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Subject: [India Thinkers Net]Time running out for Iran? - October02, 2005



From: yogi sikand <ysikand@yahoo.com>
Date: Sun Oct 2, 2005
Subject: US Planning Invasion of Iran?  


1. Time Running Out For Iran?

By Abid Mustafa

02 October, 2005
Countercurrents.org

On September 24 2005, the International Atomic Energy
Agency (IAEA) passed a resolution to refer Iran to the
UN Security Council over its nuclear programme. The
35-nation board of the IAEA in Vienna said that Iran
has a ``long history of concealment and deception''.
The Bush administration immediately seized on IAEA's
decision and forecasted that it would eventually lead
to Iran's isolation. Undersecretary of State Nicholas
Burns said," We have a patient long-term strategy.
It's to isolate Iran on this question; it's to ratchet
up the international pressure on Iran,' and assemble
the kind of global coalition against Iran."After
having spent nine months supporting Germany, Britain
and France (EU-3) in getting Iran to surrender her
nuclear ambitions, America finally took one step
closer towards confronting Tehran and controlling
Iran's vast energy reserves.

From the outset the EU-3 talks with Iran were destined
to fail. EU diplomats struggled to reach the necessary
economic guarantees promised to Iran in Paris in
November 2004. Under the Paris agreement, the EU-3
agreed on Iran's right under the Non-Proliferation
Treaty (NPT) to produce the nuclear fuel necessary for
its reactors in exchange for Iran giving up its
ambition to produce nuclear weapons. Furthermore, the
EU agreed to invest in Iran and also invite it to join
a club of nuclear fuel-producing countries.

In February 2005, the US reneged on its previous
stance of pouring scorn on the EU-3 initiative and
started to actively support EU-3 negotiations on the
condition that should the EU-3 fail to reach an
agreement with Iran, they would have to recommend Iran
to the UN Security Council. Meanwhile, America worked
behind the scenes to scupper the EU-3 initiative.
America threatened a number of EU companies with
punitive sanctions if they proceeded to invest in
Iran. This was aptly summed up by Lord Brown, the
Chief executive of BP who said,"Right now it is
impractical for BP (to invest in Iran) because 40% of
BP is in the US and we are the largest producer of oil
and gas in the US. Politically Iran is not a flyer.
One day I hope it is." This left the EU-3 bereft of
any meaningful incentives to offer Iran and as a
result, Iran had little choice, but to break off
negotiations with the EU-3.

Thus America succeeded in Iran's referral to the UN
Security Council. Her next step is to get the referral
approved by the IAEA board in November before moving
on to declare Iran in 'material breach' of any UN
resolution that might be reached in the foreseeable
future. This maybe too much for some members of the
Security Council, but the Bush administration expects
some form of international legitimacy to emerge from
the deliberations at the UN. Even an iota of
international cover will be enough for some in the
Bush administration to push for regime change in Iran.
Before such an outcome can be engineered a number of
political obstacles must be surmounted first.

America's biggest problem is that she has failed to
make a compelling case about the threat posed by
Iran's nuclear capability. The fabricated lies about
Iraq's WMD to justify Iraq's invasion has not only
blighted American and British spy agencies but also
made it extremely difficult for the US to put forward
any credible evidence that may serve to incriminate
Iran. Besides the intelligence debacle in Iraq, a US
presidential commission investigating pre-war
intelligence about Iraq's weapons concluded in March
this year that US data on Iran's arms is "inadequate".
Western intelligence agencies and eminent think tanks
have also revised their estimates about Iran's nuclear
bomb. On August 1 2005, the Washington Post reported
that US National Intelligence estimates that Iran's
nuclear programme is 10 years away from producing a
nuclear bomb. John Chipman, director of London's
International Institute for Strategic Studies echoed
similar findings. He said, "If Iran threw caution to
the wind and sought a nuclear weapon capability as
quickly as possible, without regard for international
reaction; it might be able to produce enough highly
enriched uranium for a single nuclear weapon by the
end of this decade." He also went on to say that
technical problems could prolong the process and that
given international pressure; it was more likely to
try to accumulate the capability over 10 to 15 years.
In the light of these and other reports it is
difficult to imagine how the Bush administration is
going to present Iran's nuclear programme as one that
is on the verge of producing a nuclear bomb.

