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Posts Tagged ‘Barack Obama’

Bibi’s Declaration of War (on Iran)

Tuesday, March 6th, 2012
bibi netanyahu aipac

Bibi Netanyahu at Aipac conference (Ruvi Leider)

After reading Bibi Netanyahu’s profoundly delusional and mendacious Aipac speech from earlier today, I’m left with two impressions: the most important one is that Israel will attack Iran.  His remarks read like a declaration of war.

Believe me, no Jew invokes a historical parallel to the tragic failure of the Allies to bomb the concentration camps unless he means to equate Iran with the Nazi murderers.  Of course, Bibi’s done that in the past, but in an almost peremptory fashion.  Today’s reference, in which he accused anyone who argued against attacking Iran with those who refused to bomb Auschwitz, seemed more dramatic, more gut-wrenching.  This is no longer political theater.  This is straight from the kishke stuff.  You don’t talk this way as a Jew unless you mean to act.  And when an Israeli leader “acts” he doesn’t turn to diplomacy or sanctions or anything similar.  He turns to F-16s, missiles and the things he knows best: war.

The other thing that appears slightly less clear, but I feel confident in saying, is that Bibi will likely leave town believing that if he jumped off a cliff, Obama wasn’t going with him.  Bibi pointedly said that Israel reserved the right to attack Iran.  But his rhetoric never attempted in even the most subtle way to invoke the U.S. as a partner to such an attack.

But the converse of such a statement may be that Obama has given Israel a green light to attack Iran by itself.  That in itself would be a terrible dereliction of leadership on the part of the U.S.  Not to mention that Israel cannot do the job on its own with the limited weapons at its disposal.  Meaning that Israel can at most wound this enemy and we all know that a wounded enemy can be the most fierce, most angry, most lethal.

It may be possible that Obama would ship Israel the bunker busters, refueling tankers and other materiel needed for such an attack. Again such deeds on our part would make us accessory to the catastrophe that will follow, though it will be harder for the world to view us as the major culprit.

Alternately, if Obama has told him he can attack Iran but won’t get any help from the U.S., Obama’s goal may be to give Bibi enough rope to hang himself.  Any reasonable political leader reading Bibi’s speech has to understand that the Israeli leader has driven himself and his country into a deeply delusional place.  Obama may perhaps believe that if Israel attacks Iran alone, that it will at least be hitting a target the American people loathe, so it won’t harm the president politically.  An added benefit might be that it would harm Bibi in the long run so deeply that he will be politically wounded by the failure of the attack.

Any U.S. involvement, even indirectly, in supporting an Israeli attack would be a deeply cynical act.  But those of us who’ve watched Obama’s national security policy over the last three years know that he has embraced the same national security presidency as George Bush.  Protected by the label of liberal Democrat, he’s pursued policies as injurious or more, to civil liberties and international law, as his predecessor.  Which in a sense makes him even more dangerous.  At least with Bush we knew what we were getting and were always on our guard.  Not so with Obama who maintains a progressive veneer.

Israel’s Iran Policy Doomed to Fail Whatever the Choice

Monday, March 5th, 2012

I was just reading Paul Pillar’s incisive essay in the Washington Monthly which puts the argument against war with Iran about as strongly as anyone can.  Pillar is a 28 year veteran of the CIA specializing in the Near East and South Asia, and currently is director of graduate studies at Georgetown.  The essay is so strong that even summarizing it would be a waste of time.  Just read it.

obama aipac

Pres. Obama has two options regarding Iran and both will fail (Carolyn Kaster/AP)

Reading it got me to thinking about Israel’s choices at this juncture relating to Iran.  As the lyrics of Mrs. Robinson go: “Anyway you look at it you lose.”  If Israel attacks Iran it will lose because it will not do so with enough force to deal its nuclear program a knock-out blow.  Iran may be set back a year or two or even three, but not permanently.  Iran will in turn redouble its efforts to get a weapon and do so overtly, rather than covertly.  Iran will also counterattack and cause extensive damage both to Israel, possibly American interests, and even the world economy.  Here’s how Pillar puts it:

When the Brookings Institution ran a war-games simulation a couple of years ago, an Israeli strike on Iranian nuclear facilities escalated into a region-wide crisis in which Iranian missiles were raining down on Saudi Arabia as well as Israel, and Tehran launched a worldwide terrorist campaign against U.S. interests.

If that happens, after the slight euphoria of Israel’s Shock and Awe against Iran wears off, and people start linking up for gas whose price has doubled, tripled, or quadrupled, then the bellyaching will begin.  Israel won’t look so good at that point, when the world is looking for someone to blame.

Let’s say in the best possible scenario for Israeli war hawks that the U.S. joins in the fight.  It brings far more extensive firepower to bear against Iran and does extensive damage to the nuclear program.  Even then, the U.S. is unlikely to entirely wipe out this program and it certainly will not have wiped out Iran’s will to have such a program.  That means that no matter how much damage ensues, Iran’s leaders and scientific community will be emboldened to resume the program as soon as practicable.  Further, if the U.S. doubles down on Iran and joins in the fray, then Israel will no longer be the party the world blames if anything goes wrong afterward.  Then they’ll put a nice big bull’s-eye on our backs and blame it all on Uncle Sam.

