June 18, 2019
MY CORNER by Boyd Cathey
IRAN – More Never Ending War for Unobtainable Peace?
Friends,
I am not certain what to think of the saber-rattling by Secretary
of State Mike Pompeo—of the long and incessant jeremiads he and National
Security Advisor John Bolton have engaged in over Iran and that somehow if we
don’t do “something,” well, we face Armageddon and the end of civilization as
we know it.
After all Pompeo and especially Bolton have never seen a
Middle Eastern (or African) conflict that they have not wanted the United
States to engage in (and American boys to die in). Whether Iraq, Afghanistan,
Syria, Yemen, Libya—the list goes on—Bolton reminds me of one of those middle
school bullies who cannot rest until he has pummeled or at least humiliated every
other boy who potentially might challenge his self-asserted physical
superiority.
Of course, Bolton and company do have an agenda, and that
is the vaunted Neoconservative ideological fixation that somehow we Americans
are able to and should impose American-style “democracy” and dependency on the
assorted and warring clans and Islamic sects which dominate much of that
region.
It is a policy that has, let us be frank, failed miserably
and horribly over the past three decades. The Brits learned the hard lesson
after World War I, and then again, after misadventures in Palestine and Egypt
in the 1940s and 1950s. Wisely, they exited stage right.
As for Iran and that purported evidence that the Iranians
(the Revolutionary Guard?) somehow attacked non-American oil tankers in the Gulf
of Oman, all we have to do is recall, and recall vividly, the image of George W.
Bush’s Secretary of State, Colin Powell, solemnly addressing the United Nations in 2003 with all the purported “proof” of Iraqi weapons of mass destruction he carefully illustrated to a duly impressed assembly.
It was, as we later came to discover, all fake, false,
manufactured. And probably by some of the
same folks who now have made it into the Trump administration, despite being
strenuously opposed to him before his
election…and despite a frankly disastrous record of “nation-building” and “imposing
democracy” around the world.
You would think that Bolton and his Neocon confreres would
learn…but, no, their ideological and globalist blinders are too pervasive, too
strong…and their commitment to never ending war for unobtainable peace will go
on, even if should take the life of every American soldier to do it, the
bankruptcy of the American nation, and, possibly, the re-election defeat of
President Donald Trump whose agenda was precisely the opposite in 2016.
That, of course, raises a question I’ve speculated on
previously: why has the president with his “America First” agenda managed to
surround himself with such characters who not only do not support his views,
but actively undercut them? Here is what I wrote back in May
in a long article on this subject published by The Unz Review:
Certainly, it
has much to do with the loudest voices and most visible talent pool inside the
Washington DC Beltway and that many of those globalists, who were former Never
Trumpers, strategically attached themselves to Donald Trump after he was
victorious, hoping—in many cases successfully—to shape his foreign policy along
their internationalist lines. And, also, the fact that during the critical days
after the 2016 election many of the Establishment Neocons were able to bend
Trump’s ear first, and that a major gap, a major lacuna, in the president’s
knowledge was his lack of familiarity with foreign policy. As president, Donald
Trump hoped to unify the Republican Party, and, thus, his desire was to bring
in various factions, including those who had opposed him (but now offered
“support”)…not realizing that such additions could—and would—undermine his
announced America First agenda. Lastly, the support of major pro-Israeli
pressure groups and personalities, and their bank accounts, certainly was not
to be ignored.
And I expressed the hope that for the sake of
the Trump presidency and genuine American interests Bolton, Pompeo, Elliott
Abrams, and others of their ilk be removed from the administration. Or, to
quote what King Henry II of England supposedly said
(according to historian Simon Schama) about St. Thomas a Becket (year 1170): "What miserable
drones and traitors have I nourished and brought up in my household, who let
their lord be treated with such shameful contempt by a low-born cleric?”
(Sometimes rendered as: “Will no one rid me
of this turbulent priest?”)
I pass on, then, two
articles of interest. The first is a column by Patrick Buchanan who, as usual,
encapsulates the issues concisely and accessibly—and reasonably. Pat’s words should serve as a cautionary
warning.
