Trump Plays Cat
and Mouse with Iran
By Mike Whitney
February 08,
2017 "Information
Clearing House"
- "Counterpunch"
-
Why is the Trump
administration threatening Iran?
On February 1,
National Security Adviser Michael Flynn announced that
the administration was “putting Iran on notice” after it
tested a ballistic missile which the US sees as a
violation of Iran’s treaty obligations. Flynn’s frigid
tone made it clear that the administration is
considering the use of military force. But why?
Under current
UN resolutions (Resolution 2231), Iran is forbidden “to
undertake any activity related to ballistic missiles
designed to be capable of delivering nuclear weapons.”
Read that over again. Iran is not forbidden from testing
‘all ballistic missiles’ just missiles that are ‘capable
of delivering nuclear weapons.’ The resolution could not
be clearer. There’s no gray area here, none at all.
Flynn is just fudging the resolution’s meaning, so he
can rattle a saber. But, why? And why are other members
of the administration, including the president himself,
making equally belligerent remarks? In a tweet last
week, Trump said, “I won’t be as ‘kind’ to Iran as
Obama” which was followed by a speech by US Defense
Secretary James Mattis who called Iran “the single
biggest state sponsor of terrorism in the world.”
What’s going
on? Why the full court press against Iran? And how are
these threats consistent with Trump’s campaign promise
to avoid pointless confrontations abroad? Here’s an
excerpt from a speech Trump delivered in Cincinnati on
December 1:
“We will
pursue a new foreign policy that finally learns from
the mistakes of the past…We will stop looking to
topple regimes and overthrow governments…. Our goal
is stability not chaos …In our dealings with other
countries, we will seek shared interests wherever
possible and pursue a new era of peace,
understanding, and good will.”
Where is the
“peace, understanding, and good will” towards Iran?
There doesn’t seem to be any. This is the
same incendiary rhetoric we’re heard from every US
administration dating back to the Iranian Revolution in
1979. But, why?
Isn’t the
problem the same as it was with Iraq, Libya, Syria and
every other country the US has either toppled or tried
to topple in the last 65 years?
Of course it
is. Washington abhors any country that conducts its own
independent foreign policy or resists US attempts to
install its own puppet government. With Iran, the
problems run even deeper since Iran sits on a vast ocean
of oil and natural gas to which the western oil
giants feel they are entitled. They think the oil is
theirs and they expect Washington to help them
expropriate it.
Washington
wants to return Iran to the glory days of the Shah, an
era in which the USG had a trusted ally in Tehran who
would follow its directives, crush the domestic
opposition, and preserve the privatization-model of oil
production. It’s worth noting that the Shah was
installed in a CIA coup that triggered a nearly 40-year
reign of terror for which the US is entirely
responsible. Here’s a short except from The Harvard
Crimson that will help readers to understand the horror
Washington unleashed on the Iranian people to achieve
its foreign policy objectives:
“The Shah
systematically dismantled the judicial system of
Iran and the country’s guarantees of personal and
social liberties. …. Nearly every source of
creative, artistic and intellectual endeavor in our
culture was suppressed.
The SAVAK
conducted most of the torture, under the friendly
guidance of the CIA which set up SAVAK in 1957 and
taught them how to interrogate suspects. Amnesty
International reports methods of torture that
included “whipping and beating, electric shocks,
extraction of teeth and nails, boiling water pumped
into the rectum, heavy weights hung on the
testicles, tying the prisoner to a metal table
heated to a white heat, inserting a broken bottle
into the anus, and rape.”…
The Shah
greatly expanded the military and turned it against
his own people. With newfound oil wealth the Shah
bought $2C million of U.S. arms. The U.S. military
trained Iranian officers. Despite claims that a
strong army was needed to prevent external
aggression, its real purpose became clear when the
army murdered more than 50,000 Iranians fighting the
Shah.” …. The number of students tortured, lost or
murdered is unknown.” (“Life
Under the Shah“, The Harvard Crimson)
This is
America’s legacy in Iran: “Whipping, beating, electric
shocks, extraction of teeth, boiling water pumped into
the rectum, and rape.” This is how the
exceptional nation exported democracy to Iran.
