|
Edgar J. says "Steele
yourself" for a US-Israeli Attack on Iran...
vs.
The US and Israel
Cannot Attack Iran by Michael C. Ruppert, and
Bombing Iran? Don't Count on it Unless the Neocons Exceed their Known
Capacity for Stupidity by Stan Goff
(subscribers-only articles reproduced for educational purposes--do not
post)
MUJCA-NET presents these opposing viewpoints on the likelihood of an
attack on Iran in order to underline just how insane the neocon saber-rattling
really is. Are they crazy enough to do it and destroy the US empire and
economy, and maybe the world? Or are they just pretending to be crazy? See:
http://mujca.com/madmantheory.htm
Either way, 9/11 truth is the way back
to sanity.
www.ConspiracyPenPal.com
/color>
1. The Crack
of Doom by Edgar J. Steele
February 1, 2006
My name is Edgar J. Steele. This is a Nickel Rant.
Last night, President Bush delivered the State of the Union Address, a
speech that had to be written for him by our masters (though, in all
fairness, Bush did pretty much keep his crayons within the lines).
Incredibly enough, Bush claimed that "we are winning" in Iraq.
Even though it has become plain that America never will escape from Iraq
with her dignity, Bush ruled out a withdrawal by saying, "If we were to
leave these vicious attackers alone, they would not leave us alone. They
would simply move the battlefield to our own shores." Via all those Iraqi
and Palestinian aircraft carriers, no doubt. Words. Just words. Spoken
only as a man who ran from war when it was his turn could speak them.
As
expected, Bush repeatedly set up the coming invasion of Iran. "And we do
not forget...Syria, Burma, Zimbabwe, North Korea and Iran because the
demands of justice, and the peace of this world, require their freedom as
well."
Bush did settle the question as to who gets to start the festivities in Iran
when he claimed that "Iran...sponsors terrorists in the Palestinian
territories and in Lebanon, and that must come to an end. The Iranian
government is defying the world with its nuclear ambitions, and the nations
of the world must not permit the Iranian regime to gain nuclear weapons."
Did you just hear him invite Israel to bomb the hell out of Iran? I did.
Guess who gets to go in afterward and do the dirty work? Right. Your kids
and mine. Have you picked out your son's burial plot yet?
At least Bush honestly drew the battle line when he said, "And one of the
main sources of reaction and opposition is radical Islam." I've said it
before and I'll say it again: This is not a war on "terrorism," it is a war
on Islam, blood enemy of Israel and its bullyboy, the United States of
America.
Bush's true allegiance became clear when, later in the speech, he demanded
that "the leaders of (Palestine's ruling party) Hamas must recognize Israel,
disarm, reject terrorism and work for lasting peace." Remember that
Palestinian children are the ones lobbing rocks at the Israeli tanks rolling
through their neighborhoods and who are getting shot in the head by Israeli
snipers as punishment for their meager efforts to protect their sisters and
brothers.
Remember that it was Rachel Corrie, peace activist, who was run down and
brutally murdered by an Israeli tank on Palestinian soil where she stood up
for the right of Palestinians simply to exist.
Once a year, at about this time, the President delivers the State of the
Union address. Tomorrow is Groundhog Day. Many people have gotten these
two events mixed up in their minds, which is understandable. As someone
over at Air America Radio once pointed out: "It is an ironic juxtaposition
of events: one involves a meaningless ritual in which we look to a creature
of little intelligence for prognostication while the other involves a
groundhog."
Twins separated at birth?
Coincidence?
You be the judge.
(For the whole article, see
http://www.ConspiracyPenPal.com)
2. The US and
Israel Cannot Attack Iran
by Michael C.
Ruppert
© Copyright 2006, From The Wilderness Publications,
www.fromthewilderness.com.
All Rights Reserved. This story may NOT be posted on any Internet web site
without express written permission. Contact admin@copvcia.com. May be
circulated, distributed or transmitted for non-profit purposes only.
January 27, 2006 0800 PST (FTW): The reason why so many Americans on
the left and right, whether supporters or opponents of Neocon tyranny in
Washington, are “sold” on the idea that American or Israeli air strikes
against Iran will take place this March (or soon thereafter) is simple. It
is more frightening for them to ponder the prospect of an impotent America
standing exposed and vulnerable in a world that largely – and for good
reason – hates it. Global economic meltdown, chaos and nuclear war are more
scary than the evil that Americans have incrementally compromised themselves
into endorsing. The uncertainty of a world no longer tethered to a US center
– even one that many verbally oppose – represents an intolerable leap into
the unknown. That leap, however, is a fait accompli.
The US bluffs onward with its saber-rattling rhetoric but the whole planet
is calling that bluff. Foreign investment in Iran is increasing, not
decreasing. The planet is throwing money into Iran.