Secondly, I offer a
much more developed (and referenced) essay by national security experts Robert
Gaines and Scott Horton—Horton, if I recall correctly, has appeared on the
Tucker Carlson Tonight program. This article appeared at The National Interest site and is well worth pondering and SHOULD
be read and digested by every empty-brain Congressman in Washington.
Here is hoping—and praying—that
Donald Trump will, once again, rein in his administration “experts” and then send
them packing!
War With Iran Would Become 'Trump's
War'
By Patrick J. Buchanan Tuesday - June 18, 2019
"Who wants a U.S. war with Iran? Primarily the same people who goaded us into wars in Iraq, Syria, Libya and Yemen, and who oppose every effort of Trump’s to extricate us from those wars…"
President Donald Trump cannot want war with Iran.
Such a war, no matter how long, would be fought in and around the Persian Gulf, through which a third of the world's seaborne oil travels. It could trigger a worldwide recession and imperil Trump's reelection. It would widen the "forever war," which Trump said he would end, to a nation of 80 million people, three times as large as Iraq. It would become the defining issue of his presidency, as the Iraq War became the defining issue of George W. Bush's presidency.
And if war comes now, it would be known as "Trump's War."
For it was Trump who pulled us out of the Iran nuclear deal, though, according to U.N. inspectors and the other signatories — Britain, France, Germany, Russia, China — Tehran was complying with its terms. Trump's repudiation of the treaty was followed by his re-imposition of sanctions and a policy of maximum pressure. This was followed by the designation of Iran's Revolutionary Guard as a "terrorist" organization.
Then came the threats of U.S. secondary sanctions on nations, some of them friends and allies that continued to buy oil from Iran.
U.S. policy has been to squeeze Iran's economy until the regime buckles to Secretary of State Mike Pompeo's 12 demands, including an end to Tehran's support of its allies in Lebanon, Syria, Iraq and Yemen.
Sunday, Pompeo said Iran was behind the attacks on the tankers in the Gulf of Oman and that Tehran instigated an attack that injured four U.S. soldiers in Kabul though the Taliban claimed responsibility.
The war hawks are back.
"This unprovoked attack on commercial
shipping warrants retaliatory military strikes," said Senator Tom Cotton
on Sunday.
But as Trump does not want war with Iran, Iran does not want war with us. Tehran has denied any role in the tanker attacks, helped put out the fire on one tanker, and accused its enemies of "false flag" attacks to instigate a war.
If the Revolutionary Guard, which answers to the ayatollah, did attach explosives to the hull of the tankers, it was most likely to send a direct message: If our exports are halted by U.S. sanctions, the oil exports of the Saudis and Gulf Arabs can be made to experience similar problems.
Yet if the president and the ayatollah do not want war, who does?
Not the Germans or Japanese, both of whom are asking for more proof that Iran instigated the tanker attacks. Japan's prime minster was meeting with the ayatollah when the attacks occurred, and one of the tankers was a Japanese vessel.
Writing in The Wall Street Journal Monday were Ray Takeyh and Reuel Marc Gerecht, a senior fellow at the Foundation for the Defense of Democracies, a neocon nest funded by Paul Singer and Sheldon Adelson. In a piece titled, "America Can Face Down a Fragile Iran," the pair make the case that Trump should squeeze the Iranian regime relentlessly and not fear a military clash, and a war with Iran would be a cakewalk.
"Iran is in no shape for a prolonged confrontation with the U.S. The regime is in a politically precarious position. The sullen Iranian middle class has given up on the possibility of reform or prosperity. The lower classes, once tethered to the regime by the expansive welfare state, have also grown disloyal. The intelligentsia no longer believes that faith and freedom can be harmonized. And the youth have become the regime's most unrelenting critics.
"Iran's fragile theocracy can't absorb a massive external shock. That's why Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei has, for the most part, adhered to the JCPOA (the nuclear pact) and why he is likely angling for negotiation over confrontation with the Great Satan."
This depiction of Iran's political crisis and economic decline invites a question: If the Tehran regime is so fragile and the Iranian people are so alienated, why not avoid a war and wait for the regime's collapse?