The US has
never tried to make amends for the suffering or death it
inflicted on the Iranian people, nor have its crimes
ever been prosecuted at an international tribunal, nor
has there ever been any talk of monetary
reparations. Instead, the US has done everything in its
power to further isolate and punish Iran
for resisting Washington’s savage intrusion into their
affairs. For many years, Washington has justified its
cruelty by claiming that Tehran was developing nuclear
weapons that would endanger the region and the world. As
it happens, there’s no evidence that Iran ever had
nuclear weapons program, it’s all a hoax concocted by
the political class and their allies in the
media. Here’s a quote that sums up the “Iran nukes”
fable in one short paragraph:
“It is
essential to recognize that Iran does not currently
have a nuclear weapons program, nor does it possess
a nuclear weapon. On February 26, James Clapper, the
director of national intelligence, told the Senate
Armed Services Committee that Ayatollah Khomenei,
the supreme leader of Iran, ended his country’s
nuclear weapons program in 2003 and “as far as we
know, he’s not made the decision to go for a nuclear
weapon.” This repeats the “high-confidence”
judgement of the U.S. Intelligence Community (IC)
that was first made in November 2007.”
(Micah
Zenko, “Putting Iran’s Nuclear Program in Context”,
Council on Foreign Relations)
There it is in
one, short clip: No nukes, no nuclear weapons program,
no diversion of nuclear fuel, and no sinister nuclear
project aimed at blowing up Israel and establishing a
region-wide Islamic Republic. It’s all 100 percent
bunkum conjured up by the same group of journalists who
produced the mobile weapons labs, the yellowcake
uranium, the aluminum tubes, curveball and the myriad
other lies that preceded the invasion of Iraq.
But if Iran is
not building nukes and is actually complying with the
terms of the Joint Comprehensive Plan Of Action (aka–
The Iran Nuclear Agreement) then why all the fiery
rhetoric and saber rattling? Is Trump seriously
considering an attack on a country that poses
no recognizable threat to the United States or its
allies in the region?
Many people
seem to think so, but I am not at all convinced.
Keep in mind,
that a war with Iran would not be a cakewalk, it will be
a bloody and protracted affair that
would require significant military resources and tens of
thousands of American troops on the ground. US
warplanes would not be able to selectively bomb
designated targets without provoking asymmetrical
retaliatory attacks on US military bases, oil platforms
and strategic allies in the region.
Iranian special
forces would be deployed to locations beyond their
borders where they would wreak havoc while plunging the
Middle East into a broader regional war. The transport
of oil through the Straits of Hormuz would be blocked
indefinitely which would send gas
prices skyrocketing while global equities went off a
cliff.
More
important, Washington would have no allies in the
conflict excluding a few of the corrupt Gulf monarchies
whose military value is negligible at best. The
traditional European allies would abandon the US in
order to maintain their ever-dwindling political base
which is fed up with American adventurism. The war in
Iraq, followed by the Wall Street-generated global
financial crash, followed by the flood of refugees
fleeing US conflicts in Syria, Libya and beyond, have
made it impossible for EU leaders to support another
bloody US-led fiasco in the Middle East. Washington
would have to go it alone which would, in
turn, strengthen the position of rising rightwing
politicians in the EU that want to sever relations with
the US and develop an more Euro-centric foreign policy.
The end of the
Atlantic Alliance would mark the end of imperial America
and the collapse of the current global order. If
Washington were to lose its ability to persuade or
coerce the vassal states to follow its edicts, it would
be cut off from its greatest source of geopolitical
power. An attack on Iran would precipitate a speedy
unraveling of the global system the US has painstakingly
stitched together over a seventy year period. US
dominance would progressively erode while foreign
governments would ditch the dollar leaving Washington to
face a future of pariah-like isolation and grinding
poverty.
In my opinion,
an attack on Iran would trigger a series of events that
would greatly accelerate US economic decline
while exacerbating tensions between allies that would
lead to the inevitable breakup of the Atlantic Alliance
and the end of the dollar’s dominant role as the world’s
reserve currency. Is Trump really willing to risk all
that in order to punish Iran or is something else going
on below the radar?