Every day I receive three or four stories from diverse sources – marginal
internet researchers and mainstream media/color>
outlets – stating why an attack on Iran is, a good idea, or likely, or
inevitable. In these two companion pieces, FTW’s Military Affairs
Editor, Stan Goff (retired US Army Special Forces and former West Point
instructor) and I delineate the reasons why such an attack will not (and
probably cannot) happen. That is, of course, with one remotely necessary
caveat: that stupidity beyond belief has overtaken the US and Israel. I
would rephrase that to also include suicidal tendencies beyond belief. Stan
and I both know something about these kinds of operations. I’ve been
studying them for 30 years and Stan has been living them for that long.
Any military attack on Iran of any kind will mean the end of
the world as we know it. The same thing is true of a US-sponsored
assassination attempt on Hugo Chavez or any other “regime change” or
intervention anywhere. All such developments would be universally perceived
as US-sanctioned in any case. There is much less reason to fear the US than
there was three or four years ago. Near-toothless tigers with bad gums and
fetid gingivitis breath do not inspire fear and awe. They invite attack. A
pressure-cooker of pent-up global rage against the US awaits only a pinprick
to make it blow.
As I said in lectures throughout 2005 and in my new DVD
Denial Stops Here/color>, the world has drawn a line in the sand
around Iran. China, Asia, Europe and even Britain cannot (and will not) do
without Iranian oil and gas. In 2004, China alone signed $200 billion in
long-term oil and gas deals with Iran. Europe and the rest of Asia are in
similar investment positions. Japan/color>
cannot do without Iranian energy. Malaysia/color>
cannot do without Iranian energy. South Korea/color>
cannot do without Iranian energy. Germany/color>
cannot do without Iranian energy. France/color>cannot
do without Iranian energy. India/color>
cannot do without Iranian energy. And especially
Great Britain/color> cannot do without Iranian energy; especially since
four months ago the UK became a net energy importer as its North Sea
production continued to plummet with a decline rate approaching 10% per
year.
Britain has already ruled out military moves/color>
against Iran and it will likely oppose US moves even for sanctions (a
necessary precursor) in the UN Security Council.
The world has not forgotten the lies used by the US to justify its invasion
of Iraq, nor has it somehow missed the fact that we are getting our Imperial
ass kicked there. The world has not missed today’s headlines that the US
Army is stretched to the breaking point/color>.
“The Army?” you say. “But these are going to be air strikes!”
Stan Goff has spelled it out eloquently in his article: any US
or Israeli attack on Iran will give the Iraqi insurgency a combined dose of
steroids and meth crystals that will spell utter defeat for the US in Iraq
and end the ultra-fragile SCIRI (pro-Iranian Shia)-centered coalition that
is now on life support.
Those fueling the “attack Iran” hype argue that “precision” air strikes
would likely not involve US ground troops. They forget that as the US has
become bogged in the Iraqi quagmire next door, it has made extensive (if
tenuous) bargains with Shia militias and the pro-Iranian SCIRI regime that
would undoubtedly drop all support for a US-led peace in Iraq in the event
of such an attack. As Goff so aptly points out, an attack on Iran, even by
Israel alone, would lead directly to a US defeat in Iraq. This would come at
a time when US forces are stretched to thebreaking
point.
/color>
Iran has made it abundantly clear/color>
that the whole world will suffer oil shortages in the event of a US or
Israeli attack. All Iran has to do is to reduce exports and the rest of the
world’s powers will turn on the US in a minute. The recent lessons ofUkraine/color>
and Georgia/color>
demonstrate what sudden (and mild by comparison) energy shortages can do in
a world where demand has likely already exceeded supply.
Iran is also in a position to close the Straits of Hormuz through which
about half of the world’s oil passes. It is known (or reported) to have
Excocet, Silkworm and even the deadly Russian Sunburn/color> missiles that
would make the job easy.
Oil is not the only weapon Iran can use to rally the whole world (including
Europe) against the US. Iran’s is a thriving economy, swollen with
petrodollars. That money is being used to purchase
European/Japanese/Korean-made autos, consumer goods, and high-cost
technology. Iran is filled with technicians, managers and investments from
all of the above countries. It was Russia that sold Iran the technology for
much of its nuclear research including the Bushehr nuclear reactor. Russia
has also sold Iran surface to air missile systems. China has sold Iran all
kinds of military hardware.
The Iranian military is orders of magnitude stronger and better equipped to
retaliate throughout the region than was Iraq’s. With that in mind, I
strongly recommend Goff’s brilliant Full
Spectrum Disorder/color> to get a glimpse as to how thoroughly Iraqi
insurgents have beaten the US military outside the box. The only people who
don’t seem to know this are American taxpayers.