Pillar also speculates about how such an attack would reflect on American interests in the Arab world:

Regional political consequences would include deepened anger at the United States for what would be seen as unprovoked killing of Muslims—with everything such anger entails in terms of stimulating more extremist violence against Americans. The emotional gap between Persians and Arabs would lessen, as would the isolation of Iran from other states in the region. Contrary to a common misconception, the Persian Gulf Arabs do not want a U.S. war with Iran, notwithstanding their own concerns about their neighbor to the north.  Saudi and other Gulf Arab officials have repeatedly indicated that while they look to U.S. leadership in containing Iranian influence, they do not favor an armed attack. The former Saudi intelligence chief and ambassador to the United States, Prince Turki Al Faisal, recently stated, “It is very clear that a military strike against Iran will be catastrophic in its consequences, not just on us but the world in general.”

So short of embracing regime change and boots on the ground, I don’t see any way that either Israel or the U.S. can win with a war strategy.  But that may not be the worst of it.

Let’s say Israel doesn’t attack (and to me it’s becoming increasingly clear that it will).  Israel (and the U.S.) will still come out losers.  They will have bet the house on a bellicose strategy of threatening war and invoking savage sanctions designed to destroy Iran’s economy–and all for the purpose of stopping an Iranian bomb.  But none of this will stop Iran from getting a bomb if it wants one.  Just as North Korea is a savagely mismanaged country facing mass famine, Iran will be a country brought to its knees through a starvation regime caused by western nations intent of humbling Iran.  The world will look at Iran’s starving children and again blame it on the leaders who devised the strategy in the first place: Obama and Netanyahu.

At that point you will have two world leaders who did and said everything in their power to get Iran to bend to their will, and failed.  They in turn will look weak and ineffectual.  In truth, those of us following Obama’s approach to Israel over the past three years have known he was ineffectual.  His failure in this matter (Iran) will only confirm that judgment.  It will begin Obama’s lame duck status just as his second term begins, not traditionally the point at which presidents are accustomed to seeing themselves become politically irrelevant.

There may be a way for Obama to save face and redeem a reasonable amount of the political capital he frittered away on his policy belligerence and confrontation.  He could embrace the very approach he just denied in today’s Aipac speech: containment.  Despite the fact that he renounced containment, it is, in fact, the only reasonable approach.  As such it will win out in the end.  The only question is how much of Obama’s power and influence will ebb before he reverts to the policy he could’ve followed all along.

It won’t matter as much for Netanyahu, as Israeli leaders have a habit of making disastrous decisions and not being held to account for them.  Chances are that Israelis will not make Bibi pay a price for his failures regarding Iran.  They’ll allow him to continue muddling through, going from failure to failure until he gives way to the next leader who will stumble through yet another series of policy gaffes and misjudgments probably involving another war or two in Gaza, Lebanon or God knows where else.

Yeah, I know…what a bummer.  Sorry to bring you down like this.  But to think that all of this didn’t have to happen.  If someone with leadership could’ve just looked Bibi in the eyes and told him to go to hell without worrying about Aipac or the Jewish vote and pro-Israel donors.  Alas, we don’t have a leader like that now and may never have.  Which is why we and our leader, Pres. Obama, will have to suffer whether we go to war against Iran or not.

On a related matter, Obama’s speech was typical fence-straddling.  He threw a bone to Israel with all the “got your back” nonsense and he also admonished Israeli and U.S. war hawks who’ve been nattering away about the glories in store if we go after the mullahs hammer and tong.  But there was one statement which offered Bibi a green light to attack Iran:

Israeli leaders…recognize their obligation to defend their country.

Iran’s leaders should…not doubt Israel’s sovereign right to make its own decisions about what is required to meet its security needs.

I have said that when it comes to preventing Iran from obtaining a nuclear weapon, I will take no options off the table, and I mean what I say. That includes all elements of American power

He couched this statement just vaguely enough, that if Israel does attack he can point to the fact that he was clearly stating a preference for diplomacy and using war as a last resort, and that Israel misinterpreted his remarks.  Israel, suitably, will read the passage precisely the way it wishes and read this as a presumptive seal of approval for its war policy.  The result will be an Israeli war against Iran that will do little more than “mow the lawn,” in that obscene phrasing that Israeli generals and politicians like to use.  The attack will set back Iran marginally, but cause immense hardship and suffering for Iranians, Israelis and the rest of the world as well.  To quote another great American songwriter: “That’s the way that the world goes round.”

Congressional Pro-Israel Supporters Tell Obama: To ‘Avoid War’ Be Prepared to Wage It

Saturday, March 3rd, 2012

Bibi Netanyahu is a corrupt, anti-democratic, ultra-nationalist Israeli leader.  But one thing he is indisputably good at is political manipulation both of his own population and world opinion.  In the run up to his coronation in Washington where he arrives shortly, he has superbly laid groundwork that has put Barack Obama in a vise.  Last week, he invited five powerful U.S. senators (only the Republicans who met him are now talking publicly, which suits Bibi perfectly) to have lunch in Jerusalem.  Now those senators are calling Obama a wimp and a girl if he won’t stand up to the Ayatollahs and lay down red lines that specify when we will go to war against Iran.

Here’s one the Israelis are demanding:

Israeli officials are demanding that Iran agree to halt all its enrichment of uranium in the country, and that the suspension be verified by United Nations inspectors, before the West resumes negotiations with Tehran on its nuclear program.

