Reject the Ruling Psychopathology
by
Michael S. Rozeff
Recently
by Michael S. Rozeff: When
Might War Between the U.S. and Iran Occur?
Tom
Ridge is
a Republican and a notable U.S. political figure.
Tom Ridge wants
the U.S. to overturn or subvert the Iranian regime from within.
See his op-ed
here. The International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) inspectors are
once again inspecting
Iran in a 3-day visit right now, but Ridge wants the U.S. to
act "unilaterally and decisively." He wants the U.S. openly to support
(and fund? and train? and make promises to?) anti-regime groups.
He wants the U.S. to declare that it's out for "regime change" in
Iran.
He means it
when he uses the word "unilateral", for he speaks of the "impotence"
of the U.N. resolutions and the West's sanctions.
Is subversion
an act of war? There is no book of international law that answers
this question. Some people say yes,
some say no.
It clearly depends on the nature of the subversive acts, which can
range from protests to assassinations and sabotage. But no matter
how it is classified, U.S. support of subversion and open declaration
of a goal of regime change is or would be hostile. It is
open interference and intervention into Iran's political processes
by the U.S. government. How would the U.S. react if Iran supported
groups inside America who wanted drastic regime change here?
And what does
regime change mean? Iran has had numerous elections, not all squeaky
clean, but then America's cities, states, and even national elections
have never been free from being stolen or paid for either. Iran
already has its form of democracy. It already has means of changing
its leaders, directions, and policies. So what does regime change
mean?
Regime change
must mean more than a change of leadership to Tom Ridge. If regime
change means changing the political process itself or Iran's form
of government, then he is calling for revolution. And revolution
is what he's calling for, as his reference to the Arab Spring suggests:
"In this era of the Arab Spring it is time to support regime change
in Iran, from within". And even if he means steps short of revolution,
though it's hard to imagine what they might be, he's still calling
for rank interference into another nation's political affairs. George
Washington and Thomas Jefferson would turn over in their graves
if they heard this.
The U.N. has
time and again declared itself against domestic interference of
this kind and other kinds in no uncertain terms, that is, in the
strongest and clearest of language. See
here, for example. The linked declaration argues that such interference
endangers peace and security:
"Conscious
of the fact that such policies endanger the political independence
of States, freedom of peoples and permanent sovereignty over their
natural resources, adversely affecting thereby the maintenance
of international peace and security..."
The U.N. is
an imperfect organization that does and declares many objectionable
things, but that does not mean it should be ignored when it comes
up with sensible and sound ideas, and non-interference in the domestic
politics of other nations is a sound idea.
Ridge claims
or thinks that supporting regime change sends a message to the mullahs.
Sure, it does -- a hostile message. But they already have received
this message ever since Mossadegh was overthrown and right down
to the present. They are not fools. Ridge's proposal is actually
another hostile act along the road to war. It is an act that forecloses
diplomacy, an act away from diplomacy. The message he is sending,
however, is not to the mullahs. It's to the U.S. leadership, which
he wants to support revolution in Iran openly. No doubt, it is already
acting covertly within Iran.
Ridge's op-ed
has been published at the very time that the UN inspectors are in
Iran and Iran has again promised openness. His op-ed is designed
and timed to blunt the news of that visit. Ridge's op-ed is an act
of warmongering, even though it never mentions war and proposes
regime change instead. This is clear by its content, its timing,
and by this statement: "Clearly, diplomatic engagement has failed
to halt Tehran’s nuclear drive. Sanctions have been insufficient."
Ridge has nominated
himself and the U.S. as the unilateral judge, jury, and executioner
of the current regime, disregarding the political processes within
Iran, disregarding the U.N. procedures to monitor and deal with
signatories to the Nuclear
Non-Proliferation Treaty, and disregarding the terms of the
Nuclear Non-Proliferation treaty (NPT) itself. The U.S. shall choose
the enforcement techniques and methods as it pleases, after arriving
at a judgment as it pleases, according to Ridge and other Iran warmongers.