Economic sanctions against Iran are even more toothless. Should the US try
to weaken Iran through economic sanctions it would immediately threaten the
economies of China, Europe, India and East Asia. That is, if the US could
get the sanctions through the UN in the first place. If Iran has no money to
spend then all those investments and technicians and factory reps have to go
home.
On an almost daily basis, stories are hitting the mainstream that Iran is or
isn’t moving all of its foreign assets to Asia and out of British and
European banks. The mixed messages alone are enough to roil the markets and
that’s exactly the object lesson Iran wants to drive home.
SANCTIONS AND THE UN
Don’t hold your breath, Condi. They aren’t going to happen. Any
sanctions that might come out as a result of US pressure won’t even make
Iran blink. The best the US can hope for is maybe travel restrictions on
Iranian leaders (yawn). And if that’s all the US gets after taking the
matter to the UN, the US will appear even weaker.
The permanent members of the UN Security Council include Britain, France,
China and Russia. All have one-vote, unilateral veto power. Other current
Security Council members include Japan, who will certainly oppose anything
that might slow down Iran’s purchases of their products. These nations can
read the writing on the wall. The US consumption binge is ending on a note
of severe indigestion and flatulence. The US economy is crumbling and the
signs are clear that Joe America/color> is
waking up to the fact that he’s already in
way over his head/color>.
IT’S THE BOURSE, OF COURSE
The key to understanding why Iran is under such pressure from the Empire
is simple: The oil bourse scheduled to open in Iran this March will trade in
Euros instead of dollars. The entire world (including Japan, China, Russia,
India, Latin America and Europe) is eager for this bourse to open. For it is
there that they will free themselves from the indirect taxation that has
been imposed upon them by the US dollar since the Bretton Woods agreement
was ratified after World War II.
True, dollar hegemony began when the dollar was decoupled from gold during
the Great Depression. It gained strength when, during the Second World War,
the US supplied and fed a beleaguered world, accepting payment in gold. Oil,
gold and the dollar are in heavy, heavy play right now. It is impossible for
all three to rise in value at the same time. On that front it’s two-to-one
against the dollar.*
This threat to dollar hegemony was a major reason for the removal of Saddam
Hussein. He started trading Iraqi oil for Euros in 1999. Though he wasn’t
taken seriously at first, by 2000 he was attracting enough international
business to scare the bejesus out of Imperial Washington.
Iran is at least twice the economic threat to the dollar that Iraq was.
The only problem is that the Empire has suffered a case of premature
ejaculation. It spent all of its resources in Iraq: economic, political,
moral, and military. “They’re gone and there ain’t no more.” Like the men on
the bridge at Eindhoven which proved too far for Sir Bernard Law Montgomery
in 1944’s Operation Market Garden, Iran can now stand, looking across the
bridge which it controls and give the US the raspberry. Like the rest of the
world, Iran understands that the US cannot cross that bridge without risking
losing the war. Any futile attempt by the US and Israel to attack Iran
would be the single largest “nuclear moment” since August 9, 1945,
surpassing the Cuban Missile Crisis of 1962.
The world understands this calculus and is betting – whether they admit it
or not – on Iran. The one ace up the Empire’s sleeve, PROMIS software and
other advanced hacking programs, could be used to sabotage the bourse’s
operations. But then that would be like the US leaving a calling card saying
“We did it.” The world knows what the US is capable of in terms of “data
mining.” About a sixth of my book Crossing
the Rubicon/color> was devoted to that technology and its deep
connection to the Empire.
As for Israel, an air attack on Iran would almost certainly result in an
uncontrollable chain reaction throughout the Muslim world. Beyond all reason
the state of Israel would be suddenly surrounded on all sides with
never-before-seen levels of animosity. I cannot fail to note the resemblance
to events narrated in the Book of Revelation. There can be no doubt about
what the Fundamentalist Christian PACs want. Since Israel, not Iran, is the
only nuclear power in the region it kind of makes one wonder.
Either way, the spring and summer of 2006 are going to be a turning point in
human history that no one will forget. Those who hope the US will attack
Iran may be supporting not a turning point in history but rather history’s
end.
* Much of the above analysis comes from the best economic teaching paper I
have read in ten years. It is a must-read called “The Proposed Iranian Oil
Bourse”by Krassimir Petrov, Ph.D. Commissioned by investment banker Douglas
Bowey (whom I have met), it was first published (as far as I can tell) in a
long, seven page version on January 16th at
Le Metropole Cafe/color>. Le Metropole Cafe is a
subscriber-only site that features commentary by some of the best economic
minds on the planet. Shorter versions of the article are proliferating over
some of my favorite internet sites as free reprints under US Copyright laws.
