War with Iran
The United States, Saudi Arabia and Israel,
responsible for military fiascos, hundreds
of thousands of deaths and innumerable war
crimes in the Middle East, are now plotting
to attack Iran.
By Chris Hedges
July 16, 2022:
Information Clearing House
--The United States,
Israel and Saudi Arabia are plotting a war
with Iran. The 2015 Iranian nuclear arms
accord, or Joint Comprehensive Plan of
Action (JCPOA), which Donald Trump
sabotaged, does not look like it will be
revived. U.S. Central Command (CENTCOM) is
reviewing options to attack if Teheran looks
poised to obtain a nuclear weapon and
Israel, which opposes U.S.-Iran nuclear
negotiations, carries out military strikes.
During his visit to Israel, Biden assured
Prime Minister Yair Lapid that the U.S. is
“prepared to use all elements of its
national power,” including military
force, to stop Iran from building a nuclear
weapon.
Saudi Arabia, Israel and the U.S.
function as a troika in the Middle East. The
Israeli government has built a close
alliance with Saudi Arabia, which produced
15 of the 19 hijackers in the September 11
attacks and has been a prolific sponsor of
international terrorism, supporting
Salafi jihadism, the basis of al-Qaeda,
and such groups as the Afghanistan
Taliban,
Lashkar-e-Taiba (LeT) and the
Al-Nusra Front.
The three countries worked in tandem to
back the 2013 military coup in Egypt,
led by General Abdel Fattah al-Sisi, who
overthrew its first democratically elected
government. He has
imprisoned tens of thousands of
government critics, including journalists
and human rights defenders, on politically
motivated charges. The Sisi regime
collaborates with Israel by keeping its
common border with Gaza closed to
Palestinians, trapping them in the
Gaza strip, one of the most densely
populated and impoverished places on earth.
Israel, the only nuclear power in the
Middle East, has conducted an ongoing
campaign of covert attacks on Iranian
nuclear sites and nuclear scientists. Four
Iranian nuclear scientists were
assassinated, presumably by Israel,
between 2010 and 2012. In July 2020, a fire,
attributed to an Israeli bomb, damaged
Iran’s Natanz nuclear site. In November
2020, Israel used remote control machine
guns to
assassinate Iran’s top nuclear
scientist. In January 2020, the United
States
assassinated Gen. Qassem Soleimani, the
head of Iran’s elite Quds Force, along with
nine other people including a key figure in
the anti-ISIS coalition, Abu Mahdi
al-Muhandis. It used an MQ-9 Reaper to fire
missiles into his convoy, near Baghdad’s
airport.
If similar attacks had been carried out
by Iranian operatives inside Israel, it
would have triggered a war. Only Iran’s
decision not to retaliate, beyond
lobbing about a dozen ballistic missiles
at two military bases in Iraq, prevented a
conflagration.
On July 7, Iran
informed The International Atomic Energy
Agency (IAEA) that it is using IR-6
centrifuges with "modified subheaders.” The
declared purpose of the enrichment process
at its underground facility at Fordow is to
create uranium isotope enriched up to 20
percent—far below the 90 percent enrichment
levels necessary to create weapons-grade
uranium.
Under the JCPOA agreement, enrichment
levels were capped at 3.67 percent.
Israel has
allocated $1.5 billion for a potential
strike against Iran and, during the first
week of June, held
large-scale military exercises,
including one over the Mediterranean and in
the Red Sea, in preparation to attack
Iranian nuclear sites using dozens of
fighter aircraft, including Lockheed Martin
F-35 fighter jets.
The 2016 Memorandum of Understanding
signed by President Barack Obama provides
a 10-year, $38 billion military package
for Israel.
Israel and its lobby in the U.S. are
working to scuttle negotiations with Iran
to monitor its nuclear program. The
preparation for war mirrors the Israeli
pressure on the U.S. to invade Iraq, one
of the worst strategic decisions in U.S.
history.
Former British Prime Minister Tony Blair,
in testimony before the British Iraq war
commission, offered this account of his
discussions with George W. Bush in Crawford,
Texas in April 2002:
As I recall that discussion, it was
less to do with specifics about what we
were going to do on Iraq or, indeed, the
Middle East, because the Israel issue
was a big, big issue at the time. I
think, in fact, I remember, actually,
there may have been conversations that
we had even with Israelis, the two of
us, whilst we were there. So that was a
major part of all this.
