Who Is Planning the Next War?
by
Patrick
J. Buchanan
by
Patrick J. Buchanan
DIGG THIS
As George Bush
reflects on his legacy, an urgent question must be pressing in upon
him each day.
Will I
leave here as the man who launched failed wars in Iraq and Afghanistan
that cost thousands of U.S. dead, to no avail? Or can I yet enter
history as the Churchillian statesman who used U.S. power to save
America and Israel from the mortal threat of atomic weapons in the
hands of the Iranian mullahs?
Which legacy
would Bush prefer? Or Cheney?
As Americans
await Bush's address announcing a "surge" of 20,000 to 30,000 U.S.
troops to Iraq, we may be missing the larger picture. The War Party
is turning its attention from Iraq – to Iran.
Nor is
it simply an analysis of the character of George Bush that causes
one to so conclude.
Tehran
is now two weeks into a 60-day deadline to answer a Security Council
resolution directing it to cease enriching uranium. While the sanctions
are mild, the resolution passed unanimously and gives Bush the U.N.
cover he used to wage war on Iraq. If Iran defies the United Nations,
Bush will demand further sanctions. Up the escalator we go.
Moreover,
a second U.S. carrier battle group is heading for the Gulf. More
interesting, the new CentCom commander, replacing Gen. John Abizaid,
is no soldier, but Adm. William J. Fallon, commander in chief of
U.S. forces in the Pacific. What Fallon does not know about securing
streets, he does know about taking out targets from the air and
keeping sea lanes open in a time of war.
Bush may
be sending signals, but the Israelis are preparing for war. The
London Sunday Times reports that Israeli pilots have been making
the 2,000-mile run to Gibraltar to train for strikes with bunker-busting
nuclear bombs on Iran's heavy water plant at Arak, the uranium hexaflouride
facility at Isfahan and the centrifuge cascade at Natanz.
Israel
angrily denies the report. But, on Dec. 30, retired Gen. Oded Tira,
who headed up all Israeli artillery units, burst into print with
this admonition:
"As an
American air strike in Iran is essential for our existence, we must
help (Bush) pave the way by lobbying the Democratic Party (which
is conducting itself foolishly) and U.S. newspaper editors. We need
to do this in order to turn the Iranian issue to a bipartisan one
and unrelated to the Iraq failure."
"Bush
lacks the political power to attack Iran," writes Tira. Thus, Israel
and its U.S. lobbying arm "must turn to Hillary Clinton and other
potential presidential candidates in the Democratic Party so that
they publicly support immediate action by Bush against Iran."
"The Americans
must act," Tira concludes. "If they don't, we'll do it ourselves
... (and) we must immediately start preparing for an Iranian response
to an attack."
According
to UPI editor-at-large Arnaud De Borchgrave, Tira's line tracks
the New Year's Day message of Likud superhawk "Bibi" Netanyahu,
the former prime minister.
Said Netanyahu,
Israel "must immediately launch an intense, international public
relations front first and foremost on the U.S. The goal being to
encourage President Bush to live up to specific pledges he would
not allow Iran to arm itself with nuclear weapons. We must make
clear to the (U.S.) government, the Congress and the American public
that a nuclear Iran is a threat to the U.S. and the entire world,
not only Israel."
Israel's
war, says Bibi, must be sold as America's war.
We are
thus forewarned. A propaganda campaign, using Israeli agents and
their neocon auxiliaries and sympathizers, who stampeded us into
war in Iraq, is being prepared to stampede us into war on Iran.
We are
to be convinced that Iran, with no air force or navy to speak of,
an economy not 2 percent of ours, which has not started a single
war since the revolution, 27 years ago, is about to give to terrorists,
to use on us, a nuclear bomb it may be 10 years away from even being
able to build.
Will Congress
be duped again into giving Bush a blank check for war? Or will this
new Congress summon the courage to take the war option out of Bush's
hands, to decide itself, for the nation, when, where and whether
America should ever go to war against Iran?
Every
presidential candidate should be asked: Does President Bush have
the authority to attack Iran without specific congressional authorization?
And would you support giving him that authority?
Needed
today are courageous men and women of both parties who will introduce
and pass a congressional resolution stating, "In the absence of
a direct Iranian attack on U.S. forces or personnel, or an imminent
threat of such an attack, President Bush has no authority to launch
a pre-emptive strike or a preventive war on Iran."
If
we are going to war, let us do it constitutionally, for once, and
not leave it up solely to George W. Bush and Brother Cheney.
January
10, 2007
Patrick
J. Buchanan [send
him mail] is co-founder and editor of The
American Conservative. He is also the author of seven books,
including Where
the Right Went Wrong, and A
Republic Not An Empire.
Copyright
© 2007 Creators Syndicate
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J. Buchanan Archives
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