I strongly recommend subscribing at Le Metropole to get the long version. If
not, all you have to do is Google the title and you’ll see how far and wide
this great work has spread.
3. Bombing
Iran? Don't Count on It - Unless the Neocons Exceed their Known
Capacity for Stupidity
by
Stan Goff
© Copyright 2006, From The Wilderness Publications,
www.fromthewilderness.com.
All Rights Reserved. This story may NOT be posted on any Internet web site
without express written permission. Contact admin@copvcia.com. May be
circulated, distributed or transmitted for non-profit purposes only.
Growth for the sake of growth is the ideology of the cancer cell.
-Edward Abbey
January 27, 2006 0800 PST (FTW): Sometimes it is a good mental
exercise to put oneself in the place of his or her opponent. Imagine an
antagonistic scenario from the standpoint of the other side to determine
“most likely courses of action.”
It’s a simple exercise on a military battlefield – linear and clear-cut, a
simple race to calculate the destruction of an opponent. It is an
infinitely more problematic exercise once new layers of complexity are
added.
The Haitians have a proverb that goes, “A stupid person is a real thing.”
I say all this as a preface because I am about to outline all the reasons I
don’t believe the United States or its proxy Israel will bomb Iran in March
– a speculation that’s growing legs in the media, especially the internet,
right now.
Plenty of us wrote volumes explaining why the Iraq invasion was and is a
disaster – not for the world, but for the carnival barkers of the Bush
administration. We practically wrote imperial advice columns.
The administration did it anyway and hasn’t proven capable of getting back
on the right foot since. (Except politically, in “winning/color>”
the 2004 election of course, but they were ably assisted in that venture by
the asinine Democratic Leadership Council.) Don’t get me wrong. The Bush
administration failing is probably a good thing in the larger scheme of
things, just as was the defeat of the Wehrmacht in Russia, and the
annihilation of Custer’s genocidal 7th Cavalry in Montana. The problem, as
always, is that when the high muckety-mucks make these bad decisions, it’s
the lowly grunts that bleed for them.
So everything I write here about why (from the point of view of the Bush
administration itself) the US and/or Israel attacking Iran would, as a
dumb-ass decision, rank with winter ground attacks against Russia and taking
that shortcut through the Little Bighorn — doesn’t mean they won’t do it
anyway.
With that as a huge caveat, let me explain why neither the Bush
administration nor the Israelis will attack Iran in March or any other time
this year… unless that Haitian proverb goes into effect.
In case it’s gone unnoticed, the ancien political Praetorians
assembled at the Bush White House recently to conduct an intervention.
Imperialeminence gris Zbigniew Brzezinski has been lobbing salvos of
op-ed columns at the stupidity of the decision to invade Iraq. Earlier this
month, a Blue-Ribbon panel of Wilsonian Machiavellis met with Bush to “offer
advice on the war.” Numbered among these sages were Madeleine Albright,
William Perry, William Cohen, James Baker, Lawrence Eagleburger, Colin
Powell, and – ominously – Robert McNamara, the Rumsfeldian metrician of the
Vietnam quagmire. This, just as Paul Bremer, who made his bones at the knee
of the genocidal and charming Henry Kissinger, declares that as the colonial
viceroy of Iraq, he was… “a scapegoat.” Coincidence? I think not.
Poor, poor Paul.
On the 11th of January, Brzezinski opined that “Victory or defeat [in Iraq]
is, in fact, a false strategic choice.”
In using this formulation, the president would have the American people
believe that their only options are either “hang in and win” or “quit and
lose.” But the real, practical choice is this: “persist but not win” or
“desist but not lose.”
Victory, as defined by the administration and its supporters -- i.e., a
stable and secular democracy in a unified Iraqi state, with the insurgency
crushed by the American military assisted by a disciplined, U.S.-trained
Iraqi national army -- is unlikely. The U.S. force required to achieve it
would have to be significantly larger than the present one, and the Iraqi
support for a U.S.-led counterinsurgency would have to be more motivated.
The current U.S. forces (soon to be reduced) are not large enough to crush
the anti-American insurgency or stop the sectarian Sunni-Shiite strife.
Both problems continue to percolate under an inconclusive but increasingly
hated foreign occupation.
Moreover, neither the Shiites nor the Kurds are likely to subordinate their
specific interests to a unified Iraq with a genuine, single national army.
As the haggling over the new government has already shown, the two dominant
forces in Iraq -- the religious Shiite alliance and the separatist Kurds --
share a common interest in preventing a restoration of Sunni domination,
with each determined to retain a separate military capacity for asserting
its own specific interests, largely at the cost of the Sunnis. A truly
national army in that context is a delusion. Continuing doggedly to seek "a
victory" in that fashion dooms America to rising costs in blood and money,
not to mention the intensifying Muslim hostility and massive erosion of
America's international legitimacy, credibility and moral reputation.
