Webster G. Tarpley for TARPLEY.net
  
After about two and a half years during which the danger of war  between the United States and Iran was at a relatively low level, this  threat is now rapidly increasing.  A pattern of political and diplomatic  events, military deployments, and media chatter now indicates that  Anglo-American ruling circles, acting through the troubled Obama  administration, are currently gearing up for a campaign of bombing  against Iran, combined with special forces incursions designed to stir  up rebellions among the non-Persian nationalities of the Islamic  Republic. Naturally, the probability of a new fake Gulf of Tonkin  incident or false flag terror attack staged by the Anglo-American war  party and attributed to Iran or its proxies is also growing rapidly.
The moment in the recent past when the US came closest to attacking  Iran was August-September 2007, at about the time of the major Israeli  bombing raid on Syria.1  This was the phase during which the  Cheney faction in effect hijacked a fully loaded B-52 bomber equipped  with six nuclear-armed cruise missiles, and attempted to take it to the  Middle East outside of the command and control of the Pentagon,  presumably to be used in a colossal provocation designed by the private  rogue network for which Cheney was the visible face. A few days before  the B-52 escaped control of legally constituted US authorities, a group  of antiwar activists issued The Kennebunkport Warning of August 24-25,  2007, which had been drafted by the present writer.2   It was  very significant that US institutional forces acted at that time to  prevent the rogue B-52 from proceeding on its way towards the Middle  East.  The refusal to let the rogue B-52 take off reflected a growing  consensus in the US military-intelligence community and the ruling elite  in general that the Bush-Cheney-neocon policy of direct military  aggression towards all comers had become counterproductive and very  dangerous, running the risk of a terminal case of imperial overstretch.   
A prominent spokesman for the growing disaffection with the neocons  was Zbigniew Brzezinski, who had been a national security director in  the Carter administration.  Brzezinski argued that no more direct  military attacks by the United States should be made for the time being,  and that US policy should rather focus on playing off other states  against each other, while the US remained somewhat aloof.  Brzezinski’s  model was always his own successful playing of the Soviet Union against  Afghanistan in 1979, leading to the collapse of the Soviet empire a  decade later.  A centerpiece of Brzezinski’s argument was evidently the  claim that color revolutions on the model of Ukraine 2004 were much a  better tool than the costly and dangerous US bombing and US invasion  always championed by the monomaniacal neocons.  There was clearly an  implication that Brzezinski could deliver a color revolution in Iran, as  he had done in Ukraine.
Brzezinski’s Nightmare of 2007 Is Back
Brzezinski formulated his critique of the neocon methods of  aggression and imperialistic geopolitics in his testimony before the  Senate Foreign Relations Committee in February 2007, going so far as to  point out the likely scenario of a false flag event or Gulf of Tonkin  incident designed to embroil the United States in direct military  hostilities with Iran. The heart of Brzezinski’s analysis was this: ‘If  the United States continues to be bogged down in a protracted bloody  involvement in Iraq, the final destination on this downhill track is  likely to be a head-on conflict with Iran and with much of the world of  Islam at large. A plausible scenario for a military collision with Iran  involves Iraqi failure to meet the benchmarks; followed by accusations  of Iranian responsibility for the failure; then by some provocation in  Iraq or a terrorist act in the U.S. blamed on Iran; culminating in a  “defensive” U.S. military action against Iran that plunges a lonely  America into a spreading and deepening quagmire eventually ranging  across Iraq, Iran, Afghanistan, and Pakistan.’ 3   Today we  could add Lebanon and Syria to that list, plus perhaps Yemen, Somalia,  Sudan, and some others in central Asia.
The factors contributing to the current increased danger level  include three major trends: 
The CIA’s Green Movement in Iran Has Fizzled
I. The US sponsored Green Movement in Iran has now demonstrably  failed in its project of overthrowing the Achmadinejad government.  Back  in 2006-2007, the Brzezinski-Nye-Trilateral “soft power” or “smart  power” group attacked the stupidity of the neocon plan for a direct US  military attack on Iran by pointing out the opportunities for staging a  color revolution in Iran, just as the Brzezinski faction had  successfully staged the Orange Revolution to install NATO puppets in  Ukraine. Why attack Iran directly, argued Brzezinski and his friends,  when a US puppet regime in Teheran could be used against Russia and  China in much the same way these same people had played Afghanistan  against the Soviet Union, with catastrophic results of the latter. The  apex of these subversion efforts came in June 2009, with the so-called  Twitter Revolution, which was celebrated with hysterical gloating in the  Anglo-American media. The Mousavi-Rafsanjani faction left no doubt  about its CIA and MI-6 parentage with its signature chant of “Death to  Russia, Death to China.” The illusion of an easy coup in Iran has died  hard in Washington and London. But by June 2010, the impotence of the  Green forces in Iran had become evident.  Hillary Clinton is even  complaining that Achmadinejad now represents a military-backed  government which has marginalized the mullahs, whom the US has demonized  in public but privately relied on to prevent the economic modernization  of Iran.  This gives rise to the tendency to fall back on the previous  neocon plan for some combination of direct military attack by Israel and  the United States, combined with escalated subversion efforts among the  Baluchis, Azeris, Arabs, Turkmen, and Kurds of Iran.
Russian Policy Now Uncertain
II. During the time that the neocons were attempting to launch  aggression against Iran, that task was rendered much more difficult by  pervasive uncertainty about the possible reaction of Russia.  One of the  targets of any bombing campaign against Iran would necessarily be the  Bushehr nuclear reactor, being built by Russian technicians.  Neocon war  planners had to worry about events like the visit to Tehran of Russian  President Vladimir Putin on October 16, 2007.  During the Putin era,  Russian media and figures like General Leonid Ivashov took the lead in  calling attention to suddenly increases in US-UK war preparations, as in  the case of Operation Byte, the attack on Iran proposed for Good  Friday, April 6, 2007.4   While it was thought very unlikely  that Russia would risk general war as a result of an attack on Iran,  there remained nevertheless the question as to what Russia actually  would do.  This dangerous uncertainty was a very serious obstacle for  the pro-war agitation by the neocons.  
In this way, Putin was able to make a decisive contribution to the  maintenance of world peace during the years after 9/11. As of mid-2010,  it would appear that the foreign policy of Russian President Medvedev is  momentarily evolving away from the fierce independence and Russian  nationalism championed by Putin, and is placing more value on projects  of cooperation with the NATO countries, sometimes obtained by unilateral  concessions to the US.  Part of this can be ascribed to the increasing  influence of the free market ideologue Anatoly Chubais, the architect of  the nomenklatura privatization of Soviet state property during the  1990s, whose concept of the modernization of the Russian economy depends  very heavily on information technology, in which he portrays the United  States as being in the lead.  Newsweek has reported the  approval of a new foreign policy outline drafted by the Russian foreign  ministry which has allegedly gained provisional approval by President  Medvedev. This document is entitled “Program for the Effective  Exploitation on A Systemic Basis of Foreign Policy Factors for the  Purposes of the Long-Term Development of the Russian Federation.” 5   The main immediate effect of the reported new Russian policy is the  apparent willingness of the Kremlin to make important foreign policy  concessions to the United States with very minimal returns.  This in  turn means that key unknowns surrounding a US attack on Iran have become  less of a concern for the resurgent neocon war faction in Washington.   This adds up to a situation in which an attack on Iran is now more  likely.
The US-UK Hedge Fund Blitzkrieg Against the Euro Falters
III. It is a grave error to imagine that normal relations with the  Anglo-American financiers can be obtained in the current world  depression through conciliatory behavior.  The US-UK are experiencing  cataclysmic instability in the form of a financial breakdown crisis, and  this crisis impels these powers towards irrational, adventuristic, and  aggressive behavior.  A key lesson of the 1930s is that, when  imperialist financier elites are faced by a disintegration of their  fictitious speculative bubbles, they often respond with strategic  flights forward of the most lunatic sort. In the wake of the 2007-2008  disintegration of the Anglo-American banking system, the New York and  London elites have shown signs of going collectively bonkers, although  these clinical tendencies have been primarily expressed in the area of  their reactionary domestic socioeconomic policies. The specific form  assumed by this tendency after the second half of 2008 involves the  severe weakening of the US dollar as the world reserve currency by the  creation of a $24 trillion credit line by the Federal Reserve, US  Treasury, and FDIC for the purpose of bailing out the Wall Street zombie  banks.  This tidal wave of dollars led to a severe weakening of the US  greenback on international markets during most of the second half of  2009.  In late 2009 and early 2010 a group of Anglo-American hedge funds  around Soros, Paulson, David Einhorn, and others launched a speculative  attack against the government bonds of Greece, Spain, and Portugal,  with the goal of using a crisis in the southern tier of the euro to  bring on a panic flight of hot money out of the euro, thus collapsing  that currency to Third World levels.  Partly because of the  countermeasures instituted by the German government, including the  banning of naked credit default swaps on Euroland bonds and naked shorts  of German stocks, and partly thanks to direct support from China, the  planned Anglo-American blitzkrieg against the euro has now bogged down  after eight months of effort, with the euro currently oscillating at a  price of about   $1.25 – $1.30.  This means that, unless the city of  London and Wall Street can come up with a new plan, the forces of world  economic depression represented by $1.5 quadrillion of bankrupt and  kited derivatives may now find a new victim, most likely in the form of  either the British pound or the US dollar.  
The immediate threat of a pound or dollar currency collapse is  leading the ruling financier factions to reconsider a very dangerous  flight forward in the form of an attack on Iran, precisely because such  an aggression would likely lead to a blocking of the Straits of Hormuz  or in any case to a serious disruption of one third of the world’s  tanker traffic.  Following the tested model of the Kippur war/oil  boycott of October 1973, the US-UK financiers would bid up the price of  oil to $500 or $1000 per barrel, thus creating enough demand for dollars  to soak up much of the dollar overhang and prop up the greenback, at  least for a time. 
An Astronomical Oil Price As Salvation for The US Dollar
As Jean-Michel Vernochet of the Réseau Voltaire has pointed out, the  likely Iranian retaliation for the looming attack in terms of  interdicting Hormuz and the Gulf is actually built into the US-UK war  plan as a positive contribution towards saving the dollar by massively  driving up the price of oil, which is of course still quoted mainly in  dollars.6  Energy and Capital editor Christian A.  DeHaemer, an oil market analyst, commented: “The last oil price shock in  the Middle East was in 1990 when the United States invaded Iraq for  invading Kuwait. The price per barrel of oil went from $21 to $28 on  August 6… to $46 by mid-October. The looming Iran War is not priced in,”  he warned in his newsletter. Iran has the third-highest oil reserves in  the world and is second only to Saudi Arabia in production. If any  action prevents the flow of Iranian oil, the price of “black gold” would  soar, he added.’  (IsraelNationalNews.com)7
Playing The Arabs Against The Iranians
One important prerequisite for US aggression grows out of the  Trilateral group’s strategy, starting from the Baker-Hamilton Iraq Study  Group of 2006, of forming a block of the Sunni Arab nations against the  Persian-speaking Iranian Shiites and their allies in the Lebanese  Hezbollah and the Palestinian Hamas, as well as Syria. The  Anglo-American hope for this tactic of divide and conquer is that  hostility between Arabs and Persians will eclipse the more recent enmity  between Jews and Arabs. “The Jews and Arabs have been fighting for one  hundred years. The Arabs and the Persians have been going at (it) for a  thousand,” wrote Jeffrey Goldberg on The Atlantic’s8 website.  
