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Democrats, Republicans back Bush war provocations against
Iran
By Patrick Martin
27 October 2007
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While the Bush administrations decision Thursday on a
unilateral escalation of sanctions against Iran has provoked consternation
and anger overseasRussian president Vladimir Putin, for
instance, compared the US policy to running around like
a madman with a razor blade in his handthe response
from the US political establishment has been generally supportive.
Presidential candidates of both the Democratic and Republican
parties backed the administration action designating the Iran
Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) as a nuclear proliferator and
the IRGCs foreign section, the Quds Force, as a terrorist
organization. All the leading Republicans and the frontrunning
Democrat, Hillary Clinton, are on record supporting even more
provocative actions, such as designating the entire IRGC, Irans
most powerful military branch, as a terrorist group.
Both the Washington Post and the New York Times
have soft-peddled the Bush administration decision, unprecedented
in world diplomacy, to apply the terrorist designation
to the armed forces of a major country.
The Post published an article Friday headlined, Iran
Sanctions Are Meant to Prevent War, Bush Aides Say, which
dutifully reported that Bush intends to pursue a strategy
of gradually escalating financial, diplomatic and political pressure
on Tehran, aimed not at starting a new war in the Middle East,
his advisers said, but at preventing one.
The Post continued: White House and other administration
officials have expressed frustration over the talk of war, emphasizing
that Bush remains convinced that his strategy of nonmilitary pressure
can work.
This decision today supports the diplomacy and in no
way, shape or form does it anticipate the use of force,
Undersecretary of State R. Nicholas Burns told the newspaper.
We are clearly on a diplomatic track, and this initiative
reinforces that track.
Neither the diplomat nor the newspaper addressed a key aspect
of the sanctions program announced by Bushthat by targeting
Irans most powerful and effective military force, the sanctions
aim to degrade the countrys ability to defend itself against
an impending US military strike.
The Post seemed to admit, however, in another passage
in the article, that the US government, not Iran, was pushing
the conflict to the brink of war. Whether Bush will break
from diplomacy and employ force is the great unknown, the
newspaper noted.
An accompanying editorial endorsed the new US sanctions as
A Boost for Diplomacy, claiming that they were the
alternative to military action, rather than a giant step
towards war. The editorial conceded that there was little or no
international support for an escalation of sanctionssupport
which is critical to enforcing thembut nonetheless pretended
that the unilateral sanctions could be effective in forcing
Iran to end its defiance of the Security Council and begin serious
negotiations to stop its bomb program.
The Post went on to declare that the measures are
restrained when set against the Revolutionary Guards escalating
campaign to kill Americans in Iraq by supplying sophisticated
bombs, rockets and training to allied Shiite militias. In
other words, Bush would have been justified in taking even stronger
action, like the use of military force.
The newspaper also attacked those who portray the sanctions
initiative as a buildup to war by Mr. Bush. Weve seen no
evidence that the president has decided on war... Apparently,
the Post is willing to overlook the threats of World
War III from Bush and Cheney, the repeated cross-border
provocations by US covert forces (reported in the international
press and by New Yorker correspondent Seymour Hersh), and
the recent declarations of readiness for action from US military
commanders.
The New York Times published no editorial endorsing
or opposing the new Iran sanctions, a significant decision in
its own right. A news article Friday highlighted the administration
claims of restraint, noting assurances on Thursday that
at least for now, the United States is not going to war with Iran.
The Times said that the action reflected some caution
by an administration that has also accused the Quds force of aiding
Shiite militia attacks on American soldiers in Iraq, and has even
detained some Quds force members there, but has resisted calls
for retaliatory strikes inside Iran.
The real meaning of the US government action can be seen in
the reaction of the candidates who are seeking to succeed George
W. Bush in the White House, and who fully expect Iran to be one
of their principal foreign policy targets.
The most bloodthirsty comments came from one of the leading
Republican candidates, former Massachusetts Governor Mitt Romney,
who for the first time advocated bombing if Iran did not agree
to abandon its supposed drive to build nuclear weapons. If
for some reasons they continue down their course of folly toward
nuclear ambition, then I would take military action if thats
available to us, Romney said. I really cant
lay out exactly how that would be done, but we have a number of
options, from blockade to bombardment of some kind.
Senator John McCain of Arizona cited predictions that Iran
was within two years of a tipping point in terms of
acquiring nuclear weapons technology. They are inexorably
on the road to attaining nuclear weapons, he continued.
At a recent debate, McCain remarked, after a round of bellicose
statements by his fellow Republican candidates, that a US attack
on Iran was maybe closer to reality than we are discussing
tonight.