Aside from the Orwellian intro about persisting and desisting – really a
suggested rhetorical approach for the administration to bug the fuck out of
Iraq, and the sooner the better – the rest of this analysis could have been
written by yours truly and a host of other irascibles anytime over the past
three years. We may not assign the same plus and minus signs to categories
and outcomes, but the fact that we are in accord on these (highly reduced
and simplified) basics should be telling us something.
The question is, what?
I propose that it means the empire is in very deep shit.
I’m not, however, going to propose that Wilsonian “realists” like Brzezinski,
Powell, and Albright have any better solution than the booger-picking loons
in office right now. I think the criticisms of the former of the actions of
the latter have the strong, sour scent of panic. These same luminaries
paved a direct path to where we are now, and gave us all the old
wait-and-see three years ago when Karl Rove’s wet-brained Pinocchio stepped
up to this crap table.
Brzezinski can’t say it, so I will.
Behind the whole “stable, secular democracy” smokescreen (which he borrows
from the administration) lie the true and original goals of this adventure:
to build permanent US military installations in Iraq and take the political
pressure off Saudi Arabia; to maintain those installations as “lily pads”
from which to launch future military operations throughout Hydrocarbon Asia;
to have this military control over the region as a lever to use against
various current and future competitors, including Western Europe, Japan, and
China… especially China; to compensate for the increasing weakness of the
United States as a center of productive capital by militarily securing the
global dominance of the US as the center of finance capital; to create a
demonstration effect with a decisive and destructive “shock and awe”
military assault on Iraq as propaganda-of-the-deed for would-be malcontents.
The fact that none of this has turned out as planned, which I will discuss
further along, does not mean that there was ever much choice, at least from
the standpoint of the US dominant class… which includes not only Bush but
all those nervous Wilsonians who appeared for the intervention.
When the Soviet Union broke up and the Warsaw Pact stood down, an entire
globally deployed imperial military apparatus became a doctrinal orphan.
The very enemy which was the raison d’etre of the Pentagon, its
organization, its composition, its disposition, its “air-land war” doctrine…
became an anachronism in less than a year between 1989 and 1990.
The question of how to re-dispose this unwieldy and wildly expensive killing
machine was never going to be resolved in a vacuum. The historical
tendencies that would contextualize that decision were already in motion,
and even with a very high level of complexity, there were trend lines within
those tendencies that were already part of the dominant preoccupations
within US ruling circles.
They may rule over the people in the bog, but they are still in the
same goddamned bog.
The problem was complicated by the vulgar political realities of American
society, where an entire worldview had been carefully propagated in
conjunction with the Cold War, and upon that worldview rested the very
legitimacy of successive governments.
Enemies, of course, are essential to maintain the hegemony of our national
rulers, and suddenly we were left floundering without one. The War on Drugs
was a bland substitute through the 90’s. Hell, we like drugs. That
foolishness was combined with the imperatives of consumer demand production
to juice up accumulation through both Clinton terms – so we were encouraged
to go on a spending bacchanalia and told more than once that we were at the
end of history, that we had arrived at some consumer nirvana atop a jillion
miles of fiber optic cable that now lies as unused as the Gold Coast
Railroad.
The problem with telling everyone that they’re at the end of history is that
it is a lie with a very short half-life. American politics runs in two-to
four-year cycles, within which there is a kind of partisan mud-wrestling
where there are very few rules. Except to keep the focus off the system
itself.
Both parties are constantly offering up the intellectual equivalent of
cotton candy for the masses while they compete to see who can shovel the
most money into the pockets of their most loyal capitals. The other thing
they both do, of course, at the national level, is try to preserve American
dominance in the world.
There is no argument about this goal, only about the best method to achieve
it.
The problem with an abrupt shift like the end of the Cold War and the
resulting disruption of those old categories is that it exposes the American
ruling class to a crisis of legitimacy.
That is where we are now – the ruling class and its dominant faction is
trying to build a new worldview to fill the void, in many respect at odds
with the old one, when the old one hasn’t faded yet from memory. Combine
this with the fact that all the old partisan points of reference have been
jumbled apart by this post-Cold War disruption, and we have the weird
spectacles we are treated to now – like two Yalie frat brothers running
against one another for the presidency, both agreeing with each other on the
most important question in the public mind, the war in Iraq, one running as
a “war hero” and losing to a more compelling (if utterly ridiculous) image
of his fellow multi-millionaire opponent as a Wild West cowboy… an image of
a myth.
