By The Saker
February 01, 2020 "Information
Clearing House" - Turns out that Trump
and the Pentagon were lying. Again. This time about
the true impact of the Iranian counter-strike on US
forces in Iraq. First they claimed that there were
no injured U.S. personnel, only to
eventually have to fess up that 34 soldiers had
suffered traumatic brain injury (which Trump
“re-classified” as a “headache”). Then they had to
admit that it was not really 34, but
actually 50!
According to some sources, not all U.S. personnel
were hiding in bunkers and some were deployed to
defend the base perimeter. Whatever may be the case,
this adds yet another indication that the Iranian
counter-strike was much more robust than originally
reported by the Empire. In fact, Iranian sources
indicate that following the strike, a number of
wounded casualties were flown to Israel, Kuwait and
Germany. Again, we will probably never find out the
full truth about what happened that night, but two
things are now certain:
- The Iranian attack was extremely effective
and it is undeniable that all the
US/NATO/Israeli forces in the region are now
exposed like sitting ducks waiting for the next
Iranian strike.
- Uncle Shmuel has had to dramatically
under-report the real extent and nature of the
Iranian counter-strike.
Now, let’s be clear about the quality of the
warning the U.S. personnel had. We now know at the
very least the following warnings were received:
- Warning through the Iraqi government (whom
the Iranians did brief about their intentions).
- Warning through the Swiss authorities (who
represent U.S. interests in Iran and whom the
Iranian did brief about their intentions).
- Warning through the
US reconnaissance/intelligence capabilities
on the ground, air and space.
And yet, in spite of these almost ideal
conditions (from the point of view of defense), we
now see that not a single Iranian missile was
intercepted, that the missiles all landed with very
high accuracy, that the U.S. base itself suffered
extensive damage (including destroyed helicopters
and drones) and that there were scores of injured
personnel (see
this article for a detailed discussion of the
post-attack imagery).
Are You Tired Of
The Lies And
Non-Stop Propaganda?
|
If we look at this strike as primarily a “proof
of concept” operation, then it becomes pretty clear
that on the Iranian side what was proven was a
superb degree of accuracy and robust ballistic
missile capability, whereas on the U.S. side the
only thing this strike did was to prove that the
U.S. forces in the region are all extremely
vulnerable to Iranian missile attack. Just imagine
if the Iranians had wanted to maximize U.S.
casualties and if they had given no warning of any
kind – what would the tally be then?! What if the
Iranians had targeted, say, fuel and ammo dumps,
buildings where U.S. personnel lived, industrial
facilities (including CENTCOM’s key logistic nodes),
ports or even airfields? Can you imagine the kind of
hell the Iranians would have unleashed against
basically unprotected facilities?!
Still dubious?
Then ask yourself why Trump & Co. had to lie and
minimize the real scope of the Iranian attack. It is
pretty obvious that the White House decided to lie
and to present the strike as almost without impact
because if it had admitted the magnitude of the
strike, then it would also have had to admit to the
total powerlessness to stop or even to meaningfully
degrade it. Not only that, but an outraged U.S.
public (most Americans still believe the traditional
propaganda line about “The Greatest Military Force
in the History of the Galaxy”!) would have demanded
a retaliatory counter-counter-strike against Iran,
which would have triggered an
immediate Iranian attack on Israel which, in
turn, would have plunged the entire region into a
massive war which the U.S. had no stomach for.
Contrast that with the Iranian claims which, if
anything, possibly exaggerated the impact of the
strike and claimed that 80 servicemen were injured
(I would add here that, at least so far, the Iranian
government has been far more candid and less
inclined to resort to crude lies than the U.S. has).
Clearly the Iranians were ready for exactly the kind
of further escalation that the U.S. wanted to avoid
at almost any cost.
So what really took place?