Trump seems to have several options:
—Negotiate with the Tehran regime for some tolerable detente.
—Refuse to negotiate and await the regime's collapse, in which case the president must be prepared for Iranian actions that raise the cost of choking that nation to death.
—Strike militarily, as Cotton urges, and accept the war that follows, if Iran chooses to fight rather than be humiliated and capitulate to Pompeo's demands.
One recalls: Saddam Hussein accepted war with the United States in 1991 rather than yield to Bush I's demand he get his army out of Kuwait.
Who wants a U.S. war with Iran? Primarily the same people who goaded us into wars in Iraq, Syria, Libya and Yemen, and who oppose every effort of Trump's to extricate us from those wars.
Should they succeed in Iran, it is hard to see how we will ever be able to extricate our country from this blood-soaked region that holds no vital strategic interest save oil, and America, thanks to fracking, has become independent of that.
But as Trump does not want war with Iran, Iran does not want war with us. Tehran has denied any role in the tanker attacks, helped put out the fire on one tanker, and accused its enemies of "false flag" attacks to instigate a war.
If the Revolutionary Guard, which answers to the ayatollah, did attach explosives to the hull of the tankers, it was most likely to send a direct message: If our exports are halted by U.S. sanctions, the oil exports of the Saudis and Gulf Arabs can be made to experience similar problems.
Yet if the president and the ayatollah do not want war, who does?
Not the Germans or Japanese, both of whom are asking for more proof that Iran instigated the tanker attacks. Japan's prime minster was meeting with the ayatollah when the attacks occurred, and one of the tankers was a Japanese vessel.
Writing in The Wall Street Journal Monday were Ray Takeyh and Reuel Marc Gerecht, a senior fellow at the Foundation for the Defense of Democracies, a neocon nest funded by Paul Singer and Sheldon Adelson. In a piece titled, "America Can Face Down a Fragile Iran," the pair make the case that Trump should squeeze the Iranian regime relentlessly and not fear a military clash, and a war with Iran would be a cakewalk.
"Iran is in no shape for a prolonged confrontation with the U.S. The regime is in a politically precarious position. The sullen Iranian middle class has given up on the possibility of reform or prosperity. The lower classes, once tethered to the regime by the expansive welfare state, have also grown disloyal. The intelligentsia no longer believes that faith and freedom can be harmonized. And the youth have become the regime's most unrelenting critics.
"Iran's fragile theocracy can't absorb a massive external shock. That's why Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei has, for the most part, adhered to the JCPOA (the nuclear pact) and why he is likely angling for negotiation over confrontation with the Great Satan."
This depiction of Iran's political crisis and economic decline invites a question: If the Tehran regime is so fragile and the Iranian people are so alienated, why not avoid a war and wait for the regime's collapse?
Trump seems to have several options:
—Negotiate with the Tehran regime for some tolerable detente.
—Refuse to negotiate and await the regime's collapse, in which case the president must be prepared for Iranian actions that raise the cost of choking that nation to death.
—Strike militarily, as Cotton urges, and accept the war that follows, if Iran chooses to fight rather than be humiliated and capitulate to Pompeo's demands.
One recalls: Saddam Hussein accepted war with the United States in 1991 rather than yield to Bush I's demand he get his army out of Kuwait.
Who wants a U.S. war with Iran? Primarily the same people who goaded us into wars in Iraq, Syria, Libya and Yemen, and who oppose every effort of Trump's to extricate us from those wars.
Should they succeed in Iran, it is hard to see how we will ever be able to extricate our country from this blood-soaked region that holds no vital strategic interest save oil, and America, thanks to fracking, has become independent of that.
*****
Attacking Iran Would Unleash Chaos on
the Middle East
There
is little doubt that Osama bin Laden would have loved to see the United States
attack and overthrow another of Al Qaeda's enemies, this time the Shia mullahs of
Iran.