With many reports that the United Arab Emirates and Saudi Arabia are  ready to support the US aggression, great importance must be attached to  the current struggle over the future shape of the government of Iraq.  Here The secular Shiite Allawi is a US puppet, while his rival Maliki  prefers Iran. Sadr and his Mahdi army, closely linked to Iran, represent  a key stumbling block for US intentions.  The US requires an Iraqi  puppet state which will pursue at least a pro-US neutrality in case of  war, and above all prevent Iranian special forces or guerrillas from  cutting the long US supply line alone Route Tampa from Kuwait City. This  is why the question of the Iraqi government was so important that Vice  President Biden had to make a special trip to Iraq in the vain hope of  quickly setting up a suitable puppet regime there. If the Iraq army  turns against US, the situation of US forces could become  extraordinarily critical.
War Warnings, Calls For War
Over recent days, warnings about imminent war and direct calls for  war have been proliferating in the world media.  The veteran Cuban  leader Fidel Castro gave his most detailed media interview since the  beginning of his illness several years ago, apparently for the express  purpose of issuing a warning about US aggressive plans for Iran, and  also for North Korea (DPRK). According to a wire dispatch of July 12,  ‘the 83-year-old former president talked about how tension between the  United States and both North Korea and Iran could ultimately trigger a  global nuclear war …. Castro warned that an attack on Iran would be  catastrophic for America. “The worst (for America) is the resistance  they will face there, which they didn’t face in Iraq,” he said.’ 9
On July 11, the former Malaysian Prime Minister Mahathir Mohamad  stated that ‘the US compelled the UN Security Council to impose  sanctions against Iran in order to weaken the country and lay the ground  for a military attack. The former Malaysian premier added, “It is a  matter of time before the war criminals in Israel and the United States  launch another war of aggression, once Iran has been weakened by  sanctions.”’ 10
Around the same time, former Senator Chuck Robb and former NATO  deputy commander General Charles Wald issued an editorial call for the  US to begin preparing an attack.  Their argument was that the fourth  round of economic sanctions extorted by the United States from UN  Security Council on June 9 would never be effective, and that military  action had to be geared up in parallel to these sanctions. They also  warned that the Cold War doctrine of deterrence would not work in regard  to Iran: ‘Absent a broader and more robust strategy, however, sanctions  alone will prove inadequate to halt Iran’s pursuit of nuclear  weapons…current trends suggest that Iran could achieve nuclear weapons  capability before the end of this year, posing a strategically untenable  threat to the United States. Contrary to a growing number of voices in  Washington, we do not believe a nuclear weapons-capable Iran could be  contained…. We cannot afford to wait indefinitely to determine the  effectiveness of diplomacy and sanctions. Sanctions can be effective  only if coupled with open preparation for the military option as a last  resort. Indeed, publicly playing down potential military options has  weakened our leverage with Tehran, making a peaceful resolution less  likely. Instead, the administration needs to expand its approach and  make clear to the Iranian regime and the American people: If diplomatic  and economic pressures do not compel Iran to terminate its nuclear  program, the U.S. military has the capability and is prepared to launch  an effective, targeted strike on Tehran’s nuclear and supporting  military facilities…. The stakes are too high to rely on sanctions and  diplomacy without credibly preparing for a potential military strike as  well.’ 11
The Neocons Promise A Cakewalk — Again!
One of the most blatant calls for war with Iran comes from the former  CIA agent and neocon ideologue Reuel Marc Gerecht.  The Weekly  Standard, the central organ of the neocon warmonger party, devotes  the cover story of its current issue to urging the Israelis to put an  end to Obama’s dithering by mounting the attacks themselves, thus  presenting the feckless tenant of the White House with a fait  accompli.12   
In the inimitable style of neocon Kenneth Adelman, who notoriously  promised a cakewalk in Iraq the last time we went down this road,  Gerecht impatiently dismisses a series of arguments against such a  fateful act of incalculable folly, and does not miss the opportunity to  settle accounts with Brzezinski, whose alternative model of imperialist  management is now losing support within the ruling elite. Gerecht  writes: ‘… concerns about an Israeli bombing are no more persuasive.  Hezbollah would undoubtedly unleash its missiles on Israel after a  preventive strike…. Hundreds of Israelis could die from Hezbollah’s new  and improved store of missiles. Israel might have to invade Lebanon  again, which would cost more lives and certainly upset the  “international community.”…. The Obama administration might fume, but it  is hard to imagine the president, given what he has said about the  unacceptability of Iranian nukes, scolding Jerusalem long. He might  personally agree with his one-time counsel, Jimmy Carter’s national  security adviser Zbigniew Brzezinski, that Israel has become a pariah  state, but politically this won’t fly.’ 13   Three years ago,  Brzezinski had the upper hand and the neocons were in disarray, but now  the tables have been turned to a significant extent.
There is nothing to worry about, Gerecht assures us, since the  Iranians are a paper tiger and the results will be a cakewalk: ‘American  fear of Iranian capabilities in Iraq and Afghanistan has been  exaggerated. The Americans are leaving Iraq; within a year, most of our  troops are due to be gone….’ 14   Back in 2002-2003, the  neocon line was that Saddam Hussein was so powerful that he had to be  attacked.  This time around, their field is reversed, and the main  argument is that the Iranians need to be attacked because they are a  pushover: ‘If the Iranians tried their mightiest, they could give us  only a small headache compared with the migraine we’ve already got  courtesy of the Pakistanis, who are intimately tied to Afghanistan’s  Taliban. And the Israelis know the U.S. Navy has no fear of Tehran’s  closing the Strait of Hormuz. If Khamenei has a death-wish, he’ll let  the Revolutionary Guards mine the strait, the entrance to the Persian  Gulf: It might be the only thing that would push President Obama to  strike Iran militarily. Such an escalation could quickly leave Khamenei  with no navy, air force, and army. The Israelis have to be praying that  the supreme leader will be this addle-headed.’ 15   The tried  and true ‘cakewalk’ argument is neither the first nor the last  notorious neocon trick which is being brought back these days.
But what about the awesome threat of Iranian state-sponsored  terrorism, the danger which these same neocons have been incessantly  harping on for the past decade? No problem, says Gerecht.  All we would  need to do at that point is to issue a bloodcurdling thermonuclear  ultimatum to Iran about incinerating that country with nuclear missiles,  perhaps killing tens of millions of Iranians.  As a matter of fact,  Gerecht suggests, the US had better start issuing this sort of threat  right now, without any further dithering: ‘It is entirely possible that  Khamenei would use terrorism against the United States after an Israeli  strike. That is one of the supreme leader’s preferred methods of state  action, which is why he should not be permitted a nuclear weapon. The  correct response for the United States is to credibly threaten  vengeance. President Obama might be obliged to make such a threat  immediately after an Israeli surprise attack; whether the Iranians would  believe it, given America’s record, is more difficult to assess.’  16   Note carefully that these statements amounts to the public  advocacy of aggressive war, a behavior which may run afoul of the  Nuremberg precedents of 1945.
The Iranians are crazy, says Gerecht, so the old-fashioned nuclear  deterrence of Mutually Assured Destruction will never work.  There is no  point in wasting time any longer, and it is time for the Israeli  missiles and bombers to fly: ‘‘It is possible the Israelis have waited  too long to strike. Military action should make a strategic  difference….If we’re not at the end of the road, then the Israelis  probably should waste no more time. Khamenei is still weak. He’s more  paranoid than he’s ever been. The odds of his making uncorrectable  mistakes are much better than before. Any Israeli raid that could knock  out a sizable part of Iran’s nuclear program would change the dynamic  inside Iran and throughout the Middle East…..Unless Jerusalem bombs, the  Israelis will soon be confronting a situation without historical  parallel…. In the best case scenario, if things were just “normal” in  Tehran, Israel would likely be confronting Cuban Missile Crisis-style  brinkmanship on a routine basis.’ 17
Obama As The Cynical New Woodrow Wilson
The reactionary writer Michael Barone makes the apt comparison of  Obama to the Morgan puppet Woodrow Wilson, who cynically got himself  re-elected in 1916 on a platform of “he kept us out of war,’ and then  demanded the US entry into World War I about a month into his second  term. Obama campaigned for the presidency quite explicitly as a  warmonger in regards to Afghanistan, although his constant claim to have  opposed the Iraq war left many voters with the false impression that he  was less bellicose than Bush.  In reality, Obama was always adamant  about his desire to bomb and invade Pakistan in pursuit of the  phantomatic “Osama bin Laden.” Barone comments: ‘It would be ironic if  the professorial Barack Obama launches a military attack when his  supposedly cowboy predecessor George W. Bush declined to do so….But I  take it seriously when … nonhawks [Joe Klein and Walter Russell Meade]  say Obama might bomb Iran.’ 18 
Acts Of War In Iran By Jundullah, a US Terrorist Proxy
The Sunni terrorist organization known as Jundullah, which operates  in Baluchistan on both sides of the Pakistan-Iran border, is notoriously  a creature of Anglo-American intelligence, as Brian Ross of ABC News  documented in 2007.19   Earlier this year, the Iranians,  acting with the help of Pakistan, succeeded in capturing the Jundullah  leader Rigi, whom they then executed this month.  Rigi, according to  Wayne Madsen, had been on his way to a meeting with US regional  Ambassador Richard Holbrooke at the US air base in Kyrgyzstan.20  21    Retaliation from Jundullah soon followed in the form of a murderous  attack on Iranian territory which killed 21 persons, including members  of the Pasdaran Revolutionary Guard.  Iranian leaders were quick to  denounce this action as the latest in a long series of acts of war  against Iran by the United States using terrorist proxies.  Majlis  Speaker Ali Larijani condemned this attack, which occurred in Zahedan,  while explicitly blaming the United States: ‘“The Americans should know  that they have started a game that will not end well for them,” he said  in Tehran. Larijani asserted that Iran has ample evidence that the  Jundullah terrorist group has links to the United States. The terrorist  group Jundullah, which Iranian officials say enjoys U.S. support, has  claimed responsibility for the attacks. In a statement posted on its web  site, Jundullah described the attacks as retaliation for Iran’s June 21  execution of the group’s former ringleader, Abdolmalek Rigi. Larijani  said that the United States cannot invent an excuse for the bombings.  “They may get away with other issues, but not with this one,” he added.’ 
Medvedev Policy Shift Increases Moscow-Tehran Friction
One of the main policy goals of the Brzezinski faction in the United  States has always been to maneuver Russia into a position of hostility  against Iran.  The hope has always been to foment conflicts between  these two Caspian powers. Unfortunately, the policy of attempting to  placate the United States on certain issues pursued by President  Medvedev has now created a Moscow-Tehran relationship in which elements  of acrimony coexist with gestures of cooperation. 
On July 12, Medvedev made an important verbal concession to the  emerging US-neocon theory of Iranian nuclear weapons. A RIA-Novosti  dispatch read: ‘Iran is about to acquire the capability to make nuclear  weapons, Russian President Dmitry Medvedev warned on Monday.  He urged  Russian ambassadors and permanent representatives to move away from  “simplistic approaches” toward Iran’s nuclear problem.’ 22 
On June 20, Medvedev had expressed concern about ‘U.S. secret  intelligence data that Iran has enough enriched uranium for construction  of two nuclear bombs.  “As for this information, it needs to be  verified but in any case such information always worries. Today the  international society does not acknowledge the Iranian nuclear program  as transparent. If the information from the American secret services is  confirmed it would make the situation more tense and I do not exclude  that this issue would require extra consideration,” Medvedev said at a  news conference after the G8 and G20 summits in Canada.’ 23    US intelligence regarding Iran is notoriously unreliable, and distorted  by political agendas inside the US intelligence community.  It is even  possible that some of the material which Medvedev was shown during his  time in North America cam from the alleged defector Shahram Amiri, whose  credibility is gravely in question.
