It's Isolation Stupid! Why Pre-Election Plans to Attack Iran Will Only Backfire

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Posted June 23, 2008 | 04:48 AM (EST)



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This week, Bill Kristol of the Weekly Standard insinuated that President Bush might launch an attack against Iran should Barack Obama be poised to win the presidency. Said Kristol: "I mean, what is, what signal goes to Ahmadinejad if Obama wins on a platform of unconditional negotiations and with an obvious reluctance to even talk about using military force?"

What neoconservatives fail to understand is this: The problem with the Islamic Republic of Iran is not its nuclear potential; or its already vast missile arsenal, or its support for anti-Israeli terrorist groups. Those are all symptoms of a greater ill. The real problem with the Islamic Republic is its isolation. And that is something that we, as Americans, have the power to change virtually overnight.

Sure, Iran's current isolation is of its own making. With the Iranian Revolution that ended in 1979, Iran declared itself to be "neither East nor West," a testament to the non-aligned status the people of Iran had fought for during popular movements a century and a half in the making. The Iranian Revolution was a disappointment to most, with its non-democratic outcome, the suppression of women's and minority rights, and the rampant mismanagement of the economy and the country's defenses. But one thing came from the Iranian Revolution that mattered a lot to a 2,500-year-old country: its complete and unconditional political independence.

Iran, a country that hasn't answered to a super power since 1979, achieved the kind of non-alignment that most citizens of the Middle East can only dream about. When there were sanctions, Iran found a way around them; or better still, it pushed the envelope of its domestic industrial base when no alternative was available. When visiting Iran, a man surprised me by saying, "Thank you for the sanctions." He meant it. Iran's independence was often its biggest strength.

But non-alignment came at a price. When Saddam Hussein invaded his neighbor to the East in 1980, most Arab countries joined forces with the United States and the Soviet Union to support Iraq. Casualty counts for the eight-year Iran-Iraq War vary, but some estimates put fatalities at one million on both sides.

Whenever neoconservatives talk of bombing Iran, they are not only legitimizing the idea of Iranian weapons proliferation as a defensive measure, but they are making it virtually impossible for the non-aligned Iran to sit down with America to begin with. Conditions that Iran cease its uranium enrichment, as well as America's overt talk of bombing, only paint the Islamic Republic into a corner from which it can hardly get out, given its political structure. Iran may not be a democracy, but it is no dictatorship either. No political faction has a mandate to sell out the country's independence by overtly bowing to U.S. military and economic pressures. Iranian political leaders can afford to negotiate, but they cannot afford to appease.

Just as importantly, Iran knows that in the event of war, America cannot invade; it can only bomb. This means the regime's consolidation of power as the country rallies around the flag. Worse still, Iran would have the capability of obliterating the Green Zone and several American bases, should it choose to do so, all while making life hell for our troops throughout Iraq and Afghanistan --- two countries where Iran owns much of the ground and the governments. To make matters worse, Iran knows it has profound economic leverage with its oil reserves (arguably the second largest in the world), something that drilling in pristine American areas will never be able to offset.

The real problem with Iran is not that it doesn't share any U.S. interests. It does. The problem is that Iran has created an image of itself as an anti-American, "anti-imperialist" actor that is non-aligned. Iran has isolated itself through its badly managed foreign policy, and its accelerated nuclear program is only the latest proof of the insecurity that can set in when isolation backfires.

But that was also the story of the People's Republic of China during the l960s and early 1970s. Presidents Kennedy and Johnson wisely chose not to attack China's nascent nuclear program, and this paved the way for President Nixon, who, despite neoconservative attacks, chose to engage the "communist" country in diplomacy. Our cooperation with China helped America win the Cold War by encircling the Soviet Union more effectively. Today, we can engage "Islamist" Iran as well, and expect even better results if we are willing to hold wide-ranging, non-conditional talks before Iran even has the capacity to build a bomb.

The first step toward stable relations will be to stop the counterproductive threats, and work toward an agreement in which Iran is not isolated and not armed with a nuclear weapon; but instead can use its leverage to further common U.S.-Iranian aims like the stability of mutually friendly governments in Iraq and Afghanistan, and the fight against anti-Shia Al-Qaeda. In return, Iran will know that a U.S. or Israeli attack is not around the corner, and that it can boost its trade and expect a level of respect and agency afforded to independent nations. But that day will come only if the neoconservatives' October Surprise is blunted, and the real symptoms of a largely constructed U.S.-Iranian rivalry are addressed: Iran's self-imposed isolation, and neoconservatives' insistence on worsening it.

Nathan Gonzalez is author of "Engaging Iran: The Rise of a Middle East Powerhouse and America's Strategic Choice" (Praeger, 2007), and the upcoming "The Sunni-Shia Conflict and the Iraq War: Understanding Sectarian Violence in the Middle East" (Potomac, 2009)


 
 

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- Steve Real See Profile I'm a Fan of Steve Real

It is a good time to strike Iran.