The reactive mendacity of both parties over the last three years is waking a
lot of people up. That is a big political problem… for the bigwigs.
I could say, “Meanwhile, out in the real world,” but I won’t. I said
earlier, or at least the Haitian proverb said, “A stupid person is a real
thing.” That would mean a lot of stupid people are a lot of real things… or
a really big real thing.
So I will say instead that, “Meanwhile… the empire is losing its moorings.”
I’ll begin with Iran. I promised a hypothesis. It is that neither the US
nor Israel will attack it.
WHY NO ATTACK ON IRAN
THE US MILITARY WILL BE DEFEATED IN IRAQ
I’ll begin with the increasingly nightmarish military and political fiasco
in Iraq.
The legitimation of a SCIRI*-dominated government by an election the US had
forced upon them by Grand Ayatollah Sayyid, Ali Husaini Sistani, has
effectively created a UN recognized pro-Iranian government in Iraq. There
are multiform armed conflicts. The US military occupation force is, with
punctuated operational exceptions, effectively confined to its bases. This
occupation force exists in an ocean of murderous hostility. Some polls show
87% of the population now wants the US out, and that factors in the 20% of
the population that is Kurdish and wants the Americans to remain as a
guarantee against war with Turkey.
Oil production, projected before the invasion by the PNAC alumni to jump to
4 million barrels per day, was 2.3 mb/d before the 2003 invasion has not
been able to top 2 mb/d since.
Military morale is rock bottom. Six figure reenlistment bonuses are on
offer to special operations types to stop them joining Rumsfeld’s shadow
contract army of mercenaries. Academic types call these companies PMCs for
Private Military Contractors.
Regional Arab and Muslim hostility to the US is at an all time high,
creating profound dangers for the US-supported governments of Jordan, Saudi
Arabia, Pakistan, and Egypt.
The myth of American military invincibility has been incinerated by a
lightly armed, urban resistance (so much for the “demonstration effect”).
Oil was central to this whole debacle, though not in the way people
thought. There was never a need to steal it. It’s actually cheaper to buy
it. Military operations are outrageously expensive, and a recent
calculation that takes in the hidden and long term costs of war shows that
the Iraq war will likely cost the US $2.65 trillion.
The primary consequence of any attack on Iran will be the decisive
military defeat of the United States in Iraq.
An attack on Iran right now would result in an almost instantaneous and
generalized southern Shia insurgency directed against the US occupation.
That insurgency would, within weeks, bring about tactical alliances between
Shia militias in south and central Iraq and Sunni nationalists and Islamists
in the north. The occupation would become literally unsupportable.
ISRAEL
The Sunday Telegraph (UK) has published a story showing how Israeli
jets cannot effectively reach Iran for a preemptive strike against nuclear
power facilities (Iran has NO nuclear weapons capability and is years away
from it.). The story notes that Israelis can reach their hypothetical
targets, however, from Iraqi Kurdistan, where the US oversees airfields for
its own increasingly common air strikes against urban targets all over Iraq.
Much is being made of the fact that both Bush and Blair have said that
military action against Iran “has not been ruled out.” But they never rule
that out. As an indicator of intent, this statement has all the food value
ofNutraSweet. We take little comfort, however, from the rhetorical
escalations against Iran in which the obedience-trained press, as usual, is
echoing serial distortions about “Iran’s nuclear program,” even as laptop
bombardier William Kristol goes off his Paxil long enough to
visualize attacking Iran in his boring-ass Weekly Standard.
Iran’s nuclear program is a nuclear power program. I am on record as
one who believes that producing electricity with fission is unspeakably
stupid. But the point is that Iran is not producing nuclear
weapons. Period! Categorically! Not!
There are already three real nuclear militaries in the region. One of them
– Israel – is openly hostile to Iran. Call me simple, but isn’t the best
guarantee against nuclear proliferation in the region dismantling Israel’sexisting
nuclear arsenal?
Bush and Blair are pretending to try to force the UN into taking action
against Iran. Yet the biggest violator in the world of UN resolutions –
Israel – is armed to the teeth, illegally occupying another nation, and has
a consistent history of violent provocation.
It would be imprudent to ignore the possibility of an attack on Iran, when
only three years ago we were hearing Condoleezza Rice warning us that we
didn’t want to find out “the smoking gun is a mushroom cloud,” as part of
the fabricated hysteria to promote an invasion. Saddam… Saddam… Saddam…
9-11… 9-11… 9-11… mushroom clouds… mushroom clouds… mushroom clouds.
I don’t even doubt that there are members of this administration who might
argue for striking Iran. A stupid person is a real thing.