That would mean that Iran would agree to virtually everything Israel wants BEFORE there was any negotiation.  So what would the purpose of any negotiation be?  This is the sort of  foreign policy that Israel is used to conducting with its neighbors.  We tell you want to do and you sign on the dotted line.  If not, we bomb you back to the Stone Age.  Take your pick.

One of the chosen few lunch guests, Sen. Lindsay Graham made this disingenuous, Alice in Wonderland style comment:

“It’s not just about the Jewish vote and 2012,” Mr. Graham added. “It’s about reassuring people who want to avoid war that the United States will do what’s necessary.”

First, of course it’s about the Jewish vote and 2012.  EVERYTHING is about those two things.  As for the sentence that follows, how to you “avoid war” by agreeing with an ally to fight one (which essentially what Graham and Bibi are after)?

ehud barak

Ehud Barak: Only '500 dead' from Iran counter-attack if Israelis would only 'stay indoors' (Reuters/Brendan MdDermid)

The Telegraph’s Israel correspondent puts the case for war that Bibi will make to Barack even more baldly:

Exuding confidence, Mr Netanyahu effectively brings with him an ultimatum, demanding that unless the president makes a firm pledge to use US military force to prevent Iran acquiring a nuclear bomb, Israel may well take matters into its own hands within months.

The British journalist channels the views of Ehud Barak, delusional though they may be:

According to sources close to the Israeli security establishment, military planners have concluded that never before has the timing for a unilateral military strike against Iran’s nuclear facilities been so auspicious.

It is an assessment based on the unforeseen consequences of the Arab Spring, particularly in Syria, which has had the result of significantly weakening Iran’s clout in the region…With Syria preoccupied by a near civil war and Hamas in recent weeks choosing to leave Iran’s orbit and realign itself with Egypt, Iran’s options suddenly look considerably more limited, boosting the case for war.

There is a typical egregious error of fact and analysis in the above paragraph. Hamas has left Syria’s orbit, but not Iran’s. In fact, Ismail Haniye just completed a visit to Iran in which both parties expressed support for each others respective struggles. And even with Syria weakened, this doesn’t mean that Iran can’t offer Hamas support (and it will).

Here is more hocus-pocus undoubtedly proffered to the Telegraph by Ehud Barak (though the source is only described as “close to defense ministry sources”):

“Iran’s deterrent has been significantly defanged,” a source close to Israel’s defence chiefs said. “As a result some of those opposed to military action have changed their minds. They sense a golden opportunity to strike Iran at a significantly reduced cost.”

There’s that infamous “some” so popular with politicians and journalists who can’t be bothered with specific facts to support their arguments. I know of no major figures either in Israel or the U.S. who’ve gone from the camp opposing war to the one supporting war. Until Barak can offer more specific than this, he’s bluffing big-time.

Here’s another false statement. In an example of sloppy journalism, Adrian Blomfield, the reporter doesn’t make clear whether this is his view or Barak’s. Whose ever view it is, it’s wrong:

…It is not the “doomsday scenario” that some feared, and a growing number in the security establishment are willing to take on the risk if it means preventing the rise of a nuclear power that has spoken repeatedly of Israel’s destruction.

Note the “growing number” of unnamed military experts who agree with war-hawk Barak that the cost to Israel, which in the past he’s dismissed at most “500 lives,” will be bearable.  Second, this Israeli attack will NOT prevent the rise of Iran as a nuclear power as he claims.  In fact, Obama himself in his interview with Jeffrey Goldberg, noted that Israel shouldn’t attack because that would be likely to accelerate Iran’s nuclear program.  Even those experts who favor war don’t claim it will destroy Iran’s WMD capacity.  It will at most delay it by perhaps one to three years.  As for “speaking of Israel’s destruction,” many Israeli leaders have spoken extravagantly about the need to destroy the Iranian regime.  Barak’s argument is essentially that if a country says they hate you so much they wish you would fade into oblivion, you may strike them a savage blog and claim it’s self-defense.

Another lie in Barak’s account of Iranian capabilities is that within six to nine months “ Iran will have acquired sufficient technological expertise to build a nuclear weapon.”  Iran hasn’t yet developed a nuclear warhead capable of carrying a bomb to its destination nor a trigger that would detonate the weapon.  The prevailing view among nuclear experts is that if Iran engages in any such research or development (which in itself is not a given) this will take Iran far longer than nine months, possibly two years or more.

Blomfield again sloppily substitutes real facts with atmospherics claiming Israelis are prepared for war:

Among the Israeli public, there is a sense of growing sense that a confrontation with Iran is inevitable. Overheard conversations in bars and restaurants frequently turn to the subject, with a growing popular paranoia fed by the escalation in bomb shelter construction, air raid siren testing and exercises simulating civilian preparedness for rocket strikes.

If the reporter had bothered to consult actual polls of Israeli opinion which I’ve recently featured here, he’d find that the Israeli public is just as divided about attacking Iran as the American public is.  In fact, there is no consensus in either country for an attack, especially not now.  A plurality in both places supports continuing sanctions and a majority does not support war now.

Returning to the strategic calculations of Netanyahu and Barak, wars historically have generally proven useful to Israel despite the losses in human life.  Even wars in which Israel paid the heaviest price (1948 and 1973 in particular) advanced its interests in significant ways.  After Israel’s wars (even when it does not win them decisively or at all), it is generally left at least for an extended period of time to pursue its strategic goals relatively unfettered.  In no war since 1973, has Israel paid a heavy price.  It has gotten used to considering war as an instrument of policy and a means of intimidating both the victims of its wars and potential future adversaries.  It has gotten used to wars in which it gets its way without serious consequences.  It’s gotten spoiled.  There will come a war when Israel is brought up short and pays a price.  It may be the next one–with Iran.

