Crisis Is Upon Us
by
Paul Craig Roberts
by Paul Craig Roberts
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A number of
experts have concluded that despite the Bush administration's desire
to attack Iran, the aggression would be too rash and the consequences
too dire even for the irrational Bush administration.
Military experts
point out that at a time when generals are calling for more troops
for Afghanistan and Iraq, it would be ill-advised for Bush to add
Iran to the war theater. Experts note that Iran is well armed with
missiles capable of attacking US ships and oil facilities throughout
the Middle East and that Iran can direct its Shiite allies in Iraq
to assault US troops there and set in motion terrorist actions throughout
the Middle East.
Diplomatic
experts point out that the US is isolated in its desire for war
with Iran and has no ally except Israel, thus validating Muslim
claims that the US is Israel’s instrument against Muslims in the
Middle East. Experts note that military aggression is a war crime
and that US violations of international law isolate the US and destroy
the soft power on which US leadership has been based. An attack
on Iran could be the last straw for Muslims chaffing under the rule
of US puppet governments in Egypt, Pakistan, Jordan and Saudi Arabia.
Economic experts
point out that the impact on the price of oil would be severe and
the economic consequences detrimental. With the US housing bubble
deflating, now is not the time for an oil shock.
It is difficult
to take exception to this expert analysis. Nevertheless, the Bush
administration continues to send war signals. Credible news organizations
have reported that US naval attack groups have been given "prepare
to deploy orders" that would put them on station off Iran by
October 21.
How can Bush
administration war plans be reconciled with expert opinion that
the consequences would be too dire for the US?
Perhaps the
answer is that what appears as irrationality to experts is rationality
to neoconservatives. Neocons seek maximum chaos and instability
in the Middle East in order to justify long-term US occupation of
the region. Following this line of thought, neocons would regard
the loss of a US aircraft carrier in the Persian Gulf as a way to
solidify public support for the war. US public anger at the Iranians
could even result in US public support for a military draft in order
to win "the war on terror."
The Bush administration
could bring Congress around by announcing a "Gulf of Tonkin"
incident or by orchestrating a "terrorist attack." However,
this is unnecessary as Bush has prepared the ground for bypassing
Congress with his propagandistic allegations that Iran, by arming
Iraqi insurgents, sponsoring terrorism, and building nuclear weapons,
is the major part of the ongoing "war against terrorism."
Now that Iran is blamed for rising violence in Iraq, an attack on
Iran follows as a matter of course. All Bush has to do is to continue
with his lies in order to bring the American public to a new war
hysteria.
Bush’s attorney
general has demonstrated that he has no qualms about validating
any and all extra-legal powers that the White House requires for
violating the US Constitution and international law. The congressional
attempts to block illegal wiretapping and torture have failed. The
Senate has refused to authorize torture, but the Senate has not
prevented the administration from torturing detainees. The compromise
leaves it to the White House to decide by executive order whether
its interrogation practices are objectionable. In an editorial (September
22, 2006), the Washington Post concluded that "the abuse
can continue."
Polls show
that Bush administration propaganda has convinced a majority of
inattentive Americans that Iran is making nuclear weapons. Polls
show that a majority support an attack on Iran under this circumstance.
The neoconservatives and their media allies have succeeded in causing
the public to confuse Iran’s legal nuclear energy program with a
weapons program.
The International
Atomic Energy Agency, whose inspectors pour over Iran’s nuclear
energy program for signs of a weapons program, recently denounced
a House Intelligence Committee report as "outrageous and dishonest."
Written by the Republican neocon staff, the Republican report falsely
alleges that Iran had enriched uranium to weapons grade last April
and that the IAEA had removed a senior safeguards inspector to keep
the alleged breach of the Nuclear Non-proliferation Pact secret.
Once again
neoconservatives have shown that they will tell any and every lie
to achieve their goal of attacking Iran. Jingoistic anti-UN Bush
supporters will automatically believe the neocon lie and will swallow
right-wing talk radio claims that the UN is protecting Iran’s nuclear
weapons program. As we learned from the Iraq hysteria, facts and
experts are no impediment to the Bush administration’s lies.
Rumsfeld’s
neocon Pentagon has rewritten US war doctrine to permit preemptive
nuclear attack on non-nuclear countries. As the US paid a huge
public relations cost in terms of world opinion and distrust of
the US by endorsing the first use of nuclear weapons, the revision
of US war doctrine must have a purpose.
Neocons
claim that tactical nuclear weapons are necessary to destroy Iran’s
underground facilities. However, the real reason for using nukes
against Iran is to intimidate Iran from retaliating and to threaten
the entire Muslim world with genocide unless Muslims bend to the
neocons’ will and accept US hegemony over their part of the world.
In
his speech to the United Nations, Hugo Chavez might not have been
too deep into hyperbole when he described Bush as an example of
demonic evil.
September
25, 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 was Assistant
Secretary of the Treasury in the Reagan administration. He is the
co-author of The
Tyranny of Good Intentions.
Copyright
© 2006 Creators Syndicate
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