There are two basic ways to defend against an
attack: denial and punishment. Denial is what the
Syrians have been doing against the U.S. and Israel
every time they shoot down incoming missiles. Denial
is ideal because it minimizes your own casualties
while not necessarily going up the “escalation
scale”. In contrast, punishment is when you don’t
prevent an attack, but when you inflict retaliatory
counter-strike on the attacking side, but only after
being attacked yourself. That is what the USA could
do against Iran, at pretty much at any time (yes,
contrary to some wholly unrealistic claims, Iranian
air defenses cannot prevent the US armed forces from
inflicting immense damage upon Iran, its population
and infrastructure).
The problem with punishing Iran is you are
dealing with an enemy who is actually willing to
absorb immense losses as long as these losses
eventually lead to victory. How do you deter
somebody who is willing to die for his country,
people or faith?
There is no doubt in my mind that the Iranians,
who are superb analysts, are fully aware of the
damage that the U.S. can inflict. The key factor
here is that they also realize that once the U.S.
unleashes its missiles and bombers and once they
destroy many (if not all) of their targets, they
will have nothing else left to try to contain Iran
with.
Here is how you can think of the Iranian
strategy:
- If the U.S. does nothing or only engages in
symbolic strikes (say, like Israel’s strikes in
Syria), the Iranians can simply ignore these
attacks because while they are very effective in
giving the Americans (or the Israelis) an
illusion of power, they really fail to achieve
anything militarily significant.
- If the U.S. finally decides to strike Iran
hard, it will exhaust its “punishment card” in
that counter-attack, and will have no further
options to deter Iran.
- If the U.S. (or Israel) decides to use
nuclear weapons, then such an attack will simply
give a “political joker card” to Iran saying in
essence “now you are justified in whatever
retaliation you can think of”. And you can be
darn sure that the Iranian will come up with all
sorts of most painful forms of retaliation!
You can think of the current US posture as
“binary”: it is either “all off” or “all on”. Not by
choice, of course, but these conditions are the
result of the geostrategic realities of the
Middle-East and from the many asymmetries between
the two sides:
Country |
USA |
Iran |
Air
superiority |
yes |
no |
Combat
capable ground forces |
no |
yes |
Willingness to incur major losses |
no |
yes |
Long and
vulnerable supply lines |
yes |
no |
Prepared
for major defensive operations |
no |
yes |
The above is, of course, a simplification, yet it
is also fundamentally true. And the reason for these
asymmetries lies in a very simple yet crucial
difference: US Americans have been brainwashed into
believing that major wars can be won on the
cheap. Iranians have no such illusions (most
certainly not after Iraq, backed by the USA, the
USSR and Europe, attacked Iran and inflicted immense
destruction on the Iranian society). But the era of
“wars on the cheap”
is now long over.
Furthermore, Iranians also know that U.S. air
superiority alone will not magically result in a
U.S. victory. Finally, the Iranians have had 40
years to prepare for a U.S. attack. The U.S. has
only really been put on notice since January 8th
of this year.
Again, for the USA, it is “all in” or “all out”.
We saw the “all out” in the days following the
Iranian counter-strike and we can get an idea of
what the “all in” would look like by recalling the
Israeli operations against Hezbollah in 2006.
The Iranians, however, have a much more gradual
escalatory capability, which they just demonstrated
with their attack on the U.S. forces in Iraq: they
can launch only a few missiles, or they can launch
hundreds of them. They can try to maximize U.S.
casualties, or they can decide to go after CENTCOM’s
infrastructure. They can chose to strike Uncle
Shumel directly, or they can decide to strike his
allies (KSA) and bosses (Israel). They can chose to
take credit for any action, or they can hide behind
what the CIA calls plausible deniability.
So while the U.S. and the AngloZionist Empire as
a whole are much more powerful than Iran, Iran has
skillfully developed methods and means which allow
it to be in control of what military analysts call
the “escalation dominance”.
Has Iran just “ledeened” the
almighty USA?
Remember Michael Ledeen? He is the Neocon who
came up with this historical aphorism: “Every
ten years or so, the United States needs to pick up
some small crappy little country and throw it
against the wall, just to show the world we mean
business“.
Is it not ironic that Iran did exactly that, they
took the USA and “threw it against a wall, just to
show that they meant business”, did they not?
And what does this all tell us?
