Roots of the Iranian 'Crisis'
by
Justin Raimondo
Recently by Justin Raimondo: Bibi’s
Crazy UN Speech
Why Target
Iran?
On the front
page of a prominent newspaper the news is grim: a Middle Eastern
country run by a ruthless dictatorial regime has been secretly developing
“weapons of mass destruction.” While in public they deny it, in
their underground labs their scientists are busy, cooking up a radioactive
horror that will soon be visited upon the world that is,
unless we act.
How do we
know this? An exile group of so-called “freedom-fighters” has made
this “intelligence” available to a reporter for a widely-read US
newspaper, which splashes this scoop all over its front pages.
I could be
talking about the year 2002 or 2012, with only difference
being the names of the target countries. We have been down this
road before
Israeli Prime
Minister Benjamin Netanyahu is now saying it is only a matter of
a
year or so before Iran is ready to join the nuclear club
of course, he said the same
thing last year, and the year before, and the year before that.
Adding to
our sense of deja-vu, we have an Iranian version of the Iraqi
National Congress exile group providing the same quality
of “intelligence”: the Mujahideen-e-Khalq
(MEK),
or Peoples’ Warriors, a weird Marxist-Islamic
cult which once served
Saddam Hussein and was given a base in Iraq to conduct terrorist
activities in Iran. When the southern Shi’ites rose against Saddam
in the 1990s, Saddam called in these mercenaries to slaughter
the ill-armed rebels. The War Party won a big victory the other
day when Hillary Clinton announced the MEK had been taken
off the official list of designated terrorist groups. They have
been a constant source
of phony
“evidence”
that Iran is secretly working on nuclear weapons
Hardly a day
goes by without some supposedly
sensational revelation or claim about Iran’s alleged “weapons of
mass destruction.” It seems like only yesterday, however, that we
were seeing exactly the same headlines, and the same articles, only
this time it is Iran instead of Iraq that stands accused. Back in
2002, it was a
series of pieces bylined by a New York Times reporter,
Judith
Miller whose name has become virtually synonymous with
deception. Ms. Miller was being fed her information by Chalabi’s
group, via her close connections to the administration, and
in particular to a group of political operatives deemed the
neoconservatives.
This was
is a small
but highly influential coterie of what used to be called cold war
liberals, whose views were shaped by migratory
ex-Trotskyites
with a bone to pick with Stalin. Not your run of the mill European-style
Social Democrats, mind you, but militant interventionists with a
vision of a world reshaped by American military power. Or, as one
neocon writing in a prominent foreign policy journal put it: the
goal of US foreign policy ought to be “benevolent
global hegemony” as opposed, one must assume, to the
malevolent global hegemony dreamed of by Communists, national
socialists, and other villains throughout history.
The fabled
journey of the neocons from far left to far right has been celebrated
in story and song, and there is no need to go into all the gory
details here: we’ve heard it all before in a PBS documentary,
“Arguing the World,” and
in numerous memoirs
by the participants. Yet this famous hegira didn’t take them anywhere:
it was a journey standing still. For they had simply transferred
their allegiance from the Soviet Union to the United States without
changing the basic underlying
assumptions of their radical universalism: instead of a world
communist revolution as advocated by Leon Trotsky and his followers,
these disillusioned Marxists now dreamed of a “global
democratic revolution,” as one of George W. Bush’s speechwriters
put
it in a presidential oration celebrating the anniversary of
the National Endowment for Democracy.
Having walked
out of the Democratic party, disgusted with the alleged “pacifism”
of George McGovern, these Scoop Jackson Democrats wound up in the
Republican party just as the Reagan Revolution, so-called, was picking
up steam. When Reagan went to Washington, the neocons followed in
his wake, and wound up ensconced
in the National
Endowment for Democracy, which was founded with them in mind.
There Reagan’s advisers could keep an eye on them, while they stayed
largely out of sight of the general public.
From a small
coterie of social democratic intellectuals, the neocons soon branched
out and established a Washington network that tied them into
the right-wing cold war coalition of social
conservatives, free
market types, and professional
anti-communists. The neocons fit neatly into the latter category,
but were never quite comfortable with the other members of the coalition.