In response to Medvedev’s allegations about an Iranian nuclear  weapons program, leaders in Teheran responded with vigorous denials. On  July 13, RIA Novosti reported that ‘Iranian officials on Tuesday angrily  dismissed Russian President Dmitry Medvedev’s remarks that Tehran was  on the verge of acquiring military nuclear capability, the Fars News  Agency reported. “These remarks are at odds with reality,” Iranian  Foreign Minister Manouchehr Mottaki said during a press conference at  the Iranian embassy in Madrid, stressing that Tehran has always sought  only peaceful uses for nuclear technology.’ 24  During the  preparation of the Iraq war, Russia was very skeptical of the  explanations offered by the Bush regime, including at the UN Security  Council.  This time around, it would appear that parts at least of the  Russian government are lending credibility to the US charges.
In response to these Iranian objections, Medvedev returned to the  issue on July 15, reiterating that ‘Russia possesses information  indicating that Iran is continuing to develop its nuclear technology  …”The information that is being received comes both from open sources  and from special services that deliver relevant reports and shows that  these [nuclear] programs are being developed,” Medvedev said during a  joint news conference with German Chancellor Angela Merkel in the  Russian Urals city of Yekaterinburg.’ 25 
The Russian government has issued sharply conflicting statements  about whether the sale of modern Russian S-300 surface-to-air missiles  would be blocked by the new round of UN sanctions.  It is generally  thought that, if Iran can finally take delivery of these missiles, any  design for air attacks against Iran would have to reckon with  extravagant losses among the attacking aircraft. On June 11, RIA Novosti  reported that ‘a Kremlin source said on Friday the sale of S-300 air  defense systems fall under the new UN Security Council’s sanctions  against Tehran, but the Russian foreign minister said it was up to the  president to make the final decision.’ 26   Ironically, this  reading of the sanctions was less favorable to Iran then what the US  State Department was saying on the same day. On June 11, the State  Department opined that ‘the delivery of Russian S-300 surface-to-air  missile systems to Iran is not against the recently imposed UN  sanctions.’ 27
In the face of criticism, the Kremlin characterized its position as  evenhanded. On May 26, RIA Novosti reported that presidential aide  Sergei Prikhodko had argued that ‘Russia’s position on Tehran’s nuclear  program is neither pro-American, nor pro-Iranian. The statement comes  after Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad said in a televised  interview earlier in the day that Russia’s support for UN sanctions  against Tehran was “not acceptable to the Iranian nation.”’ 28  
Russia also expressed no enthusiasm for an expansion of the so-called  five plus one group (composed of the five permanent members of the UN  Security Council plus Germany) which had been negotiating the nuclear  issue with Iran.  The arbitrary nature of this five plus one grouping  had been pointed out by many countries, and inevitably arose after the  initially successful mediation of the Iranian nuclear fuel enrichment  issue by Turkey and Brazil. Why not have Turkey and Brazil joined the  five plus one? The addition of these two states would obviously make the  negotiating group less hostile to Iran. But the Russian Foreign  Ministry was not interested. On July 19, RIA Novosti reported that  ‘Turkey and Brazil are not joining talks led by the Iran Six group of  international mediators on Tehran’s nuclear program, the Russian foreign  minister said Wednesday. “There have been no discussions on the issue,”  Sergei Lavrov said.  Iranian Foreign Minister Manouchehr Mottaki said  Tuesday that the Islamic Republic wanted Turkey and Brazil to  participate in the talks.’ 29 
Criticism of Iran keeps coming from numerous Russian diplomats. On  July 14, Russia’s UN ambassador Vitaly Churkin said there was “still  cause for concern about Iran’s nuclear program as signals from the  Islamic Republic have been far from encouraging… “The signals I have  heard from Iran are not encouraging,” he said. “Iran continues to set  out terms, make excuses and say that it will persist in enriching  uranium to 20%.”’ 30 
At the same time, Russia continued to assist Iran in the construction  of the Bushehr nuclear power reactor, which should come on line and  start generating electricity within a few months.  The Iranians also  operate research reactors.  On July 12, Iran announced that ‘nuclear  fuel for the Tehran research reactor will be ready in September 2011….  “God willing, we will deliver the fuel to the Tehran reactor next  September,” Ali Akbar Salehi of the Atomic Energy Organization of Iran  (AEOI) was quoted by Fars News Agency (FNA) as saying. “At present we  have produced about 20 kg of 20%-enriched uranium and we are now  producing fuel plates,” he said.’ 31   The Anglo-Americans  have tried to make this 20% enrichment a virtual casus belli,  despite the fact that weaponization requires far higher percentages,  well above 90%.
According to Vernochet of the Réseau Voltaire, the Russian policy  ‘appears to reflect a certain schizophrenia at the highest level of the  state, or an openly diverging policy with two heads, with a presidency a  priori more pro-Western than Prime Minister Vladimir Putin.’  32Ezhednevny Zhurnal, May 14).’   The net result of these developments is that the aggressive forces  inside the United States think they have a much freer hand with Iran  than they did during the time of the Putin presidency.  McDermott agrees about this latent conflict, noting: ‘There is  also the thorny issue that Prime Minister Vladimir Putin, has a group  of foreign policy aides managed by Yuriy Ushakov functioning as a  “little” foreign ministry: which represents the single greatest barrier  to adopting such policy concepts (
Brzezinski Group Weaker, Neocon-Petraeus Faction Stronger
As already noted, the Brzezinski-Nye-Trilateral faction is losing  ground to the neocons, who have been mightily strengthened by the  ascendancy of their chosen factional figurehead and presidential  candidate for 2012, General David Petraeus.  The planned color  revolution in Iran has not materialized, and therefore the neocon  recipes for aggression are winning by default, especially given the  systemic hysteria induced by the financial breakdown crisis.  The  Brzezinski-Nye-Trilateral group had been early supporters of Obama, and  growing public awareness of Obama’s weakness, fecklessness, dithering,  and treachery are also weakening his backers. 
Petraeus, The Savior Of The Savior
Obama’s appointment of Petraeus as the new commander in Afghanistan,  succeeding McChrystal, is an act of supreme political folly.  By  appointing Petraeus, Obama has focused new adulation by the political  class on his most formidable opponent for the presidency in 2012, as  seen in Petraeus’ 99-0 confirmation vote by the U.S. Senate.  It should  be evident that Petraeus is not likely to have accepted this new command  without having extracted certain binding policy commitments from Obama  in advance, and one of these is likely to have been a more truculent US  stance against Iran, to say nothing of Pakistan and other states. Obama  had been the savior, but Petraeus now assumes the role of the savior of  the savior, and it is the neocon faction and its strident war program  which is the beneficiary.33 
A New National Intelligence Estimate By And For Warmongers
During the declining years of the Bush regime, one of the most  important signals of a general ruling class consensus that the US attack  on Iran should be taken off the table was the national intelligence  estimate issued in December 2007, which concluded that Iran no longer  had a functioning nuclear weapons program.  This simply meant in  practice that the neocons, for the moment, were out of power.  This  finding was opposed tooth and nail by the neocons, and was directly  contradicted by the claims of Israeli intelligence.
The way in which this new NIE is being rigged, with the facts and  intelligence being fixed around the desired war policy, is reflected in a  recent rare interview by CIA Director Leon Panetta. The new phony NIE  is now guaranteed to repudiate the previous finding, and to accuse Iran  of actively seeking nuclear bombs.  This was in fact Panetta’s first  network news interview since taking over the CIA in early 2009.  According to one published account, ‘in an ABC News interview Sunday,  CIA Director Leon Panetta alluded to a fact that was reported by Newsweek  months ago: U.S. intelligence agencies have revised their widely  disputed 2007 conclusion that Iran had given up its efforts to design or  build a nuclear bomb. That shift is expected to be reflected in an  update of the controversial 2007 National Intelligence Estimate, which  was supposed to have been completed months ago, but according to three  counter-proliferation officials, who asked for anonymity when discussing  sensitive information, the formal update still is not finished and may  be delayed for months to come. Even when it’s done, officials have said,  the Obama administration is expected to keep the revised report’s  contents officially secret….’ 34  Panetta, a political hack,  has claimed that Iran is working on weaponization of fissile material,  which has been a central issue in the dispute within the US intelligence  community. With this, Panetta clearly joins the warmonger camp.
State Department: Iran Wants Nukes, Iran Has Always Wanted Nukes
On June 8, David E. Sanger of the New York Times reported  that US diplomats at the United Nations were already beginning to  prepare the other members of the UN Security Council for a complete volte-face  on the question of Iranian nukes compared to the December 2007 NIE.  In  December 2007 there were no nukes, but now there are some again, the US  in effect argued.  One imagines that UN Ambassador Susan Rice took  special satisfaction in an Orwellian reversal of this type. Sanger  wrote: ‘The American briefings, according to foreign diplomats and some  American officials, amount to a tacit admission by the United States  that it is gradually backing away from a 2007 National Intelligence  Estimate. It is using new evidence to revise and in some cases reverse  conclusions from that estimate, which came to the much disputed  conclusion that while Iran had stepped up its production of nuclear  fuel, its leadership had suspended its work on the devices and warhead  designs needed to actually build a weapon.’ 35 
The neocons are already mobilized to skew the new NIE in the  direction they want. An example of their effort is the op-ed by Gabriel  Schoenfeld of the arch-reactionary Hudson Institute appearing in the Wall  Street Journal on July 19. Schoenfeld’s first goal is to perform  the Orwellian exercise of expunging the December 2007 NIE: ‘In December  2007, our intelligence agencies put out a National Intelligence Estimate  (NIE), which in its opening sentence baldly declared that “We judge  with high confidence that in fall 2003, Tehran halted its nuclear  weapons program.” In a stroke, this authoritative pronouncement  eliminated any possibility that President Bush, then entering his final  year in office, would order a military strike against Iran’s nuclear  facilities. Perhaps even more significantly, it undercut White House and  international efforts to tighten sanctions on Iran. After all, if the  Iranian nuclear program had been halted in 2003, what would be the  point?….Behind the scenes, the intelligence services of Germany, Great  Britain, France and Israel all took issue with the NIE. It became the  subject of fierce criticism in Congress and the press. It is now clear  that while the U.S. dithered, Tehran forged ahead…. Evidence has  surfaced that the flawed 2007 NIE was the result of political cookery….  Since late last year, U.S. intelligence has been preparing a new  estimate of Iran’s nuclear program. The critical question is whether the  forces that led to politicization in 2007 have been eradicated. Will  the drafters of the new Iran NIE call the shots as they are, or will  they once again use intelligence as a political lever?’ 36  
Neocons Want a Team B For Iran
Notice that, for this neocon doublethinker, ‘politicization’ is  anything which delays or avoids war, while objectivity is identified  exclusively with the warmonger position. Schoenfeld is obsessed with  counting how many months remain before Iran stages their first nuclear  detonation. Israel says there may be as few as twelve months left! How  to focus public attention on this issue? Schoenfeld has an answer ready:  ‘That is why a neutral outside panel should be brought in to scrutinize  the discredited 2007 NIE and the entire estimating process in this  sensitive arena.’ This sounds very much like an old neocon trick – Team  B, the panel of apocalyptic dissident ideologues created by Bush the  elder in 1975-76 to prepare an alarmist estimate of Soviet intentions in  contradiction to the findings of the official CIA.37  In  such a contest, neocon Strangeloves proclaiming dramatic doomsday  messages have an easy time marginalizing colorless bureaucrats with  their plodding prose. It is the neocons who are the iron chefs of  cooking intelligence. As Sir Richard Dearlove, the boss of MI-6,  informed Tony Blair and his ministers in July 2002, ‘the intelligence  and facts were being fixed around the policy’ by Washington in the runup  to the Bush-Cheney aggression against Iraq.38 
Leverett: There Is No Iranian Nuclear Weapons Program
One leading US expert on Iranian affairs is Flynt Leverett, who  worked on Iran during his time in the G. W. Bush National Security  Council. In a July 18 radio interview transcribed on Leverett’s website,  Race for Iran, which is also by run by Hillary Mann Leverett, an  important Iran expert in her own right.  the former official stated that  ‘to the best of my knowledge…there is no evidence of an Iranian nuclear  weapons program.…I haven’t been working in a classified environment for  a number of years now and I certainly wouldn’t claim to know everything  that the U.S. intelligence community might have, [but]…my very strong  impression is that we know that the Iranians have been working on…a  dedicated fuel cycle program focused on uranium enrichment for a long  time.  Could they have at some point…looked into other kinds of  technical or engineering problems that you would need to solve if you  were actually at some point going to build a nuclear weapon?  Yeah,  that’s possible, but I’ve never seen what I would consider clear and  convincing evidence of it.’ 39 
The mendacious process by which National Intelligence Estimates are  manufactured on sensitive issues like Iran is much illuminated by the  case of the Iranian scientist Shahram Amiri. Amiri, it will be recalled,  issued a Youtube video in which he alleged that he had been kidnapped  by the United States while on a pilgrimage to Saudi Arabia, and was  being held in Arizona. Later, he issued another videotape, this one  better produced, in which he reassured the public that he was fine,  studying physics in Arizona of his own free will. A third tape went back  to asserting that he had been kidnapped. Amiri at length appealed to  the Iranian interest section of the Pakistani Embassy in Washington, DC,  and soon returned to Iran.
