The
Investigative Reporter vs. the President
by
Kevin B. Zeese
by Kevin B. Zeese
Seymour Hersh's
extensive article describing plans to attack Iran, including the
use of tactical nuclear weapons, has forced President Bush to respond.
Two days after Hersh's article appeared, President Bush came forward
to deny any intent to attack Iran – calling such claims "wild
speculation."
Hersh begins
his
article in the New Yorker explaining the real purpose
of attack on Iran: "There is a growing conviction among members
of the United States military, and in the international community,
that President Bush’s ultimate goal in the nuclear confrontation
with Iran is regime change."
In response,
President Bush said allegations that he plans to use force to halt
Iran's nuclear program are "wild speculation." He went
on to say that his focus is on diplomacy: "I know here in Washington
prevention means force. It doesn't mean force necessarily. In this
case it means diplomacy." When Donald Rumsfeld, the embattled
Secretary of State, was asked about planning for Iran he was evasive,
saying "The last thing I’m going to do is to start telling
you or anyone else in the press or the world at what point we refresh
a plan or don't refresh a plan and why."
Hersh seemed
to expect this response, writing before Bush spoke:
"The
Bush Administration, while publicly advocating diplomacy in order
to stop Iran from pursuing a nuclear weapon, has increased clandestine
activities inside Iran and intensified planning for a possible
major air attack. Current and former American military and intelligence
officials said that Air Force planning groups are drawing up lists
of targets, and teams of American combat troops have been ordered
into Iran, under cover, to collect targeting data and to establish
contact with anti-government ethnic-minority groups."
And when asked
about Bush's comments, Hersh told Amy
Goodman on Democracy Now: "It's simply a fact that the
planning has gone beyond the contingency stage, and it’s gone into
what they call the operational stage, sort of an increment higher.
And it's very serious planning, of course. And it's all being directed
at the wish of the President of the United States. And I can understand
why they don't want to talk about it, but that's just the reality."
Pressure
is Mounting to Attack Iran – a Long-Term Target of the Bush Administration
Adding credibility
to Hersh's claims is that removing those in power in Iran has been
supported by many neo-cons since before Bush took office. It is
consistent with the re-making of the Middle East, called for by
the Project for a New
American Century, as part of ensuring U.S. military and economic
dominance of the world.
In addition,
a paper published by an Israeli think tank, the Institute for Advanced
Strategic and Political Studies in 1996 entitled
"A Clean Break: A New Strategy for Securing the Realm,"
written for Benjamin Netanyahu, set out a plan for Israel to "shape
its strategic environment," beginning with the removal of Saddam
Hussein and restoration of the Hashemites in Iraq. With Iraq transformed,
they describe a strategic axis of Iraq, Jordan and Turkey that would
weaken and "roll back" Syria and divide the Shia'a in
Iraq with those in Iran and Syria.
The Jewish
Institute for National Security Affairs (JINSA), another hard-line
advocacy group, has advocated "regime change" by any means
necessary in Iraq, Iran, Syria, Saudi Arabia and the Palestinian
Authority. JINSA's board of advisers has included many Bush administration
leaders: Dick Cheney, John Bolton, Richard Perle, James Woolsey
and Douglas Feith. JINSA now sees Iran as THE security threat saying
in an April 12 JINSA Report entitled "Iran,
Iran, Iran and Iran:"
"Whatever
we do in Iraq and whatever Iraqi politicians do; whatever we do
to Hamas; however hard we look for Bin Laden or al-Zawahiri; whoever
runs our port terminals; whatever the price of gasoline; however
we secure our borders; whoever leaked Valerie Plame's name under
the shadow of a nuclear-capable Iran, American and allied options
are reduced."
Iran, they
say, is "the whole list of national security priorities."
The current
pressure to attack Iran is building. The hard right Israeli lobby
in the United States is advocating attacking Iran to stop the development
of nuclear weapons. A full page advertisement
in The New York Times on April 4 on page A-15 sponsored by
the American Jewish Committee urged an attack on Iran, drawing a
map with Iran in the center showing how far it is from various countries
in Asia, Europe and African asking: "Can anyone within range
of Iran's missiles feel safe?" Just as the pro-Israel lobby
beat the war drums for the invasion of Iraq, they are doing the
same for Iran. AIPAC, the powerful pro-Israeli lobby has a special
page on Iran's
escalating threat. The concern of many has been heightened by
reported comments by Iran’s President, Mahmoud Ahmadinejad challenging
the reality of the Holocaust and that Israel must be "wiped
off the map."
The recent
announcement by Ahmadinejad that Iran has enriched uranium in a
164-centrifuge network to 3.5% has heightened the conflict further.