Israel’s need to preserve regional dominance is, in large part, the reason for the current imbroglio with Iran.  The latter is a real regional threat because it is the first state in the region that may be pursuing nuclear capability (Israel of course already has the bomb many times over).  It also is a state that vociferously opposes Israel and its policies.  Israel’s strategic approach has demanded not just parity with its enemies but overwhelming superiority.  Having an Iran able to stand up to Israel as an equal is unthinkable.  It must be cut down to size.  At all costs.

My view of Israel’s approach is that it is wrong, but as a sovereign state it has a right to pursue its interests, as misguidedly as they may be interpreted.  But my real problem here is with how the U.S. acts.  If we allow ourselves to be sucked into aiding Israel, or being instrumental in Israel’s long-term strategic goals of humbling Iran, we become an accessory after the fact, instead of a great power pursuing our own sovereign interests.  For us to do so would not just mean betraying our own national interests, it would be aiding and abetting Israel’s war pathology.

Bibi wants a war.  Bibi needs a war.  He mistakenly believes Israel needs a war.  Make no mistake: this war will be a military adventure, not a pragmatically conceived, carefully executed operation.  It will end in Israel failing to achieve its long-term objectives just as its last two wars did.  It may end catastrophically for both sides.  The U.S. must not be party to this.

Obama Protects Pro-Israel Right Flank, Beating Iran War Drums

Friday, March 2nd, 2012
barack obama aipac

Obama: this one's got Aipac's name written all over it

Pres. Obama is attempting to steal a march on Bibi Netanyahu, who will be arriving in Washington in four days, by giving pro-Israel journalist, Jeffrey Goldberg, an interview heavy with martial overtones:

President Obama…stiffened his pledge to prevent Iran from acquiring nuclear weapons, even as he warned Israel of the negative consequences of a pre-emptive military strike on Iran’s nuclear facilities.

Seeking to reassure a close American ally that contends it has reached a moment of reckoning with Iran, Mr. Obama rejected suggestions that the United States was willing to try to contain a nuclear-armed Iran.

The other half of Obama’s message, and the one that I hope is operative and that Bibi hopes is window-dressing, is Obama’s warning that an Israel attack is a helluva bad idea:

The president also said he would try to convince Mr. Netanyahu, whom he is meeting here on Monday at a time of heightened fears of a conflict, that a premature military strike could help Iran by allowing it to portray itself as a victim of aggression. And he said such military action would only delay, not prevent, Iran’s acquisition of nuclear weapons.

But this leaves his argument fatally flawed. An Israeli attack would not prevent an Iranian bomb, but somehow an American attack at a later unspecified date would. Of course, it’s true that the U.S. could inflict a great deal more damage on Iran’s nuclear program than an Israeli attack. But even the U.S. military likely could not entirely destroy an Iranian program. We heard a week ago or so that Leon Panetta does not believe that America’s most potent bunker buster can penetrate the Fordow facility.

And listen to what would be involved if we attacked Iran:

The United States could open a broad, sustained attack with long-range B2 stealth bombers, F-18 fighter jets based on aircraft carriers and hundreds of cruise missiles launched from submarines in the Arabian Sea. The United States has plentiful refueling capability, and drone aircraft to assess damage to help direct further strikes.

Given that we did not do this to Pakistan, India or North Korea when they created their own nuclear weapons, do we really think the world will sit back and say nothing as we proceed to pulverize Iran to little pieces? Given the bad blood that our invasions of Iraq and Afghanistan have generated not just in the Arab/Muslim world, but internationally, do we really believe the world will welcome such new forms of mayhem?

Obama even said it himself:

Mr. Obama said that any military action could deflect attention from other factors in the region that were eroding Iran’s influence.

“At a time when there is not a lot of sympathy for Iran and its only real ally is on the ropes,” the president said, referring to Syria, “do we want a distraction in which suddenly Iran can portray itself as a victim, and deflect attention from what has to be the core issue, which is their potential pursuit of nuclear weapons?”

An excellent question that Obama shouldn’t just be asking Bibi Netanyahu, but himself and his own Iran war planners.

An alarming element of Obama’s interview was his renunciation of the policy of containment:

Administration officials have signaled that they are not open to a “containment” strategy toward Iran…Such a strategy…would run “completely contrary” to his nuclear nonproliferation policies, and raise a host of dangers the United States could do little to control.

The president [said] Iran’s acquisition of a weapon would set off an arms race in the Middle East, offering a robust case for why the West could not contain Iran the way it did the Soviet Union during the cold war.

There is a “profound” danger that an Iranian nuclear weapon could end up in the hands of a terrorist organization, Mr. Obama said. Other nations in the region would feel compelled to push for nuclear weapons to shield themselves from a nuclear Iran.

So a policy that worked reasonably well for four decades in maintaining a balance of power between Soviet Russia and the U.S. and kept the world safe and peaceful, won’t work in the case of Iran.

