OpEdNews
Original Content at
http://www.opednews.com/articles/genera_dave_lin_061223_crime_of_the_century.htm
December 23, 2006
Crime of the Century: Are Bush & Cheney Planning Early
Attack on Iran?
By Dave Lindorff
Crime of the Century: Are Bush & Cheney Planning Early
Attack on Iran?
Back on October 9, I wrote in The Nation that it looked
like the Bush-Cheney gang, worried about the November
election, was gearing up for an unprovoked attack on
Iran's nuclear facilities, with a carrier strike group
led by the USS Eisenhower being ordered to depart a
month early from Norfolk, VA to join the
already-on-station USS Enterprise. That article was
based on reports from angry sailors based on the
Eisenhower who had leaked word of their mission.
There was, thankfully, no attack on Iran before Election
Day, but it is starting to look like I may have been
right about the plan after all, but wrong about the
timing.
As the threat of a catastrophic US election-eve attack
on Iran started to look increasingly likely, reports
began to trickle out of the Pentagon that the generals
and admirals were protesting. They knew that the US
military is stretched to the limit in Iraq and
Afghanistan, and that a war with Iran would be a
disaster of historic proportions. To bolster their
blocking efforts, the Iraq Study Group, headed by
Republican fixer and former Secretary of State (under
Bush Pere) James Baker, which had been slated to release
its report on what to do about Iraq in January, 2007,
pushed forward its report. Baker, together with co-chair
Lee Hamilton, went prematurely public with the group's
conclusion that the Iraq war was a failure, and that the
US should be trying to negotiate with Iran, not attack
that country.
That joint effort appeared to have blocked Bush and
Cheney's war plan, but the reprieve may have only been
temporary.
It now appears that the idea of attacking Iran is again
moving forward. The Eisenhower strike force, armed with
some 800 Tomahawk cruise missiles as well as a fleet of
strike aircraft, and already on station in the Arabian
Sea for over a month and a half, has moved into the
Persian Gulf. A second carrier group, led by the USS
Stennis, is steaming toward the Gulf, too. Already in
position are three expeditionary strike groups and an
amphibious warship, all suitable for landing Marines on
Iranian beaches. On December 20, the New York Times,
citing Pentagon sources, reported that both Britain and
the U.S. are moving additional naval forces into the
region "in a display of military resolve toward Iran
that will come as the United Nations continues to debate
possible sanctions against the country." (We've all seen
what "displays of force" by the Bush administration
actually turn out to be.)
The idea of hitting Iran may make sense from the
Bush-Cheney bunker, where the only consideration is not
what's good for the country, but what's good for Bush
and Cheney. After all, if you're losing your war in
Iraq, and if you have hit bottom politically at home
(Bush's ppublic support ratings are now down in the 20s,
where Nixon's were just before his resignation, and
Cheney's numbers have been in the teens for months), and
if the public is clamoring for an end to it all--and
maybe for your heads, too--expanding the conflict and
putting the nation on a full war footing can look like
an attractive even if desperate gambit.
From the nation's point of view, of course, an attack on
Iran would be an unmitigated disaster. There are no more
troops that the U.S. could throw into battle (the
Pentagon is scrambling just to find another 20,000 or so
bodies that Bush wants to throw into the Iraq quagmire),
so an attack would have to be basically that--an attack.
Certainly the forces the Navy is assembling in the
Persian Gulf, together with the B-52s and B-1s and B-2s
available at Diego Garcia in the Indian Ocean and at
bases in other countries in the region, are capable of
destroying most of Iran's nuclear facilities, as well as
its military infrastructure. But in terms of conquering
territory, the most the U.S. could hope to do would be
to perhaps hold a beachhead on the Straits of Hormuz,
where the Persian Gulf links to the Arabian Sea. And
even that would be a bloody challenge.
There is no way the U.S. could hope to conquer Iran.
