On the US-Iran relationship, President Obama seems to be
talking from both sides of his mouth. From one side we hear promising messages
of dialogue and a �new beginning� with Iran; from the other side provocative
words that seems to be coming right out of the mouth of his predecessor, George
W. Bush.
For example, on the occasion of the Iranian New Year in
March, while the president expressed willingness for �engagement that is honest
and grounded in mutual respect� he also warned Iran that it cannot �take its
rightful place in the community of nations . . . through terror or arms.�
Claims that Iran supports international terrorism or seeks
to manufacture nuclear weapons were used by the Bush administration as excuses
for not negotiating with Iran. President Obama�s occasional mimicking of those
claims (which completely disregards the expert views of both the International
Atomic Energy Agency and the National Intelligence Estimate) is likewise bound
to serve as a major obstacle in the way of a meaningful conversation with Iran.
In terms of actual policy measures, President Obama and his
foreign policy team have not taken any steps to reverse or mitigate the hostile
policies their predecessors put into effect against Iran.
Spearhead by Secretary of State Hillary Clinton and
President Obama�s �point man� on Iran, Dennis Ross, the administration is
pushing the other permanent members of the United Nations Security Council to
further escalate multilateral sanctions against Iran if Tehran does not stop or
limit its uranium enrichment (or nuclear-fuel production) activities. This
demand is nothing short of sheer provocation because as a signatory of the
Non-Proliferation Treaty (and under the supervision of IAEA inspectors) such
activities are altogether within the legitimate and lawful rights of Iran.
Furthermore, by occasionally parroting George W. Bush�s
militaristic song that, concerning Iran, �all options are on the table,�
President Obama has not disavowed his predecessor�s favorite threat of �regime
change� in Tehran.
This not-so-subtle threat of �regime change� in Iran is not,
however, limited to purely rhetorical statements such as �all options are on
the table.� More importantly, there are ongoing destabilizing covert operations
against Iran that are sponsored by various agents or agencies of the US
government.
As Flynt Leverett and Hillary Mann Leverett, former National
Security Council staff members, point out, �the Obama administration has done
nothing to cancel or repudiate an ostensibly covert but well-publicized
program, begun in President George W. Bush�s second term, to spend hundreds of
millions of dollars to destabilize the Islamic Republic� [1].
This means that �the U.S. is, in effect, conducting a secret
war against Tehran, a covert campaign aimed at recruiting Iran�s ethnic and
religious minorities . . . into a movement to topple the government in Tehran,
or, at least, to create so much instability that U.S. intervention to �keep
order� in the region is justified. Given recent events in Iran � a suicide
bombing in the southeast province of Sistan-Baluchistan and at least two other
incidents � the effort is apparently ongoing.
�A suicide-bomber blast, which occurred inside a mosque in
the city of Zahedan, killed at least 30 people: a rebel Sunni group [called
Jundallah] with reported links to the U.S. claimed responsibility. . . . The
violence was very shortly followed up by attacks on banks, water-treatment
facilities, and other key installations in and around Zahedan, including a
strike against the local campaign headquarters of Iranian President Mahmoud
Ahmadinejad. Add to this an attempted bombing of an Iranian airliner . . . and
you have a small-scale insurgency arising on Iran�s eastern frontier� [2].
The Iranian government has repeatedly accused the U.S. and
Israel of fomenting destabilizing covert activities across its borders.
Although they deny any connection with Jundallah, the Pakistan-based terrorist
organization that has claimed responsibility for a number of cross-border
attacks on Iran, including the recent wave of bombings, ABC News, citing US and
Pakistani intelligence sources, reported in 2007 that the terrorist group �has
been secretly encouraged and advised by American officials� to destabilize the
government in Iran [3].
In an interview with National Public Radio (NPR) on the
occasion of the publication of his article in The New Yorker, titled �Preparing the Battlefield,� the
renowned investigative journalist Seymour Hersh revealed striking details of
his findings on the goals of the $400 million budgeted by the US government for
covert operations inside Iran. He provided valuable information on US military
preparations to strike the country . . . and on the US support for the
anti-Iran terrorist organizations Jundallah and MKO [4].
More evidence of the US involvement in the terrorist
activities inside Iran came to light recently when the head of the Jundallah
gang, Abdulmalik Rigi, �admitted receiving assistance from the terrorist group
Mojahedin Khalq Organization (MKO),� a terrorist gang of Iranian expatriates
under US protection in Iraq. There have been persistent intelligence reports of
collaborations between the MKO and Jundallah in the past. But, in a significant
admission, Rigi told a US-based satellite TV station . . . on June 2, �They
[MKO] have had good intelligence collaborations with us and have provided us
with much information about the activities of the Iranian regime� [5].
