Reuel Marc Gerecht’s screed justifying an Israeli  bombing attack on Iran coincides with the opening the new Israel lobby  campaign marked by the introduction of  House resolution 1553    expressing full support for such an Israeli attack.
What is important to understand about this campaign  is that the aim of Gerecht and of the right-wing government of Benjamin  Netanyahu is to support an attack by Israel so that the United States  can be drawn into direct, full-scale war with Iran.
That has long been the Israeli strategy for Iran,  because Israel cannot fight a war with Iran without full U.S.  involvement. Israel needs to know that the United States will finish the  war that Israel wants to start.
Gerecht openly expresses the hope that any Iranian  response to the Israeli attack would trigger full-scale U.S. war against  Iran. “If Khamenei has a death-wish, he’ll let the Revolutionary Guards  mine the strait, the entrance to the Persian Gulf,” writes Gerecht. “It  might be the only thing that would push President Obama to strike Iran  militarily….”
Gerecht suggest that the same logic would apply to  any Iranian “terrorism against the United States after an Israeli  strike,” by which we really means any attack on a U.S. target in the  Middle East.  Gerecht writes that Obama might be “obliged” to threaten  major retaliation “immediately after an Israeli surprise attack.”
That’s the key sentence in this very long Gerecht  argument. Obama is not going to be “obliged” to joint an Israeli  aggression against Iran unless he feels that domestic political  pressures to do so are too strong to resist. That’s why the Israelis are  determined to line up a strong majority in Congress and public opinion  for war to foreclose Obama’s options.
In the absence of confidence that Obama would be  ready to come into the war fully behind Israel, there cannot be an  Israeli strike.
Gerecht’s argument for war relies on a fanciful  nightmare scenario of Iran doling out nuclear weapons to Islamic  extremists all over the Middle East. But the real concern of the  Israelis and their lobbyists, as Gerecht’s past writing has explicitly  stated, is to destroy Iran’s Islamic regime in a paroxysm of U.S.  military violence.    
Gerecht first revealed this Israeli-neocon fantasy as early as 2000, before the Iranian nuclear program was even taken seriously, in an essay written for a book published by the Project for a New American Century. Gerecht argued that, if Iran could be caught in a “terrorist act,” the U.S. Navy should “retaliate with fury”. The purpose of such a military response, he wrote, should be to “strike with truly devastating effect against the ruling mullahs and the repressive institutions that maintain them.”
And lest anyone fail to understand what he meant by  that, Gerecht was more explicit: “That is, no cruise missiles at  midnight to minimize the body count. The clerics will almost certainly  strike back unless Washington uses overwhelming, paralyzing force.”
In 2006-07, the Israeli war party had reason to  believed that it could hijack U.S. policy long enough to get the war it  wanted, because it had placed one of its most militant agents, David  Wurmser, in a strategic position to influence that policy.
We now know that Wurmser, formerly a close adviser to Benjamin Netanyahu and during that period Vice President Dick Cheney’s main adviser on the Middle East, urged a policy of overwhelming U.S. military force against Iran. After leaving the administration in 2007, Wurmser revealed that he had advocated a U.S. war on Iran, not to set back the nuclear program but to achieve regime change.
“Only if what we do is placed in the framework of a  fundamental assault on the survival of the regime will it have a pick-up  among ordinary Iranians,” Wurmser told The Telegraph.  The U.S. attack  was not to be limited to nuclear targets but was to be quite thorough  and massively destructive. “If we start shooting, we must be prepared to  fire the last shot. Don’t shoot a bear if you’re not going to kill it.”
Of course, that kind of war could not be launched out  of the blue.  It would have required a casus belli to justify a limited  initial attack that would then allow a rapid escalation of U.S.  military force.  In 2007, Cheney acted on Wurmser’s advice and tried to  get Bush to provoke a war with Iran over Iraq, but it was foiled by the  Pentagon.
As Wurmser was beginning to whisper that advice in  Cheney’s ear in 2006, Gerecht was making the same argument in The Weekly  Standard:
Bombing the nuclear facilities once would mean we were declaring war on the clerical regime. We shouldn’t have any illusions about that. We could not stand idly by and watch the mullahs build other sites. If the ruling mullahs were to go forward with rebuilding what they’d lost–and it would be surprising to discover the clerical regime knuckling after an initial bombing run–we’d have to strike until they stopped. And if we had any doubt about where their new facilities were (and it’s a good bet the clerical regime would try to bury new sites deep under heavily populated areas), and we were reasonably suspicious they were building again, we’d have to consider, at a minimum, using special-operations forces to penetrate suspected sites.
The idea of waging a U.S. war of destruction against  Iran is obvious lunacy, which is why U.S. military leaders have strongly  resisted it both during the Bush and Obama administrations.  But   Gerecht makes it clear that Israel believes it can use its control of  Congress to pound Obama into submission. Democrats in Congress, he  boasts, “are mentally in a different galaxy than they were under  President Bush.” Even though Israel has increasingly been regarded  around the world as a rogue state after its Gaza atrocities and the  commando killings of unarmed civilians on board the Mavi Marmara, its  grip on the U.S. Congress appears as strong as ever.
Moreover, polling data for 2010 show that a majority  of Americans have already been manipulated into supporting war against  Iran – in large part because more than two-thirds of those polled have  gotten the impression that Iran already has nuclear weapons.  The  Israelis are apparently hoping to exploit that advantage. “If the  Israelis bomb now, American public opinion will probably be with them,”  writes Gerecht. “Perhaps decisively so.”
Netanyahu must be feeling good about the prospects  for pressuring Barack Obama to join an Israeli war of aggression against  Iran.  It was Netanyahu, after all, who declared in 2001, “I know what  America is. America is a thing you can move very easily, move it in the  right direction. They won’t get in the way.” 
Gareth Porter  is an investigative historian and journalist specialising in US  national security policy. The paperback edition of his latest book,  “Perils of Dominance: Imbalance of Power and the Road to War in  Vietnam”, was published in 2006. 
						
an interesting development here: http://rt.com/Top_News/2010-07-29/south-korea-exonerates-north.html
sorry it’s off the topic
alibi
@alibi: not only is this not off topic, but its worth a full repost on the front page which I will do ASAP. Thanks!!!
The Saker