Israel is the only country that continues to propagate
the view that Iran's nuclear bomb is months away.
Sylvan Shalom, Israel's Foreign Minister told a
meeting of Jewish leaders in New York: "According to
our people, security and intelligence, they are very,
very close. It may be only six months before they will
have that full knowledge."

So given the paucity of data on Iran's nuclear
programme and the admission by western agencies that
Iran's nuclear bomb will be ready by 2015, the best
case the US can make against Iran, is that the
country's nuclear aspirations contravene international
norms. This is despite the fact that Iran's nuclear
programme is legal under NPT and Iran is doing nothing
more then exercising its right under the treaty.
Penalising Iran's observance of NPT, while rewarding
India (a non-signatory to NPT) with the right to
produce nuclear fuel and remaining silent on Israel's
nuclear bombs, sends an unequivocal message that
America is an avid practitioner of nuclear apartheid.

Another hurdle for America to overcome is the lack of
consensus at the UN about Iran's nuclear programme and
the measures needed to curtail it. This was evident at
the IAEA board meeting where its members voted by a
slim majority to refer Iran to the UN. Divisions
amongst UN Security Council
members over Iran are much more pronounced,
particularly amongst the permanent members.

Three years ago, the UN Security Council was severely
damaged in the run up to the Iraq war, with Germany,
France and Russia standing against America and
Britain. Bush's visit to Europe and Russia early this
year was intended to repair schisms over Iraq. It was
also an implicit admission that the
neoconservative inspired Bush doctrine had collapsed
and an olive branch was extended to old Europe to heal
the transatlantic rift.

Nevertheless, during the visit there was unanimity
between America and Europe that Tehran should not be
allowed to possess nuclear weapons, but disagreement
remained on how to punish Iran's non-compliance with
their wishes. Bush echoed these differences when he
said, "Great Britain, Germany and France are
negotiating with the ayatollahs to achieve our common
objective. This notion that the US is getting ready to
attack Iran is simply ridiculous. Having said that,
all options are on the table." But despite Bush's
assurance not to attack Iran, doubts in Europe still
linger to this day over American intentions to use
military force against Iran.

America's relations with Russia and China over Iran
are much more precarious. Both countries view an
attack on Iran as Washington's way of attempting to
control the world's oil supply. The recent
announcement by Shanghai Cooperation Organization
(SCO) demanding America to vacate military bases in
Afghanistan and Central Asia, as well as the
unprecedented Russian-Chinese military exercises are
intended to remind America that any advances against
Iran will be vehemently opposed. If such a standoff
were to transpire over Iran the likelihood for a new
world war could increase
dramatically.

Given these differences it is very unlikely that
America will be able to pass a resolution that
justifies use of military force against Iran. Not only
are the Chinese and Russians opposed to military
action but so are the Europeans. In August 2005,
Chancellor Schroeder responding to Bush said, "My
answer to that is: 'Dear friends in Europe and
America, let's develop a strong negotiating position
towards Iran, but take the military option off the
table."On September 3 2005, after wide-ranging talks
with the EU's 25 foreign ministers in Newport, south
Wales, and Britain's Foreign Secretary Jack Straw told
journalists: "Nobody is proposing military action in
regard of Iran. This is an issue that needs to be
resolved, and can only be resolved, by diplomatic
means." Nonetheless the Europeans are more likely to
support economic sanctions than their Russian and
Chinese counterparts. However, the Europeans would
never support robust sanctions against Tehran, as this
would hurt their commercial interests in Iran.

Whether the sanctions are watered down or not, to some
in the Bush administration the very notion of
sanctions represents a failure of US policy on Iran
and a return to the old policy of containment pursued
by previous Democratic and Republican administrations.

