Will Bush bomb Iran?
Alarm bells
have been ringing, left and right. John Pilger, the
radical journalist, wrote an article, Iran: The War Begins (New Statesman, 3
February), warning that a US air attack on Iran was imminent.
Lynn Walsh, editorial from Socialism
Today magazine
The US journalist, Seymour Hersh,
reported that Bush had ordered the Pentagon to draw up plans for air strikes
against Iran, and special US forces were already carrying out undercover
operations inside Iran. (Guardian, 26 February) At the same time, the veteran cold-war
warrior, Zbigniew Brzezinski,
was warning the Senate Foreign Relations Committee (SFRC) of a “plausible
scenario for a military collision with Iran”. (1 February)
Aggressive propaganda from the Bush
regime, backed by the deployment of a second US aircraft-carrier battle-group in the Persian Gulf, were widely interpreted
as the prelude to a US – or US-backed Israeli – attack on Iran’s nuclear facilities. Bush appeared to be
preparing the ground for a pre-emptive strike against Iran to counter its alleged intervention in Iraq and pre-empt its emergence as a nuclear power.
Bush seemed to be defying overwhelming opposition in the US to escalation in Iraq and to extending the war to Iran.
Then, the secretary of state, Condoleezza
Rice, announced (27 February) that the US, together with the other four UN
Security Council powers, would be participating in two Middle East regional
meetings on Iraq – involving both Syria and Iran. Bush officials acknowledged
there would be informal ‘corridor talks’ between US and Iranian
representatives.
Vice-president Cheney, leader of Washington’s increasingly isolated neo-con hawks, chorused
‘all options are still on the table’. But Rice claimed the meetings were a ‘new
component’ in US diplomacy. Is this a U-turn for Bush, a retreat from confrontation? Or a diplomatic camouflage for military strikes? Or a combination of military threat and diplomacy?
Bush has undoubtedly stepped up the
pressure against Iran in recent months, claiming that the Iranian regime has been
supporting the insurgency in Iraq. Six Iranian diplomats were detained by US forces
in Iraq, and Bush highlighted ‘intelligence’ that Iran is supplying
sophisticated explosive devices to the Iraq insurgency – on the authority of
Iran’s top leadership. The US, proclaimed Bush, would “interrupt the flow of
support from Iran and Syria” and “seek out and destroy the networks providing advanced weapons
and training to our enemies in Iraq”.
Testifying to the foreign relations
committee, Brzezinski, former national security
adviser to president Carter, warned that elements in the Bush regime could be
preparing a ‘provocation’ to justify a ‘defensive war’ against Iran. Members of
the Washington foreign policy establishment, including James
Baker, who led the Iraq Study Group inquiry, more far-sighted representatives
of the ruling class than the Bush clique, warned the White House against
another disastrous military adventure.
A senior member of the committee,
Republican Chuck Hagel, warned Rice that the
administration should not attempt another ‘Cambodia’. He was referring to Nixon’s adventure at the end
of the Vietnam war, when he denied sending forces into
Cambodia while in fact doing so. Hagel
called Bush’s plan “the most dangerous foreign policy blunder in this country
since Vietnam… The kind of policy that the president is talking
about here, it’s very, very dangerous”. (CNN News, 11 January)
Such action, Brzezinski
warned the senators, would plunge “a lonely America into a spreading quagmire eventually ranging
across Iraq, Iran, Afghanistan and Pakistan”.
The neo-con hawks aimed to use US imperialism’s overwhelming military power to
strengthen its hegemony over the Middle East, and
secure control of the region’s oil reserves. They boasted that regime change in
Iraq would be the first step in a democratic
transformation of the Middle
East, code for installing
compliant, pro-US regimes in major Arab states. Instead, Bush’s adventure in Iraq has revealed the limits of US power, creating a far more volatile situation.
Representatives of Washington’s foreign policy, intelligence and military
establishment are desperately seeking a way, in spite of Bush, of salvaging US power and prestige from the neo-con quagmire.
The fallout
Most establishment strategists believe an
attempt to bomb Iran’s nuclear facilities would rebound on the US. The Iranian regime has learned the lesson of
1981, when the Israeli state bombed Saddam’s nuclear reactor at Osirak (shortly before it was due to become operational). Iran’s nuclear facilities have been dispersed,
protected in underground sites. The US would have to target a dozen sites, which would
cause horrendous casualties and destruction of the civilian infrastructure.
