January 12, 2020 "Information
Clearing House" - The U.S. assassination
of General Qassem Soleimani has not yet plunged us
into a full-scale war with Iran thanks to the
Iranian government’s measured response, which
demonstrated its capabilities without actually
harming U.S. troops or escalating the conflict. But
the danger of a full-blown war still exists, and
Donald Trump’s actions are already wreaking havoc.
The tragic attack on the Ukrainian passenger jet,
which left 176 innocent people dead, is the first
example of this. Iranian anti-aircraft defenses, on
high alert and jittery after Trump’s irresponsible
threats of devastating retaliation against 52 sites
in Iran, mistook the civilian airliner for an
attacking U.S. cruise missile and shot it out of the
sky.
As we wait for the next unintended consequences
of Trump’s reckless actions in Iraq, here are ten
important ways they have left the American people,
the region and the world in greater danger.
1. The first result of Trump’s blunders may be
an increase in U.S. war deaths
across the greater Middle East. While this was
avoided in Iran’s initial retaliation, Iraqi
militias and Hezbollah in Lebanon have already
vowed to seek revenge for the deaths of
Soleimani and the Iraqi militia. US military bases,
warships and
nearly 80,000 U.S. troops in the region are
sitting ducks for retaliation by Iran, its allies
and any other group that is angered by U.S. actions
or simply decides to exploit this U.S.-manufactured
crisis.
The first U.S. war deaths after the U.S.
airstrikes and assassinations in Iraq were
three Americans killed by Al-Shabab in Kenya on
January 5th.
Further escalation by the U.S. in response to
Iranian and other attacks on Americans will only
exacerbate this cycle of violence.
2. U.S. acts of war in Iraq have injected even
more volatility and instability into an
already war-torn and explosive region. The
U.S. close ally, Saudi Arabia, is seeing its efforts
to solve its conflicts with Qatar and Kuwait thrown
into jeopardy, and it will now be harder to find a
diplomatic solution to the catastrophic war in
Yemen–where the Saudis and Iranians are on different
sides of the conflict.
Soleimani’s murder is also likely to sabotage the
peace process with the Taliban in Afghanistan.
Shiite Iran has historically opposed the Sunni
Taliban, and Soleimani even worked with the United
States in the aftermath of the U.S. overthrow of the
Taliban in 2001. Now the terrain has shifted. Just
as the United States has been engaging in peace
talks with the Taliban,
so has Iran. The Iranians are now more apt to
ally with the Taliban against the United States. The
complicated situation in Afghanistan is likely to
draw in Pakistan, another important player in the
region with a large Shiite population. Both the
Afghan and Pakistani governments have already
expressed their fears that the US-Iran conflict
could unleash uncontrollable violence on their soil.
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Like other short-sighted and destructive
U.S. interventions in the Middle East,
Trump’s blunders may have explosive
unintended consequences in places most
Americans have not yet even heard of,
spawning a new string of U.S. foreign policy
crises.
3. Trump’s attacks on Iran may actually
embolden a common
enemy, the Islamic State, which can take
advantage of the chaos created in Iraq. Thanks to
the leadership of Iran’s General Soleimani, Iran
played a significant role in the fight against ISIS,
which was almost
entirely crushed in 2018 after a four-year war.
Soleimani’s murder may be a boon to the ISIS
remnants by stoking anger among Iraqis against the
group’s nemesis, the Americans, and creating new
divisions among the forces–including Iran and the
United States–that have been fighting ISIS. In
addition, the U.S.-led coalition that has been
pursuing ISIS has “paused”
its campaign against the Islamic State in order to
get prepared for potential Iranian attacks on the
Iraqi bases that host coalition troops, giving
another strategic opening to the Islamic State.
4. Iran has announced it is withdrawing
from all the restrictions on enriching uranium
that were part of the 2015 JCPOA nuclear agreement.
Iran has not formally withdrawn from the JCPOA, nor
rejected international supervision of its nuclear
program, but this is one more step in the
unraveling of the nuclear agreement that
the world community supported. Trump was determined
to undermine the JCPOA by pulling the U.S. out in
2018, and each U.S. escalation of sanctions, threats
and uses of force against Iran further weakens the
JCPOA and makes its complete collapse more likely.
5. Trump’s blunders have destroyed what
little influence the U.S. had with the Iraqi
government. This is clear from the recent
Parliamentary vote to expel the U.S. military. While
the U.S. military is unlikely to leave without long,
drawn-out negotiations, the 170-0 votes (the Sunnis
and Kurds didn’t show up), along with the huge
crowds that came out for Soleimani’s funeral
procession, show how the general’s assassination has
rekindled enormous anti-American sentiment in Iraq.
The assassination has also eclipsed Iraq’s
burgeoning
democracy movement. Despite savage repression
that killed more than 400 protesters, young Iraqis
mobilized in 2019 to demand a new government free of
corruption and of manipulation by foreign powers.
They succeeded in forcing the resignation of Prime
Minister Adil Abdul-Mahdi, but they want to fully
reclaim Iraqi sovereignty from the corrupt U.S. and
Iranian puppets who have ruled Iraq since 2003. Now
their task is complicated by U.S. actions that have
only strengthened pro-Iranian politicians and
parties.
6. Another inevitable consequence of Trump’s
failed Iran policy is that it strengthens
conservative, hard-line factions in Iran.
Like the U.S. and other countries, Iran has its own
internal politics, with distinct points of view.