MKO, sheltered and armed by the Iraqi dictator Saddam
Hussein, have killed thousands of Iranians in their decades-old campaign of
bombings and other terrorist activities against Iran. After the fall of Saddam
Hussein, the MKO came under the protection of the occupying US power in Iraq.
Although the US State Department officially lists MKO on its list of terrorist
organizations, it nonetheless refuses to turn them in to Iranian authorities,
as frequently requested. Nor has the US, as the MKO custodian, put an end to
its terrorist activities against Iran.
That�s why it is safe to argue that the US is playing a
crucial (though largely submerged) role in the terrorist collaboration between
Jundallah and MKO against Iran.
It is not surprising, then, that Iranians are not thrilled
by President Obama�s rhetoric of �peace and dialogue,� as they can easily see
who is pulling the strings of the Jundallah-MKO terrorist activities from
behind the scene. �What�s going on in Iran today � a sustained campaign of
terrorism directed against civilians and government installations alike � is
proof positive that nothing has really changed much in Washington, as far as
U.S. policy toward Iran is concerned� [6].
But what is to be made of President Obama�s apparently
contradictory overtures toward Iran? What accounts for his simultaneously
extending a hand for friendship and a fist for continued antagonism?
Charitable and optimistic interpretations tend to blame the president�s
opponents for his doublespeak on Iran: the president does have a real plan for
a genuine conversation and rapprochement with Iran; but to bring this about he
has to occasionally make some tactical Iran-bashing statements in order to
appease his powerful opponents lest they should torpedo his entire plan. Hence,
his conflicting statements.
Whether this generous reading of the president�s mind is
true or false can never be conclusively proven. Nor can such wishful
speculations about the president�s �true� feelings or inner desires be of any
analytical value for political or policy purposes. What matters -- at the end
of the day -- is what he does or says -- not what he quietly thinks to himself.
And what he does and says in relation to Iran is pathetic.
He seems to want to eat his cake, and have it too:
continuing with George Bush�s policies while employing slick rhetoric and
pretending he is different! He serves as the smiley-face mask for the same
militaristic policies left behind by George W. Bush and his Neoconservative
handlers.
Iranians see through this fraud very clearly. For example,
Iran�s most powerful leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei recently stated: �The
nations in the region hate the United States from the bottom of their hearts
because they have seen violence, military intervention and discrimination. . .
. The new US government seeks to transform this image. I say firmly, that this
will not be achieved by talking, speeches and slogans� [7].
Many of Obama�s fans, both at home and abroad (including, by
the way, many in Iran), who were indignant of his predecessor�s unrefined
personality and militaristic policies, seem to be in denial that Obama�s
so-called �change� is mainly about style and rhetoric, not substance. This is
true not only of foreign but also domestic policies. Just note how his
neoliberal, supply-side economic response to the ongoing economic crisis is
more friendly to Wall Street rackets than any other president�s in US history
-- President Reagan included.
A major problem with wishful interpretations of President
Obama�s conflicting statements on Iran is that they tend to perpetuate the
illusion that he can bring about meaningful change in the US policy toward Iran
or, for that matter, the broader Middle East. In reality, however, while the
resident of the White House may posture as Commander-in-Chief and tweak policy
around the edges, US foreign policy in this region is determined largely by two
other sources of power, or special interest groups.
These two powerful special interests are (a) the highly
influential beneficiaries of military spending and war dividends or, as the
late President Eisenhower put it, the military-industrial complex; and (b) the
equally powerful proponents of Greater Israel (from the Jordan River to the
Mediterranean coasts), known as the Israel lobby. Evidence shows that both of
these groups view their interests better served by war and geopolitical
tensions in the Middle East.
There is an unspoken or tacit alliance between these two
extremely powerful interest groups: the armaments lobby and the Israel lobby.
There is no formal or legal framework for the alliance; it is largely based on
a convergence of interests on war and international convulsion in the Middle
East.
To say that the military-industrial complex thrives on war
and militarism is to state the obvious. Arms industries and other powerful
beneficiaries of war dividends need an atmosphere of war and international
tensions in order to promote the sale of armaments and maintain continued
increases in the Pentagon budget, thereby justifying their lion�s share of the
public money. Viewed in this light, unprovoked US wars abroad can been seen as
reflections of domestic fights over national resources, or tax dollars.
