Bazooka Joe
Biden Goes Ballistic… With Hypocrisy
By
Finian Cunningham
March 10,
2016 "Information
Clearing House"
- "American
Herald Tribune"
- While on a visit to nuclear-weaponzied Israel this
week, US Vice-President Joe Biden threatened Iran
with unspecified “action”over its testing of two
long-range ballistic missiles.
Biden, who
is nicknamed Bazooka Joe for his blunt rhetorical
style, displayed typical American hypocrisy over his
warning to Iran. He issued his admonition while
in Tel Aviv alongside Prime Minister Benjamin
Netanyahu, whose state is known to be armed with as
many as 300 nuclear warheads in defiance of the
Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT).
Earlier,
Iran reportedly tested the ballistic missiles on its
own remote territory. Each were said to have range
of over 1,000 kilometers, and an Iranian military
spokesman said the weapons were capable of hitting
Israel.
Biden did
not specify what the US action towards Iran would
entail. But given that Washington has repeatedly
violated international laws forbidding the mere
verbalizing of aggression by threatening that “all
options are on the table”with regard to Iran, the US
action could mean a military response. Or it could
mean the US blocking the lifting of economic
sanctions as part of the international nuclear
accord signed last July with Iran and the P5+1 group
of world powers.
For its
part, Iran said that the missiles tested this week
were for conventional, non-nuclear warheads. Tehran
rejected US claims that it had violated the P5+1
nuclear accord, which mandates that Iran foregoes
any nuclear weapons development. Iran says it has
the right to develop all conventional weapons for
defensive purposes.
Given that
Israel actually does possess nuclear missiles and,
like the US, has illegally threatened Iran on
countless occasions with pre-emptive military
strikes, one could reasonably expect Iran to develop
long-range missiles for defense.
Only two
weeks ago, the US test-fired two Intercontinental
Ballistic Missiles (ICBMs),
according to Reuters. The Minuteman III missiles
were launched from Vandenberg Air Force Base in
California to hit targets more than 6,500 kilometers
away in the South Pacific. The difference with the
Iranian missile tests this week is that the American
weapons are expressly designed to carry nuclear
warheads. Though the California test-fired missiles
were on that occasion reportedly not armed with
nukes.
But as
deputy defense secretary Robert Work said at the
time: “We and the Russians and the Chinese routinely
do test shots to prove that the operational missiles
that we have are reliable. And that is a signal…
that we are prepared to use nuclear weapons in
defense of our country if necessary.”
According
to Reuters, the US launch was the 15th such
nuclear-capable ICBM test-fire since January 2011.
That’s a rate of three per year.
Russia has
reportedly carried out a total of 16 nuclear-capable
ICBM test launches over a 25-year period since the
end of the Soviet Union. That is less than one per
year. A
report earlier this month said that Russia was
about to conduct ICBM test-launches from
nuclear-powered submarines in the Barents Sea.
Many
analysts
reckon that the world is witnessing a new
nuclear arms race. The US appears to be leading this
race, with the administration of President Barack
Obama having
committed more than $1 trillion over the next
three decades to upgrade the US nuclear arsenal.
The US has
more than 4,700 warheads in military service,
according to the Arms Control Association. This
is more than any other country, although Russia is
close behind with 4,500. Between them, the US and
Russia possess 90 per cent of the world’s entire
stockpile of these weapons of mass destruction.
And lest we
forget, the US is the only country to have ever
actually used nuclear weapons when it destroyed the
Japanese cities of Hiroshima and Nagasaki in August
1945, killing over 200,000 mainly civilians
instantly.
This is the
reality check that Washington needs, but few of its
politicians seem amenable to. Instead, US
politicians have an in-built double-think mental
device that comes with years of indoctrination on
“American exceptionalism”.
For more
than 40 years since the signing of the NPT, the
world is nowhere near the nuclear disarmament that
it mandates of more than 160 signatory nations,
including the US. Israel being a US-sponsored rogue
state is not even a signatory of the NPT.
President
Obama received a Noble Peace Prize back in 2009
because of a speech that ostensibly committed his
nation to nuclear disarmament. Reuters
described Obama’s renewed spending on nukes an
“ironic turn”. Some would simply call it a gross
deception.
With North
Korea last week threatening “pre-emptive nuclear
strikes”on top of an alleged ICBM test only weeks
before, it does seem that the world has indeed
entered a new, dangerous arms race.
The only
reasonable way forward is for a concerted
international program of mutual disarmament. The
logistics of a verifiable process of reduction are
not beyond the means of practical human feasibility.
This call was made 53 years ago by US President John
F Kennedy in a landmark speech at the American
University in Washington on June 10, 1963.
The main
insurmountable problem since then has been official
American hypocrisy. The US evidently presumes the
right to maintain the world’s biggest arsenal, while
excoriating other states like North Korea and Iran
for allegedly contemplating the development of the
same weapons.
Joe Biden
speaking in a state this week that continues to
illegally occupy Palestinian land in defiance of
countless UN resolutions, a state which possesses
nuclear weapons outside of any international
control, and yet Biden chooses to focus his
admonishment on Iran based on spurious complaints
–now that demonstrates that American hypocrisy
really has gone ballistic and is not coming back to
Earth any time soon.
Finian Cunningham (born 1963) has written
extensively on international affairs, with
articles published in several languages. For
over 20 years, he worked as an editor and
writer in major news media organisations,
including The Mirror, Irish Times and
Independent.
|