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Iran: Why does Bush invoke the threat of World War III?
Part 1: Irans strategic position
By Alex Lantier
30 November 2007
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This is the first of a three-part series. Part
two will be posted December 1. Part
three will be posted on December 3.
On October 17, George Bush made a remarkable statement concerning
the mounting tensions between the US and Iran: If youre
interested in avoiding World War III, it seems like you ought
to be interested in preventing [Iran] from having the knowledge
necessary to make a nuclear weapon. Bush has since repeated
and defended this comment. It testifies to the superficiality
of media commentary that this declaration has not been subjected
to critical analysis.
Bushs statement has profound and far-reaching implications.
Washingtons deliberate stoking of political tensions with
Iran over the last yearwith accusations of Iranian military
assistance to the anti-US Iraqi resistance, and the branding of
portions of the Iranian armed forces as terroristdoes
not simply threaten Iran. It is a confrontation with a global
cast of characters.
Further investigation of the context of Bushs comments
substantiates their significance. He made his initial statement
about World War III just one day after Russian President Vladimir
Putin had said during a visit to Iran, Not only should we
reject the use of force, but also the mention of force as a possibility.
Clearly, Bushs remarks were a response to Putin, a fact
that has been barely, if at all noted in the bourgeois media.
However, such inflammatory comments, coming on the heels of an
important state visit by the Russian president, indicate that
US hostility to Iran is bound up with global considerations central
to the interests of US imperialism.
The verbal exchange between Putin and Bush raises important
questions. What is so crucial about Iran that its acquisition
of a few crude nuclear devicesfar outweighed by the hundreds
of strategic nuclear devices held by Israel, let alone the thousands
possessed by the major nuclear powerswould trigger a world
war? When Washington contemplates fighting World War III over
an Iranian nuclear weapon, whom does it view as its potential
adversaries, and why?
Iran, oil, and the geopolitics of the Persian
Gulf
Iran is at the heart of oil-rich, war-torn Southwest Asia.
It lies on the north shore of the Persian Gulf, which holds 63
percent of the worlds proven oil reserves. Immediately to
the north of Iran lie Turkey, the Caucasus, the Caspian Sea and
the former Soviet states of Central Asiaspringboards to
Europe, Russia and China. By virtue of this geography, control
of Iran is a valuable prize for all the major capitalist powers,
which could use it to decisively increase their influence in commercial
and diplomatic relations.
Irans own energy reserves are massive. According to US
Department of Energy figures, Iran has the second largest proven
oil reserves in the Middle East136.3 billion barrels. It
also has 970 trillion cubic feet of natural gasthe second-largest
reserves in the world. Its oil and gas exports account for the
vast bulk of its activity in international markets, generating
85 percent of export revenue and 65 percent of state revenue.
It exports over 2.5 million barrels of oil per day and is a critical
supplier to East Asia and Europe.

Even more than its own energy reserves, Iran owes its strategic
importance in the Persian Gulf energy industry to its position
astride the Gulfs shipping lanes. Oil shipped out of the
Gulf on tankers must pass through the Strait of Hormuz off Irans
southern coast to reach the Indian Ocean.
Anthony Cordesman of the US Center for Strategic and International
Studies writes: Oil flows through the Strait of Hormuz account
for roughly 40 percent of all world traded oil. He cites
International Energy Agency figures showing that, of the 17.4
million barrels shipped daily through the Straits of Hormuz, 13
million travel east, through the Indian Ocean and the Straits
of Malacca near Singapore, to East Asia. Of the remainder, 3.5
million barrels travel through the Bab el-Mandab into the Red
Sea, to Europe and the US.
He continues: Irans coastline is particularly important
because tanker and shipping routes pass so close to Irans
land mass, the islands it controls in the Gulf, and its major
naval bases. At the narrowest point (the Strait of Hormuz), the
Gulf narrows to only 34 miles wide, with Iran to the north and
Oman to the south. The key passages through the Strait consist
of 2-mile wide channels for inbound and outbound tanker traffic,
as well as a 2-mile wide buffer zone.
Tehran has purchased numerous cruise missiles from Russia and
China and deployed them on patrol boats and at naval bases along
these shipping lanes. Iranian officials, including Ayatollah Ali
Khamenei, have repeatedly said that, in the event of a US attack
on Iran, energy shipments through the region will be jeopardized.
Iran has emerged from the 2003 US occupation of Iraq as the
most serious regional obstacle to the strategy of US imperialism
in the Persian Gulf. It wields considerable influence within the
Shiite fundamentalist parties that have functioned as Washingtons
favored quislings inside Iraq.
