The media is
silent, Congress is absent, and Americans are distracted as George W. Bush
openly prepares aggression against Iran.
- US
Navy aircraft carrier strike forces are deployed off Iran.
- US Air
Force jets and missile systems are deployed in bases in countries
bordering or near to Iran.
- US B-2
stealth bombers have been refitted to carry 30,000-pound "bunker
buster" bombs.
- The US
government is financing terrorist and separatist groups within Iran.
- US
Special Forces teams are conducting terrorist operations inside Iran.
- US war
doctrine has been altered to permit first strike nuclear attack on Iran
and other non-nuclear countries.
Bush's war threats against Iran have intensified during the
course of this year. The American people are being fed a repeat of the lies
used to justify naked aggression against Iraq.
Bush is too self-righteous to see the dark humor in his
denunciations of Iran for threatening "the security of nations
everywhere" and of the Iraqi resistance for "a vision that rejects
tolerance, crushes all dissent, and justifies the murder of innocent men,
women, and children in the pursuit of political power." [President
Bush Addresses the 89th Annual National Convention of the American Legion,
August 28, 2007] Those are precisely the words that most of the world applies
to Bush and his Brownshirt administration. The Pew Foundation's world polls
show that despite all the American and Israeli propaganda against Iran, the US
and Israel are regarded as no less threats to world stability than demonized
Iran.
Bush has discarded habeas corpus and the Geneva Conventions,
justified torture and secret trials, damned critics as anti-American, and is
responsible, according to Information Clearing House, for over one million
deaths of Iraqi civilians, which puts Bush high on the list of mass murderers
of all time. The vast majority of "kills" by the US military in Iraq
and Afghanistan are civilians.
Now Bush wants to murder more. We have to kill Iranians
"over there," Bush says, "before they come over here."
There is no possibility that Iranians or any Muslims who have no air force, no
navy, no modern military technology are going to "come over here,"
and no indication that they plan to do so. The Muslims are disunited and have
been for centuries. That is what makes them vulnerable to colonial rule. If
Muslims were united, the US would already have lost its army in Iraq. Indeed,
it would not have been able to put an army in Iraq.
Meanwhile the US media focuses
on whether Republican Senator
Larry Craig is a homosexual
or has offended gays by denying to be one of them. The run-up for the public's
attention is why a South
Carolina beauty queen cannot answer a simple question about why
her generation is
unable to find the United States on a map.
The war criminal is in the living room, and no official
notice is taken of the fact.
Lacking US troops with which to invade Iran, the Bush
administration has decided to bomb Iran "back into the stone age."
Punishing air and missile attacks have been designed not merely to destroy
Iran's nuclear energy projects, but also to destroy the public infrastructure,
the economy, and the ability of the government to function.
Encouraged by the indifference of both the American media
and public to the massive casualties inflicted on Iraqi civilians, the Bush
administration will not be deterred by the prospect of its air attacks
inflicting massive casualties on Iranian civilians. Last summer the Bush
administration demonstrated to the entire world its total disdain for Muslim
life when Bush supported Israel's month-long air attack on Lebanese civilian
infrastructure and civilian residences. President Bush blocked the attempt by
the rest of the world to halt the gratuitous murder of Lebanese civilians and
infrastructure destruction. Clearly, turning the Muslim Middle East into a
wasteland is the Bush policy. For Bush, civilian casualties are a non-issue.
Hegemony uber alles.
The Bush administration has made its war plans for attacking
Iran and positioned its forces without any prior approval from Congress. The
"unitary executive" obviously doesn't believe that an attack on Iran
requires the approval of Congress. By its absence and quietude, Congress seems
to agree that it has no role in the decision.
In the improbable event that Congress were to make any fuss
about Bush's decision to attack yet another country, the State Department has
devised legalistic cover: simply declare Iran's military to be a
"terrorist organization" and go to war under the cover of the
existing resolution.
The "Iran issue" has been created by the Bush
administration, not by Iran. Iran, like many other countries, has a nuclear
energy program to which it is entitled as a signatory to the Nuclear
Non-Proliferation Treaty. Inspectors of the International Atomic Energy Agency
have found no evidence of a nuclear weapons program in Iran.
The Bush administration has brushed away this fact, which
should be determining, just as the Bush administration brushed away the fact
that weapons inspectors reported, prior to Bush's invasion of Iraq, that there
were no weapons of mass destruction in Iraq.
The Bush administration managed to disrupt the work of the
pesky IAEA weapons inspectors in Iran. Iran has been working successfully with
the IAEA and has achieved what a senior IAEA official recently described as a
milestone agreement. The Bush administration instantly went to work to
discredit the agreement and unleashed its new lapdog, French President Nicolas
Sarkozy, to threaten "the bombing of Iran." [Iran risks
attack over atomic push, French president says By Elaine Sciolino, International
Herald-Tribune, August 27, 2007]
The Bush administration's position is legally untenable and
is really nothing but a contrived excuse to start another war. Bush claims that
Iran, alone among all the signatories of the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty,
must be denied its right under the pact to develop nuclear energy, because
Iran, along among all the other signatories, will be the only country able to
deceive the IAEA inspectors and develop nuclear weapons. Therefore, Iran must
be denied its rights under the agreement.
Bush's position on the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty is
as legally untenable as his position on every other issue -- the Geneva
Conventions, the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act, habeas corpus, the
constitutional separation of powers, and presidential signing statements that
he cavalierly attaches to new laws. Bush's position is that the meaning of laws
and treaties varies with his needs of the moment.
Bush has declared himself to be the "decider." The
"decider" decides whether Americans have any rights under the
Constitution and whether Iran has any rights under the Nuclear
Non-Proliferation Treaty. As the "decider" has decided that Iran has
no such rights, the "decider" decides whether to attack Iran.
No one else has any say about it. The people's
representatives are just so much chaff in the wind.
Whatever form of government Bush is operating under, it is
far outside an accountable constitutional democratic government. Bush has
transitioned America to caesarism, and even if Bush leaves office in January
2009, the powers he has accumulated in the executive will remain.
Unless Bush and Cheney are impeached and convicted,
there is no prospect of the US Congress and federal judiciary ever again being
co-equal branches of government.
Paul
Craig Roberts [email him] was Assistant Secretary of the Treasury in the
Reagan Administration. He is the author of Supply-Side
Revolution : An Insider's Account of Policymaking in Washington; Alienation
and the Soviet Economy and Meltdown:
Inside the Soviet Economy, and is the
co-author with Lawrence M. Stratton of The
Tyranny of Good Intentions : How Prosecutors and Bureaucrats Are Trampling the
Constitution in the Name of Justice. Click here for Peter
Brimelow�s Forbes Magazine interview with Roberts about the recent epidemic of
prosecutorial misconduct.