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The Tehran fixation

A convergence of strategic concerns and electoral dynamics in the American homeland is increasing the chances of war with Iran.


There is a full year before the United States presidential election of 4 November 2008, but the nomination campaigns are already being run at an intense pace. This, against the background of a situation where the US's military forces are heavily engaged abroad, makes it inevitable that the state's security posture is growing in importance as an issue.

The rooted unpopularity of the Iraq war raises the expectation that a combination of Democratic candidates pursuing an anti-war line and Republicans seeking to distance themselves from President Bush might create a dynamic in favour of a more constructive, multilateral and peace-building foreign policy. This is not the way the campaign is going; on the contrary, its unfolding character carries ominous signs for security in the middle east in the coming months.

A receding concern

The absence of a more vigorous political critique of the US administration's record in the "war on terror" can partly be explained by the fact that the Iraq war has receded, at least for the moment, from the headlines. The decline in both US casualties and insurgent attacks has lent support to claims by the war's more vehement cheerleaders that it may now effectively have been won. More generally, the reduced media coverage of Iraq helps create the sense even among disaffected citizens that the war is less important than it was - and among politicians that there is little to be gained by criticising it or (an important distinction) its conduct.

Paul Rogers is professor of peace studies at Bradford University, northern England. He has been writing a weekly column on global security on openDemocracy since 26 September 2001

That may be little comfort for Iraqis, where there are many indices of the grievous state of the country's health and welfare systems, human security and infrastructure. The latest report from the Institute for War and Peace Reporting, to take one example, documents the condition of the country's electricity system. After an investment of over $4 billion into the generating and distribution system, Baghdad's electricity supply is actually worse than in 2003. At the very time that US-sourced reconstruction money is diminishing, the Iraqi government estimates that $27 billion investment is required (see IWPR/Iraq Crisis Report 235, 25 October 2007).

A further illustration of Iraq's condition is the deteriorating security situation on the ground in many parts of the country. The chief of police in the southern city of Basra has admitted that his force cannot control a city currently being fought over by rival armed groups, some of whom have infiltrated the police (see Ahmed Janabi, "Iraqi city in the grip of militias", al-Jazeera, 31 October 2007). The militias and their political associates in this region of Iraq particularly covet Basra and the port of Umm Qasr, since whoever can wield power over them and their energy exports can acquire considerable political leverage even as far as Baghdad.

A campaign dynamic

From the perspective of a Washington whose political horizons seem at present to be narrowing, such developments in a far-off land barely register. This is unfortunate enough, but the further problem is that when attention is focused on the region it tends to be filtered through a prism of rhetorical belligerence. The latest examples of what has become a routinely punitive attitude is President Bush's announcement on 25 October of further sanctions on Iran; this follows the senate's non-binding resolution of 26 September to designate the Iranian Revolutionary Guards Corps as a "terrorist" organisation. These moves reflect an important shift in the US focus from Iraq to Iran as the controversy over Tehran's nuclear plans deepens (see "Baghdad spin, Tehran war", 6 September 2006). But they also have an impact on the domestic political debate, in a way that reinforces the point that US electoral discourse is encouraging an unsettling security dynamic.

The evidence for this can be found in the current appeal of the leading rival candidates, who are setting the pace on foreign and defence policy in their respective camps. Hillary Clinton is at this stage the clear frontrunner for the Democrats, notwithstanding intense criticism from rival candidates of her alleged "controlling" style, inconsistency, and indulgence of the administration (as reflected in her support for the 26 September resolution). Her fundraising abilities have been impressive, her campaign has gained substantial momentum and her team is going to great lengths to present her as unstoppable. That judgment may prove premature, as in their own way Barack Obama and a presently well-received John Edwards remain formidable; but what is relevant in respect of security-centred issues is the tough line Clinton is adopting towards Iraq and Iran.

On Iraq, she has been careful to keep open the options on the likely timescale for a US military presence in the country, and on the timetable for even a partial withdrawal. Her delicate combination of criticism of Iran, support for sanctions and reluctance to commit herself over the war option is designed to maximise advantage in a fluid political environment. In the case of Iran, however, there are particular dangers in a situation where the refusal to rule out support for military action could be used in convenient circumstances as effective endorsement by those who advocate such an approach.