Amiri, The CIA’s New Iranian Curveball?
So what is the truth about Amiri?  We need to recall the examples of  the anonymous “source Curveball” and of Achmed Chalabi, two Iraqi  adventurers assiduously courted by the neocons and plied with large sums  of US taxpayer money in order to make fantastic allegations about the  allegedly threatening programs of weapons of mass destruction being  pursued by Saddam Hussein.  If the CIA had really brought Amiri to the  United States and offered him $5 million, it is a pretty good guess that  he was being paid to provide the lurid details of an Iranian nuclear  weapons program which many qualified experts, as we have just seen,  conclude to be nonexistent, just as the US government officially stated  in December 2007.  
The Leveretts stress that Amiri was never a top official of the  Iranian science establishment, and it is therefore very likely that his  opinions about the alleged Iranian nuclear weapons program are  worthless. As the Leveretts wrote on July 15, ‘We warned, in April that  Amiri could not possibly be the highly valuable intelligence source that  some Western officials and the National Council for Resistance in Iran  (an affiliate of the MEK, which the U.S. government has designated as a  foreign terrorist organization) claimed him to be — a source who “had  worked on sensitive nuclear programs for at least a decade” and was now  revealing the inside story on Iran’s alleged clandestine nuclear weapons  program.  We were appalled that the Washington Post was  reporting these claims without the most minimal, common-sense follow-up  questioning.  Now we learn that the CIA apparently tried to pay Amiri $5  million.  Along with trying to figure out the details of Amiri’s  trajectory over the last year, journalists ought to be focusing on what  the Agency’s willingness to pay $5 million to a hyped-up source signals  about the U.S. Intelligence Community’s desperation to make a  prosecutor’s case against the Islamic Republic.  Indeed, the CIA and the  rest of the Intelligence Community seem sufficiently desperate to make  their case that they will pay taxpayer dollars to gotten-up defectors  who might be prepared to say—for the right price—what Washington elites  want to hear.  As we noted in our April piece, if the CIA and its  partners in the Intelligence Community are unable to make a case against  Iran, “how could Washington argue for intensified sanctions against the  Islamic Republic—much less keep the military option ‘on the table?’”’
Press comments on Panetta’s ABC News interview suggest precisely  this: Amiri was brought in to provide fodder for a campaign of mass  brainwashing designed to show that Iran is on track to build nuclear  bombs. On the ABC website we read: ‘Panetta did not directly confirm  that the controversial 2007 National Intelligence Estimate on Iranian  nukes was under revision. But other officials have confirmed to  Declassified that an update has been in the works since late last year.  They say its completion has been postponed several times while agencies  evaluate new intelligence reporting which has surfaced over the last few  months. At least some of that fresh input is believed to have come from  one or more Iranian nuclear insiders, including Shahram Amiri, an  Iranian nuclear scientist who disappeared about a year ago while on a  religious pilgrimage to Saudi Arabia. Earlier this year, ABC News  reported that Amiri had defected to the United States. Although  government sources have acknowledged …that they are aware of Amiri’s  defection and of information that he might have provided, they do not  confirm that he defected to the U.S.’ 40 
Now that Amiri has fled back to Iran, another possibility opens up  for the US mindbenders: they might now argue that the December 2007 NIE  which concluded there was no Iranian nuclear weapons program had been  based on falsified information procured by Amiri and others like him,  who had been recruited to espionage by the US, but who later proved  unreliable – as shown by Amiri’s flight back to Iran to rejoin his  family there.  All of these points represent good reasons not to believe  the contents of the new NIE when its contents are reported in the press  in the very near future. It is guaranteed to be a tissue of lies.
Amiri’s Last Word: No Iranian Nuclear Weapons Program
The last word from Amiri seems to be a statement that there is no  Iranian nuclear weapons program after all.  This has been established by  CIA veteran Philip Giraldi based on leaks from his networks inside the  agency.  As Gareth Porter of IPS reported, ‘Contrary to a news media  narrative that Iranian scientist Shahram Amiri has provided intelligence  on covert Iranian nuclear weapons work, CIA sources familiar with the  Amiri case say he told his CIA handlers that there is no such Iranian  nuclear weapons programme, according to a former CIA officer. Philip  Giraldi, a former CIA counterterrorism official, told IPS that his  sources are CIA officials with direct knowledge of the entire Amiri  operation.’ 41   But mere facts have never prevented the  neocon mythographs from pressing for aggression.  Maybe they will now  re-create the Pentagon’s Office of Special Plans, which was responsible  for a series of whoppers in 2002-2003.
Obama Regime Beats The Propaganda Drum For War
In the wake of the new round of sanctions in June, top officials of  the Obama regime have begun to suggest that sanctions will be inadequate  to stop the nuclear weapons development which they will soon claim is  going on, leaving the obvious conclusion that direct military attack is  the only option.  ‘”Will [sanctions] deter them [Iran] from their  ambitions with regards to nuclear capability?” CIA Director Leon Panetta  told ABC News on June 27. “Probably not.”’ 42 
Defense Secretary Robert Gates is taking special pains to argue  against the idea that Iran could be held in check by traditional nuclear  deterrence of the time-honored Cold War type, even if Tehran were to  procure nuclear weapons.  This is an argument which has been endorsed by  some leading US military officers, who are obviously not eager to go  into the Iranian meatgrinder.  According to Fox News, ‘Gates is sounding  more belligerent these days. “I don’t think we’re prepared to even talk  about containing a nuclear Iran,” he told Fox News on June 20. “We do  not accept the idea of Iran having nuclear weapons.” He added: “I don’t  think we’re prepared to even talk about containing a nuclear Iran. I  think we’re — we — our view still is we do not accept the idea of Iran  having nuclear weapons. And our policies and our efforts are all aimed  at preventing that from happening.” … “Actually, what we’ve seen is a  change in the nature of the regime in Tehran over the past 18 months or  so. You have — you have a much narrower based government in Tehran now.  Many of the religious figures are being set aside. As Secretary Clinton  has said, they appear to be moving more in the direction of a military  dictatorship. Khamenei is leaning on a smaller and smaller group of  advisors.”’ 43   Gates had been skeptical in public about the  Iran attack, in conformity with his Brzezinski pedigree; his joining  the extreme war party thus means the bureaucratic situation is  deteriorating.
The US argument against the Iranian regime used to be that Iran was  bad because it was a theocratic dictatorship of the mullahs, who were  the bearers of Islamic fundamentalism.  Gates and Clinton now argue that  Iran is bad precisely because it is no longer a theocratic dictatorship  of mullahs, but an authoritarian military dictatorship.  The only  constant is the desire for war and confrontation.
Netanyahu Of The War Party
In order for the US to assemble an Arab-Sunni front in the Middle  East to oppose the chosen Persian-Shiite adversary, it was considered  advantageous to get the Israelis to make a few concessions to the  Palestinians with a view to creating the illusion of progress towards an  overall peace settlement between these two parties.  Because the  politics of economic depression has produced a marked heightening of the  extremist elements of Israeli politics, the Netanyahu regime has  refused to make any concessions, and has acted out defiance of Obama for  domestic political consumption.  This dynamic gave rise to the hostile  and heated atmosphere of Netanyahu’s previous White House visit.  This  time, the atmospherics were kept more conciliatory. In any case,  Netanyahu’s demand for US military attack on Iran is a constant refrain.   
As the Leveretts pointed out on July 11: ‘it is the Prime Minister’s  remarks on Iran that deserve special attention—for these remarks suggest  that Netanyahu is embarked on an extremely dangerous course.  Netanyahu  is pushing the United States to take eventual military action against  Iran — a confrontation that would have predictably disastrous  consequences for U.S. interests and regional stability, and for which  Israel and the pro-Likud community in the United States will be blamed,  because they will have led the charge to war.  Such a scenario would be  far more damaging to Israel and the American Jewish community than  anything Iran might conceivably do.  Netanyahu argued that the Islamic  Republic’s “irrational regime” cannot be allowed to develop nuclear  weapons capability, because “you can’t rely on the fact that they’ll  obey the calculations of cost and benefit that have governed all nuclear  powers since the rise of the nuclear age after Hiroshima and  Nagasaki.”’ 44 
Netanyahu, it is argued, is also trying to force the US to take the  lead in attacking, which is less convenient for Washington than being  dragged into war by a supposed breakaway ally: ‘…while preserving the  option of Israeli military strikes against Iranian nuclear targets,  Netanyahu is shifting the onus for forestalling the further development  of Iran’s nuclear capabilities onto the prospect of U.S. military  action.’ 45 
The UAE Calls For War At Aspen, Colorado Ideas Festival
Many reports stress that the political leadership of Saudi Arabia and  the United Arab Emirates are issuing strident demands that the US make  the attack on Iran, thus abandoning all hypocritical pretenses of Arab  solidarity.  One piece of evidence in this regard is the outburst of the  UAE ambassador to the United States during a panel discussion in Aspen  Colorado during the first week of July. In response to a question about  Iran, UAE ambassador to the United States Yousef Al Otaiba issued a  remarkable open call for US military aggression in regard to Iran,  despite the likely serious negative side effects which his own country  would experience because of its close geographical propinquity does a  theater of war. ‘”I think it’s a cost-benefit analysis,” Mr. al-Otaiba  said. “I think despite the large amount of trade we do with Iran, which  is close to $12 billion … there will be consequences, there will be a  backlash and there will be problems with people protesting and rioting  and very unhappy that there is an outside force attacking a Muslim  country; that is going to happen no matter what.”’ Al-Otaiba concluded:  ‘”If you are asking me, ‘Am I willing to live with that versus living  with a nuclear Iran?,’ my answer is still the same: ‘We cannot live with  a nuclear Iran.’ I am willing to absorb what takes place at the expense  of the security of the U.A.E.”’ 46  Al-Otaiba was soon  called home for consultations. His formulation is reminiscent of French  President Sarkozy’s cynical comment that the only thing worse than  bombing Iran is Iran with a bomb.
