By Alastair Crooke
January 20, 2020 "Information
Clearing House" -
On the 17
September 1656, Oliver Cromwell, a
Protestant Puritan, who had won a civil
war, and had the English king beheaded
in public, railed against England’s
enemies. There was, he told Parliament
that day, an axis of evil abroad in the
world. And this axis – led by Catholic
Spain – was, at root, the problem of a
people that had placed themselves at the
service of ‘evil’. This ‘evil’, and the
servitude that it beget, was the evil of
a religion – Catholicism – that
refused the English peoples’ desire for
simple liberties: “… [an evil] that put
men under restraint … under which there
was no freedom … and under which, there
could be ‘no liberty of individual
consciousness’”.
That was how the English protestant
leader saw Catholic Spain in 1656. And
it is very close to how key orientations
in the U.S. sees Iran today:
The evil of religion – of Shi’ism –
subjecting (they believe) Iranians to
repression, and to serfdom. In Europe,
this ideological struggle against the
‘evil’ of an imposed religious community
(the Holy ‘Roman’ Axis, then) brought
Europe to ‘near-Armageddon’, with the
worst affected parts of Europe seeing
their population decimated by up to 60%
during the conflict.
Is this faction in the U.S. now
intent on invoking a new,
near-Armageddon – on this occasion, in
the Middle East – in order, like
Cromwell, to destroy the religious
‘community known’ as the Shi’a
Resistance Axis, seen to stretch across
the region, in order to preserve the
Jewish “peoples’ desire for simple
liberties”?
Of course, today’s leaders of this
ideological faction are no longer
Puritan Protestants (though the
Christian Evangelicals are at one with
Cromwell’s ‘Old Testament’ literalism
and prophesy). No, its lead ideologues
are the neo-conservatives, who have
leveraged Karl Popper’s hugely
influential The Open Society and its
Enemies – a seminal treatise, which
to a large extent, has shaped how many
Americans imagine their ‘world’.
Popper’s was history understood as a
series of attempts, by the forces of
reaction, to smother an open society
with the weapons of traditional religion
and traditional culture:
Marx and Russia were cast as the
archetypal reactionary threat to open
societies. This construct was taken up
by Reagan, and re-connected to the
Christian apocalyptic tradition (hence
the neo-conservative coalition with
Evangelists
yearning for Redemption, and with
liberal interventionists, yearning for a
secular millenarianism). All concur that
Iran is reactionary, and furthermore,
the posit, poses a grave threat to
Israel’s self-proclaimed ‘open society’.
The point here is that there is
little point in arguing with these
people that Iran poses no threat to the
U.S. (which is obvious) – for the
‘project’ is ideological through and
through. It has to be understood by
these lights. Popper’s purpose was to
propose that only liberal globalism
would bring about a “growing measure of
humane and enlightened life” and a free
and open society – period.
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All this is but the outer Matryoshka
– a suitable public rhetoric, a painted
image – that can be used to encase the
secret, inner dolls. Eli Lake,
writing in Bloomberg,
however, gives away the next doll:
“Since
President Donald Trump ordered the drone
strike that killed [Soleimani –
justified in terms of deterrence, and
allegedly halting an attack] … a handful
of Trump’s advisers, however, [espied
another] strategic benefit to killing
Soleimani: Call it regime disruption …
“The
case for disruption is outlined in a
series of unclassified memos sent to
[John Bolton]in May and June 2019 …
their author, David Wurmser, is a
longtime adviser to Bolton who then
served as a consultant to the National
Security Council. Wurmser argues that
Iran is in the midst of a legitimacy
crisis. Its leadership, he writes, is
divided between camps that seek an
apocalyptic return of the Hidden Imam,
and those that favour of the
preservation of the Islamic Republic.
All the while, many Iranians have grown
disgusted with the regime’s incompetence
and corruption.
“Wurmser’s crucial insight [is that] –
were unexpected, rule-changing actions
taken against Iran, it would confuse the
regime. It would need to scramble,” he
writes. Such a U.S. attack would “rattle
the delicate internal balance of forces
and the control over them upon which the
regime depends for stability and
survival.” Such a moment of confusion,
Wurmser writes, will create momentary
paralysis — and the perception among the
Iranian public that its leaders are
weak.
“Wurmser’s memos show that the Trump
administration has been debating the
blow against Soleimani since the current
crisis began, some seven months ago …
After Iran downed a U.S. drone [in
June], Wurmser advised Bolton that the
U.S. response should be overt and
designed to send a message that the U.S.
holds the Iranian regime, not the
Iranian people, responsible. “This could
even involve something as a targeted
strike on someone like Soleimani or his
top deputies,” Wurmser wrote in a June
22 memo.