Saudi Arabia, which seeks to dominate the
Arab world,
severed ties with Iran in 2016 after its
embassy in Tehran was stormed by protesters
following
Riyadh’s execution of Shia cleric Sheikh
Nimr al-Nimr. Saudi Arabia, with Chinese
help,
has built a plant to process uranium ore
and acquired ballistic missiles. Saudi
Arabia signed a series of letters in 2017
with the U.S. to purchase weapons totaling
$110 billion immediately, and $ 350 billion
over the next decade.
A war with Iran would be a catastrophe of
unimaginable proportions. It would spread
swiftly throughout the region. The Shiites
across the Middle East would see an attack
on Iran as a religious war against Shiism.
The two million Shiites in Saudi Arabia,
concentrated in the oil-rich Eastern
province; the Shiite majority in Iraq; and
the Shiite communities in Bahrain, Pakistan
and Turkey would join the fight against the
U.S. and Israel.
Iran would use its Chinese-supplied
anti-ship missiles, rocket and bomb-equipped
speedboats and submarines, mines, drones and
coastal artillery to shut down the Strait of
Hormuz,
the corridor for 20 percent of the
world’s oil and liquified gas supply. Oil
production facilities in the Persian Gulf
would be sabotaged. Iranian oil, which makes
up 13 percent of the world’s energy supply,
would be taken off the market. Oil would
jump to over $500 a barrel and perhaps, as
the conflict drags on, to over $750 a
barrel. Our petroleum-based economy, already
reeling under rising prices because of the
sanctions on Russia, would grind to a halt.
Israel would be hit by Iranian Shahab-3
ballistic missiles. Hezbollah’s store of
Iranian-supplied rockets that
allegedly can reach any part of Israel,
including Israel’s nuclear plant at Dimona,
would also be deployed. Strikes by Iran and
its allies on Israel, as well as on American
military installations in the region, would
leave hundreds, maybe thousands, dead.
In 2002, the U.S. military
conducted its “most elaborate war game”
ever, costing over $ 250 million. Known as
the Millennium Challenge, the exercise was
between a Blue Force (the U.S.) and the Red
Force (widely considered as a stand-in for
Iran). It was meant to validate America’s
“modern, joint-service war-fighting
concepts.” It did the opposite. The Red
Force, led by retired Marine lieutenant
general Paul Van Riper, conducted a swarm of
kamikaze suicide boat attacks and destroyed
16 U.S. warships in under 20 minutes.
When the war game was reset, it
was rigged in favor of the Blue Force.
The Blue Force was given access to
experimental technology – including that
which doesn’t exist such as airborne laser
weapons. Meanwhile, the Red Force was told
they weren’t allowed to shoot down the Blue
Team’s aircraft, had to keep their offensive
weapons in the open and could not use
chemical weapons. Even then, the Blue Force
could not achieve all of its objectives as
Riper unleashed a guerrilla insurgency on
the occupying forces.
Why shouldn’t Joe Biden be feted by the
murderous regime of Saudi Arabia and the
apartheid state of Israel? He and the
U.S. have as much blood on their hands as
they do. Yes, in 2018 the de facto ruler of
Saudi Arabia, Mohammed bin Salman,
ordered the assassination and
dismemberment of my friend and colleague
Jamal Khashoggi. Yes, Israel
assassinated Palestinian journalist
Shireen Abu Akleh. But Washington has
more than matched the crimes carried out by
Israel and the Saudis, including against
journalists.
The imprisonment of
Julian Assange – who released the
collateral murder video showing U.S.
helicopter pilots laughing as they shot to
death two Reuters journalists and a group of
civilians in Iraq in 2007 – is designed to
destroy Assange psychologically and
physically. The corpses of civilians,
including children, piled up by Israel and
Saudi Arabia, who do much of their
killing in Gaza and Yemen with U.S. weapons,
don’t come close to the hundreds of
thousands of dead we have left behind in the
two decades of warfare we have perpetrated
in the Middle East.
In 1991, a U.S.-led coalition destroyed
much of Iraq’s civilian infrastructure,
including water treatment facilities
resulting in sewage contaminating the
country’s drinking water. Then
followed years of U.S., U.K. and French
airstrikes enforcing a “No Fly Zone” along
with crushing sanctions they
imposed via the U.N. From 1991 to 1998,
these sanctions alone were
estimated to have killed 100,000 to
227,000 Iraqi children under the age of
five, although the exact figures have been
the subject of much dispute. The U.S. “Shock
and Awe” bombing campaign of Iraqi urban
centers during its subsequent invasion of
Iraq in 2003 dropped
3,000 bombs on civilian areas, killing
over 7,000 noncombatants in the first
two months of the war.
By one estimate, the U.S. has been
responsible for directly or indirectly
killing nearly 20 million people since the
end of the Second World War.
