By Ira Glunts (source: Bay Area Indymedia, CA)
Despite the expectation of easy passage, AIPAC's controversial resolution is stalled in committee. The efforts of antiwar groups who mobilized messages of protest proved fruitful, but the debate over the use of military force in Iran is just beginning.
Ordinarily, the American Israel Policy Action
Committee (AIPAC) has an influence on U.S. foreign policy way which goes
unchallenged. In the case of the current
House
resolution, H. Con. Res. 362, despite the intense pressure exerted by AIPAC,
some members of the United States House of Representatives who initially were
about to rubber stamp this reckless non-binding resolution promoted by the
powerful pro-Israel lobbying group, are having a change of heart. After
receiving many thousands of messages which pointed out that the resolution could
be interpreted as Congressional authorization for military action against Iran,
legislators began expressing their own reservations.
On May 19, 2008, a 12-member House delegation led by House Speaker Pelosi met
with Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert. At that lunch meeting,
Olmert proposed that a
naval blockade be imposed on Iran in order to stop its uranium enrichment
program. Present at this meeting were: Majority Leader Steny Hoyer, House
Foreign Affairs Committee Chairman Howard Berman, and AIPAC loyalists Reps. Nita
Lowey and Gary Ackerman. Three days after this meeting, Mr. Ackerman introduced
the resolution H. Con. Res. 362 in the House.
The legislation calls for prohibiting the export to Iran of all refined
petroleum products; imposing stringent inspection requirements on all persons,
vehicles, ships, planes, trains, and cargo entering or departing Iran. This
certainly sounds as if the resolution is seeking the blockade which Prime
Minister Olmert had requested. A military blockade is an act of war. The passage
of this resolution would add the voice of the United States House of
Representatives to the growing calls for armed intervention against Iran.
AIPAC, the highly influential advocate for the Israeli government on Capitol
Hill, is the author and tireless promoter of H. Con. Res. 362. Israel has openly
declared that it seeks armed intervention in order to prevent Iran from
developing a nuclear weapons capability. There are many in the Bush
administration who are known to favor bombing either Irans alleged nuclear
weapons sites or their military bases, among them, Vice President Dick Cheney.
It was reported in Israel and has since been
corroborated by Time, that during the Presidents May visit to
Israel, the U.S. delegation convinced the Israelis that America would attack
Iran before the Bush term expired. Time claims that the administration
has reversed its policy and now favors negotiations, although the U.S.
governments true intentions are not actually known.
Over 5000 AIPAC activists went to The Hill at the beginning of June, where in
500 separate meetings, they lectured our representatives and Senators about the
great importance American supporters of Israel attribute to the swift passage of
their Iran legislation.
Initially, the results were predictable based on past performance. Congressman
rushed to offer their support. As of today, 252 members of Congress have
co-sponsored the legislation in a truly extraordinary show of loyalty to the
pro-Israel lobby. An unnamed AIPAC official predicted the legislation would
quickly and easily become law with no amendments, like a hot knife through
butter. But strangely that did not happen.
The legislation is presently stalled.
Mark Weisbrot reported that the Chairman of the House Foreign Relations
Committee, Rep. Howard Berman, has promised that H. Con. Res. 362 will not be
reported out of the committee until the blockade clause is removed. Ghandi Peace
Brigade
activist Leslie Angeline wrote, after lobbying on the Hill, that Berman
indicated he had "no intention of moving the bill through his committee unless
the language is first altered to ensure that there is no possible way it could
be construed as authorizing any type of military action against Iran." My
requests to the House Foreign Relations Committee for information about the
immediate future of the resolution and to verify statements attributed to Berman
did not receive a response.
Many people, already alarmed by U.S. and Israeli saber-rattling, were startled
at the aggressive tone of the AIPAC resolution. They reacted especially
adversely to the clause prohibiting imports of refined petroleum which appeared
to demand a blockade. Even if a blockade did not materialize, passage of the
resolution could be understood by the Bush administration as a Congressional
authorization for the use of force against Iran. At the very least, passage of
H. Con. Res. 362 would indicate a lack of Congressional resolve to prevent the
U.S. from expanding Americas Middle East war to Iran. This is especially
worrisome in light of the fact that, as Seymour Hersh has written in The New
Yorker, a Congressional delegation led by Nancy Pelosi has already
authorized 400 million dollars for covert operations in Iran aimed at arming
dissident groups and subverting Iranian nuclear sites.
