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The New York Times and Bushs threat of World
War III
By Bill Van Auken
30 October 2007
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When President Bush used an October 17 White House press conference
to threaten that the escalating US confrontation with Iran posed
a danger of World War III his remark was passed over
in silence by most of the media. Those that did report it seemed,
for the most part, to accept the White House claim that the president
was engaging in hyperbole and merely making a rhetorical
point.
In the nearly two weeks since, Bushs remark has been
followed up by a menacing speech by Vice President Dick Cheney,
whose vow that the US would not stand by as Iran allegedly
pursued a nuclear weapons program constituted an implicit threat
of war. The heated war rhetoric has also been accompanied by the
imposition of another round of sweeping economic sanctions backed
by the unprecedented US designation of sections of Irans
security forces as proliferators of weapons of mass
destruction and as a foreign terrorist organization.
Given the Bush administrations claim to be engaged in
a permanent global war on terrorism, this designation
is tailor-made for justifying a US military assault on Iran.
These events, undoubtedly accompanied by behind-the-scenes
preparations for military action, have led to a somewhat belated
reaction to Bushs invocation of a third world war. Over
the weekend, several Democratic legislators took issue with the
presidents ominous statement. Senator Barbara Boxer of California,
for example, called Bushs World War III statement irresponsible.
Ive been briefed by the Pentagon who say if there
were to be a conflagration with Iran, which we all hope to avoid,
it would be generations of jihad right here on our shores,
she said. We dont want to go that way, so lets
calm down the rhetoric.
Senator Carl Levin of Michigan, chairman of the Senate Armed
Services Committee, also warned of the implications of a war against
Iran, including the potential closing of the strategic Strait
of Hormuz. He made clear that he believed that the military option
should be kept on the table, but urged the White House
to stop talking about it.
Dont give them the weapon that they use against
us that were trying to bully them, that were trying
to do dominate them, he said. And thats what
this hot rhetoric does when its just constantly repeated,
about World War III or that were going to use a military
option.
Mohamed ElBaradei, director general of the International Atomic
Energy Agency (IAEA), also warned against the confrontational
approach taken by Washington.
My fear is that if we continue to escalate from both
sides that we will end up into a precipice, we will end up into
an abyss, he said. The Middle East is in a total mess,
to say the least. And we cannot add fuel to the fire.
Perhaps the most extraordinary response from within the political
establishment came on Monday in the form of a lead editorial in
the New York Times entitled Trash Talking World War
III.
The Times writes: Americas allies and increasingly
the American public are playing a ghoulish guessing game: Will
President Bush manage to leave office without starting a war with
Iran? Mr. Bush is eagerly feeding those anxieties. This month
he raised the threat of World War III if Iran even
figures out how to make a nuclear weapon.
With a different White House, we might dismiss this as
posturingor bank on sanity to carry the day, or the warnings
of exhausted generals or a defense secretary more rational than
his predecessor. Not this crowd.
The implications of this assessment, coming as it does from
the Americas newspaper of record, the voice of erstwhile
establishment liberalism, deserve the most serious consideration.
Not this crowd. In other words, a remark about World
War III from another administration might have been written off,
in the words of Senator Boxer, as irresponsible, but
in the mouths of Bush, Cheney & Co. it becomes a palpable
threat.
With the US military already mired in two colonial-style wars
with no end in sight, the Times indicates that there exist
no grounds for believing that the White House will not pursue
the seemingly insane course of launching yet a third war, whichfar
more than those already underwaycarries with it the danger
of spreading into a global conflagration.
Reflected in the tone of this editorial is a profound political
crisis within American ruling circles. Its unstated implication
is that US policy is presently determined by a militarist camarilla
which is out of control and subject neither to constitutional
restraints nor international law.
Such a statement would not appear in the leading US daily paper
unless there were deep concerns within the political establishment
that America is on the brink of a war that poses catastrophic
consequences.
But what the Times editorial cannot explain and does
not even attempt to elucidate is how this crowd has remained
in control of the US government going on eight years now, and
how the seemingly insane escalation of American militarism has
become Washingtons predominant policy on a world scale,
supported and funded by both major parties. This cannot be rationalized
as the outcome of Bushs or Cheneys supposed dementia.
Instead, the editorial makes the following toothless criticism
of Bush: Four years after his pointless invasion of Iraq,
President Bush still confuses bullying with grand strategy. He
refuses to do the hard work of diplomacyor even acknowledge
the disastrous costs of his actions.
Since when was the invasion of Iraq pointless?
The point to attempting to subjugate Iraq was clear from the outset.
As former US Federal Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan wrote in
his recently published bookdescribing it as what everyone
knowsthe war against Iraq is largely about oil.
That is, behind all of the propaganda lies about weapons of
mass destruction and terrorism, the war was launched in pursuit
of definite imperialist aims. Washington consciously decided to
utilize its military might as a means of offsetting US capitalisms
economic decline relative to its major rivals in Europe and Asia.
Placing an American hand on the oil spigots of the Persian Gulf
was seen as a means exerting decisive pressure on these rivals
and preserving US hegemony in the affairs of world capitalism.
This war was not pointless, it was criminal. To pursue its
aims, US imperialism was prepared to unleash destruction on a
scale that has now claimed the lives of over a million Iraqis
and laid waste to an entire society.
The same point lies behind the present escalation
of US aggression against Iran, pursued once again in the name
of curtailing weapons of mass destruction and combating terrorism.
The results of such a new war will prove far bloodier.
The Timesas in the run-up to the Iraq waris
once again advocating the use of diplomacy to secure legitimization
for the predatory imperialist interests that Washington is pursuing
against Iran. Its differences with the Bush administration, like
those of the Democrats, are merely of a tactical character.
The supposed insanity of the Bush and Cheney crowd is
in the end shared, at least in its essential symptoms, by all
sections of the American ruling elite. The fundamental source
of this malady lies not in the psychology of those presently in
the White Househowever unstable it may bebut rather
in the underlying contradictions of world capitalism, above all
the subordination of the powerful forces of globally integrated
capitalist production to the private profit interests of the ruling
elites of competing national states.
It is these contradictions, which are objectively driving the
eruption of American militarism, that threaten a new war against
Iran and a broader conflagration, as other major powers are inevitably
compelled to defend their own access to strategic energy supplies
and markets. Mounting economic instability will only accelerate
this process.
The Times editorial constitutes a serious warning. A
far wider war is now seen within the US ruling elite as a real
and imminent danger to which no section of the present political
establishment has a viable alternative. Such a war poses the real
threat of a nuclear conflagration and the extermination of hundreds
of millions.
The decisive question is that class-conscious workers and youth
grasp both the immense dangers and the emerging revolutionary
possibilities in the present situation. Mankind is threatened
with wars that will reproduce and eclipse the catastrophes inflicted
by the two world wars of the last century. But this threat is
itself a manifestation of the profound crisis of the capitalist
system.
Nothing could make clearer the hopelessness and bankruptcy
of a perspective of ending the war in Iraq or halting an even
bloodier catastrophe in Iran by means of pressuring Congress or
supporting the Democratic Party against the Republicans.
A genuine struggle against war must waged by politically uniting
working people worldwide based on a common socialist and internationalist
program aimed at putting an end to economic and political domination
of a financial oligarchy that pursues its profit interests by
means of military slaughter.
See Also:
Democrats, Republicans back Bush war
provocations against Iran
[27 October 2007]
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]
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