The issue of containment/engagement versus military
force to change Tehran's behaviour has plagued the
Bush administration ever since Bush rose to office -
often resulting in mixed signals from Washington. This
has become a major stumbling block in formulating a
coherent policy to deal with Iran. At the heart of the
issue is a fierce dispute between the realists and the
neoconservatives regarding the best approach towards
Iran. The row has permeated all sections of the US
government and has divided institutions like the State
Department, the Pentagon and the CIA. The
disagreements over Iran came to ahead in July 2004
with the publication of the report entitled "Iran:
Time for a New Approach" which was prepared by the
Council on Foreign Relations (CFR) under the direction
of Dr. Zbigniew Brzezinski, President Jimmy Carter's
national security adviser. The report argued that Iran
was not ripe for regime change as advocated by the
neoconservatives. The report stated: ""[D]espite
considerable political flux and popular
dissatisfaction. Iran is not on the verge of another
revolution. Those forces that are committed to
preserving Iran's current system remain firmly in
control." The report also stressed, that a "grand
bargain" to settle all outstanding conflicts between
Washington and Tehran is unrealistic and that talks
should focus instead on making "incremental progress"
on a variety of key issues, including regional
stability and Iran's nuclear ambitions.

The recommendations of the report were instantly
dismissed by the neoconservatives who are closely
associated with Vice President Dick Cheney and Defence
Secretary Donald Rumsfeld. Arch neoconservative
Micheal Ledeen, who considers Tehran the global
capital of Islamist "terror masters," wrote in
National Review Online that the CFR recommendations
were "humiliating" and constituted "appeasement".

However, the beginning of the second Bush presidency
heralded the decline of the neoconservatives in the
Bush administration. Some of the neoconservatives like
Paul Wolfowitz and John Bolton were ushered out of
foreign policy making roles and given policy
implementation roles at the World Bank and the UN,
while others like Douglas Feith was forced to leave.
The departure of the neoconservatives gave way to
realism and soft power in the Bush administration. To
a large extent parity was restored between the
influence of the US State Department and Pentagon over
foreign policy matters. Collaboration with other
nations to solve political crisis in Sudan, Lebanon,
North Korean, and Iran is reminiscent of
multilateralism employed by previous US
administration.

The ascendancy of realism in the Bush administration
has not completely silenced neoconservative views on
Iran. The ever present Dick Cheney an ardent supporter
of neoconservatism has taken it upon himself to ensure
that should the opportunity avail itself, America is
prepared to use overwhelming force against Iran to
occupy its oil and gas fields.

For sometime now, the Cheney faction in the Bush
administration has been secretly preparing to attack
Iran. This came to the world's attention early this
year, when Seymour Hersh revealed in the New Yorker
that American Special Forces had conducted
reconnaissance missions inside Iran for six
months. Apart from US commandos operations inside
Iran, aerial surveillance of the country has been
rampant. On February 13 2005, The Washington Post
revealed that the US military had been flying
surveillance drones over Iran for nearly a year to
seek evidence of nuclear weapons programs and detect
weaknesses in air defences. The paper went on to
state: "The aerial espionage is standard in military
preparations for an eventual air attack and is also
employed as a tool for intimidation".

America also enlisted Musharraf to assist the American
military and her surrogates to launch attacks from
inside Pakistan. Richard Sale, the intelligence
correspondent for United Press International, wrote
that Musharraf had allowed Iranian anti-regime
fighters to operate from Pakistan's Balochistan
province that abuts Iran. Sale claimed that the
fighters included those from the Mujahideen-e-Khalq
(MEK), which is officially listed as a terrorist
organization by the US State Department. Americans
already have access to DalBaladin airbase which is the
largest airbase in Balochistan. The current insurgency
in Balochistan has been exploited by Musharraf to
build new military installations and other facilities
that the Americans can use in any confrontation with
Iran. Such reports seem to be highly credible when
measured against the backdrop of the military activity
in Balochistan and Musharraf's statement on Iran, when
he said," We hope the US doesn't attack Iran. In the
event of an attack, Pakistan will remain neutral."

Musharraf's assistance to US military planners extends
beyond Balochistan. He has helped American soldiers to
become familiar with the terrain of Tehran by
facilitating joint exercises between the Pakistani and
the American army in Karachi. The existence of such
exercises was confirmed by a spokesman of the
Inter-Services Public Relations (ISPR), Colonel Tahir
Idrees Malik, who described them as anti-terrorist
drills.