This helps explain why since World War II powerful beneficiaries
of war dividends have almost always reacted negatively to discussions of
international cooperation and tension reduction, or d�tente.
For example, in the face of the 1970s tension-reducing
negotiations with the Soviet Union, representatives of the military-industrial
complex rallied around Cold Warrior think tanks, such as The Committee on the
Present Danger, and successfully sabotaged those discussions. Instead, by
invoking the �communist threat,� they managed to reinforce the relatively weakened
tensions with the Soviet Union to such new heights that it came to be known as
the Second Cold War -- hence, the early 1980s dramatic �rearming of America,�
as President Reagan put it.
Likewise, when the collapse of the Soviet system and the
subsequent discussions of �peace dividends� in the United States threatened the
interests of the military-industrial conglomerates, their representatives
invented �new external sources of danger to U.S. interests� and successfully
substituted them for the �threat of communism� of the Cold War era. These �new,
post-Cold War sources of threat� are said to stem from the �unpredictable,
unreliable regional powers of the Third World,� from the so-called rogue
states, from �global terrorism,� from �Islamic fundamentalism,� or more
recently from Iran�s �impending nuclear weapons.�
Just as the powerful beneficiaries of war dividends view
international peace and stability as inimical to their business interests, so
too the hardline Zionist proponents of Greater Israel perceive peace between
Israel and its Arab neighbors as perilous to their territorial ambitions. The
reason for this fear of peace is that, according to a number of United Nations
resolutions, peace would mean Israel�s return to its pre-1967 borders.
But because proponents of Greater Israel, which includes the current Israeli
government, are unwilling to return to those internationally-agreed-upon
borders, they sabotage peace efforts and avoid genuine dialogue with
Palestinians. By the same token, these proponents view war and socio-political
convulsion (or, as David Ben-Gurion, one of the key founders of the State of
Israel, put it, �revolutionary atmosphere�) as opportunities that are conducive
to the expulsion of Palestinians, the geographic recasting of the region, and
the expansion of Israel�s territory.
Although there is no formal agreement or treaty between the
Israel lobby and the armaments lobby, there is a de facto institutional
framework for the unholy alliance of these two militaristic interest groups: a
web of closely knit think tanks that are both founded and financed primarily by
the armaments lobby and the Israeli lobby. These include the American
Enterprise Institute, Project for the New American Century, Center for Security
Policy, Middle East Media Research Institute, Washington Institute for Near
East Policy, Middle East Forum, National Institute for Public Policy and the
Jewish Institute for National Security Affairs. These malicious institutes of
war and militarism are staffed largely by the war-mongering Neoconservative
chicken-hawks.
It is no longer a secret that the major plans of the Bush
administration�s jingoistic foreign policy were drawn up largely by these
think-tanks, often in collaboration, directly or indirectly, with the Pentagon,
the arms lobby, and the Israeli lobby. Although no longer as noisy as during
the heydays of the Bush administration, especially when they were cheerleading
the invasion of Iraq, these belligerent think tanks are no less busy plotting
another war of aggression in the region -- this time against Iran.
These think-tanks and their (somewhat disguised but still
active) Neo-conservative champions continue to serve as influence-peddling,
corrupting and, ultimately, subversive links between the armaments lobby, the
Israel lobbies, the White House, the Pentagon, the State Department and the
Congress. What is truly amazing is that the debacles they have wrought in Iraq
and Afghanistan have not deterred them from working just as hard, using the
same scandalous tactics, to bring about a military strike against yet another
Muslim country -- Iran.
Since the late 1940s, no US president has been able to
seriously challenge the militaristic designs of the unholy alliance of the
armaments lobby and the Israel lobby in the Middle East. President Obama does
not seem to represent an exception to this pattern -- his feeble message of
peace and hollow posturing about a �new beginning� with Iran, or his
formalistic advocacy of the two-state solution in Palestine, notwithstanding.
The carrot-and-stick strategy of the alliance in corrupting
and/or co-opting politicians is rather well known: the carrot being the money
the alliance pays for their election while the stick is driving them out of
office if the carrot proves ineffective. What is less known (but perhaps more
dangerous) is the alliance�s tendency to resort to pernicious
patriotic-blackmailing tactics against politicians who may defy its policies
and priorities.
