To Nuke or not to Nuke? That is the question
by William Bowles ? Friday, 2 March, 2007
?All options are on the table? president Bush
For well over a year now pundits on both the left and the right have
been telling us that the US/Israel Axis is about to bomb/invade Iran;
those on the right say it with glee and on the left with understandable
fear of the consequences, not only for the unfortunate Iranian people
but for the entire planet.
But just like ?peak oil?, Der Tag keeps on getting pushed forward. Now
why it?s correct to make people aware of what kind of aggressive, war-
mongering government we have ensconced in Washington DC, it is also
incumbent upon us to try and analyse the strategies of the imperialists
and to try and assess their effectiveness and realisability. So is an
attack on Iran immanent?
What are the options open to the US? What would they stand to gain
from ?taking out? Iran? Most importantly, is the US able to extend its
wars of acquisition Eastward? In other words does it possess both the
military and political power to invade Iran? And what of the
consequences?
On the one hand it could be argued that the US is not planning an
actual invasion, it?s primary objective would be to reduce Iran to a
pile of radioactive rubble, or at least its nuclear facilities,
something only a combined nuclear, ?conventional? attack could achieve
and it?s a strategy fraught with all manner of unknowns, not the least
of which would be the reaction of countries such as Russia and China
which have close economic and political ties to Iran.
The first problem with this scenario is that radiation doesn?t
recognise national boundaries, a nuclear attack would inevitably lead
to the ultimate in ?blowbacks? only this time, literally. Even if a
?tactical? nuclear strike is contemplated (is there such an animal?),
the radiation released from both US weapons and Iran?s nuclear
facilities would in all likelyhood make much of the region
uninhabitable, including most probably Israel. Talk of ?tactical?
nuclear weapons obscures the real nature of nuclear weapons?
indiscriminate effects. The results just don?t bear thinking about.
A ?conventional surgical strike?: assuming Israel?s involvement it
would almost inevitably lead to Iranian retaliation and Israel being a
very small country both economically and physically, unless the war was
of extremely short duration, it would in all likelyhood lead to severe
damage if not destruction, obviously not a scenario that either the US
or Israel would approve of. And any retaliatory attack on Israel would
inevitably involve the US in a regional war which could quickly spiral
out of control.
Talk of a ?Tonkin Gulf? type provocation has been bandied about as the
trigger for such a scenario and indeed, the propaganda emanating from
Washington about Iranian weapons alleging the cause of the deaths of
170 US servicemen in Iraq would appear to support this. However, unlike
the WMD scenario that led to the invasion of Iraq, such claims have
been met with a great degree of scepticism even in the mainstream
media. If the intention was to justify a replay of the events leading
up to the invasion of Iraq, so far it has not had the desired effect.
Are US/Israeli threats a gigantic and extremely dangerous bluff? Let?s
imagine one possible outcome: Iran capitulates and agrees to stop
enriching uranium, but once Iran?s ?nuclear threat? is removed, what
does the US do next? Regime change is the stated objective of the US,
thus abandoning its ?nuclear ambitions? as the West describes it, would
not satisfy the US. This would leave the US in the position of either
accepting the existing status quo or of mounting a follow-up invasion
and occupation or perhaps instigating some kind of coup d?etat. Either
way, it would inevitably drag the US into a wider regional war, one it
can ill afford at the present time.
Iran would still possess nuclear facilities and a large military
capacity including medium and long range missiles as well as its
awesome Russian supersonic cruise missiles, which if deployed could do
some serious damage to the two US fleets (soon to be three) stationed
in the region. Again, short of a total nuclear blitzkrieg, the US would
have no option other than to invade and occupy Iran, something it is
not in a position to do. It?s already fighting wars on two fronts and
one assumes they?ve read their Clausewitz.
Then there is the US military high command who according to some
reports don?t appear to be too keen on the idea and for obvious
reasons. Already overstretched, attacking Iran doesn?t make much
military sense given its other commitments and involvements.
