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Do We Have the Courage to Stop War with Iran?

wrensis [no longer around] said Sep 3, 2007, 7:37 AM:

 

 

Do We Have the Courage to Stop War with Iran?

By Ray McGovern, AlterNet
Posted on September 3, 2007, Printed on September 3, 2007
http://www.alternet.org/story/61328/

Why do I feel like the proverbial skunk at a Labor Day picnic? Sorry, but I thought you might want to know that this time next year there will probably be more skunks than we can handle. I fear our country is likely to be at war with Iran – and with the thousands of real terrorists Iran can field around the globe.

It is going to happen, folks, unless we put our lawn chairs away on Tuesday, take part in some serious grassroots organizing and take action to prevent a wider war – while we still can.

President George W. Bush's speech Tuesday lays out the Bush/Cheney plan to attack Iran and how the intelligence is being “fixed around the policy,” as was the case before the attack on Iraq.

It's not about putative Iranian “weapons of mass destruction,” not even ostensibly. It is about the requirement for a scapegoat for U.S. reverses in Iraq and the White House's felt need to create a casus belli by provoking Iran in such a way as to “justify” armed retaliation, eventually including air strikes on its nuclear-related facilities.

Bush's Aug. 28 speech to the American Legion comes five years after a very similar presentation by Vice President Dick Cheney. Addressing the Veterans of Foreign Wars on Aug. 26, 2002, Cheney set the meretricious terms of reference for war on Iraq.

Sitting on the same stage that evening was former CENTCOM commander Marine Gen. Anthony Zinni, who was being honored at the VFW convention. Zinni later said he was shocked to hear a depiction of intelligence (Iraq has WMD and is amassing them to use against us) that did not square with what he knew. Although Zinni had retired two years before, his role as consultant had enabled him to stay up to date on key intelligence findings.

“There was no solid proof that Saddam had WMD … I heard a case being made to go to war,” Zinni told Meet the Press three and a half years later.

(Zinni is a straight shooter with considerable courage, and so the question lingers: Why did he not go public? It is all too familiar a conundrum at senior levels; top officials can seldom find their voices. My hunch is that Zinni regrets letting himself be guided by a misplaced professional courtesy and/or slavish adherence to classification restrictions, when he might have prevented our country from starting the kind of war of aggression branded at Nuremberg the “supreme international crime.”)

Cheney: dean of pre-emption

Zinni was not the only one taken aback by Cheney's words. Then-CIA director George Tenet says Cheney's speech took him completely by surprise. In his memoir Tenet wrote, “I had the impression that the president wasn't any more aware than we were of what his No. 2 was going to say to the VFW until he said it.”

Yet, it could have been anticipated. Just five weeks before, Tenet himself had told his British counterpart that the president had decided to make war on Iraq for regime change and that “the intelligence and facts were being fixed around the policy.”

When Bush's senior advisers came back to town after Labor Day, 2002, the next five weeks (and by now, the next five years) were devoted to selling a new product – war on Iraq. The actual decision to attack Iraq, we now know, was made several months earlier but, as then-White House chief of staff Andy Card explained, no sensible salesperson would launch a major new product during the month of August, Cheney's preemptive strike notwithstanding. Yes, that's what Card called the coming war: a “new product.”

After assuring themselves that Tenet was a reliable salesman, Cheney and then-defense secretary Donald Rumsfeld dispatched him and the pliant Powell at State to play supporting roles in the advertising campaign: bogus yellowcake uranium from Niger, aluminum tubes for uranium enrichment, and mobile trailers for manufacturing biological warfare agent, the whole nine yards. The objective was to scare or intimidate Congress into voting for war, and, thanks largely to a robust cheering section in the corporate-controlled media, Congress did so on Oct. 10 and 11, 2002.

This past week saw the president himself, with that same kind of support, pushing a new product – war with Iran. And in the process, he made clear how intelligence is being fixed to “justify” war this time around. The case is too clever by half, but it will be hard for Americans to understand that. Indeed, the Bush/Cheney team expects that the product will sell easily – the more so, since the administration has been able once again to enlist the usual cheerleaders in the media to “catapult the propaganda,” as Bush once put it.

