By Graham E. Fuller
January 08, 2020 "Information
Clearing House" -
The United
States, through its assassination of
top-ranking Iranian General Qasim Soleimani,
has once again opened Pandora’s box in its
conduct of foreign policy. How long does
Washington think it can enjoy unique
monopoly over exercise of these forms of
international violence before they are
turned against us? For a brief period we had
a monopoly on the use of military use of
drones—now everybody is doing it and the US
can now fall victim as readily as it uses
them against others. Ditto for cyberattacks,
pioneered by the US, but now a weapon at the
disposal of any number of middle sized
countries.
Assassination is not, of course, a new
tactic in the annals of wartime. In what
technically we must call
“peace-time”—despite the many wars the US
has going at the moment—assassination is a
dangerous tool, especially when used in the
conduct of foreign policy against
top-ranking foreign officials. General
Soleimani was not just the commander of al-Quds
military forces. Far more accurately he
should be considered the number two figure
of importance in the entire Iranian ruling
structure, and perhaps the most popular
political/military figure in Iran. Or he
could be likened to a National Security
Adviser in the US, or to a Chairman of the
Joint Chiefs, or any number of US regional
commanders put together. Mark you, this was
a blatantly political assassination, and, in
the calculations of most practitioners of
international law it was an act of war. One
can only imagine the US response to a
similar Iranian assassination of a top US
regional commander.
That
General Soleimani was a formidable opponent
of the US is beyond question. His strategy,
tactics and policies ran circles around the
leaden and ill-conceived policies and
leaders of the US war in Iraq—still ongoing
17 years later and that has already cost the
US dearly in its feckless goal to dominate
and master Iraq. The US has long since lost
the geopolitical lead in the Middle East as
a whole—going back decades.
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The
trembling puffery and outrage on the
part of most politicians and
commentators in the US that “Soleimani
was responsible for the deaths of any
number of American soldiers in Iraq”
reflects either childish naivete or
massive self-delusion about what the
nature of war is all about. Iran knew it
was in the US neocon cross-hairs when
the US invaded Iraq in 2003; the
standing joke in the US then was that
war with Iraq is fine, but “real men go
to war with Iran.” The US had fully
supported Saddam Hussein’s vicious war
against Iran throughout the 1980s. It
was not surprising then that Iran aided
the massive uprising of Iraqi Sunni and
Shi’a forces to resist the US military
invasion and occupation of Iraq—a
presence that lacked any legal standing.
Naturally Iran provided advice and
weapons to Iraqi guerrillas to
facilitate killing the soldiers of the
American occupation, that’s what war
is. The US has supported any number of
guerrilla forces around the world to
fight against enemies and regimes we
don’t like, starting with military aid,
training, intelligence, joint missions,
etc., as we have seen most recently in
Iraq, Syria and Yemen. There is precious
little ground for US moral outrage in
all of this—unless one simply assumes,
as the US usually does—that America by
definition represents the “moral cause,”
the “good guys,” and has a god-given
right to intervene anywhere and
everywhere in the name of freedom,
democracy or human rights or to protect
whatever it is.
When it
comes to lives lost, the US of course has
itself been responsible for hundreds of
thousands of deaths in Iraq as well as
generation of massive internal and external
refugee flows. Yet we convince ourselves
that killing others in the name of the US
cause is OK, but anyone resisting, or
actually killing Americans represents an
outrage.
Let’s at
least have a little sophistication here
about the nature of war and conflict and
drop the double standards.
It’s
chastening to recall that even during the
Cold War the US and the Soviet Union, by at
least tacit agreement, avoided assassination
of significant enemy leaders—although the US
did try repeatedly to assassinate Fidel
Castro, among other leaders of smaller
hostile states.
So does
Washington really want to open the
floodgates to a new policy—to the
assassination of top-ranking officials in
countries we dislike? Next thing we know,
everybody can play. For that matter, Israel
already leads the world in conducting
political assassinations according to an
Israeli scholar.
https://www.middleeastmonitor.com/20180730-israels-mossad-leads-assassinations-in-the-world/
The
assassination of General Soleimani also
revealed Washington’s continuing assumption
of a right to violate the sovereignty of any
country in the world if it deems it in its
interest to do so. And this time Iraq will
surely expel all US troops from Iraq in
response to this violation. Not that
withdrawal of US troops from this war,
ill-conceived from the start, is necessarily
a bad thing from the perspective of many,
but it surely represents an ignominious end
to a failing, pointless, and brutal invasion
that Washington had actually believed would
swing Iraq over into the “pro-US column” as
an ally of the US in the Middle East.
Such
naivete further reflects another American
deeply cherished assumption that countries
with semi-democratic political systems will
automatically be pro-American. Has nobody
ever heard of national interests? Or do we
believe that US interests globally are now
basically coterminous with the global
interests of all peoples (deep down)?
A still
bigger issue is at stake here. The US is has
increasingly come to be regarded with dismay
by any number of friends and “allies” for
its demand of support for its dangerous and
ill-conceived international policies,
threats and wars. To sign on to the US
global security vision is to have to sign on
to policies many countries are very
uncomfortable with. They are not ready to
support US routinely hostile policies
towards Russia, China, Iran, Cuba, and many
others. Nor are they ready to lend the
automatic support to Israel that Washington
demands. This growing reluctance of one-time
friends and allies has grown under Trump,
but goes back at the very least to George
W. Bush and the Global War on Terror—“you’re
either with us or against us.” No one in
Europe and few in the world supported
Washington’s tearing up of the nuclear
treaty with Iran, nor do they support the
crushing sanctions the US has imposed upon
Iran since then for which it demands
compliance. Increasingly Europe and other
“allies” no longer find it comfortable to be
allied with a US whose foreign policies are
obsessively focussed on identification of
enemies and where we expect our allies to
fall into line—starting before the US
invasion of Iraq.
This
latest act of “foreign policy by
assassination” will be largely rejected by
most in the world. Only a few craven Gulf
kings and princes—and Israel—will applaud
it. And worst of all, the US has now taken
one more giant step towards convincing the
world that the US has indeed become a “rogue
nation” no longer willing to follow the
rules of international law and procedure—and
wisdom—that it claims to lead. Fewer and
fewer countries anywhere are going to sign
up for war or searches for “alliances” that
can be turned against Russia or China.
Indeed,
as the era of US global dominance is drawing
to an end it looks like the US is taking the
process very, very hard indeed. It may soon
deprive itself of most influence and respect
if policies like the assassinations of top
leaders of countries we don’t like become
the new US norm.
Graham E. Fuller is a former senior CIA
official, author of numerous books on the
Muslim World; his first novel is “Breaking
Faith: A novel of espionage and an
American’s crisis of conscience in
Pakistan”; his second one is BEAR—a novel of
eco-violence. (Amazon, Kindle).
grahamefuller.com
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