In addition, there are serious divisions emerging within the ruling US
political class between the so-called neo-cons and what are dubbed the
?realists?, led, it appears, by Zbegniew Brezinski who is reported as
saying that the invasion of Iraq was
?a historic, strategic, and moral calamity ? driven by Manichean
impulses and imperial hubris.?
The problem with this approach is that ?imperial hubris? as a basis
for a consistent US strategic foreign policy that stretches back over
half-a-century is not borne out by the facts. Far from being a failure,
the invasion of Iraq has consumed vast amounts of surplus capital and
has led to staggering profits not only for the military industry but
also for Big Oil.
The destruction of Iraq has removed one major obstacle to Israel?s
objectives of a ?final solution? to the Palestinian problem. Yet even
here, Israel is no closer to realising its objectives of the creation
of a Greater Israel. If anything, Israel?s destruction of Lebanon and
threats of ?taking out? Syria have had the opposite effect. Israel now
finds itself more isolated than at any period since its creation in
1948 (not that this has helped the besieged Palestinian people).
Israel?s role
The primary objective of the attack on Lebanon was to divert attention
away from Israel?s onslaught on the Palestininan people which also
coincided with the objective of diverting attention away from the
situation in Iraq. All the evidence points to the fact that Israel?s
attack on Lebanon was planned and sanctioned in Washington, not Tel
Aviv.
But okay, let?s assume fot the sake of argument that the US is run by
a clique of fanatical madmen intent on unleashing nuclear conflagration
in order to fulfill its ?End Days? fantasy. Is it likely that the more
sober-minded members of the US business and political elite, the
?realists?, will allow such a scenario to unfold?
The problem with those who advocate the view that an invasion/attack
on Iran is immanent is that it is based on the assumption that US
policy is largely dictated by Israel and its gung ho supporters within
the Bush administration.
Here?s what one writer has to say on the subject. Quoting an article
in the Guardian,
?If there were doubts as to the motives behind the Iraq war, there
should be none when it comes to Iran. According to the Guardian, ?Neo-
conservatives, particularly at the Washington-based American Enterprise
Institute, are urging Mr Bush to open a new front against Iran. So too
is the vice-president, Dick Cheney ? US preparations for an air strike
against Iran are at an advanced stage ? the present military build-up
in the Gulf would allow the US to mount an attack by the spring.?? ?
?Anyone Can Go To Baghdad; Real Men Go To Tehran?, Muhammad Idrees
Ahmad. Tuesday, 27 February 2007
The major players behind this objective are all Zionists, closely
allied to JINSA, AIPAC and other like-minded organisations. Now whilst
there is no doubt that there are people close to Bush who are fanatical
supporters of the Zionist state, it is important not to let the
fundamental economic realities out of sight and to clearly separate
public pronouncements from the real objectives of US capital which
remain the same, namely maintaining US control of the global economy
and especially the Middle East. Keeping the pot boiling has long been
US strategy in the region. Self-interest always comes first.
If we can draw any conclusions from the situation in the Middle East
it?s that the US has continued to employ the tried and tested method of
divide and rule, and in so doing, maintain what is effectively a state
of chaos, for regardless of the ?failure? of the Iraq adventure, unless
a unified opposition is created, the US will maintain its foothold
there. Why else build its largest foreign military base in the world in
Iraq?
The US may well have miscalculated that an effective puppet government
would remove the need for a countrywide military occupation and now
tries to Balkanise the country instead. Whether this tactic will
succeed depends on the degree to which the resistance can unify in its
opposition to the occupation which in turn results in the US being
physically driven from the country.
The ?failure? in Iraq is a failure only insofar as the US has failed
to maintain domestic support for the occupation, mainly due to the
large number of US casualties (Iraqi deaths don?t figure in the
equation at all).
And whilst oil is not the only concern, it remains the major concern,
for without oil it cannot maintain its vast military force. It should
surely be obvious that oil and the military go hand-in-hand (the US
military machine is the single largest consumer of oil in the world),
and in turn, US military force is used to enforce its economic
dominance either through its actual use or the threat of its use.