Iran's nuclear plans

It has been like waiting for Godot … the endless wait for the latest National Intelligence Estimate on Iran's nuclear plans. That NIE turns out to be the quintessential dog that didn't bark. The most recent published NIE on the subject was issued two and a half years ago and concluded that Iran could not have a nuclear weapon until “early- to mid-next decade.” That estimate followed a string of NIEs dating back to 1995, which kept predicting, with embarrassing consistency, that Iran was “within five years” of having a nuclear weapon.

The most recent NIE, published in early 2005, extended the timeline and provided still more margin for error. Basically, the timeline was moved 10 years out to 2015 but, in a fit of caution, the drafters settled on the words “early-to-mid next decade.” On Feb. 27, 2007, at his confirmation hearings to become director of national intelligence, Michael McConnell repeated that formula verbatim.

A “final” draft of the follow-up NIE mentioned above had been completed in Feb. 2007, and McConnell no doubt was briefed on its findings prior to his testimony. The fact that this draft has been sent back for revision every other month since February speaks volumes. Judging from McConnell's testimony, the conclusions of the NIE draft of February are probably not alarmist enough for Vice President Dick Cheney. (Shades of Iraq.)

According to one recent report, the target date for publication has now slipped to late fall. How these endless delays can be tolerated is testimony to the fecklessness of the “watchdog” intelligence committees in the House and Senate.

As for Iran's motivation if it plans to go down the path of producing nuclear weapons, newly appointed Defense Secretary Robert Gates was asked about that at his confirmation hearing in December. Just called from the wings to replace Donald Rumsfeld, Gates apparently had not yet read the relevant memo from Cheney's office. It is a safe bet that the avuncular Cheney took Gates to the woodshed, after the nominee suggested that Iran's motivation could be, “in the first instance, deterrence”:

While they [the Iranians] are certainly pressing, in my opinion, for a nuclear capability, I think they would see it in the first instance as a deterrent. They are surrounded by powers with nuclear weapons – Pakistan to the east, the Russians to the north, the Israelis to the west, and us in the Persian Gulf.

Unwelcome news (to the White House)

There they go again, those bureaucrats at the International Atomic Energy Agency. On Aug. 28, the very day Bush was playing up the dangers from Iran, the IAEA released a note of understanding between the IAEA and Iran on the key issue of inspection. The IAEA announced:

The agency has been able to verify the nondiversion of the declared nuclear materials at the enrichment facilities in Iran and has therefore concluded that it remains in peaceful use.

The IAEA deputy director said the plan just agreed to by the IAEA and Iran will enable the two to reach closure by December on the nuclear issues that the IAEA began investigating in 2003. Other IAEA officials now express confidence that they will be able to detect any military diversion or any uranium enrichment above a low grade, as long as the Iran-IAEA safeguard agreement remains intact.

Shades of the preliminary findings of the U.N. inspections – unprecedented in their intrusiveness – that were conducted in Iraq in early 2003 before the United States abruptly warned the United Nations in mid-March to pull out its inspectors, lest they find themselves among those to be shocked and awed.

Vice President Cheney can claim, as he did three days before the attack on Iraq, that the IAEA is simply “wrong.” But Cheney's credibility has sunk to prehistoric levels; witness the fact that the president was told that this time he would have to take the lead in playing up various threats from Iran. And they gave him new words.

The president's new formulation

As I watched the president speak on Aug. 28, I was struck by the care he took in reading the exact words of a new, subjunctive-mood formulation regarding Iran's nuclear intentions. He never looked up; this is what he said:

Iran's active pursuit of technology that could lead to nuclear weapons threatens to put a region already known for instability and violence under the shadow of a nuclear holocaust.