Why?
because they are already in three proxy wars

One in Lebanon
One in Iraq
One In Palestine
and if the Israelis strike?

That'll be four wars!
Four proxy wars that Iran will be waging in the Middle East.
yet somehow the unemployment line keeps
on growing in Tehran.

This is the time to knock Iran out of the water
military for the next few years.
before they get the A Bomb.

You would have to hit a lot of targets.
and It would probably take a few days
to hit everything that needs to be hit.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:13 PM on 06/24/2008
- frostbite See Profile I'm a Fan of frostbite

Sick, sick, sick and racist posting.

Sure let's just kill a few millions Muslims. That will make you feel good.

Iran support freedom fighters in four countries, The US and the Israelis support freedom fighters in about 49 countries.

Iran has a history of being a peaceful country.

Peace.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:35 PM on 06/24/2008
- MagisterLudi See Profile I'm a Fan of MagisterLudi

Iran has a history of fighting their wars with proxy armies. They just finance and train them.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:15 AM on 06/25/2008
- JonathanDS2U See Profile I'm a Fan of JonathanDS2U

I always enjoy it when matters that could easily lead to the obliteration of half the civilized world are discussed as if everything can be carefully figured out through referencing somewhat miniscule events of recent history.

Israel will not stand for a neighbor inching towards nuclear weapons capability while threatening to obliterate it (nor would anyone else, unless you are so self-centered that asking you to put the shoe on the other foot is beyond your ability). If the U.S. doesn't act against Iran, Israel will. Once either the U.S. and/or Israel do act (and we are not talking about some impotent, token action), Russia will side with Iran. This is where things stand, and all of the miniscule, incremental measures being advocated are like sedatives designed to avoid facing the overwhelmingly horrible nature of the situation. If Iran wasn't so oblivious to how it is backing everyone into a corner, it would grasp the fact that it has put huge numbers of people on a collision course, and that they OWE it to the planet to get rid of Ahmadinijad, one way or the other.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:04 PM on 06/24/2008
- Durango See Profile I'm a Fan of Durango

So when we attack Iran it will be Iran's fault for "backing us in a corner."

Since when is Israel, or the United States the final arbitor of what happens in the world?

Maybe, just maybe it would be a good idea to talk to the Iranians?

Especially since there is no evidence that they are now, or in the near future building nuclear weapons.

Unless you accept the same type of "intelligence" as regarded WMD's and Saddams ties to al Qaida. ie: LIES.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:59 PM on 06/24/2008
- frostbite See Profile I'm a Fan of frostbite

Durango, very well said. War is the worst of all terrorism and Americans need to speak out against this threatening of the people of Iran. War is good for war-profiteers, and bad for everyone else. An attack on Iran would at least be good for global warming, since it would immediately double the cost at the gas pump--and cut down on pollution.

Peace.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:41 PM on 06/24/2008
- peterg76 See Profile I'm a Fan of peterg76

Military action would be counter-productive and a public relations catastrophe. All Iran has to do is sell oil in euros and they can hurt the US far more than the US can hurt them (short of nukuler holocaust).

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:51 PM on 06/24/2008
- islander800 See Profile I'm a Fan of islander800

Does BushCo not consider that an attack an Iran would be Putin's wet dream?

From what I've read, Iran is armed to the teeth with Russian surface-to-surface missiles against which US ships have, believe it or not, little-to-no defence. What kind of a shooting gallery do you think you'd have in that land-locked lake to the west of Iran, presently home to such a large concentration of US naval forces? Israel alone doesn't have the capacity to take out all of those missile launchers should they initiate an attack on Iran. Iran has stated that that would respond to any attack on them with an all-out retaliation on US forces in the region, including those in the Gulf, so this implies the US has to be in on ACT 1. Even then, if they're unsuccessful in eliminating ALL of the hundreds of Iranian missile facilities lining their Gulf coast, there's the real possibility that US carrier forces in the Gulf would suffer serious losses, both in assets and lives. Meanwhile, US ground forces get decimated in Iraq. What then? I guess you're only left with the option of dropping the big one on Tehran in moral indignation.

Will someone please remove these madmen before they drag us all to Hell in a handbasket (and I'm talking about the ones in Washington, not Tehran!).

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:47 PM on 06/24/2008
- Durango See Profile I'm a Fan of Durango

The immediate effect of an American attack on Iran would be to unify the people of Iran around their government.

Which is the last thing that should be done.

An attack would not "wipe out" their nuclear production ability. "Surgical" bombing is a myth. The planners have no idea where all the targets are. Remember the Chinese Embassy?

But it would prove to Iran, and every other sovereign nation on earth, that nuclear weapons are an absolute necessity if you want to avoid aggression .