Some of them remained socialists, or at least social democrats of
one sort or another, and as far as capitalism was concerned, they
could only give it two
cheers, at the most as Irving Kristol put it in the title
of one of his books. When it came to domestic issues, the neocons
were all over the map, from Sidney
Hook the quintessential New York intellectual
who remained a socialist until his dying day, to Irving
Kristol, a former Trotksyist who wound up founding a veritable
dynasty based on the ideological assumptions to be found in the
Republican party platform.
What unified
them, and defined them as a cohesive group, was a fanatical hatred
of Stalinism and their dedication to the idea of spreading democracy
at gunpoint, if necessary throughout the world. During
the cold war, the CIA made
use of them as the US sought to counter Soviet influence on
the international left. Having displaced
the older generation of conservatives, who were derided as “isolationists,”
these New Conservatives or neoconservatives, as they came
to be known came to dominate the American right-wing and
soon seized
control
of the philanthropic foundations that poured money into right-wing
causes.
As the cold
war ended, however, they saw their influence waning. When Reagan
met with Gorbachev and signed a treaty limiting long-range missiles
based in Europe, they accused
the man who had coined the phrase “evil empire” with selling out
to the commies and leaving the US defenseless against the Kremlin.
They failed to understand what was happening when the Soviet colossus
began to crack because they never “got it” that communism’s biggest
enemies were its own internal
contradictions.
With the fall
of Communism, and the dissolution of the Warsaw Pact, the professional
anti-communists were out
of work. Suddenly there was a big hole in their worldview: the
rationalization for our interventionist foreign policy had disappeared
almost overnight. Worse, from their point of view, the Republicans
were drifting back to their “isolationist” roots. When, during the
Clinton administration, the Republicans in Congress threatened
to pull the funding from our military adventure in Kosovo, Bill
Kristol, editor of the Weekly Standard, threatened
to walk out of the Republican party.
Ah, but all
was not lost. When George
W. Bush went to Washington, a gaggle of neocons followed him.
Showing up for work that fateful winter were all the familiar faces
who had worked for Sen.
Scoop Jackson (D-Boeing), organized the Committee on the Present
Danger (and other neocon front groups), and served as the de facto
command center of the War Party in previous administrations: Paul
Wolfowitz, Richard
Perle, Eliot
Cohen, Elliott
Abrams, Douglas
Feith and, sitting in the peanut gallery, the neocon
publicists like Bill
Kristol, son of Irving, editor of the Weekly Standard:
Max Boot,
former CIA analyst, the gang over at Commentary
magazine, the staff of the American
Enterprise Institute the most prominent and certainly
the wealthiest conservative think tank and various and sundry
Republican politicians, as well as ostensible Democrats like Sen.
Joe Lieberman. The policy
office of the
Pentagon and the National
Security Council were packed
with neocons,
and they had their
agenda all
set to go when George W. Bush entered the Oval Office.
They went
to Washington with a plan: invade
and subjugate Iraq. They had found a new enemy to take the place
of the Kremlin, and it wasn’t just the Iraq dictator although
Saddam was their initial
target but the entire Muslim world, which they determined
had to be transformed. The “swamp,” they averred, had to be “drained.”
In their view, the entire Arab world had been deformed and kept
back from achieving “modernity” due to certain characteristics of
what they
called the “Arab mind” deformations that could be traced
back to the all-pervasive influence of Islam on the development
of Arab civilization.
The stage
was set for the disaster that was about to unfold….
Its
All About Israel
It was and
is a matter of high principle for the neoconservatives that the
US unconditionally support Israel in its struggle against the Arab
world. Disputing the neocons’ claim to the mantle of Wilsonianism,
Michael Lind
described this odd nexus of radical universalism and ethno-nationalism
as “Trotsky’s theory of the permanent revolution mingled
with the far-right Likud strain of Zionism,” adding: “Genuine American
Wilsonians believe in self-determination for people such as the
Palestinians.”