The cautious wording suggests to me that the White House finally has concluded that the “nuclear threat” from Iran is “a dog that won't hunt,” as Lyndon Johnson would have put it. While initial press reporting focused on the “nuclear holocaust” rhetorical flourish, the earlier part of the sentence is more significant, in my view. It is quite different from earlier Bush rhetoric charging categorically that Iran is “pursuing nuclear weapons,” including the following (erroneous) comment at a joint press conference with Afghan President Hamid Karzai in early August:

This [Iran] is a government that has proclaimed its desire to build a nuclear weapon.

The latest news from the IAEA is, for the White House, an unwelcome extra hurdle. And the president's advisers presumably were aware of it well before Bush's speech was finalized; it will be hard to spin. Administration officials would also worry about the possibility that some patriotic truth teller might make the press aware of the key judgments of the languishing draft of the latest NIE on Iran's nuclear capability – or that a courageous officer or official of Gen. Anthony Zinni's stature might feel conscience-bound to try to head off another unnecessary war, by providing a more accurate, less alarmist assessment of the nuclear threat from Iran.

It is just too much of a stretch to suggest that Iran could be a nuclear threat to the United States within the next 17 months, and that's all the time Bush and Cheney have got to honor their open pledge to our “ally” Israel to eliminate Iran's nuclear potential. Besides, some American Jewish groups have become increasingly concerned over the likelihood of serious backlash if young Americans are seen to be fighting and dying to eliminate perceived threats to Israel (but not to the United States). Some of these groups have been quietly urging the White House to back off the nuclear-threat rationale for war on Iran.

The (very) bad news

Bush and Cheney have clearly decided to use alleged Iranian interference in Iraq as the preferred casus belli. And the charges, whether they have merit or not, have become much more bellicose. Thus, Bush on Aug. 28:

Iran's leaders … cannot escape responsibility for aiding attacks against coalition forces … The Iranian regime must halt these actions. And until it does, I will take actions necessary to protect our troops. I have authorized our military commanders in Iraq to confront Tehran's murderous activities.

How convenient: two birds with one stone. Someone to blame for U.S. reverses in Iraq and “justification” to confront the ostensible source of the problem – “deadeners” having been changed to Iran. Vice President Cheney has reportedly been pushing for military retaliation against Iran if the United States finds hard evidence of Iranian complicity in supporting the “insurgents” in Iraq.

President Bush obliged on Aug. 28:

Recently, coalition forces seized 240-millimeter rockets that had been manufactured in Iran this year and that had been provided to Iraqi extremist groups by Iranian agents. The attacks on our bases and our troops by Iranian-supplied munitions have increased in the last few months …

QED

Recent U.S. actions, like arresting Iranian officials in Iraq – eight were abruptly kidnapped and held briefly in Baghdad on Aug. 28, the day Bush addressed the American Legion – suggest an intention to provoke Iran into some kind of action that would justify U.S. “retaliation.” The evolving rhetoric suggests that the most likely immediate targets at this point would be training facilities inside Iran, some 20 targets that are within range of U.S. cruise missiles already in place.

Iranian retaliation would be inevitable and escalation very likely. It strikes me as shamelessly ironic that the likes of our current ambassador at the United Nations, Zalmay Khalilizad, one of the architects of U.S. policy toward the area, are now warning publicly that the current upheaval in the Middle East could bring another world war.

The public buildup

Col. Pat Lang (U.S.A., ret.), as usual, puts it succinctly:

Careful attention to the content of the chatter on the 24/7 news channels reveals a willingness to accept the idea that it is not possible to resolve differences with Iran through diplomacy. Network anchors are increasingly accepting or voicing such views. Are we supposed to believe that this is serendipitous?

And not only that. It is as if Scooter Libby were back writing lead editorials for the Washington Post, the Pravda of this administration. The Post's lead editorial on Aug. 21 regurgitated the allegations that Iran's Revolutionary Guard Corps is “supplying the weapons that are killing a growing number of American soldiers in Iraq;” that it is “waging war against the United States and trying to kill as many American soldiers as possible.” Designating Iran a “specially designated global terrorist” organization, said the Post, “seems to be the least the United States should be doing, giving the soaring number of Iranian-sponsored bomb attacks in Iraq.”