For one thing, the U.S. military is in real
trouble. It is pretty obvious that U.S. air defenses
are hopelessly ineffective: we saw their
“performance” in Saudi Arabia against the Houthi
strikes. The truth is that the Patriot missiles
never performed adequately, not in the first Gulf
War, nor today. The big difference is that Saddam
Hussein’s Iraq did not have any high-precision
missiles and that its attempts to strike at the U.S.
(or Israel, for that matter) where not very
effective. Thus, it was easy for the Pentagon to
fudge the real performance (or lack thereof!) of its
weapon systems. Now that Iran has been able to
pinpoint some buildings while carefully ignoring
others shows that the entire Middle-East has entered
a radically new era.
Second, it is equally obvious that U.S. bases in
the Middle-East are very vulnerable to ballistic and
cruise missile attacks. Air defenses are a very
complicated and high-tech branch of the military and
it often takes years, if not decades, to develop a
truly effective air defense system. Due in part to
its tendency to only attack weak and
lightly-defended countries, and also due to the very
real deterrent might the U.S. armed forces used to
deliver in the past, the U.S. never had to really
worry much about air defenses. The “little guys” had
no missiles, while the “big guys” would never dare
to openly strike at Uncle Shmuel’s forces.
Until recently.
Now, it is the previously almighty World Hegemon
which has been tossed against a wall by a much
weaker Iran and thus found itself being treated
like a “small crappy little country”.
Sweet irony!
But there is much more to this story.
The real Iranian goal: to get the
U.S. out of the Middle-East
The Iranians (and many Iranian allies in the
region) have made it clear that the real retaliation
for the murder of General Soleimani would be to
bring about a complete withdrawal of U.S. forces
from Iraq and Syria primarily, followed by a
complete withdrawal from the entire Middle-East.
How likely is such an outcome?
Right now, I would say that the chances of that
truly happening are microscopically small. After
all, who could seriously imagine the U.S. leaving
either Saudi Arabia or Israel? Ain’t gonna happen
short of a true cataclysm.
What about countries like Turkey or Pakistan
which are formally allies of the USA but which are
also showing clear signs of being mighty fed-up with
the kind of “patronage” the USA likes to mete out to
its “allies”? Do we have any reason to believe that
these countries will ever officially demand that
Uncle Shmuel’s mercenaries (because that is what
U.S. forces are, paid invaders) get the hell out?
And then there are countries like Iraq or
Afghanistan which have hosted a very successful and
active anti-U.S. insurgency which has kept U.S.
forces hunkered down in heavily fortified bases. I
don’t think there is anybody mentally sane out there
who could offer a even semi-credible scenario of
what a U.S. “victory” would look like in these
countries. The fact that the U.S. stayed in
Afghanistan even longer than the Soviets did shows
not only that the Soviet forces were far more
effective (and popular) than their U.S.
counterparts, but also that Gorbachev’s Politburo
was more in touch with reality than Trump’s NSC.
Whatever may be the case, I believe it is
undeniable that the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan are
lost and than no amount of grandstanding will change
this outcome. The same goes for Syria where the U.S.
is basically holding on out of sheer stubbornness
and a total inability to admit defeat.
Uncle Shmuel’s “vision of peace”
for the Middle-East
Zionist Apartheid combined with
a typically illegal land grab in violation
of hundreds of UNSC resolutions. And they
call that a “Vision for Peace”. |
I just listened to the Idiot-in-Chief
proudly present “his” Middle-East “peace”
plan to Bibi Netanyahu and the world. This
latest stunt shows two crucial things about
the mind-set in Washington, D.C.:
- There is nothing which the U.S.
ruling classes will not do to try to get
the favor and support of the Israel
Lobby.
- The USA does not care, not even
marginally, what the people of the
Middle-East think.
This dynamic, which is not anything new,
but which received a qualitative “shot of
steroids” under Trump, will only further
contribute to the inevitable collapse of
Empire in the Middle-East. For one thing,
all the so-called “U.S. allies” in the
region a;; understand that the only country
which matters to the USA is Israel, and that
all the others count for almost nothing.
