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The Bush administrations new strategy of setting the
Middle East aflame
By Peter Symonds
28 February 2007
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A lengthy article in this weeks New Yorker magazine
by veteran investigative journalist Seymour Hersh provides further
evidence that the Bush administration has not only set course
for war against Iran, but has over the past few months embarked
on a reckless and incendiary strategy that has the potential to
unleash sectarian Sunni-Shia conflicts throughout the Middle East.
The broad outlines of what Hersh writes in his article The
Redirection (as the plan is termed in the White House) have
been out in the open for some time. In the wake of the US Congressional
elections last November, the Bush administration ignored the sentiments
of the overwhelming majority of the American people and the recommendations
of the top-level Iraq Study Group (IRG). The White House has increased
troop numbers in Iraq, bolstered its naval presence in the Persian
Gulf and markedly turned up the volume of the threats against
Iran.
In outlining his plans for Iraq on January 10, President Bush
denounced Syria and Iran for assisting anti-US insurgents in Iraq
and warned that the US military would destroy their networks of
agents. According to Hershs sources, since last August as
many as 500 Iranians have been arbitrarily detained and interrogated
at any one time, including many Iranian humanitarian and aid workers.
As a former senior US intelligence official explained: The
White House goal is to build a case that the Iranians have been
fomenting the insurgency... and supporting the killing of Americans.
These unsubstantiated allegations, along with Irans alleged
nuclear weapons program and its support for terrorist
groups in the Middle East, are being drummed up as potential pretexts
for a confrontation with Tehran. In articles over the past year,
Hersh has pointed to high-level preparations for an intensive
bombing attack on Iran. In his latest article, he notes that these
processes have accelerated with the establishment of a special
planning group in the Pentagon offices of the Joint Chiefs of
Staff, with a brief to prepare a contingency plan that could be
implemented on Bushs orders within 24 hours. Two replacement
aircraft carrier groups are due to arrive in the Gulf, but the
entire naval force could be ordered to stay in place, to
allow for an attack order this spring.
The Pentagons military planning is being accompanied
by a broad US diplomatic offensive against Tehran, which was outlined
by US Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice in her testimony to
the Senate Foreign Relations Committee last month. She declared
that the US was seeking a new strategic alignment in the
Middle East by supporting moderates, including
Saudi Arabia, Jordan, Egypt and the Gulf states, against the extremistsIran,
Syria and their allies such as Hezbollah and Hamas. Significantly,
all talk of spreading democracy in the region went
out the window so as to justify alliances with openly autocratic
and repressive regimes.
Behind the recent intense diplomatic activity of Rice and other
top US officials in the Middle East is a strategy aimed at isolating
Iran and undermining its allies using all available means, including
covert operations in Lebanon, Syria and Iran itself. To consolidate
its new alignment, the Bush administration is preying on the fears
in the so-called Sunni Arab nations of the expanding influence
of Shiite Iran following the toppling of the Saddam Hussein regime
in Iraq. Having plunged Iraq into civil war, the US is fanning
the flames of sectarian conflict throughout the Middle East with
no regard for the disastrous consequences.
Contrary to media speculation that the so-called neo-conservatives
have been marginalised in the Bush administration, Hersh explains
that the key players are Vice President Dick Cheney
and deputy national security adviser Elliot Abrams, together with
the departing US ambassador to Iraq Zalmay Khalilzad and Saudi
Arabias national security adviser Prince Bandar bin Sultan.
While Rice has been deeply involved in shaping the public
policy, the article explained, former and current
officials said that the clandestine side has been guided by Cheney.
Last November, Cheney made a snap one-day trip to Saudi Arabia
to meet with King Abdullah and his top aides. While publicly the
visit was to reassure the Saudi monarchy the US was not going
to pull out of Iraq, privately the discussion focussed on countering
Iranian influence throughout the region. Along with Israel, Saudi
Arabia is a central element in the US strategy as a rallying point
for other moderate Sunni states and a source of finance
for clandestine operations throughout the region. The more aggressive
Saudi stance has provoked sharp conflicts in ruling circles in
Riyadh, leading to the abrupt resignation in December of the countrys
ambassador to the US, Prince Turki al-Faisal, who reportedly favours
easing, rather than heightening, tensions with Iran.