As for the news side of the Post, which is widely perceived as a bit freer from White House influence, its writers are hardly immune. For example, they know how many times the draft National Intelligence Estimate on Iran's nuclear program has been sent back for redrafting … and they know why. Have they been told not to write the story?

For good measure, the indomitable arch-neocon James Woolsey has again entered the fray. He was trotted out on Aug. 14 to tell Lou Dobbs that the United States may have no choice but to bomb Iran in order to halt its nuclear weapons program. Woolsey, who has described himself as the “anchor of the Presbyterian wing of the Jewish Institute for National Security Affairs,” knows what will scare. To Dobbs: “I'm afraid within, well, at worst, a few months; at best, a few years; they [Iran] could have the bomb.”

As for what Bush is telling his counterparts among our allies, reporting on his recent meeting with French President Nicolas Sarkozy are disquieting, to say the least. Reports circulating in European foreign ministries indicate that Sarkozy came away convinced that Bush “is serious about bombing Iran's secret nuclear facilities,” according to well-connected journalist Arnauld De Borchgrave.

It is up to U.S.

Air strikes on Iran seem inevitable, unless grassroots America can arrange a backbone transplant for Congress. The House needs to begin impeachment proceedings without delay. Why? Well, there's the Constitution of the United States, for one thing. For another, the initiation of impeachment proceedings might well give our senior military leaders pause. Do they really want to precipitate a wider war and risk destroying much of what is left of our armed forces for the likes of Bush and Cheney? Is another star on the shoulder worth THAT?

The deterioration of the U.S. position in Iraq, the perceived need for a scapegoat, the knee-jerk deference given to Israel's myopic and ultimately self-defeating security policy, and the fact that time is running out for the Bush/Cheney administration to end Iran's nuclear program together make for a very volatile mix.

So, on Tuesday let's put away the lawn chairs and roll up our sleeves. Let's remember all that has already happened since Labor Day five years ago.

There is very little time to exercise our rights as citizens and stop this madness. At a similarly critical juncture, Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. was typically direct. I find his words a challenge to us today:

There is such a thing as being too late. … Life often leaves us standing bare, naked, and dejected with lost opportunity. … Over the bleached bones of numerous civilizations are written the pathetic words: 'Too late.'

Former CIA analyst Ray McGovern is co-founder of Veteran Intelligence Professionals for Sanity.


View this story online at: http://www.alternet.org/story/61328/
  Pierre : Being

Re: Do We Have the Courage to Stop War with Iran?

Pierre said Sep 3, 2007, 10:47 AM:

 

It seems like everyone is suffering something akin to templar paralysis…
Do we secretly want to see something catastrophic happen… have we been so brainwashed by the soap opera, the movies, the news, the media - that we want to see IF it happens?
Because it will.
And then there will be the gnashing and grinding of teeth. “Oh no”, we protest. “…how could this happen? Why us… what did we do to deserve…” Stuck in our generational childhood pattern.

There will be much political analysis. But what could it do other than fill up airtime and keep people distracted from what's really happening….

I think… it's going to take a cataclysm to wake the sleeping conscience up. On a micro level - the addict only faces the truth - by hitting rock bottom. We're not there yet. Rock bottom is - when the missiles start flying - and the little boys in their sandpit game of soldiers… start their tantrums - live out their dysfunctional childhoods.
What did George endure under George senior. It must have been terrible for him to wreak this kind of violence on the world. What has been the dynamic in “America's 60 Families”?

It is the price of evolution. If we survive it - it might get better. Might. A big might.
It might also really be…

The End.

 

Re: Do We Have the Courage to Stop War with Iran?

wrensis [no longer around] said Sep 3, 2007, 11:43 AM:

 

I got this from three different sources today.  

I seldom  reference Global Reasearch  as a source because they  often exaggerate, The Alternet one which I posted it the first example in a regularly read blog.  My most trusted source Juan Cole of Informed Comment also has it today.