Frank Barnaby, a nuclear scientist now
working for the Oxford Research Group, estimates that even such strikes would
only set back Iran’s programme by about two years. In his ORG report, Would
Air Strikes Work? (March 2007), Barnaby writes that, while Iran has undoubtedly
been developing uranium enrichment facilities and research and development into
the production of nuclear weapons, “there is no evidence to suggest that Iran
has embarked on production engineering – putting in place the technical facilities
needed to build a bomb – and it is known that it is some way off being able to
produce the amount of fissile material needed to produce a nuclear weapon”.
US military attacks on Iran, however, would transform the situation: “If Iran’s nuclear facilities were severely damaged during
an attack, it is possible that Iran could embark on a crash programme to make one
nuclear weapon. In the aftermath of an attack, it is likely that popular
support for an Iranian nuclear weapon capability would increase; bolstering the
position of hardliners and strengthening arguments that Iran must possess a nuclear deterrent. Furthermore, Iran has threatened to withdraw from the NPT
[Non-Proliferation Treaty] and, should it do so post-attack, would build a
clandestine programme free of international inspection and control”.
An attack would unite the population
against the US, strengthening the hard-line, nationalistic character of the regime.
In spite of Sunni-Shia tensions and other
ethno-religious conflicts (involving Baluchis, Turkomen, Kurds, etc), there would be an eruption of mass
fury against US imperialism throughout the Middle East.
The survival of the US-British occupation
forces in Iraq depends on the collaboration of the coalition
government (currently headed by Maliki) dominated by
the Shia parties, which have close links with the
Iranian regime. If Tehran pushed for an all-out Shia
offensive against the occupation, the position of the US and other imperialist forces would soon become
completely untenable.
In the event of a US attack on Iran, regional conflicts would explode volcanically,
particularly given the links between Hezbollah, Hamas
and the Iranian regime. There would most likely be an increase in terrorist
attacks against the West. By choking off oil exports to the west, Iran could provoke a world economic crisis.
The Iraq syndrome
Even some OF Bush’s top military
commanders have publicly disassociated themselves from Bush’s threats against Iran. The commander of US forces in Iraq, General Peter
Pace, “would not say” Iran’s leadership was directing attacks on US forces in
Iraq by Iranian elements. He also told reporters, “we can take care of the
security of our troops by doing the business we need to do inside Iraq”, that is, without intervention in Iran.
Bush’s ‘intelligence’ is now tainted by
the ‘Iraq syndrome’. “The spectre of the war in Iraq – a war that the Bush administration denied it was
planning, supported by evidence that turned out to be forced – looms large over
administration policy towards Iran”. (Scepticism Over Iraq Haunts US Iran Policy, Washington Post, 15 February) After the phoney weapons of
mass destruction (WMD) intelligence conjured up to justify the war against Iraq, there is almost universal scepticism about
current intelligence claims.
According to the Bush camp, Iran is on the verge of completing large-scale
production facilities for weapons-grade fissile material. Recalling the
misinformation of US intelligence services regarding Saddam’s alleged WMD, “much of the
intelligence on Iran’s nuclear facilities provided to UN inspectors by American spy
agencies has turned out to be unfounded, according to diplomatic sources [IAEA
officials] in Vienna”. (US Intelligence On Iran Does Not Stand Up, Guardian, 23 February) Most
experts, however, including IAEA head, Mohamed ElBaradei,
consider that Iran is at least five, and possibly ten, years away from the reprocessing
of plutonium or enrichment of uranium necessary to produce even a small nuclear
arsenal.
By joining talks on Iraq that include Syria and Iran, Bush, Rice and company appear to be adopting the
Iraq Study Group’s position, ‘discussing with the US’s enemies’. Nevertheless, the threat of US imperialism’s force is still there. The presence
of two major aircraft carriers in the Gulf shows that the US has the potential to launch air strikes against Iran at any time.
Moreover, in a change of tactics, the Bush
regime has now decided to boost its support for the region’s Sunni regimes,
particularly Saudi Arabia, United Arab Emirates, Egypt and Jordan. The neo-cons’ ‘democratic transformation’ of the
region has been abandoned and, on recent trips to the Middle East, Rice has made no mention of ‘promoting
democracy’. On 20 February, Rice met in Jordan with the intelligence chiefs of Saudi Arabia, Egypt, Jordan and the UAE in a meeting widely seen in the region
as preparing the ground for a new US-Sunni alliance.
Alarmed by the strengthening of Iran and the region’s Shia
forces since the overthrow of Saddam’s regime, the Saudi monarchy has been deploying
its enormous resources to mount a counter-offensive against Shia
power. This undoubtedly includes support for right-wing Islamic groups using
terrorist tactics.