Ahmadinejad says Iran must now be treated as a nuclear country and
that it plans to continue to develop nuclear power. This is far
from the level of enrichment needed for a nuclear weapon – requiring
at least 80% enrichment and thousands of centrifuges. Iran says
it plans to go ahead and construct a 3,000-centrifuge network at
the Natanz facility within a year and eventually expand to 54,000
centrifuges. Developing enriched uranium for nuclear power is legal
under the Nuclear Non-proliferation Treaty but the UN Security Council
has given Iran until April 28 to suspend uranium enrichment.
Further, much
to the chagrin of the Bush administration, the Iraq invasion has
strengthened Iran. Noted Middle East commentator, Juan
Cole, has described Iran as the real victor in the Iraq War.
Iran has been able to establish warm relations with the government
in Iraq. To have a member of the axis of evil strengthened as result
of U.S. policy is an unintended consequence the U.S cannot let stand.
Problems mounting
in Iraq are a two-edged sword. On one side the U.S. military is
stretched thin and exhausted and opening another front in the Middle
East – with a country four times the size of Iraq – would seem to
be physically impossible. And, an air campaign would be a challenge
with an estimated 400 sites that would need to be targeted. In addition,
there are concerns about an alliance between the Shia community
in Iraq and Shia-dominated Iran making the difficult Iraq situation
even more challenging.
But, the other
edge of the Iraq-quagmire sword increases the chance of an attack
on Iran. Certainly, the administration would prefer to have discussion
of war strategy instead of the fighting in Iraq. And video of precision
air attacks bombing alleged nuclear facilities in Iran will be preferred
to civilian deaths in Iraq. As former national security adviser
Norman
Birnbaum recently said "I fear what the French term a
fuite en avance, a flight in advance, and an attack on Iran."
Is Diplomacy
Possible? Is it Really Being Pursued?
Pursuing diplomacy
is complicated by President Bush's rhetoric. Four years ago Iran
was labeled by President Bush as part of the "axis of evil."
Since then the United States has surrounded the country with troops
in Afghanistan on its western border, Iraq on its eastern border
and the Persian Gulf in the south. And, the rhetoric is escalating.
Since the Iranian
Revolution the US has had no formal diplomatic ties with Iran. According
to a report
in the New York Times, in the lead-up to the 2003 Iraq
War, Iran reportedly made an overture to U.S. officials to begin
what former U.S. policymaker Flynt Leverett, a former national security
adviser, State Department and CIA official says there was "a
diplomatic process intended
to resolve on a comprehensive basis all the bilateral differences
between the United States and Iran." The United States
did not take up the offer. Leverett says that Bush "is, on
this issue, very, very resistant to the idea of doing a deal, even
a deal that would solve the nuclear problem." So, is the administration
serious about diplomacy?
Leverett's
view is consistent with one stated by Javad
Zarif, the Iranian ambassador to the United Nations, in a NY
Times op-ed on April 6. Zarif made the point that "A solution
to the situation is possible and eminently within reach." And,
he emphasized that Iran has complied with the Nuclear Nonproliferation
Treaty, indeed, would like to see it strengthened and enhanced.
Further, "Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, the leader of the Islamic
Republic, has issued a decree against the development, production,
stockpiling and use of nuclear weapons." Further, he points
out that Iran wants "stability" and "never initiated
the use of force or resorted to the threat of force against a fellow
member of the United Nations. Although chemical weapons have been
used on us, we have never used them in retaliation – as United Nations
reports have made clear. We have not invaded another country in
250 years." The article also highlights how Iran has gone above
and beyond the inspection requirements of the UN. Zarif concludes
saying: "Finding solutions requires political will and a readiness
to engage in serious negotiations. Iran is ready."
Not only is
the President's rhetoric and record a problem for diplomacy, but
so is modern U.S. history with Iran. In 1953, the Eisenhower administration
engaged in public rhetorical attacks on Iran when they nationalized
the oil industry, seizing a British oil company. Working with Great
Britain, the
CIA overthrew the democratic government of Mohammed Mossadegh
and installed the Shah of Iran.
The most recent
Democratic Secretary of State, Madeline Albright, excused the U.S.
overthrow of Mossadegh saying in 2000 that: "The Eisenhower
administration believed its actions were justified for strategic
reasons. But the coup was clearly a setback for Iran's political
development and it is easy to see now why many Iranians continue
to resent this intervention by America."
