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East : Iran
Bush threatens to militarily confront Iran
By Bill Van Auken
29 August 2007
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In his second foreign policy speech in less than a week, President
Bush Tuesday portrayed the ongoing US military occupation in Iraq
as part of a broader regional struggle to defend vital US interests
against radicals and extremists.
Contained in this speech was the explicit threat of widening
the US war in the Middle East, directed in the first instance
against Iran.
Either the forces of extremism succeed or the forces
of freedom succeed, Bush said. Either our enemies
advance their interests in Iraq, or we advance our interests.
The immediate purpose of Bushs back-to-back speechesthe
first delivered last Wednesday to the Veterans of Foreign Wars
convention in Kansas City and the second to the American Legion
convention in Reno, Nevadais to intimidate the massive popular
opposition to the Iraq war and set the stage for the report on
the Iraq surge that Gen. David Petraeus and US Ambassador
Ryan Crocker are to deliver to Congress next month.
That this presentation has been scheduled for September 11the
sixth anniversary of the terrorist attacks on New York and Washingtonis
hardly a coincidence. It will unquestionably be packaged as part
of a fresh propaganda campaign aimed at frightening the American
people with the supposedly ubiquitous threat of terror.
This was prefigured in Bushs own speech. Once again he
mouthed the absurd and threadbare lie that 160,000 US troops are
in Iraq to battle Al Qaedaincessantly and falsely described
as the same people who attacked us on 9/11for
the supposed purpose of preventing fresh attacks on the US.
We will fight them over there so we do not have to face
them in the United States of America, he told the veterans
group. That there was no one in Iraq identifying himself as Al
Qaeda before the US carried out its unprovoked invasion of the
country in March 2003 is only one of the inconvenient facts evaded
by the White House propaganda surge.
Coming closer than usualalthough still obliquelyto
acknowledging the real motives underlying the Iraq war, Bush stated,
America has enduring and vital interests in the region.
He continued: Throughout our history, the American people
have had strong links with this regionthrough ties of commerce
and education and faith. Long before oil and gas were discovered
in the Middle East the region was a key source of trade. It
is the home to three of the worlds great religions. It remains
a strategic crossroads for the world. [Emphasis added].
Warning of the dire consequences that would supposedly unfold
should Washington fail in its attempt to quell the resistance
and establish its colonial-style domination over Iraq, the US
president said, Extremists would control a key part of the
worlds energy supply, could blackmail and sabotage the global
economy. They could use billions of dollars of oil revenues to
buy weapons and pursue their deadly ambitions.
Here Bush is merely accusing those who are resisting the American
occupation of pursuing the essential aims of US imperialism and
the dominant right-wing layers within the American ruling elite
that he himself represents. They are attempting to establish by
means of military aggression unchallenged American control over
the key oil-producing regions of the Middle East and Central Asia
in order to assert US hegemony over the global economy and place
Washington in a position to dictate terms to its rivals in Asia
and Europe, which are more dependent upon the energy reserves
in these regions than is the US.
In his potted version of the dirty colonial war being fought
by US forces in Iraq, Bush portrayed the struggle as being against
two strains of radicalismSunni extremism, which
he identified with Al Qaeda, and Shia extremism, which he identified
with Iran.
Bush accused the former of attempting to create a violent
and radical caliphate that spans from Spain to Indonesia,
a delusional vision that only the right-wing ideologues in Washington
grant the slightest credibility.
The supposed threat from the other radical strain,
however, was presented in far more immediate and concrete terms.
Accusations against Iran
Shia extremism, Bush charged, is supported
and embodied by the regime that sits in Tehran. He described
the Iranian government as the worlds leading state
sponsor of terrorism, while claiming that it threatened
the region with a nuclear holocaust.
Bush repeated the unsubstantiated charges that American forces
are coming under increasing attack from Iranian-supplied weapons
and that Iranian Revolutionary Guard elements are training and
arming Iraqi extremist groups.
Such claims are unsupported by the US militarys own reports
from Iraq. The Pentagon recently acknowledged that since the escalation
of the US intervention last February, it has recorded a 50 percent
increase in the number of detainees it is holdingsoaring
from 16,000 to 24,500. Yet, it has identified only 280 foreign
fighters, none of whom are Iranian.
Moreover, according to the statistics reported in the New
York Times last week, 85 percent of those detained are Sunni,
with the remaining Shia detainees drawn largely from supporters
of the Sadrist Mahdi Army, which is openly hostile to Teheran.
The statistics provided by the Pentagons Task Force 134,
which runs US detention operations in Iraq, contradict the entire
thesis advanced by Bush that the war in Iraq is an ideological
struggle against Islamist extremism. Only a relative handful
of those detained identify with Al Qaeda, while the militarys
spokesman for the detention operation describes the vast majority
of them as angry men who dont have jobs.
In other words, the resistance is motivated neither by supposed
Sunni extremist visions of a caliphate nor Shia extremist agitation
from Teheran, but by overwhelming hostility to the carnage and
devastating destruction wrought by the US invasion and occupation
upon every facet of Iraqi society.
Bush made claims in his speech as to the supposed success of
his surge in ameliorating these conditions that can
only be described as patent lies.
Our new strategy is also showing results in places where
it matters mostthe cities and neighborhoods where ordinary
Iraqis live, he said. In these areas, Iraqis are increasingly
reaching accommodations with each other, with the coalition, and
with the government in Baghdad.
Every report coming out of occupied Iraq refutes these phony
assertions. Among the most recent is a survey conducted by the
Associated Press showing that the average daily Iraqi death toll
that it has documented through its reporting has nearly doubled
since the surge began, climbing from 33 to 62. The news agency
acknowledged that these numbers are a gross underestimation of
the real carnage, as many killings go unreported or uncounted.
Also not included in the numbers were those classified as insurgents
killed by the US military and its puppet forces.
Similarly, the Iraqi Red Crescent has documented a doubling
of the number of displaced civilians since the beginning of the
yearroughly since the US military escalation beganclimbing
from under 450,000 to over 1.1 million as of July 31.
Bush followed his allegations against Iran with an unmistakable
threat. Iran, he said, ... cannot escape responsibility
for aiding attacks against coalition forces and the murder of
innocent Iraqis. The Iranian regime must halt these actions. And
until it does, I will take actions necessary to protect our troops.
I have authorized our military commanders in Iraq to confront
Tehrans murderous activities.
The implication is clear. The debacle confronting the American
occupation of Iraq is driving the government in Washington not
towards a withdrawal of US forces, but rather towards an even
bloodier military adventure.
The charges of alleged Iranian terrorism and weapons constitute
a direct echo of the pretexts used four-and-a-half years ago to
prepare the war of aggression against Iraq. There is every reason
to believe that the world is on the brink of another eruption
of US militarism.
See Also:
Washington continues propaganda barrage
against Iran
[24 August 2007]
New York Times on Iran: Neo-colonialism
with a liberal twist
[18 August 2007]
New provocation against Tehran
Bush to brand Iranian force as terrorist
[16 August 2007]
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