You are sadly astute in your observation that we want to see “What  IF it happens”

The rock and hard place is wanting desperately to be wrong, while the reality of it  is all too vivid.

In a call  to my Senator's office last week I was told by the aide that I was not alone in my fear of  this happening,.  Alone no, powerless yes.

  Bill : practicioner & free

Re: Do We Have the Courage to Stop War with Iran?

Bill said Sep 3, 2007, 5:39 PM:

 

I also think only repeated disasters will wake americans. Which is horribly sad.

The 60 Families - odd, I hadn't heard that term for the masters before, you'd think I would have…

http://www.nndb.com/lists/439/000127058/

  Pierre : Being

Re America's Sixty Families.

Pierre said Sep 4, 2007, 1:30 AM:

 

It is a book which I haven't read but the title struck me as rather revealing with regard to what is coming into the light.  Google reveals quite a bit. Below is one of the links that came up.

http://www.uoregon.edu/~vburris/whorules/readings.htm

  Pierre : Being

America - here it is. What are we gonna do?!

Pierre said Sep 14, 2007, 1:53 AM:

 

 

Fox analyst:

Germany's actions leave us 'no choice' but to bomb Iran

David Edwards and Muriel Kane

Published: Wednesday September 12, 2007

http://rawstory.com//news/2007/Fox_US_makes_Iran_bombing_plan_0912.html

 

According to Fox News, advisers are telling the White House that diplomacy has failed to stop Iran's nuclear program, and as a result officials are making plans to attack Iran as early as next summer.

“A recent decision by German officials to withhold support for any new sanctions against Iran has pushed a broad spectrum of officials in Washington to develop potential scenarios for a military attack on the Islamic regime,” Fox reported on Tuesday.

Lt. Gen. (ret.) Thomas McInerney told Fox, “Since Germany has backed out of helping economically, we do not have any other choice. … They've forced us into the military option.”

 
“I think the option should initially be tit-for-tat,” McInerney went

on. “For every explosively formed projectile from Iran that goes off in

Iraq, two go off in Iran, no questions asked.”

 

“The one I favor the most, of course, is an air campaign,” he

continued. “Forty-eight hours duration, hitting 2500 aimed points to take out

their nuclear facilities, their air defense facilities, their air force,

their navy, their Shahab-3 retaliatory missiles, and finally their command

and control. And then let the Iranian people take their country back.”

 

McInerney described such a bombing campaign as “easy” and spoke

enthusiastically of the weaponry involved, including “a new massive

ordnance penetrator that's 30,000 pounds, that really penetrates …

Ahmadinejad has nothing in Iran that we can't penetrate.”

 

Although introduced by Fox merely as a military analyst, McInerney has

been prominent for several years as an advocate of war against Iran and

chairs the advisory council of the hardline Iran Policy Committee,

known for its backing of the anti-Iranian terrorist group, MEK. McInerney was

quoted in February 2005 as saying, “[Bush] doesn't have any choice. “He

understands [the Iranians] are the king of terror right now. They are

striving for nuclear weapons that can get into the hands of terrorists,

and then it's too late.”

#

 

Excerpts from Fox article:

 

Germany - a pivotal player among three European nations to rein in

Iran's nuclear program over the last two-and-a-half years through a

mixture of diplomacy and sanctions supported by the United States -

notified its allies last week that the government of Chancellor Angela

Merkel refuses to support the imposition of any further sanctions

against Iran that could be imposed by the U.N. Security Council.

 

Consequently, according to a well-placed Bush administration source,

“everyone in town” is now participating in a broad discussion about the

costs and benefits of military action against Iran, with the likely

timeframe for any such course of action being over the next eight to 10

months, after the presidential primaries have probably been decided,

but well before the November 2008 elections.

 

The discussions are now focused on two basic options: less invasive

scenarios under which the U.S. might blockade Iranian imports of

gasoline or exports of oil, actions generally thought to exact too high

a cost on the Iranian people but not enough on the regime in Tehran;

and full-scale aerial bombardment.

