| K Gajendra Singh
Like Iraq , some fancy schemes are on the anvil
in the Pentagon .To ward off the threats to the
world economy if Tehran curtailed oil traffic
through the Strait of Hormuz, the US has
reportedly made contingency plans for the
indefinite takeover of Iranian territory in Chah
Bahar, which would deny Tehran its strategic
leverage with Hormuz
Texan Poker Bluff and
Persian Chess Moves.
"The arrogance of military power has led to a
grave crisis - and to a decline of the United
States' role and influence." Mikhail Gorbachev.
"The president is living in a dream world,'' US
Sen. Barbara Boxer.
By K Gajendra Singh
01/22/07 "ICHBlog"
--- On Iran , US Administration has
reached the pre-Iraq invasion rhetoric level of
2003 , when against the UN Charter and world
opinion ,President George Bush decided to invade
Iraq after having assembled a naval armada and
air and land forces in the region ,cheerlead by
a subservient US media . Bush and Secretary of
State Condoleezza Rice are accusing Tehran of
developing nuclear weapons and exporting
terrorism, just as Saddam Hussein was allegedly
doing. Iran is also not abiding by U N
resolutions on its nuclear weapons program,
which, like Iraq then, it denies it has. UN
Nuclear Agency in Vienna has found no proof of a
weapons program .Neither there was one in Iraq
in 2003. Almost all accusations made by US
President , his deputy and others , exaggerated
by US corporate owned media proved to be false.
But after 4 years of blunders and stupidity ,
the situation is unlike March, 2003 , with an
isolated Bush administration now under siege
having become unpopular and discredited at home
and with allies abroad .In Iran it faces a
people with a long history of survival beginning
with Alexander and his uncouth Macedonian hordes
, Arabs ,Turks , Mongols and others. And they
succeeded in civilizing most of them.
Even the new Chairman of the US Senate
Intelligence Committee , John D. Rockefeller (D)
took umbrage at the Bush administration's
increasingly hostile barrage against Iran .The
efforts to portray it as a growing threat were
uncomfortably reminiscent of the rhetoric about
Iraq. "To be quite honest, I'm a little
concerned that it's Iraq again," Senator
Rockefeller said in an interview on 19 January.
"This whole concept of moving against Iran is
bizarre." "I don't think that policymakers in
this administration particularly understand
Iran," he added. Rockefeller, a moderate , with
good access to most classified intelligence
about the threat from Tehran felt that US
agencies still knew little about either Iran's
internal dynamics or its intentions in the
Middle East.
On how President Bush has dealt with the threat
of Islamic fundamentalism since 119 attacks,
Rockefeller believed that the campaign against
international terrorism was "still a mystery" to
the President. "I don't think he understands the
world," he said. "I don't think he's
particularly curious about the world. I don't
think he reads like he says he does." He added,
"Every time he's read something he tells you
about it, I think."
Over Bush's policy of 'Surge ' ie sending
additional 21,500 troops to Iraq ,hot words are
being exchanged between Democrat party
,resurgent after Bush's Republican party debacle
in November elections and the White House. House
Speaker Nancy Pelosi said Democrats are backing
a nonbinding Senate Democratic resolution
declaring that "It is not in the national
interest of the United States to deepen its
military involvement in Iraq, particularly by
escalating the US military force presence in
Iraq."
Pelosi warned that President Bush was wading too
deeply into Iraq .It should not be "an
obligation of the American people in
perpetuity." She added that Bush "has dug a hole
so deep he can't even see the light on this.
It's a tragedy. It's a stark blunder." White
House spokeswoman Dana Perino retorted that
Pelosi's comments were "poisonous," stating that
Bush feels that once additional troops reached
Iraq and once they're in battle , the Congress
won't cut off funds.
Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton , Democrat front
runner for party's Presidential nomination
during her recent visit to Baghdad met with
Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri al Maliki. She felt
that Bush's strategy had little chance of
success. " The Iraqi government is not committed
to taking the steps both militarily and
politically that would help them to gain control
over Baghdad and other places in the country,"
Clinton told NBC ."I do not think that this
strategy has a very high level of success at all
attached to it. In fact, I think that at best
it's a holding pattern."But she supported " the
beginning of a phased redeployment out of
Baghdad and eventually out of Iraq completely."
She backed placing an immediate cap on the
number of US troops in the country, currently
about 132, 000.
The arrival of new US reinforcements have met
with increased attacks against occupation troops
. On 20 January , at least 19 American troops
were killed,athe deadliest day for US forces in
two years, including 12 brought down in a
helicopter crash claimed by the resistance and 5
in an attack by militia fighters in Shia holy
city of Karbala A British soldier was killed by
a roadside bomb and 4 other soldiers were
wounded in the attack in Basra and south Iraq.
Bush raises the stakes;
It was the prospect of " hot pursuit" raids into
Iran, raised by Bush last week, that fuelled
fears that the Administration was preparing the
public for attacks on Iran. Many analysts have
been warning since 2004 against a planned US
attack alone or in cahoots with Israel on Iran ,
one of the so called axis of evil , in the hoary
Western tradition of demonizing those they want
to invade , colonise and then loot.
US accusations of Tehran aiding militias and
insurgents who attack US troops in Iraq , have
been denied by Tehran. Yes, most of Iraq's Shia
ruling elite and al-Badr militia were financed
and trained by Iran when Saddam Hussein was a US
darling in 1980s.Tehran also extended support to
Kurds in north Iraq , whenever pressurized by
the Saddam regime.