Joe Klein in Time: Arab Gulf States Want Iran Bombed
According to Joe Klein of Time Magazine, the demand  for war  by the Saudis and the Gulf states is pushing the United States rapidly  down the path to military conflict.  One senses that alibis are being  prefabricated for Obama and his officials for when the body bags begin  to come home. Klein writes: ‘One other factor has brought the military  option to a low boil: Iran’s Sunni neighbors really want the U.S. to do  it. When United Arab Emirates Ambassador Yousef al-Otaiba said on July 6  that he favored a military strike against Iran despite the economic and  military consequences to his country, he was reflecting an increasingly  adamant attitude in the region. Senior American officials who travel to  the Gulf frequently say the Saudis, in particular, raise the issue with  surprising ardor. Everyone from the Turks to the Egyptians to the  Jordanians are threatening to go nuclear if Iran does. That is seen as a  real problem in the most volatile region in the world: What happens,  for example, if Saudi Arabia gets a bomb, and the deathless monarchy  there is overthrown by Islamist radicals?’ 47   We should  stress that the rulers of Saudi Arabia and the Gulf states represent  some of the most extreme and backward feudal relics to be found anywhere  on this planet, having survived through the 20th century mainly thanks  to the fact that these were British imperial puppet states for most of  that time.  The idea that a gaggle of titled feudal reactionaries can  talk the United States into a catastrophic war shows how far gone the  current situation actually is.
The clamor for war from the Saudi and Gulf potentates is also the  theme of a recent article in the online edition of the pro-British  German newsmagazine, Der Spiegel, where we read:  ‘Israel and  the Arab states near the Persian Gulf recognize a common threat: the  regime in Tehran. A regional diplomat has not even ruled out support by  the Arab states for a military strike to end Iran’s nuclear ambitions….  Never have the strategic interests of the Jewish and Arab states been so  closely aligned as they are today. While European and American security  experts consistently characterize a military strike against Iran as “a  last option,” notable Arabs have long shared the views of Israel’s  ultra-nationalist foreign minister, Avigdor Lieberman. If no one else  takes it upon himself to bomb Iran, Saudi cleric Mohsen al-Awaji told  SPIEGEL, Israel will have to do it. “Israel’s agenda has its limits,” he  said, noting that it is mainly concerned with securing its national  existence. “But Iran’s agenda is global.”’ 48 
A Philodoxer Of The War Party: Bernard-Henri Lévy
One who rejoiced that the UAE was now ready to fight the Iranians to  the last American was the notorious philodoxer Bernard-Henri Lévy, who  had already done yeoman service for the Anglo-Americans over many years  as an all-purpose warmonger on the subject of Iraq.  Here is part of the  Huffington Post account of Lévy’s remarks:  ‘”The UAE has chosen to  side with the camp of those who apply to the letter the new United  Nations resolution of June 9,” wrote Lévy, noting that it was “truly a  blow to the regime” in Iran. For Lévy, the “union sacrée” of Muslim  countries against the “Zionist enemy” is a fantasy. The countries that  feel threatened by Tehran, he added, now have the opportunity to form an  alliance of convenience.  We might as well say that the Emirates’  decision is truly a blow to the regime…. And the fact that, for the  first time, an Arab country took this step, the fact that it said no to  the Iranians’ attempted holdup, thus foiling the manœuvre of which Hamas  and Hezbollah were the vanguard but whose ultimate goal was to set the  region ablaze, constitutes not only a gesture of survival but proof of  maturity and a welcome sign of clarification.  If this decision is  maintained, nothing will ever be the same again. And for Ahmadinejad,  the countdown will have begun.’ 49   The reference to the  countdown at the end suggests Lévy’s vision of US missiles streaking  towards Tehran with their deadly cargo.
Saudi Arabia Volunteers As Springboard For Assaulting Iran
Saudi Arabia has by all indications volunteered the use of its  airspace as a transit corridor for Israeli planes attacking Iran.  According to other reports, Israeli forces are now present on the  territory of the kingdom. On June 12, The Times of London  reported that Saudi Arabia had recently ‘conducted tests to stand down  its air defenses to enable Israeli jets to make a bombing raid on Iran’s  nuclear facilities’ – as part of an attack on Iranian targets. In  March, reports had started appearing in the European press about secret  negotiations between Jerusalem and Riyadh to work out the details of  cooperation.50 
On July 5, these reports became more concrete when the London  Times wrote that ‘the head of Mossad, Israel’s overseas  intelligence service… assured Benjamin Netanyahu, its prime minister,  that Saudi Arabia would turn a blind eye to Israeli jets flying over the  kingdom during any future raid on Iran’s nuclear sites. Earlier this  year Meir Dagan, Mossad’s director since 2002, held secret talks with  Saudi officials to discuss the possibility. The Israeli press has  already carried unconfirmed reports that high-ranking officials,  including Ehud Olmert, the former prime minister, held meetings with  Saudi colleagues. The reports were denied by Saudi officials. “The  Saudis have tacitly agreed to the Israeli air force flying through their  airspace on a mission which is supposed to be in the common interests  of both Israel and Saudi Arabia,” a diplomatic source said last week.  Although the countries have no formal diplomatic relations, an Israeli  defense source confirmed that Mossad maintained “working relations” with  the Saudis.’ 51   On June 28, RT Jerusalem correspondent  Paula Slier reported that Israeli helicopters were dropping off materiel  at Saudi bases. Vernochet of Voltaire cites a press agency report to  the effect that Israeli planes landed in Saudi Arabia on June 18 and 19.52  
Another Big Difference This Time: The French President
During the Bush-Cheney propaganda campaign for an attack on Iraq back  in 2002-2003, a key focal point of resistance was constituted by French  President Jacques Chirac and French Foreign Minister Dominique De  Villepin.  These French leaders earned the gratitude of persons of  goodwill all over the world through their opposition to the wild lies  told by the US neocons.  This time around, the world situation is  qualitatively worse because the independent French spirit typified by  Chirac and Villepin  is no longer reflected at the top of the Paris  government.  Instead, the tenant of the Elysée Palace is Nicholas  Sarkozy,  an adventurer and demagogue who grew up in a household closely  allied with the Wisner family of the CIA.  Of all the European leaders,  Sarkozy has been the absolute worst on all issues concerning Iran,  where he has surpassed all the rest in his bellicose and belligerent  rhetoric.  Everything indicates that Sarkozy, if he is still in office,  intends to support the coming attack on Iran.  Sarkozy has attempted in  particular to pull Medvedev away from the traditional Russian position  and towards the Anglo-Americans. As RIA Novosti wrote, ‘France has  welcomed Russia’s decision on new sanctions against Iran, French  President Nicolas Sarkozy said at the St. Petersburg International  Economic Forum…. “I would like to welcome, in particular, the decision  by President Medvedev in regard to voting for sanctions on the Iran  issue. This (sanctions) would be impossible if he had not made this  choice,” Sarkozy said.’ 53   There is now some hope that the  l’Oréal political contributions scandal could weaken or even oust  Sarkozy.  This scandal is at least a sign that seventy years after de  Gaulle’s famous call to arms, French institutions are fighting back  against foreign domination.  The US anti-Obama opposition could learn a  great deal from this scandal.
China Opposed, But Without Conviction
As for China, this power is trying to placate the US hawks while at  the same time maintaining reasonably good relations with Iran, upon  which the Chinese depend for a significant part of their current oil  supply, and which above all represents the best future hope of building a  pipeline (Iran-Pakistan-China) which would finally provide a land route  for oil from the Middle East to the Middle Kingdom, far from such  chokepoints is the Straits of Malacca, and above all far from the naval  domination of the Anglo-Americans. Hillary Clinton has blackmailed China  by telling Beijing that they have to choose between supporting  sanctions on Iran, which might cut off their Iranian oil imports if  Tehran becomes enraged, and the worse option of losing all their Gulf  oil imports if there are no sanctions, since in the absence of sanctions  a more likely Israeli or US attack on Iran would lead to the total  closing of the Gulf through Iranian retaliation.  Risk giving up your  Iranian oil, Hillary told the Chinese, or risk your Saudi oil as well,  with the latter supply being more important.  China also has its own  areas of direct conflict with the United States, including such issues  as US cyber-subversion campaigns, sovereignty over the oil-rich South  China Sea, China’s sovereign right to manage its own currency, and the  proper handling of the DPRK.  The Chinese have argued that, although  they voted for the sanctions as demanded by the US, they had been  instrumental in making them weaker and more diluted.  In any case, China  is anxious to find ways of getting along with Tehran. On June 6, a RIA  Novosti article reported that ‘China is ready to strengthen diplomatic  relations with Iran, regardless of sanctions imposed on the Islamic  Republic over its nuclear program, Chinese Foreign Ministry Spokesman  Qin Gang said on Thursday.’ 54 
How The Next War Will Come
Joe Klein of Time describes how, during the time the neocon  General Petraeus was in command, the US CENTCOM was busy working out new  and apocalyptic scenarios for Iran. He stresses that Israel has been  integrated into US military planning, under various pretexts. Klein  writes: ‘…intelligence sources say that the U.S. Army’s Central Command,  which is in charge of organizing military operations in the Middle  East, has made some real progress in planning targeted air strikes —  aided, in large part, by the vastly improved human-intelligence  operations in the region. “There really wasn’t a military option a year  ago,” an Israeli military source told me. “But they’ve gotten serious  about the planning, and the option is real now.” Israel has been brought  into the planning process, I’m told, because U.S. officials are  frightened by the possibility that the right-wing Netanyahu government  might go rogue and try to whack the Iranians on its own.’
Klein also acknowledges that there is resistance among the US  military to this new round of aggression.  And well there might be: at  various times over the past few months, Obama has had more US combat  troops in the field than Bush ever did.  The suicide rate in the U.S.  Army in particular has grown to alarming proportions.  Armies can reach  breaking points, and the U.S. Army is not exempt from this rule. Klein  notes: ‘Most senior military leaders also believe Gates got it right the  first time — even a targeted attack on Iran would be “disastrous on a  number of levels.” It would unify the Iranian people against the latest  in a long series of foreign interventions. It would also unify much of  the world — including countries like Russia and China that we’ve worked  hard to cultivate — against a recowboyfied U.S. There would certainly be  an Iranian reaction — in Iraq, in Afghanistan, by Lebanese Hezbollah  against Israel and by the Hezbollah network against the U.S. and Saudi  homelands. A catastrophic regional war is not impossible…. But it is  also possible that the saber-rattling is not a bluff, that the U.S.  really won’t tolerate a nuclear Iran and is prepared to do something  awful to stop it.’ 55 
Flynt Leverett regards this new and wider war as a gradual process,  with time necessary to show that the new round of sanctions has not had  the desired effect. Leverett said in a radio comment on July 19, ‘we now  have these new sanctions in place that we’re going to need to go  through—six months, twelve months or so living with these sanctions  until everyone is willing to acknowledge that they’re not having the  desired effect.  And I think the Israelis are playing a game, looking at  a year down the road, 18 months, maybe two years down the road, when  after more and more people come on board and say sanctions aren’t  working, the Iranians are continuing to develop their fuel cycle  capabilities, etc.—at that point, probably around the time that  President Obama is gearing up for his own reelection campaign in a  serious way, the Israelis can come back and say, “Okay, now we need to  do something more coercive around the Iranian problem.”’ 56    But things may also move much faster.