Furthermore, when the alliance is unable to influence policy
within the existing parameters or premises of international relations, it would
not hesitate to change (or try to change) those parameters in order to bring
about the desired change in policy.
This cynical strategy includes fabrication of evidence,
provocation of terrorism (often in Muslim countries or communities), and
instigation of war and political tensions. It is a strategy of manufacturing
�external threats to our national security,� or inventing new enemies, in order
to justify war and military intervention, thereby coercing presidents and other
politicians who may otherwise resist the alliance�s tendency to militarize US
foreign policy.
For example, President Jimmy Carter went to the White House
(1976) with a major agenda for international peace and stability. A key
principle on that agenda was reducing tensions and seeking harmony with the
Soviet Union. One of the main reasons for Carter�s peace overtures with the
Soviets was to downsize the US military colossus and cut the Pentagon spending
in order to reduce the US budget deficit. Carter�s discussion of �peace
dividends� frightened beneficiaries of war dividends.
Terrified by Carter�s proposals of tension reduction with
the Soviet Union, these influential beneficiaries of military spending set out
to challenge him mercilessly. Organizing around opposition to tension-reducing
talks with the Soviet Union, they reconstituted the brazenly militaristic
Committee on the Present Danger (CPD), which had been instrumental to President
Truman�s militarization policies of the early 1950s.
The CPD questioned the National Intelligence Estimate
(NIE)�s account of the Soviet military capabilities. It charged that the NIE�s
account of Soviet arms outlays was too low, and that there should be an
�independent� analysis. Sounding the false alarms of the Soviet threat, it came
up with an alternative estimate (known as the Team B Report) of the Soviet
Union�s military spending.
The Team B report �discovered� a sizable error in previous
NIE/CIA estimates of Soviet military outlays: the USSR was said to be spending
13, not 8, percent of its GNP on arms. Multiplying this �error factor� by 10
(for the 10-year period 1970-80), it was concluded that by the end of the 1970s
the USSR would have outspent the US by $300 billion [8].
Although years later it was acknowledged that the Team B
Report was bogus, it was nonetheless effectively used at the time to divert the
Carter administration from its tension-reducing negotiations with the Soviet
Union. �By late 1977 or early 1978 President Carter had moved from his campaign
pledge to reduce military spending every year to increasing it. . . . Pressured
by the CPD . . . , Carter began a sustained buildup in military expenditures�
that continued to the end of his term as president [9].
Evidence thus clearly indicates that, using �threats to our
national security interests,� along with subtle but unmistakable
patriotic-blackmailing tactics, champions of war and militarism successfully
highjacked President Carter�s initially-peaceful agenda soon after he arrived
in the White House. His militaristic political opponents outmaneuvered and
coerced him to abandon most of his campaign pledges. Not only was he not able
to reduce the geopolitical tensions of the Cold War atmosphere, but, indeed, in
the second half of his presidency Carter moved to revive the
ephemerally-relaxed Cold War tensions of the early-to-late 1970s and, instead,
embark on a confrontational course with the Soviet Union.
There are striking similarities between CPD�s tactics of
inventing �external threats to our national security� in order to heighten
hostility with the Soviet Union in the late 1970s and the Neoconservatives�
employment of similar tactics in the early 2000s in order to pave the way for
the invasion of Iraq. Just as the CPD questioned and overrode the NIE/CIA
estimates of the Soviet military capabilities during the Carter administration,
so too in the immediate aftermath of the heinous 9/11 attacks the
Neoconservative think tanks and their war mongering operatives in and around
the Bush administration overruled the official CIA assessments of Iraq�s
military capabilities under Saddam Hussein, thereby justifying the invasion of
that country -- which drastically increased the fortunes of war profiteers.
The tried-and-true scheme of militarism, �external threats
or enemies,� to instigate wars and international tensions continues to this
day. Just as during the Bush administration the Neoconservative champions of
war and militarism fabricated intelligence in order to justify the occupation
of Iraq, so too today their counterparts in and around the Obama administration
are plotting to discredit the official CIA/NIE intelligence on Iran�s nuclear
plans and military capabilities in order to bring about a military assault
against that country.
President Obama and his top policy makers on Iran may use a
slightly tempered rhetoric, but they are not any less hawkish in terms of
concrete policy measures against that country. While Donald Rumsfeld and Paul
Wolfowitz are out; Hillary Clinton and Dennis Ross are in. In their attitudes
and approaches toward Iran, neither Hillary Clinton is less hawkish than Donald
Rumsfeld, nor is Dennis Ross than Paul Wolfowitz.
