January 14,
2020 "Information
Clearing House" -
If one seriously
seeks to understand how delusional
policymakers in Washington are it is only
necessary to examine the responses by the
president and Congress to the assassination
of Iranian Major General Qassem Soleimani.
The first response came in the form of a
Donald Trump largely incoherent nine-minute
self-applauding speech explaining what he
had done and why. It was followed by a House
of Representatives War Powers non-binding
resolution that was all theater and did
nothing to limit the president’s unilateral
ability to go to war with the Islamic
Republic.
It was reported
that the Trump speech had been hurriedly written by
aides the night before it was given and that it
existed in several competing drafts. It was full of
out-and-out lies and half truths and intended to
reassure the American people that the president was
keeping them safe. The opening line might well be
regarded as some kind of joke: “As long as I am
President of the United States, Iran will never be
allowed to have a nuclear weapon.” Trump has in fact
done more to ensure that Iran will have a nuclear
weapon than any other president through his abrupt
withdrawal from the Joint Comprehensive Plan Of
Action (JCPOA) and his assassination of Soleimani,
which together have convinced the Iranian leadership
that there is no possibility of a reasonable
negotiated solution when dealing with the American
president, even when he claims he wants to “talk.”
Trump then went on
characteristically to eulogize our brave soldiers on
far flung battlefields before lying again, saying
“For far too long — all the way back to 1979, to be
exact — nations have tolerated Iran’s destructive
and destabilizing behavior in the Middle East and
beyond. Those days are over. Iran has been the
leading sponsor of terrorism, and their pursuit of
nuclear weapons threatens the civilized world. We
will never let that happen.” Lie one is that the
“destructive and destabilizing behavior” actually
has Made in U.S.A. stamped all over it. Lie two is
“leading sponsor of terrorism,” an honor that
belongs to Israel, Saudi Arabia and the United
States, in that order. And lie three is that Iran
“pursued” nuclear weapons. It has never done so.
Are You Tired Of
The Lies And
Non-Stop Propaganda?
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Trump them boasted that “Last
week, we took decisive action to stop a ruthless
terrorist from threatening American lives. At my
direction, the United States military eliminated the
world’s top terrorist, Qasem Soleimani. As the head
of the Quds Force, Soleimani was personally
responsible for some of the absolutely worst
atrocities.” Trump’s preening was again wrong on
every count: Soleimani is no terrorist by any
reasonable definition, nor is there any evidence
that he threatened American lives. And Trump and his
chorus of neocons cannot name a single “atrocity”
committed by the man
The president claimed that
Soleimani “…viciously wounded and murdered thousands
of U.S. troops, including the planting of roadside
bombs that maim and dismember their victims,” a
particularly absurd charge suggesting that Trump
believes that any American soldier who died in Iraq
or Afghanistan did so at the hands of the Iranian
Major General. By the same logic, the musical chairs
series of American generals that have served in
Afghanistan, Iraq and Syria have murdered hundreds
of thousands of people. If Trump wants to start
counting fatalities he should perhaps start with
David Petraeus.
Piling Ossa on Pelion, Trump
declared that Soleimani “…orchestrated the violent
assault on the U.S. embassy in Baghdad. In recent
days, he was planning new attacks on American
targets, but we stopped him.” There is no evidence
whatsoever to support either assertion and Trump
then goes on to ascribe all the problems of the
Middle East to Iran, ignoring the roles played by
others, most notably Washington, Israel and the
Saudis. He also roundly condemned the JCPOA before
asserting falsely that “Three months ago, after
destroying 100 percent of ISIS and its territorial
caliphate, we killed the savage leader of ISIS,
al-Baghdadi…” In reality, ISIS was defeated by the
Syrian Army and its allies Russia and Iran, the very
countries that Trump has continued to vilify even as
he struts his anti-terrorist credentials. Qassem
Soleimani played a major role in the destruction of
ISIS.
The only good things in the
Trump speech were that it was short and the
president did not find it necessary to say a whole
lot of good things about Israel. Interestingly, no
one in the mainstream media or in the political
chattering class made much effort to challenged
Trump on the “facts” he cited, though there was some
pushback from mostly Democratic congressmen who
stated that they could not see any “imminent threat”
in the evidence that the Administration produced
during a classified briefing. The actual war powers
concurrent resolution that passed in the House
last Thursday was symptomatic of the unwillingness
of the political opposition to take on the illegal
and immoral wars in the Middle East themselves – it
had no teeth and will not change anything.