Former New York Mayor Rudolph Giuliani, the current leader
in Republican opinion polls, called a military strike against
Iran a promise rather than a threat, but said it would
consist of air strikes using precision-guided bombs and missiles
and thus should not be characterized as war.
A lengthy profile of Giulianis foreign policy advisers,
published Thursday in the New York Times, drew attention
to the prominent role of the same group of neo-conservative war
hawks who played a leading role instigating the US invasion of
Iraq, including such figures as Norman Podhoretz, Daniel Pipes
and Michael Rubin. The article quoted Giuliani as downplaying
Podhoretzs call for immediate US air strikes, and then asking
rhetorically, Can we get to that stage? Yes. And is that
stage closer than some of the Democrats believe? I believe it
is.
Both the Post and the Times drew attention to
the split among the Democratic presidential candidates, with frontrunner
Hillary Clinton advocating a noticeably more hawkish stance in
relation to Iran. Clinton was the only Democratic presidential
candidate to vote September 22 for the nonbinding resolution urging
the Bush administration to declare the entire IRGC a terrorist
organization. The White House actions were a step short of this,
declaring the Quds Force to be aiding terrorists, while naming
the IRGC as a violator of nonproliferation agreements, for its
supposed efforts to develop an Iranian nuclear weapon.
Rival Democrats like John Edwards, Christopher Dodd, Joseph
Biden and Barack Obama all criticized Clinton for her vote on
the Iran resolution, comparing it to the Senate resolution adopted
in October 2002 to give Bush authority to take military action
against Iraq, for which Clinton also voted.
The less chance the candidate has of wresting the nomination
from Clinton, the more strident the criticism of her position
on Irana clear indication that, whatever the rhetoric of
individual candidates, the Democratic Party as an institution
is lining up behind the coming war with Iran.
The badly trailing Dodd called the resolution a dangerous
step toward armed confrontation with Iran, while Edwards,
running a poor third, said, I learned a clear lesson from
the lead-up to the Iraq war in 2002: If you give this president
an inch, he will take a mileand launch a war. Instead of
blocking George Bushs new march to war, Senator Clinton
and others are enabling him once again.
Obama, who places second in most polls and has raised nearly
as much money as Clinton, was far more cautious in his criticisma
posture made even more necessary because Obama himself supports
the designation of the Revolutionary Guard as a terrorist organization.
It is important to have tough sanctions on Iran, particularly
on the Iranian Revolutionary Guard which supports terrorism,
Obama said. But these sanctions must not be linked to any
attempt to keep our troops in Iraq, or to take military action
against Iran.
Senator Clinton herself continued to posture as an opponent
of war with Iran while supporting all the actions the Bush administration
is taking to prepare for that war. In a mailing sent out to households
in Iowa, where the first presidential nominating contest will
be held in less than 10 weeks, Clinton declared, I am opposed
to letting President Bush take any military action against that
country without full Congressional approval.
There is rather less to this than meets the eye, since Clinton
did not say what her position would be if Bush actually sought
congressional approval. She is merely demanding that Congress
become a full partner in the future war of aggression, just as
the Democrats participated in approving the drive to war in Iraq.
In a statement hailing the unilateral escalation of economic
sanctions against Iran, Clinton described the action as an opportunity
to finally engage in robust diplomacy to achieve our objective
of ending Irans nuclear weapons program, while also averting
military action.
Newsweek columnist Michael Hirsh, however, pointed to
lifted spirits among the advocates of war with Iran, citing a
meeting with a happy hard-liner, a senior White House official,
at a Washington party. His good mood, it turns out, had a lot
to do with the new, uncompromising stance laid out by his boss,
George W. Bush, against Iran.
Hirsh noted that the administration has advanced so wide a
range of charges against Iran that it is difficult to see
how there can be a negotiated solution. Even if Tehran decides
to suspend enrichment, for exampleas unlikely as that it
isWashington will still suspect it of proliferation of missiles
and support to terrorist groups in Iraq, Afghanistan, Lebanon
and the Palestinian territories. No wonder my White House hard-liner
was so relieved, as he told me.
In other words, the Bush administration, with the full support
of Hillary Clinton and the congressional Democratic leadership,
is concocting a case for war, just as it did in the run-up to
the invasion of Iraq, so that no matter what the Iranian leadership
does it will be unable to stave off a military assault by American
imperialism.
See Also:
US imposes unilateral sanctions on Iran:
One step closer to war
[26 October 2007]
US militarism threatens to unleash regional
conflagration
[23 October 2007]
Bush invokes threat of World War
III
[19 October 2007]
US general fires a new propaganda salvo
against Iran
[9 October 2007]
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