He does this
because Tehran is not kowtowing to his demand that they halt what
he calls "their nuclear drive". Iran has committed no nuclear crime,
not even that of polluting the atmosphere with repeated nuclear
tests. I believe that it has made some effort to understand how
to build a nuclear bomb and conducted some experiments along that
path. I think it has perhaps experimented or perhaps investigated
how to cause an implosion that creates a critical mass. I don't
think that it has gone much beyond what any good physicists and
engineers could discover from open sources about building an atomic
bomb.
I think that
the nuclear fears over Iran are way overblown and, furthermore,
that the nuclear issue is not even the central factor in the conflict
between the U.S. and Iran. It accompanies that central factor but
is not itself the central factor. Even if Iran had no nuclear understanding
or was not developing nuclear power for making electricity, the
U.S. would still be on Iran's case. The central factor is that Iran
is making itself independent and wants to be an independent
power, out of the orbit and domination of the U.S. and also Russia.
The differences between the U.S. and Iran over Israel and Hezbollah
are symptomatic of that central factor. When the Israel lobby or
the oil lobby in the U.S. exert their influence and succeed in getting
U.S. policy-makers to act on their behalf, those factors wax in
importance. However, U.S. foreign policy toward Iran would still
be aimed at dominating Iran, even were those factors absent.
Iran's desire
for independence manifests in many ways, such as wanting nuclear
power for electricity, so that it can sell more oil on the world
market. It has an indigenous military industry and wants to build
it up. It has its own ideas about its neighbors. It has its own
ideas about using the dollar or not in exchange for oil.
Another example
is the Iran-Pakistan-India
pipeline. The U.S. pressured India into withdrawing its participation
in the Iran-Pakistan-India natural gas pipeline. Pakistan was pressured
too but refused. Iran has already completed its portion. Instead,
the U.S. supports an alternative liquified gas pipeline by an alternative
consortium from Tajikistan through Afghanistan. The latter is not
close to reality. It requires a political stability in Afghanistan
that does not exist.
Now this pipeline
is a peaceful and progressive development approved by democratic
governments and the U.S. stands in the way. The U.S. talk about
freedom and democracy is a smokescreen. It wants to control these
countries and control the business opportunities. The U.S. fears
political rivals. It fears strength in foreign quarters that it
does not control. The U.S. wants satellites in one way or another.
Its central reason for wanting to control progress, competition,
markets, and business rivalries is to control foreign strength and
independence. It wants to keep foreign nations weaker than itself.
The U.S. wants to keep Iran weak. This is the behavior of
an empire.
Tom Ridge is
advising the current emperor (Obama) what to do in order to weaken
Iran and control it. That is the purpose of his op-ed piece. Several
reasons that he mentions therein are absolutely peripheral and trivial.
One of them is mobs chanting "Death to America" in the funeral of
the assassinated nuclear scientist. What does he expect, loving
praise for that deed? Is he not calling for the death of the existing
Iranian regime, if not their heads? Doesn't he know enough not to
place much stock in the expression of such emotions surrounding
such a touchy event? Or is Ridge himself trying to exploit American
emotions?
Another reason
he gives is the case of a man sentenced to death by an Iranian court
for being a CIA
spy. (His appeal is pending.) Whether true or not, Ridge is
grasping at another emotional straw to use such an event as justification
for advocating a U.S.-backed revolutionary movement inside Iran.
Ridge lists
uranium
enrichment as a big concern, but that is allowable under the
non-proliferation treaty. That treaty has several passages pertinent
to this. One says "all Parties to the Treaty are entitled to participate
in the fullest possible exchange of scientific information for,
and to contribute alone or in co-operation with other States to,
the further development of the applications of atomic energy for
peaceful purposes..." Among other things that signatories have agreed
not to do is "not to manufacture or otherwise acquire nuclear weapons
or other nuclear explosive devices..." Iran hasn't acquired any
nuclear devices, and it hasn't been accused of doing so. It hasn't
manufactured any nuclear devices either.
Section 3 of
Article III of the NPT explicitly allows peaceful uses of nuclear
energy and production of nuclear material:
"The safeguards
required by this Article shall be implemented in a manner designed
to comply with Article IV of this Treaty, and to avoid hampering
the economic or technological development of the Parties or international
co-operation in the field of peaceful nuclear activities, including
the international exchange of nuclear material and equipment for
the processing, use or production of nuclear material for peaceful
purposes in accordance with the provisions of this Article and
the principle of safeguarding set forth in the Preamble of the
Treaty."
