The Ticking Clock
by
Tom Chartier
by Tom Chartier
DIGG THIS
I think
the fate not only of our own civilization, but I think the fate
of world and the future of the human race, is involved in preventing
a nuclear war." ~ John F. Kennedy – Third
Nixon-Kennedy Presidential Debate, October 13, 1960
"This
notion that the United States is getting ready to attack Iran
is simply ridiculous. Having said that, all options are on the
table." ~ President George W. Bush, February 2005
Mankind invented
the damned thing and has used it twice. Sooner or later mankind
will use it again.
We all know
what the damned thing is, The Bomb. Despite multifarious
efforts to contain
and control nuclear weapons through a variety of treaties, the
promise
of a mushroom cloud looms ominously
on the horizon.
Must the 21st
century be scorched by a nuclear war? I see little chance of stopping
it.
In 1967, Secretary
of State Robert
S. McNamara said: "No sane citizen, political leader or
nation wants thermonuclear war." Do the U.S., Israel and Iran
have sane political leaders?
To avoid "mutual
assured destruction," the
world needs rational decisions of rational governments headed by
rational leaders backed by rational citizens.
Where are
these rational
leaders of governments? You tell me. The U.S. is run by trigger-happy,
paranoid
gunslingers and several other countries, such as North Korea
and Iran appear to be just as reckless.
By the ill-advised
invasion of Iraq in 2003, the United States exposed a serious vulnerability
in its much-vaunted military might. The U.S. cannot fight, or win,
a long
term, ground-based, guerilla war. The citizens of America do
not want a ruthless Empire-building regime… not that what Americans
want is of any concern to the Bush
Administration or to the "think"
tanks which design
and drive the policies.
Men who ought
to know better are repeating the mistakes
made in the Vietnam War.
This "back
to the future" state of affairs has not gone unnoticed by Iraq’s
neighbor Iran. Hated by the late Saddam Hussein, by the American
public, by the manipulators in Washington and by the leaders of
Israel, Iran has seen its opportunity for Middle East dominance.
Hoping that the U.S. will suffer a serious humiliation in Iraq,
does Iran
do more than pray for the Shia majority in Iraq? Remember, Iran
has a powerful
friend in Russia.
A game of defiance
is being played out by the Iranian regime. It is a game of brinksmanship
to see just how much Iran can get away with… and gain in the process.
As a signatory
of the Nuclear
Non-Proliferation Treaty, Iran has the right to develop nuclear
energy for peaceful uses. Israel, Pakistan
and India, all nuclear powers, are not
signatories. This is the trump
card Iran has been playing all along.
Does Iran
have a covert
nuclear weapons program? Nobody
really knows. This is precisely Iran’s idea, to keep the world
guessing. The potential of Iran possessing nuclear weapons gives
that country clout
and leverage in the Middle East.
The possibility
of an Iran capable of launching nuclear weapons certainly has much
of the world quite nervous… too nervous. Previously committed to
non-nuclear policies, other
Persian Gulf nations are concerned to the point of reversing
those policies and have announced their own plans of developing
"peaceful"
nuclear capabilities.
Israeli Prime
Minister Ehud Olmert has stated
quite clearly that Israel will not permit a nuclear Iran.
The United
States also considers a nuclear
Iran unacceptable. Does the U.S. dare to invade Iran with a
conventional ground army? Obviously, this is a ludicrous impossibility.
The US military has told Bush only 9,000
troops are available for his "surge" in Iraq. Bush
has rejected
diplomacy. So what are the remaining options? I think they are
fairly obvious. Is wiping Iran off the map
one of those "options"
Bush has left on the table?
How far does
Iran dare to push Israel and the United States? How far do Israel
and the U.S. dare to push Iran? At
what point will someone lose a nuclear temper? Israel may be standing
on the brink right now with reports of plans
to nuke Iranian nuclear
facilities. Israel denies
the report labeling it "incorrect."
Time and time
again Israel has shown little mercy to those who threaten her. The
state of Israel believes in ensuring
its survival. Brutal
retaliation for any threat to her security has been Israel’s
modus operandi. And now, after last summer’s Lebanese
debacle, Israel sits in embarrassed defeat by Hezbollah… and
fearful of another Holocaust.
Iranian President
Ahmadinejad needs to learn some tact. Recently the Iranian president
further taunted Israel with his Holocaust
Conference.
Ahmadinejad
has been quoted as calling for Israel to be "wiped
off the map." Manouchehr Mottaki, Iran’s foreign minister
attempted to clarify
Ahmadinejad’s speech. Speaking in Brussels, Mottaki said of Israel
"We do not recognize legally this regime." Mottaki asked, "How
is it possible to remove a country from the map?" Good question.
Ask Israel, ask Bush?
Will the Israelis
use the boastings
of an increasingly
unpopular loud mouth like Ahmadinejad as one of their excuses
to attack Iran? It’s been done before… in Iraq.
Will Israel
say "enough!" and push the button?
Or will George
W. Bush beat Israel to it? As "War President," Mr. Bush
has been a failure. Public support for Bush’s "Global War on
Terror" has turned against him not because of the illegality,
expense or slaughter but because losing another war has embarrassed
America and her puffed up president.
Delusional
dreams of conquest have addled The Decider’s decision making. Reality
is falling dreadfully short of his fantasies.
A second U.S.
carrier strike group has been sent to the Persian Gulf, not
for diplomatic purposes but as a threat to Iran. Like a sitting
duck, these carrier
groups are easy targets for Iran’s newly
acquired missiles. It’s almost as if Bush is baiting
the Iranians to lob a missile at a U.S. aircraft carrier which
would give him the green light to push the red button.
Bush
means business. A tactical U.S. nuclear strike would serve as
a firm warning to the rest of the world that The Will of Bush must
be served. Or
would it? In the twilight of his second term, Bush is desperate
to do something
glorious. Is Bush crazy enough to consider nuclear war a crowning
glory?
Are any of
the involved parties rational enough to back
away from Armageddon?
Elizabeth
Gyllensvard contributed to and edited this story.
January
12, 2007
Tom
Chartier [send him mail]
played lead guitar in legendary Los Angeles punk band The Rotters
for 26 years until their final appearance in January of 2004. He
has lived in Tokyo and Los Angeles. Currently he resides somewhere
in the Caribbean.
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© 2007 LewRockwell.com
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