Nor would the Iranian people rise up and overthrow their
theocratic leaders--the same neoconservative fantasy
that Bush war-mongers promised ahead of the Iraq
invasion, and which they are re-cycling now to justify
an attack on Iran. In fact, an attack on Iran, far from
sparking a rebellion against the government there, would
crush the new wave of reform that was evidenced in last
week's local elections in Iran, which dealt a blow to
the country's hardliners. Iran is a proud nation with a
history reaching back thousands of years. If attacked,
its people can be counted on to rally around their
current rulers, and its war-hardened soldiers can be
counted on to fight to the death to defend their
country.
Moreover, while its military may be no match for
America's, Iran has many asymmetrical options for
retaliation. As the key player in Iraq, with close links
to Iraq's Shia factions, Iran's military has trained and
armed the Badr Brigades--the largest and best-armed
faction in Iraq, and one which to date has stayed out of
the fighting against US forces. Iran is also close to
the Mahdi Army of Moqtada al Sadr, and could unleash his
fanatical troops too, against US forces in Iraq. If this
happens, count on American casualty rates leaping to or
even surpassing Korea or Vietnam-era levels overnight.
Additionally, Iraq's intelligence services have
connections with Shia groups in Saudi Arabia and other
oil-producing countries, and can be expected to quickly
organize cells to strike at economic and US military
targets there.
More seriously, of course, an attack on Iran will jack
the price of oil to levels never seen before. Even if
the US managed to militarily control the Straits of
Hormuz, Iran's hundreds of stockpiled anti-ship
missiles, which are buried in bunkers all along the
Persian Gulf, would cause insurance rates to soar so
high that no tanker could afford to sail that route,
effectively cutting off over one quarter of the world's
oil supply. Virtually all of the oil produced in Iraq,
Saudi Arabia, Iran, Kuwait and the Arab Emirates would
be trapped in the ground. As well, the network of
pipelines that bring oil from wellheads to refineries
and to storage and pier facilities would be virtually
indefensible against Iran-inspired sapper attacks.
Oil industry analysts have talked of oil leaping in
price to $200 a barrel or more in the event of a US war
with Iran, and given how panicked this country got when
oil reached $80 a barrel recently, there's no need to go
into detail explaining what $200/barrel oil would do to
the U.S. economy--or to the global economy.
Of course, the biggest issue is that attacking Iran
would be yet another war crime by this craven
administration. No one can argue that Iran poses an
imminent threat to anyone, least of all to the U.S.--the
only legitimate grounds under the U.N. Charter and the
Nuremburg Charter, to which the U.S. is a signatory, for
initiating a war. Attacking a country that poses no such
threat is defined as the most heinous of war crimes: a
Crime Against Peace.
If Bush and Cheney perpetrate this crime, the Congress
should initiate immediate impeachment proceedings and
should simultaneously pass legislation terminating
funding for the war. The important thing now is for the
American people to register their opposition to this war
before it happens. Call your senators and your
representative and let them know you don't want it to
happen, and you want impeachment if it does. And add
your name to the petition against war. Also mark down
January 27 in your calendar, for the big march and rally
against war and for impeachment in Washington, D.C. (to
be followed by two days of lobbying Congress on Jan.
28-29.
Finally, send this story to everyone you know, and urge
them to do the same. At this point, with Democrats still
cowering in their offices, only the American people can
stop this madness.
Authors Website:
http://www.thiscantbehappening.net
Authors Bio: Dave Lindorff, a columnist for
Counterpunch, is author of several recent books ("This
Can't Be Happening! Resisting the Disintegration of
American Democracy" and "Killing Time: An Investigation
into the Death Penalty Case of Mumia Abu-Jamal"). His
latest book, coauthored with Barbara Olshanshky, is "The
Case for Impeachment: The Legal Argument for Removing
President George W. Bush from Office (St. Martin's
Press, May 2006). His writing is available at
http://www.thiscantbehappening.net
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