Having flouted most international rules,
regulations , treaties and conventions since
Bush was crowned by a judicial sleight of hand
in 2000, tarnishing USA's electoral and legal
credibility , Washington has now initiated
clearly illegal and aggressive actions like the
abduction of accredited Iranian personnel in
Irbil in north Iraqi Kurdistan .Even the Kurdish
leaders , beholden to Washington and thriving
under US protection since the end of 1991 Gulf
War ,have demurred and protested as have the
Iraqi leaders and government 'elected' or
selected by US Viceroys since the occupation.
Senior Iraqi Shia politicians , now in power,
and beholden to Tehran since decades are now
required to implement Bush's policy of 'Surge'
,by adding over 21,500 troops to help fight
militias , provide security and reconstruction
.They are naturally reluctant in striking
against Shia militias and their leaders on whose
support they survive , politically and
militarily . In spite of public bon homie and
some token measures .there are clear signs of a
growing rift between the White House and the
Iraqi leadership resident in Baghdad's Green
Zone fortress , on policies at home or vis a vis
Tehran.
A tour of the Middle East by the US Congress
harassed Secretary of State Condi Rice , after
her August trip last year when she described the
destruction of civilian infrastructure and
deaths in Lebanon by Israel as the birth pangs
of a new Middle East ,evoked little enthusiasm
or real support from USA's Sunni allies in the
region , who are in panic over Tehran's
expanding influence in the region , Muslim Ummah
and the world .
After the Lebanese Hezbollah gave a bloody nose
to Israel's famed commandos in July-August war
last year ,its leader Sheikh Hassan Nasrallah
and Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, both
Shias were voted the most popular Muslim leaders
even in the Sunni bastion of Egypt and elsewhere
much to the discomfiture of regional Sunni
leaders ,who had lambasted the Hezbollah after
Tel Aviv used the abduction of its two soldiers
to launch a full scale war it had prepared for .
The continued ramification of Israeli defeat
ended in the recent resignation of Israeli
Military chief Lt.Gen Dan Halutz. "Since the end
of the war we had been expecting Halutz to
resign and [Defence Minister Amir] Peretz and
[Prime Minister Ehud] Olmert to follow him,"
gloated Sheikh Nasrallah .
Iraq's other neighbour; Turkey's position ;
There is little common ground on Iraq between
USA and its NATO ally Turkey with a million
armed men and a key regional player .Turkish
Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan told a US TV
channel last month that with the dead in
sectarian violence having exceeded 650,000 ...
it could only be explained as a civil war. He
added that Iraq's neighbors have a huge stake in
the Iraqi civil war not spreading outwards .In
addition to Iran, Turkey, Syria and US having
bilateral or trilateral meetings, there should
be an international consensus that includes all
neighboring countries and the U.N. Security
Council.
As for the 'Surge ' in US troops, Erdogan felt
that it was time for a phased reduction of US
military presence in Iraq. Erdogan had earlier
opposed dispatch of more US troops to Iraqi
Kurdistan .He declared recently that if faraway
US could ferry troops to Iraq then Ankara had
the right to enter north Iraq too ,as the
situation there impinged on Turkey directly and
adversely.
Thousands of rebels from PKK (Turkish Workers
Party ) are now sheltered in north Iraq .Since
1984 over 37,000 have been killed in the Kurdish
rebellion in Turkey's South East. Ankara has
some times laid claims on the north Iraq city of
Kirkuk , floating on oil like Kuwait , where its
kinsman the Turcomen have a sizable presence.
This region was occupied by the British after
the First World War ceasefire following the
collapse of the Ottoman Empire, of which the
region was a province.
Policy differences between Washington and Iraqi
leaders ;
The acrimonious exchanges between US
Administration and Prime Minister, al-Maliki on
implementation of Bush's policy of 'Surge " have
become public . To counter US criticism of his
failure to halt sectarian violence al Maliki
said, "I wish that we could receive strong
messages of support from the US so we don't give
some boost to the terrorists and make them feel
that they might have achieved success." To Condi
Rice's statement of his government living on
"borrowed time", he responded tartly, "Secretary
Rice is expressing her own point of view if she
thinks that the government is on borrowed time,
whether it is borrowed time for the Iraqi
government or American administration."
Al Maliki claimed if Iraqi security forces were
given sufficient training and equipment, which
were denied , Iraq could be stabilized and allow
US troops to begin withdrawing ."I think that
within three to six months our need for the
American troops will dramatically go down." But
"that's on the condition that there are real
strong efforts to support our military forces."
US officials are how ever worried that military
equipment would end up in with the Shia militias
,which has happened.
Regarding action to eliminate all militias , al
Maliki announced that 400 members ,including
some commanders of the Mahdi Army loyal to the
highly popular and powerful cleric Moqtada al-Sadr
were arrested. One Mahdi commander told the AP ,
"Our top leadership has told us to lay low and
not confront the Americans. But if Sadr City is
attacked, if civilians are hurt, we will ignore
those orders and take matters in our own hands.
We won't need orders from Sheik Muqtada ."
Mahdi street fighters have been told not to wear
their black uniforms and hide their weapons and
make their checkpoints less visible. It appears
that instructions are being obeyed. With the US
plans a public secret, Moqtda also reshuffled
the Mahdi Army command structure, transferring
many leaders to new districts and firing others
of suspected loyalty.
The six-member Moqtda al-Sadr bloc which
boycotted the Iraqi Parliament would rejoin on
21 January , in spite of the arrest of Sheikh
Abdel Hadi Al-Diraji, a close aide of Moqtda ,
who has ordered his men to avoid armed
confrontation with the government. The
Parliament boycott was enforced when Al Maliki
met with Bush in Amman in spite of Moqtda's
demand. Al Maliki depends on Moqtda for
political and military support .The other Shia
Dawa militia is under Abdul-Aziz al-Hakim of
Supreme Council for the Islamic Revolution in
Iraq (SCIRI).