Just as Albright
excused the overthrow by a Republican president, there is essential
silence by the Democrats in response to the Bush administration's
talk of bombing Iran. While some Democrats have opposed the use
of nuclear weapons, they have not opposed the idea of attacking
Iran with non-nuclear weapons. Senator Hilary Clinton has said that
a nuclear-armed Iran would be "unacceptable." Rep. Nancy
Pelosi, the Democratic leader in the House describes Iran as "the
greatest threat to Israel's right to exist." Senator John Kerry
told Meet the Press on April 10, that he favored keeping the option
of air strikes against Iran on the table. The strongest opposition
to attacking Iran has come from Rep.
Ron Paul (R-TX) who notes there is little resistance in Congress
and it appears we have not learned anything from three years in
Iraq.
Hersh reports
on a Member of the House of Representatives describing meetings
where carefully selected Members have been briefed on Iran, he writes:
"'There’s no pressure from Congress' not to take military
action, the House member added. 'The only political pressure is
from the guys who want to do it.' Speaking of President Bush, the
House member said, 'The most worrisome thing is that this guy has
a messianic vision.'"
If diplomacy
means gaining international support then the Bush administration
has problems. There is opposition to an attack on Iran around the
world. The U.S. may only have Israel as a serious ally in a military
attack. The Washington
Post reports that the Russians and Chinese won't even go
along with economic sanctions. And in the recent Security Council
resolution Russia and China edited out the threat of sanctions if
Iran did not stop its enrichment of uranium. Further, Saudi
Arabia has asked Russia to use its position on the Security
Council to prevent a U.S. military attack on Iran. Even Great Britain
is unlikely to participate in an Iran attack.
The consensus
seems to be that while many would prefer Iran not to have a nuclear
weapon, Iran is certainly not an immediate threat to the U.S. or
surrounding countries. U.S. intelligence agencies and Hans Blix,
chief UN weapons inspector have reported that Iran
having a bomb is five to ten years away. As author Mike
Whitney point out, "IAEA chief Mohammed ElBaradei has repeatedly
stated that his team of inspectors, who've had the opportunity to
'go anywhere and see anything,' has found nothing to corroborate
the assertions of the US or Israel."
Further,
would Iran use a nuclear weapon offensively? Iran does not have
any modern history of attacking other countries. Certainly, with
Israel having 250 nuclear bombs and the U.S. with its large arsenal,
would leave Iran to recognize that the use of the bomb would result
in the destruction of Iran. A nuclear response would be something
that Israel and the U.S. could easily justify and the world would
accept.
Hersh is
Not Alone Reporting on Iran Attack Planning, Including Nuclear Weapons
Sy Hersh is
not the only one reporting on military plans being developed. According
to Philip Giraldi, writing in the American
Conservative, last year Vice President Cheney ordered the
Strategic Command to develop plans to attack Iran if there is another
9-11 type attack on the United States. These plans include a large-scale
air assault on Iran employing both conventional and tactical nuclear
weapons.
Giraldi points
out that within Iran there are more than 450 major strategic targets,
including numerous suspected nuclear-weapons-program development
sites. Many of the targets are hardened or are deep underground
and could not be taken out by conventional weapons, hence the nuclear
option. As in the case of Iraq, the response is not conditional
on Iran actually being involved in the act of terrorism directed
against the United States. Giraldi reports that several senior Air
Force officers involved in the planning are appalled at the implications
of what they are doing – that Iran is being set up for an unprovoked
nuclear attack – but no one is prepared to damage his career by
posing any objections.
Further, the
Washington
Post also wrote that intense planning was underway including
the nuclear option in an article published on April 9. The Post
reports that while U.S. officials continue to pursue the diplomatic
course they privately are increasingly skeptical that it will succeed.
And, that last month the White House's new National Security Strategy
labeled Iran the most serious challenge to the United States posed
by any country. They described two levels of air attack – a quick
and limited strike against nuclear-related facilities and a more
ambitious campaign of bombing and cruise missiles leveling targets
well beyond nuclear facilities. The White House is also considering
"nuclear penetrator munitions" to take out buried labs.
Hersh describes
specific plans using tactical nuclear weapons stating:
"One
of the military’s initial option plans, as presented to the White
House by the Pentagon this winter, calls for the use of a bunker-buster
tactical nuclear weapon, such as the B61-11, against underground
nuclear sites. One target is Iran’s main centrifuge plant, at
Natanz, nearly two hundred miles south of Tehran. Natanz, which
is no longer under I.A.E.A. safeguards, reportedly has underground
floor space to hold fifty thousand centrifuges, and laboratories
and workspaces buried approximately seventy-five feet beneath
the surface. That number of centrifuges could provide enough enriched
uranium for about twenty nuclear warheads a year. (Iran has acknowledged
that it initially kept the existence of its enrichment program
hidden from I.A.E.A. inspectors, but claims that none of its current
activity is barred by the Non-Proliferation Treaty.) The elimination
of Natanz would be a major setback for Iran’s nuclear ambitions,
but the conventional weapons in the American arsenal could not
insure the destruction of facilities under seventy-five feet of
earth and rock, especially if they are reinforced with concrete."
