Can
a U.S. War With Iran Be Prevented?
by Karen
Kwiatkowski
by Karen Kwiatkowski
DIGG THIS
Even after
a long
winter of orchestrated chanting and battlegroup repositioning,
springtime American attacks on Iranian territory are not written
in stone. Such a war is not predetermined, except
in the minds of neoconservatives in this country and some
politicos in Tel Aviv.
We should remember
that these people do not run the country, ostensibly still a Republic.
True, this mindset of war-economics and benign super-dominance of
the world is appealing to many in Congress. Those with the ability
to deliver votes, and take them away, seem to want this next iteration
of creative
destruction. More dangerously, this mindset grips the military-industrial
complex and even many diplomats for reasons of self-actualization.
War makes them relevant, prosperous, significant.
If we were
a kingdom, George W. Bush would be our King. If George W. Bush were
our King, a war with Iran would indeed be inevitable. To stop that
war, we would need to stop the king himself – and stopping a king
is often something that requires bold action on the part of those
with access to him.
If we were
a kingdom trying to stop a troublesome king, we might look to the
person closest to him. For us, this would be the vice president,
Dick Cheney. However, if we were a kingdom today, we would be witness
to a power behind the throne in the form of a well-placed civilian
with a mystical reputation for force of personality, and a posse
of loyal samurai willing to kill and die for him. Other empires
have had their Grigori
Rasputins, their Agrippinas, their de Richelieus. If we were
a kingdom, we would have Dick Cheney.
If we were
a kingdom, a key source of power with excellent access to a wayward
or delusion king would be the head of the king’s army. Marine
General Peter Pace has recently stated that he "believes"
Iran is involved in Iraq against our troops, but he sees no need
for "kinetic
action against Iran." Well, I suppose that’s comforting.
In a kingdom, the top military officer would be exceptionally loyal
to his king. In a republic, he would be loyal to the Constitution,
or perhaps, the "people." The jury is out on Perfect Peter,
but somehow I think he will be of little assistance this time.
If we were
a kingdom, we might seek the help of trusted advisors to the king,
and call on their persuasive skills to realign the kingdom towards
fiscal sanity, peace, and civility. The modern American serfs might
set their hopes on the lovely Condi Rice, ostensibly holding an
important position and personally close to the president. However,
her
latest obfuscations to the Congress should leave the serfs less
than inspired.
If we were
a kingdom, those who speak for the serfs might truly be our salvation.
In a republic, a congress may represent the people, and in ours,
holds the sole charter to declare wars and to impeach incompetent
and corrupt officials. If we were a kingdom, we would have something
similar, perhaps a parliament that exists to advise the king, but
rarely if ever overrule him. It might be called a parliament
of whores, to borrow a moniker popularized by P.J. O’Rourke.
Not much help, if we were a kingdom.
If we were
a kingdom, we would be in dire straits. We would be saddled with
a crazed and warlike fantasist as king, a powerful warlike fantasist
as his right hand man, a perfect peter as top military man, an über-loyal
diplomatic advisor, and a parliament of whores standing alert and
ready like trained dogs.
Are we not
a republic? A republic would, in response to the desires of a supermajority,
turn back our carrier battle groups, and bring our troops home from
Iraq and elsewhere in the world where they occupy unwanted garrisons.
A republic would seek constitutional inspiration and hard truth
in order to make foreign policy. A republic would take action to
impeach corrupt officials, and remove from power those who have
proven to be both criminal and grossly incompetent in their public
duties.
If we were
still a republic, reversing the stupidity and hubris of this administration
and bringing troops home, much less avoiding this so-called inevitable
attack on Iran, would be achievable, and even normal.
If we are still
a republic, I am not justified in advocating harsher and more radical
action.
But if we are
no longer a republic, then more radical action by individuals and
groups is surely appropriate. Today, those who wish for good government
and a wise foreign policy charitably march on Washington during
the weekend, disrupting no traffic, and seeing few lawmakers. If
we are not a republic, it is legitimate to act in a less charitable
manner, perhaps by shutting down traffic around the White House
Monday through Friday, and disrupting the everyday activities of
our monarchy and their lackeys in other creative ways.
If we are not
a republic, we have already lost a great deal of that for which
we fight as a nation – and thus we ought to feel no obligation to
fight solely for an unpopular king. If we are no longer a republic,
we should be supporting the troops not by sending sunscreen and
love letters but by encouraging desertion, insubordination, and
rebellion at every turn.
If we are a
kingdom, or an empire ruled by our own special Nero, then we have
nothing to gain by following the rules of republican citizenship,
and everything to gain by ignoring them.
I don’t know
if we will attack Iran or other countries from the sea, the air,
and our
lily-pads in puppetized post-Saddam Iraq and post-Taliban Afghanistan.
I don’t believe it is inevitable, exactly. If we were a republic,
we would not do it.
Sadly, habit
and evidence both point in a different direction, one of more
murder, more death, more destruction – and it demands that each
of us begin to learn and practice new and more frightening ways
to be patriots and republicans.
February
16, 2007
LRC
columnist Karen Kwiatkowski, Ph.D. [send
her mail], a retired USAF lieutenant colonel, has written on
defense issues with a libertarian perspective for MilitaryWeek.com,
hosted the call-in radio show American
Forum, and blogs occasionally for Huffingtonpost.com
and Liberty and Power.
Archives of her American Forum radio program can be accessed here
and here. To receive
automatic announcements of new articles, click
here.
Copyright ©
2007 Karen Kwiatkowski
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