 

On the latter course, active consideration is being given as to how

long it would take to degrade Iranian air defenses before American air

superiority could be established and U.S. fighter jets could then begin

a systematic attack on Iran's known nuclear targets.

  Pierre : Being

Re: Do We Have the Courage to Stop War with Iran?

Pierre said Sep 14, 2007, 3:34 AM:

 

rense.com

‘We Are Going To
Hit Iran…Bigtime’
Maccabee
9-2-7

I have a friend who is an LSO on a carrier attack group that is planning and staging a strike group deployment into the Gulf of Hormuz. (LSO: Landing Signal Officer- she directs carrier aircraft while landing) She told me we are going to attack Iran. She said that all the Air Operation Planning and Asset Tasking are finished. That means that all the targets have been chosen, prioritized, and tasked to specific aircraft, bases, carriers, missile cruisers and so forth.
I asked her why she is telling me this.
Her answer was really amazing…
She started in the Marines and after 8 years her term was up. She had served on a smaller Marine carrier, and found out through a friend knew there was an opening for a junior grade LSO in a training position on a supercarrier. She used the reference and the information and applied for a transfer to the United States Navy. Since she had experience landing F-18Cs and Cobra Gunships, and an unblemished combat record, she was ratcheted into the job, successfully changing from the Marines to the Navy. Her role is still aligned with the Marines since she generally is assigned to liason with the Marine units deploying off her carrier group.
Like most Marines and former Marines, she is largely apolitical. The fact is, most Marines are trigger pullers and most trigger pullers could care less who the President is. They simply want to be the tip of the sword when it comes to defending the country. She voted once in her life and otherwise was always in some forward post on the water during election season.
Something is wrong with the Navy and the Marines in her view. Always ready to go in harms way, Marines rarely ever question unless it’s a matter of tactics or honor. But something seems awry. Junior and senior officers are starting to grumble, roll their eyes in the hallways. The strain of deployments is beginning to hit every jot and tittle of the Marines and it’s beginning to seep into the daily conversation of Marines and Naval officers in command decision.
“I know this will sound crazy coming from a Naval officer”, she said. “But we’re all just waiting for this administration to end. Things that happen at the senior officer level seem more and more to happen outside of the purview of XOs and other officers who typically have a say-so in daily combat and flight operations. Today, orders just come down from the mountaintop and there’s no questioning. In fact, there is no discussing it. I have seen more than one senior commander disappear and then three weeks later we find out that he has been replaced. That’s really weird. It’s also really weird because everyone who has disappeared has questioned whether or not we should be staging a massive attack on Iran.”
“We’re not stupid. Most of the members of the fleet read well enough to know what is going on world-wise. We also realize that anyone who has any doubts is in danger of having a long military career yanked out from under them. Keep in mind that most of the people I serve with are happy to be a part of the global war on terror. It’s just that the touch points are what we see since we are the ones out here who are supposedly implementing this grand strategy. But when you liason with administration officials who don’t know that Iranians don’t speak Arabic and have no idea what Iranians live like, then you start having second thoughts about whether these Administration officials are even competent.”
I asked her about the attack, how limited and so forth.
“I don’t think it’s limited at all. We are shipping in and assigning every damn Tomahawk we have in inventory. I think this is going to be massive and sudden, like thousands of targets. I believe that no American will know when it happens until after it happens. And the consequences…whatever the consequences…they will have to be lived with. I am sure if my father knew I was telling someone in a news organization that we were about to launch a supposedly secret attack that it would be treason. But something inside me tells me to tell it anyway.”
I asked her why she was suddenly so cynical.
“I have become cynical only recently. I also don’t believe anyone will be able to stop this. Bush has become something of an Emperor. He will give the command, and cruise missiles will fly and aircraft will fly and people will die, and yet few of us here are really able to cobble together a great explanation of why this is a good idea. Of course many of us can give you the 4H Club lecture on democracy in the Mid East. But if you asked any of the flight officers whether they have a clear idea of what the goal of this strike is, your answer would sound like something out of a think tank policy paper. But it’s not like Kosovo or when we relieved the tsunami victims. There everyone could tell you in a sentence what we were here doing.”
“That’s what’s missing. A real sense of purpose. What’s missing is the answer to what the hell are we doing out here threatening this country with all this power? Last night in the galley, an ensign asked what right do we have to tell a sovereign nation that they can’t build a nuke. I mean the table got EF Hutton quiet. Not so much because the man was asking a question that was off culture. But that he was asking a good question. In fact, the discussion actually followed afterwards topside where someone in our group had to smoke a cigarette. The discussion was intelligent but also in lowered voices. It’s like we aren’t allowed to ask the questions that we always ask before combat. It’s almost as if the average seaman or soldier is doing all the policy work.”
She had to hang up. She left by telling me that she believes the attack is a done deal. “It’s only a matter of time before their orders come and they will be sent to station and told to go to Red Alert. She said they were already practicing traps, FARP and FAST.” (Trapping is the act of catching the tension wires when landing on the carrier, FARP is Fleet Air Combat Maneuvering Readiness Program- practice dogfighting- and FAST is Fleet Air Superiority Training).
She seemed lost. The first time in my life I have ever heard her sound off rhythm, or unsure of why she is doing something. She knows that there is something rotten in the Naval Command and she, like many of her associates are just hoping that the election brings in someone new, some new situation, or something.
“Yes. We’re gong to hit Iran, bigtime. Whatever political discussions that are going on is window dressing and perhaps even a red herring. I see what’s going on below deck here in the hangars and weapons bays. And I have a sick feeling about how it’s all going to turn out.”