In an interview out on 19 January in Rome 's La
Republica ,Moqtada stated that he never trusted
Prime Minister al-Maliki nor his predecessor
Iyad Allawi. He accused them of being in cahoots
with the US plans to destroy him and his
militia. A crackdown on his movement "has
already kicked off." "Last night they arrested
over 400 of my people. But it is not us they
want to destroy, it's Islam," he declared.
Moqtda also denied that members of his militia
have infiltrated the army and police. "The exact
opposite has happened: it is our militia which
is full of spies. It is actually very easy to
infiltrate an army of the people." He also
denied that those who chanted his name and
insulted Saddam Hussein at his execution were
his men. "Those were people paid to disparage
me, to make me appear like the person
responsible for the hanging," he declared .
Ibrahim al-Jaafari, a former Iraqi Prime
Minister , when asked if an increase in US
troops would be a threat to Iran, replied: "We
don't want Iraq to pose a threat to any country.
We also don't accept that any neighbouring
country poses a threat to Iraq."
The Iraqi Government and the Mahdi Army could
employ the tactics used by Washington's major
non-NAO strategic ally in the war against
terrorism, Pakistan and its all purpose powerful
tool ,Inter-Services Intelligence agency ( ISI
). When pressed by Washington , Islamabad
produces a few Al Qaeda operatives , mostly low
level ,for Washington to garner some propaganda
points . Five years on after 911 , the results
of the war on terrorism are dismal , with most
convinced it is but a charade , to keep US
public frightened for Bush Administration to
implement its partisan agenda .In return
Pakistan has received billions worth of aid ,
mostly for defence, which has only strengthened
the strangle hold of the military over civil
society.
Iraq leaders criticise US action in Irbil;
Abdul-Aziz al-Hakim of SCIRI , leader of the
130-member Shia bloc in the Parliament and thus
one of Iraq's most powerful politicians and
who was hosted at the White House in early
December criticised the US action in Irbil .He
described the detention of the Iranians an
attack on Iraq's sovereignty. "Regardless of the
Iranian position, we consider these actions as
incorrect," Hakim, told the BBC. "They represent
a kind of attack on Iraq's sovereignty, and we
hope such things are not repeated."
In a statement Iraqi President Jalal Talabani, a
Kurd, expressed "disturbance and condemnation"
of the predawn operation and urged the US
military to release the arrested. Iraq's Foreign
Minister, Hoshyar Zebari, also a Kurd , said
that Iraq needed good relations with Iran. "We
can't change the geographical reality that Iran
is our neighbour. This is a delicate balance and
we are treading a very thin line," he said. "We
fully respect the views, policies and strategy
of the United States, which is Iraq's strongest
ally , but the Iraqi government has national
interests of its own."
US Iran hostilities would disrupt peace in the
region and the growing affluence of Kurdish war
lords . In that case Turkey might even
intervene. To calm the situation President
Talbani , who has been to Ankara a few times ,
went to Damascus , first such visit in 3 decades
by an Iraqi Head of State . Of course he visited
Damascus many times during the Saddam era .Post
2003 invasion, Of course Iraq's Shia leadership,
with long close relations with Iran have visited
Tehran many times. Even convicted embezzler but
Minister ,exile Ahmet Celebi, once a blue eyed
boy of the Pentagon .
Iranians have played it cool and not made such a
big issue of the raid .Iranian Foreign Ministry
spokesman Mohammad Ali Husseini condemned the
raid. "The activity of all those people at our
office in Irbil was legal and was in cooperation
with and had the approval of the Iraqi side,"
Husseini told Iran's state-owned Arabic language
satellite channel Al-Alam.
In ratcheting up tensions beyond threats,
Washington might try to implement the so called
'Khuzestan gambit' i.e. creating dissentions
and even intervening across south Iraq in Iran's
major oil producing region of Khuzestan , of
ancient Elam and Cyrus's Persian empire's
capital Susa. Now it is sparsely populated by
preponderantly Arab Shias. During the 1980-99
Iraq-Iran war , Shia Arabs on the two sides of
the border had fought loyally for their
countries .
When the Shias in Basra were quiet watching
disenfranchised Sunni elite take on the US
troops and harm each other , British James Bonds
were active across in Khuzestan .But Iraqi Shia
militias would take on all occupation troops if
Iran or themselves are attacked. A large
majority of Shia population and leadership is
now strongly opposed to the occupation. So the
un-nerved British forces fled from Basra city to
the airport and safe desert bases for easier
Dunkirk like run for home, when necessary.
The British had even suggested that they would
like to shift their troops to a more important
mission in South Afghanistan , where along with
reluctant NATO it is now confronted by a
resurgent Taleban. With Pakistan having lost
over 800 troops in its North West Frontier
Province and forced into a peace agreement with
the Taleban , attacks against NATO forces in
Afghanistan have increased .
Muhammad Hanif, a Taliban spokesman captured by
British and Afghan troops near the border with
Pakistan, on being grilled, confessed that the
Taleban Emir Mullah Omar lives in Quetta in
Pakistan. "He is protected by ISI," Hanif said.
Afghan President, Hamid Karzai, made similar
allegations in the past .But Aftab Ahmad Sherpao,
Pakistan's Interior Minister denied the reports,
"We have no information on the whereabouts of
Mullah Omar. He is not living in Pakistan."
