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Naval encounter highlights tensions stoked by Bush trip to
Middle East
By Peter Symonds
8 January 2008
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An incident in the Strait of Hormuz on Sunday involving US
warships and small, high-speed Iranian craft has served to heighten
tensions in the Gulf on the eve of President Bushs departure
for his first extended trip to the Middle East. The Iranian foreign
ministry downplayed the encounter as a normal issue
that happens every now and then for both sides, but
the Pentagon and White House did the opposite, claiming that the
Iranian actions had been provocative and dangerous.
The only details have been provided by the US. Vice Admiral
Kevin Cosgriff, commander of the US Fifth Fleet based in Bahrain,
told the media that five Iranian boats had approached three US
warships at high speed as they passed through the Strait of Hormuz
some three miles outside Iranian waters. A radio message warned
that the US warships would shortly explode as two of the Iranian
craft came within 500 metres of the USS Ingraham and dropped white
box-like objects in its path. The US warships increased their
onboard readiness but no shots were fired and the
Ingraham passed safely. The entire incident was over in less than
30 minutes.
A series of high-level US warnings have followed. Pentagon
spokesman Bryan Whitman described the moves, allegedly involving
the Iranian Revolutionary Guard (IRG), as a reckless and
dangerous and potentially hostile act. In a separate statement,
White House national security spokesman Gordon Johndroe declared:
We urge the Iranians to refrain from such provocative actions
that could lead to a dangerous incident in the future. US
Defence Secretary Robert Gates declared the incident to be troubling
and a matter of real concern.
All these pronouncements have to be taken with a large grain
of salt. While there are no independent accounts of what took
place, it certainly cannot be ruled out that the encounter was
deliberately provoked by the US navy, rather than the IRG vessels,
with the intention of inflaming tensions as Bush arrives in the
region tomorrow. Washington has a long history of staging such
provocations, including for the purpose of creating the pretext
for war. In 1964, for instance, the Johnson administration manufactured
the notorious Gulf of Tonkin incident that provided
the justification for escalating the US military intervention
in Vietnam.
An examination of Bushs trip to the Middle East makes
clear that Washington has far more to gain by highlighting the
Iranian danger than Tehran has in risking a potentially
disastrous military confrontation. The US president has repeatedly
declared in the past few days that one of the purposes of the
seven-day tour is to warn of the threat posed by Iran. He told
Al Arabiya TV last week: I view the Iranian regime as a
danger. Part of the trip is to tell people, yes, were engaged
to help you [against Iran], if you want our help, to enhance security.
Nominally, the focus of Bushs tour is to advance the
decision taken at the Annapolis summit in November to secure a
comprehensive treaty between Israel and the Palestinian Authority
by the end of the year. The US president is to spend the first
three days of the trip in Israel and the West Bank in discussions
with Israeli and Palestinian leaders. No one, however, expects
any major breakthroughs in this fanciful project. Indeed, in the
lead up to Bushs arrival, the Israeli military has been
engaged in repressive actions, including a large-scale, three-day
operation in the West Bank town of Nablus, no doubt to underscore
Israeli demands that Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas dismantle
terrorist organisations.
The subtext of the Annapolis summit was to ensure the support
of moderate Arab states, including Saudi Arabia, Jordan
and Egypt, for the US administrations plans to intensify
hostilitiesboth economic and militaryagainst Iran.
Over the past year, Washington has sought to capitalise on concerns
in Sunni Arab capitals over the growing influence
of Shiite Iran following the 2003 US-led invasion
of Iraq and the overthrow of Tehrans main regional rivalthe
regime of Saddam Hussein. The US campaign has been accompanied
by escalating demands for UN sanctions and economic and military
threats against Iran over its alleged nuclear weapons programs,
support for anti-US insurgents in Iraq and backing for terrorist
organisations such as Hezbollah in Lebanon and Hamas in the Palestinian
territories.
The White House plans suffered a significant setback shortly
after the Annapolis summit when 16 US intelligence agencies issued
a long-delayed National Intelligence Estimate (NIE) on Iran, which
concluded that Tehran had ended any nuclear weapons program in
2003. By puncturing the Bush administrations often sensational
but unsubstantiated claims about the Iranian nuclear threat, the
NIE undermined a potential pretext for a confrontation against
Iran, on which Israel and other US allies had based their own
calculations.
Regional responses
Bushs trip to the Middle East is aimed at shoring up
US alliances in the region, above all by resurrecting the Iranian
threat. Last Friday he told the Israeli newspaper Yediot
Ahronot: Part of the reason Im going to the Middle
East is to make abundantly clear to nations in that part of the
world that we view Iran as a threat, and that the [NIE] in no
way lessens that threat, but in fact clarifies the threat.
It is no accident that Bushs remarks are directed to
Israel, whose leaders have been bitterly critical of the NIE.
The Israeli political and military establishment, which regards
Iran as its main regional rival, has repeatedly sought assurances
that the Bush administration would deal with Tehran
before leading office. Senior ministers have warned that Israel
would take military action of its own to disable the threat
posed by Irans nuclear facilities.