In May 2005, Rumsfeld visited Afghanistan, Azerbaijan
and Pakistan to negotiate the use of airbases as part
of a plan to complete Iran's encirclement. In
Afghanistan, Rumsfeld met with Karzia to discuss the
possibility of making several American airbases
permanent. A small proportion of these bases are in
close proximity to Iran. For instance the military
base in Herat is undergoing renovations by the US
military. In December 2004, US Army spokesman Major
Mark McCann said, "We are building a base in Herat. It
is true." Another base of significance to US military
planners is Shindand Air Field inthe western province
of Herat. Shindand is about 100 kilometres from the
border with Iran, a location that makes it
controversial. According to the US-based think-tank
Global Security, Shindand is the largest air base in
Afghanistan. The proximity of Shindand to Iran could
give Tehran cause for concern, says Paul Beaver, an
independent defence analyst based in London. In
Azerbaijan, Rumsfeld discussed the prospect of
upgrading its military base in Baku. The upgraded base
will host a new rapid reaction force, called the
Caspian Guard, as well as state of the art radar
equipment.America is also planning to use nuclear
weapons against Iran. Media reports are rife with
speculation that these weapons will be used to destroy
Iranian bunkers impregnable to conventional weapons.
On May 15 2005, the Washington Post reported that
Defence Secretary Donald H. Rumsfeld had approved a
top secret "Interim Global Strike Alert Order"
directing the military to assume and maintain
readiness to attack hostile countries that are
developing weapons of mass destruction, specifically
Iran and North Korea. The paper went on to state: "The
inclusion, therefore, of a nuclear weapons option in
CONPLAN 8022 - a specially configured
earth-penetrating bomb to destroy deeply buried
facilities, if any exist - is particularly
disconcerting. The global strike plan holds the
nuclear option in reserve if intelligence suggests an
"imminent" launch of an enemy nuclear strike on the
United States or if there is a need to destroy
hard-to-reach targets". Whether America intends to use
CONPLAN 8022 or not, largely depends upon the ability
of the US government to dupe the American public into
believing that there is a real and immediate threat
from a known adversary.Right now the American public
is increasingly weary of US commitments abroad and
this represents a major challenge for the Bush
administration-especially for those in the
administration who seek military confrontation with
Iran.


The rising US casualties in Iraq, the mounting costs
of the Iraq occupation and the ferocity of the
ever-expanding resistance in Iraq have taken its toll
the US public. This has been further compounded by the
inept response of the US federal government to the
relief effort in the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina.
This has prompted the American people to seriously
question the wisdom of maintaining US forces in Iraq
and Afghanistan, while Americans are suffering at
home. Majority of Americans on either sides of the
political divide want to bring the troops home and
reduce the financial burden of the Iraq war. Americans
believe that the money saved could be better spent on
helping fellow Americans made destitute by Katrina and
Rita.

Even the Republican Party has not been spared from the
fallout of Katrina and Iraq. Differences amongst the
party ranks have threatened to destabilise the party
over Iraq and Katrina. To make matters worse, some
Republicans have stopped listening to the Whitehouse.
Instead they are taking their queue from their
constituencies in order to reposition themselves for
the forthcoming elections in 2006. The stepping down
of Tom Delay the Congress Majority leader and the
ethics charges against Bill First the Senate, Majority
Leader have added to Bush's growing political woes.
Bush now has to contend with charges of nepotism
within his party.

With the American public preoccupied with domestic
issues and the Republican Party marred with hubris and
scandals, it is unlikely that President Bush will be
unable to muster support for a new military
confrontation with Iran-should the opportunity arise.
However, if America were to experience another 9/11
type of attack the US public mood could be manipulated
to support military action against Iran.

But Tehran is not taking any chances. The Iranian
government has taken note of US military deployments
in the neighbouring countries and has taken several
steps to fortify Iran against a possible US invasion.
The first sign came in June with the election of
Mahmoud Ahmadinejad who proceeded to purge the
military, the security apparatus, the civil service,
state-owned corporations and the media of moderate
elements. The most significant purges occurred in the
military top brass. Among those replaced are the
commander-in-chief of the regular army and his four
deputies, 11 senior commanders of the Islamic
Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) and five commanders
of the paramilitary Mobilisation of the Dispossessed.
The minister of intelligence and security, and the
minister of the interior who controls the police and
the gendarmerie, have also been replaced. But,
perhaps, the strongest sign of Iranian military
preparedness stems from the military build-up in the
five provinces bordering Iraq. The region, with a
population of 20 million, has been put under the
control of the IRGC. Iran is estimated to have 250,000
troops in the area, its biggest military deployment
since the end of the Iran-Iraq war in 1988. Iran has
also tightened its grip on Turkomen, Arabs, Baloch,
and Kurds who live in the southwest, southeast, and
northwest of the country. This is because Tehran fears
a multiple prong attack from the US which may result
in separation of the Arab province of Khuzestan, the
Kurdistan province and the Baloch province of Khorasan
from the motherland.

