The spin prior to delivering her speech to the Council on Foreign Relations was that this was going to be a "muscular" speech, and indeed it was: threatening to use the military to "defend our interests, our allies, and our people" when it comes to Iran's alleged nuclear weapons program, she declared, with typical Clintonian glibness: "this is not an option we seek nor is it a threat; it is a promise." With those words, the first rhetorical shots of the third Middle Eastern war – and potentially the most devastating, both to the region and our national interests – have been fired. The phraseology is almost Bushian in its studied belligerence, and it is most certainly not a précis to a rapprochement with Tehran. This is just
about what any observer of the scene would have expected from our
Secretary of State, given her past statements – the most recent
being her threat to launch a "first strike" (her words)
on Iran – and her ongoing refusal to retract her enthusiasm for
the Iraq war. Indeed, in her comments to George Stephanopoulos on
"This Week," she held up the invasion of Iraq as a
model for how to deal with the Iranians. As I pointed out on the occasion of her appointment, the State Department is going to serve as the War Party's operational command post in this administration, and Hillary's war cry delivered in the form of a speech is the signal that the push for war has begun. The CFR speech was widely touted as auguring Hillary's great comeback, after taking a nasty fall, and her rising prominence and visibility puts an all-too-familiar face on American foreign policy, one that hasn't changed in any but a cosmetic sense, at least as far as Iran is concerned. Obama, consumed with the rapidly deteriorating US economy, will let Hillary define the terrain on which the conflict with Iran will unfold: the stage is being set. The actors take their places, and, amid frantic preparations taking place behind the curtains, hardly suspected by the audience, the drama takes its preordained course. July 20, 2009 Justin Raimondo [send him mail] is editorial director of Antiwar.com and is the author of An Enemy of the State: The Life of Murray N. Rothbard and Reclaiming the American Right: The Lost Legacy of the Conservative Movement. Copyright © 2009 Antiwar.com
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