Hersh describes
the nuclear option as creating "serious misgivings inside the
offices of the Joint Chiefs of Staff," with "some officers
have talked about resigning. Late this winter, the Joint Chiefs
of Staff sought to remove the nuclear option from the evolving war
plans for Iran – without success . . ." Further "some
senior officers and officials were considering resigning over the
issue" and "the Joint Chiefs had agreed to give President
Bush a formal recommendation stating that they are strongly opposed
to considering the nuclear option for Iran."
Hersh also
comments that the Defense Science board, chaired by William Schneider,
Jr., an Under-Secretary of State in the Reagan Administration, which
has urged the development of tactical nuclear weapons. Schneider
served on an ad-hoc panel on nuclear forces sponsored by the National
Institute for Public Policy, a conservative think tank, in January
2001. Hersh states: "The panel’s report recommended treating
tactical nuclear weapons as an essential part of the U.S. arsenal
and noted their suitability 'for those occasions when the certain
and prompt destruction of high-priority targets is essential and
beyond the promise of conventional weapons.' Several signers of
the report are now prominent members of the Bush Administration,
including Stephen Hadley, the national-security adviser; Stephen
Cambone, the Under-Secretary of Defense for Intelligence; and Robert
Joseph, the Under-Secretary of State for Arms Control and International
Security."
While seeking
to stop Iran, the Bush Administration has made upgrading US nuclear
weapons a key goal. The
Los Angles Times reported on April 6 that "The administration
. . . wants the capability to turn out 125 new nuclear bombs per
year by 2022, as the Pentagon retires older bombs that it claims
will no longer be reliable or safe." The last nuclear bomb
was built in 1989 but the Bush plan also "calls for a modern
complex to design a new nuclear bomb and have it ready in less than
four years, allowing the nation to respond to changing military
requirements."
Thus, the Bush
administration is moving to upgrade U.S. nuclear weapons, develop
tactical nuclear weapons and even use nuclear weapons against Iran
– in an effort to stop Iran from developing a nuclear weapon. The
irony (or is it irany) of this hypocrisy will not be lost on the
world and it is likely to further weaken U.S. alliances around the
world.
Who to Trust,
Hersh or Bush?
So, back to
the original question – who to believe, the commander in chief or
the investigative reporter. Sy
Hersh is a Pulitzer Prizewinning reporter who gained international
fame for exposing the My Lai massacre in Vietnam and more recently
the Abu Ghraib prison scandal.
President Bush
has most recently been tied to the leak of a CIA agents name in
retaliation of her husband's report criticizing claims related to
nuclear weapons in Iraq. He has been widely criticized for exaggerating
the threat of Iraq regarding weapons of mass destruction. And he
has claimed that the United States does not torture people it detains,
when photographs and other evidence indicate that it does.
Right now the
U.S. public is divided on attacking Iran. The Los
Angeles Times reports that 48% would support an attack if
Iran continued to develop nuclear weapons, while 40% opposed. In
January a Times/Bloomberg poll found 57% support, so support is
dropping. But, there is loss of trust in Bush, with 54% saying they
do not expect him to make the right decision.
Bloomberg reports that only 37% of Americans believe Bush when
he claims progress is being made on Iraq. And, according to a Washington
Post poll, 55% of Americans do not find Bush to be "honest
and trustworthy." So, Bush has a lot to overcome to convince
the public to believe him on Iraq.
Hersh obviously
struck a cord deep enough that the president felt he had to respond.
Hopefully, shining the light on the plans to go to war will result
in a more informed electorate and opposition in Congress that stops
the expansion of the war in the Middle East.
Join Democracy
Rising, Gold Star Families for Peace, CODE PINK, Progressive Democrats
of America, Democrats.com, Traprock Peace Center, Global Exchange,
Velvet Revolution, Truthout, OpEdNews, Backbone Campaign, Consumers
For Peace, Campus Antiwar Network, and The Young Turks in signing
a petition to Bush and Cheney opposing the launching of a war of
aggression against Iran. The petition, with all the signatures
and comments you add, will be delivered to the White House by Cindy
Sheehan and many other activists.
Help build
a voting bloc to prevent future wars of aggression – sign the
voters pledge at VotersForPeace.US.
April
15, 2006
Kevin
Zeese [send him mail]
is director of Democracy
Rising.
Copyright
2006 Kevin Zeese
Kevin
Zeese Archives
|