In addition to his weekly openDemocracy column, Paul Rogers writes an international security monthly briefing for the Oxford Research Group; for details, click here

Paul Rogers's latest book is Global Security and the War on Terror: Elite Power and the Illusion of Control (Routledge, July 2007). This is a collection of papers and essays written over the last twenty years, with two new essays on the current global predicament

Hillary Clinton may be experiencing a familiar and deep-seated Democratic bind, whereby fear of being accused of lack of patriotism can lead to an over-compensating (and misdirected) "surplus" of such a quality. This perceived vulnerability can also override the need to speak to and articulate the widespread opposition to the Iraq war (and indeed to the prospect of war with Iran) among Democratic supporters. But Clinton's notably cagey stance on the US's overseas entanglements partly reflects developments on the "other side" - not Tehran, but the Republican campaign, and especially the progress of the former mayor of New York, Rudy Giuliani.

Indeed, Giuliani's unexpected prominence has been one of the surprises of the campaign so far. A figure who holds relatively liberal positions on gun control and abortion, and whose interesting private life includes three marriages, is not self-evidently appealing to a Republican Party that today depends on conservative Christians for so much of its support; yet Giuliani is becoming so influential in the Republican campaign that even some Christian leaders are starting to align themselves with him.

There is an element of crude political necessity (even desperation) in this: anyone but Hillary, anyone but a Democrat in the White House. But again, the global-security factor cannot be ignored. Giuliani has of late adopted a particularly hardline stance on terrorism, Iraq and Iran. This reflects the recruitment to his campaign team or circle of advisers of some of the most hawkish of the United States's analysts and opinion-formers on the middle east; they include Norman Podhoretz (a fervent advocate of military action against Iran), Michael Rubin of the American Enterprise Institute, and Daniel Pipes of the Middle East Forum (see Michael Cooper & Marc Santora, "Mideast Hawks Help to Develop Giuliani Policy", International Herald Tribune, 25 October 2007).

The "internal" linkage in the Giuliani project seems to be that his strategists have responded to the political downside for Republican voters of some of his liberal views on domestic concerns, by seeking to sharpen his profile on international issues. Giuliani's authoritative handling of the 9/11 tragedy during his New York mayoralty may be an asset here, but there are clearly elements of a wider repositioning towards a macho, "patriotic" stance.

The early signs are that this may be working. The trouble is that what "works" for an aspiring presidential candidate has consequences for the campaign as a whole, and ultimately perhaps for the world. At present, Giuliani's strategy appears to be warping the entire argument over the next presidency in the direction of a hawkish foreign policy, and that the ripple-effects include a subtle but definite impact on Hillary Clinton's campaign.

A political alignment

Nothing, yet, is set in stone. Hillary Clinton has not yet received a single vote, and a bad early primary result could upset all calculations; Rudy Giuliani is even less secure among the Republicans' ostensibly more open field. At the same time, there are clear indications that the Republicans could increase their political opportunities if they can exploit the "fear factor" that is one of the most potent weapons in their armoury.

This, precisely, is where the attitude to Iran of the George W Bush administration and the interests of the wider Republican cause may - after a period of some disassociation - yet reconverge. If, as seems likely, the key figure of vice-president Dick Cheney and his immediate affiliates continue their present policy of focusing on Iran as the arch-enemy, then they may indirectly be aiding the Republican presidential effort. The renewed influence of their conservative equivalents in Iran itself may act as a reinforcement (see Omid Memarian, "Iran: prepared for the worst", 30 October 2007).

It is almost certainly still the case (as several columns in this series have argued) that the greatest risk of war with Iran comes from a provocation that precipitates a crisis that in turn tips over into armed confrontation - rather than from a sudden, unforeseen attack by the United States or even Israel (see "America and Iran: the spark of war", 20 September 2007). The worry is that the manner in which the US presidential election campaign is developing may come to mean that there will be no senior, authoritative voice of reason arguing coherently against the war option. That alone serves to make a war against Iran more likely.