Following the old European and now US policy of
divide and rule ,Washington is successfully
igniting dissensions and perhaps succeeding in
arousing the dormant historic hatred between
Arab Sunnis and Shias in Iraq, who are now
savagely killing each other , more so since the
US reported that Al Qaeda damaged the Shia
Golden Dome mosque in Samarrah early last year
. US cracked the first Shia-Sunni fault line in
Iraqi nationalism when then President George
Bush Senior asked Shias and Kurds of Iraq to
rise against Saddam Hussein at the end of 1991
Gulf War .And then did nothing when Saddam
Hussein regime attacked by the rebels suppressed
the uprising brutally . That would not inspire
Shia trust in US words .The illegal trial and
lynching of Saddam Hussein under US direction,
control and occupation has deepened this
sectarian chasm further.
Robert Gates- A strong and a long time US
presence in Middle East;
It was quite apparent that the Iraq Study Group
Report was just another red herring to mollify a
disenchanted US public and keep the new Congress
diverted .USA would not walk away from the
region .Listen to what a major contributor to
ISG report, the newly minted Defence Secretary
Robert Gates said about the buildup of US forces
in the region, involving the dispatch of an
aircraft carrier and Patriot missile defence
batteries , apart from US troops.
"We are simply reaffirming that statement of the
importance of the Gulf region to the United
States and our determination to be an ongoing
strong presence in that area for a long time
into the future," said Gates on the first
arrival of reinforcements in Baghdad as part of
Bush's "surge" strategy. The US military buildup
is intended to signal American determination to
remain a dominant player in the region.
"The Iranians clearly believe we are tied down
in Iraq, that they have the initiative, that
they are in a position to press us in many
ways," Gates told journalists in Brussels. "They
are doing nothing to be constructive in Iraq at
this point." He added that Tehran was seeking to
foment conflict in Lebanon through Hezbollah.
But Gates did not rule out the possibility of
talks in the future if Iran changed its
behaviour. "When the Iranians are prepared to
play a constructive role in dealing with some of
these problems there might be opportunities for
engagement," he said.
Bush 'Stays the Course' - in aggressive mode;
When asked if the alleged killing of Americans
by Iranian agents in Iraq constituted an act of
war , Bush said he was not a lawyer so could not
define what constituted an act of war but "let
me just say it's unacceptable". He warned if the
US failed in Iraq it would lead to a wider
regional crisis, "If the [Iraq] government falls
apart and there is sectarian enclaves and
violence it'll invite Iran into the Shia
neighbourhoods."
On June 21, 2005, General John R Vines, then a
senior US commander in Iraq, told reporters that
the insurgents had probably drawn on bomb-making
expertise from Saddam's battle hardened army. US
media and the British keep on claiming Iranian
hand in supplying and helping Iraqi militias,
even to the Sunni resistance.
Baltimore Times reported that at the current
spending rate on the Iraq War, being waged along
with the fighting in Afghanistan, the cost of
the Iraq invasion will reach $600 billion this
year. Much of the funding for the war comes from
outside the normal budgetary process , through
emergency appropriation bills.
US Congress rallies against 'Surge';
The policy of the 'Surge 'was concocted to
counter ISG Report by Neo-Cons of American
Enterprise Institute and former Lt Gen Keane .
But Democrat Congressman John Murtha, a former
decorated Marine and vocal opponent of the Iraq
war and the incoming chairman of the Defense
Appropriations Subcommittee said, "If we have
our way there will be substantial change and
substantial pressure put on this administration…
The allies don't want us over there. The Iraqis
don't want us over there and we expect that even
the Republicans will support us when we get our
bill up."
He then added ominously, (we want a)
"redeployment of troops out of Iraq" and (we
will) "restrict funding until some of the
problems are fixed at home." [ redeployment to
new massive bases in Iraq which can house up to
70,000 soldiers !]
Murtha clarified, " You know they say that Al
Qaeda is causing the divisions and sectarian
violence? The invasion itself is what causes the
sectarian violence –It's the occupation causes
the violence. That's the problem we have and we
have to change directions."
Murtha had raised the alarm in 2005 that the US
army had done what it could do in Iraq .It was
now broken. It was followed by the Generals
revolt , when 8 senior retired generals went
against Defence Secretary Donald Rumsfeld and
blamed him for defective Iraq war planning and
its implementation. The two top Generals, Arabic
knowing Gen. John Abizaid ( of Lebanese
extraction ) Head of Centcom and Gen George
Casey the man on the ground in Iraq who
expressed themselves against increased US troops
, are being eased out. Along with the naval
build up in the Gulf , a Naval Admiral is being
appointed apparently to carry out operations
against Iran .
But the opposition to the war has seeped even
into the ranks of the US forces . Some 1,000
active-duty soldiers and Marines urged US
lawmakers to support a quick withdrawal.
Although they're duty-bound to carry out the
President's orders, they can legally express
their views. The statement, carried on the Web
site AppealforRedress.org, was signed by 1,080
troops by 16 January.
It urged the US Congress to support "the prompt
withdrawal of all American military forces and
bases from Iraq," adding, "Staying in Iraq will
not work and is not worth the price." "Despite
our best efforts, Iraq fell further into chaos,"
said Marine Corps Sgt. Liam Madden at a press
conference .He believed that the war "benefits
neither the United States nor Iraq, and
especially not the American military".
Senate leaders have introduced a non-binding
bipartisan resolution opposing the 'surge'
policy .It has been drafted by Senate Foreign
Relations Committee Chairman Joseph R. Biden
Jr. (D-Del.), Senate Armed Services Committee
Chairman Carl M.Levin (D-Mich.) and Sen. Chuck
Hagel (R-Neb.) "The whole thing could let
Republicans off the hook with a meaningless,
toothless vote," said Andrews, who has been
meeting with senior Democrats on war issues.