Galvanized by the extreme language of the AIPAC resolution and the growing
evidence that both the U.S. and Israel are considering an attack on Iran before
the end of Bushs presidency, activist groups started asking their members to
send emails and make phone calls to their legislators in order to express
concerns about H. Con. Res. 362. Among the groups that had formal actions were
Peace Action, United for Peace and Justice, the National Iranian-American
Council, the Friends Committee on National Legislation, Code Pink, Just Foreign
Policy, the Madison Institute for Peace and Progressivism, Jstreet, Voters for
Peace, AfterDowningStreet, and the Campaign Against Sanctions and Military
Intervention in Iran. According to reports, members of the House of
Representatives received tens of thousands of messages asking lawmakers to
oppose the legislation, many specifically citing the blockade clause.
The non-binding resolution is built on a series of assumptions which selectively
and inaccurately reflect the conclusions of the American intelligence and United
Nations intelligence sources. The legislation ignores the key conclusion of the
National Intelligence Estimate (NIE) and the International Atomic Energy Agency
(IAEA) which state that there is no hard evidence that Iran has an active
nuclear program. The NIE report, which was published in November 2007, states
that evidence indicates that Iran abandoned its nuclear weapons program in 2003.
Rep. Gary Ackerman has written two separate letters to the members of the House
which explain the importance of his resolution. He described as nonsense the
claim that the legislation calls for a blockade of Iran. Ackerman stated that
the qualifying clause which expressly says that the resolution should not be
taken to assert that military force should be used against Iran, makes it clear
that no use of such force could be implied by the resolution. The problem is
that if the resolution is quoted by those seeking to use military force, as an
indication of Congressional support, it would be very easy for them to
selectively quote the blockade clause and omit the denial of authorization of
force clause. Ackerman also stated that the prohibition of refined petroleum
clause is meant to be enforced voluntarily in the exporting countries and not in
the Persian Gulf. The phrase entering or departing Iran in the resolution tends
to contradict that claim.
Reps. Robert Wexler and Barney Frank have publicly said that they will attempt
to alter the legislation in order to eliminate all ambiguity about its demanding
the use of military force. Neither has withdrawn his co-sponsorship, however.
Three Congressman have withdrawn their co-sponsorships and others have expressed
concern about the legislation in general and about the blockade clause in
particular. Rep.
Ron Paul went further in a speech on the House floor in which he warned that
the resolution is indeed a call to war.
Senator Barack
Obama met with House Democrats on July 29. At that meeting, Rep. Howard
Berman, who is so far refusing to report H. Con. Res. 362 to the House for a
vote, asked about the candidates opinion of the current state of negotiations
with Iran over its nuclear program. The Democratic candidate, reflecting a
reluctance many share about appearing soft on Iran said, according to Rep.
Shelly Berkley, "if the Iranians don't accept a deal now because they think
they're going to get a better deal from the next president, they're mistaken."
If Berman thought he was going to get a statement from Obama supporting
negotiations and/or opposition to military threats, he was mistaken. Obama has
been making a major effort to court the Jewish vote, so is not about to
criticize the Bush administrations or anyone elses use of a military threat
against Iran.
Non-binding legislation initiated and supported by AIPAC usually passes in the
House quickly with only 15 to 20 dissenting votes. The unexpected delay in
committee and the growing opposition to the legislation may reflect the
increasing and understandable concern about the role of AIPAC in creating
American foreign policy in the Middle East and the alarm that Iran will be the
next target of Americas expanding war in that region.
What will be the fate of H. Con. Res. 362? Even if it is held up indefinitely in
the House Foreign Affairs Committee, the fact that it has 252 co-sponsors means
that it expresses the sense of the House regarding the alleged threat posed by
Iran and a willingness of a majority of members of the House to support AIPACs
Iran foreign policy.
It is clear that the antiwar movement has emerged as a voice in the ongoing
debate concerning Iran. However, if military confrontation with Iran is to be
avoided, the peace movement must convince our politicians not only to oppose
legislation like H. Con. Res. 362, but, more importantly, to renounce the world
view of AIPAC and the neo-cons which has been the foundation of the Bush
administrations Middle East policies. This means the work has just begun.
Ira Glunts lives in Madison, NY where he owns and operates a used book
business with his wife. Mr. Glunts has written numerous articles on U.S. foreign
policy in the Middle East.