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A political bombshell from Zbigniew Brzezinski
Ex-national security adviser warns that Bush is seeking a
pretext to attack Iran
By Barry Grey in Washington DC
2 February 2007
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Testifying before the Senate Foreign Relations Committee on
Thursday, Zbigniew Brzezinski, the national security adviser in
the Carter administration, delivered a scathing critique of the
war in Iraq and warned that the Bush administrations policy
was leading inevitably to a war with Iran, with incalculable consequences
for US imperialism in the Middle East and internationally.
Brzezinski, who opposed the March 2003 invasion and has publicly
denounced the war as a colossal foreign policy blunder, began
his remarks on what he called the war of choice in
Iraq by characterizing it as a historic, strategic and moral
calamity.
Undertaken under false assumptions, he continued,
it is undermining Americas global legitimacy. Its
collateral civilian casualties as well as some abuses are tarnishing
Americas moral credentials. Driven by Manichean principles
and imperial hubris, it is intensifying regional instability.
Brzezinski derided Bushs talk of a decisive ideological
struggle against radical Islam as simplistic and demagogic,
and called it a mythical historical narrative employed
to justify a protracted and potentially expanding war.
To argue that America is already at war in the region
with a wider Islamic threat, of which Iran is the epicenter, is
to promote a self-fulfilling prophecy, he said.
Most stunning and disturbing was his description of a plausible
scenario for a military collision with Iran. It would, he
suggested, involve Iraqi failure to meet the benchmarks,
followed by accusations of Iranian responsibility for the failure,
then by some provocation in Iraq or a terrorist act in the
US blamed on Iran, culminating in a defensive
US military action against Iran that plunges a lonely America
into a spreading and deepening quagmire eventually ranging across
Iraq, Iran, Afghanistan and Pakistan. [Emphasis added].
This was an unmistakable warning to the US Congress, replete
with quotation marks to discount the defensive nature
of such military action, that the Bush administration is seeking
a pretext for an attack on Iran. Although he did not explicitly
say so, Brzezinski came close to suggesting that the White House
was capable of manufacturing a provocationincluding a possible
terrorist attack within the USto provide the casus belli
for war.
That a man such as Brzezinski, with decades of experience in
the top echelons of the US foreign policy establishment, a man
who has the closest links to the military and to intelligence
agencies, should issue such a warning at an open hearing of the
US Senate has immense and grave significance.
Brzezinski knows whereof he speaks, having authored provocations
of his own while serving as Jimmy Carters national security
adviser. In that capacity, as he has since acknowledged in published
writings, he drew up the covert plan at the end of the 1970s to
mobilize Islamic fundamentalist mujaheddin to topple the pro-Soviet
regime in Afghanistan and draw the Soviet Union into a ruinous
war in that country.
Following his opening remarks, in response to questions from
the senators, Brzezinski reiterated his warning of a provocation.
He called the senators attention to a March 27, 2006
report in the New York Times on a private meeting
between the president and Prime Minister Blair, two months before
the war, based on a memorandum prepared by the British official
present at this meeting. In the article, Brzezinski said,
the president is cited as saying he is concerned that there
may not be weapons of mass destruction found in Iraq, and that
there must be some consideration given to finding a different
basis for undertaking the action.
He continued: Ill just read you what this memo
allegedly says, according to the New York Times: The
memo states that the president and the prime minister acknowledged
that no unconventional weapons had been found inside Iraq. Faced
with the possibility of not finding any before the planned invasion,
Mr. Bush talked about several ways to provoke a confrontation.
He described the several ways in which this could be
done. I wont go into that... the ways were quite sensational,
at least one of them.
If one is of the view that one is dealing with an implacable
enemy that has to be removed, that course of action may under
certain circumstances be appealing. Im afraid that if this
situation in Iraq continues to deteriorate, and if Iran is perceived
as in some fashion involved or responsible, or a potential beneficiary,
that temptation could arise.
At another point Brzezinski remarked on the conspiratorial
methods of the Bush administration and all but described it as
a cabal. I am perplexed, he said, by the fact
that major strategic decisions seem to be made within a very narrow
circle of individualsjust a few, probably a handful, perhaps
not more than the fingers on my hand. And these are the individuals,
all of whom but one, who made the original decision to go to war,
and used the original justifications to go to war.
None of the senators in attendance addressed themselves to
the stark warning from Brzezinski. The Democrats in particular,
flaccid, complacent and complicit in the war conspiracies of the
Bush administration, said nothing about the danger of a provocation
spelled out by the witness.
Following the hearing, this reporter asked Brzezinski directly
if he was suggesting that the source of a possible provocation
might be the US government itself. The former national security
adviser was evasive.
The following exchange took place:
Q: Dr. Brzezinski, who do you think would be carrying out this
possible provocation?
A: I have no idea. As I said, these things can never be predicted.
It can be spontaneous.
Q: Are you suggesting there is a possibility it could originate
within the US government itself?
A: Im saying the whole situation can get out of hand
and all sorts of calculations can produce a circumstance that
would be very difficult to trace.
See Also:
Steny Hoyer at the Brookings Institution
House majority leader lays out Democratic position on Iraq
[1 February 2007]
Stepped up US preparations for war against
Iran
[1 February 2007]
Iraqs colonial occupier,
the US, denounces foreign meddling
[30 January 2007]
Bush authorizes shoot-to-kill
policy against Iranians in Iraq
[29 January 2007]
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