As for an “arms race,” does Obama mean a race other than the one that’s brought nuclear weapons to Israel and Pakistan (in the region) and North Korea and India (outside it)? Who else will join the race? Saudi Arabia? But they’re one of our allies, aren’t they? Egypt? Given the upheaval to which it’s been subject over the past year, not to mention the financial emergency it faces, I doubt it will be seeking to spend billions on a nuclear program.

Why does Obama believe Iran would be any more likely to promote nuclear proliferation than, say Pakistan, whose leading nuclear scientist single-handedly helped two nations get nuclear weapons? In fact, Iran exercises far more controls over its program than Pakistan or North Korea (which is also rumored to have contracted with other countries to export its nuclear know-how). Why do we only hear about imagined Iranian vulnerabilities, but not about actual floodgates of nuclear technology released by these countries?

In short, this is once again another pathetic performance by the Obama administration. It turns its back on decades of successful foreign policy in return for dickering with Israel over how many Iranians we’ll kill and when we’ll do it. Sure, our target will be the nuclear program alone. But do we think we won’t kill thousands, if not tens of thousands of others? Not to mention what will happen after Iran counter-attacks and kills some of ours, and the pressure for massive retaliation rises. This isn’t laser-based brain surgery we’re talking about. It’s dropping 30,000 pound bombs and firing 2,000 mile-an-hour missiles.

Meanwhile, back in the Hall of Mirrors that is Israeli strategic thinking, Bibi today said the world would understand if Israel attacked Iran:

“…Israel, like any sovereign country…reserve[s] the right to defend [itself] against a country that calls and works for our destruction.”

Well, er, not quite, Mr. Prime Minister.  Iran never called for Israel’s destruction.  You only claim it did.  As for “defending itself,” usually nations defend themselves after they directly attacked.  If Israel attacks, it might be the first time in history one country struck another for saying bad things about it.  It might be the first time in history that one country (with nuclear weapons) has attacked another (without them) because the victim nation might be developing them.

There are those who point to Iran’s alleged support of Hezbollah and Hamas, as justification for attacking Iran.  To them I’d ask, Iran has presumably supported these groups for years.  If Iran’s so-called support of terror against Israel is so damaging, why didn’t Israel attack Iran directly earlier?  For example, if Hezbollah received those 20,000 missiles from Iran with which it attacked Israel in 2006, why not attack Iran to punish it?  You didn’t then, why now?

Bibi has the chutzpah to demand that Iran stop its uranium enrichment program, something Iran is entitled to under the Non Proliferation Treaty it signed, and which Israel hasn’t.  If Iran ends its uranium enrichment, why not Israel ending its own?  Why is Israel entitled to the bomb, but not Iran?  Israel has enemies?  Iran doesn’t?  You claim Iran only has enemies because it’s earned them?  Many say precisely the same about Israel.  What’s good for the goose is good for the gander.

If Israel attacks Iran, and even more so if the U.S. supports such aggression in any significant way, this will be the triumph of delusional thinking and psychopathology in Middle East relations.  If we want to explore the sorts of conflicts that could lead to the end of the human race through mass violence, you have only to watch the gathering storm unfold.

What is almost as sad about this is that if Iran wants a nuclear weapon, it will get one.  After it gets one, Obama and Bibi, for all their fulminating, will look very small and insignificant in the eyes of the world.  There is no way that Obama can physically prevent Iran from getting a bomb short of invading the country and toppling the regime.

Most analysts who view this subject pragmatically, believe that Iran will not create a nuclear bomb.  Rather, it will assemble the various components of such a program so that if it needed one it would put one together for preventive.  So far, Obama has not stated that this would cross a red line, while Israel has.  But if the U.S. approves of attacking Iran for anything short of putting together a bomb, it will have to explain why Japan’s nuclear program, which is based on precisely the same principle, is safe, while Iran’s poses a mortal danger.

NOTE: I’m “delighted” to see that Aipac, proving true to form, has ejected, Mitchell Plitnick, a Zionist journalist from covering its national conference.  Mitchell’s sin?  He used to work for Jewish Voice for Peace and B’Tselem.  Aipac also put Phil Weiss is herem, which is less surprising considering that Phil is anti-Zionist (though he has covered three previous Aipac conferences without incident).  JTA says that “barring coverage” is a rarity in Washington political circles.  Unfortunately, the reporter (likely Ron Kampeas) doesn’t realize that Aipac routinely bans journos it doesn’t like.  In fact, I reported here that it frog-marched the Guardian’s Chris McGreal out of the 2009 national conference, despite the fact that he had registered for the conference and been accredited to cover it.

Polls Indicate No Israeli or U.S. Consensus Favoring Military Attack on Iran

Friday, March 2nd, 2012

As Bibi Netanyahu heads to Washington for yet another in an endless series of consultations of dubious utility with Barack Obama, followed by yet another appeal to the worshipful multitudes at Aipac’s national conference, it’s important to note that opinion polls both in the U.S. and Israel confirm there is no consensus within either country supporting war against Iran.

In the NY Times report on Bibi’s coming visit, Zalman Shoval falsely claims:

“Public opinion polls in America are about 50-50 on whether America should take a role in an eventual military operation against Iran. This is not the main element in a decision, but it will have some influence on the candidate, who happens to be president.”

Here are some recent U.S. poll findings on the subject.  A February 2012 CNN poll finds that only 17% of Americans favor a U.S. attack now, while 60% favor sanctions with no military attack now.  22% favor taking no action at all.  In a February Pew survey, 64% of Americans said that sanctions will not work.  58% said they would favor military action if it was the only way to prevent Iran from getting a bomb.  30% said they opposed a strike even if meant Iran got a nuclear weapon.