President Rouhani and Foreign Minister Zarif, who
negotiated the JCPOA, are from the reform wing of
Iranian politics that believes Iran can and should
reach out diplomatically to the rest of the world
and try to resolve its long-standing differences
with the U.S. But there is also a powerful
conservative wing that believes the U.S. is
committed to destroying Iran and will therefore
never fulfill any commitments it makes. Guess which
side Trump is validating and strengthening by his
brutal policy of assassinations, sanctions and
threats?
Even if the next U.S. president is genuinely
committed to peace with Iran, he or she may end up
sitting across the table from conservative Iranian
leaders who, with good reason, will not trust
anything U.S. leaders commit to.
The killing of Soleimani has also stopped the
popular mass demonstrations against the Iranian
government that began in November 2019 and were
brutally repressed. Instead, people now express
their opposition toward the U.S.
7. Trump’s blunders may be the last straw
for U.S. friends and allies who have stuck
with the U.S. through 20 years of inflammatory and
destructive U.S. foreign policy. European allies
have disagreed with Trump’s withdrawal from the
nuclear deal and have tried, albeit weakly, to save
it. When Trump tried to assemble an international
naval task force to protect shipping in the Strait
of Hormuz in 2019, only the U.K., Australia and some
Persian Gulf states wanted
any part of it, and now 10 European and other
countries are joining
an alternative operation led by France.
At a January 8 press conference, Trump called on
NATO to play a greater role in the Middle East, but
Trump has been blowing hot and cold on NATO–at times
calling it obsolete and threatening to withdraw.
After Trump’s assassination of Iran’s top general,
NATO allies began
withdrawing forces from Iraq, signaling that
they do not want to be caught in the crossfire of
Trump’s war on Iran.
With the economic rise of China, and Russia’s
renewed international diplomacy, the tides of
history are shifting and a multipolar world is
emerging. More and more of the world, especially in
the global south, sees U.S. militarism as the gambit
of a fading great power to try to preserve its
dominant position in the world. How many chances
does the U.S. have to finally get this right and
find a legitimate place for itself in a new world
that it has tried and failed to smother at birth?
8. U.S. actions in Iraq violate
international, domestic and Iraqi law,
setting the stage for a world of ever greater
lawlessness. The International Association of
Democratic Lawyers (IADL) has drafted
a statement explaining why the U.S. attacks and
assassinations in Iraq do not qualify as acts of
self-defense and are in fact crimes of aggression
that violate the UN Charter. Trump also tweeted that
the U.S. was ready to hit 52 sites in Iran,
including cultural targets, which would also violate
international law.
Members of Congress are incensed that Trump’s
military attacks violated the U.S. Constitution,
since Article I requires congressional approval for
such military actions. Congressional leaders were
not even made aware of the strike on Soleimani
before it occurred, let alone asked to authorize it.
Members of Congress are now
trying to restrain Trump from going to war with
Iran.
Trump’s actions in Iraq also violated the Iraqi
constitution, which the U.S. helped to write and
which
forbids using the country’s territory to harm
its neighbors.
9. Trump’s aggressive moves strengthen
the weapons makers. One U.S. interest group
has a bipartisan blank check to raid the U.S.
Treasuryat will and profits from every U.S. war and
military expansion: the military-industrial complex
that President Eisenhower warned Americans against
in 1960. Far from heeding his warning, we have
allowed this behemoth to steadily increase its power
and control over U.S. policy.
The stock prices of U.S. weapons companies have
already risen since the U.S. assassinations and
airstrikes in Iraq and the CEOs of the weapons
companies have already become
significantly richer.
U.S. corporate media have been trotting out the
usual line-up of weapons company lobbyists and board
members to beat the war drums and praise Trump’s
warmongering – while keeping quiet about how they
are personally profiting from it.
If we let the military-industrial complex get its
war on Iran, it will drain billions, maybe
trillions, more from the resources we so desperately
need for healthcare, education and public services,
and only to make the world an even more dangerous
place.
10. Any further escalation between the U.S. and
Iran could be catastrophic for the world
economy, which is already riding a
roller-coaster due to Trump’s trade wars.
Asia is especially vulnerable to any disruption
in Iraqi oil exports, which it has come to depend on
as Iraq’s production has risen. The larger Persian
Gulf region is home to the greatest concentration of
oil and gas wells, refineries and tankers in the
world.
One attack already shut down half of Saudi
Arabia’s oil production in September, and that was
only a small taste of what we should expect if the
U.S. keeps escalating its war on Iran.
Conclusion
Trump’s blunders have placed us back on the path
to a truly catastrophic war, with barricades of lies
blocking every off-ramp. The Korean, Vietnam, Iraq
and Afghanistan Wars have cost millions of lives,
left the U.S.’s international moral authority in the
gutter and exposed it as a warlike and dangerous
imperial power in the eyes of much of the world.
If we fail to haul our deluded leaders back from the
brink, an American war on Iran may mark the
ignominious end of our country’s imperial moment and
seal our country’s place among the ranks of failed
aggressors whom the world remembers primarily as the
villains of human history.
Alternatively, we, the American people, can rise
up to overcome the power of the military-industrial
complex and
take charge of our country’s destiny. The
anti-war demonstrations that are taking place around
the country are a positive manifestation of public
sentiment. This is a critical moment for the people
of this nation to rise up in a very visible, bold
and determined groundswell to stop the madman in the
White House and demand, in one loud voice: NO. MORE.
WAR.