Iran has allowed
inspectors into Iran in the past. It continues to allow U.N. inspectors
into Iran. They are there at this moment. Iran has a right under
the treaty to develop nuclear technology for peaceful purposes.
It has not withdrawn from the treaty, which is possible under Article
X of that treaty with a three months notice and under extraordinary
circumstances that it regards as jeopardizing its national interests.
The pressures exerted by the West on Iran have not led it to withdraw
from the treaty, which is exactly what the U.S. would like to see
it do, as that would provide a pretext for open warfare.
Ridge wants
to go further, and further leads in only one direction: war. Ridge
essentially wants to goad Iran into war, or else goad it into looking
bad by suppressing internal dissidents supported by the U.S., thereby
providing yet another excuse for making war on Iran.
There is no
reason why the U.S. should be concerned with Iran as a matter of
American well-being or security. American well-being and security
are furthered by neutral, peaceful and fair relations with all nations.
American well-being is not furthered by expansionism over the globe
and foreign policies that require huge military expenditures. What
does this do but create near-perpetual wars? What does the empire
do but drain the productive capacity of Americans? What does it
do but lead to attacks on continental America? What does it do but
lead to suppression of liberty at home? What does it do but further
socialist and fascist policies domestically? What does it do but
strengthen the hand of the establishment's control over us? What
does it do but exacerbate our own already large problems?
The reason
that the U.S. is concerned over Iran and cruising for an all-out
fight is that the empire demands weakness among all those around
it that might conceivably challenge its dominance. It demands compliant
satellites wherever it can create them or force them into compliance.
Is this the historic role of Americans? Is this what America is
about? Is it about political domination of the world? Is it about
empire? Is it about suppressing progress and liberty in the aim
of keeping other nations weak? Is it about putting into practice
a psychopathology of power?
What does empire
mean at home? Is America about stagnation, high unemployment, a
constantly rising price level, high taxes, TSA inspections, food
stamps for millions, huge bailouts, and boundless rules and regulations?
Is it about straitjackets placed on industry after industry? Is
it about so-called "sacrifices" that cost Americans dearly with
no commensurate gains? Is it about worthless educations? Is it about
loss of industries? Is it about loss of competitiveness? It is about
turning into a fifth-rate nation?
Or is America
about peace, freedom, and progress? Is America about leaving other
peoples alone who are doing us no harm? Is it about opportunity?
Is it about getting ahead? Is it about creativity, invention, and
individual flourishing? Is it about renouncing tyranny, including
tyranny authored by Americans that is visited upon Americans here
at home or upon peoples overseas?
Is
not America about rights known and respected? And if this is so,
then it is time long overdue to stop violating rights in foreign
nations. It is time to leave politics in other lands to those who
live there. It is time to stop attempting to secure our own rights
at the expense of the rights of others. It is time to stop interfering
and intervening in other lands under the rhetorical smokescreens
of freedom, justice, security or democracy but really with the central
aim of control of foreign governments or reshaping foreign political
processes to the liking of the men and women of empire who own and
operate our foreign policies and who have adopted aims and methods
that deviate from normal aspirations, that are dysfunctional to
Americans at large, and that are dangerous to our well-being.
Grandiose,
vague, and utopian ideals placed into practice by means that contradict
them, such as violence, violating rights, and warfare have to be
viewed as manifestations of illogical, irrational and deranged minds.
In short, it is time to reject the rule of psychopaths in our very
own American establishment, whom too many Americans ordinarily regard
with an untoward and altogether excessive degree of respect and
acceptance. It is time to terminate the national psychopathic nightmare
that we are experiencing.
January
31, 2012
Michael
S. Rozeff [send him mail]
is a retired Professor of Finance living in East Amherst, New York.
He is the author of the free e-book Essays
on American Empire: Liberty vs. Domination and the free e-book
The U.S. Constitution
and Money: Corruption and Decline.
Copyright
© 2012 by LewRockwell.com. Permission to reprint in whole or in
part is gladly granted, provided full credit is given.
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