According to Hersh, the US, Israel and Saudi Arabia have developed
an informal agreement about the new strategic direction, which
includes security guarantees to Israel, US support for Sunni nations
in the Middle East to counteract Iranian influence and Saudi efforts
to rein in Hamas. The Saudi monarchy brokered a deal in Mecca
this month to form a coalition Palestinian government between
Hamas and Fatah as a step toward negotiations with the Israeli
government.
A de facto alliance with Al Qaeda
A major focus of the US strategy is to weaken the Syrian government
of President Bashir Assad and his alliance with Iran, and to undermine
the influence of Hezbollah in Lebanon. The Bush administration
actively encouraged Israels savage bombardment and invasion
of Lebanon last year as the opening shot in a broader campaign
against Syria and Iran. But in a significant blow to US plans,
Israel failed to destroy Hezbollah, which emerged from the rubble
with heightened political stature. In an interview on Australian
Broadcasting Corporation radio, Hersh described Hezbollah leader
Sheikh Hassan Nasrallah as the single most popular figure
among Sunnis and Shias in the Middle East.
In its efforts to counter the Shiite-based Hezbollah and shore
up the government of Prime Minister Fuad Siniora, the US is now
covertly supporting Sunni extremist groups in Lebanon that are
known to have close ideological ties to Al Qaeda. Nothing is more
revealing of the criminal character of the Bush administration.
In the name of fighting its bogus war on terror against
Islamo-fascists to defend the American people, the
White House has no compunction in forming in a de facto alliance
with Sunni fanatics who pay homage to Osama bin Laden and Al Qaeda.
A former senior American intelligence official told Hersh:
We are in a program to enhance Sunni capacity to resist
Shiite influence, and were spreading money around as much
as we can... In this process, were financing a lot of bad
guys with some serious potential unintended consequences. We dont
have the ability to determine and get pay vouchers signed by the
people we like and avoid the people we dont like. Its
a very high-risk venture.
Former British MI6 agent Alastair Crooke, based at the Conflicts
Forum think tank in Beirut, explained that Fatah al-Islam, which
broke from the pro-Syrian group Fatah al-Intifada in the Nahr
al-Bared refugee camp in northern Lebanon, had been offered money
to fight Hezbollah. A larger Sunni fundamentalist group, situated
at the Ain al-Hilweh Palestinian refugee camp, received arms and
supplies from Lebanese internal security forces and militias associated
with the Siniora government.
An article in the British-based Telegraph last month
confirmed that President Bush had given the green light to the
CIA to provide financial and logistical support to the Lebanese
prime minister. The classified presidential order authorises
the CIA and other US intelligence agencies to fund anti-Hezbollah
groups in Lebanon and pay for activists who support the Siniora
government. The secrecy of the finding [order] means that US involvement
in the activities is officially deniable.
All these activities are going on behind the backs of the US
Congress and the American people. It is no surprise that Elliot
Abrams, who was convicted over the Iran-Contra affair, is a central
figure in these dirty operations. In the 1980s, the Reagan administration
was involved in secretly selling arms to Iran as a means of covertly
funding and arming the right-wing Contras in Nicaragua without
congressional approval. Now Abrams is directing another criminal
operation, involving the Saudis, to fund Sunni extremists to undermine
Tehran and its allies as the US prepares to launch a war on Iran.
The close involvement of Saudi Arabia in the enterprise is
particularly significant. The Saudi monarchy, which has a long
history of financing Sunni fanatics, was a close partner in the
1980s in the CIAs backing of Mujaheddin fighters against
the Soviet-backed regime in Afghanistan. The blowback
from that operation included the creation of Al Qaeda, which called
for a jihad against the US after American troops were stationed
in Saudi Arabia for the first Gulf War in 1990-91. Now with Saudi
assistance, the Bush administration is unleashing the same reactionary
forces in its efforts to undermine Iran, with cynical disregard
for the consequences.