US imperialism is playing a very dangerous game. An
unintended outcome of smashing Saddam’s regime has been the strengthening of Iran’s regional power and influence. Now, despite
facing a mainly Sunni insurgency in Iraq, the US is stepping up support for Sunni regimes that
sponsor right-wing Sunni forces throughout the region. This can only inflame
tensions, already rising, between sectarian forces throughout the region. Most
of the anti-Shia groups, moreover, are also
fanatically anti-US imperialism from their own right-wing, Islamist standpoint.
Like US support for the mujaheddin
in Afghanistan in the 1980s, the Bush tactic is likely to rebound
on the US in the future.
An Israeli attack?
The Bush regime, it seems, is now leaning
towards diplomacy. Despite the continued threat of force, US air attacks on Iran do not seem the most likely course at present. But
given the extreme tensions in world relations, it would be unwise to completely
rule out military action by Bush.
Yet it would be disastrous for the US to bomb Iran, even from the standpoint of US imperialism. By invading Iraq, the Bush regime has already defied strategic
rationality. Establishment figures like Brzezinski
and Hagel fear that Bush will compound his mistakes
on Iraq with an even more disastrous adventure against Iran.
The same applies to Israel. “An Israel air strike against Iran’s nuclear facilities”, commented the Financial
Times (22 January), “would be a disaster of disasters”. Israel’s prime minister, Ehud Olmert, has said he believes
that international sanctions and financial measures against Iran are effective: “I think that the Iranians are not
as close to the technological threshold as they claim to be and, unfortunately,
they are not as far as we would love them to be”. (Financial Times, 5 March)
Following the defeat of his barbarous
military attack on Lebanon last year, however, Olmert
is under tremendous pressure from the Israeli right to act against Iran. For instance, Benyamin
Netanyahu, Likud opposition leader, has used Ahmadinejad’s provocative attacks on Israel and his hosting of a holocaust-denial conference last
year, to accuse the Iranian president of preparing a second holocaust in the
region. Moreover, after recent elections, Olmert had
to bring into his government Avigdor Lieberman,
leader of the ultra-rightwing Our Home Israel Party, which stands for a greater
Israel state excluding all Arab citizens.
The Israeli right claims that the very
existence of Israel is threatened by Iran’s nuclear capacity – even though
Israel has an enormous nuclear arsenal compared to Iran’s embryonic facilities.
In this desperate situation, can it be excluded that Olmert,
or another leader, could attempt to escape from a political crisis by
recklessly attacking Iran?
Iran’s position
Provocative, nationalistic statements from
the president of Iran, Ahmadinejad, and his sponsorship
of the notorious holocaust-denial conference, have given the impression that
the Iranian regime is intransigent when it comes to security, ruling out any
discussions about its nuclear processing programme. However, there are rival
centres of power within the regime.
A section of the
regime’s clerical wing, represented by figures like Rafsanjani, have powerful positions in leadership bodies.
Rafsanjani favours a shift towards neo-liberal economic policies, which would
require an accommodation with the US and an opening up to the world economy.
The ‘supreme leader’, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, holds the balance between rival factions. He
evidently fears that Rafsanjani’s neo-liberal
policies could erupt in social crisis. On the other hand, he has disassociated
himself from some of Ahmadinejad’s confrontational
rhetoric against US imperialism and the Israeli state.
The Iranian regime has embarked on a
nuclear programme, almost certainly with the intention of developing the
capacity to produce nuclear weapons, in response to threats of regime change
from the US. While rejecting demands that they should abandon
nuclear processing as a precondition for talks, the leadership might be ready
to suspend the nuclear programme in return for a comprehensive deal with the US and other western powers. This would mean the
abandonment of regime change by the US and the normalisation of Iran’s political and economic relations with the
outside world.
Even if the US and Iran engage in bilateral negotiations, agreement would
not be assured. Nevertheless, a tentative accommodation could emerge, as with
the US and North Korea recently. Any deal would inevitably be extremely
fragile. Leaving aside possible upheavals within Iran, the unresolved conflicts of the region, Israel-Palestine, Lebanon, etc, could erupt at any time, with new wars and
civil wars, shattering any agreement between imperialism and regional regimes.
There has always been a cycle of events in
the Middle East, alternating between armed conflict and ‘peace
talks’. But there can be no lasting peace or harmonious cooperation between
states within the crisis-ridden framework of imperialism and capitalism.