Undeterred by decades of carnage and the
disastrous outcomes of prior conflicts, ideologues within
the Trump administration are clamoring for military action against Iran. The
exact basis for this escalation varies. Common among the allegations are
concerns over Iran’s civilian nuclear program, in spite of Iranian compliance with
the Non-Proliferation Treaty, Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (the Iran
nuclear deal) and their Safeguards Agreement with the IAEA. Other
pro-intervention voices decry Iran’s
alleged sponsorship of terror organizations or cite a general concern for U.S.
interests in the region as a pretext for action. This view of the Iranian
regime is overly narrow and ahistorical. Iran is a conservative state in a
region otherwise awash in radicalism. Any military action undertaken by the
United States or its allies against the regime in Tehran will represent a grave
error.
Sponsorship of terror organizations or
extremist groups is a hallmark of nearly all Middle Eastern states. Saudi Arabia, Qatar and Kuwait have
both lent financial and material support to Sunni extremist groups involved in
the Syrian Civil war. Yet they remain in good standing as U.S. allies. Even Israel has
aided rebels groups in Syria near its border, though Jerusalem denies that
it is supporting extremists. Iran is not beyond reproach, for it has maintained
relationships with Hezbollah and Hamas. However, these groups, while on the State
Department’s terrorist list, do not threaten the United States.
The claim that
the Iranian regime harbors or supports Al Qaeda is patently absurd and easily
disproven.
Prior to the start of the Global War on
Terror, Iran supported the
foremost adversary of Al Qaeda in Afghanistan, the confederation of warlords
known as the Northern Alliance. Following the attacks of September 11, 2001,
the Iranian government handed over photocopies of three hundred passports
associated with suspected Al Qaeda members to the United Nations. Of these
three hundred, many would be forcibly deported back to Saudi Arabia and other
Arab countries. In an additional gesture of good will, the Iranian regime offered to provide search
and rescue support, humanitarian relief and targeting assistance in the fight
against the Taliban and Al Qaeda to then-Deputy Secretary of State for Near
East Affairs Ryan Crocker. America was initially receptive, accepting Iranian
assistance in the Bonn Conference that oversaw the creation of the post-Taliban
Afghan government. Special Envoy James Dobbins would later state that
the Iranians were “comprehensively helpful” in the post 9/11 period.
Despite being rebuffed by George W. Bush’s
“Axis of Evil” speech, the
Iranians nevertheless doubled down on their commitment to positive bilateral
relations with the United States. In a memorandum personally endorsed by
Ayatollah Khamenei and delivered with the aid of Swiss Diplomat Tim Guldimann,
the Iranian government offered to assist the United States in
targeting Al Qaeda, submit to full transparency in its nuclear energy program,
cease support for Palestinian groups, pressure Hezbollah into transitioning
into a purely political organization, and recognize the two state concept for
Israel-Palestine put forth in the Arab League Beirut Summit.
Through false attribution of an Al Qaeda
attack in Riyadh to Tehran, Dick Cheney and Donald Rumsfeld were able to
dissuade President Bush from additional talks with Iran. Then-Undersecretary of
State for Arms Control John Bolton successfully lobbied for
the removal of the Swiss intermediary Guldimann, further reducing the hope for
future talks. In spite of these setbacks, Iran maintained its opposition to Al
Qaeda.
From the cache of documents removed from
the Abbottabad residence of al Qaeda’s slain leader, Osama bin Laden, it is
known through translated correspondence that
many members of the terror group who attempted to flee into Iran after the
United States invaded Afghanistan were arrested by Iranian military and
intelligence services. By April of 2003, Iranian forces had captured a
number of higher profile Al Qaeda members like the architects of
the 1998 Kenya and Tanzania embassy bombings, Saif Al-Adl and Abdullah Ahmed
Abdullah, along with a former top lieutenant of Abu Musab Al-Zarqawi, Khalid
Mustafa Al-Aruri. Those detained in Iran also included two sons, a daughter,
and a wife of Osama bin Laden. Though an exact inventory of the captured is
inaccessible, it is known that with the exception of two escapees, Enan and the
late Sa’d bin Laden, many al Qaeda members remained in custody at least until
2010, when a few were exchanged for a kidnapped Iranian diplomat in
Pakistan. Had the United States agreed to continue cooperating with Iran for
counter-terrorism purposes, it could have traded captured members of the
anti-Iranian-regime Mujahideen-e Khalqh (MEK) from the battlefield in Iraq for
an Al Qaeda lieutenant like Said Al-Adel or heir apparent Hamza bin Laden, rather
than losing them back to the battlefield.
