Barak’s Tales of Israel's Near War With Iran
Conceal The Real Story
A good cop/bad cop routine by the US and Israel was in fact a
strategy to get crippling sanctions against Iran approved by the UN
Security Council
By Gareth Porter
August 30, 2015 "Information
Clearing House" -
Middle East Eye
- New
evidence has now surfaced from former Israeli defense minister Ehud
Barak that Israel came close to attacking Iran three times over the
past few years – if you believe what
major
news media reported about the story.
But you shouldn’t believe it. The latest story is
only a continuation of the clever ploy that has been carried out by
Israeli administrations from Ehud Olmert to Benjamin Netanyahu to
convince the world that it was seriously contemplating war against
Iran in order to pressure them toward crippling sanctions against
Iran, if not military confrontation with it.
And there is even very strong circumstantial
evidence that the Obama administration was consciously playing its
part in a “good cop/bad cop routine” with the Israelis over the
ostensible Israeli war threat until early 2012 to influence other
states’ Iran policies and gain political leverage on Iran.
The latest episode in the seemingly endless story
of Israel’s threat of war followed the broadcast in Israel of
interviews by Barak for a new biography. The New York Times’
Jodi Rudoren reported that, in those interviews, Barak “revealed
new details to his biographers about how close Israel came to
striking Iran”. Barak “said that he and Mr. Netanyahu were ready to
attack Iran each year,” but claimed that something always went
wrong. Barak referred to three distinct episodes from 2010 through
2012 in which the he and Netanyahu were supposedly maneuvering to
bring about an air attack on Iran’s nuclear program.
But a closer look at Barak’s claims shows that in
reality neither Barak nor Netanyahu were really ready to go to war
against Iran.
One of the episodes occurred in 2010 when
Netanyahu ordered the Israeli army to put Israeli forces on the
highest possible state of alert reserved for preparation for actual
war, only to be frustrated by the refusal of Israeli army chief of
staff Ashkenazi to the order. But an Israeli television program on
the episode aired in a television special in 2012
suggested that the order was not intended as a prelude to war.
Although the television account was not allowed to
give the date of the episode, it is consistent with what happened on
17 May, 2010, when Turkish prime minister Recept Tayyip Erdogan and
Brazilian President Luiz Inacio Da Silva reached an agreement with
Iran on a “fuel swap” deal. Netanyahu regarded
the agreement as a maneuver to derail a new UN Security Council
agreement on sanctions, but the government issued no public
statement that day.
Barak denied on the Israeli program that he and
Netanyahu had intended to go through with an actual attack, which
implied that it was to be a short-term bluff to ensure that the
sanctions agreement would go through. Ashkenazi’s opposition to the
order was not that it was intended to take Israel into war, but that
it could easily provoke a military response from Iran.
Both Barak and Ashkenazi agreed on the program,
and moreover, that the Israeli army lacked the capability to carry
out a successful strike against Iran without US involvement.
That agreement reflected a broad consensus within
the Israeli security elite that Israel could not carry out a
successful operation against Iran without the full involvement of
the United States. Nevertheless, that elite believed that the threat
was necessary to pressure the rest of the world to act on Iran. As
Yossi Alpher, a former aide to Barak, told me in 2012, most retired
national security officials were totally opposed to an attack on
Iran, but they remained silent because they did want to “spoil
Bibi’s successful bluster”.
A second episode to which Barak refers to in his
interviews involves his demanding that the United States postpone
the joint military exercise planned for Spring 2012, which he now
says he did in order to be able to order an attack on Iran during
that period without implicating the United States in the decision.
But the postponement was announced in mid-January 2012, in plenty of
time for Barak to plan the strike against Iran – if that is indeed
what he and Netanyahu had intended. Instead, it didn’t happen, and
Barak offers no real explanation, commenting that they were “still
unable to find the right moment”.
The Obama administration pretended to be alarmed
about Netanyahu’s readiness to attack. But Obama was actually
playing along with the Israeli strategy in order to line up support
for a more aggressive regime of sanctions and then to put pressure
on Iran to enter into negotiations aimed at closing down its
enrichment program.
Gary Samore, Obama’s adviser on WMD, had openly
espoused the notion before taking that job that the United States
should exploit an Israeli threat to attack Iran to put pressure on
the Iranians over their nuclear program. At a Harvard University
symposium in September 2008,
Samore opined that the next administration would not want to
“act in a way that precludes the [Israeli] threat, because we’re
using the threat as a political instrument”.
The Obama administration’s policy toward Iran
clearly applied that Samore strategy early and often. Within weeks
of his arrival in the White House, on 1 April, 2009, Obama’s
Secretary of Defense Robert Gates and the Commander of CENTCOM David
Petraeus both
commented
publicly that Israel was bound to attack Iran within a matter of
a few years at most, unless Iran came to heel on its nuclear
program.
And in mid-November 2009,
Obama sent Dennis Ross and Jeffrey Bader of the White House
staff to Beijing to warn the Chinese that the United States could
not restrain Israel from an attack on Iran much longer unless the
Security Council adopted a strong package of tough economic
sanctions against Iran.
That diplomatic exploitation of the Israeli threat
came seven months after Haaretz
reported in May 2009, that CIA director Leon Panetta had just
obtained a commitment from Netanyahu and Barak that they would not
take military action without consulting Washington first. That
commitment reflected a reality that most senior national security
officials accepted – that Israel could not attack Iran without US
cooperation.
What happened in late 2011 and early 2012 was a
“good cop/bad cop” routine by Panetta and Barak at a historical
juncture when the United States and Israel were cooperating closely
in a strategy to get crippling sanctions against Iran approved in
the UN Security Council while pressuring Iran to begin negotiating
on its enrichment program.
Panetta’s role in the routine was to wring his
hands over alleged indications that Israel was intent on a strike in
the spring. But Panetta’s
interview with David Ignatius in early February 2012 in which he
warned of the “strong likelihood” of an Israeli attack in “April,
May or June” included a clear giveaway that the real purpose of his
warning was to gain diplomatic leverage on Iran. He suggested to the
Iranians that there were two ways to “dissuade the Israelis from
such an attack”: either Iran could begin serious negotiations on its
nuclear program, or the United States could step up its own
cyber-attacks against Iran.
Later that year, of course, Obama would break
dramatically with Netanyahu’s strategy. But despite that clear
indication in early 2012 that Panetta was playing a game that suited
the interests of both administrations, consumers of the world’s
commercial news media were led to believe that Barak and Netanyahu
were on the brink of war.
Barak himself is still peddling that same
warmed-over, patently false tale of near war-war with Iran. And in
one more indicator of the degree to which the media parrot the
Israeli line on Iran, they are still reporting it as unquestioned
fact today.
Gareth Porter, an investigative historian and
journalist specializing in U.S. national security policy, received
the UK-based Gellhorn Prize for journalism for 2011 for articles on
the U.S. war in Afghanistan. His new book is
Manufactured Crisis: the Untold Story of the Iran Nuclear Scare.
He can be contacted at
porter.gareth50@gmail.com.