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deteodoru said:



Fri, 2007-11-02 23:38
Before dying, a top CIA source told me that the Cuban Missiles Crisis was a fantastic double hoax in that Khrushchev didn't dare install the nuclear warheads and JFK knew it. Then came the American genius in JFK letting the Russians get away with it as a down-payment towards an end of the Cold War that Nixon brought midway, splitting the Chicoms and Soviets forever, and Reagan brought to a conclusion by making nuclear assault arms irrelevant by forcing the Soviets (then ahead of the US in ABMs) to struggle to match the US R&D in anti-missile systems. The devil, of course, is in the details. But American genius was evident in every president since Truman to save America's global leadership and greatness, despite numerous stupidities. Now, the Iran Crisis makes no sense to me, just as 9/11 had not. First of all, it seems to me, 9/11 was totally OUR fault in that we had long been in the habit of breaking two firm rules established in the 1970s when we suffered a spree of skyjackings: (1) the pilot's cabin is to be made impenetrable,(2) two sky-marshals are to be on every airliner. On 9/11, four airplanes were taken over, functionally, inside of 10 min. That means that the one point on which there was no hitch was in the takeover of the pilot's seat, in all four cases. As one American Airlines Exec had the gall to say on 9/12 in order to excuse the open pilot's cabin door: The people who pay so much for a First Class ticket have the right to see that someone is flying this thing. And since then, I have seen little discussion of the access to the pilot's cabin recklessly provided, not even in the 9/11 Commission's report. Perhaps Corporate America was then united on saving a couple of airlines from the liability of violating the law. But the real consequence of disregarding this issue is that we created another monster to slay: Islamic Terrorism, far more monstrous in our collective imagination-- fed by a homeland security bureaucracy of "terrorism experts" dependent on that fear of "Islamo-fascism," whatever that is, for house and car payments and kids' tuition. And indeed, as with Communism, we fed the beast and made it bigger and stronger directly with our mindless reactions to it, often killing innocent civilians. Worst of all, by invading Iraq, according to an alQaeda site, we demonstrated our total dependence on Mideast oil. Cognizant of the importance of our dependence to its strategy, the site ordered all Jihadists not to touch the oil wells with explosives, for they will be critical to both the struggle to Sharia and its later economic survival. In so doing, they gave away the maximalist perimeter of the Islamic World as end goal to their grand strategy. As for America, several alQaeda sources predicted (as well as Russian and Chines sources), the Iraq War would expose America's upper limit in its capacity to fight Islamic Terrorism. And indeed it has-- proving that manpower is its weak point, and so it is forced to waste its economy's finances seeking security both in terms of external and internal combustion (ie. getting blown up and having fossil fuel for its engines). So, the very alQaeda we decimated in Afghanistan has led a Sunni Resistance against us that kept us from materializing our oil bonanza enticements to the "Coalition of the Willing," rendering them all gradually unwilling, to the point where we fight alone, stubbornly seeking to control Iraq's oil through the PSA Law we are trying to impose on all Iraqis. But for the last six years we have known no American genius as we had in sparks at the necessary moment from Truman to Clinton. All we had is neuropathologic perceveration with the pedal to the metal until our engine (the US Army) began to seize. Instead of imposing our PSA Law, we created a Shia takeover of Iraq so that both the Saudis and Israelis that originally convinced Bush (through Rumsfeld and Cheney) to remove Saddam, became convinced that with friends like the US you don't need enemies. The Iraqi Sunnis realized that, ridding themselves of the alQaeda sent "foreign Jihadis," they could get the US to undermine the Shia regime which the US created. But Iran's diplomacy has brought all the Shia factions together in reaction to American attempts to split them up and exterminate them one at a time through assassinations, as taught to do by the Israelis. Now, as the power in the Iraqi government, the Shi'ites will not permit the efforts by Bush's pal Hunt to force a PSA relationship with the Kurdish 20% of Iraq's oil, nor will they allow the US to touch the 80% of Iraq's oil in the Shia south. To make things worse for Bush, the Maliki government of Iraq has announced that it