De Borchgrave: Obama Wants Three Wars And Both Houses Of Congress
The veteran columnist Arnaud de Borchgrave offers the following  estimate, which gives considerable attention to the US military  opposition against the coming strike, as well as to Iranian capabilities  for retaliation in the region: ‘A former Arab leader, in close touch  with current leaders, speaking privately not for attribution, told this  reporter July 6, “All the Middle Eastern and Gulf leaders now want Iran  taken out of the nuclear arms business and they all know sanctions won’t  work.” The temptation for Obama to double down on Iran will grow  rapidly as he concludes that Afghanistan will remain a festering sore as  far as anyone can peer into a murky future, hardly a recipe for success  at the polls in November. With a war in Afghanistan that is bound to  get worse and a military theater in Iraq replete with sectarian  violence, the bombing of Iran may give Obama a three-front war — and a  chance to retain both houses of Congress. Adm. Mike Mullen, chairman of  the Joint Chiefs of Staff, also expressed reservations from time to  time. The Joint Chiefs and former CENTCOM commanders know better than  most experts that Iran has formidable asymmetrical retaliatory  capabilities. For example, all of these are vulnerable to Iranian  sabotage or hundreds of Iranian missiles on the eastern side of the  Gulf: from the narrow Straits of Hormuz, which still handles 25 percent  of the world’s oil traffic; to Bahrain, the U.S. Fifth Fleet’s  headquarters where the population is two-thirds Shiite and the royal  family is Sunni; to Dubai, where about 400,000 Iranians live, including  many who are “sleeper agents” or favorable to Tehran; to Qatar, now the  world’s richest country with per-capita income at $78,000, which  supplies the United States with the world’s longest runway and  sub-headquarters for CENTCOM, and whose LNG facilities are within short  missile range of Iran’s coastal batteries; to Saudi Arabia’s Ras Tanura,  the world’s largest oil terminal, and Abqaiq, nerve center of Saudi’s  eastern oil fields.’ 57 
On The Eve Of A New False Flag Provocation?
Naturally, the traditional Anglo-American method for neutralizing any  possible opposition from military leaders or members of Congress, to  say nothing of the increasingly atomized US public, has been to stage a  provocation along the lines of the Gulf of Tonkin in August 1964, or an  event like 9/11, quickly followed by the appropriate congressional  resolution which can be used in lieu of an actual declaration of war, as  needed.  Vernochet finds that these ingredients are really the only  ones missing in the current constellation of forces to get military  operations going in grand style.58  Vernochet estimates that  the only possibility for stopping this war would be the creation of a  large block of states led by Russia and China, and that this possibility  seems very remote at the present time.  But instead of seeing the  denizens of Manhattan and the city of London as power crazed, it would  be more accurate to regard them as living in mortal fear of their own  imminent financial bankruptcy, and desperately seeking some way to  convince the world that their empire of derivatives, zombie banks, and  hedge funds actually represents the economic future of humanity.59    In the meantime, one thing which antiwar activists can unquestionably  do is to begin inoculating public opinion to regard any terrorist act  or military clash attributed by the mass media to Iran as a provocation  deliberately staged by the US-UK war party.
US And Israeli Warships Mobilized
The US has recently deployed a second aircraft carrier battle group  to waters near Iran.  A large number of US warships, by some accounts 11  vessels, passed through the Suez Canal heading east towards the Gulf at  the end of June.  This was evidently the expanded battle group around  the attack carrier USS Truman. An Israeli report says: ‘International  agreements require Egypt to keep the Suez open even for warships, but  the armada, led by the USS Truman with 5,000 sailors and marines, was  the largest in years. Egypt closed the canal to fishing and other boats  as the armada moved through the strategic passageway that connects the  Red and Mediterranean Seas.’ 60  Some reports stated that an  Israeli ship was part of the armada.
There are also reports that the Israeli Navy is expanding its  operations into the Gulf: ‘Several defense websites have reported that  Israel is deploying one to three German-made nuclear submarines in the  Persian Gulf as a defensive measure against the possibility of a missile  attacks from Lebanon and Syria, as well as Iran. “The submarines of  Flotilla 7 — Dolphin, Tekuma and Leviathan — have visited the Gulf  before,” DeHaemer wrote, “but the decision has now been taken to ensure a  permanent presence of at least one of the vessels.”61  These  submarines fire nuclear missiles, and could destroy Iranian cities.   They cannot defend anything, but they can launch a nuclear first strike.
US Troops In Eleven Countries Encircle Iran
US forces currently operate in at least 11 countries within striking  distance of Iran. These are Iraq, Afghanistan, Turkey, Pakistan, Kuwait,  Azerbaijan, Armenia, Turkmenistan, Saudi Arabia, UAE, and Kyrgyzstan.  While Manas Air Force base in Kyrgyzstan might be available for  operations against Iran, there are currently no US bases in Uzbekistan,  so far as is known.  But the US is trying to re-open its Uzbek base,  which was closed in 2005.62   Thus, US military forces are  now present in virtually all of Iran’s neighbors, except Syria.  Many of  these are places which the US peace movement, to the extent that it has  survived the coming of Obama, has never heard of. This includes more  than 50,000 GIs in Iraq (where the US is now alone, after the departure  of all coalition contingents) and Afghanistan, where there are some  100,000 US forces. There are US forces in various disguises in Pakistan.  There are NATO bases, including the formidable Incirlik air base, in  Turkey. Whether Turkey will allow its territory to be abused for  aggression is another question. 
US Protectorate Over Azerbaijan
US forces are now in Azerbaijan, a country which Secretary of State  Hillary Clinton visited at the end of June. When these troops showed up,  they provoked an immediate stir among the Iranian Pasdaran: ‘…a large  American force has massed in Azerbaijan, which is on the northwest  border of Iran. [Iranian] Revolutionary Guards Brigadier General Mehdi  Moini said Tuesday that his forces are mobilized “due to the presence of  American and Israeli forces on the western border.” The Guards  reportedly have called in tanks and anti-aircraft units to the area in  what amounts to a war alert.’ 63 
US Forces In Armenia
US units have also surfaced in Armenia. A report dated June 24   details a sharp Iranian protest against this further hostile  militarization so close to its border: ‘Iran will not allow a United  States-led military force to be deployed in the Nagorno-Karabakh  conflict zone that immediately borders on its territory, according to  the Islamic Republic’s chief diplomat in Armenia. At a press conference  in Yerevan on Wednesday Ambassador Seyed Ali Saghaeyan claimed that  Washington is contemplating a deployment of its troops in Fizuli, which  is one of the seven Armenian-controlled districts around  Nagorno-Karabakh. He further alleged that the American intention was to  do so under the guise of a peacekeeping operation.’ 64 
Result: Iran Surrounded
The following summary by an oil industry analyst sums up the degree  to which Iran is hemmed in by hostile US and NATO military. Emphasis has  been added to show the number of countries involved: ‘Iran literally is  surrounded by American troops, notes an oil market analyst, Energy  and Capital editor Christian A. DeHaemer. There is no evidence of  an imminent attack, but he connects a number of recent events and the  presence of American soldiers to warn that oil prices might soar — with  or without a pre-emptive strike aimed at stopping Iran’s nuclear power  ambitions. Iran is bordered on the east by Pakistan and  Afghanistan, where U.S. troops have been waging a  costly war, in terms of money and lives, against Taliban, Al-Qaeda and  other terrorists. The Persian Gulf is on Iran’s  southern border, and last week’s report, confirmed by the Pentagon, that  11 warships had sailed through the Suez Canal, raised alarm bells that  the U.S. is ready to fight to keep the Persian Gulf open. Iran has  threatened it could close the waterway, where 40 percent of the world’s  oil flows in tankers, if the United Nations or the United States by  itself carry out harsh energy sanctions against the Islamic Republic. An  Israeli ship has also reportedly joined the U.S. armada. Kuwait,  which is heavily armed by the U.S. and is home to American bases, is  located on the southwestern border of Iran. The country’s western  neighbors are Turkey and Iraq, also  home to American bases, and Turkmenistan, the Caspian  Sea and Azerbaijan are the Islamic Republic’s northern  neighbors. The U.S. Army last year advanced military cooperation with Turkmenistan.  An independent Caspian news agency has confirmed unusually heavy  activity of American troops along the border with Iran. The Iranian  Revolutionary Guards’ Brigadier General Mehdi Moini said last week that  his forces increased patrols, including tanks and anti-aircraft units,  along the border with Azerbaijan because they noticed  increased American activity. Iran charged that Israeli forces were also  present, sparking a virtual war alert among the Iranian Guards.’ 65   
US Nuclear Response To Envelopment In Iraq, Afghanistan
The US naturally intends these forces to be a factor of strength in  the coming conflict against Iran.  There is, however, another  possibility, which is that US units in Iraq, Afghanistan and elsewhere  near Iran, which are widely scattered or which are operating in  inaccessible areas, could be surrounded by Iranian or pro-Iranian  forces, or else could have their supply lines cut by the Iranian side.66    A retired U.S. Navy captain who had served in the nuclear submarine  fleet under Admiral Hyman Rickover described in a conversation with this  writer on July 18 how he had at one time in his career participated in  an exercise which assumed that 35,000 US troops had been cut off in or  near Iran.  The immediate response was the use of nuclear weapons, he  recalled.
Israeli Retaliation Against Syria For Hezbollah Actions
This is not the appropriate place to offer a detailed hypothetical  scenario of what the consequences of an Israeli or US attack on Iran  might be, but it is already clear that they would be catastrophic.  We  should bear in mind once again the Brzezinski testimony of February  2007.  One factor which has changed is unquestionably the growing  strength of Hezbollah in Lebanon, which would almost certainly be  brought to bear on Israel if Iran is bombed.  To this must be added in  the now-declared Israeli policy of carrying out retaliatory strikes  against Syria in response to whatever Hezbollah might do to the  Israelis.  In the London Times of April 18, 2010 we read:  ‘Israel has delivered a secret warning to Syrian President Bashar Assad  that it will respond to missile attacks from Hezbollah, the militant  Lebanese-based Islamist group, by launching immediate retaliation  against Syria itself. In a message, sent earlier this month, Israel made  it clear that it now regards Hezbollah as a division of the Syrian army  and that reprisals against Syria will be fast and devastating. It  follows the discovery by Israeli intelligence that Syria has recently  supplied long-range ballistic missiles and advanced anti-aircraft  systems to Hezbollah.  “We’ll return Syria to the Stone Age by crippling  its power stations, ports, fuel storage and every bit of strategic  infrastructure if Hezbollah dare to launch ballistic missiles against  us,” said an Israeli minister, who was speaking off-the-record, last  week. The warning, which was conveyed to Damascus by a third party, was  sent to reinforce an earlier signal by Avigdor Lieberman, the Israeli  foreign minister. “If a war breaks out the Assad dynasty will lose its  power and will cease to reign in Syria,” he said earlier this year.’  67 
Based on this report, we must assume that a conflict with Iran would  impose the necessity of US combat operations in Lebanon, Syria, Iraq,  Iran, and Afghanistan, with the status of Pakistan being anybody’s  guess.  Hostilities would probably involve Yemen, where a pro-Iranian  insurrection confronts the Saudi-backed regime, and might also implicate  Somalia, and even Sudan.  For a bankrupt power with an overstretched  and exhausted army like the US today, this means biting off a very large  chunk of the globe as a theater of war.  Bombing Iran means killing  Russian technicians at the Bushehr nuclear reactor and other sites.  It  may mean killing Chinese present in the oil fields were supervising  Chinese oil imports from Iran.  Bombing Syria may involve the Tartus  naval base of the Russian navy, which is being expanded.  From here, the  possibilities of grave danger go on and on.
Israel In The Crossfire Of Missiles From Hezbollah And Iran?