Saddam Hussein,
you’ll recall, had been offering bounties for suicide bombers, at
least according to the
propaganda we heard, and alongside the contention
that he was also developing nuclear weapons this was the
pitch the neocons,
and the
Israel lobby, gave in public to justify the invasion. Yet there
was another layer of rationalization which went largely undetected
in America, and the argument was contained in a paper prepared for
then Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, in 1996, under the
auspices of the Israeli Institute for Advanced Strategic and Political
Studies, which had organized a “Study Group on a New Israeli
Strategy Toward 2000.” The paper was shaped by a series of
seminars in which several figures who would figure prominently in
the administration of George W. Bush participated, including Richard
Perle, Douglas
Feith, David
Wurmser, and Meyrav Wurmser. Entitled “A
Clean Break: A New Strategy for Securing the Realm,” the proposal
proffered by these future American policymakers urged Netanyahu
to undertake a long-term project to break Israel out of its geographic
and demographic boundaries and engage in a campaign of “regime change”
in the Middle East. To the incoming Prime Minister, who had upended
the long rule of the Israeli Labor Party, they gave the following
advice: ditch the peace process, and make a “clean break” with the
policy of appeasing both the Palestinians and the
United States. Stand up to Uncle Sam, insist on mutuality, build
up support for Israeli objectives in the US Congress, and go on
the offensive against the enemies of the Jewish state:
“Israel
can shape its strategic environment, in cooperation with Turkey
and Jordan, by weakening, containing, and even rolling back Syria.
This effort can focus on removing Saddam Hussein from power in Iraq
an important Israeli strategic objective in its own right
as a means of foiling Syria’s regional ambitions.”
The entire
regime change operation we are seeing unfold in the Middle East
is a veritable laundry list of neoconservative goals as outlined
in the “Clean Break” document, as well as in the agenda of the
Project for a New American Century (PNAC), Bill Kristol’s vehicle
for injecting a strong dose of interventionism into the incoming
Bush administration. Aside from calling for regime change in practically
every Middle Eastern state all this prior to the 9/11 terrorist
attacks PNAC’s proposal for tripling the military budget
was prefaced by a yearning for “a new Pearl Harbor,” which would
wake the American people up to the imperative of American military
supremacy at any cost.
The neocons
got
their Pearl Harbor on September 11, 2001, and they were more
than ready to take full
advantage of the opportunity to implement their agenda of permanent
war. While the administration made a half-hearted
attempt to capture Osama bin Laden they failed to corner him in
Afghanistan, and the top leadership slipped through the American
dragnet with the help
of its Taliban allies. This, however, didn’t really concern the
neocons all that much: Paul Wolfowitz and others were arguing
inside the administration that the real enemy was in Baghdad. After
the preliminaries in Afghanistan, they turned their sights on the
real object of their war-lust: Iraq.
The “Clean
Break” scenario envisioned the overthrow of Iraq’s Ba’athist regime
as a prerequisite for Israel’s success, and the
Israel lobby, in concert with the
neoconservatives, played a key role in dragging us into that
disastrous war of aggression. Yet that was just the beginning of
the road they wanted to take us on, and we are halfway down it already.
As Ariel Sharon told a delegation of American congressmen in 2003,
after Iraq must come Iran,
Libya, and Syria:
“These are
irresponsible states, which must be disarmed of weapons mass destruction,
and a successful American move in Iraq as a model will make that
easier to achieve," said the Prime Minister to his guests,
rather like a commander issuing orders to his foot-soldiers. While
noting that Israel was not itself at war with Iraq, he went on to
say that “the American action is of vital importance.”
Of course
it was, but as far as the Israelis and their American amen corner
were concerned, it was to be just the beginning.
The Israelization
of American foreign policy under George W. Bush was a policy consciously
promoted by the neoconservatives from their well-situated perch
at the heights of the national security apparatus. The progenitors
of the “Clean Break” scenario saw the Israeli state facing a terminal
crisis: the Jewish state, in their view, was suffering from an “exhaustion”
that could lead to extinction. The idea was to break with the idea
of “containment” and go for a policy of preemption.
As the “Clean Break” document put it:
“Notable
Arab intellectuals have written extensively on their perception
of Israel’s floundering and loss of national identity. This
perception has invited attack, blocked Israel from achieving true
peace, and offered hope for those who would destroy Israel. The
previous strategy, therefore, was leading the Middle East toward
another Arab-Israeli war. Israel’s new agenda can signal a
clean break by abandoning a policy which assumed exhaustion and
allowed strategic retreat by reestablishing the principle of preemption,
rather than retaliation alone and by ceasing to absorb blows to
the nation without response.”