will not permit renewal of the UNSC resolution that legalizes US occupation of Iraq; that when on December 31st, 2008 the resolution expires, the Maliqi Government will then retake total sovereignty of its nation and that the PSA Law will never be passed. So, whereas Bush hoped that all the costs it blood and treasure he caused would be forgotten as he comes to be remembered as the president who, in the last moment, pulled off the fill-er-up of your SUVs with cheap oil, his dominion in Iraq will only end up with a $3 trillions bill and thousands of our best and most motivated troops dead or injured, while Iraq becomes a Shia nation allied to Iran. To prevent total failure of his presidency in the war on terror-- because he exposed the upper limit of our power, our maximum capacity in war, inadequate manpower spread so thin that it can be slowly eroded by an endless supply of shahids (as the Soviets had in their own case discovered in Afghanistan) Bush will have no choice in order to prevent an end to the game than to attack Iran, once again singing his WMD "mushroom cloud" tune. But as Bush attacks Iran, he in no way improves our greatest weakness: manpower, for no one will accept a draft so that we can hold on to Iraq's oil. On the contrary, our attack of Iran will multifold increase the availability of willing shahid manpower for the Islamist Jihad-- Shia and Sunni. The weak Saudi leaders may now have influence over the Iraq Sunni resistance, but once the US gives signs of prolonged occupation and Iraq becomes an extended battlefield, they will return to alQaeda's side, accepting hundreds of thousands of "foreign" Sunni volunteers. Zawahiri deliberately betrayed Zarqawi's position to US forces in June 2006 because he could no longer tolerate Zarqawi's obsessive hate for Shia. Yet, it is now, a year and a half later, clear that if the US attacks Iran it will be fighting ALONE a UNITED Islamic world at the very moment when Bush is on his way out and desperately trying to force a fait accompli on his Democrat replacement. But I would bet all the cash I have that, instead of that, he will face a last minute impeachment and possible conviction by the Senate. By then, Podhoretz will be too frightened to show off his Medal Of Freedom, given him by Bush in 2004 when he became the chief neocon mouthpiece for "World War IV." What is needed now is another American moment of genius; and if it should somehow soon come from the Bush Administration, then one would have to admit that he was truly inspired by God, for Bush certainly lacks that je ne sais quoi that made so many of his presidential predecessors pull success out of the jaws of failure. What could he do now? Bush could simply do nothing. He could disregard Iran's prospective puny nuclear capacity and let the chips realign themselves. The Saudis have used the US to come to dominate Islam. Khomeini challenged them, so a string of US presidents, all beholding to Riyadh for their personal fortunes and their presidential libraries, sent American soldiers to fight and die in the Arab deserts. Israel became their duped cover, because it cheered on every one of these presidents, hoping against hope, that Americans were enough ruled by "dumb goyim," as the neocons assured them, to eventually take out the Iranian mullahs. It was a perfect storm, thought the neocons (even to the point of offering the Saudis silence of slanderous anti-Arab propaganda if they invest in neocon businesses), In that way, figured the neocon con men, Israel would get what it wants: removal of the Islamic regime in Tehran while they add a couple of billions to their portfolios. But Israelis closer to the crisis came to see it all quite differently. As so ably demonstrated in Trisa Parsi's excellent new book: "Treacherous Alliance: The Secret Dealings of Israel, Iran, and the United States," http://www.amazon.com/Treacherous-Alliance-Secret-Dealings-Israel/dp/0300120575/ref=sr_1_1/102-8606146-8778569?ie=UTF8&s=books&qid=1193867282&sr=1-1 Israel knows the mullahs well, for TO THIS DAY, it has been deep in political and economic relations with them (as with all other Islamic states-- quietly but critically important to mutual benefit). A destruction of the Tehran regime can only perpetuate US presence in the Mideast, hence Israel's domination of the region. But that is a short sighted Likudnik World War IV-ist view. There is an alternative quite popular in Israeli security circles: No Israeli intelligence, security, academic or military circles believe that the Iranian nuclear capacity-- if it ever comes to be-- would be meant for anything but as a deterrent. But then that puts the Sunni Arabs in a desperate need for a mutual deterrence of their own. Unfortunately for the Arabs, none