END OF EMPIRE – Fast Crash or Slow Burn
But the reason for the recent “interventions” by the Old Guard are
clear. They are concerned that George W. Bush’s administration might not
note the signposts along this road that say, End of Empire.
We are not an empire that exists through force of arms, except in very
limited spatio-temporal ways. That is why I say that this is not now nor has
it ever been a Bush war. Democrats, who would have likely created their own
pretext to try the same thing, albeit in more “multilateral” fashion, were
as obliged by the imperatives of American power as any Republican to conduct
a redisposition of American military forces out of their Cold War posture
and into roughly the same arrangement being attempted now by Bush’s band of
narcissists.
The difference between the administration and these cynical Wilsonians is
that the latter recognize a disaster when they see it. They are simply in
the best position to name what they see now – within acceptable limits, of
course – without any damage to their own political careers and legacies.
George W. Bush did not invent the international system this administration
has deployed its military to protect. George W. Bush did not create the
emerging conflict with China that now has Iran in sharp focus. George W.
Bush did not create Peak Oil as an inevitability within the material
substrates of late imperialism. He is simply the latest and perhaps most
buffoonish in a string of heads of state who have been scrambling to save
not just capitalism – it’s more complicated than that – but American
dominance within the world capitalist system, ever since the last half of
the US disaster in Vietnam.
George W. Bush couldn’t find his ass with a hand-held radar. He, and no
less all the imperial wizards around Brzezinski, are being carried along by
tendencies they must both fight to preserve, but which hold within them the
seeds of their very undoing.
To explain why, I have to refer back to the Edward Abbey quote at the
beginning of this commentary.
“Growth for the sake of growth is the ideology of the cancer cell.”
It is also the imperative within capitalism, and like cancer, it is
metastatic. When growth exceeds its national, regional, and material
limits, it has to reach beyond itself into those places, both physical and
cultural, that have so far escaped commodification, to engage in what
Luxemburg called “primitive accumulation”; that is, theft, fraud,
dispossession, and looting.
Sometimes, these activities are very contingent and opportunistic, e.g.,
the land grab taking place right now in the wake of Hurricane Katrina
(dispossession). Other times, these methods are highly organized, and there
is a name for that also: war.
Many grasp the essence of Peak Oil/color>
which is not a claim that oil will “run out,” but that it will inevitably
reach a point of no return in extraction. Oil is an irreplaceable material
substrate of society as it is presently organized.
Oil is necessary for continued accumulation (growth). American capital
cannot afford oil. If they paid its real value, there would be a deep
accumulation crisis. They shift the costs onto the public in the form of
taxpayer-financed infrastructure provision for the private sector and
military spending, then write it off as a War on Terror.
No, children, there is no substitute for oil/color>…
and there never will be.
The pain of accumulation crises from the US war against Vietnam has been
shifted ever more heavily onto peoples and nations far, far outside the view
of the American suburbs. The decline of world oil production will not
affect all equally. The US state will deepen its exploitation and even
destruction of the world’s most vulnerable actors for as long as possible to
fend off a political crisis at home.
The problem is that exterminist imperialism/color>
is so far advanced already that one can do some fairly simple and accurate
calculations now about increasing Chinese (and now more and more Indian) oil
demand and import-dependency, and see that the confrontation between the US
and China over this strategic commodity is already in motion, though the
conflict is not yet open and direct.
China’s breakneck plunge into industrialization combined with its past-peak
domestic oil pools (China became a net importer in 1993) created a demand
for oil imports that in 2004 pushed China past Japan for gross petroleum
imports – second only to the United States.
ATTACKING IRAN IS ATTACKING CHINA – UN VETOES
China now imports 13% of its oil from Iran. China hasn’t a single motive
for antagonizing Iran. China’s seat on the UN Security Council, and
Russia’s too for that matter (Russia has strong trade relations with Iran,
sharing nuclear technology), are a virtual assurance that US posturing about
UN sanctions is pure diplomatic psychobabble.
The Unites States will not get the UN Security Council to censure Iran.
It is in this international context that we can appreciate how significant
the consequences are likely to be of a US-sanctioned Israeli attack against
Iran. Any attack by Israel on Iran will be perceived (probably rightly) as
having been sanctioned by the United States. Such sanction would be
undeniable should Israeli planes fly through US-controlled airspace. Those
consequences are precisely why Russia and China, as UNSC members, can rest
assured that their veto power will have the force of a final say. Bill
Kristol will just have to go home and suck his thumb.
UNINTENTIONALLY UNITING THE MIDDLE EAST
A secondary consequence, not as certain but certainly possible, would be the
sympathetic detonation of popular anti-government rebellions in places like
Jordan, Egypt, Pakistan, and Saudi Arabia. The very perception of a joint
US-Israeli strike against a Muslim nation would advance Muslim unity across
all of Southwest Asia more quickly than twenty Arab League conferences.