A 2010 CNN survey found only 36% favored a military attack if sanctions did not work, while 39% favored no military action.  71% of those polled believe (falsely) that Iran already has nuclear weapons.

A Pew poll in January 2011 said that 50% of Americans favored taking a “firm stand” against Iran, while 40% favored avoiding a military conflict.  A November CBS survey found that only 15% of Americans favored military action against Iran now, while 55% believed that Iran could be contained by diplomacy, rather than force.

Now for Israeli public opinion: Shibley Telhami’s latest University of Maryland poll of Israeli public opinion finds that only 19% favor an attack that is against the will of the U.S.  42% would favor an attack with U.S. support.  34% oppose a strike regardless of whether there is U.S. support.

22% believe that if Israel did attack it would delay the Iranian nuclear program by more than five years.  Even the most hawkish Israeli generals and politicians claim it will delay the program by a year or possibly two.  11% believe it would accelerate the Iranian WMD program, which is what a number of analysts suspect will happen.

27% of Israelis believe that if Israel did attack against the U.S.’ wishes, the latter would join the war against Iran nonetheless, while 39% believe the U.S. would support Israel diplomatically but not militarily.

29% of Israelis believe, against the explicit guarantee of hawks like Ehud Barak and Moshe Yaalon, that a war would take “months.”  22% believe it would last “years,” a particularly grim finding.

44% of Israelis believe an attack by their country would strengthen the Iranian regime.

While Israelis are evenly split in their preference between Obama and Romney as future president, they favor Obama by 33% to 18% over Rick Santorum.  They even favor Obama over Newt Gingrich (32% to 25%), which is surprising considering that Sheldon Adelson’s Yisrael HaYom, Israel’s most popular daily, is shilling for Gingrich virtually every day in its pages.

India, Iran’s Top Oil Customer, Rejects U.S. Oil Sanctions

Sunday, February 12th, 2012

It is a truth universally acknowledged that the west’s oil embargo against Iran will bring that country to its knees.  Among other related truths: Iran’s economy derives much of its revenue from oil sales; oil sanctions will cripple Iran; all Iran’s previous customers will abandon it seeing the justice in our cause; Iran will not be able to replace those customers with others; with unsold inventory, masses clamoring for food, and unable to fund it’s military and nuclear research programs, Iran will have no choice but to cry “Uncle.”

In case you detected a note of irony in my reference to Jane Austen above, let’s examine a few of the premises. Will Iran’s oil customers abandon it? So far Russia And China won’t. Yes, we’ve seen articles in the NY Times confirming that Chinese state buyers are searching for alternate fuel sources in case Iran’s oil spigot closes. But this is merely doing due diligence in order to anticipate China’s possible loss of Iranian oil. I see no fundamental change in China’s support for Iran.

Now, the Times adds a new ingredient to the dish. It reports that India is not only buying Iranian oil, but it has become Iran’s largest customer and plans to continue to be. It makes no promise that it will honor the oil embargo:

India’s determination to continue buying Iranian oil, despite sanctions and growing political pressure from the United States and Europe, has frustrated officials in Washington at a time when the forward momentum in the United States-India relationship has slowed…

The situation was exacerbated last week by news reports that India had become Iran’s top oil customer, while an Indian official announced plans to send a trade delegation to Tehran. In New Delhi, diplomats and analysts say India’s purchasing of Iranian oil is a matter of economic necessity, given its dependence on imported oil.

…Indian officials…caution against turning issues like Iran into diplomatic litmus tests…“This can’t be a test of our friendship,” said Lalit Mansingh, a former Indian ambassador to the United States. “Washington must realize that we are in a neighborhood where Iran is a factor.”

Alas, that is precisely what the U.S. will likely refuse to do.  In this sense, the U.S. approach to Iran, though marginally more pragmatic than Israel’s delusional one, is still based on mirages and faulty premises.  The U.S. believes that it can orchestrate a universal international cold shoulder to Iranian oil and that this in turn will force the Ayatollahs to come to their senses and give up their nukes (or their so-called desire to have them).

Let’s pour some bracing cold water on those assumptions: three of the world’s larger economies which use lots of oil are saying “Not so fast” to our gangbusters approach.  What will we do when we find that there are leaks in this magnificent boat we’re building?  Will we physically blockade Iran, closing the Strait of Hormuz and thereby forcing Iran to stop oil shipments?  If we do this, think back to how Israel reacted when Egypt blockaded the Strait of Tiran.  It was a causus belli and that’s one of the reasons Israel offered for initiating the 1967 War.  In Iran’s case, it would be far more justified in going to war because Tiran had no major trade importance for Israel, while Hormuz is critical for Iran.

And if we seal of Hormuz, Iran is likely to figure out other ways to export oil.  It has thousands of miles of borders with multiple countries.  Though it is much more efficient to export oil by tanker and water than by land, Iran might be able to maintain a semblance of oil trade by land.  If the price of oil skyrockets, then such a method of shipment would become even more effective.

Everything we’re doing now is designed to create a soft landing when we supposedly seal Iran off from its customers.  The price of oil will remain stable because we will have arranged for alternate source of oil for all of Iran’s current customers.  But what if it doesn’t happen?  What if we can’t find those alternate sources?  What if Saudi Arabia, Iraq and Libya can’t fill the gap?  What if the oil price goes through the roof?  What if the “coalition of the willing” becomes less willing to support the embargo?  What then?