As a US government consultant told Hersh, Prince Bandar and
other Saudis had offered assurances that they will keep
a very close eye on the religious fundamentalists. Their message
to us was, Weve created this movement, and we can
control it. Its not that we dont want the Salafis
[Sunni fundamentalists] to throw bombs; its who they
throw them atHezbollah, Moqtada al-Sadr, Iran, and at the
Syrians, if they continue to work with Hezbollah and Iran.
No doubt similar assurances were given in the 1980s that Riyadh
would control a little-known Saudi engineer, Osama bin Laden,
and his followers.
The US encouragement of Sunni extremist groups is not limited
to Lebanon. Druze leader Walid Jumblatt, a strong supporter of
the Siniora government, met with Cheney in the northern autumn
to discuss undermining Syrian President Assad. Jumblatt told Hersh
that he had advised Cheney to talk to the Syrian Muslim BrotherhoodSunni
fundamentalists with a history of anti-government violence. While
Assad is from the Alawi Shiite sect, the majority of people in
Syria are Sunni Muslims. Assad may not be the chief target of
the US strategy, but the campaign against him is aimed particularly
at weakening Syrias alliance with Iran.
In an article in December entitled Syria in Bushs
Cross Hairs, Time magazine leaked the contents of
US plans to forge an anti-Assad coalition known as the National
Salvation Front (NSF), including the Muslim Brotherhood, to contest
elections this year. NSF representatives held at least two meetings
last year in the White House and plans were mooted to open an
office in Washington. Hershs sources confirmed that the
US and Saudi Arabia were covertly providing support to the NSF.
The issue is particularly sensitive as another of Bushs
moderate alliesthe Egyptian government of President
Hosni Mubarak has been attempting to wipe out the Muslim Brotherhood
for years.
Region-wide sectarian conflict
As in his previous articles, Hersh is a conduit for deep concerns
within US ruling circles about the implications of the Bush administrations
plans for the underlying interests of US imperialism in the Middle
East. Having created a disaster in Iraq, the White House is now
implementing another reckless and criminal adventure that is plunging
the entire region toward conflict. While all the critics undoubtedly
share the long-held US ambition of establishing its undisputed
dominance over the Middle East and its huge oil reserves, they
fear the outcome will be an unmitigated disaster.
In his comments to Hersh, Martin Indyk, a senior official in
the Clinton administration, declared: The Middle East is
heading into a serious Sunni-Shiite Cold War. The White House
is not just doubling the bet in Iraq. Its doubling the bet
across the region. This could get very complicated. Everything
is upside down. Vali Nasr, a senior fellow at the Council
of Foreign Relations, was deeply troubled by the unleashing of
Sunni extremists. The last time Iran was a threat, the Saudis
were able to mobilise the worst kind of Islamic radicals. Once
you get them out of the box, you cant put them back,
he warned.
Far from resolving the US military disaster in Iraq, the deliberate
inflaming of Shiite-Sunni tensions throughout the region will
only expand the escalating sectarian war there. The US occupation
rests directly on a puppet regime in Baghdad dominated by Shiite
fundamentalist parties that have longstanding links with Tehran.
Sections of the Saudi elite have been bitterly critical that the
US has opened the door for expanding Iranian influence in Iraq.
As part of its propaganda war, the Bush administration is accusing
Iran of supplying anti-US insurgents, but remains completely silent
about the growing evidence that Saudi finance and arms are making
their way to the Sunni resistance groups responsible for the overwhelming
majority of US casualties.
Any US assault on Iran is certain to inflame opposition among
Iraqs Shiite majority and provoke a political crisis in
the government of Prime Minister Nuri al Maliki. In what can only
be interpreted as a warning to the Iraqi parties to sever their
relations with Iran, the US military has deliberately targetted
figures associated with some of Irans closest allies. Just
last week, US troops detained the son of Abdul Aziz al-Hakim,
leader of the Supreme Council for Islamic Revolution in Iraq (SCIRI),
and his bodyguards as he returned from a visit to Iran. While
US officials subsequently apologised for the mistake,
there is little doubt that the arrest was another threat to the
governing parties. If the Maliki government does not toe the line,
the US has already made clear, in a series of thinly veiled warnings
last year, that it will be removed.
