John Bolton’s Call for
War on Iran
By Bill Van Auken
March 27, 2015 "ICH"
- "WSWS"
- The New York Times Thursday
published a prominent opinion piece entitled
“To Stop Iran’s Bomb, Bomb Iran.”
The author was John R.
Bolton, a former State Department official
and, for a brief period, US ambassador to
the United Nations, under the administration
of George W. Bush. He became an influential
figure in the administration after serving
as a lawyer in the Bush campaign’s
successful operation to steal the 2000
election by stopping the vote count in
Florida.
Bolton, it must be said,
has been calling for an immediate military
attack on Iran’s nuclear facilities—by
either Israel or the US, or both—for at
least the last seven years. On each
occasion, he has warned darkly that unless
his prescription for intensive bombing
followed by “regime change” was adopted
within days, the world would face the threat
of an Iranian nuclear attack.
Thursday’s column was no
different. “President Obama’s approach on
Iran has brought a bad situation to the
brink of catastrophe,” Bolton writes. He is
referring to the attempt by Washington,
together with the other member nations of
the UN Security Council plus Germany, to
negotiate restrictions on a nuclear program
that Iran insists is strictly for civilian
purposes in return for easing punishing
economic sanctions.
“Even absent palpable
proof, like a nuclear test, Iran’s steady
progress toward nuclear weapons has long
been evident,” according to Bolton. Despite
the lack of “palpable proof,” Bolton insists
that Iran’s unwillingness to “negotiate away
its nuclear program” and the inability of
sanctions to “block its building of a broad
and deep weapons infrastructure” constitute
an “inescapable conclusion.”
He continues: “The
inconvenient truth is that only military
action like Israel’s 1981 attack on Saddam
Hussein’s Osirak reactor in Iraq or its 2007
destruction of a Syrian reactor, designed
and built by North Korea, can accomplish
what is required. Time is terribly short,
but a strike can still succeed.”
Bolton, who has made an
entire career of suppressing “inconvenient
truths,” allows that he would prefer an
all-out US bombing campaign, but would
accept a US-backed attack by Israel.
“The United States could
do a thorough job of destruction, but Israel
alone can do what’s necessary,” he writes.
He adds that this military onslaught must be
combined with US efforts “aimed at regime
change in Tehran.”
What is involved here is
an open appeal for the launching of a war of
criminal aggression and incitement of mass
murder. The unbridled militarism expressed
in Bolton’s column would not be out of place
in the writings of Hitler’s foreign
minister, Joachim von Ribbentrop, the first
to hang at Nuremberg after his conviction on
charges of crimes against peace, war crimes
and crimes against humanity for his role in
organizing the Nazi regime’s wars of
aggression.
The question arises, why
has he been given a forum in the editorial
pages of the New York Times, the
supposed newspaper of record and erstwhile
voice of American liberalism?
The obvious answer is that
any differences the Times editorial
board—or for that matter the Obama
administration—have with Bolton over Iran
are of an entirely tactical character. All
of them stand by the principle that US
imperialism has the unique right to carry
out unprovoked “preemptive” war anywhere on
the planet where it perceives a potential
challenge to its interests.
Not so long ago, Bolton,
who personifies this arrogant and criminal
policy, and the Times were on the
same page politically and on essentially the
very same lines he presents in his latest
column on Iran.
In 2002, Bolton was
Undersecretary of State for Arms Control and
International Security and a point man in
the Bush administration’s campaign to
prepare a war of aggression against Iraq
based upon the lies that Saddam Hussein was
developing “weapons of mass destruction” and
preparing to hand them over to Al Qaeda.
Bolton, described by one
of his former colleagues at the State
Department as “the quintessential kiss up,
kick down kind of guy,” had been an advocate
of aggression against Iraq at least since
1998, when he joined other right-wingers in
signing an “Open letter to the president”
demanding such a war.
In the run-up to war, he
played a central role in manufacturing phony
evidence of the existence of Iraqi WMD. This
included the promotion of the crude
forgeries indicating that Iraq was seeking
to procure yellowcake (concentrated uranium)
from Niger.
During this same period,
the Times provided invaluable
assistance to this propaganda campaign. Its
senior correspondent Judith Miller was
working in alliance with administration
officials and right-wing think tanks to
confirm and embellish upon the lies about
WMD. Thomas Friedman, the paper’s chief
foreign affairs columnist, was churning out
column after column justifying what he
readily acknowledged was a “war of choice”
against Iraq, justifying it in the name of
democracy, human rights and oil.
As the reputed newspaper
“of record,” the Times set the tone
for the rest of the corporate media, which
together worked to overcome popular
opposition to a war in the Middle East.
The results are well
known. The war claimed the lives of over a
million Iraqis, devastated an entire society
and threw the whole region into chaos. In
the process, some 4,500 US troops lost their
lives, tens of thousands more were maimed
and wounded and some $2 trillion was
expended. A dozen years later, the Obama
administration has launched a new war in
Iraq, supposedly to halt the advance of
ISIS, a force that it effectively backed in
the war for regime change in Syria.
No one has ever been held
accountable for these war crimes; not Bush,
Cheney, Rumsfeld, Bolton and others who
conspired to drag the American people into a
war of aggression based upon lies. And not
the editors of the Times who
produced the propaganda that facilitated
their conspiracy.
On the other hand, those
who oppose war—from Private Chelsea Manning,
who exposed war crimes in Iraq, to Sergeant
Bowe Bergdahl, who was sickened by the
atrocities carried out against the people of
Afghanistan—are submitted to a media
lynching and then given the full measure of
“military justice.”
In publishing Bolton’s
column, the Times is making sure
that it burns no bridges to the most
right-wing and sociopathic layers of the
American ruling establishment. While it may
differ with them now over an imminent
bombing of Iran, future US wars—including
against Russia or China, where the
propaganda mills of the Times are
grinding once again—will undoubtedly bring
them back into sync.