Figures such as former CIA director and
current Secretary of State Mike Pompeo, and
organizations like the Foundation for the Defense of Democracies (FDD),
still insist that an operational relationship exists between Iran and Al Qaeda.
This shouldn’t come as a surprise, as claims like these are a staple in
pre-war propaganda campaigns. In reality, as the detailed analysis of
the records from Osama bin Laden’s Abbottabad compound by West Point’s
Combating Terrorism Center (CTC) shows, relations between al Qaeda and Iran
have been consistently antagonistic. The presence of Al Qaeda in Iran is only
represented by prisoners of
the regime. With Al Qaeda active in contiguous states, captive Al Qaeda members
represent negotiating leverage and a deterrent against future attacks.
Attacks by
Al Qaeda affiliates and splinter groups inside
the country, such as a massive attack in February on members of the Islamic
Revolutionary Guard Corps, have further undercut accusations that Iran is
acting as a haven for extremist groups. To counter these groups, Iran has
deployed its forces to the battlefields of Syria and Iraq, making considerable sacrifices
in combating the Islamic State, and these contributions should
be regarded as a critical factor in the defeat of the Bin Ladenite factions and
splinter groups in both nations.
An American military campaign against Iran
would only succeed at great cost. The Iranian military is better organized and
equipped than many countries in the region. Through the use of intermediate
range missiles,
Iranian forces could effectively engage large U.S. installations in Iraq,
Kuwait, Afghanistan, Qatar, and Bahrain, as well as U.S. Arab allies in the
Persian Gulf. U.S. naval vessels could be highly vulnerable to Iranian modern
anti-ship missiles as
well.
After the United States suppresses Iran’s
integrated air defense systems and anti-aircraft fire, U.S. forces should be
capable of destroying the regime in Tehran, at least in the short term.
However, the prospect of occupying and stabilizing a country whose population
and landmass far exceed that of Iraq should be a formidable deterrent. If, after
initial costs of $2 trillion and
decades of U.S. involvement, Iraq is still in disarray, how could any rational
governing body logically pursue a similar strategy against a country over three
times the size, with a complex topography
and an equally diverse ethnic
and religious landscape? The Iranian regime, while imperfect, does maintain a
general stasis between the varied sects of Shia and Sunni Muslims in the
country. Under the chaos of war and foreign-military occupation, the outbreak
of sectarian warfare like that of Iraq is a real possibility, made worse by the
virulently anti-Shia Al Qaeda and ISIS waiting at the periphery. Prolonged and
extensive carnage would surely follow.
Further complicating such a campaign would
be the presence of the Marxist guerilla cult and U.S. foreign-policy
establishment favorite, the Mujahideen-e Khalqh (MEK),
who would also be vying for control of the state, despite that their popular
support inside Iran is approximately nonexistent. The
combination of these factors seriously diminishes the long-term probability of
success for a U.S. invasion of Iran.
Some reporting last year suggested that the
administration was considering launching
a series of air attacks based on Bill Clinton’s “Operation Desert Fox” model.
This would be based on the premise that the Iranians would be too smart to dare
fight back and provoke even worse American wrath. Of course, this would seem to
be a fairly optimistic take from those claiming that Iranian aggression against
U.S. forces is forcing them to respond militarily in the first place.
That Iran’s so-called provocations are exaggerated and
that they are likely to defend themselves with
force if attacked would seem to be the more reasonable assessment.
As with all military
incursions undertaken by the United States during the Global War on Terror, a
major victor will be the Al Qaeda members who sought to draw U.S. forces deeper
into the Middle East for the purpose of waging a war of financial attrition
against the United States and destabilizing U.S. regional allies. There is little doubt that
Osama bin Laden would have loved to see the United States attack and overthrow
another of Al Qaeda’s enemies, this time the Shia mullahs of Iran, and sow a
whole new generation of sectarian war, and warriors, throughout formerly
stable, opposition-held Iran.
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