The neoconservatives want to transform the region into
territories controlled by Arab Shias, but segregated
from Sunni dominated areas. In many ways this is an
offshoot of the old American plan to divide Iraq into
3 segments and to gather the Arab Shia's under
America's leadership. The reason behind this, is that
the majority of the oil of the Middle East lies in
Arab Shia dominated lands such as Southern Iraq,
Khuzestan, Bahrain and Eastern Saudi Arabia. In short,
the neoconservative vision for the region is a
magnified picture of Iraq-segregated oil rich US
protectorates surrounded by managed chaos. A recipe
for perpetual wars, continuous occupation of Arab
lands and bloodshed- this is the neoconservative
dream.

In conclusion, the realists in the Bush administration
have the upper hand. their preferred method of dealing
with Iran's nuclear programme is through multilaterism
and diplomacy, as opposed to unilateralism and
military intervention. However, the failure of the
Bush administration to subdue those voices who exhort
military action against Iran continues to alarm the
world. But these concerns appear to be over-stated as
Iraq, Katrina and scandals in the GOP threaten to
derail Bush's foreign policy agenda.

2. Preparing for War With Iran?
[http://westchesterweekly.com/gbase/News/content?oid=oid:127517]
Former U.N. weapons inspector Scott Ritter outlines
the Bushies' plan for military domination of the
Middle East

by Steve Sellery - September 29, 2005



Scott Ritter: "Iraq is a nation on fire. And our
troops are the fuel that feeds that fire."

Scott Ritter, former U.N. weapons inspector in Iraq,
made a strong case that the Bush administration is
preparing to take the war to Iran in a speech he gave
at the United Church on the Green in New Haven on
Sept. 17 before an attentive crowd of about 250.
The gathering, sponsored by Squeaky Wheel Productions,
Between the Lines Radio Newsmagazine, WPKN and the
Yale Coalition for Peace, was perfectly timed. Ritter
spoke the day before the visit of Cindy Sheehan, the
mother who still wants President George W. Bush to
tell her why her son died. In his speech, titled
"Parallel Deceptions: The Bush Agenda for War in Iraq
and Iran," Ritter made it clear that her son died
because of deceptions by the Bush administration that
led to the Iraq war and that are preparing us for war
in Iran. It is all laid out in the Wolfowitz-Cheney
gang's document "Project for a New American Century"
where the neocons plan for military domination of the
Middle East.

Scott Ritter is an imposing man. Big and burly, he
still looks like the Marine Corps leader who led a
dozen men in combat. He began his speech by remarking
wryly that he could never have imagined being
sponsored by peace groups. He was and is a military
man, a card-carrying member of the American Legion. "I
still believe in war," he said. "It's just that this
is an illegal war and every day it takes us further
from our goals of peace."

Ritter's controlled anger at the Bush administration
was apparent. This is not the anger of a peacenik, but
of a military man who has been deceived by his
leadership. "It's not the fault of the military men on
the scene in Iraq," he said. "They are just taking
orders. When you and your 12 men are face to face
against the enemy, you have to focus on staying alive
and winning your mission. The military men and women
are doing what we as a country have asked them to do."


"Iraq is a nation on fire," Ritter asserted. "And our
troops are the fuel that feeds that fire." Make no
mistake about it, he added, today is the best day that
we are going to have in Iraq. It is only going to get
worse. Why not get out of Iraq on the best day? We do
not need to wait until it gets worse.