In science, we learn that the simplest answer to a problem is more likely true than a more complex answer since the more parts there are the more likely one of them could prove wrong.  In politics, the converse is also true: the more complicated a policy is the more likely it will be to fail.  The west’s approach to its conflict with Iran is tremendously complex and based on multiple assumptions, any one of which can be wrong.  If the path we choose is to bomb Iran, it will likely make Iran more likely to get a nuclear weapon.  If we don’t bomb Iran and rely on sanctions like an oil embargo, but the embargo fails, then we’re left holding a bag full of holes.  In turn, this will make us look like fools and the Iranians like geniuses (even if they don’t deserve to be).

So the simplest path is the best in this situation.  The simplest path is to put all our issues on the table with Iran and for them to put all theirs there as well.  Then talk things out and arrive at a similar Grand Bargain to the one then-Preisdent Khatami offered the U.S. in 2003 (and which George Bush spurned).  Simple is best.  By simple, I don’t mean easy and I don’t mean short.  Of course negotiations will hard and take some time.  But as Tom Pickering and Bill Luers argued in their recent NY Times op-ed, it’s the only reasonable way and the one most likely to work.

Returning to some of the delusional thinking on which U.S. (and Israeli) policy is based, the Daily Beast publishes a story about the development of Obama’s approach to Iran over the course of his presidency.  The authors note that when he came into office his chief spooks begged him not to cancel their covert campaign against Iran’s nuke program.  But  Obama supposedly genuinely wanted to give a try to diplomacy as a way of resolving conflict with Iran.  So what did he do?

In the first days of the administration, deputy CIA Director Steve Kappes and Gen. James Cartwright, vice chairman of the Joint Chiefs, went…to the new president.

Obama listened intently. He understood Cartwright’s concern [for not cancelling the covert operations], and yet his diplomatic strategy hinged on the Iranians believing that American outreach was genuine. The president mulled the question of whether covert activities might compromise his nascent effort to engage with Iran’s leaders. “He was trying to weigh the slowing down of our covert activities—when that meant Iran would be able to reprocess [uranium] faster—against the risk to the outstretched-hand policy,” recalls one adviser. “That was the tricky balance.”

In the end, Obama concluded that he could pursue boththe covert and diplomatic tracks—simultaneously. He told his advisers that a successful campaign to disrupt Iran’s nuclear plans, in fact, would buy more time for diplomacy.

I swear sometimes I think people who should know better take the Iranians for dunces.  If you were Ahmadinejad or Khamenei having faced the tortured relationship you had with the U.S., and you came across this sort of duplicitousness what would you think?  You’d think just what I think.  When you’re president of a superpower you can’t have your cake and eat it.  You’ve got to make a choice and stick with it.  If you try to have it both ways your interlocutor will see through you in a heartbeat.  The Iranians weren’t wrong to respond as skeptically as they did to Obama.  He was dicking them (pardon my language but Obama’s approach annoys the hell out of me and warrants it) around and they knew it.

Rhetoric like this, even if you take into account that it’s offered by an overtly Israel advocate like Eli Lake and therefore needs to be regarded with skepticism, also chills the bones:

Israeli officials now insist that Obama has undergone what they regard as a positive evolution in his views on Iran. “The rhetoric from the United States today is different from what it was a year ago,” says an Israeli in Netanyahu’s inner circle. “Today, when you listen to Obama … you get the feeling the Americans are ready to attack if worse comes to worst.” Another official privy to discussions on Iran at the highest levels in Israel says, “It becomes clearer and clearer that America is on the course of a growing conflict, growing friction, growing risk of a big conflict with Iran.”

You remember what I wrote above about Israel’s delusional approach to Iran?  First, no reasonable U.S. analyst believes that Obama is “ready to attack if worst comes to worst.”  And even if you count this statement as typical Israeli blowhard rhetoric, there’s no question that the assumptions behind it fuel Israel’s military thinking.  In other words, Israeli leaders believe Obama will help them finish off the job they begin, therefore they feel freer to start what they know they can’t finish.  Which means that if Israel attacks and Obama doesn’t intend to finish the job then he will have only himself to blame for not sending a stronger signal to Israel.

Alternatively, if the Israelis are right and Obama will come to their aid after they spark what could well become a regional war, then all bets are off.  This president will have sent himself, his presidency, and all the rest of us to hell in a handbasket.

Another portion of this article no doubt penned by Lake (there are two other authors as well) argues from an Israeli source that Obama should stop Iran from getting nukes because it will tarnish U.S. power and credibility:

Obama is also thinking more broadly—about a possible nuclear-arms race in the region and the reputation of the United States. One of the senior Israeli officials interviewed for this article says he has heard U.S. counterparts express concern that a failure to stop Iran could lead to an eclipse of American power in the Middle East. “You stand to lose a very wide area of influence that was yours for 60 years,” says the official. “If Iran did [develop nukes] in spite of America, how would Obama look? How would America look?”

Would he or America look any worse than we looked after North Korea, Pakistan or India got nukes?  This is one of the more idiotic arguments I’ve heard.  The only way in which our prestige will be diminished in this regard is if we bet the house on stopping Iran and fail.  And that IS what our policy is rapidly becoming.  The more we double down on this bet, the more likely Iran will dig in its heels and insist that it get what it wants.  THAT is what will really harm our status in the region and world.

