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2/8/07
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The U.S. will not leave Iraq without first militarily weakening Iran
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By Siddharth Varadarajan, The
Hindu
From
mega surge to dual rollback
EVER SINCE the Islamic
Revolution of 1979 took Tehran out of Washington's
orbit, the United States has
run its Iraq policy with one
eye firmly planted on Iran.
In the 1980s, the
U.S. supported Saddam
Hussein's war against Iran and protected him in the United
Nations Security Council even after it became clear the Iraqi regime had used
chemical weapons. Iraq's
August 1990 invasion of Kuwait made Washington much more hostile towards Baghdad but its preferred policy became that of "dual
containment" of Iraq and
Iran rather than of
rapprochement with Tehran. After evicting the Iraqi army from
Kuwait in 1991, George Bush
Sr. had the option of pressing ahead till Baghdad. He chose not to because he did not
wish to create a situation that might favour Iran, a country the U.S. considered a more challenging adversary than
Iraq.
Regime change was still
a goal but the thought that the downfall of the Ba'athist regime would lead to
the rise of Iraqi political forces sympathetic to Iran acted as a deterrent
against full-scale aggression, even for the "liberal internationalist" Bill
Clinton. Throughout the 1990s, then, the White House used sanctions and air
power to keep Saddam Hussein "in his box." More than half-a-million Iraqis died
during this period as a direct result of the U.N.-enforced embargo or because
the air strikes launched by U.S. pilots often missed their
intended targets.
As for Iran, the White House worked closely
with Congress to pass legislation that threatened penalties on companies from
third countries investing more than $40 million in the oil and gas sector of the
Islamic Republic. The idea was to weaken the Iranian economy by starving its
principal income source of foreign technology and capital. Iran's civilian nuclear industry, which the
U.S. had actively encouraged
during the Shah's time, was also deemed verboten: Open attempts at fuel cycle
collaboration with China,
Argentina, and the
International Atomic Energy Agency reached a dead-end thanks to
U.S. pressure, forcing the Iranian
authorities to resort to concealment.
Though premised on conventional
balance of power calculations, dual containment was never intended to be an
open-ended policy of eschewing force. Indeed, by the end of the 1990s, Neocon
lobbyists had begun pressing for a shift from dual containment to "dual
rollback," an ambitious strategy that envisaged the use of both military and
non-military pressure to bring about regime change in Iraq and Iran and thereby strengthen U.S. and Israeli
interests in the region.
The beauty of dual rollback was that it accepted
the logic of dual containment but turned its prescriptions inside out: If
attacking Iraq meant
strengthening Iran, the Neocon answer was not "dual
appeasement" but dual war.
In principle at least, the Pentagon's
post-Cold War plans for the U.S. armed forces allowed for this
extreme scenario. These envisaged America simultaneously fighting and winning two
wars against a major regional adversary in two geographical theatres as far
apart as West Asia and East Asia, not to speak
of two enemies in the same region. The triumph of air power in Nato's
Yugoslavia war of 1999 further
broadened the menu of "rollback" or "regime change" options available to
military planners.
Despite the ascendancy of the Neocons in the first
months of the George W. Bush presidency, however, it did seem as if dual
rollback and the two-war doctrine would take a back seat. Donald Rumsfeld, who
served as Defence Secretary till the end of 2006, initially took the line that
the hardware acquisitions required to sustain the two-war doctrine might come in
the way of military modernisation. But in the wake of 9/11, he not only embraced
the doctrine but expanded it to the new formula of 1-4-2-1: that the U.S.
military should be prepared to defend the homeland, deter aggression in four
distinct parts of the world, wage and win wars against two major regional
powers, and be in a position to occupy the capital of at least one
adversary.
Today, the U.S. has gone beyond the exacting
requirements of 1-4-2-1. It brought about regime change in both
Afghanistan and
Iraq and remains in occupation of not
one but two countries. And despite having no doctrine or force-planning to cope
with sustained insurgency in both theatres, the Bush administration has begun
preparations for a military campaign against Iran.
Dangerous
consensus
By
abandoning dual containment in March 2003 and going for the kill in
Iraq, President Bush produced the
very outcome his father's advisers had warned against in 1991.
