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| THE CLOCK IS TICKING. Rodriguez / Truthout; Adapted: Bart Hiddink, Hossein Derakhshan) |
The January/February issue of Foreign Affairs featured the article
“Time to Attack Iran: Why a Strike Is the Least Bad Option,” by Matthew
Kroenig, along with commentary about other ways to contain the Iranian
threat.
The media resound
with warnings about a likely Israeli attack on Iran while the U.S.
hesitates, keeping open the option of aggression – thus again routinely
violating the U.N. Charter, the foundation of international law.
As tensions
escalate, eerie echoes of the run-up to the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq
are in the air. Feverish U.S. primary campaign rhetoric adds to the
drumbeat.
Concerns about
“the imminent threat” of Iran are often attributed to the “international
community” – code language for U.S. allies. The people of the world,
however, tend to see matters rather differently.
The nonaligned
countries, a movement with 120 member nations, has vigorously supported
Iran’s right to enrich uranium – an opinion shared by the majority of
Americans (as surveyed by WorldPublicOpinion.org) before the massive
propaganda onslaught of the past two years.
China and Russia
oppose U.S. policy on Iran, as does India, which announced that it would
disregard U.S. sanctions and increase trade with Iran. Turkey has
followed a similar course.
Europeans regard
Israel as the greatest threat to world peace. In the Arab world, Iran is
disliked but seen as a threat only by a very small minority. Rather,
Israel and the U.S. are regarded as the pre-eminent threat. A majority
think that the region would be more secure if Iran had nuclear weapons:
In Egypt on the eve of the Arab Spring, 90 percent held this opinion,
according to Brookings Institution/Zogby International polls.
Western commentary
has made much of how the Arab dictators allegedly support the U.S.
position on Iran, while ignoring the fact that the vast majority of the
population opposes it – a stance too revealing to require comment.
Concerns about
Israel’s nuclear arsenal have long been expressed by some observers in
the United States as well. Gen. Lee Butler, former head of the U.S.
Strategic Command, described Israel’s nuclear weapons as “dangerous in
the extreme.” In a U.S. Army journal, Lt. Col. Warner Farr wrote that
one “purpose of Israeli nuclear weapons, not often stated, but obvious,
is their ‘use’ on the United States” – presumably to ensure consistent
U.S. support for Israeli policies.
A prime concern right now is that Israel will seek to provoke some Iranian action that will incite a U.S. attack.
One of Israel’s
leading strategic analysts, Zeev Maoz, in “Defending the Holy Land,” his
comprehensive analysis of Israeli security and foreign policy,
concludes that “the balance sheet of Israel’s nuclear policy is
decidedly negative” – harmful to the state’s security. He urges instead
that Israel should seek a regional agreement to ban weapons of mass
destruction: a WMD-free zone, called for by a 1974 U.N. General Assembly
resolution.
Meanwhile, the
West’s sanctions on Iran are having their usual effect, causing
shortages of basic food supplies – not for the ruling clerics but for
the population. Small wonder that the sanctions are condemned by Iran’s
courageous opposition.
The sanctions
against Iran may have the same effect as their predecessors against
Iraq, which were condemned as “genocidal” by the respected U.N.
diplomats who administered them before finally resigning in protest.
The Iraq sanctions
devastated the population and strengthened Saddam Hussein, probably
saving him from the fate of a rogues’ gallery of other tyrants supported
by the U.S.-U.K. – tyrants who prospered virtually to the day when
various internal revolts overthrew them.
There is little
credible discussion of just what constitutes the Iranian threat, though
we do have an authoritative answer, provided by U.S. military and
intelligence. Their presentations to Congress make it clear that Iran
doesn’t pose a military threat.
Iran has very
limited capacity to deploy force, and its strategic doctrine is
defensive, designed to deter invasion long enough for diplomacy to take
effect. If Iran is developing nuclear weapons (which is still
undetermined), that would be part of its deterrent strategy.
The understanding
of serious Israeli and U.S. analysts is expressed clearly by 30-year CIA
veteran Bruce Riedel, who said in January, “If I was an Iranian
national security planner, I would want nuclear weapons” as a deterrent.
An additional
charge the West levels against Iran is that it is seeking to expand its
influence in neighboring countries attacked and occupied by the U.S. and
Britain, and is supporting resistance to the U.S.-backed Israeli
aggression in Lebanon and illegal Israeli occupation of Palestinian
lands. Like its deterrence of possible violence by Western countries,
Iran’s actions are said to be intolerable threats to “global order.”
Global opinion
agrees with Maoz. Support is overwhelming for a WMDFZ in the Middle
East; this zone would include Iran, Israel and preferably the other two
nuclear powers that have refused to join the Nuclear Non-Proliferation
Treaty: India and Pakistan, who, along with Israel, developed their
programs with U.S. aid.
Support for this
policy at the NPT Review Conference in May 2010 was so strong that
Washington was forced to agree formally, but with conditions: The zone
could not take effect until a comprehensive peace settlement between
Israel and its Arab neighbors was in place; Israel’s nuclear weapons
programs must be exempted from international inspection; and no country
(meaning the U.S.) must be obliged to provide information about “Israeli
nuclear facilities and activities, including information pertaining to
previous nuclear transfers to Israel.”
The 2010 conference called for a session in May 2012 to move toward establishing a WMDFZ in the Middle East.
With all the furor
about Iran, however, there is scant attention to that option, which
would be the most constructive way of dealing with the nuclear threats
in the region: for the “international community,” the threat that Iran
might gain nuclear capability; for most of the world, the threat posed
by the only state in the region with nuclear weapons and a long record
of aggression, and its superpower patron.
One can find no
mention at all of the fact that the U.S. and Britain have a unique
responsibility to dedicate their efforts to this goal. In seeking to
provide a thin legal cover for their invasion of Iraq, they invoked U.N.
Security Council Resolution 687 (1991), which they claimed Iraq was
violating by developing WMD.
We may ignore the
claim, but not the fact that the resolution explicitly commits signers
to establishing a WMDFZ in the Middle East.
© 2011 Noam Chomsky
Source: Truthout