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WSWS : News
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East : Iran
Stop the US war drive against Iran!
By the Editorial Board
14 February 2007
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The World Socialist Web Site condemns the military and
political provocations with which the Bush administration is laying
the foundations for an attack on Iran. We call on all working
people and student youth to oppose the brutal and insane warmongering
of the Washington pyromaniacs. A politically conscious class-based
movementunconnected to and independent of the pro-imperialist
parties of big business and the political establishmentmust
be built if war is to be averted.
This is no time for complacency and illusions. Barely three
months after the American people went to the polls and delivered
an overwhelming popular repudiation of the war in the Middle East,
the Bush administration is not only escalating its military operations
in Iraq, but recklessly plunging towards a new war against neighboring
Iran.
There is an unmistakable acceleration in the tempo of events.
In the aftermath of the election, the Bush administration dismissed
out of hand the recommendations of the Iraq Study Group to hold
negotiations with Iran and Syria. Instead, in announcing his surge
in Iraq on January 10, Bush accused Iran and Syria of arming and
training anti-US insurgents in Iraq and declared that the American
military would seek out and destroy such support networks.
Day after day Bush officials, aided by a complicit media, have
maintained a steady drumbeat of menacing accusations against Tehran
for meddling in Iraq and aiding the killing of American
soldiersall without providing a shred of evidence.
Within the past week, shadowy Pentagon officials have presented
evidence that some of the bombs used against US patrols
are manufactured in Iran. They and others in the administration
have claimed certainty that the highest levels of the Iranian
government are involved. That the Pentagon officials who
presented this purported evidence spoke only on condition that
they be neither named nor recorded is indicative of the trumped-up
character of this search for a casus belli against Tehran.
Indeed, within barely 48 hours of the presentation of the proof
in Baghdad, General Peter Pace, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of
Staff, admitted that the military had no knowledge of Iranian
government involvement in arms shipments to Iraqi Shiite militias.
Nonetheless, these accusations against Tehran have been widely
parroted by the media, which for the most part is content to play
the same perfidious role as a conduit for false war propaganda
about threatening weapons and terrorist links that it played in
the run-up to the US invasion of Iraq four years ago.
The trumped-up case against Iran has been accompanied by blatant
provocations on the ground, including military raids against Iranian
government offices in Iraq and the armed abduction of Iranian
diplomats.
The military buildup in the Persian Gulf, meanwhile, is proceeding
apace. By the end of February, an American armada of 50 warships
will be stationed in the area, including two carrier strike groups
for the first time since March 2003. There are reports that a
third such battle group may be on the way. Backed by warplanes
that have been positioned at a network of military bases throughout
the region, the US military will have the capacity to conduct
round-the-clock bombing using cruise missiles and hundreds of
warplanes. Batteries of Patriot anti-missile systems are currently
being installed in the Gulf states to defend vital US military
assets and reassure nervous allies against potential Iranian reprisals.
Alongside these military preparations, Washington is engaged
in intense diplomatic activity. Senior Bush officials have crisscrossed
the Middle East in the past weeks seeking to consolidate an anti-Iranian
alliance, including Egypt, Saudi Arabia and Jordan. The closest
American ally in the region, Israel, has already threatened Iran
with severe steps if it fails to shut down its nuclear
programs.
The trips of Vice President Dick Cheney, the prime mover in
the Iraq invasion, take on a particular significance. His one-day
visit last November to personally meet with the Saudi monarch
has been followed by a steady increase in Saudi oil output and
fall in world oil prices, which not only undermines the Iranian
economy but provides a cushion against the economic shock of war.
This month Cheney is to visit Australia and Japan to line up support
from these close allies for US plans on Iran.
Every attempt is being made to provoke a war. They intend
to be as provocative as possible and make the Iranians do something
[America] would be forced to retaliate for, Hillary Mann,
the Bush administrations former National Security Council
director for Iran and Persian Gulf Affairs, told Newsweek.