of them--INCLUDING THE SAUDIS-- can afford one. And so, that leaves them to become totally dependent on the only nuclear power in the region, Israel. For its part, Israel is a failed state. Netanyahu, when Minister of Finance, promised to make Israel independent of any US aid. He totally failed because Israel is a welfare state in which, according to the JERUSALEM POST, you can make more on welfare than from a paycheck. Israel has no bargaining position economically because it has no open economic relations with its neighbors. You might say that it really only serves as a big campus in that millions of young Israelis, once educated, leave for good jobs in the West. Israel is bleeding a youth aliyah in the wrong direction. The Israeli shekel is TOTALLY supported by the US dollar. But as the dollar loses value in the global economy, Israel's only real export industry-- deadly weapons-- can't support its welfare state; and so it need even more welfare from the US, not less as Netanyahu had promised. When PM Olmert came to Wash DC in March of 2006, begging for an extra #10 billions for that year, Bush forced him to turn Israeli troops into mercenaries for his schemes to provoke war with Iran so that the US would not be able to withdraw from Iraq without controlling its oil. But, as Israel found that its war machine in Lebanon-- much as ours in Iraq-- strengthens the enemy by massively killing innocent helpless civilians rather than cowering Hezbollah, unlike Bush in Iraq, he immediately pulled out. Now Olmert is only [propagandistically] singing, not [militarily] performing, for his #10 billions dinner; bellowing hollow warnings that he will bomb Tehran, he is really hoping that Bush will find a way for the USAF to strike Iran without the Israelis having to do so. In other words, Olmert is not as reckless as Bush. That is because he is a mature solid thinker (even if facing indictment by his own national prosecutor for corruption). Right now, he is reassuring the Iranians while threatening them. This makes Bush seem like nothing more than an aggressive drunk (as claimed by a number of journalists that saw him in the White House, they claim, drunk and publicly cursing his wife). No doubt all this will come out in last minute impeachment proceedings; until then, as far as Iran is concerned, we will have to rely on the threat from the Joint Chiefs of Staff and SecDef Gates threat that they will all resign en masse if he attacks Iran. With dependence on Israel as their deterrent to a nuclear Iran, the Arabs will have to see Israel in a thoroughly new light. The more they force the Palestinians to cease their Intifada, the more the Israelis will appreciate their need for economic ties to their neighbors. The courageous Rabin strategy of LAND FOR PEACE will now become the willy Olmert strategy of LAND FOR BUSINESS. And the Arabs nations will need Israeli know-how because they are all like one crop banana republics: OIL. And, whoever follows Bush will get rid of the OILERS in the administration, replacing them with alternative fuel experts whose goal it will be to make the US fossil fuel independent. No Arab country has the know how to switch from an oil income economy and survive. Only Israel has the technical know-how to switch them all to globally competitive high-tech industries. It will thus befit the admonition of its Zionist Forefathers, to become "a light onto the [Arab] nations." Just as Jews from all over the world had to learn Hebrew in order to live in Israel, Israelis will learn Arabic in order to get payed well saving the Arab economies for them in return. It is fortunate that Arabs deep down in their hearts really trust Israelis (their Semitic cousins) as "family" more than they trust Americans and Europeans. Finally, because of a nuclear Iran, Israel may once and for all time be economically and politically integrated as a leader of the Semitic family, the Middle East. With Middle Eastern Jews quickly becoming the biggest group in Israel, there is no shortage of a political will to regional integration. Israel's educational system, the best in the world, may do more for Zionism's survival than any of its military services. So now it seems, the whole world wants Bush to take hands off of it. It remains for the American people to show its children that neither crime nor negligence pay, because with responsibility (I am the decider) comes culpability, by impeaching and removing Bush from office, even if just one day before his term ends. That will once again show that in a sea of stupidities Americans will always have moments of utter genius that maintain them as "the shinning beacon on a hill," to which Reagan referred. Daniel E. Teodoru
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