From the region, we now have to return to an international context, and here
is where the cancer-cell ideology of “growth”/color>
is significant again.
While touted as the application of the principles of “free enterprise”
around the world, growth is actually the still-evolving attempt of global
capital to outrun its own crises. For the moment, it involves the draining
of value from developed countries via dollar hegemony (what Gowan called the
Dollar-Wall Street Regime/color>, and the draining of value from
peripheral nations through debt leverage (International Monetary Fund
loan-sharking) combined with dollar hegemony/color>.
The security of US power in peripheral nations, for instance throughout most
of Latin America, is based most directly on the higher profits that can be
extracted from them. These higher rates of profit are available precisely
because of underdeveloped, non-capitalist sectors of the reproductive
economy; that is, the extremely low cost of living in places where there is
no well-developed social infrastructure. One very reliable measure of that
underdevelopment is per capita energy
consumption/color>. It is to these areas that crisis-wracked capitalists
(i.e., movements of capital) flee, accelerated in this flight by competitive
pressure with one another, as they have done during the deindustrialization
of many US urban cores – sending commodity assembly platforms abroad. These
peripheral nations are also available for plain plunder in many cases.
The people in these countries, however, grow increasingly resistant as their
resources are plundered and their labor exploited. Moreover, the incessant
tendency of capitalism to commodify/color>
every cranny of social life transforms non-capitalist (primitive
accumulation) sectors into capitalist sectors, and the inhering problems
with falling profit rates recur, and over-accumulation becomes a crisis,
forcing capital to flee once again. Patrick Bond has an excellent tutorial
on overaccumulation/color>, sometimes
called overproduction.
Given that dollar hegemony, which is the basis of US financial domination
of the world system, is also utterly reliant on the US’s status as the
premier world military power, and the corresponding fact that inhering
social and material limits to growth will inevitably be encountered, a
military crisis will quickly be translated into a more general political,
then economic crisis.
The contemporary Leftward continental
drift/color>
of Latin America has been empowered by the quagmire in Iraq and by the
reverse demonstration effect, that is, the failure of the US in Iraq to
support its own mystique as invincible. Interestingly enough, the
leadership being provided to Latin Americans who are rapidly mobilizing in
popular movement toward anti-neoliberalism (read: independence) is from
Venezuela, an oil-producing nation that is building a relationship with
China, and underwriting the near-term plans of two nations, Brazil and
Argentina, to pay down the interest on their external debt and free
themselves from the IMF.
This is an indicator, I think, of the deeper significance of the grinding
military failure in Iraq – which is the most precarious moment the American
empire has seen since the US war against Vietnam. The very fabric of the
empire could unravel, and this is why the Wilsonian section of the ruling
class’ political factions is closing in on George W. Bush.
There is probably no action, short of a nuclear attack, that the United
States could approve or conduct that would worsen that crisis more
decisively than an attack on Iran.
So there is my argument for why Iran can rest easy for now. But…
A stupid person is a real thing.
* Supreme Council of the Islamic Revolution in Iraq, the Shia political
party emerging as one of the dominant players in Iraq.
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Religious Leaders Outreach Program MUJCA-NET can help arrange
for a 9/11 Truth outreach person to speak to a priest, imam, rabbi
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Eminent Theologian David Griffin Sparks 9/11 Truth Groundswell
David Griffin, one of America's most eloquent and influential
theologians, has summed up the overwhelming evidence for US
government 9/11 complicity in in his bestseller
The New Pearl Harbor. (Read
Marc Estrin's review.) (Listen
to Pacifica radio interview.) Dr. Griffin's follow-up book,
The 9/11 Commission Report: Omissions and Distortions,
demolishes the last shreds of doubt that 9/11 was an inside job, and
the official story a transparent cover-up. |
Day
of Prayer for 9/11 Truth Jews, Christians and Muslims from
around the world are uniting to pray for 9/11 truth every Friday
afternoon. (Muslim congregational prayer occurs shortly after noon
on Fridays.) Muslims are asking God to end the nazi-style
persecution aimed at them, and related political violence
perpetrated by all sides, by helping reveal the the truth about what
happened on 9/11. All are invited to join.
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Book-in-Progress: The Myth of 9/11 MUJCA-NET co-founder Kevin
Barrett is writing a book entitled The Myth of 9/11: An American
Muslim Speaks Out. Dr. Barrett, an Arabist specializing in the
analysis of myth, literature and folklore, argues that the official
story of 9/11 is a myth, both in the popular sense of an untrue
story, and the scholarly sense of a founding narrative legitimizing
a particular social order.
Preview and
comment on The Myth of 9/11. |
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