Cheneys year of Iran
The Washington Post, meanwhile, reports, Some
senior administration officials still relish the notion of a direct
confrontation. One ambassador in Washington said he was taken
aback when John Hannah, Vice President Cheneys national
security adviser, said during a recent meeting that the administration
considers 2007 the year of Iran and indicated that
a US attack was a real possibility.
Senator Christopher Dodd (Democrat, Connecticut), meanwhile,
acknowledged in a television interview Sunday, There are
certainly those who are in favor of war with Iran. Weve
seen that in the past that they would like nothing more than to
build a case for that.
Similarly, New York Times columnist Paul Krugman wrote
in a Monday column warning of an attack on Iran, There are
indications that, at the very least, a powerful faction in the
administration is spoiling for a fight.
More and more, the descriptions of the foreign policy and internal
dynamics of the Bush administration resemble nothing so much as
the machinations of the state in Nazi Germany or imperial Japan.
It is increasingly evident that Washingtons policy is being
driven largely by a criminal, war-crazed camarilla that is setting
into motion forces that make another US war of aggression almost
inevitable.
As in the lead-up to the US war on Iraq, President Bush continues
to declare that the US has no immediate plans to attack Iran.
The denials are simply not credible. The most generous interpretation
that can be placed on the Bush administrations actions is
that by menacing Tehran it hopes to force the Iranian regime to
capitulate to all of its demands. Such thuggery, however, has
a logic of its own that can easily spiral out of control into
all-out military conflictwhatever the initial intentions.
Moreover, the overwhelming evidence of the past six years is that
Bushs aims are far from benign. The neo-cons, who articulate
the views of the most militarist layers of the American ruling
elite and in the White House, continue to press for regime
change in Tehran as part of a broader strategy of refashioning
the Middle East under US domination.
The Wall Street Journal, which most closely reflects
the outlook of the right-wing layer in control of the White House,
carried an editorial Tuesday accepting the Bush administrations
accusations against Iran as good coin and calling for the US to
send Tehran the message that it will not be allowed to kill
Americans with impunity. It urged an immediate bombing campaign,
including hitting Revolutionary Guards targets, or Iranian
weapons factories.
A disturbing warning of what is in preparation emerged in the
February 1 testimony of former US national security adviser Zbigniew
Brzezinski to the Senate Foreign Relations Committee. Deeply troubled
that Bushs policies are heading the US towards disaster,
Brzezinski denounced the war in Iraq as a historic, strategic
and moral calamity. He bluntly predicted that if the US
continues to be bogged down in a protracted bloody involvement
in Iraq, the final destination of this downhill track is likely
to be a head-on conflict with Iran and with much of the world
of Islam at large.
In a biting critique of Bushs entire war on terror,
Brzezinski described as a mythical historical narrative
the attempts to equate Islamic extremism and Al Qaeda with the
threat posed to US imperialism by Nazi Germany and Soviet Russia.
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 prophesy, he declared. Vague
and inflammatory talk . . . is breeding intensifying anti-Americanism
and is increasing the danger of a new long-term collision between
the United States and the Islamic world.
In the most chilling passage of his statement, Brzezinski outlined
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.
In the course of his testimony, Brzezinksi suggested that the
White House was not only following this scenario, but was capable
of manufacturing some provocation in Iraq or a terrorist
act in the US as the pretext for launching a war against
Iran. These comments from a man with decades of experience in
the top circles of the American state apparatus are the sharpest
indication that the Bush administration is rushing headlong towards
military conflict with Iran with complete disregard for the far-reaching
ramifications of its actions.
Any war on Iran would immediately have tragic consequences
for the countrys people, who have already had to endure
a bloody conflict throughout the 1980s with Iraq, encouraged and
abetted by the US. The use of atomic bombs against Iran is actively
being debated in top American and Israeli circles, raising the
prospect of a nuclear conflagration for the first time since the
US incineration of the Japanese cities of Hiroshima and Nagasaki
in 1945.
The implications of a US attack on a country of 70 million
peoplethree times the size of Iraqgo well beyond Iran
itself, however. The conflict would inevitably have a profoundly
destabilizing effect throughout the Middle East and Central Asia
and potentially draw in the major European and Asian powers, all
of which have a vital stake in the huge energy reserves of the
region.