"It's a pressure valve that could work against
us."
A Pew Research Center poll released on 16
January showed that 61 percent of Americans
oppose sending more troops to Iraq. Some 60
percent of Republicans support Bush's plan and
33 percent oppose it. Among Democrats, 12
percent support it and 82 percent oppose it.
The media is owned and manipulated by corporate
interests who fund elections and employ lobbies
with a US$ 2.4 billion treasure chest to get
favourable laws enacted. Thus the interests of
the poor and the middle classes remain neglected
.But even the misinformed and info-challenged US
electorate has deciphered the truth in Iraq and
in November elections bashed up the Republican
party . Only an election deters these , some not
so, honourable legislators , afraid of losing
the power and the pelf they enjoy . Republicans
slated for next elections are opposing the
'surge '.Hillary Clinton , who has announced her
bid for the Presidency , a fervid supporter of
Israel and a strong supporter of US war on Iraq
is now singing a different tune .There would be
lot of political maneuverings but US would not
easily give up its addiction to cheap Middle
East oil and enormous profits for the energy
interests and the military industry complex ,
which promotes wars .They rule the roost in the
USA.
Retired US Generals recommend political solution
in the Senate ;
A panel of retired generals told the Senate
Foreign Relations Committee on 18 January that
sending 21,500 additional troops to Iraq would
do little to solve the underlying political
problems in the country. "Too little and too
late," said Gen. Joseph P. Hoar, a former chief
of the Central Command. He added that American
leaders had failed to understand the political
forces at work in the country. "The solution is
political, not military," he said. Gen. Barry R.
McCaffrey, who commanded troops in the first
Gulf War, described it as "A fool's errand."
Other countries had concluded that the effort in
Iraq was not succeeding, and "our allies are
leaving us and will be gone by summer." He said
that Iraqis should try to make political deals
domestically and negotiate for stability with
neighboring nations, particularly Syria and
Iran.
"The United States did not understand the
consequences of deposing Saddam Hussein," said
Lt. Gen. William E. Odom, a former director of
the National Security Agency. The war benefited
Iran and Al Qaeda, not the United States. "There
is no way to win a war that is not in your
interests," he said. USA is in a 'No Win'
situation. Even a plan to start withdrawing US
troops carried the risk of the armed Iraqi
population to step up the level of attacks. "We
will be shot at as we are going out." said Gen.
Jack Keane, a former vice chief of staff of the
Army.
Iran's counter moves ;
After the ISG recommendation that US talk with
Syria and Iran , Tehran was somewhat euphoric
and so was Damascus. But that is now gone and
Tehran is pondering over its moves carefully to
counter political and military moves by
Washington. Ali Larijani, Iran's chief
negotiator on the nuclear question delivered a
joint letter to the Saudi King Abdullah from the
Iranian Supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei
and President Ahmadinejad requesting Saudi
mediation with the US. The letter was delivered
just before Rice's visit to Riyadh. Reuters
quoted an unnamed Saudi official saying Iran
wanted the Saudi King to relay a goodwill
message to Washington to "help bring opinions
together" between Iran and the US.
Ever green Expediency Council Chairman Akbar
Hashemi Rafsanjani , a former President who
lost to Ahmadinejad said that the US having
failed to achieve its goals in the region, was
now seeking to embark on a new adventure to
cover up its defeat. He urged the need for
vigilance.
To temper President Ahmadinejad's over blown
rhetoric and consequent popularity with the
public, but bad press in the West , Ayatollah
Ali Khamenei has allowed 150 parliamentarians to
attack the President's economic policies. In a
signed letter they blamed Ahmadinejad for the
raging inflation , high unemployment and failure
to even present the budget in time. They decried
his going on a tour of Latin America at the time
of a crisis. Western media hopefully suggested
that the mounting criticism could mean
Ahmadinejad's political doom and even
impeachment. But on return from Latin America
Ahmadinejad reiterated that Tehran's program on
nuclear energy would continue.
Like (the Chess King) Ali Khamenei might remove
from the centre (Knight ) Ahmadinejad with his
awkward moves. Iranians have shown Chess like
long term planning and finesse to counter US
moves in the region , even offering full
cooperation in 2003 ( an honourable draw ) ,
if US normalized bilateral relations disrupted
since 1979 . Always many moves ahead they
nurtured SCIRI , Dawa and other Iraqi groups and
Kurds .Since the invasion of Iraq , they now
occupy and control the centre (as in Chess
board) , with open and hidden threats to any US
moves .
In Bishop like pincer moves across the region,
Tehran has smartly moved with Hamas after its
electoral victory in Palestine ,taking it under
its wings , with its top political leader Khaled
Meshaal resident in Damascus . If Iraq President
Talabani is visiting Damascus , so is Palestine
Authority President Mahmoud Abbas to meet with
President Bashar Assad but meeting with Meshaal
did not materialize as no agreement could be
reached on a unity government in Palestine .
Perhaps both visitors have US acquiescence if
not approval .They must also plan if US
commitment in the region weakens or dwindles
away.
Ahmed Yusuf, an adviser to Palestinian Prime
Minister Ismail Haniya, said Hamas ministers had
received promises of donations amounting to
£500m during recent visits in the Muslim world.
