Iran or North Korea?
If Trump is truly intent on war, he can be expected
go for the ‘easier’ option first
By Abdel Bari Atwan
October 12,
2017 "Information
Clearing House"
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Everyone in the Middle East is busy
buying weapons. Barely a week goes by without some
big new arms deal being announced. Last week, Saudi
Arabia agreed to buy ultra-sophisticated S-400 air
defence missiles from Russia, a fortnight after
Turkey purchased the same systems. The US responded
by offering to supply Riyadh with its own Thad
missiles.
What
is happening exactly? What are the US and its allies
cooking up in the region? Why this rush to arm? And
why now, when the jihadi groups that are supposed to
be the targets of everyone’s wars in the region,
such as Islamic State and the Nusra Front in Iraq
and Syria, are on the verge of being defeated? Are
the people of this part of the world to be denied in
perpetuity any chance to breathe for a few weeks or
months, and be spared the tribulations of war and
bloodshed and of being financially, economically and
psychologically drained?
It is
war. We
have no other answer. US President Donald Trump gave
us the glad tidings at the weekend when hosting a
dinner for senior military officers and their
spouses at the White House. This was the ‘calm
before the storm’, he proclaimed. He said he had
discussed military options against both Iran and
North Korea with his commanders, and we would all
soon find out what he was planning to do.
It is,
of course, impossible to know what Trump truly
means. But one cannot help wondering. If he is
intent on war as he has been threatening, where will
he begin? With Iran, which he accuses of sponsoring
and exporting terrorism and destabilizing the
region? Or with North Korea, which he threatened in
his speech at the UN General Assembly to totally
destroy in order to defend the US and its allies?
The
answer is known by Trump alone, and perhaps his
senior advisors. We can only guess. But it is
reasonable to speculate that he would not want to
wage two wars against two powerful countries, one of
which has a nuclear capacity, simultaneously. He
might opt to start with the ‘easier’ option – Iran –
by way of intimidating the tougher one.
Trump
has been setting the stage for this by preparing to
de-certify the P5+1/Iran nuclear deal later this
month, on the grounds that it is detrimental to US
national security, as he has often stated. His
administration has begun consultations with
legislators about the planned move, and his aides
have been touting a ‘new strategy’ against Iran
aimed at curtailing its nuclear ambitions and
‘constant aggression’.
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Some
analysts and observers believe Trump is merely
blustering and posturing to appeal to his domestic
base. But others think his threats should be taken
very seriously indeed: reckless and egotistical by
nature, he is intent on launching a war to silence
critics who accuse him of being a loud-mouth who
makes verbal threats without following up on them.
The
Iranians sense the threat and have been preparing
for it. Foreign Minister Mohamed Javad Zarif warned
— after holding talks at the UN during which the
extent of the US administration’s hostility to his
country was made clear – that cancelling the nuclear
agreement would ‘open the gates of hell’. He
affirmed that Iran had many options at its disposal
and would never agree to anything that constrains
its ability to defend itself. A blunter warning came
from Hassan Nasrallah, leader of Lebanon’s
Hezbollah. He has often sounded the alarm about
Israeli plans to wage a devastating new war on his
country. But during his televised Ashoura speech
last week, he spoke as though he believed an assault
was imminent. He
addressed Israeli Jews directly, warning them that
such a war would invite retaliation on a massive
scale and they would be the victims, and advising
them to return to their countries of origin in order
to avoid the consequences. A war might be triggered
by a local issue such as the Iraqi Kurdish
referendum on independence, but nobody can predict
when, how and where it would end.
The
Arab regimes, of course, are for the most part mere
bystanders in all of this. They have no say in
unfolding developments, and their role is merely to
heed and comply with the decisions taken and orders
given by others. Yet they, or at least some of them,
will be among the victims of this war should it
break out. At the very least, they will pay the
price for it and cover its costs. What else is new?
This
article was originally published by
Raialyoum
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