Hillary Clinton is on record as having said (during her unsuccessful
bid for the White House), �we would be able to totally obliterate� Iranians
should they threaten our ally Israel. There was a widespread understanding of
the word �obliteration� as having meant the use of �tactical/surgical� nuclear
bombs against Iran. Parroting the AIPAC claim that Iran represents an
�existential danger to Israel,� Hillary Clinton recently described a
potentially nuclear Iran as an �extraordinary threat� [10].
President Obama�s appointment of Dennis Ross as the point
man in dealing with Iran is equally ominous. Ross is known as having developed
a strategy of dealing with Iran that is called �engagement with pressure,�
which means projecting or pretending negotiation with Iran in order to garner
broader international support for the US-sponsored economic pressure on that
country. Here is how Flynt and Hillary Leverett, former National Security
Council staff members, relate a conversation they had with Ross about his
cynical strategy of engagement-with-pressure:
�In conversations with Mr. Ross before Mr. Obama�s election,
we asked him if he really believed that engagement-with-pressure would bring
concessions from Iran. He forthrightly acknowledged that this was unlikely.
Why, then, was he advocating a diplomatic course that, in his judgment, would
probably fail? Because, he told us, if Iran continued to expand its nuclear
fuel program, at some point in the next couple of years President Bush�s
successor would need to order military strikes against Iranian nuclear targets.
Citing past �diplomacy� would be necessary for that president to claim any
military action was legitimate� [11].
It is no secret that AIPAC strongly favored Hillary Clinton
over Barack Obama in the 2008 presidential race for the White House. Although
they failed in this bid, they succeeded in filling key foreign policy positions
in the Obama administration with their favorites: Hillary Clinton as the
Secretary of State and Dennis Ross as the point man in dealing with Iran.
Perhaps more importantly, they also succeeded in having Rahm Emmanuel, who
served in the Israel Defense Forces, appointed as Obama�s chief-of-staff.
Considering this team of advisors, who are not much
different in their approach to Iran than their Neo-conservative counterparts of
the Bush days, it stands to reason to argue that, at least in the context of
the Middle East, President Obama works essentially from within the same
metaphorical box of policy options as did his predecessor, President George W.
Bush.
Nor is it surprising to see Mr. Obama use the same political
toolbox in his approach to Iran as did Mr. Bush: the same narrative, the same
premises, the same assumptions, and the same faulty intelligence or distorted
information. These dubious assumptions and premises include,
(a) Iran�s nuclear program is not a peaceful technological
pursuit, as attested by both the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) and
National Intelligence Estimate (NIE), but a pursuit of nuclear weapons.
(b) Hamas is not a democratically elected government, but a
terrorist organization; Hezbollah is not a major political party in Lebanon,
but a terrorist organization; therefore, Iran�s support of these two
organizations is tantamount to supporting terrorism.
This spurious, obstructionist narrative -- borrowed without
reservations from the Bush administration and its Neoconservative handlers -- are
bound to render President Obama�s rhetoric of �a new beginning with Iran�
meaningless. It is hypocritical -- as well as offensive -- to talk about �a new
beginning� while carrying out old policies of lies, demonization, threats and
subversion.
Iran poses no military threat to the United States or Israel
-- or, for that matter, any other country in the world. The shrill noises
coming out of Washington and Jerusalem, however, continue to relentlessly
portray Iran as a menace to the national interests of the United States and an
�existential threat� to Israel. Why? What accounts for this need of Iran as a
boogeyman?
A widely-shred view blames Iranian leaders, especially
President Ahmadinejad, for the US-Israeli hostility toward Iran. What the
proponents of this view overlook, however, is the fact that Iran�s nuclear
issue or Ahmadinejad�s controversial statements about Israel are no more than
distractions and excuses -- distractions from land grabbing, and excuses for
war profiteering. The US-Israeli hostility toward Iran did not start with
Ahmadinejad; nor will it end after him. The military-industrial-Likud alliance
is certain to quickly find other distractions and boogeymen soon after
Ahmadinejad is replaced by another president, whenever that maybe.
Just as a reliable prognosis of a disease requires a sound
diagnosis, so too a sensible solution to the plague of war and militarism in
the Middle East requires an objective identification of the root causes of the
continued cycle of violence and bloodshed.