But the largest pledge was from Iran, more than
that of EU. Last year Tehran pledged £125 m to
help Hamas survive the international boycott led
by USA. After inroads in Syria and Hezbollah in
Lebanon , Tehran's support to Hamas has created
serious concern in US, Israel, Saudi Arabia and
the Gulf states- at Iran's rapid expansion as a
regional power.
Yuval Diskin, the head of Israel's secret
service, Shin Bet, warned that international
sanctions against the authority were forcing
Hamas into a closer relationship with Iran.
President Bush has asked Congress to approve $83
million for Abbas 's security forces. Israeli
officials transferred $100 million in withheld
revenues 9 collected as Tax and Customs dues to
the Authority.
Palestine has become an arena of Shia Iran and
Sunni Arab rivalry. Apart from Fathah and other
cadres ,Abbas is raising a 3,500-strong
Presidential Guard, as a bulwark against Hamas'
militia of 5,000 gunmen. .If Iran is supplying
funds and arms to Hamas then Egypt, Jordan ,
Saudi Arabia and USA are arming the now
discredited and corrupt Palestine Authority
.Hamas and Fathah militants are killing each
other apart from the Israeli forces genocidal
ways in Gaza in another example of divide and
rule.
Apparently Hezbollah had abducted two Israeli
soldiers last July to also ease intense Israeli
pressure off Hamas in Gaza .Of course it did not
expect a full blown savage destructive war by
Israel as Nasrallah himself later admitted. But
it turned out well for them and has altered the
strategic power landscape in Lebanon and the
region benefiting Iran. Israel must now watch
over its shoulders before any reckless military
venture.
In spite of blatant Western lies , nationalist
Hezbollah movement has very wide support in
Lebanon , where USA has now sent in its
disruptive agents to counter Hezbollah's
peaceful sit in for a role in decision making
appropriate to its showing in the war and its
popularity .In Syria with over 80% Sunni
population , the ruling elite is dominated by
Assad family led Shia Alawaites .But no where in
the world such a minuscule minority rules as do
the Jews and the Israel Lobby in USA. If the
Holocaust can not be questioned neither can the
influence of Israeli Lobby in USA. A recent book
by former President and highly respected
peacemaker Jimmy Carter , comparing Israel's
apartheid system with that of former state of
South Africa has brought the whole force of
Israeli lobby on his head.
Condi Rice in the New Middle East after last
years birth pangs;
Condi Rice began her safari of the Middle East
from Israel and returned via friendly Angela
Markel's Berlin and London with Tony Blair still
clinging on despite failed policies and other
scandals .As for Rice's attempt at rejuvenating
the Israeli-Palestinian peace process, the Arab
media simply described it as an attempt to
change the subject .US has little credibility as
an honest broker.
The carefully worded support that Arab allies
are offering for Bush's new Iraq strategy
highlights the deep suspicion among Washington's
few real friends and puppets in the region that
Iraq might already be a lost cause. The Bush
plan " encountered strong skepticism across the
Mideast, where many believe that even with more
soldiers, America will fail to break the cycle
of violence."
Rice who discussed the 'Surge' plan in Jordan,
Egypt, Saudi Arabia and Kuwait, got only vague
commitments and lukewarm response She and 8
Arab foreign ministers in a statement welcomed
U.S. commitment to defend Iraq 's " territorial
integrity and guarantees of its stability ." The
host, Kuwaiti Foreign Minister Sheik Mohammed Al
Sabah, when asked if it was already too late to
stop the rising cycle of Sunni-Shiite violence
in Iraq replied, "Nine foreign ministers are
meeting in Kuwait today to try to prevent Iraq
from sliding into a civil war." " I think that
speaks volumes." Or rather the hopelessness of
the situation.
Earlier key Sunni Arab allies while endorsing
the goals of Bush's plan, and expressing hopes
of success , almost in the same breath suggested
that the Shia -led government in Baghdad cannot
or would not implement the plan.
Saudi Arabian Foreign Minister Saud al-Faisal
was perhaps the most positive , who agreed "
with the full objectives set by the new plan,
the strategy." After talks with Rice earlier ,
he commented , "This has objectives that ... if
it were applied, it will solve the problems
facing Iraq." But he emphasized that it was the
responsibility of the Iraq government alone. "We
cannot be Iraqis more than Iraqis," Saud
emphasised. "Other countries can help, but the
burden, the whole burden and taking a decision
will be the Iraqis'."
It was well put by the Saudi newspaper Al
Jazirah which noted, "The Americans are trying
to get out of the Baghdad bottleneck and they
are looking for agent players in managing their
conflict with Tehran to make their new strategy
in Iraq successful."
Of course the Sunni Arab world would not trust
Prime Minister al-Maliki's government with close
ties with Shia Iran The Shias have become
empowered after many centuries , courtesy
Washington and would not let go .Rice did admit
that" There are concerns about whether the
Maliki government is prepared to take an
evenhanded, nonsectarian path here. There's no
doubt about that."
Bush's plan that al-Maliki use Iraqi troops to
crack down on militants from both sides and meet
a series of benchmarks to promote reconciliation
between Sunnis and Shias is unlikely to succeed.
Al-Maliki has resisted U.S. pressure in the past
.Before Bush unveiled his plan al-Maliki was
made to agree that he would go after his
political ally Muqtada al-Sadr's Mahdi Army.
But he has already criticised US for not
imparting proper training or providing weapons
to Iraqi forces ( aka artillery , tanks and
helicopter gun ships ), which US fears might be
passed on to the militias and used against US
forces .To begin with al-Maliki has appointed
his own man as commander of the Iraqi forces in
Baghdad against US choice.
