|
WSWS : News
& Analysis : Middle
East : Iran
Europe alarmed by US threats against Iran
By Peter Schwarz
25 January 2005
Use
this version to print
| Send this
link by email | Email
the author
Reports of American war preparations against Iran have provoked
consternation within European political circles.
US military Special Forces units had been operating in Iran
for several months, identifying targets for air raids and a possible
invasion of the country, according to a recent article by American
journalist Seymour Hersh published in the New Yorker magazine.
The article cited high-ranking US intelligence officials as its
sources. While the Pentagon rejected Hershs report as inaccurate,
its disclaimers were only half-hearted. When President Bush was
asked directly about the article, he expressly said he would not
exclude a military option against Iran.
On the surface, the European political response has been one
of appeasement. According to diplomatic circles in Brussels, an
attack on Iranian nuclear plants is not a realistic option at
present; and Washingtons military involvement in Iraq makes
an operation against Iran hardly feasible. Bushs insistence
that the military option be kept open should not be understand
as a threat but is purely hypothetical, since the American president
always keeps all the options open. There is even speculation that
Washington deliberately leaked the information used by Hersh in
order to increase pressure on Iran, thereby helping achieve a
breakthrough in the diplomatic efforts of the Europeans, who are
negotiating with Teheran about ending its nuclear programme.
However, many European politicians, by dissociating themselves
sharply from any military action against Iran, have made clear
that Hershs report and the threats of the US government
are taken very seriously.
Already last November, British Foreign Minister Jack Straw
stressed that he could not imagine any circumstances which
would justify military measures against Iran. Now, one of
his spokespersons has said it was inconceivable that the
United Kingdom would support such a policy, if there ever were
such a policy.
In Germany, both government and opposition spokespersons have
rejected the American position. Gernot Erler, a Social Democratic
Party (SPD) foreign affairs expert called the US threats a
shot across the bow for the European Unions policy of negotiation.
He expressed surprise at the lukewarm denials of the US government
and voiced the fear that the US administration was trying to extend
its dreadful Iraq policy. The chair of the Green Party, Claudia
Roth, criticised the US government plans as not at all helpful.
She warned they would aggravate the situation throughout the entire
region and stressed, We need diplomatic solutions, not threats
of force.
The opposition Christian Democratic Unions (CDUs)
foreign affairs spokesman Friedbert Pflueger appealed to Bush
to support the EUs diplomatic efforts. His parliamentary
colleague Ruprecht Polenz said, We would move forward much
faster, if the Americans didnt just stand with their arms
folded watching the Europeans.
In addition to Hershs article, there are numerous other
indications that American war threats against Iran are deadly
serious.
Even before Bushs re-election, the German weekly Die
Zeit reported at the beginning of November on the plans of
the neo-conservatives to bring about regime change in Teheran.
The Mullahs must goif the bomb cannot be defused,
then the power apparatus in Teheran should be, was how Die
Zeit described their attitude. Should George Bush win
the election, this project could soon stand on the agenda.
According to Die Zeit, those agitating for such a course
of action included Pentagon officials, strategists and lobbyists,
who have already advanced the campaign against Saddam Hussein
and who possess personal contacts with the highest echelons
in Washington, particularly to vice-president Richard Cheney.
In particular, Die Zeit pointed to the role of
Michael Ledeen, a right-wing ideologue for the American Enterprise
Institute and a key figure in the Iran-Contra affair of the 1980s,
as well as Douglas Feith, who heads the Pentagon political-planning
department. Feith also enjoys close links with the Israeli government,
which is likewise interested in a regime change in Teheran. These
circles feel vindicated by Bushs re-election. As Seymour
Hersh emphasises in his article, Bushs success in the election
has strengthened the position of the neo-conservatives within
the Pentagons civilian leadership, who had endorsed the
invasion [of Iraq], including Paul Wolfowitz, Deputy Secretary
of Defence, and Douglas Feith, Under-Secretary of Defence for
Policy.
During confirmation hearings before the Senate Foreign Affairs
Committee, Secretary of State-designate Condoleezza Rice also
announced a hard line towards Iran. At some point, Iran
has to be called to account for its failure to meet its international
obligations, she stated. At the same time, she broadened
Bushs Axis of Evil Iraq, Iran and North
Koreato include four more countries: Cuba, Burma, Zimbabwe
and Belarus, calling them outposts of tyrannya
clear warning that the US intends to hold fast to its aggressive
course.
In an interview with MSNBC television news, Vice-President
Cheney accused Iran of developing new robust nuclear programmes
and of being a well-known sponsor of terrorism. If one looks
around the world for potential flash points, then Iran stands
at the top of the list, he added.
President Bushs inauguration speech dispelled any remaining
doubts that US military threats should be taken seriously. He
threatened to liberate the entire world with American
weapons. What this means can be seen every day in Iraq, where
more than 100,000 people have died since it was liberated.
Bush made it clear that neither international law nor any other
impediments will prevent the US from attacking any country it
regards as an obstacle to its interests.
Reinhard Bütikofer, federal leader of the Green Party,
the party of the German foreign minister, accused Bush of trampling
the great value of liberty in the dirt. He added, The
great slogan of liberty has been hijacked for a policy that will
finally produce less than liberty.
The hope that, following the US foreign policy debacle in Iraq,
Washington would be more peaceful and amenable to compromise has
proved to be a complete miscalculation. Like a wild animal that
has been cornered, the Bush government is thrashing about in a
blind rage.