Another way in which the planned attack on Iran could go out of  control and lead to a more general war, including a nuclear war by  miscalculation, has to do with the erosion of the conventional  superiority traditionally enjoyed by Israel in the Middle East..  As  long as the Israelis can win on the conventional plane against their  Arab neighbors, they may not be tempted to escalate to nuclear weapons  of mass destruction.  But, if Israel is facing conventional defeat, then  the impulse towards nuclear escalation may become irresistible.  The  failure of the Israeli efforts against Hezbollah in the August 2006 war  already suggested that Israel’s conventional edge was no longer what it  had been in the past.  Now, there are press reports of large transfers  of solid-fuel ballistic missiles with reasonably accurate guidance  systems into the hands of Hezbollah. If the reports are true, these  missiles might represent a lethal threat to the Israeli Air Force, which  has always been a cornerstone of that country’s conventional strength.   This is the background for the Israeli ultimatum to Syria reported  above.
David Moon of the Asia Times has recently called attention  to the upgrades in the Hezbollah missile arsenal, and to their  far-reaching strategic implications.  Moon writes: ‘The recent alleged  transfer of a small number of Scud missiles to Hezbollah from Syria only  serves to highlight the capabilities of Hezbollah-operated M600  missiles manufactured and supplied by Syria.  The M600 is a  truck-mounted solid fuel booster pushing a 500 kilogram (1,100 pound)  warhead nearly 300 kilometers….  The unanswered question – and the one  of most concern – is the number of game-changing launchers Hezbollah has  already got hidden away or that it will acquire from Syria.’ 68
Hezbollah: From Counter-Value To Counterforce
In August 2006, Hezbollah launched some 4,000 short range missiles  against northern Israel, most of which were Russian-made Katyushas of  World War II vintage.  These missiles had limited range and were  impossible to aim accurately.  Accordingly, Hezbollah could only point  them in the general direction of Israeli cities.  But the new missiles  may be much more accurate, and might allow Hezbollah to engage in a  counterforce rather than counter-value strategy.  Instead of terrorizing  Israeli civilians, Hezbollah might be able to target the air fields  used by the Israeli Air Force.  At the same time, Israel has been  developing a layered missile defense in the form of the Iron Dome,  David’s Sting, Arrow, and Patriot systems.  There are reports that the  Israeli air force is ready to flee northern Israel at a moment’s notice  and take refuge in bases in the south of their country, where the  Hezbollah missile threat is less.  But what if Hezbollah acquires  accurate missiles which can reach all that Israeli territory?  And what  happens if Hamas can get a few more effective missiles into the Gaza  Strip?  
As Moon writes, ‘Israelis express concern that this missile [the  M600, also known as the Fatah 110] will be directed at population  centers. A more accurate and more dangerous threat to Israel militarily  is for Hezbollah to rain down rockets on its most dangerous enemy – the  Israeli Air Force – principally on airfields in northern Israel.  However, with upwards of 40,000 Katyusha rockets stockpiled, Hezbollah  still retains the terror option. If Hezbollah’s plentiful M600s were  fired in high-volume volleys, the Arrow system could be overwhelmed. If  the IRGC [Iranian Revolutionary Guards Corps] launched Iranian  high-value Shahab-3Bs and variants timed with Hezbollah’s M600s, the  Islamic republic could deal telling blows to strategic targets….  Hezbollah is said to be flush with the Russian-made SA-7 “Grail”, the  SA-14 “Gremlin” and the SA-18 “Grouse”. These shoulder-fired SAMs are a  point defense for covering mobile missile launchers like the M600 when  exposed during the firing and retirement cycle. Also in the bargain came  the SA-8 “Gecko”, a mobile launcher with a range of about 16 kilometers  and a height of 12,000 meters. Mix these new capabilities with Syria’s  new radar system supplied by Tehran…  For Israel, the cost of setting  back Iran’s nuclear program a few years before dealing decisively with  Hezbollah and Syria is now at an all-time high.’ 69 
If Iran and Hezbollah can coordinate their missile salvos, Moon thus  suggests, it might be possible for them to overwhelm the Israeli  antimissile defenses, and to inflict grave damage on the airfields where  the Israeli air force is based.  This potential for conventional defeat  or simply for grave losses conjures up another prospect of an  escalation into the nuclear realm by the Israelis as the sole remaining  means of saving the day.  On the surface, it would seem that the atomic  bombing of southern Lebanon and even more so of Gaza would make no sense  for the Israelis, since the radioactive debris and fallout would  descend in large measure on Israeli territory and Israeli population  centers.  But there are also unconfirmed reports that the Israelis may  have developed their own version of the neutron bomb, something last  discussed widely in the United States during the Jimmy Carter  administration.  This might avoid most of the radioactive fallout  problem. In any case, using the neutron bomb against Hezbollah would  unquestionably represent the first use of atomic weapons, and would  clearly cross the nuclear threshold.  At that point, the Middle East and  the world would have entered a new and uncharted terrain, replete with  incalculable risks of general war and nuclear war.
In the meantime, we would like to interrogate the proverbial fly on  the wall during this week’s meeting of Obama with British Prime Minister  Cameron at the White House.  Was their discussion really consumed by  the vicissitudes of BP and the Lockerbie incident, or was there also  some discussion of cooperation in military aggression against Iran?   Given the way the wind is blowing, the latter hypothesis appears  persuasive.  Someday we may find new and more scandalous Downing Street  memoranda devoted to this meeting. But let’s not wait around.
Political mobilization against this new war danger is imperative.   There is a conference in Albany, New York within a few days which bills  itself as a national gathering of the United States peace movement.  If  this movement still exists in reality, it will respond to the situation  around Iran with a call for mass mobilization against the new  warmonger-in-chief Obama and his new and wider war, before the end of  the summer.  It is important to promote primary election or third-party  challenges, especially against Democratic members of Congress who have  voted for or otherwise supported war appropriations over the past two  years.  Most important would be the presence of a qualified, serious,  antiwar challenger against Obama in the Democratic primary election  process, starting in Iowa and New Hampshire in January 2011, which is  just six short months away.  A third-party peace candidate of real  presidential caliber would also be a godsend.  Those who are intelligent  enough to understand these necessities had better get busy right now.   One thing is certain: Noam Chomsky and the various left-liberal paladins  of impotence are not going to take the lead on this one. 
Even though the forces that may initially respond to such calls for  mobilization may be relatively limited, they can perform the  indispensable function of alerting larger parts of public opinion at  home and abroad that a tragic and genocidal crime is being prepared  behind the scenes.  If we recall the fateful summer of 2002, when the  Iraq war was being cooked up, the warlike intent of the US  administration was signaled through a bellicose speech by Cheney at the  Veterans of Foreign Wars in August, followed by a coordinated media  campaign of war psychosis starting in September.70   So far,  Obama and Biden have not started a campaign of open war propaganda  concerning Iran.  This time around, it may be possible for those of us  still in the reality-based community to get out in front of the war  party rather than having to run to catch up with them.71 
It is genuinely appalling to realize that we are now back to  something resembling the desperate situation of 2002, with Iran as the  target this time around.  One rule of thumb which many learned during  the Bush-Cheney years is that the attack is likely to start during the  dark of the moon.  This suggests a possible timetable built around  August 10, September 8, or October 7 of this year, or perhaps some time  later. It may come as an October surprise, as de Borchgrave seems to  suggest.  We are back once again to the classic predicament of persons  of good will in recent decades: get active or get radioactive.  So it’s  time to get active.
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1 Webster G. Tarpley, “Cheney Determined To Strike In US With WMD This Summer,” July 21, 2007, at http://tarpley.net/2007/07/21/cheney-determined-to-strike-in-us-with-wmd-this-summer/
1 Webster G. Tarpley, “Cheney Determined To Strike In US With WMD This Summer,” July 21, 2007, at http://tarpley.net/2007/07/21/cheney-determined-to-strike-in-us-with-wmd-this-summer/
2   “THE KENNEBUNKPORT WARNING/ To the American people,  and to peace loving individuals everywhere: Massive evidence has come to  our attention which shows that the backers, controllers, and allies of  Vice President Dick Cheney are determined to orchestrate and manufacture  a new 9/11 terror incident, and/or a new Gulf of Tonkin war provocation  over the coming weeks and months. Such events would be used by the Bush  administration as a pretext for launching an aggressive war against  Iran, quite possibly with nuclear weapons, and for imposing a regime of  martial law here in the United States. We call on the House of  Representatives to proceed immediately to the impeachment of Cheney, as  an urgent measure for avoiding a wider and more catastrophic war. Once  impeachment has begun, it will be easier for loyal and patriotic  military officers to refuse illegal orders coming from the Cheney  faction. We solemnly warn the people of the world that any terrorist  attack with weapons of mass destruction taking place inside the United  States or elsewhere in the immediate future must be considered the prima  facie responsibility of the Cheney faction. We urge responsible  political leaders everywhere to begin at once to inoculate the public  opinion of their countries against such a threatened false flag terror  operation. (Signed) A Group of US Opposition Political Leaders Gathered  in Protest at the Bush Compound in Kennebunkport, Maine, August 24-25,  2007” at http://actindependent.org/
3 SENATE FOREIGN RELATIONS COMMITTEE TESTIMONY — ZBIGNIEW  BRZEZINSKI, February 1, 2007, at http://www.thewashingtonnote.com/archives/001916.php
4  Webster G. Tarpley, “Operation Bite – April 6 Sneak  Attack By US Forces On Iran Planned, Russian Military Sources Warn,”  March 25, 2007, http://www.rense.com/general75/bite.htm
5  Roger McDermott, “Kremlin Contemplates a Seismic Shift  in Russian Foreign Policy,” May 31, 2010, http://www.jamestown.org/programs/edm/single/?tx_ttnews%5Btt_news%5D=36393&cHash=f2c72323eb
6   ‘Sans oublier le scénario de basse intensité  comportant la fermeture du détroit d’Ormuz… mais à y regarder de plus  près, celle-ci ne ferait que retarder l’échéance d’une campagne (déjà  planifiée) de frappes massives destinées à donner toutes ses chances aux  forces intérieures œuvrant au renversement du régime. Le scénario «  Ormuz » devant se révéler tout aussi impuissant à dissuader les  attaquants potentiels… L’artère jugulaire d’Ormuz par laquelle  transitent près de 30 % de la production mondiale des hydrocarbures  nécessaires à faire tourner le moteur planétaire, fermée, un baril qui  bondirait à 300 $ serait d’ailleurs une aubaine inespérée pour les Majors,  le cartel des grandes Compagnies pétrolières, qui pourraient dès lors  se lancer dans l’exploitation à haut coût des schistes et des sables  bitumineux du Groenland et d’ailleurs ou se lancer dans d’aventureuses  campagnes de forages en eaux profondes comme dans le golfe du Mexique et  avec le « succès » que l’on sait.’ Jean-Michel Vernochet, “La guerre  d’Iran aura-t-elle lieu?” Réseau Voltaire, http://www.voltairenet.org/article166329.html
7 Tzvi Ben Gedalyahu, ‘Iran is Surrounded by US Troops in  10 Countries,’ June 27, 2010. http://www.israelnationalnews.com/News/News.aspx/138284
11 ‘Sanctions alone won’t work on Iran,’ Washington Post,  July 9, 2010, http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2010/07/08/AR2010070805070.html
12 Reuel Marc Gerecht, ‘Should Israel Bomb Iran?’, Weekly  Standard, July 26, 2010
18 Michael Barone, ‘Rising speculation about bombing  Iran’s nukes,’ San Francisco Examiner, July 21, 2010 at http://www.sfexaminer.com/politics/Rising-speculation-about-bombing-Iran_s-nukes-1002107-98879894.html.  See also Jim Lobe, ‘Stirrings of a New Push for Military Option on  Iran’, Inter Press Service, July 9, 2010, at http://www.globalresearch.ca/index.php?context=va&aid=20104
19 ‘ABC News Exclusive; The Secret War Against  Afghanistan,” April 3, 2007, at http://blogs.abcnews.com/theblotter/2007/04/abc_news_exclus.html
21 Tehran Times, July 18, 2010, http://www.tehrantimes.com/index_View.asp?code=22314
22 Iran could acquire nuke weapons capability – Medvedev, http://en.rian.ru/russia/20100712/159769777.html
23 Russia’s Medvedev says worried with U.S. intelligence  data on Iran (Update-1), http://en.rian.ru/world/20100628/159599504.html
24 Iran says Medvedev’s nuke remarks ‘divorced from  reality’, http://en.rian.ru/russia/20100713/159801504.html
25 Russia up to date on Iranian nuclear developments –  Medvedev, http://en.rian.ru/world/20100715/159823618.html
26 S-300 missiles come under new UN sanctions on Iran –  Kremlin source, http://en.rian.ru/russia/20100611/159387435.html
27 Russian-Iranian S-300 missile deal not against UN  resolution — U.S., http://en.rian.ru/world/20100611/159382525.html
28 Russia rejects Iran’s claims it favors U.S. on nuclear  issue , http://en.rian.ru/world/20100526/159167373.html
29 Turkey, Brazil not included in Iran Six talks – Lavrov,  http://en.rian.ru/world/20100714/159811258.html
30 Iran’s nuclear program still cause for concern –  Russian envoy , http://en.rian.ru/world/20100714/159809491.html
31 Iran to load reactor in Sept. 2011 – nuclear chief, http://en.rian.ru/science/20100712/159773330.html
32 ‘En ce qui concerne Moscou, cette décision semble bien  refléter une certaine «schizophrénie» au sommet de l’État ou un  bicéphalisme ouvertement divergent entre une Présidence a priori plus  «occidentaliste» que ne le serait le Premier ministre Vladimir Poutine.’  Jean-Michel Vernochet, “La guerre d’Iran aura-t-elle lieu?” Réseau  Voltaire, http://www.voltairenet.org/article166329.html 
33 See Webster G. Tarpley, “Towards the Eighteenth  Brumaire of General David Petraeus?”, June 23, 2010, at http://tarpley.net/2010/06/23/towards-the-eighteenth-brumaire-of-general-david-petraeus/
34 “New Iran Nuke NIE Still Not Ready,” Newsweek,  June 28, 2010, http://www.newsweek.com/blogs/declassified/2010/06/28/new-iran-nuke-nie-still-not-ready.html
35 David E. Sanger, ‘U.S. Presses Its Case Against Iran  Ahead of Sanctions Vote,’ New York Times, June 7, 2010 at http://www.nytimes.com/2010/06/08/world/middleeast/08nuke.html
37 See Webster G. Tarpley and Anton Chaitkin, George  Bush: The Unauthorized Biography (Washington DC: EIR, 1992), pp.  320-325.