Increasingly, the conduct of the Bush administration bears
an uncanny resemblance to reckless acts of aggression that gave
rise to the first and second world wars. In the 1930s, Germany
and Japan marched troops into one country after another, terrorizing
their populations and installing puppet regimes on the basis of
brazenly fabricated pretexts and in complete contempt of international
law. Similarly today, world politics appears more and more to
be in the grip of madmen and megalomaniacs hell-bent on triggering
a worldwide conflagration.
The roots of American militarism
There is an inexorable logic to this madness, however. The
underlying causes of the eruption of US militarism are to be found
in the frantic efforts of the ruling elites to overcome the fundamental
and irresolvable contradictions of the profit system itself: between
world economy and the outmoded capitalist nation state system,
and between socialized production and the anarchy of the market
based on private ownership. Falling rates of profit and a deepening
crisis of the global economy are pressing the major powers into
a relentless competition for markets, cheap labor and resources
that can ultimately only be settled by military means.
Nowhere do these processes find a more concentrated expression
than in the United States itself. In the aftermath of World War
II, the American ruling class was able to utilize the vast economic
resources at its disposal to prop up the world capitalist order
that had been wracked by three decades of war and depression.
The subsequent economic decline of America against its European
and Asian rivals, underscored by its conversion from the worlds
largest creditor into the largest debtor nation, has transformed
the US into the most destabilizing factor in global politics.
In a desperate attempt to offset its economic weakness, Washington
has increasingly resorted to its residual military might to maintain
its position as global hegemon.
The reasons why Bush is preparing for war against Iran have
nothing to do with Tehrans alleged nuclear weapons programs
or claims that it is meddling in Iraq. While Washington
has maintained an economic blockade of Iran since the overthrow
of its loyal ally Shah Reza Pahlavi in 1979, it has been compelled
to look on as the European powers along with Russia, China, Japan
and India have signed lucrative economic deals with the Islamic
republic, particularly to exploit the countrys energy reserves.
Unable to establish its dominance economically, the Bush administration
is seeking to use its military muscle to assert control over what
are the worlds second largest reserves of natural gas and
the third largest of oil.
The greatest political mistake would be to believe that saner
layers in ruling circles, whether in the US or internationally,
will prevent the slide towards war with Iran. The universal silence
that has greeted Brzezinskis warnings in the American media
and political establishment confirms once again that the Democrats,
having given the green light for the illegal invasion of Iraq,
will do nothing to prevent Bush and his cronies from playing Russian
roulette with the world by attacking Iran. Brzezinskis own
proposal for a US withdrawal from Iraq and a regional solution
involving all of the major powers points to the underlying reasons.
Such a plan would inevitably mean an erosion of US imperialisms
dominance in the Middle East and therefore globally, an outcome
that is completely unacceptable to the American ruling elite.
Those who place their faith in the European Union, Russia,
China or the United Nations acting as a brake on the Bush administrations
war drive are certain to be disappointed. After protracted maneuvering
to protect their own economic interests, all of the major powers
lined up in December behind a UN Security Council resolution that
declared Irans nuclear programs to be a threat to world
peace and condemned Tehran for failing to shut them down. As it
did prior to the invasion of Iraq, the US will undoubtedly exploit
the UN resolution, whatever its precise wording and legal caveats,
to justify an attack on Iran. As for the UN, its top officials
remain completely mute in the face of the US military build up
in the Persian Gulf.
A war with Iran will have profound political consequences in
the United States. The Bush administrations blatant disregard
for the outcome of the November election has placed it on a collision
course with the American people. A US attack on Iran will be accompanied
by an all-out assault on democratic rights at home as the White
House seeks to stamp out any opposition to its deeply unpopular
policies. In the event that the Congress seeks to impede Bushs
plans, however timidly, there is no guarantee that the US administration
will abide by established constitutional procedure. Bush has repeatedly
asserted his rights as commander-in-chief to override
longstanding democratic and legal norms.