Israel and Saudi Arabia are gangster
states. But so is the United States.
“There are few of them,” Biden, reacting
to Democratic lawmakers who have criticized
Israel’s treatment of the Palestinians,
told Israel's Channel 12 news. “I think
they're wrong. I think they're making a
mistake. Israel is a democracy. Israel is
our ally. Israel is a friend and I make no
apologies.”
The angst about Biden’s not holding the
Saudis and the Israelis to account on this
visit is risible, as if we have any
credibility left that allows us to arbitrate
between right and wrong. The idea that Biden
and the U.S. are brokers for peace was
eviscerated long ago. The U.S. offers
shameless support for Israel’s right-wing
government, including vetoing U.N.
resolutions that censor Israel. It refuses
to condition aid on a respect for human
rights even as Israel
launches repeated
murderous assaults against the civilian
population in Gaza, labels Palestinian NGOs
as terror groups, expands illegal
Jewish-only settlements,
carries out aggressive housing evictions
of Palestinian families and mistreats
Palestinian and Arab-American citizens at
points of entry and within the Occupied
Palestinian Territories.
The idea that we represent and promote
virtue illustrates the self-delusion that
accompanies our moral and physical
degeneration. The rest of the world, which
recoils in repugnance at whom we have
become, does not take us seriously. They
fear our bombs. But fear is not respect.
They no longer envy our hedonistic mass
culture, tarnished by mass shootings, social
inequality, the decay of our infrastructure,
dysfunction and a Grand Guignol-style of
politics that has turned civil and political
discourse into a tawdry burlesque. America
is a grim joke, one about to be made worse
when the
Christian fascists, bigots and
conspiracy theorists take control of the
Congress in the fall, and I expect, the
presidency two years later.
The U.S., along with Israel, makes
war on Muslims who, with
an estimated 1.9 billion adherents,
comprise
nearly 25 percent of the world
population. We have turned many in the
Muslim world into our enemies. The Muslim
world
does not hate us for our values.
It hates our hypocrisy. It hates our
racism, our refusal to honor their political
aspirations, our
lethal attacks and military occupations
and our crippling sanctions. Muslims express
the rage felt by Guatemalans, Cubans,
Congolese, Brazilians, Argentines,
Indonesians, Panamanians, Vietnamese,
Cambodians, Filipinos, North and South
Koreans, Chileans, Nicaraguans and
Salvadorans – those Frantz Fanon called “the
wretched of the earth.” They too were
slaughtered by our high-tech military
machine and subjugated, humiliated, forced
to accept U.S. hegemony and killed in our
clandestine torture centers or by CIA-backed
assassins.
No one is held accountable. The CIA
blocked all investigations into its torture
program, including
destroying videotape evidence of
interrogations involving torture and
classifying nearly all of the 6,900-page
report by the Senate Select Committee on
Intelligence that examined the CIA’s
post-9/11 program of detention, torture and
other abuse of detainees.
Biden goes to Saudi Arabia and Israel as
a supplicant. As a presidential candidate,
he
called Saudi Arabia a “pariah” and vowed
to make it “pay the price” for Khashoggi’s
murder. But with the rising price of oil,
Biden is whitewashing the murder, along with
the
humanitarian disaster the Saudis have
caused in Yemen, imploring the Saudis to
increase output, a plea Prince Salman has
rejected. Similarly, Biden is weak in
Israel, powerless against the expansion of
Jewish settlements and assaults on
Palestinians, and unwilling to move the
U.S. Embassy back to Tel Aviv from
Jerusalem, a move by the Trump
administration that violates international
law. Biden’s staff was
reduced to pleading with the Israelis
not to embarrass him as they did during his
2010 visit as vice president. During his
2010 visit, Israel announced it was building
1,600 new Jewish-only houses in illegal
settlements in occupied East Jerusalem. The
Obama White House angrily condemned “the
substance and timing of the announcement.”
How can the U.S. bar Cuba, Nicaragua and
Venezuela from a
summit of the Americas in Los Angeles
and embrace the Saudi regime and the Israeli
aparatheid state? How can it decry the
war crimes of Russia and unleash industrial
violence on the Mulism world? How can it
plead for the 12 million Uyghurs, mostly
Muslim, living in Xinjiang, and ignore the
Palestinians? How can it justify another
“preemptive war,” this time against Iran?
The duplicity is not lost on most of the
world. They know who we are. They know that
in our eyes they are
unworthy. Our
inevitable demise on the world stage is
cheered by the majority of the planet. The
tragedy is that, as we go down, we are
determined to take so many others down with
us.
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