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East : Iran
BBC reports on US military plans to strike Iran
By Peter Symonds
21 February 2007
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Despite its menacing naval build up in the Persian Gulf, the
US has repeatedly denied any plans for war against Iran. Last
Thursday Defence Secretary Robert Gates brazenly told a Pentagon
press conference: For the umpteenth time, we are not looking
for an excuse to go to war with Iran. We are not planning a war
with Iran. The statement is another of the Bush administrations
lies.
A BBC report on Monday made clear that the Pentagon has completed
contingency planning for extensive air strikes on Iran that go
beyond nuclear sites and include most of the countrys
military infrastructure. The article continued: It
is understood that any such attackif orderedwould
target Iranian air bases, naval bases, missile facilities and
command-and-control centres.
The Bush administration insists it is pursuing diplomatic means
to force Iran to shut down its enrichment facilities. But as the
BBC explained: Diplomatic sources have told the BBC that
as a fallback plan, senior officials at Central Command in Florida
have already selected their target sets inside Iran. That list
includes Irans uranium enrichment plant at Natanz. Facilities
at Isfahan, Arak and Bushehr are also on the target list.
The BBC report is not the first to leak details of the Pentagons
preparations for war against Iran. Citing senior Pentagon, State
Department and intelligence sources, veteran US journalist Seymour
Hersh has published several detailed articles in the New Yorker
over the past year outlining the US plans for attacking Iran,
including the possible use of nuclear weapons. Several British
newspapers, including the Times, have described advanced
US and Israeli military preparations against Tehran.
An article in the British-based New Statesman on Monday
also detailed the US plans. American military operations
for a major conventional war with Iran could be implemented any
day. They extend far beyond suspect WMD facilities and will enable
President Bush to destroy Irans military, political and
economic infrastructure overnight using conventional weapons.
British military sources told the New Statesman,
on condition of anonymity, that the US military switched
its whole focus to Iran as soon as Saddam Hussein was kicked
out of Baghdad. It continued this strategy, even though it had
American infantry bogged down in fighting the insurgency in Iraq.
The US army, navy, air force and marines have all prepared battle
plans and spent four years building bases and training for Operation
Iranian Freedom.
What is significant about the BBC report is that it identified
two triggers, demonstrating that an attack on Iran
is under active discussion. According to security correspondent
Frank Gardner, the first was any confirmation that Iran
was developing a nuclear weapon. This trigger provides a
sweeping excuse for military action, as the Bush administration
insists that Tehran already has a nuclear weapons program, despite
the lack of definite proof and repeated denials by the Iranian
regime.
As in the lead up to the 2003 US invasion of Iraq, the Bush
administration is quite capable of fabricating evidence to provide
confirmation of an Iranian nuclear weapons program.
To use this trigger, however, the White House would, formally
at least, need to seek approval for a new war from the Democratic-controlled
Congress and also the UN Security Council, raising the prospect
of opposition, even if very limited, and delays.
The second trigger would provide an excuse for immediate action
on the grounds of defending US troops in Iraq. As reported by
the BBC: Alternatively, our correspondent adds, a high-casualty
attack on US forces in neighbouring Iraq could also trigger a
bombing campaign if it were traced directly back to Tehran.
President Bush has already laid the basis for such a provocation,
accusing Iranian and Syrian networks of arming and training anti-US
insurgents in Iraq. Over the past month, the US media has published
increasingly lurid accounts of the alleged activities of Iranian
agents inside Iraq.
The BBC account echoes the remarks of former US national security
adviser Zbigniew Brzezinski to the Senate Foreign Relations Committee
on February 1. In a stinging attack on the Bush administrations
policies in the Middle East, Brzezinski suggested that a plausible
scenario for war with Iran would be: 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.
Hans Blix and Mohamed ElBaradei, the two top UN weapons inspectors
dealing with Iraq prior to the 2003 US invasion, have joined growing
chorus of voices warning of the dangers of a US war against Iran.
In an article in the International Herald Tribune on
Monday, Blix asked: Will the United States use armed force
against Iran? Hardly any foreign policy issue is hotter right
now. American planes are reported to be patrolling along the borders
between Iraq and Iran, and US forces have been authorised to kill
Iranian agents in Iraq. Two US aircraft carriers are in the Gulf
and missile defences have been installed in Gulf states. The military
build up is either to scare Tehran or to prepare for American
attacks on Iran.
Blix noted that Iran had refused to abide by the UN Security
Council resolution passed in December calling for the suspension
of its uranium enrichment and other nuclear programs. Iran
is thus on collision course with the resolution adopted by the
council. While Washington declares that diplomacy rather than
military action is on the agenda, the administration evidently
believes that naval demonstrations may have an impact. A recent
column in the Washington Times suggested an even more explicit
demonstration: the launching of a missile on the former US embassy
in Tehrannow used by the Iranian revolutionary guards.
Retired US Admiral James Lyons, former commander in chief of
the US Pacific Fleet, called in the February 9 issue of the right-wing
Washington Times for a tomahawk missile strike to send
a swift and unmistakable signal to Tehran. The
fact that the Iranian Revolutionary Guards use our embassy is
immaterial. The message would be clear to all and serve notice
to Iran what will happen if they dont stop meddling in Iraq
and come instead to the negotiating table on all issues. The alternative
for Iran would be unimaginable devastation.
While Blix has retired as a UN weapons inspector, ElBaradei,
as head of the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA), is at
the centre of the confrontation between the US and Iran over its
nuclear programs. The deadline for Iran to meet the demands of
the UN resolution expires today. Earlier this month, ElBaradei
appealed for both sides to take a time out to negotiate
an end to the standoff. The Bush administration, however, has
adamantly refused to enter into talks with Iran unless it shuts
down its nuclear programsi.e., concedes to US demands in
advance of any negotiations. Senior Iranian officials declared
yesterday they would not suspend their uranium enrichment activities.
In a lengthy interview yesterday with the British-based Financial
Times, ElBaradei was deeply pessimistic about the prospect
for negotiations. He is due to present a report to the UN Security
Council on Irans compliance with the December resolution.
While noting Iran may be as close as six months to industrial
scale enrichment, ElBaradei explained that it was five to ten
years, according to British and US intelligence, from producing
a nuclear bomb. Iran continues to insist that its enrichment plant
is solely to fuel its power reactor at Bushehr.
Commenting on the perpetual rumbles that Washington or
Israel might yet contemplate the use of force, ElBaradei
replied: [E]ven if [the Iranians] were not going to develop
a nuclear weapon today, this would be a sure recipe for them to
go down that route... Go for the military option and then either
youll have a repeat of North Korea [which has developed
nuclear weapons] or you have a repeat of Iraq, and these are not
our greatest achievements as civilised human beings.
The Bush administrations hostility to negotiations with
Iran over its nuclear programs and alleged support for anti-US
insurgents in Iraq stems from the fact that these issues are pretexts
for the pursuit of broader US ambitions for economic and strategic
dominance throughout the energy-rich regions of the Middle East
and Central Asia. The Bush administrations diplomacy
is simply a smokescreen behind which it is preparing for military
action against Iran to achieve these ends.
See Also:
Is the Bush administration behind the
bombings in Iran?
[17 February 2007]
US "diplomacy" on Iran: thuggery
and threats of war
[15 February 2007]
At White House press conference, Bush
escalates war threats against Iran
[15 February 2007]
Stop the US war drive against Iran!
[14 February 2007]
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