The resolution’s subject line
“Directing the President pursuant to section 5(c) of
the War Powers Resolution to terminate the use of
United States Armed Forces to engage in hostilities
in or against Iran” actually is misleading. And the
first thing the text does do is slam Iran with the
same dubious “facts” employed by Trump, including
that “The Government of Iran is a leading state
sponsor of terrorism and engages in a range of
destabilizing activities across the Middle East.
Iranian General Qassem Soleimani was the lead
architect of much of Iran’s destabilizing activities
throughout the world.”
The resolution includes “In
matters of imminent armed attacks, the executive
branch should indicate to Congress why military
action was necessary within a certain window of
opportunity, the possible harm that missing the
window would cause, and why the action was likely to
prevent future disastrous attacks against the United
States.” It then goes on to explain that “When the
United States uses military force, the American
people and members of the United States Armed Forces
deserve a credible explanation regarding such use of
military force…” because “The War Powers Resolution
(50
U.S.C. 1541 et seq.) requires the President to
consult with Congress ‘in every possible instance’
before introducing United States Armed Forces into
hostilities.” It concludes with “Congress has not
authorized the President to use military force
against Iran.”
It would seem to be a
devastating critique of the Trump Art of War but
then comes the wiggle room “…Congress hereby directs
the President to terminate the use of United States
Armed Forces to engage in hostilities in or against
Iran or any part of its government or military,
unless Congress has declared war or enacted specific
statutory authorization for such use of the Armed
Forces; or such use of the Armed Forces is necessary
and appropriate to defend against an imminent armed
attack upon the United States, its territories or
possessions, or its Armed Forces, consistent with
the requirements of the War Powers Resolution.
Nothing in this section may be construed to prevent
the President from using military force against al
Qaeda or associated forces…” In other words, all
Trump has to do is claim “imminent threat” or that
he is attacking “terrorist associated forces” and he
is home free no matter what he does, particularly as
the resolution itself is non-binding.
The sheer ignorance and
arrogance of elites in Washington combined with a
colonialist mentality that dismisses Asians and
Africans as unthinking “wogs” who will do one’s
bidding if they are confronted with punishment is
currently on display. It was inevitable that Iraq
would demand the departure of U.S. troops after
thirty-four Iraqi militiamen were killed by American
drone and air strikes, but many in Washington just
didn’t get it. Trump threatened, in characteristic
fashion, to respond with sanctions, but now Iraqi
Prime Minister Adel Abdul Mahdi has made it official
in a phone call to Secretary of State Mike
Pompeo, demanding a plan and timetable for the
removal of the American soldiers. The State
Department has indicated that it is not prepared to
discuss the matter.
Some pundits
who should know better have predicted that the
withdrawal of U.S. soldiers will not take place
because Iraq somehow “needs” the United States. And
besides, there will be economic consequences if Iraq
does go ahead to insist on an American withdrawal.
But sometimes abstractions prove to be more powerful
than material incentives. The United States violated
Iraqi sovereignty not once but twice and murdered 34
Iraqis in the process. Pompeo can huff and puff all
he wants and Trump can mouth his illiteracies, but
nothing changes the fact that the United States did
things it did not have to do based on a delusional
view of the Middle East and will have to pay a
price. Minus a presence in Iraq, Syria will be
untenable and one might hope that once the U.S.
loses its ability to directly confront Iran on the
ground the whole house of cards just might collapse,
leading to Washington’s gradual departure from the
region. That would be good for the region and also
for the United States even if Israel and the Saudis,
who prefer to have Americans fight and die in their
wars, might object.
Philip M. Giraldi, Ph.D.,
is Executive Director of the Council for the
National Interest, a 501(c)3 tax deductible
educational foundation (Federal ID Number
#52-1739023) that seeks a more interests-based U.S.
foreign policy in the Middle East. Website is
councilforthenationalinterest.org, address
is P.O. Box 2157, Purcellville VA 20134 and its
email is
inform@cnionline.org.
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