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Republican presidential candidates back nuclear strike against
Iran
By Patrick Martin
7 June 2007
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Nine of ten candidates for the Republican presidential nomination
explicitly or tacitly supported a US attack on Iran using nuclear
weapons, in response to a question at Tuesday nights nationally
televised debate in New Hampshire.
Despite the extraordinary character of these declarationsgiving
support to the first use of nuclear weapons in war since Hiroshima
and Nagasaki, 62 years agothere was virtually no US press
coverage of these remarks and no commentary on their significance.
While the Republican candidates sought to present the military
action as a limited one against Irans alleged nuclear weapons
facilities, calling them tactical nuclear strikes,
no one should misunderstand what this means. The use of nuclear
weapons, in whatever form, against a densely populated country
of 75 million would be an act of mass murder.
These comments reflect the derangement and depravity of considerable
sections of a ruling elite which believes it must make a success
of its occupation of Iraq, even if it requires doubling
its bet and attacking another major country in the Middle
Eastone which is three times larger than Iraq and with a
long history of struggle for independence and against colonial-style
rule.
The initial exchange came about half an hour into the debate,
which was broadcast on CNN and moderated by CNN anchorman Wolf
Blitzer. After some initial discussion on the Iraq war, in which
nine of the ten candidates vowed to persevere in the effort to
control the oil-rich country, Blitzer asked Congressman Duncan
Hunter of California, former chairman of the House Armed Services
Committee, about recent talks between US and Iranian officials
in Baghdad. He asked Hunter whether it was correct to negotiate
with Iran, given Irans alleged efforts to develop nuclear
weapons. When Hunter endorsed the talks, Blitzer followed up with
this question:
Blitzer: If it came down to a preemptive US strike against
Irans nuclear facility, if necessary would you authorize
as president the use of tactical nuclear weapons?
Hunter: I would authorize the use of tactical nuclear weapons
if there was no other way to preempt those particular centrifuges.
Blitzer then turned to former New York mayor Rudolph Giuliani,
who currently leads in opinion polls of prospective Republican
primary voters.
Blitzer: What do you think, Mayor? Do you think if you were
president of the United States and it came down to Iran having
a nuclear bomb, which you say is unacceptable, you would authorize
the use of tactical nuclear weapons?
Giuliani: Part of the premise of talking to Iran has to be
that they have to know very clearly that it is unacceptable to
the United States that they have nuclear power. I think it could
be done with conventional weapons, but you cant rule out
anything and you shouldnt take any option off the table.
The same question was then posed to former Virginia Governor
James Gilmore, and to former Massachusetts Governor Mitt Romney,
the candidate with the most backing from Wall Street and other
financial interests.
Gilmore criticized the desire for Iran to dominate that
portion of the world, adding that while he supported negotiations
with Iran, Were also going to say that having a nuclear
weapon is unacceptable. They need to understand it. And all options
are on the table by the United States in that instance.
Questioned by Blitzer, Romney used the same formulation.
Blitzer: Governor Romney, I want to get you on the record.
Do you agree with the mayor, the governor, others here, that the
use of tactical nuclear weapons, potentially, would be possible
if that were the only way to stop Iran from developing a nuclear
bomb?
Romney: You dont take options off the table.
These four candidates were the only ones directly asked the
question, but five othersSenator John McCain, Senator Sam
Brownback, Congressman Tom Tancredo, former Wisconsin Governor
Tommy Thompson, and former Arkansas Governor Mike Huckabeehad
ample opportunity to object or to distinguish their positions
from this endorsement of mass murder.
Only one candidate chose to do so, Congressman Ron Paul of
Texas, the former Libertarian presidential candidate. Paul, a
conservative politician who articulates the isolationist strain
in American bourgeois politics, is a critic of the Iraq war. He
finally addressed the issue of using nuclear weapons an hour after
it was raised, in response to a question from a college professor
in the audience, who asked what each candidate thought was the
most important moral issue facing the country.
Several of the Republican candidates gave predictable responses,
citing abortion and the right to life, a right which
they are not prepared to concede to the people of Iraq, Iran or
any other country that stands in the way of American imperialism.
Congressman Pauls response is worth quoting, since it demonstrates
how far the mainstream of American bourgeois politics
has gone in embracing mass killing as an instrument of state policy.
Blitzer: Congressman Paul, whats the most pressing moral
issue in the United States right now?
Paul: I think it is the acceptance just recently that we now
promote preemptive war. I do not believe thats part of the
American tradition... And now, tonight, we hear that were
not even willing to remove from the table a preemptive nuclear
strike against a country that has done no harm to us directly
and is no threat to our national security!
These remarks were greeted with considerable applause, an indication
that even among self-identified rank-and-file Republicans there
is growing unease over the escalating militarism of the American
ruling elite.
But in the corporate-controlled US media, there was little
or no commentary about the endorsement of a nuclear strike against
Iran. CNN, which broadcast the debate, reported it in passing,
and cited only Congressman Hunters support for the use of
tactical nuclear weapons.
The Washington Post reduced the issue to a single clause
of a sentence towards the end of its report on the debate, in
which, it claimed, McCain, Giuliani and Romney each had
moments in which they shined. The Post reporters
did not say if they thought that Giulianis and Romneys
support for possible nuclear strikes on Iran was such a moment.
The entire treatment of the subject was limited to the following:
The candidates said they would not remove the option of
using nuclear weapons to prevent Iran from obtaining such weapons,
and they also fielded questions about abortion, religion, health
care and global warming.
The rest of the mainstream press did not even report this endorsement
of an unprovoked US nuclear attack on Iran. The New York Times,
the Wall Street Journal, the Associated Press, Bloomberg
News Service, ABC, NBC, CBS and Fox News all said nothing.
There is no politically innocent explanation for this silence.
One can only imagine the howling in the American media if a prominent
official figure in China had threatened the use of nuclear weapons
against Taiwan, or if a candidate to succeed Vladimir Putin in
Russia had called for nuclear strikes against one of its pro-Western
neighbors.
Outside the United States, the significance of the threats
of nuclear attack on Iran was widely recognized. The British news
service Reuters led its report on the debate with the Iran comments,
under the headline, Republicans: Iran Must Not Have Nuclear
Arms. The lead paragraph begins: Republican candidates
for US president agreed on Tuesday that Iran must not develop
atomic weapons even if a tactical nuclear strike is needed to
stop it ...
The Israeli daily newspaper Haaretz also took
note, commenting, One of the more memorable statements was
made by former Governor Jim Gilmore, who said that all options
were on the table in dealing with Iran, including the possible
use of tactical nuclear weapons.
The bloodlust expressed in these remarks is not limited to
the nine Republicans on the stage in New Hampshire. Prospective
candidate Fred Thompson, the former senator from Tennessee, gave
a television interview immediately after the debate in which he
solidarized himself with the call for a preemptive strike against
Irans nuclear facilities.
As for the Democrats, nearly all of the partys presidential
candidates, as well as the entire congressional leadership, are
on record in support of escalating the US campaign of diplomatic
pressure, economic sanctions and military saber-rattling against
Iran, aimed at preparing public opinion in the United States for
a new and even more terrible slaughter in the Middle East.
See Also:
Democrats pose as Iraq war opponents
in New Hampshire debate
[5 June 2007]
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