John Pilger: Iran, a war is coming
- Subject: John Pilger: Iran, a war is coming
- From: Roberto Vignoli <rvignoli at gmail.com>
- Date: Thu, 08 Feb 2007 03:05:02 +0100
In his latest piece for the New Statesman, John Pilger describes
American plans to attack Iran, possibly with nuclear weapons. Although
the majority of Americans voted last November to end the war in Iraq,
the Bush cabal remains undeterred by inspid protests from Democrats and
is proceeding with another, even more dangerous adventure. The United States is planning what will be a catastrophic attack on Iran. For the Bush cabal, the attack will be a way of “buying time” for its disaster in Iraq. In announcing what he called a “surge” of American troops in Iraq, George W Bush identified Iran as his real target. “We will interrupt the flow of support [to the insurgency in Iraq] from Iran and Syria”, he said. “And we will seek out and destroy the networks providing advanced weaponry and training to our enemies in Iraq.” “Networks” means Iran. “There is solid evidence,” said a State Department spokesman on 24 January, “that Iranian agents are involved in these networks and that they are working with individuals and groups in Iraq and are being sent there by the Iranian government.” Like Bush’s and Blair’s claim that they had irrefutable evidence that Saddam Hussein was deploying weapons of mass destruction, the “evidence” lacks all credibility. Iran has a natural affinity with the Shia majority of Iraq, and has been implacably opposed to al-Qaeda, condemning the 9/11 attacks and supporting the United States in Afghanistan. Syria has done the same. Investigations by the New York Times, the Los Angeles Times and others, including British military officials, have concluded that Iran is not engaged in the cross-border supply of weapons. General Peter Pace, chairman of the US Joint Chiefs of Staff, has said no such evidence exists. As the American disaster in Iraq deepens and domestic and foreign opposition grows, “neocon” fanatics such as Vice-President Cheney believe their opportunity to control Iran’s oil will pass unless they act no later than the spring. For public consumption, there are potent myths. In concert with Israel and Washington’s Zionist and fundamentalist Christian lobbies, the Bushites say their “strategy” is to end Iran’s nuclear threat. In fact, Iran possesses not a single nuclear weapon nor has it ever threatened to build one; the CIA estimates that, even given the political will, Iran is incapable of building a nuclear weapon before 2017, at the earliest. Unlike Israel and the United States, Iran has abided by the rules of the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty, of which it was an original signatory and has allowed routine inspections under its legal obligations – until gratuitous, punitive measures were added in 2003, at the behest of Washington. No report by the International Atomic Energy Agency has ever cited Iran for diverting its civilian nuclear programme to military use. The IAEA has said that for most of the past three years its inspectors have been able to “go anywhere and see anything”. They inspected the nuclear installations at Isfahan and Natanz on 10 and 12 January and will return on 2 to 6 February. The head of the IAEA, Mohamed El-Baradei says that an attack on Iran will have “catastrophic consequences” and only encourage the regime to become a nuclear power. Unlike its two nemeses, the US and Israel, Iran has attacked no other countries. It last went to war in 1980 when invaded by Saddam Hussein, who was backed and equipped by the US, which supplied chemical and biological weapons produced at a factory in Maryland. Unlike Israel, the world’s fifth military power with thermo-nuclear weapons aimed at Middle-East targets, an unmatched record of defying UN resolutions and the enforcer of the world’s longest illegal occupation, Iran has a history of obeying international law and occupies no territory other than its own. The “threat” from Iran is entirely manufactured, aided and abetted
by familiar, compliant media language that refers to Iran’s “nuclear
ambitions”, just as the vocabulary of Saddam’s non-existent WMD arsenal
became common usage. Accompanying this is a demonising that has become
standard practice. As Edward Herman has pointed out, President Mahmoud
Ahmadinejad, “has done yeoman service in facilitating this”; yet a
close examination of his notorious remark about Israel in October 2005
reveals its distortion. According to Juan Cole, American professor of
Modern Middle History, and other Farsi language analysts, Ahmadinejad
did not call for Israel to be “wiped off the map”. He said, “The regime
occupying Jerusalem must vanish from the page of time”. This, says
Cole, “does not imply military action or killing anyone at all”.
Ahmadinejad compared the demise of the Jerusalem regime to the
dissolution of the Soviet Union. The Iranian ergime is repressive, but
its power is diffuse and exercised by the mullahs, with whom
Ahmadinejad is often at odds. An attack would surely unite them. |
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