Further, Israeli sources quoted in the article blame Obama for the opacity of Israel’s approach to war with Iran.  They claim that because Obama would not promise to go to war against Iran if sanctions fail, that Israel had to decide to go it alone and shut off the intelligence pipeline it had with the U.S. on these matters.  So there you have it, the president had the chutzpah to tell the Israelis he wouldn’t commit to war with Iran, which in turn guarantees an Israeli war with Iran.

Atlanta Jewish Newspaper Advocates Mossad Assassinating Obama If Iran Gets Nukes

Friday, January 20th, 2012

Andrew Adler, now that’s a name that should live in Jewish infamy.  He’s the publisher of the Atlanta Jewish Times who actually published a column in his paper saying that one of three options Israel should consider on the day the Prime Minister hears that Iran has a nuclear weapon is for Mossad agents in the U.S. to assassinate Barack Obama.  Just in case you think I’m making this lunacy up here’s a screenshot of the column itself.  Here’s the money–or should I say, “kill shot.”  Adler writes that Option 3 is:

…Give the go-ahead for U.S.-based Mossad agents to take out a president deemed unfriendly to Israel in order for the current vice president to take his place, and forcefully dictate that the United States’ policy includes its helping the Jewish state obliterate its enemies.

Yes, you read option three correctly. Order a hit on a president in order to preserve Israel’s existence. Think about it. If I have thought of this Tom Clancy-type scenario, don’t you think that this almost unfathomable idea has been discussed in Israel’s most inner circles?

Another way of putting “three” in perspective goes something like this: How far would you go to save a nation comprised of seven million lives…Jews, Christians and Arabs alike?

You have got to believe, like I do, that all options are on the table.

No, actually I’ve got to believe that Andrew Adler is a class A asshole and an idiot to boot.  I could rail about the fact that the editor of a Jewish paper in one of America’s largest Jewish communities would pen such disgusting tripe.  But what disturbs me even more is that the tens of thousands of Jews living in Atlanta read not just this, but all the garbage this jerk writes.  Imagine the impact that this has on the tone and substance of political debate in that town.

Apparently, Israel has such a sterling reputation lately for political assassinations that Adler and others have come to believe that the best way of pursuing a political objective is to murder whoever stands in the way.  That’s one of the legacies that Israel’s far right government has bestowed to the world, both Jewish and non-Jewish.

Don’t think that Atlanta is alone.  The Jewish paper in the Five Towns published a similarly disturbing column a few years ago calling for the murder of Muslims.  Jews, even rabbis, dream up the most vile, disgusting scenarios for their fellow Jews.  In Israel, rabbis call for putting uppity Arabs in concentration camps.  We have much to ashamed of, just as we have much to be proud of: from our prophetic ethical tradition and inheritors of its mantle like Martin Buber, Judah Magnes and those who founded Brit Shalom; and their latter-day followers in NGOs like Sheikh Jarrah Solidarity, the Popular Committee Against Torture, Breaking the Silence, Peace Now and so many others.

Obama Ups Ante for War Against Iran

Friday, January 13th, 2012

strait of hormuzThose of you who know your World War I history will remember that that continental conflagration began with a match lit by the assassination of an Austrian archduke and his wife along a Serbian roadside.  Now Pres. Obama has opened yet another opportunity for yet another conflict in the Middle East by warning Iran that if it closes the Strait of Hormuz, the U.S. would go to war.

So you can expand the earlier U.S. claim that we would be willing to go to war only to prevent Iran from getting a nuclear weapon.  That now include battling it out over sea supremacy in the Persian Gulf.  In this sense, the U.S. is acting as a true colonial power in the old-fashioned sense by projecting its power for reasons that aren’t rooted in intrinsic U.S. interests.  It is true that a large amount of the world’s oil supply flows through the Gulf and that its closure would harm the world economy.  But there are many ways to deal with the disputes we face with Iran.  Threatening war over something like this almost invites war.  Now all that would be necessary is for one trigger-fingered Revolutionary Guard speedboat captain or one overeager U.S. Navy officer to press a button and send a ship to the bottom of the Gulf for there to be all-out mayhem.

This has happened numerous times in the past.  We shot down an Iranian jetliner killing nearly 300 civilians and they attacked us as well.  Imagine if any of that happened now.  There would be full scale conflict.  We can’t afford this.  Yet Obama is walking right into it with his eyes seemingly wide open (or is it “eyes wide shut?”).

Clearly, the U.S. has now given up hope or any chance of using diplomacy to resolve the conflicts with Iran.  Now we are reduced to issuing military threats and ultimatums.  Right now I’m thinking of that Marx Brothers line:

To war!  To war!  Fredonia’s going to war!

Except that this war will be far from a Marx Brothers farce.  It will be bloody nasty hell.  And naturally Israel will become involved pursuing its own interests and anything Israeli gets involved in becomes infinitely more bloody and complicated.

War began from a minor, possibly even imagined incident, in the Gulf of Tonkin.  It happened similarly in 1914.  It could easily happen again.  And if you think Barack Obama is too smart or too liberal a president to get us into something like this, you’re wrong.  Lyndon Johnson walked into the Vietnam War in a similar way.  All of Europe ended up slaughtering each other by the millions for a similar reason.