Thus when assessing the likelyhood of a US, or US/Israeli strike on
Iran, I maintain that the Israeli lobby is not a significant factor,
Israel plays the role of ?cat amongst the pidgeons? in maintaining
chaos in the Middle East with Israel being used as a local Rottweiler,
with the US constantly threatening to let it off the leash aka Lebanon.
We need to ask ourselves what would the US gain from attacking Iran
given that an occupation is not a practical objective? Protecting
Israel? Iran obviously has no intentions of attacking Israel in spite
of all its (alleged) bellicose statements. To do so would be suicidal.
Furthermore, destroying Iran would be counter-productive for Big Oil,
as it would in all likelyhood put Iranian oil off limits for the
forseeable future.
It can be argued that as the US doesn?t directly buy Iranian oil, an
attack would deny it to the US?s major competitor, China. Could this be
the basis for an attack on Iran? The major problem with this
proposition is that China is the single largest repository of US
dollars outside the US as well as being a major location of US foreign
investment, attempting to destabilise the Chinese economy by denying it
access to Iranian oil would seem to be counter-productive.
Curbing Iranian support for Hamas and Hizbollah? Hamas and Hizbollah
may well be an irritant to Israel but neither pose a real threat to
either the US or even to Israel, only united regional opposition can
seriously challenge US/Israeli plans, a scenario that is unfortunately
not currently realisable.
Thus whilst I do not rule out the possibility of some kind of limited
military strike on Iran at some point in the future, I still maintain,
just as I did a year ago, that the current conditions simply do not
warrant a full scale assault. Furthermore, a ?surgical strike? on Iran?
s nuclear facilities is fraught with all manner of uncertainties.
Comparisons are made with Israel?s attack on Iraq?s nuclear plant in
the 1980s but is this a valid comparison? Iran is not Iraq, neither is
Iran in a de facto state of war with Israel as Iraq was and in fact,
Iran?s relationship to Israel is both murky and contradictory as the
Iran-Contra events revealed.
There is only one possible scenario that could form the basis for an
attack and that?s an engineered provocation but the idea has already
been ?floated? through leaks to the media and the response has not been
positive. It is a classic case of history repeating itself, the second
time as farce.
There is no doubt that regime change in Iran is the primary US
objective, a regime which would be compliant to the US just as the
puppet government of Iraq is. But would a military assault on Iran
achieve this end? I seriously doubt it, if anything it would reinforce
the position of the conservative forces currently in power.
I contend that the current US strategy is proving unworkable and it is
the main reason for the ?realists? popping out of the woodwork just as
it is the major reason why the US is ratcheting up tensions as well as
offering to engage in talks with Iran over Iraq, in the hope that one
or the other of these strategies will work.
?? referring to India?s changing attitude towards non-proliferation,
?[t]he best illustration of this is the two votes India cast against
Iran at the IAEA. I am the first person to admit that the votes were
coerced [by the US].?? ? Stephen G. Rademaker, former Assistant
Secretary for Non-proliferation and International Security at the U.S.
State Department. ?Evidence of US coercion of IAEA members against Iran
revealed?.
The US and/or Israel will only risk an attack on Iran if they think
firstly that it will achieve their aims and secondly if they think they
can get away with it, which is why it?s vitally important to expose US
objectives and especially the special role that Israel plays in US
strategy in the region but to argue that US strategy is determined by
Israel is a complete misreading of the relationship between the two
countries.
So, will there be a ?Spring offensive? against Iran as some, including
even some mainstream media reports, allege? An unprovoked attack on
Iran would undoubtedly further isolate the US from the world community,
further complicate its relations with the EU, Russia and China. It
would also further diminish the US?s influence over world affairs,
leading to it being even more isolated than it already is. If I?m
wrong, then the US is even more desperate and its leaders even more out
of touch with reality than any of us realise.
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