38 Michael Smith, “Blair planned Iraq war from start,” London  Times, May 1, 2005.
39 See http://www.raceforiran.com/
40 http://abcnews.go.com/print?id=11025299; see also http://www.newsweek.com/blogs/declassified/2010/06/28/new-iran-nuke-nie-still-not-ready.html
41 Gareth Porter, ‘Amiri Told CIA Iran Has No Nuclear Bomb  Programme,’ IPS, July 19, 2010, at http://ipsnorthamerica.net/news.php?idnews=3201
42 This Week, June 27, http://abcnews.go.com/print?id=11025299
43 http://www.foxnews.com/on-air/fox-news-sunday/transcript/transcript-secretary-robert-gates/?page=2
45 “WHO WILL BE BLAMED FOR A U.S. ATTACK ON IRAN?”, July  11, 2010, http://www.raceforiran.com/
46 ‘U.A.E. diplomat mulls hit on Iran’s nukes,’ Washington  Times, July 6, 2010, http://www.washingtontimes.com/news/2010/jul/6/uae-ambassador-endorses-bombing-irans-nuclear-prog/
47 Joe Kein, “An Attack on Iran: Back on the Table,”  Time.com, July 15, 2010, at http://www.time.com/time/nation/article/0,8599,2003921,00.html;  Time, July 26, 2010, p. 22.
48 Alexander Smoltczyk and Bernhard Zand, ‘Persian  Isolation: A Quiet Axis Forms Against Iran in the Middle East,’ Spiegel  Online, July 15, 2010, at http://www.spiegel.de/international/world/0,1518,706445,00.html
49 ‘The Arab World Against Ahmadinejad?,’ Huffington Post,  July 6, 2010, http://www.huffingtonpost.com/bernardhenri-levy/the-arab-world-against-ah_b_636952.html
50 Hugh Tomlinson, ‘Saudi Arabia gives Israel clear skies  to attack Iranian nuclear sites,’ London Times, June 12, 2010,  at http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/news/world/middle_east/article7148555.ece
51 Saudis give nod to Israeli raid on Iran, London  Times, July 5, 2010, http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/news/world/middle_east/article6638568.ece
52 ‘Verdict qui tombe après que l’Agence Guysen  International News eut diffusé le 24 juin une information donnée pour  être d’origine iranienne (!) suivant laquelle « … des avions israéliens  auraient atterris sur l’aéroport saoudien de Tabouk les 18 et 19 juin  dernier…C’est ce qu’a rapporté l’agence iranienne FARS dans un article  intitulé “Activité militaire douteuse du régime sioniste en Arabie  Saoudite.”’
53 France’s Sarkozy welcomes Russia’s support of new Iran  sanctions, http://en.rian.ru/world/20100619/159490333.html
54 China ready to strengthen diplomatic ties with Iran  (Update), .http://en.rian.ru/news/20100610/159374152.html
55 Joe Kein, “An Attack on Iran: Back on the Table,”  Time.com, July 15, 2010, at http://www.time.com/time/nation/article/0,8599,2003921,00.html;  Time, July 26, 2010, p. 22.
57 Arnaud de Borchegrave, ‘Global Sentiment Builds to  Attack Iran,’ Newsmax, July 13, 2010, http://www.newsmax.com/deBorchgrave/Iran-Iraq-airstrikes-US/2010/07/13/id/364492
58 ‘Il ne manque plus au tableau qu’un prétexte plausible,  une provocation intervenant n’importe où dans le monde mais  suffisamment spectacularisable pour frapper les opinions de sidération,  cela, le temps nécessaire à lancer les premières frappes qui  tétaniseront les oppositions en les prenant de court et enclencheront  automatiquement l’escalade militaire.’
59 ‘Sauf par conséquent à ce que l’initiative tripartite  ne soit reprise par une large coalition conduite par la Russie et la  Chine, ce qui semble peu probable dans la conjoncture présente, le  scénario du pire, sous les deux versions qui viennent d’être évoqués –  frappes préventives, représailles, fermeture d’Ormuz – est en fait de  plus en plus plausible. Et sauf une levée de bouclier internationale  particulièrement nette et ferme, La guerre de Troie aura bien lieu si  les dieux assoiffés de puissance qui siègent dans l’île de Manhattan et  règnent sur la Cité de Londres s’accordent entre eux et en décident  ainsi. Il restera aux stratèges de décider s’ils frappent directement la  Perse, ou s’ils font éclater un conflit à sa marge, pour l’y précipiter  et l’y détruire.’ Jean-Michel Vernochet, “La guerre d’Iran aura-t-elle  lieu?” Réseau Voltaire, http://www.voltairenet.org/article166329.html
60 ‘US, Israel Warships in Suez May Be Prelude to Faceoff  with Iran,’ June 20, 2010,  http://www.israelnationalnews.com/News/news.aspx/138164
61 Tzvi Ben Gedalyahu, Iran is Surrounded by US Troops in  10 Countries, June 27, 2010.http://www.israelnationalnews.com/News/News.aspx/138284
62 Ann Gearan and Robert Burns, ‘Uzbekistan Being  Considered By US As Backup Air Base,’ Huffington Post, February 5, 2009,  at http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2009/02/05/uzbekistan-being-consider_n_164469.html
63 Tzvi Ben Gedalyahu, ‘Reports: IAF Landed at Saudi Base,  US Troops near Iran Border,’ June 23, 2010, http://www.israelnationalnews.com/News/news.aspx/1382
64 ‘Militarization of the Caucasus: Tehran Says it will  Oppose Deployment of American Forces in Karabakh close to Iran Border,’ http://www.globalresearch.ca/index.php?context=va&aid=19879
65 Tzvi Ben Gedalyahu, ‘Iran is Surrounded by US Troops in  10 Countries,’ June 27, 2010.http://www.israelnationalnews.com/News/News.aspx/138284
66 This danger is not new; see Webster G. Tarpley, ‘US  Could Face Catastrophic Military Defeat In Iraq – What Baker And  Hamilton Forgot,’ December 17, 2006, at http://tarpley.net/2006/12/17/us-could-face-catastrophic-defeat-in-iraq/
67 Uzi Mahnaimi, ‘Israel warns Syria over Hezbollah  attacks,’ London Times, April 18, 2010, at http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/news/world/middle_east/article7101106.ece
68 David Moon, ‘Amid war talk, arms buildup continues,’ Asia  Times, July 20, 2010, at http://www.atimes.com/atimes/Middle_East/LG20Ak03.html
69 David Moon, ‘Amid war talk, arms buildup continues,’ Asia  Times, July 20, 2010, at http://www.atimes.com/atimes/Middle_East/LG20Ak03.html
70 For Cheney’s Iraq war campaign kickoff speech of August  27, 2002, see http://www.nytimes.com/2002/08/27/world/eyes-iraq-cheney-s-words-administration-case-for-removing-saddam-hussein.html
71 For the reality-based community, see Ron Suskind,  ‘Faith, Certainty, and the Presidency of George W. Bush,’ New York  Times, October 17, 2004, http://www.nytimes.com/2004/10/17/magazine/17BUSH.html
						
With another nuclear power in the Middle East Israel would not be able to act as ruthlessly as it has in the last half century. How could it denigrate states backing the Palestinian people as unworthy of consideration when drawing up “peace accords” if one of them has a nuclear option? How could it casually let off missiles in Syria’s direction if its ally Iran had a nuclear bomb? To have such restraint foisted on Israel would shake the very foundations of its power. The real threat is not that Iran would use its nuclear weapons but that merely possessing them would lead to a levelling of the imbalance of terror in the Middle East. The way I see it the one thing worse than a balance of terror is an imbalance of terror.
Very interesting article. I remember that very strange case of the nuclear-armed B-52 that mysteriously “went astray”, but I never imagined at that time that someone was trying to use it for a likely attack! And then Hollywood makes movies about mad rogue Russian generals who plan to use nuclear weapons on their own, the media (still) tells about the danger of Russian weapons “going into wrong hands”, but it seems that Kubrick and his “Dr. Strangelove” were right, as the US almost did it.
Medvedev Policy Shift Increases Moscow-Tehran Friction
It looks like Putin has distanced himself from this issue. I don’t recall him giving any comments on the subject for quite a wile. Could it be that Putin is just using Medvedev to make the US to believe that Russia is giving a blind eye to a possible strike at Iran. Russia is probably the only country that will get huge benefits from a strike. And still Putin would want to save a decent relationship with Teheran afterwards. So why not get the benefits ant put the blame for a short-sighted leaning towards the US on liberal Medvedev. Predicting the reaction of the Russian people on such a strike it’s easy to guess that Medvedev will be politically dead for the 2012 elections. And at the end Putin will have presidency backed up by hi oil prices, the US getting down even faster, Iran losing it’s nuke capability and still staying away from the European gas market. China turning towards Russian oil securing it’s supply routs. And the Iranians most likely will start seriously hate the US though without much love towards Russia. But there was no love anyway. Russian – Persian relationships through history left no room for love or thrust. But Iran will still need Russia afterwards and that’s what counts. So by blaming Medvedev for all his liberal silliness Putin can get plenty of benefits for himself.
Alibi