This doctrine
of preemption came to be known as the Bush
Doctrine, but it really ought to be called the Sharon-Bush Doctrine,
given its true origins. When George W. Bush declared that the United
States has the “right,” and even the
obligation, to attack any nation on earth, on the grounds that
the target poses a potential threat to US interests, he was merely
echoing what had by that time already become official Israeli policy.
This policy was given free rein in a whole series of wars, aside
from the permanent state of war prevailing
in the occupied territories of Palestine: two invasions
of Lebanon,
and, today, terrorist
attacks inside Iran carried out by Israeli intelligence agencies
in cooperation with their proxies, such as the Mujahideen
Khalq. The ultimate example of preemption would be an attack
on Iran and here we see a real conflict developing between
the Obama administration and Netanyahu’s government.
The Israeli
position on Iran is an application of the Bush Doctrine taken to
its logical extreme. While the American intelligence community is
clear that the Iranians abandoned their embryonic nuclear weapons
program in 2003, and all subsequent “evidence” of a viable Iranian
nuke in the making has turned out to be either forgeries
or pre-2003 materials, Netanyahu gets around this by upping the
ante. The danger, he says, is that the Iranians will achieve the
capacity
to put together a nuclear weapon on very short notice. The Romney
campaign, taking its cues from Tel Aviv, has echoed this escalation
of Israeli demands, with the formulation that they don’t want Tehran
“one
turn of the screwdriver away” from acquiring nuclear weapons.
This is a
technical impossibility, a crude bit of war propaganda that has
no basis in reality: but then again, that’s what war propaganda
usually is blind assertions meant to evoke an emotional response
rather than one based on reason, or, in this case, on science. As
the Wilson
Center study on the costs and benefits of an attack on Iran
put it, it would take at least two years or more for Iran to develop
a deliverable nuclear warhead and the effort would be detected
long before that.
In short,
the ticking time bomb scenario described by Netanyahu and his American
co-thinkers is pure nonsense: in no sense could the Iranians ever
be “one turn of the screwdriver away” from nuking Israel. Even given
the doctrine of preemption, in light of these facts the justification
for war simply does not exist. Netanyahu and his defense minister
claim Israel faces an “existential”
crisis, nothing less than the prospect of a second
Holocaust. Yet there are no facts to back up this assertion:
it is simply an emotional appeal. Something else is at work here
other than fear of a genuine threat, and it is quite simply politics
that is, the internal politics of Israel, and also of the
United States.
Objectively,
there is no threat to Israel, or to the West, emanating from Iran:
armed with nuclear
weapons, and so far advanced
militarily over its neighbors that the distance between them can
only be measured in light years, Israel has no real reason to fear
an attack that is not forthcoming in any event. The whole thing
is manufactured by politicians who have but one goal in mind: to
stay in power.
Meir Dagan,
former head of the Mossad, says
the idea of a preemptive attack on Iran is “the stupidest idea I’ve
ever heard,” and inside Israel support for Netanyahu’s gambit is
far
from solid. Shimon
Peres, one of the last of the old-style (i.e. rational) Israeli
leaders, recently went on television to expressly dissent from Netanyahu’s
apocalyptic rhetoric and to give support to President Obama as a
reliable ally.
What’s interesting
is that the rhetoric coming from Netanyahu and his defense minister,
Ehud Barak, has a distinctly anti-American strain. As Barak put
it, in arguing for a unilateral Israeli strike on Iran:
“Ronald
Reagan did not want to see a nuclear Pakistan, but Pakistan did
go nuclear. Bill Clinton did not want to see a nuclear North Korea,
but North Korea went nuclear.”
“If
Israel forgoes the chance to act and it becomes clear that it no
longer has the power to act, the likelihood of an American action
will decrease… We cannot wait to discover one morning that
we relied on the Americans but were fooled because the Americans
didn’t act in the end…. Israel will do what it has to do.”
Barak’s message
is all too clear: the Americans are mercurial, and weak-willed
they can’t be counted on, and besides we have to do what we have
to do. This is the spirit and letter of the “Clean Break” document,
which decried US “intervention” in Israel’s internal affairs, and
it is the language of the extreme nationalists, such as Avigdor
Lieberman, the foreign minister, who once advocated bombing
the Aswan dam and is a former bouncer in a bar. His extremist right-wing
party advocates a “Greater Israel,” and is supported by the “settler”
movement violent fanatics who want to create a Greater Israel
based on their interpretation of the Bible.