Rice tried to exploit fear of Iran among US's
Sunni allies, many with substantial Shia
minorities, to support its plans, But have not
they outsourced their security to USA since
decades in return for free exploitation of the
regions oil riches by US led West. The Arab
states have amassed massive arms inventories ,
earn fat bribes and subsidise US-UK military
industry complex. They can hardly use these
arms, as was proved in Iraq's invasion of Kuwait
in 1990. Scared and hoodwinked Saudi Arabia
allowed US GIs including female troopers, a run
of the Arabian peninsula, sacred soil according
to Muslims. The rest ie Osama bin Laden and Al
Qaeda is history.
Yes , the statement in Kuwait did contain a
coded signal to Iran, which was reportedly not
part of the group's discussions. "Relations
among all countries should be based on mutual
respect for the sovereignty and territorial
integrity of all states and on the principle of
noninterference in the internal affairs of other
nations," [ Does Washington respect this
principle and what did the group do when US
invaded Iraq illegally].
Intimidated and nervous, Sunni Arab rulers in
Cairo, Amman, Riyadh and the Gulf are egging US
to stay put in the region , to stop and roll
back Iranian influence . They had acted
similarly when Saudis, Kuwaitis , Emirates ,
Egypt , West et al had encouraged and funded
'brother Saddam' and Iraq in its 1980-88 war
against a rampant Iran after the Khomeini led
Shia revolution of 1979 .Iraq's Shia Arabs had
fought against Iran's Revolutionary Guards and
young boys seeking martyrdom .And how did the
Arabs repay that debt and react to the US
controlled and Al Maliki executed Kangaroo Court
trials and lynching of 'brother Saddam'? In 2003
many in the Arab world were unhappy that for
Arab honour , Iraqi officers and soldiers did
not sacrifice themselves futilely against absurd
odds in Iraq against F-16 , Cobra gun ships and
massive artillery.( They melted to fight another
day , as the Iraqi resistance now.)
But who among the Arabs would fight. Egypt
initiated the 1973 war to recover its lands and
oil fields lost to Israel after the 1967
debacle. The oil Sheikhs used the war to raise
oil prices and its nouvo riche citizens went
around lording over sophisticated Cairo and
Beirut. After the 1979 peace treaty with Israel
, Egypt , now on US pay roll retired .There can
be no war with out Egypt in the Middle East(
against Israel ) and no peace without Syria
.During the 1980-88 Iraq-Iran war millions of
Egyptians worked on Iraqi farms and industries
for Iraqis doing the fighting .
It was Pakistani Brigadier Zia-ul- Haq who
organized the military operation against PLO
guerillas in Jordan and expelled them to Lebanon
in 1977. (With the ruler scripting a message for
the Pakistani Military Chief for saving his
Kingdom , so a retired Pakistani General told
me). So who will fight the Iranians or even
Iraqi Shia Arabs now in militias , army and
police . They and Sunni Iraqi resistance now
fought Iran's Shia revolutionary guards and
young boys looking for martyrdom.
Western Policy of Divide and Rule;
USA and the perfidious Albion would only succeed
in igniting a Shia-Sunni conflagration in the
region except that oil prices would zoom and
seriously affect the US and world economy. The
US dilemma is how to expel Iran and keep control
of Iraq, the region with its oil wealth for its
use , as hitherto .It is a mission impossible.
The British divided Hindustan into Pakistan and
India, so that a weaker Muslim Pakistan ( with
its ruling military elite ), would perforce ally
with the West to protect from USSR , Middle East
oil wells ,for exclusive Western exploitation .
This can be seen from the British records of the
period quoted in a recent book by an Indian
diplomat, who was ADC in 1947 to the last
British Viceroy Lord Louis Mountbatten.
Following the partition of India there was
ethnic cleansing in West Pakistan , exchange of
populations and millions of Hindus and Muslims
butchered each other . The West is at its old
game again in the Middle East.
One can not forget the most disruptive Joker in
the pack; Israel .Now in a state of uncertainty
and an existential threat in the wake of its
defeat by Lebanon's Hezbollah. An Israeli Naval
warship was disabled with Hassan Nasrallah
giving a running commentary of the attack on Al
Minar ,its TV channel , which Tel Aviv could not
disrupt during the war .Apparently Hezbollah
succeeded in breaking into Israeli
communications net work .Some reports suggest
among other things , by providing drugs to bored
Israeli border guards across south Lebanon.
West and USA are now flaunting its military
prowess and would later rewrite history . Except
that with online media , internet blogs and many
honest and dedicated media persons even in the
West , one can surf and ferry out the truth .For
example ,in the Second World War , USA played
a minor role compared to the Soviet Union in the
destruction of the Nazi war machine in which
USSR sacrificed tens of millions of its soldiers
and citizens .Its economy was destroyed .Come
lately US ( it has already spent more time in
Iraq now than in that war ) and even UK tried to
take all the credit . They produced 'The longest
day ' and 'Gen Patton ' and UK dreams up James
Bond victories in the battle field and the bed
room .Even channels like 'Discovery Channel '
spew lies all the time and brain wash the
ignorant . Germans and Russian soldiers were
accused of mass rapes and killings. US soldiers
raped many thousands women in West Europe and it
faced a very high rate of desertion in its
troops. But for instant communications now ,you
would not have heard of or very little of Gulags
like Guantamano, Abu Ghraib , Bagram , genocide
in Fallujah ,Haditha and elsewhere , and
rendition by CIA for torture of innocents
,mostly Muslims in secret places all around the
world . This has been the core of the Western
mental make up though out the colonial era and
even now .
