Will
the United States attack Iran?
That was the question on everyone’s mind
at a recent political talk I gave in a small college town in Texas. I
ran through some of the many reasons such an attack would be
ill-advised, bordering on insane:
* U.S. forces are bogged down in a failed war in Iraq and have limited
capacity to fight anywhere;
* Iran is militarily a much more
formidable opponent than Iraq, and its people are even less likely than
Iraqis to welcome the U.S. military;
* Iranian nuclear sites are dispersed
around the country, making it difficult for U.S. (or U.S.-backed
Israeli) air strikes to achieve the stated goal; and
* Any aggression in a region already
enraged about U.S. bullying, prison torture, and war crimes would risk
setting off an uncontrollable conflict that would be potentially
catastrophic, leaving U.S. troops in Iraq and American citizens
everywhere exposed to heightened dangers.
“Given all that,” I asked the audience, “can you imagine any sane
politician or policymaker deciding to invade or bomb Iran?”
“No, of course not,” they responded.
“Even though all this is obvious,” I asked, “are you still worried that
the Bush administration is going to bomb Iran?”
“YES!” they shouted back.
The Bush administration’s ongoing propaganda campaign to paint Iran as a
grave threat to U.S. security -- which just happens to look a lot like
the propaganda campaign that targeted Iraq -- suggests that whether or
not policymakers have definitive plans to invade and/or bomb, they are
creating the context for attack if they deem it necessary to their
project of total domination of the Middle East and Central Asia.
So, many in the United States -- and even more people around the world
-- are scared that among top U.S. policymakers, rational arguments can
easily be trumped by ideology, willed ignorance, and self-delusion.
While U.S. military commanders likely view an attack on Iran as
dangerous folly -- and are the likely source of leaks to journalists
about the planning process, perhaps in an attempt to derail such plans
-- civilian leaders seem to be insulated from reality and
responsibility.
Indeed, the fanatics in the Bush administration pose a serious threat to
peace and are an impediment to the pursuit of justice in the world. But
that should not obscure the other lesson of the current “crisis” around
Iran’s nuclear program: We are dealing with the consequences of 60 years
of dangerous U.S. policies around the world.
Let’s remember the basics of post-World War II U.S. policy in Iran: A
CIA-supported coup in 1953 overthrew Prime Minister Mohammad Mosaddeq’s
government after his nationalization of the oil industry, leading to
more than two decades of harsh rule by Shah Mohammad Reza Pahlavi
enforced by a brutal secret police, SAVAK. Support for the shah, who
played a key role as a mostly obedient U.S. surrogate in the region,
continued through Republican and Democratic administrations alike --
including that of Jimmy Carter, the so-called “human-rights president.”
All that is well documented, but the public memory of U.S.-Iranian
relations and the 1979 Islamic revolution typically is reduced to the
“hostage crisis,” in which the United States casts itself as a victim of
crazed Muslims gripped by irrational hatreds.
But we forget history at our own peril. Today many of our problems
around the world are a result of what has been called “blowback” --
support of reactionary forces for short-term advantage has often created
unforeseen problems. A bit more attention to those decades of immoral
and shortsighted U.S. policy around the world would suggest a new
course, one that requires the U.S. public to do what doesn’t come
naturally in this ahistorical, propaganda-driven society: Study honest
accounts of our history, evaluate the facts, and apply basic legal and
moral principles. That’s not only the right thing, it’s the sensible
thing to do out of self-interest.
We can start with a simple question: If Iranian leaders do indeed want
to acquire nuclear weapons, why might that be? Other major players in
that part of the world (Pakistan, India, China) have nukes, as does
Iran’s primary regional enemy (Israel). And let’s not forget that the
occupying army in Iran’s next-door neighbor belongs to the United
States, whose president has designated Iran as a member of the “axis of
evil.” Iranians no doubt have observed that of the two other original
members of that exclusive club, one is thought to have nuclear weapons
(North Korea) and one quite clearly didn’t (Iraq). Which one got
invaded?
What does Iran want? As would any nation in its position, Iran seeks
security guarantees -- exactly what the United States refuses to give.
As U.S. ambassador to the United Nations John Bolton put it this spring,
the Iranians “must know everything is on the table and they must
understand what that means.”
Got it, Mr. Ambassador, we understand: The United States, once again, is
ignoring a fundamental principle of international law. The U.N. charter
states that nations “shall refrain in their international relations from
the threat or use of force against the territorial integrity or
political independence of any state.”
So, everything is on the table, including bombing, which has many people
nervous. But we should remember this is not a new U.S. policy. Go back
to President Carter’s 1980 State of the Union address, in which he
outlined the “Carter Doctrine”: “An attempt by any outside force to gain
control of the Persian Gulf region will be regarded as an assault on the
vital interests of the United States of America, and such an assault
will be repelled by any means necessary, including military force.”
Throughout the post-WWII period, U.S. policymakers have interpreted
“outside force” to include inside forces -- that is, any force that
doesn’t bow to U.S. demands, no matter where it lives. The Bush
administration, while more brazen in its threats and use of force than
some past administrations, is not straying too far from a time-honored
U.S. principle, articulated most clearly by his father, the first
President Bush, in 1991: “What we say goes.”
Two simple, but haunting, questions were on the minds of the folks at my
talk in Denton, Texas, that night: What if “what we say” is crazy? And,
do those in power actually have the power to make sure a crazy idea
“goes” forward?
With the attack on Iraq, the Bush administration -- along with
fellow-travelers in both the Republican and Democratic parties --
ignored international law, a global mass movement against the war, and
the opinions of the vast majority of the world’s governments in pursuit
of a policy of domination-through-violence.
The same forces are lined up for and against an attack on Iran. The
difference may be that this time even the most fanatical in the
administration will have a hard time convincing themselves such an
attack can succeed.
We hope.
Robert Jensen is a journalism
professor at the University of Texas at Austin and board member of the
Third Coast
Activist Resource Center. He is the author of The Heart of
Whiteness: Race, Racism, and White Privilege and Citizens of the
Empire: The Struggle to Claim Our Humanity (both from City Lights
Books). He can be reached at:
rjensen@uts.cc.utexas.edu.