The Bush administrations rapacious policies abroad serve
the interests of the same parasitical corporate elite that has
been piling up huge profits at home through systematic restructuring,
downsizing and outright financial looting operations. An immense
social gulf now exists between an obscenely wealthy few and the
majority of the population who, if not living in abject poverty,
are struggling to get by. The interests of working people in the
United States do not lie in supporting the war plans of Bush but
rather in uniting with the vast mass of humanity around the world
who, like them, aspire to peace, a decent standard of living and
basic democratic rights.
The opposition of the WSWS to the imperialist onslaught against
Iran does not imply political support for the reactionary clericalist
regime of President Ahmadinejad. The Iranian government represents
an unstable coalition of bourgeois capitalist interests that employs
religious demagogy and occasional anti-imperialist sloganeering
to maintain a tenuous grip on mass support. It fears above all
the renewal of a independent movement of the Iranian working class,
which has a long history of revolutionary socialist struggles.
The repressive policies of the clerical regime are aimed at suppressing
the resurgence of a genuine democratic, socialist and anti-imperialist
movement of the Iranian masses.
But a settlement of accounts with the bourgeois regime in Iran
is the task of the Iranian working class. In fact, the warmongering
of the Bush administration provides the Ahmadinejad government
with the opportunity to divert popular attention from pressing
social needs within Iran itself. Moreover, an assault on Iran
by the United States would have as its aim not the creation of
a democratic regime, but rather the installation of a another
puppet government and the reduction of the country to the status
of a semi-colonial American protectorate.
For a socialist program against war
The only means for opposing the eruption of American militarism
is the construction of a broad independent political movement
of the working class around the world opposed to war and its root
causes that lie in the capitalist system itself.
The independent strength of working people must be mobilized
in support of definite demands, including the immediate and unconditional
withdrawal of all US troops from Iraq and Afghanistan, the removal
of the armada of US warships from the Persian Gulf and the dismantling
of the web of military bases that the Pentagon has established
throughout the Middle East and Central Asia.
The demand must also be raised for all those within the US
administration responsible for conspiring to carry out an unprovoked
war of aggression against Iraqand who are now preparing
another war based upon lies against Iranbe held politically
and legally accountable for their actions.
Working people must also resolutely oppose any attempt in the
US or elsewhere to impose military conscription in order to compel
working class youth to serve as cannon fodder for these wars.
The struggle against war must also be directed against the
definite class and profit interests that promote it. The immense
US military-industrial complex must be taken out of private hands
and turned into a public utility, redirected to peaceful production.
The vast public resourcessome $470 billion budgeted for
the Pentagon this year alonespent for war must be redirected
to solve the pressing social problems of working people in the
US and internationally.
Similarly, the energy conglomeratesExxonMobil, Chevron,
Conoco-Phillips, etc.all of which have reaped windfall profits
off of the death and destruction in Iraq, must be placed under
public ownership and control.
The fight to put an end to the continuing war in Iraq and the
threat of a new and even bloodier assault on Iran cannot be advanced
by means of the existing big business parties and state institutions
in the United States or any other country. It requires uniting
the struggles of working people all over the world based on the
perspective of building a mass international socialist movement.
This is the task undertaken by the parties of the International
Committee of the Fourth International (ICFI).
The WSWS strongly supports the emergency
conference convened in the United States by the International
Students for Social Equality (ISSE) and the Socialist Equality
Party (SEP) under the slogans End the occupation and withdraw
all US forces from Iraq! No to war against Iran!
This conference, to be held on March 31 and April 1, at the
University of Michigan in Ann Arbor, Michigan, will serve as an
indispensable forum for mobilizing students, youth and working
people in the United States and internationally against imperialist
war and the capitalist system that creates it.
See Also:
Oppose the occupation of Iraq! No
to war against Iran!
International Students for Social Equality and SEP to hold emergency
conference against war
[12 February 2007]
For an international mobilization
of workers and youth against the war in Iraq
[22 January 2007]
The war in Iraq and American
democracy
[20 January 2007]
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