Iran also has potential political influence with the population
of the southern Gulf shore. In Saudi Arabias oil-rich Eastern
Province, as well as Bahrain, US-backed Sunni monarchs rule over
an oppressed Shiite population subjected to sectarian discrimination.
These monarchs are terrified of any Shiite-populist political
agitation like that carried out during the early years of the
1979 Iranian Revolution.
Iran has been under a US embargo since the 1979 Revolution
overthrew the US-backed Shah. Its oil is largely traded with other
powers. Asia accounts for the largest share (56 percent, largely
to Japan and China, with lesser amounts to Korea, India and Southeast
Asia); Europe, especially Italy and France, buys 29 percent of
Irans oil exports. Europe, China and Korea also supply over
50 percent of Irans imports, and several European corporations
have set up manufacturing operations there.
Iran as a global commercial gateway
Iran is a potential nexus of oil pipelines and trade routes
between all the major geopolitical competitors of the US bourgeoisie.
It is a transit point, via its northwestern border, for oil and
gas flowing from the Middle East and Central Asia to Turkey and
the European market. Via its northeastern border with the former
Soviet republic of Turkmenistan, it could become a transit point
to Kazakhstan and thence to western China.
Iran has taken on a particularly vital role in this last regard,
since the other land routes to the Indian Ocean from Central or
East Asia are barredeither by geographical barriers such
as the Himalayas, or by the permanent state of civil war in US-occupied
Afghanistan and the increasing destabilization of Pakistan.
Iran has significant potential to help the former Soviet republics
of Central Asia (notably Kazakhstan, Turkmenistan and Azerbaijan)
ship their oil and gas via the Indian Ocean to world markets.
This is particularly important since, in the aftermath of the
industrial collapse that accompanied the dissolution of the USSR,
the regions economy has largely been rebuilt around oil
and gas exports, enriching a narrow layer of former Stalinist
apparatchiks. Currently, all oil and gas is exported through a
Soviet-era pipeline network controlled by the Russian corporation
Gazprom.
The question of Central Asias oil and gas has long held
the attention of US corporations and diplomats. At a 1998 hearing
of the US House of Representatives Committee on International
Relations, Frederick Starr of the Central Asia Institute of Johns
Hopkins University noted: The heaviest burdens of the measures
we are taking toward Iran fall disproportionately on Azerbaijan,
Kazakhstan and Turkmenistan, for it prevents them from exporting
their oil by one of the most obvious alternative routes to Russia,
namely Iran. The US position has been to argue that this would
not be in the Central Asians best interests. None of our
friends in the region agree.
Other speakers at the hearing also admitted that the US veto
of pipeline construction through Iran significantly distorts the
regions economy. Unocal executive John Maresca described
Russian plans for a pipeline to the Black Sea port of Novorossiysk
and a US plan for a pipeline through the Caucasus (from Baku,
Azerbaijan to Tblisi, Georgia and to Ceyhan, Turkeythe so-called
BTC pipeline). Both pipelines are now operational.
Maresca said: Even if both pipelines were built, they
would not have enough total capacity to transport all the oil
expected to flow from the region in the future. Nor would they
have the capability to move it to the right markets.... Western
Europe, Central and Eastern Europe, and the Newly Independent
States of the former Soviet Union are all slow growth markets
where demand will grow at only a half a percent to perhaps 1.2
percent during the period 1995 to 2010. Asia is a different story
altogether.
Since then, Iran has developed pipeline links to Turkmenistan,
sealing a deal to pump 30 billion cubic meters of natural gas
per year from Turkmenistan through Iran and Turkey to Europe.
However, such links would undoubtedly multiply if Iran were not
living under the constant threat of US attack.
Iran has also become increasingly active in regional diplomacy.
Since 2006, it has had observer status at the Shanghai Cooperation
Organization (SCO), a regional grouping including China, Russia,
Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan and Uzbekistan. The SCO has
actively lobbied for the closure of US military bases in Central
Asia obtained just after the September 11, 2001 terrorist attacks,
during the initial US attack on Afghanistan.
These basing rights have now largely been revoked, as Central
Asian governments have come to view Washington as principally
dedicated to their overthrowespecially after the failure
of the US-backed Tulip Revolution in Kyrgyzstan and
the US-backed Andijan uprising in Uzbekistan, both in 2005.
To be continued
See Also:
More warnings of a US war
on Iran
[29 October 2007]
US imposes unilateral sanctions
on Iran: One step closer to war
[26 October 2007]
Bush invokes threat of World
War III
[19 October 2007]
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