Tonkin Gulf II and the Guns of August?
by
Patrick
J. Buchanan
by
Patrick J. Buchanan
DIGG THIS
Is the United
States provoking war with Iran, to begin while the Congress is conveniently
on its August recess?
One recalls
that it was in August 1964, after the Republicans nominated Barry
Goldwater, that the Tonkin Gulf incident occurred.
Twice it was
said, on Aug. 2 and Aug. 4, North Vietnamese patrol boats had attacked
the U.S. destroyers Maddox and Turner Joy in international
waters. The U.S. Senate responded by voting 88 to two to authorize
President Johnson to assist any Southeast Asian nation whose government
was threatened by communist aggression.
The bombing
of the North began, followed by the arrival of U.S. Marines. America's
war was on.
As Congress
prepares for its August recess, the probability of U.S. air strikes
on Iran rises with each week. A third carrier, the USS Enterprise,
and its battle group is joining the Nimitz and Stennis
in the largest concentration of U.S. naval power ever off the coast
of Iran.
And Tonkin
Gulf II may have already occurred.
In Baghdad,
on July 1, Gen. Kevin J. Bergner charged that Iranians planned the
January raid in Karbala, using commandos in American-style uniforms,
that resulted in the death of five U.S. soldiers.
As the New
York Times reports, this "marks the first time that the
United States has charged that Iranian officials have helped plan
operations against American troops in Iraq and have had advance
knowledge of specific attacks that have led to the death of American
soldiers."
The Quds Force
of the Iranian Revolutionary Guards is using Hezbollah to train
Shi'ites to attack our soldiers and providing them with enhanced
IEDs that have killed scores of U.S. troops, Bergner charged. He
says we have captured a veteran Hezbollah agent and documents pointing
to direct Iranian complicity in the Karbala raid.
Iran has denounced
the charge as "ridiculous." But the Senate has voted 97
to zero to censure Iran for complicity in killing the Americans.
If what Bergner
alleges is true, President Bush has not only the right but appears
to have the blessing of Congress to attack Iran. And he now has
the naval and air forces at hand. What is stopping him?
For it is surely
not Congress, which buried a resolution last spring declaring that
Bush must come to Congress before taking us into a new war in the
Middle East. Congress appears to be signaling Bush: "If you
want to hit Iran, you have the green light. No need to consult us."
Is this yet
another abdication by Congress of its moral and constitutional duty
to decide when and whether America goes to war?
And something
smells awfully fishy here.
Iran has no
interest in a war with the United States, which it seems to be toying
with. Iran supports the pro-American Shia regime in Baghdad. And
the al-Qaeda umbrella group in Iraq, which is our mortal enemy,
has just warned Iran it faces terror attacks if it does not stop
supporting Shi'ites in Iraq.
Abu Omar al-Baghdadi,
who leads the al-Qaeda group known as the Islamic State in Iraq,
says his fighters have been preparing for four years for war on
Iran.
"We are
giving the Persians, and especially the rulers of Iran, a two-month
period to end all kinds of support for the Iraqi Shi'ite government
and to stop direct and indirect intervention otherwise a
severe war is waiting for you," Baghdadi said in a 50-minute
videotape.
Baghdadi also
warned Arab Sunnis in the region who do business with Shi'ites in
Iran that they were inviting assassination.
Query: If Iran's
ally, the Maliki government, is our ally, and if Iran's enemy, al-Qaeda
in Iraq, is our enemy, why would Iran use the Quds Force to attack
Americans and risk U.S. retaliation?
Killing
Americans in Iraq is not going to defeat the United States. But
it could trigger heavy U.S. retaliation, not only on the Quds Force,
but on Iran's nuclear facilities and a war with the United
States. Yet Iran's diplomatic behavior suggests it wishes to avoid
such a war.
Another explanation
comes to mind. Iran is not initiating, but is responding to U.S.-inspired
attacks inside Iran, in the Kurdish north, the Arab southwest, and
the Baluchi southeast of its country. Was Karbala an attempted kidnapping
to exchange U.S. soldiers for the five Iranian "diplomats"
we are holding?
Has Bush secretly
authorized covert attacks inside Iran? Are U.S. and Israeli agents
in Kurdistan behind the attacks across the border to provoke Iran?
On July 11, Iranian troops clashed with Kurd rebels inside Iran,
and the Iranians fired artillery back into Iraq.
Why
is Congress going on vacation? Why are a Democratic-controlled House
and Senate not asking these questions in public hearings? Why is
Congress letting Bush and Vice President Cheney decide whether we
launch a third war in the Middle East?
Or is Congress
in on it?
July
19, 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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