Shias developed the first human bomber , the
Assassins and evolved the system of takkyia ie
not telling the truth under duress and
occupation making them very secretive in their
methods as shown in Lebanon . So US would be
making a grave mistake in attacking Iran ,
exposed as it is and fully stretched on the
ground .Iran's military build up has not been
degraded by sanctions like in Iraq , which had
no navy or air force or missiles and even WMDs.
US and China and others have provided enough
military hardware including sophisticated
missiles to Iran and Syria .
As for US righteousness most of the military
hard ware US gifted to Pakistan to fight
communism was used against democratic India .US
now grants Air and Naval aircraft and hardware
to counter terrorism in Afghanistan ( and
Pakistan ).Israel and USA should not forget the
deep tunnels and other innovations employed
brilliantly in south Lebanon against such heavy
odds.
Conclusions ;
Like Iraq , some fancy schemes are on the anvil
in the Pentagon .To ward off the threats to the
world economy if Tehran curtailed oil traffic
through the Strait of Hormuz, the US has
reportedly made contingency plans for the
indefinite takeover of Iranian territory in Chah
Bahar, which would deny Tehran its strategic
leverage with Hormuz. Washington might even push
for outright "regime change" in Tehran, never
mind lack of troops necessary for even a limited
war. Theoretically , would this not take the war
and US troops to Iran ( via Azerbaijan ) ,
which will then face Russia across and the
Caspian Sea.
During the failed 1979 US hostages rescue
operation in Iran ordered by President Jimmy
Carter , it was said that USSR had tipped Tehran
about Washington's plans. Both Russia and China
have serious and log term stakes in a united and
stable Iran.
"The administration does have Iran on the brain,
and I think they are exaggerating the amount of
Iranian activities in Iraq," commented Kenneth
Pollack, the director of research at the Saban
Center at the Brookings Institution, "There's a
good chance that this is going to be
counterproductive."
W Joseph Stroupe , editor of Global Events
Magazine wrote recently that the Middle East was
already 'like a sectarian tinderbox waiting for
a spark to ignite its multiple civil
wars-in-waiting. The United States' additional
21,500 new troops will be like a desperate
roving band of flamethrowers let loose on the
entire region, from Saudi Arabia to Iran. "
Stroupe wondered if the current invasion plans
were any better than of 2003 .Would it achieve
only " an early but short-lived victory over
Iran, only to massively lose the longer war,
just as happened in Iraq? "
Iraq's sectarian and other militias will not lay
down their arms and would fight the US led
occupation forces to retain and further
consolidate their hard-won power and prestige
within their respective regions. Very
importantly, the majority of Iraqis , who have
come to rely on their respective militias for
safety and security in the environment of the
abject failure of Iraq's government and the US
and British forces to provide such, would not
wish to see their favored militias weakened or
defanged.
Hence the population can be expected to deny all
meaningful support to the US. Many will actively
oppose the occupying powers through their
respective militias, thereby dooming the entire
effort to massive failure. " If the US and
Britain are perceived by Iraq's Shias as
excessively targeting Shia militias while
largely ignoring Sunni militias, then they risk
mobilizing the entire body of Iraq's Shia
population against the continued presence of
foreign forces, resulting in a virtual Shia
insurrection, with catastrophic results,' says
Stroupe.
By unintentionally shoving the entire
oil-and-gas-rich Middle East on to a fast track
to chaos, the US will empower Russia as the
immovable global energy kingpin. Already, Europe
and Asia are being forced to reconsider placing
too much reliance on the region for energy
imports, opening the way for Russia." Africa
and Latin America suffer from strategic
instability and long distances haulage.
Iran would be helped in its recovery by Russia,
China and other key energy exporting and
consuming nations of the world. While signing
another liquid gas contract with Tehran ,
Beijing brushed aside Washington's opposition in
the spirit of recent UNSC resolution . Iran has
excellent relations with Russia and China .The
three powers could initiate a global energy
consortium opposed to US power. It could be
joined by others like Kazakhstan and Uzbekistan,
with Iran even becoming a full member of
Shanghai Cooperation Organization, which is
slowly morphing into a military alliance to
counter a rapacious NATO , now getting ensnared
in the Afghanistan morass .
" I am deeply concerned about Iraq. The task you
have given me is becoming really impossible. Our
forces are reduced now to very slender
proportions… I do not see what political
strength there is to face a disaster of any
kind, and certainly I cannot believe that in any
circumstances any large reinforcements would be
sent from here…
There is scarcely a single newspaper… which is
not consistently hostile to our remaining in
this country. … Any alternative Government that
might be formed here… would gain popularity by
ordering instant evacuation. Moreover, in my own
heart I do not see what we are getting out of
it. …No progress has been made in developing the
oil. Altogether I am getting to the end of my
resources. --At present we are paying… millions
a year for the privilege of living on an
ungrateful volcano out of which we are in no
circumstances to get anything worth having."
Extracts from a memorandum dated September 1,
1922 , from Winston Churchill , Colonial
Secretary to Prime Minister David Lloyd George,
whose government was on its last legs.
Both Bush and Blair claim to be great admirers
of Churchill, but never come round to read this
chapter in Iraq's history or Churchill's naval
debacle at Gallipoli .Now another naval
misadventure is under planning.
K Gajendra Singh, Indian ambassador (retired),
served as ambassador to Turkey and Azerbaijan
from August 1992 to April 1996. Prior to that,
he served terms as ambassador to Jordan, Romania
and Senegal. He is currently chairman of the
Foundation for Indo-Turkic Studies. Copy right
with the author. E-mail:
Gajendrak@hotmail.com .
http://www.ichblog.eu/content/view/66/1/
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