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27 April 2010 By Dave Lindorff Just yesterday, the Wall Street Journal
had a lead story about Israeli planning to possibly
“go it alone” in an attack on Iran if the US were not
to “succeed” in its diplomatic efforts to get Iran to
“stop” its alleged attempts to develop a nuclear
weapon capability. Aside from the fact that there is no hard evidence
that Iran is trying to make a nuclear bomb or even to
refine uranium to obtain nuclear-grade material, the
paper ignored one crucial point: Israel cannot “go it
alone” in any strike on Iran, since its key
weapons--American fighter-bombers--are supplied to it,
and kept flying, thanks to the equipment and spare
parts provided by the United States. Indeed the entire
Israeli military machine is largely financed and armed
by the US. (They also need refueling by planes
supplied by the US to make a round-trip to Iran.) No Israeli military effort can go forward without
the full backing of the US, and to say otherwise is to
simply perpetrate a fraud on the American public,
implying that Israel is an independent actor on the
world stage. It is not. Another example of media warmongering came in an
interview by Terri Gross on her program “Fresh Air,”
which I believe is the most widely syndicated and
popular program on National Public Radio, produced
here in Philadelphia at the studios of NPR affiliate
WHYY. Listening to “Fresh Air” this week, which
featured an interview with New York Times war
correspondent Dexter Filkins, a generally excellent
reporter who distinguished himself for his reporting
on the Iraq War, and particularly on the brutal US
assault on the city of Fallujah, I heard Filkins refer
casually to Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, as
“America’s arch-enemy.” Now it’s possible, and I certainly do hope it’s the
case, that Filkens was being ironic here. But Terri
Gross allowed this characterization of Iran’s
president pass without comment. America’s arch-enemy? Really? On what basis? What, exactly, has Iran or Ahmadinejad done to make
itself America’s arch- enemy? Iran has backed the same
Shi’ite led government in Iraq that the US has been
backing, and indeed, to the extent that Iraq has
stabilized, it is largely Iran’s doing. It provided
key help to the US in the early invasion of
Afghanistan and the routing of the Taliban government,
which was never favored by the Iranians. We know also that two years before the election of
Ahmadinejad to the presidency, Iran made an offer to
the US to recognize Israel, help broker a two-state
peace solution to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict,
and end Iran’s support of armed groups in the Middle
East region, all in return for the US accepting Iran
as what the 70-million population nation unarguably
is: a legitimate power in the region. That offer was
slapped down by the Bush/Cheney administration, which
had as its goal not peace in Palestine or with Iran,
but the occupation and control of Iraq, and perhaps
ultimately a war against Iran. In fact, since the Iraq
invasion, the US is known to have been financing and
helping to organize a terror campaign inside Iran that
has led to many deaths by bombings. If any country is
acting towards the other in an aggressive and warlike
fashion, it is the US, towards Iran, and not the
reverse. None of this is to suggest that Amadinejad is a
great guy. He's not. He's a political thug who has
ordered or allowed the murder and torture of many of
his own citizens, and has said some stupid stuff about
the Nazi Holocaust, but the world is full of
blustering idiots--we have had plenty here in the US,
including President Reagan and John McCain. But having
a blustering idiot as a leader is not a justifiable
reason to launch a war. It needs to be said, but somehow never is in the
establishment US media, whether corporate or
not-for-profit, that Iran historically is not an
aggressive, expansive nation (can that be said with a
straight face about our own country?). Though it is,
by dint of its oil reserves and its population, one of
the biggest and most powerful countries in the Middle
East, Iran has not invaded another country since the
mid-19th century (and even the several wars with
Russia before then were over disputed territory on the
border), and there is no indication that it plans to
invade any other country now. Even nuclear experts scoff at the notion that a
nuclear Iran would initiate an attack on Israel, the
only nuclear power in the Middle East, with an
estimated 200 high-grade nuclear weapons (more than
China has), and a first-rate delivery system of
missiles and supersonic bombers. For Iran to launch a
crude nuke at Israel would be an act of national
suicide, and while individual terrorists may kill
themselves, nations don’t commit suicide. They may
miscalculate, with devastating consequences, but they
don’t deliberately self-immolate. None of this makes its way into the US media, which
continues the drumbeat for war, whether by Israel,
with US backing, or by the US, with reports that
Secretary of Defense (sic) Robert Gates is presenting
the president with Iran attack options, and that the
White House, while “preferring a diplomatic solution”
to Iran’s supposed nuclear ambitions, is “keeping all
options on the table.” Most media reports refer to Iran’s “ability to
produce bomb-grade uranium” within a year, without
mentioning that there is no evidence that the country
intends to do this (Iran insists it has no such
plans). The New York Times, for instance, was
reporting, incorrectly, back in 2008 that Iran had
enough enriched uranium to make “one nuclear bomb.”
Those reports, quoting Pentagon and CIA sources, now
quote “experts” as saying that Iran could develop a
bomb within three to four years, again generally
failing to add that there is no evidence that Iran is
trying to do that, or is even considering doing it. And yet Iran is consistently portrayed as America’s
“enemy” or even as its “arch-enemy”--a term that harks
back to the Bush/Cheney claim that Iran was, along
with Iraq and North Korea, part of a three-nation
“Axis of Evil.” On its face the idea that Iran is America’s
arch-enemy is ludicrous. We are talking here about a
third-rate country, financially speaking, with an
economy the size of Finland’s, with a third-rate
military, the total budget of which, at $4.8 billion,
is less than the annual replacement cost for the US
military’s Chinook and Seahawk helicopter fleet, and
which would be totally decimated in any all-out attack
by the US. Iran has no ability to attack the US, and even its
ability to threaten US forces in Iraq or Afghanistan
is severely limited, not to mention the fact that
should it be foolhardy enough to initiate any such
action, it would bring down the full force of the US
military on its head in an instant. Reading and watching American reporting on Iran
reminds me of nothing so much as reading the Chinese
state media about Taiwan when I was living in China
back in the 1990s. It’s all pathetic nonsense,
manufactured paranoia, and bluster. But at least the
average Chinese citizen has enough sense to recognize
that she or he is being fed a lot of propaganda.
Americans, all too often, seem to ready to buy the
garbage they hear and read about Iran. They may not be
able to show you where on the globe Iran is, or tell
you anything about the country other than perhaps that
it is Muslim, but they will accept, uncritically, that
it is our “arch-enemy.” Note to Filkins: If, as I hope, you were being
ironic on “Fresh Air,” please understand that irony
requires a modicum of sophistication on the part of
the listener--something I’m not sure you can count on
with Times readers or NPR listeners. |