When Bush lands in Israel tomorrow, the item on the top of
the agenda, behind closed doors at least, is going to be Iran,
rather than a treaty with the Palestinian Authority. Meir Javedanfar,
an Iranian expatriate and security analyst living in Israel, told
the Washington Post on Monday: Iran, for Israel,
is topic Number One. Most of the Israeli politicians and population
see Iran as a greater threat than Hamas. And the Israeli government
will be eager for Bush to show them that he is still committed
to stopping Iran.
A comment in the right-wing Jerusalem Post on Sunday
was dismissive of Bushs reassurance on Saturday that the
US would defend Israel from any Iranian attack. The fact
that Bush is travelling here to show his support and commitment
to Israel and the region must not be minimised. The gesture is
significant and appreciated, it stated. But Bush himself
is a leader who presumably understands that it is the bottom line
that matters, and that line is a simple one: Will Iran be allowed
to go nuclear or not?
The British-based Times indicated that Israeli security
officials intended to brief Bush on their latest intelligence
about Irans nuclear programand how it could be destroyed.
Israeli intelligence, the report stated, had rock solid
evidence that Iran had restarted its nuclear weapons program.
Ehud Barak, the defence minister, is said to want to convince
him [Bush] that an Israeli military strike against uranium enrichment
facilities in Iran would be feasible if diplomatic efforts failed
to halt nuclear operations, it added.
The remainder of Bush trip will be spent in the Persian GulfKuwait,
Bahrain, the United Arab Emirates (UAE), where he will deliver
a keynote address in Abu Dhabi, and Saudi Arabiawith a final
stop in Egypt to meet President Hosni Mubarak. All these authoritarian
Arab regimes, which had expressed concerns about Iranian influence
and the emerging Shiite crescent, were part of Washingtons
plans for an anti-Iranian alliance. But in the wake of the NIE,
the conclusion was reached that the US would have to shelve any
plans for a military attack on Iran. In comments to the Washington
Post, Arab League Secretary General Amr Moussa summed up the
reaction saying: As long as they have no nuclear program...
why should we isolate Iran? Why punish Iran, now?
Signs emerged that the US allies were seeking their own accommodation
with Tehran, which in quick succession notched up a number of
diplomatic advances. In early December, Iranian President Mahmoud
Ahmadinejad addressed a meeting of the Gulf Cooperation Council,
which was formed in 1981 in the midst of the Iran-Iraq war to
counter Tehran. In another first for an Iranian president, Saudi
King Abdullah personally invited Ahmadinejad to visit Mecca for
the annual haj religious pilgrimage and later held talks with
him. Also last month, top Iranian negotiator Ali Larijani visited
Egypt, a country that has frozen its ties with Iran for 28 years,
and spoke of cooperation on nuclear programs and the resumption
of diplomatic relations.
At a press conference convened last week by the US-based Center
for Strategic and International Studies (CSIS), analyst Jon Alterman
pointed to the logic behind these steps. We like to think
of ourselves as a constant in the Gulf... [But] Iran is a constant.
Iran is something that they have been dealing with not for years
or decades, but for millennia... They are more reluctant to confront
Iran. They are more interested in trying to co-opt Iran, because
their sense is that the United States may come and go, but Iran
will not come and go.
At the same briefing, longstanding CSIS analyst Anthony Cordesman
highlighted the growing influence in the Gulf of US rivals, particularly
from Asia. After noting concerns about Iran and the US occupation
of Iraq, he explained: It is also a region which had oil
at a low of $10.98 in 1998 and it went to over $100 a barrel this
week. It is a region where the primary customer isnt Europe
or the United States or the West; its Asia. And not only
[is] Asia the primary customer now; its the primary customer
that is going to steadily grow in terms of demand and influence
and money.
Cordesmans remarks highlight the central aim of the Bush
administration, and indeed the American political establishment
as a whole, which is to secure US dominance in the key oil-rich
region over its major rivals in Europe and Asia, especially the
emerging economic giant China. Washington has nothing to offer
the Gulf states economically. In fact, Bush is coming cap in hand
to seek their assistance in helping to bail out American corporations
hit by the current credit squeeze. Abu Dhabis investment
authority, flush with funds from high oil prices, recently promised
to put $7.5 billion to help prop up Citigroup Inc, still reeling
from the subprime crisis.
The US has longstanding defence ties and huge US military bases
in the Gulf states. During his trip, Bush is expected to outline
plans for closer security ties with US allies and to consolidate
$20 billion in arms deals that were offered last year. But if
these countries, all of which have considerable economic clout,
reach their own accommodation with Iran then the US security offer
will no longer have the same attraction and Washington risks seeing
its influence waning as other major powers seek a larger stake
in the region. The only lever that Washington retains is the military
one that it has recklessly wielded already to invade and occupy
Afghanistan and Iraq.
It is in this context that the incident has taken place in
the Strait of Hormuz, just three days before Bushs touchdown
in the Middle East. If it did not organise the naval affair, the
Bush administration is certainly seizing on it with both hands
as it seeks to exploit the Iranian threat to shore
up its alliances in the region.
See Also:
Despite US intelligence
shift: European powers back continued sanctions against Teheran
[7 December 2007]
Following intelligence
report exposing administration's lies
Bush continues threats against Iran
[6 December 2007]
US intelligence report
shows war drive against Iran based on lies
[5 December 2007]
Iran: why does Bush
invoke the threat of World War III?
[30 November 2007]
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