In order to
understand what Trump is doing, we need to clarify a few
details regarding the Iranian nuclear deal or JCPOA. In
very broad terms, the Iranian leadership accepted the
strictest nuclear inspections regime in history
(overseen by the IAEA) in exchange for the lifting of
economic sanctions. (which, by the way, were imposed
without any hard evidence that Iran was developing
nuclear weapons) Donald Trump believes that this is the
worst deal in history when, in fact, Iran was being
unfairly punished for crimes it never committed.
The question
is: Why would Trump oppose an agreement that clearly
eliminates any chance for Iran to cheat and secretly
build a nuclear weapon?
The obvious
answer is that the hawks in his administration want
to (eventually) topple Iran’s government which requires
that they weaken the regime as much as possible through
economic sanctions. This is how Washington
typically conducts its regime change operations;
economic strangulation usually precedes the coup
d’ etat followed by the installing of a US puppet. Wash,
rinse, and repeat.
But here’s the
rub: The administration cannot unilaterally terminate
the JCPOA because it’s a multi-lateral agreement
endorsed by the UN Security Council. As one analyst
said, If Trump rejects the deal “the international
sanctions regime that incentivized Iran to negotiate
would unravel…. Russia and China, for instance, won’t
continue sanctions on Iran because the GOP says they
should. If this were to happen, Iran would receive
sanctions relief without having any constraints on its
nuclear program.” Besides, If Trump walks away from the
JCPOA, then “the next round of negotiations will be the
US sitting at a table for one.”
So even though
Trump doesn’t like the deal, he’s stuck with it, because
if he bails out, the allies are not going to support
him. Here’s a little more background that helps to
explain things:
“Some
opponents of the deal advocate for threatening the
international community: You can either do business
with Iran or business with the United States. But
this threat lacks credibility. As Treasury Secretary
Jacob Lew explained in a New York Times
Op-ed, 40% of American exports go to the European
Union, China, Japan, India, and Korea. By
threatening to exclude these countries from our
banking system, the U.S. would be placing a
significant portion of its own economy at risk.
Moreover, the major importers of Iranian oil (China,
India, Japan, South Korea, Taiwan, and Turkey) also
account for one-fifth of U.S. exported goods and own
47% of foreign-held American treasuries. Even
threatening to terminate this economic connectivity
could have negative ramifications for both the US
economy and the economies of our allies.
Our
negotiating partners will not maintain sanctions
that hurt their economies simply because the U.S.
Congress insists they do so. Threatening our allies
with economic warfare is a ludicrous approach,
especially when compared to the practical and widely
supported alternative of implementing the
agreement….”(“Iran
Nuclear Deal: Debunking the Myths“, The Center
for Arms Control and Non Proliferation)
What does it
all mean?
It means that
coercion and arm-twisting aren’t going to work this
time. The agreement is written in a way that make it
nearly impossible for the administration to achieve its
objectives, which is to return to a bygone era when the
US could inflict excruciating economic punishment on
Iran without anyone uttering a word of protest. Those
days are gone.
But if that’s
the case, then why have Trump and his lieutenants
stepped up the hectoring, the demonization and the saber
rattling? What’s that all about?
That’s where it
gets interesting. The Trump team has settled on a
strategy of cat and mouse, which means they’re trying
to beat Iran by tricking them into making a mistake that
will give the US the advantage. In other words, Trump
does not want a shooting war with Iran, he simply
wants Iran’s leaders to overreact to Washington’s
bullying by abandoning JCPOA. That’s the goal. The fact
that the administration can’t unilaterally reject the
nukes deal, doesn’t mean that Iran can’t be duped
into doing it for them. And, if Iran takes the bait
and withdraws from the agreement, then Trump will have
the allies on his side for another painful round of
economic sanctions. That’s what Trump wants.
So the best
thing Iran can do is nothing. They need to continue to
stay the course, shrug off the provocations, and keep
up their end of the deal. That’s it; just hang tight and
stay cool.
Unfortunately,
that’s easier said than done.
Mike
Whitney lives in
Washington state. He is a contributor to Hopeless:
Barack Obama and the Politics of Illusion (AK
Press). Hopeless is also available in a Kindle
edition. He can be reached at fergiewhitney@msn.com.
The views
expressed in this article are solely those of the author
and do not necessarily reflect the opinions of
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