US
Secretary of State Issues War Threat Against
Iran
By Bill
Van Auken
April
22, 2017 "Information
Clearing House"
- "WSWS"
-
US Secretary of State Rex Tillerson issued a
threat of military confrontation with Iran
Wednesday at a hastily called news conference in
which he drew a direct parallel to Washington’s
reckless and increasingly dangerous
confrontation with North Korea.
Referring to the nuclear agreement negotiated
between Iran and the major world powers,
Tillerson said: “This deal represents the same
failed approach of the past that brought us to
the current imminent threat that we face from
North Korea. The Trump administration has no
intention of passing the buck to a future
administration on Iran. The evidence is clear:
Iran’s provocative actions threaten the United
States, the region and the world.”
The
Trump administration had acknowledged on Tuesday
that Iran has fully complied with the terms of
the nuclear agreement that it negotiated in July
2015 with the so-called P5+1—China, France,
Russia, the United Kingdom and the United States
plus Germany. In the same breath, however, it
signaled that it is preparing measures designed
to blow the agreement up.
In a
formal notification required every 90 days to
the US Congress—the first delivered since
Trump’s inauguration—Secretary of State
Tillerson certified that, as of April 18, Iran
was meeting its terms of the deal, which
required it to cap its uranium enrichment,
reduce its number of centrifuges by two-thirds
and submit to international inspections to
ensure compliance. These terms were supposed to
preclude Iran’s ability to develop a nuclear
weapon, something which Tehran insisted it had
never sought.
The
rest of Tillerson’s statement, however, revealed
that the Trump administration is conducting a
systematic review of all of the economic and
financial sanctions that were waived in return
for Iran’s reining in of its nuclear program.
Iran,
the secretary of state alleged, “remains a
leading sponsor of terror through many platforms
and methods,” and therefore Trump “has directed
a National Security Council-led interagency
review of the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action
that will evaluate whether suspension of
sanctions related to Iran pursuant to the JCPOA
(Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action, the formal
name of the Iran nuclear deal) is vital to the
national security interests of the United
States.”
On
Wednesday, White House spokesman Sean Spicer
deflected a direct question as to whether the
administration was seeking to abrogate the
nuclear agreement, saying that the “inter-agency
review” would be concluded in 90 days and would
serve as the basis for policy recommendations.
“We're
well aware of any potential negative impacts
that an action could have,” he added, in
relation to the re-imposition of suspended
sanctions.
Indeed
such “negative impacts” are precisely the
purpose of taking this action, which would be
designed to provoke Iran into repudiating its
own obligations under the nuclear agreement and
thereby creating the pretext for US military
aggression.
Thus,
even as Washington is pushing the world to the
brink of a potential nuclear confrontation on
the Korean peninsula, it is laying the
foundations for another catastrophic war in the
Middle East.
During
his 2016 presidential campaign, Donald Trump
repeatedly denounced the Iran nuclear agreement
as “the worst deal ever negotiated” and vowed to
“rip it up” once elected.
In
February, his since ousted national security
advisor Gen. Michael Flynn marched into a White
House briefing to ominously announce that he was
putting “Iran on notice,” implying possible US
military retaliation for the Iranian military’s
testing of non-nuclear missiles, which is not
barred by the nuclear agreement.
And
last month, Gen. Joseph Votel, the chief of US
Central Command, which oversees the American
wars and interventions in the Middle East and
Central Asia, denounced Iran as the “greatest
long-term threat to stability” in the Middle
East and advocated a campaign to “disrupt [Iran]
through military means or other means.”
The
latest escalation of these threats came as
Trump’s defense secretary, Gen. James “Mad Dog”
Mattis, is conducting a tour of the Middle East,
with meetings scheduled with Iran’s principal
regional enemies, including the Saudi and Qatari
monarchies and Israel.
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Mattis
has reportedly advocated a policy of increasing
the already massive US military aid and arms
sales to the Saudi royal dictatorship and
providing more direct US collaboration in its
more than two-year-old war against the
impoverished population of Yemen, which has
killed some 12,000 people, the majority of them
civilians, turned 3 million into refugees and
left large portions of the population on the
brink of starvation.
Speaking to reporters in Riyadh after meeting
with Saudi King Salman and Deputy Crown Prince
and minister of defense Mohammed bin Salman,
Mattis declared, “Everywhere you look if there
is trouble in the region, you find Iran.” He
added, “We will have to overcome Iran’s efforts
to destabilize yet another country and create
another militia in their image of Lebanese
Hezbollah but the bottom line is we are on the
right path for it.”
The
charges of Iranian “destabilization” stem from
Iran’s objective position as Washington’s rival
for regional hegemony in the Middle East and its
participation, alongside Russia, in defending
the government of Syria against the
US-orchestrated war for regime change.
The
hypocrisy of Washington’s labeling Iran as a
sponsor of terrorism and the source of all
“trouble in the region” is shameless. US
imperialism has carried out a series of wars
that have killed millions, toppled governments
and devastated entire societies. The CIA has
armed and funded terrorist Islamist groups in
Libya, Iraq and Syria, including those directly
tied to Al Qaeda.
In
Yemen, the Pentagon has supplied the warplanes,
bombs and missiles that have slaughtered men,
women and children, while offering intelligence
assistance as well as mid-air refueling to
enable round-the-clock bombing aimed at crushing
the Yemeni population’s resistance and
compelling them to accept the re-imposition of
the puppet regime of ousted President Abd-Rabbu
Mansour Hadi.
Now,
the Pentagon is reportedly preparing to directly
assist a Saudi-UAE offensive to conquer the
Yemeni port of Hodeida, the last link between
the country’s starving population and the
outside world. Aid agencies have warned that
such an attack may well tip the country into a
full-blown famine.
Speaking alongside the Saudi deputy crown prince
on Wednesday, Mattis offered an obsequious
tribute to the 31-year-old “royal highness”
while vowing to “reinforce Saudi Arabia's
resistance to Iran’s mischief and make you more
effective with your military as we work together
as partners.”
Mattis
went on to declare that it was in the US
“interest to see a strong Saudi Arabia military
security service and secret services,” this in a
country where the “secret services” ruthlessly
repress any manifestation of dissent and where
criticism of the ruling royal family is grounds
for beheading.
As with
the attack on Syria, the ratchetting up of
tensions with Russia and the ongoing nuclear
brinksmanship with North Korea, the Trump
administration has enjoyed crucial support from
the Democrats for the buildup toward war with
Iran. Key Democratic members of the House and
Senate have joined with Republicans in
supporting the imposition of new sanctions. From
the 2016 presidential campaign onward, the
Democrats’ criticisms of Trump have been focused
centrally on foreign policy and have come from
the right, particularly over concern that the
Trump administration would prove “too soft” on
Russia, and, by extension, Iran, which has
allied itself with Russia in Syria.
The
views expressed in this article are solely those
of the author and do not necessarily reflect the
opinions of Information Clearing House.