As I have briefly argued in this essay, two nasty viruses
lie at the root of war and geopolitical convulsion in the Middle East. These
are (a) the beneficiaries of war dividends (the military-industrial complex and
associated businesses that benefit from war and military spending), and (b)
partisans of territorial expansion in Palestine, that is, militant Zionism, as
reflected, for example, in the policies of the Likud Party in Israel and those
of American Israel Public Affairs Committee (AIPAC) in the United States [12].
These two powerful groups view Iran as a threat to their
nefarious interests not because of its military power but because Iran exposes
these two interest groups for what they are: real sources of war and mischief
in the Middle East, driven by a thirst for more profits and more land.
It follows that efforts to end war and geopolitical
turbulence in the Middle East require removing or reducing the destructive
influences of these two extremely powerful interest groups in the shaping of
the policies of the Middle East. This is admittedly a suggestion that is not
easily realized. Some might even say it is altogether impractical. But there is
simply no other way to achieve peace and stability in the region. It requires
two major steps.
First, as the late General Smedley D. Butler pointed out
long ago, it requires �taking profits out of war and arms production� [13]. This
means greatly downsizing the military-industrial complex, closing down the
nearly 800 US military bases overseas, and nationalizing the war/defense
industry. In suggesting this drastic overhaul, I am not unmindful of the fact
that millions of jobs, hundreds of thousands of businesses, and thousands of
communities have become dependent on military spending. My suggestion is
therefore to reallocate a major portion of military to non-military public
spending so that the overall public spending would not diminish. This is, by
the way, a suggestion that is sometimes referred to as substituting �peace
dividends� for �war dividends.�
Second, ending war and political turbulence in the Middle
East also requires ending the suffering of the Palestinian people and the
occupation of their land. All that is needed to be done here is simply to carry
out the long-standing UN resolutions regarding the Palestinian-Israeli
relations. This, of course, requires curtailment of the Likud/AIPAC power, as
well as the influence of their supporters in the US congress and the media.
While this may appear remote and unlikely, it is bound to
happen. It is simply a matter of time. I only hope that more Jewish people will
wake up to the ominous trajectory of expansionist Zionism, and play a salutary
role in the unfolding of this inevitable outcome. The sooner they realize
and/or acknowledge (as many far-sighted and peace-loving Jews already have)
that militant Zionism is a con game, headed toward a dead end, the better.
No doubt, the leaders of militant Zionism are, by and large,
intelligent and politically savvy people. But they are also short-sighted, as
they seem oblivious to the fact that their project of Greater Israel remains,
ultimately, hostage to the political utility and profitability imperatives of
imperialist powers. They fail to realize or acknowledge that forceful conquest
and occupation of the Palestinian land cannot be continued or maintained for
ever; and that, as the late Albert Einstein put it, �Peace cannot be kept by force.
It can only be achieved by understanding.�
Notes
[1] Flynt Leverett and Hillary Mann Leverett, �Have
We Already Lost Iran,� The New York Times (May 24, 2009):
[2] Justin Raimondo, �War
With Iran: Has It Already Begun?� Antiwar.com (June 03, 2009):
[3] �Jundullah
claim responsibility for Iran blast,� Press TV (May 30, 2009):
[4] �Seymour Hersh:
US Training Jondollah and MEK for Bombing Preparation,� CASMII Press
Release (July 8, 2008):
[5] �Jundullah:
Jundullah admits MKO connection,� WorldAnalysis.net (June 02, 2009):
[6] Justin Raimondo, �War
With Iran: Has It Already Begun?� Antiwar.com (June 03, 2009):
[7] Jay Deshmukh, �Iran�s
Khamenei slams US as Obama reaches out,� AFP (June 4, 2009):
[8] James Cypher, �The Basic Economics of Rearming America,�
Monthly Review 33, no. 6 (1981): 20-21.
[9] Ibid.
[10] Philip Giraldi, �Setting
a Higher Standard for Making War,� Antiwar.com (May 26, 2009)
[11] Flynt Leverett and Hillary Mann Leverett, �Have
We Already Lost Iran,� The New York Times (May 24, 2009):
[12] For a detailed discussion of this issue please see
Chapter 6 of my book, The Political Economy of U.S. Militarism
(Palgrave-Macmillan 2007).
[143] Smedley D. Butler, War Is a Racket (Los
Angeles: Feral House, 1935 [2003]), 39.
Ismael Hossein-zadeh,
author of the recently published The
Political Economy of U.S. Militarism
(Palgrave-Macmillan 2007), teaches economics at Drake University, Des Moines,
Iowa.