Furthermore, all the rulers of the
Middle-East now also know that being allied
to the USA also means being a cheap
prostitute for Israel which, in turn, is
guaranteed political suicide for any
politician not wise enough to smell the
trap. Finally, the wars in Afghanistan,
Iraq, Yemen, Lebanon and Syria have shown
that the “Axis of Kindness” is long on
hyperbole and hubris, but very short in
terms of actual combat capability.
The simple truth is that the abject
brown-nosing of the Israel Lobby that Trump
has been engaged in from Day 1 of his term
only serves to further isolate and weaken
the U.S. in the Middle-East (and beyond,
really!). |
In this context, how realistic is the Iranian
goal of kicking Uncle Shmuel out of the region?
As I said, not realistic at all, if seen solely
in the short term. But I hasten to add that it is
very realistic in the mid-term if we look at some,
but not all, the countries of the region. Finally,
in the long term, it is not only realistic, it is
inevitable, even if the Iranians themselves don’t do
much, or anything at all, to make that happen.
These grinning ignoramuses are
doing more than anyone else to bring down
the Empire, even if they don’t understand
this!
Conclusion: “Israel’s”
days are numbered
The Israelis have been feeding us all a steady
diet about this or that country or politician being
a “new Hitler’ who will either gas 6M Jews “again”,
or wants to wipe Israel “off the map” or even engage
in a new Holocaust. Gilad Atzmon brilliantly calls
this mental disorder “pre-traumatic
stress disorder”, and he is spot on. The Israelis
mostly used this “preemptive geschrei*” as
a way to squeeze out as many concessions (and money)
from the western goyim as possible. But in
a deep sense, it is possibly that the Israelis are
at least dimly aware that their entire project is
simply not viable, that you cannot ensure the
survival of any state by terrorizing all of your
neighbors. Violence, especially vicious, rabid,
violence can, indeed, terrorize people, but only for
so long. Sooner or later, the human soul will
outgrow any fear, no matter how visceral, and will
replace that fear by a new and immensely powerful
sense of determination.
Here is
what Robert Fisk said in distant 2006, 14 years
ago:
You heard Sharon, before he suffered his
massive stroke, he used this phrase in the
Knesset, you know, “The Palestinians must feel
pain.” This was during one of the intifadas. The
idea that if you continue to beat and beat and
beat the Arabs, they will submit, that
eventually they’ll go on their knees and give
you what you want. And this is totally, utterly
self-delusional, because it doesn’t apply
anymore. It used to apply 30 years ago, when I
first arrived in the Middle East. If the
Israelis crossed the Lebanese border, the
Palestinians jumped in their cars and drove to
Beirut and went to the cinema. Now when the
Israelis cross the Lebanese border, the
Hezbollah jump in their cars in Beirut and race
to the south to join battle with them. But the
key thing now is that Arabs are not afraid any
more. Their leaders are afraid, the Mubaraks of
this world, the president of Egypt, King
Abdullah II of Jordan. They’re afraid. They
shake and tremble in their golden mosques,
because they were supported by us. But the
people are no longer afraid.
What was true only for some Arabs in 2006, has
now become true for most (maybe even all?) Arabs in
2020. As for the Iranians, they have never had any
fear of Uncle Shmuel, they are the ones who
“injected” the newly created Hezbollah with this
qualitatively new kind of “special courage” (which
is the Shia ethos, really!) when this movement was
founded.
Empires can survive many things, but once they
are not feared anymore, then their end is near. The
Iranian strike proved a fundamental new reality to
the rest of the world: the USA is much more afraid
of Iran than Iran is afraid of the USA. U.S. rulers
and politicians will, of course, claim otherwise.
But that futile effort to re-shape reality is now
doomed to failure, if only because even the Houthis
can now openly and successfully defy the combined
might of the “Axis of Kindness”.
You can think of U.S. and Israeli leaders as the
orchestra on the Titanic: they play well, but they
will still get wet and then die.
(*geschrei: the Yiddish word for yelling, crying
out, to shriek)
This article was
published by "UNZ"
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