Iran today has close ties with both
the U.S.-installed regime of Nouri al-Maliki as well as with the Shia militia of
Moqtada al-Sadr. It has gained unprecedented influence in Iraq. Mad as it
seems, then, the U.S. is coming around to the view that the only way to get out
of the mess is to push for dual rollback, to light a big fire in order to
extinguish the smaller one.
Notwithstanding the Iraq Study Group's
`Realist' call for dialogue with Iran — a call that was rejected for sound
Realist reasons of not wanting to further strengthen Tehran's hand — it is only
the targeting of Iran that has the capacity to bring together all of
Washington's warring tribes onto one platform. The Republicans and Democrats can
spar endlessly on how the Iraq fiasco should end but no presidential candidate
worth his or her salt will oppose the use of the `military option' against Iran
as and when President Bush takes the call. It is worth noting that in the past
10 days at least two Democratic contenders, Hillary Clinton and John Edwards,
have addressed gatherings of Israeli lobbyists and used bellicose language
against Tehran.
The Bush administration's case
for military action against Iran is being made in three distinct
ways.
On the nuclear question, Washington's aim is to provoke Iran to quit the
Nuclear Nonproliferation Treaty (NPT) or throw out IAEA inspectors and
monitoring equipment. Since the IAEA has yet to find any evidence that
Iran has diverted nuclear
material for a prohibited purpose, Tehran has been pushed into the impossible
situation of being asked to demonstrate it has no clandestine activities and to
hold its nuclear fuel cycle activities in abeyance till then. Using the threat
of unilateral military force as a lever, the U.S. has persuaded the UNSC to impose limited
sanctions on Iran. But since it is impossible for
Tehran to prove a negative, Washington will soon
start pressing for tougher sanctions. At some point, the Bush administration
hopes, Iranian hawks will say enough is enough and walk out of the NPT, thereby
providing the U.S. a rationale for the use of
force.
It is not accidental that the U.S. has scuttled every initiative that could
have provided a diplomatic solution to the Iran crisis.
Last year, it killed the Russian proposal for Iran to combine limited enrichment activity
onshore with more elaborate facilities inside Russia. Another
was the suggestion made last autumn that Iran suspend
enrichment after talks with the European Union resumed, and not as a
precondition. Most recently, IAEA director general Mohammad el-Baradei's
proposal for a "time out" in which the U.N. suspends its sanctions as
Iran's suspends enrichment
has been dismissed by the U.S.
And yet, nuclear
scare-mongering may not serve as a sufficient excuse at a time when the
U.S. public has grown increasingly
wary of wars related to weapons of mass destruction (WMD). So a second
justification is being trotted out — that Iran is directly helping Iraqi insurgents mount
deadly attacks on U.S. soldiers. Last week, for
example, the `Realist' Defence Secretary, Robert Gates, claimed 70 per cent of
IED attacks on American soldiers were linked to Iran. The arrest
of Iranian officials in Erbil by U.S. soldiers and the presidential
shoot-to-kill order against "Iranian operatives" in Iraq barely days after Mr.
Bush's aggressive State of the Union speech last month suggest the White House
is serious about upping the ante.
There is also a third card, aimed
perhaps primarily at reluctant Realists. This is the absurd suggestion that if
the U.S. does not itself act
quickly against Iran, the
Israeli regime might somehow jump the gun and launch a bombing run or two
against Iranian nuclear facilities with consequences far more disastrous than if
the U.S. were to do the
job.
Against this backdrop, the proposed "surge" of U.S. troops in Iraq — which is
really a mega-surge involving at least another 50,000 soldiers — is clearly
intended to serve an objective additional to the stated one. Yes, the
U.S. would like to stop
bleeding in Iraq, but it is
not going to withdraw without first weakening Iran to the
point of rollback.
Indeed, the deployment of a second U.S. aircraft
carrier task force to the Persian Gulf gives the Pentagon's planners an
additional "sea base" from which to attack Iranian military and nuclear
facilities. To be sure, any military action against Iran would
likely follow the Yugoslav rather than the Iraqi war model, with the prolonged
and extensive use of airpower in place of a ground invasion. But a beefed up
ground force is needed to deal with the fallout inside Iraq of any U.S. aggression against Iran.
If
Russia, India, China, and Europe have any sense, they should find a collective way
of averting this impending disaster. The world today is paying dearly for not
having stopped the invasion of Iraq. Appeasing Washington again is
simply not an option.
... Payvand News - 2/8/07 ... --
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