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Several
Steps Closer to Armageddon
by
John Chuckman
October
18, 2003
The
United States apparently has fitted out the Harpoon missiles it previously
supplied Israel to accommodate nuclear warheads. These missiles are carried on
three German-built submarines, making a reality of Israel's grandiose plan for
a nuclear-triad force, a miniature replica of America's land-air-sea nuclear
force in a country with a total population smaller than greater Chicago.
Perhaps more pertinent, the missiles' nuclear capability extends a threat
towards Iran, bringing home to its leaders the possible consequences of
"going nuclear."
A
step like this, taken by either side during the Cold War, would have been
regarded as a serious escalation in arms, but now it causes barely a ripple in
the United States. There are, of course, signed obligations that
American-supplied weapons are to be used only for Israel's defense, yet these
have been violated many times, most notoriously during the invasion of Lebanon
- a bloody, aggressive war led by the very man who now leads Israel.
Iran
almost certainly wants to become a nuclear power, and it has nothing to do with
being "evil." It is for all the reasons that Israel secretly went
nuclear, for all the reasons that South Africa secretly went nuclear before the
end of apartheid, and for all the reasons that North Korea has gone nuclear.
When you have determined enemies, and especially when they include, as they do
in Iran's case, the world's great power, nuclear weapons must appear
reassuring.
This
is certainly the case for North Korea, another country branded as
"evil," and Bush is directly responsible for destroying a framework
of understanding and cooperation with that country established through years of
hard diplomacy, all in the interest of bluster and demonstrating how tough he
is. There have been many threatening words and activities aimed at North Korea
under the Bush version of foreign policy, as for example significant changes
being made to the deployment of American forces at North Korea's southern
border.
The
United States has invaded and occupied Iran's neighbor, Iraq, has pointedly
designated Iran as "evil," and during the long and vicious Iran-Iraq
war, it supported the aggressor, Iraq, even to the point of shooting down an
Iranian airliner in error without so much as a proper apology and disgracefully
tolerating Iraq's extensive use of chemical weapons. The older generation of
Iranians must remember, too, that the United States overthrew their
democratically-elected government and supported the Shah who for decades
terrorized all who opposed him. Much of the excess of the Iranian Revolution
sprang from grievances over that.
Of
course, we have to put in the balance the so-called Bush Doctrine, a rather
exalted-sounding expression for a crude threat against anyone suspected of
wrong-doing by America's narrow and paranoid reckoning, something that has sent
shivers through much of the world and will almost certainly drive still others
towards more sophisticated weaponry. My, what a contribution to peace and
stability.
Israel
launched an attack against Syria (again using those American weapons supposedly
restricted to defense), claiming it was against bases harboring terrorists. The
President of the United States almost welcomed this open act of war, whose
stated reason remains about as well demonstrated as Iraq's strategic weapons
stockpile, but then Bush had talked around invading Syria himself before coming
to understand into what a hornet's nest he had heedlessly thrust his fist in
Iraq.
Someone
in Gaza has killed Americans. It may well have been an accident because it
truly does not serve the interests of residents. One has to admire the
restraint shown by Palestinians all these years since America has hurt them
many times with unfulfilled promises and unbalanced policy, a situation now
grotesquely pushed to extremes by Bush. Almost any brutal thing Israel does is
an act for peace. The Palestinians are told even who their leader cannot be and
are treated like wayward children by a President himself never elected to
office.
Sharon's
concrete-monster wall, called a neighborly-sounding fence in the odd political
language of Israel, continues abuilding, taking additional Palestinian land
here and there as its millions of pounds of concrete are poured. The wall
effectively serves as a giant tourniquet applied to the arteries of any future
Palestinian state, but that almost certainly is the idea, a new and less
violent approach to ridding the area of undesirable residents. Greater Israel
remains a dream for many, but especially for the party in power and its key
allies.
I
just received an e-mail vividly reminding me of that. It was from an Israeli
still dreaming about Arab states taking the Palestinians, even naming the
places they might go, as though these economically-depressed places with some
of the world's highest birthrates could absorb about 3 1/2 million immigrants.
In his dreaming there was no awareness that he truly was describing a form of
ethnic-cleansing, no awareness that the hideous Nazis tried exactly same thing
during the 1930s. Their effort to export Germany's innocent Jews, to expel
those their blind ideology insisted were a problem, failed. This man's dream,
too, cannot but fail, and God knows where that will take us.
John Chuckman lives in Canada and is
former chief economist for a large Canadian oil company. He writes frequently
for Yellow Times.org and other publications.
* Hope Against
Hope: Supporting Wesley Clark is a Wasted Opportunity
* The
First Two Years of Insanity
* The
Perfumed Prince and Other Political Tales
* A
George Will Follies Review
* The
Painful Horrors of Political Autism
* Enron-Style
Management in a Dangerously Complex World
* The Real
Clash of Civilizations: Liberals Versus the Crypto-Nazis
* Banality,
Bombast, and Blood
* Through A Glass
Darkly: An Interpretation of Bush's Character
* Of
Blair, Hussein, and Genocide