And assure Iran's development of those weapons.

But then George W. Bush is just a big enough of a fool to think he could get away with it.

And he and Cheney would delight in destroying any chance of Obama's creating Peace and Prosperity for our country.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:27 AM on 06/24/2008
- vote4kucinich See Profile I'm a Fan of vote4kucinich

Is there any truth to this that I have read on the web but have not seen mentioned anywhere else that so many 'Neocons' that surround the Bush administration actually hold dual citizenship with Israel? The list includes: Michael Mukasey, Michael Chertoff, Richard Perle, Paul Wolfowitz, Doug Feith, Kenneth Adelman, Scooter Libby, Elliott Abrams, Ari Fleischer, Josh Bolten, John Bolton, Ken Melman, and many others. Does any Jewish person automatically hold dual citizenship with Israel? Such a concentration of power in people who may have a shared agenda that is not in America's best interest sounds dangerous.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:58 AM on 06/24/2008
- siegfried89 See Profile I'm a Fan of siegfried89

Check out Empire Builders at the Christian Science Monitor website.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:50 AM on 06/25/2008
- earthwealth See Profile I'm a Fan of earthwealth

Yes, but you missed some more names. No it does not SOUND dangerous. It is dangerous. The danger has been seen and felt already. But you must not talk about it because you would be labeled anti-Semite! That is why when the real patriotic Jewish Americans who raise their concern in this regard must be truly honored and supported.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:20 PM on 06/24/2008
- vote4kucinich See Profile I'm a Fan of vote4kucinich

It seems as though it is a very big omission on the part of the press. They don't mind giving mega-coverage to Reverend Wright, but the religious background of so many powerful people is off limits. It puts our Mid-East policy in a whole new light. Very disturbing.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:33 PM on 06/24/2008
- Jonahson See Profile I'm a Fan of Jonahson

That bring us to the next big question. Will the next President, most likely to be run away Obama unless he shoots himself on the feet, continue this war rhetoric with Iran or will he find a peaceful,sensible solution to end posible wars in the Middle East?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:25 AM on 06/24/2008
- earthwealth See Profile I'm a Fan of earthwealth

You be the judge after checking the follwing links

Ask Nancy Pelosi:
http://globalresearch.ca/index.php?context=va&aid=9393

Past US intervention in Iran. Please watch:
http://youtube.com/watch?v=VV7YBnf6IHs
and
http://youtube.com/watch?v=_RuVi6DAO6s

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:28 AM on 06/24/2008
- AngieD See Profile I'm a Fan of AngieD

Hussein threw out western oil companies 28 years ago... America slaughtered and million plus Iraqis and the oil companies are back there. Iran did the same in '79... America will slaughter as many Iranians as it takes to get the oil companies back there... Pure and simple... What do you expect from a nation born of the genocide of the indigenous native Americans... And the people? Those wonderful, blessed inhabitants of that shining citadel on the hill? That beacon of democracy and the world's last, best hope? They'll cheer and support the troops as they fill up their gas guzzlers for a buck a gallon, once more. Damn you all to hell, you murderous sons-of-bitches!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:25 AM on 06/24/2008
- earthwealth See Profile I'm a Fan of earthwealth

You have raised good points. I must add that it is ironic that the same economical sanction that we imposed on Iran during the last 30 years has prevented Iran from expanding their oil industries and consequently their export capacity is hurting us in our own wallets!
As long as people keep electing politicians who would put Israel"s interest before American interest, our problems will not get resolved. For example when it comes to Iran, Israel"s interest and American interest do not coincide. Since Iran has been isolated from American Businesses, the big gainers have been mainly China, India and Russia. At the time American businesses were prohibited to do business in Iran, Chinese and Russian businesses have been signing multi-billion Dollars contracts. If US-Iran relations is ever improved, Iran would make a strong and effective US ally in the Middle East and US may not have to rely on Israel so much. Consequntly there would be no longer any reason for billions of Dollars of annually financial and military US aides to Israel. For that exact reason, every time there is a chance that there could be some improvement in the US-Iran relation, the process is sabotaged directly by Israel or indirectly via Israel"s special interest groups such as AIPAC.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:29 AM on 06/24/2008
- mergina See Profile I'm a Fan of mergina

These greed fueled creatures who have spent the last 7 plus years laying the ground work for their coffers to continue to fill even after the oil thieves leave washington. These creatures live to feed the greed that has a grip on them. A war here, a war there, a billion here, a hundred billion there. Greed is the reason Iran will be attacked, as it was for Iraq. Greed.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:20 AM on 06/24/2008
- jeanrenoir See Profile I'm a Fan of jeanrenoir

