarians to Account.”
Pilger states, “NATO's civilian targets included public
transport, hospitals, schools, museums, churches. ..bombing bridges on Sunday
afternoons and market places."
Citing the goal of opening the region to a “free-market
economy,” Pilger notes how NATO intentionally targeted state-owned businesses
to bring Kosovo into the global economic paradigm and remove any stain of its
socialist past.
Pilger
says, “In the bombing campaign that followed, it was state-owned
companies, rather than military sites, that were targeted. NATO's destruction
of only 14 Yugoslav army tanks compares with its bombing of 372 centers of
industry, including the Zastava car factory, leaving hundreds of thousands
jobless. Not one foreign or privately owned factory was bombed.”
We
expect that the same basic model will be applied to Iran,
although the assault will be papered-over by the “state-media
franchise” (the “free press”). Iran has no nuclear weapons programs and
Washington knows it. It is being prepared for “economic reform” and “structural
readjustment” so that it can be included in the prevailing system of predatory
capital and satisfy the West’s ravenous appetite for cheap oil and new markets.
US
carrier groups are already moving to the Gulf and the finishing touches are
being put on the battle plans. Lt General Sam Gardiner expects that an attack
will come as early as this month. That seems like a reasonable prediction.
Mike
Whitney lives in Washington state. He can be reached at: fergiewhitney@msn.com.