 

Re: Do We Have the Courage to Stop War with Iran?

wrensis [no longer around] said Sep 16, 2007, 7:45 AM:

 

 

US-Iranian tensions have mounted significantly in the past few days. The Guardian reports that the U.S. has decided to establish a military base in Iraq less than five miles from the Iranian border.

Watch our latest interviews with Aijaz Ahmed from New Delhi and Pepe Escobar from Paris. Ahmed is a Senior Editorial Consultant for The Real News and political commentator for the Indian newsmagazine, Frontline. Aijaz Ahmed has taught Political Science and written widely on South Asia and the Middle East.

During Part 1 of his interview, Ahmed talks to Senior Editor Paul Jay, about the White House threats towards Iran. Ahmed declares, “This administration is determined to attack Iran before it leaves office.”

Ahmed then explores in Part 2, Iran's commitments to the Nuclear Non-proliferation Treaty, “They must commit themselves to not producing the weapon, which they have. They must commit themselves to inspections, which they have. They have a sovereign right to create, to pursue enrichment for peaceful purposes.”

In his latest interview, Pepe Escobar, Real News correspondent and writer for The Asia Times Online, answers the question, can the White House intimidate Iran? “Persian society has been around for thousands of years and they don't scare easily.”

The second segment of this two-part interview examines the possible confrontation between the U.S. and Iran. “The original plan is to dismantle, to provoke regime change in Iran and to appropriate Iran's oil and gas.”

Watch the interviews with Aijaz Ahmed and Pepe Escobar at therealnews.com.

Today, The Guardian carries a report: Proxy War Could Soon Turn to Direct Conflict, Analysts Warn by Julian Borger and Ian Black. US strikes on Iran predicted as tension rises over arms smuggling and nuclear fears.The growing US focus on confronting Iran in a proxy war inside Iraq risks triggering a direct conflict in the next few months, regional analysts are warning.US-Iranian tensions have mounted significantly in the past few days, with heightened rhetoric on both sides and the US decision to establish a military base in Iraq less than five miles from the Iranian border to block the smuggling of Iranian arms to Shia militias.

We hope you find these interviews interesting and of value.

Thank you for your continued support of The Real News Network.

Paul Jay and The Real News Network Team