Ritter summed up the current Iraq conflict as an
"illegal" war that is the result of a decade of
deception by the U.S. government and the CIA. After
Saddam Hussein invaded Kuwait, the U.N. Resolution
called for the removal of Iraqi forces from Kuwait.
This was done. Colin Powell, who was then Joint Chief
of Staff of the military, told the president not to
take over Iraq because we did not have a plan for
managing the aftermath; and without a plan there would
be ethnic bloodshed. Bush took his advice. The CIA
told the president that with economic sanctions, we
could squeeze the Iraqis until they deposed Saddam
Hussein. The CIA thought it would take six months.

Weapons of mass destruction were used as a
justification for the economic sanctions on Iraq after
Kuwait was liberated. But, Ritter noted, the first
Gulf War came close to destroying all of Iraq's
capabilities. These were only "high school-like
programs" to develop WMD, Ritter said. However, the
U.S. government hyped up the threat to make the
economy collapse so that Hussein would be thrown out.
Bush signed the order to the CIA that made getting rid
of Saddam Hussein goal No. 1.

During the run up to the Iraq War, the Iraqis were
letting arms inspectors into the country, Ritter
explained. The Iraqis said they had destroyed much of
their capabilities. Ritter said inspectors had
evidence of most of the destroyed capabilities, but
they could not verify the last remaining weapons.
"It's impossible to prove a negative," he said. "The
CIA kept saying that some remained and at the time we
could not prove them completely wrong. Now we know.

"The CIA said there were 140 SCUD missiles in Iraq and
we proved them wrong," he added. "The CIA reduced that
number to 14 missiles and said they would not budge
from that number. And they were right about one
thing--they never budged from that number. But it was
politically motivated from the beginning."

On to Iran. Ritter maintains that the Bush
administration plans to go to war with Iran over its
nuclear energy program. Our government says we can't
trust the Iranians because an oil rich nation does not
need nuclear energy. But in 1976 (when Donald
Rumsfield was Secretary of Defense and Dick Cheney was
the Chief of Staff under Gerald Ford's presidency),
the Shah of Iran told the United States that he needed
nuclear energy to diversify his country's energy
program for security reasons, in case the Persian Gulf
were militarily blocked or if there was massive
damage--natural or manmade--to its oil wells. The U.S.
government agreed with the Shah's logic then, but has
since changed its position, because, as Ritter noted,
the neocon strategy is for regime change throughout
the Middle East, despite the fact that the same people
who once approved of Iran's nuclear energy program,
are now opposed to it.

Iran has been complying with all international laws in
regards to international inspections of its nuclear
energy program. There is no legal way to oppose it, so
the Bush administration is saying that it's a front
for weapons of mass destruction, according to Ritter.
If the United States asks Iran to shut down its
nuclear energy program, and this request goes to the
U.N. Security Council, Russia and China have said that
they will oppose the request. In that scenario, Ritter
said, the United States can fall back on Bush's Sept.
17, 2002 New Security Agreement and say that U.S.
security is threatened and that the only solution is
war.

Ritter said that one reason we cannot find a way out
of the Iraq War is that so many members of Congress
voted for the war and are afraid to change their
position. The only solution is for the American people
to vote out of office every elected
official--Republican or Democrat--who refuses to
change his or her position to one of immediate
withdrawal. This includes Democrats like Hillary
Rodham Clinton and Joseph Biden, who are sticking by
their pro-war positions as they run for president.
Until we purge all of these people from office, they
will send us to war in Iran, Ritter predicted.

Following his speech, Ritter took questions from the
audience. One person asked about the permanent
military bases in Iraq. Ritter said that the United
States started with 120 military bases and is
consolidating them to 40 with the plan to consolidate
further to 14 and then to four major bases outside of
the population zones. Iraq will become our "lily pad"
in the Middle East, he said. It will allow us to
withdraw our troops from Saudi Arabia, but still
provide us with the capability to strike in Iran,
Syria, etc. However, the Iraqi people want us out of
their country completely, he said. They will not
accept these permanent American military bases.

A second person asked Ritter what he could tell his
high-school-aged children. Ritter responded, "I have
two girls, 12-year-old twins. We need to make this
world safe for them and their children. When I speak
at high schools around the nation, I tell the students
that my generation has failed them. Yes, we have
failed them. They should not listen to us, because we
have created a world of permanent war, and because we
lie to them on a regular basis. Do not trust your
government, I tell them. Trust yourself. Question
authority. Take responsibility for the world. Take
action. Only you can save the world."

seller y@...



 








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