In this regard, there are remarkable parallels between the
mentality of the right-wing clique that presently determines American
foreign policy and Hitlers Nazi regime. In situations of
apparent hopelessness, Hitler often staked everything on one roll
of the diceand won. Compromise and retreat were alien to
him. Thus, in Munich in 1938, he was successful in gaining control
of the Sudetenland and the Czech defences without firing a shot,
owing to the British policy of appeasement. His victory opened
the way for the Second World War. Hitler maintained this attitudeeven
when the final result of the war was long decidedright up
to the fall of the Third Reich.
The impotence of the Europeans
The predominant majority in official European political circles
undoubtedly rejects an armed attack on Iran. As a German newspaper
commented, this would be the nightmare scenario, not only
of the Europeans. Europes rulers fear for their close
trade relations with Iran, one of the most important oil producers
in the world, and for the stability of the entire region. Iran
in flames would unleash an inferno all the way to Europe,
another newspaper commented.
But the European policy is unable to seriously oppose that
of Washington. To do this, it would have to make clear to the
American government that it would react to a military attack on
Iran not only with words, but also with deeds. Imposing international
sanctions against America, shutting down US military bases in
Europe and supplying defence equipment to Iran would be the minimum
necessary to divert the right-wing clique in the White House from
their bellicose course.
However, the European governments are neither capable nor willing
to take such steps. Instead, they are responding in a manner similar
to that of British Prime Minister Chamberlain in 1938 in the face
of Hitlers demands over Czechoslovakia. They are trying
to convince Teheran to disarm itself, in this way hoping to appease
Washington and to protect the peace. For months, the
German, French and British foreign ministers have been negotiating
with the Iranian government over closing down Irans nuclear
programmealthough the program is in compliance with international
law and international contracts.
The fact that Teheran will not simply accede to such entreaties
is all too understandable after the experiences in Iraq. As is
now apparent, following the first Gulf War, Baghdad met Washingtons
demands for disarmament and destroyed a large part of its weapons.
In this case, European governments also exerted enormous pressure,
supporting sanctions against the country. But this did not prevent
the US from attacking and conquering Iraq. The so-called Weapons
of Mass Destruction only served as a pretext; the real goal was
the installation of a puppet regime and the conversion of Iraq
into an American semi-colony.
The same applies to Iran. At least the American neo-conservatives
are more honest in this regard, when they openly talk of regime
change in Tehran. In a country that suffered for 26 years under
the bloody dictatorship of the Shah, who came to power in a 1953
CIA-backed coup, a regime subservient to the US is to be (re)established.
European governments do not oppose American policy openly,
because they agree in principle with its goals. They are not concerned
with Irans right to self-determination and sovereignty,
but with their own interests in the region, which they see endangered
by the aggressive actions of the US.
The dispute about Iran forms part of a broader pattern of conflicts
emerging more and more openly between the US and Europeand
above all with Germany and France.
The recent edition of the French journal Politique étrangère
points out that throughout the Mediterraneanfrom the
Middle East to Moroccothe US and Europe increasingly confront
each other as rivals. Under the headline, A new transatlantic
rivalry in the Mediterranean?, the journal concludes that,
although the Americans and Europeans arrived at the same analysis
regarding the problems of the region and pursued the same goalspolitical
and economic liberalisation economic initiatives take
place separately and their consequences potentially lead to conflict.
European initiatives for the economic integration of the region,
like the 1995 Barcelona process, stand in competition
with American projects like the 1998 Einzenstat Initiative
for the integration of the Maghreb. The article describes the
latest initiative for the re-organisation of the region under
American supremacy, called the Greater Middle East
project, which covers the entire Middle East and North Africa.
American and European interests increasingly collide in other
regions of the world, such as the states that emerged from the
breakup of the former Soviet Union, in attitudes towards Russia
and China, as well as in financial and industrial policy.
Emblematic of the latter was the recent unveiling of the new
Airbus 380 in Toulouse. With this new plane, the Europeans are
challenging the nearly 40-year monopoly enjoyed by the American
Boeing 747 for large-scale long-distance jets. The Airbus 380
is substantially larger and more economical, and has a greater
range than its American competitor.
As the plane was solemnly unveiled in the presence of the French,
British, Spanish and German heads of state, Chancellor Schröder
of Germany alluded quite openly to US arguments used during the
Iraq war. At that time, Secretary of Defence Rumsfeld had made
great play of the differences between new and old
Europe. With a wry smile, Schröder said, It is the
traditions of good old Europe, of cooperation, fairness, social
sensitivity, that have enabled the A-380-project to become a success.
The increasing transatlantic tensions are a consequence of
the fight for markets, raw materials and cheap labour between
the large corporations that dominate the world economy. The contradiction
between the global character of modern production and the system
of nation states in which bourgeois society is anchored can be
only resolved within capitalism by violently dividing and re-dividing
the world among the great powers. That was the cause for First
and the Second World War, and is today the reason for the deepening
tensions between the imperialist powers.
The danger of war this produces cannot be opposed by supporting
one great power against another; by supporting the more
peaceful against the more aggressive; by supporting old
Europe against America. The struggle against imperialism
and the danger of war requires the unification of the international
working class based on a socialist programme directed against
the foundations of the capitalist system.
See Also:
US carrying out acts of war against Iran,
magazine reports
[20 January 2005]
The invasion of Iraq and the crisis of
American and world capitalism
[17 January 2005]
Top of page
The WSWS invites your comments.
Copyright 1998-2008
World Socialist Web Site
All rights reserved |