We should all be beyond petrified at the prospect of either Israel or its neocon surrogate Bush bombing Iran. Within the past week or two, a world authority on the economics of oil predicted on NPR that an attack on Iran by either Israel or the US would immediately result in a doubling or even tripling of the price of oil. Can you imagine the economic fallout of $10 or $15 gas at the pump in America, not to mention heating oil at comparably astronomical prices? On the face of it, such a development would completely crater the American and world stock markets and lead to a Depression of historic proportions. There's no way America or the world to adjust to such a sudden spike in the price of oil. If it was caused by Israel, the fury of the American public directed at both Israel and any politicians or journalists defending Israel would be unimaginable. If anyone thinks the public is enraged over the Iraq debacle and Bush, just wait until either Israel or Bush causes $10 gas and world economic depression.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:15 PM on 06/23/2008
- julianne See Profile I'm a Fan of julianne

The imbroglio among Israel, Iran, and the U.S. seems similar in inception to our own growing domestic and hemispheric messes. This is so because we are not being led by our best citizens and our life experience together but by our worst citizens, our fears and superstiitions fed by gross private and foreign institutions. Iraq was a private invasion also supported by foreigners who don't want us to live in own hemisphere, armed to the teeth with humility and respect for others. No, they want the world and everything in it- everything our forefathers warned us against. Strutting cretins like our President and Vice-President who have brought the world down on us. The Neocons are the end product of our past political oil-weapons regimes at home and abroad. Today they and the fucking oil and gas companies that fund the political foundations that house the Neocons. use our nation as a fortress to extend their financial and ideological empires throughout the world and our children as disposable labor and cannon fodder when they get in a jam or want more. They are a monoculture of alien, fascistic killers who have offered a national plan FOR NOTHING except war and theft abroad and at home. If Israel runs with these scum then Israel is on a dangerous collision course, maybe not with Obama, but with the majority of the American people.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:58 PM on 06/23/2008
- deminmo See Profile I'm a Fan of deminmo

AIPAC is pushing for inspections of all shipments into
Iran as well as stopping petroleum products and some
luxury items. Bush has an agenda of power. Power over the
people of America, power over oil reserves and profit.
He is attempting to gain a permanent foothold in Iraq,
and his egotism seems to point to believing he and Israel
can control Iran. I can see Bush maintaining control of the
White House through a manufactured threat from Iran. If
he starts war, he can declare martial law. He can finish
the job of making America a Dictatorship. Look how far he's
gotten.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:41 PM on 06/23/2008
- bobwalters See Profile I'm a Fan of bobwalters

AIPAC and Olmert got it done -- Congress today passed a resolution requesting Bush to take action against Iran.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:00 AM on 06/24/2008
- Durango See Profile I'm a Fan of Durango

Your'e crazy.

No such resolution was passed.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:32 AM on 06/24/2008
- BARRISTER See Profile I'm a Fan of BARRISTER

You MUST be joking!!

Pelosi MUST go!! Wexler for Speaker!!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:03 AM on 06/24/2008
- stuckinohio See Profile I'm a Fan of stuckinohio

Remember this?
"If Tyranny and Oppression come to this land; it will be in the guise of fighting a foreign enemy."
James Madison

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:40 AM on 06/24/2008
- earthwealth See Profile I'm a Fan of earthwealth
    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:37 AM on 06/24/2008
- Badbone See Profile I'm a Fan of Badbone

It is truly shocking to see someone get it so very wrong. The threats from the United States are not "counterproductive". They are extremely productive. The question is, productive towards what? In this case, war with Iran.

The United States in this instance wants war. So, they will continue to bully, and threaten, and demand. The US is like a schoolyard bully, spoiling for a fight, picking on a much smaller child. If Iran doesn"t fight back, they will continue to be bullied. If they do fight back, they will be beaten.

The US is putting Iran in an untenable position ON PURPOSE. The pattern is exactly the same as they used with Iraq. Make outrageous claims, force them to prove and reprove the non-existence of imaginary weapons, keep asking for more and more concessions from them. Then when they balk at it, claim diplomacy didn"t work, and invade.

Before you say America missed it"s target in the negotiations with Iran, ask yourself. What were they aiming for?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:32 PM on 06/23/2008
- Durango See Profile I'm a Fan of Durango

The United States doesn't want war.

Bush/Cheney and the Neo-Cons Neo-Colonialists want war.

Big difference.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:49 PM on 06/24/2008
- earthwealth See Profile I'm a Fan of earthwealth

Don"t blame him. He is just using the power he was given as much as he can. Blame the idiots who elected him not once but twice. First time could not be blamed much, but twice? $10 a galon gas is a small price to pay comparing with many orphans who were created by their votes!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:10 AM on 06/24/2008
- S1m0n See Profile I'm a Fan of S1m0n

Why would you think that an attack on Iran that does nothing but drive up the price of oil has 'backfired'?

Surely that's Cheney's intent.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:15 PM on 06/23/2008
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