In the context
of growing extremism infecting the Israeli body politic, a politician
like Netanyahu is considered a centrist. To his right are even more
anti-American ultra-nationalists, and this movement is growing.
In order to accommodate it, and contain it within the confines of
his own party, Netanyahu has had to move in an even more extreme
direction, even going so far as to threaten
that Israel will strike Iran on its own, without US support.
This, of course,
is a policy of de facto blackmail, since any war between Israel
and Iran will almost
inevitably see the Americans dragged in. This has been the whole
Israeli strategy, so far except that it hasn’t worked. The
President has steadfastly
refused to give in, at least up until this point. He has even
gone so far as to inform
the Iranians in advance that any such attack by Israeli forces
will not have the sanction or support of the US and, in such
an event, to please refrain from attacking American targets in Iraq
and the Persian Gulf.
In view of
the lack of American support for war, both in Washington and among
the American electorate, the persistence of the debate within Israel
over whether they should attack all on their own is disturbing.
Such a scenario could only be disastrous for the region, and for
Israel in particular, as Gen.
Dempsey, head of the US joint chiefs of staff, has recently
made plain. The Israeli defense and intelligence establishment has
been saying the
same thing, and still Netanyahu and Barak continue
to talk about it as if it were a real option.
While Netanyahu
is bound to be deterred by the cold reception this idea has received
in Washington, in this context we have to ask ourselves a sobering
question: will Avigdor
Lieberman’s finger some day be on Israel’s nuclear trigger?
This is a question the Iranians, and others in the region, have
no doubt asked themselves. That it is even a possibility is profoundly
unsettling and this, not the prospect of a nuclear-armed
Iran, is the source of the real danger looming over the Middle East.
Israel’s nuclear
monopoly in the region is the real issue at hand, and it is one
the Israelis have not had to face. It is known the Israelis possess
at
least two-hundred warheads. Their policy is one of “nuclear
ambiguity,” neither confirming nor denying the existence of their
deadly arsenal. Unlike Iran, they have refused
to sign the Nuclear Nonproliferation Treaty (NPT), and inspections
of their nuclear facilities are therefore out of the question.
Iran, on the
other hand, regularly submits to a tight
schedule of inspections from the International Atomic Energy
Agency (IAEA), which would soon discover any weaponization procedures
in progress. Israel’s contemptuous attitude toward the international
community is given a free pass by the US and its allies, while the
Iranians are subjected to crippling sanctions and an international
campaign of vilification on the mere suspicion that they might one
day have the capacity to develop nuclear weapons. To call this a
double standard is to understate the case.
The destabilizing
effects of Israel’s nuclear monopoly are a major cause of regional
tensions and the entire basis for assuming Iran has nuclear
ambitions above and beyond its stated intention of harnessing nuclear
energy for peaceful purposes. One of the arguments against containing
Iran, as opposed to taking the military option, is that the acquisition
of a nuclear arsenal by Tehran will spark a dangerous
arms race throughout the region. Yet this is disproved by the
existence of Israel’s own arsenal, which has sparked no such race
even though the Jewish state’s Muslim neighbors have ample
reason to believe the Israelis could conceivably launch a first
strike on them. This, after all, is the essence of the doctrine
of preemption, which the Israelis have embraced.
While there
is zero evidence the Iranians have restarted their nuclear weapons
program, could one blame them if they did? How else could they possibly
hope to deter an Israeli first strike? In a 2008 op-ed piece in
the New York Times, the noted Israeli historian Benny Morris
wrote:
“Iran’s
leaders would do well to rethink their gamble and suspend their
nuclear program. Bar this, the best they could hope for is that
Israel’s conventional air assault will destroy their nuclear
facilities. To be sure, this would mean thousands of Iranian casualties
and international humiliation. But the alternative is an Iran turned
into a nuclear wasteland.”
An Israeli
nuclear strike at Iran is not inconceivable: indeed, it is all too
conceivable. So who are the real aggressors in the Middle East?
Read
the rest of the article
October
13, 2012
Justin
Raimondo [send him mail]
is editorial director of Antiwar.com
and is the author of An
Enemy of the State: The Life of Murray N. Rothbard and Reclaiming
the American Right: The Lost Legacy of the Conservative Movement.
Copyright
© 2012 Antiwar.com
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