In
these memos, Wurmser is careful to
counsel against a ground invasion of
Iran. He says the U.S. response “does
not need to be boots on the ground (in
fact, it should not be).” Rather, he
stresses that the U.S. response should
be calibrated to exacerbate the regime’s
domestic legitimacy crisis.
So there it is – David Wurmser is the
‘doll’ within: no military invasion, but
just a strategy to blow apart the
Iranian Republic. Wurmser, Eli Lake
reveals, has quietly been advising
Bolton and the Trump Administration all
along. This was the neo-con, who in
1996, compiled Coping with Crumbling
States (which flowed on from the
infamous Clean Break policy
strategy paper, written for Netanyahu,
as a blueprint for destructing Israel’s
enemies). Both these papers advocated
the overthrow of the Secular-Arab
nationalist states – excoriated both as
“crumbling relics of the ‘evil’ USSR”
(using Popperian language, of course) –
and inherently hostile to Israel (the
real message).
Well (big
surprise), Wurmser has now been at
work as the author of how to ‘implode’
and destroy Iran. And his insight? “A
targeted strike on someone like
Soleimani”; split the Iranian leadership
into warring factions; cut an open wound
into the flesh of Iran’s domestic
legitimacy; put a finger into that open
wound, and twist it; disrupt – and
pretend that the U.S. sides with the
Iranian people, against its government.
Eli Lake seems, in his Bloomberg
piece, to think that the Wurmser
strategy has worked. Really? The problem
here is that narratives in Washington
are so far apart from the reality that
exists on the ground – they simply do
not touch at any point. Millions
attended Soleimani’s cortege. His
killing gave a renewed cohesion
to Iran. Little more than a dribble have
protested.
Now let us unpack the next ‘doll’:
Trump bought into Wurmser’s ‘play’,
albeit, with Trump subsequently
admitting that he did the assassination
under
intense pressure from Republican
Senators. Maybe he believed the patently
absurd narrative that Iranians would ‘be
dancing in the street’ at Soleimani’s
killing. In any event, Trump is not
known, exactly, for admitting his
mistakes. Rather, when something is
portrayed as his error, the President
adopts the full ‘salesman’ persona:
trying to convince his base that the
murder was no error, but a great
strategic success – “They like us”,
Trump claimed of protestors in Iran.
Tom Luongo has
observed: “Trump’s impeachment trial
in the Senate begins next week, and it’s
clear that this will not be a walk in
the park for the President. Anyone
dismissing this because the Republicans
hold the Senate, simply do not
understand why this impeachment exists
in the first place. It is [occurring
because it offers] the ultimate form of
leverage over a President whose desire
to end the wars in the Middle East is
anathema to the entrenched powers in the
D.C. Swamp.” Ah, so here we arrive at
another inner Matryoshka.
This is Luongo’s point: Impeachment
was the leverage to drive open a wedge
between Republican neo-conservatives in
the Senate – and Trump. And now the
Pelosi pressure on Republican Senators
is
escalating. The Establishment threw
cold water over Trump’s assertion of
imminent attack, as justification
for murdering Soleimani, and Trump
responds by painting himself further
into a corner on Iran – by going the
full salesman ‘monte’.
On the campaign trail, the President
goes way over-the-top, calling Soleimani
a “son of a b—-“, who killed
‘thousands’ and furthermore was
responsible for every U.S. veteran who
lost a limb in Iraq. And he then
conjures up a fantasy picture of
protesters pouring onto the streets of
Tehran, tearing down images of
Soleimani, and screaming abuse at the
Iranian leadership.
It is nonsense. There are
no mass protests (there have been a
few hundred students protesting at one
main Tehran University). But Trump has
dived in pretty deep, now
threatening the Euro-Three
signatories to the JCPOA, that unless
they brand Iran as having defaulted on
JCPOA at the UNSC disputes mechanism, he
will slap an eye-watering 25% tariff on
their automobiles.
So, how will Trump avoid plunging in
even deeper to conflict if – and when –
Americans die in Iraq or Syria at the
hands of militia – and when Pompeo or
Lindsay Graham will claim, baldly,
‘Iran’s proxies did it’? Sending
emollient faxes to the Swiss to pass to
Tehran will not do. Tehran will not read
them, or believe them, even if they did.
It all reeks of stage-management; a
set up: a very clever stage-management,
designed to end with the U.S. crossing
Iran’s ‘red line’, by striking at a
target within Iranian
territory. Here, finally, we arrive at
the innermost doll.
Cui bono? Some Senators who
never liked Trump, and would prefer
Pence as President; the Democrats, who
would prefer to run their candidate
against Pence in November, rather than
Trump. But also, as someone who once
worked with Wurmser observed tartly:
when you hear that name (Wurmser),
immediately you think Netanyahu, his
intimate associate.
Matryoshka herself?