The kindling of anti-Iranian, anti-Persian and anti-Shiite
prejudices is already having ramifications throughout the Gulf
states, many of which have significant Shiite minorities. The
petty despots who preside over these oil-rich countries have no
hesitation in deliberately stirring up sectarian hostilities to
divide working people against each other and prop up their own
corrupt rule.
An article in yesterdays Wall Street Journal entitled,
As US puts pressure on Iran, Gulfs religious rift
spreads, highlighted the tensions in Bahrain, where a privileged
Sunni elite rules over a Shiite majority. The latest flare-up
occurred when extremist Sunni clerics, backed by government officials,
launched a campaign last year against the purchase of a house
by Shiites, alleging they were Iranian agents. In
the lead-up to elections, the issue led to a witch-hunt against
Shiites and polarised voters along sectarian lines.
The article provided more evidence that the US is enlisting
Sunni extremists sympathetic to Al Qaeda in its confrontation
with Iran. In a document published in January entitled, Covenant
of the Supreme Council of Jihad Groups, a Kuwaiti cleric
ranked Iran ahead of the US and Israel as the most dangerous foe,
denouncing the Safawi [Iranian] enemy that seeks the destruction
of Islamic civilisation. In late December, a senior Saudi
cleric branded Shiites as more dangerous than Jews and Christians.
The Wall Street Journal noted: Some experts on
the region warn that Americas stand-off with Iran is exacerbating
Sunni-Shiite rivalry and pushing the US into some unruly company.
Indeed, America now unintentionally finds itself on the same page
as Sunni firebrands who loathe America but sometimes hate Shiites
even more. Much of the most venomous anti-Iranian rhetoric comes
from militants whose views echo Osama bin Ladens.
What Hershs article demonstrates is that far from being
unintentional, these firebrands are being deliberately
encouraged, with Saudi assistance, as part of the US war drive
against Iran.
Consolidating the support of the Gulf states is critical to
the US strategy. These states sit atop huge reserves of oil and
gas, are dotted along the coastline of the Persian Gulf directly
opposite Iran and host major US military installations. Bahrain
is home to the US Navys Fifth Fleet and Qatar hosts the
US Central Command, whose area of responsibility covers the Middle
East and Central Asia. As part of its military buildup, the Pentagon
has sent Patriot anti-missile batteries to several Gulf states
to protect its military bases and to reassure nervous local allies.
Saudi Arabia and the Gulf states are bolstering their own military
capacities. A fortnight ago, nearly 900 weapons manufacturers
attended the annual Idex military trade fair in the United Arab
Emirates (UAE). According to a New York Times report, deals
worth some $60 billion were signed by the UAE, Saudi Arabia, Kuwait
and Oman, covering everything from the most sophisticated warplanes
and combat helicopters to early warning systems, cruise missiles
and tanks. This years planned purchases are a marked hike
over previous years.
Taken together, the Bush administrations strategy for
the Middle Eaststretching from Lebanon and Syria to Iran
and the Gulf statescan only produce a catastrophe for working
people throughout the region, in the United States and internationally.
Any US attack on Iran has the potential to plunge the entire Middle
East into conflict, drawing in Americas European and Asia
rivals, whose vital economic and strategic interests are at stake.
Having gambled and lost with their criminal invasion of Iraq,
the gangsters in the White House are doubling their bets across
the board and dicing with the future of humanity.
See Also:
US war drums beat louder after Iran fails
to meet UN deadline
[26 February 2007]
US Vice President Cheney menaces Iran
with military aggression
[24 February 2007]
Cheney's speech in Sydney: An ominous
silence on Iran from the US vice president
[23 February 2007]
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