Iranophobia
by
Paul Craig Roberts
by Paul Craig Roberts
If you were
President George W. Bush with all available US troops tied down
by the Iraqi resistance, and you were unable to control Iraq or
political developments in the country, would you also start a war
with Iran?
Yes, you would.
Bush’s determination
to spread Middle East conflict by striking at Iran does not make
sense.
First of all,
Bush lacks the troops to do the job. If the US military cannot successfully
occupy Iraq, there is no way that the US can occupy Iran, a country
approximately three times the size in area and population.
Second, Iran
can respond to a conventional air attack with missiles targeted
on American ships and bases, and on oil facilities located throughout
the Middle East.
Third, Iran
has human assets, including the Shia majority population in Iraq,
that it can activate to cause chaos throughout the Middle East.
Fourth, polls
of US troops in Iraq indicate that a vast majority do not believe
in their mission and wish to be withdrawn. Unlike the yellow ribbon
folks at home, the troops are unlikely to be enthusiastic about
being trapped in an Iranian quagmire in addition to the Iraqi quagmire.
Fifth, Bush’s
polls are down to 34 percent, with a majority of Americans believing
that Bush’s invasion of Iraq was a mistake.
If you were
being whipped in one fight, would you start a second fight with
a bigger and stronger person?
That’s what
Bush is doing.
Opinion polls
indicate that the Bush regime has succeeded in its plan to make
Americans fear Iran as the greatest threat America faces.
The Bush regime
has created a major dispute with Iran over that country’s nuclear
energy program and then blocked every effort to bring the dispute
to a peaceful end.
In order to
gain a pretext for attacking Iran, the Bush regime is using bribery
and coercion in its effort to have Iran referred to the UN Security
Council for sanctions.
In recent statements
President Bush and Pentagon chief Donald Rumsfeld blamed Iran for
the Iraqi resistance, claiming that the roadside bombs used by the
resistance are being supplied by Iran.
It is obvious
that Bush intends to attack Iran and that he will use every means
to bring war about.
Yet, Bush has
no conventional means of waging war with Iran. His bloodthirsty
neoconservatives have prepared plans for nuking Iran. However, an
unprovoked nuclear attack on Iran would leave the US, already regarded
as a pariah nation, totally isolated.
Readers, whose
thinking runs ahead of that of most of us, tell me that another
9/11 event will prepare the ground for a nuclear attack on Iran.
Some readers say that Bush, or Israel as in Israel’s highly provocative
attack on the Jericho jail and kidnapping of prisoners with American
complicity, will provoke a second attack on the US. Others say that
Bush or the neoconservatives working with some "black opts"
group will orchestrate the attack.
One
of the more extraordinary suggestions is that a low yield, perhaps
tactical, nuclear weapon will be exploded some distance out from
a US port. Death and destruction will be minimized, but fear and
hysteria will be maximized. Americans will be told that the ship
bearing the weapon was discovered and intercepted just in time,
thanks to Bush’s illegal spying program, and that Iran is to blame.
A more powerful wave of fear and outrage will again bind the American
people to Bush, and the US media will not report the rest of the
world’s doubts of the explanation.
Reads
like a Michael Crichton plot, doesn’t it?
Fantasy? Let’s
hope so.
March
16, 2006
Dr.
Roberts [send him mail]
is
Chairman of the Institute for Political Economy and Research Fellow
at the Independent Institute.
He is a former associate editor of the Wall Street Journal,
former contributing editor for National Review, and a former
assistant secretary of the U.S. Treasury. He is the co-author of
The
Tyranny of Good Intentions.
Copyright
© 2006 LewRockwell.com
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