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The tape, released on the eve of President George Bush's visit to the Middle East, dramatically underscored one of the president's main themes for the trip--Iran is a dangerous nation that must be confronted. The four-minute recording appeared to show five small patrol boats buzzing a U.S. Aegis cruiser and its destroyer and frigate escorts.
On the surface the small boats did not appear to pose much of a threat to the three heavily armed U.S. ships, but the boats did come within the security zone of the ships and commanders would have been within their rights to fire on the boats. The Navy tape seems to show a warning horn sounding.
The most menacing part of the tape (and the one stressed in all the media coverage) is the audio that the Navy now acknowledges was spliced into the video. It is a deep voice sounding like someone doing an Arnold Schwarzenegger imitation saying, "I am coming to you. You will explode after a few minutes."
The Navy now says it does not know who said this or if it came from the Iranian boats. There is no background noise with the voice, such as boat engines or wind, and the voice is unlike any other heard on the tapes. The Navy says the voice was recorded on channel 16, an unclassified channel used by all mariners for bridge to bridge communications and monitored by the U.S. Navy at sea. In other words, it could have come from any radio, anywhere in the area.
Iran released its own five-minute tape that appears to show a calm encounter with the Navy and the Guard in routine communication. The Navy does not dispute the authenticity of the Iranian tape. From the beginning, the Iranian Foreign ministry said the incident was commonplace in the narrow straits. They denied that any threats were made and said the situation normalized as soon as identities were established. "What happened between the Guards and foreign vessels was an ordinary identification," said Ali Reza Tangsiri, commander of the Guard's naval forces in the region.
Overreaction
Both sides seemed to have released tapes edited to tell their side. The truth may lie somewhere in between. If the Navy tape is accurate as to the position of the Iranian boats, then the Revolutionary Guard went dangerously beyond a commonplace naval encounter. If the Iranian tape is accurate as to the routine verbal exchanges, then the Bush administration's release of the edited tape and dire warnings from the president and secretary of state needlessly hyped a threat for political purposes and further undermined American credibility in a crucial region.
Political figures continued the spin throughout the week. With the South Carolina primary approaching, leading Republican presidential candidates renewed claims about the security threat posed by Iran. Former New York City Mayor Rudolph Giuliani said that the Hormuz encounter "reminds us that we shouldn't be lulled into some false sense of confidence about Iran." Former Arkansas Governor Mike Huckabee went further, warning that those who threatened a U.S. ship should be prepared to see "the gates of Hell."
Late Friday, the New York Times reported that a US warship had actually fired warning shots at an Iranian patrol boat during a similar incident in the Gulf December 19. This would appear to contradict administration assertions that the January incident was highly unusual and out of the ordinary.
What Can We Learn?
A calmer view came from regional policy experts who warned that the hyped up threat and the attempt to continue a policy of isolating Iran is bound to fail.
William Arkin noted that "[f]or their part, the U.S. naval officers in the video show remarkable control, remaining wary and yet careful not to contribute to any escalation." But he lamented that "it's too bad that the administration won't emulate the Navy's discipline and take the incident in stride."
Trita Parsi, president of the National Iranian American Council, said regional players may conclude that the most dangerous source of tension is the current state of no-war no-peace between the United States and Iran, which has created an atmosphere in which incidents at sea--whether intentional or accidental--can escalate into full-fledged wars with unpredictable regional repercussions. "This may reinforce the belief that U.S.-Iran tensions and the policy of isolating Iran in and of themselves pose a greater risk to regional stability than Iran's willingness and ability to wreck havoc."
Analysts Mark Brzezinski and Ray Takeyh say that: "given the dramatic changes that the Middle East has undergone in the last few years, and the removal of the traditional Iraqi barrier to projection of Iran's influence, it is hard to see how Tehran can be isolated. At a time when Iranian officials are welcomed in Arab capitals, and as trade between Iran and its neighbors soars, a regional accord on isolating Iran simply does not exist."
A New Realism
It is time for the Bush administration to jettison its failed Iran policy. The president's attempt to use his Middle East trip to win support for a strategy that attempts to coerce Iran into compliance or collapse has failed. Nor can he afford to simply "muddle through" his last year in office.
There is still time to forge a new policy that combines pressure with incentives--a policy that contains Iranian ambitions by engaging Iran in a process that America can still largely control. Such a strategy is detailed in a Center for American Progress report, Contain and Engage. It should be a policy that takes note of the recent statements from Iran Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei that "We never said that these relations will be suspended indefinitely. . . . Certainly I would be the first to approve of resuming ties with the U.S. the day it is to the benefit of the nation."
In short, the United States should adopt a pragmatic policy that neither exaggerates the threats nor underestimates the difficulties. The sooner we embark on its formation, the sooner we begin to unleash all the levers of U.S. power--economic, diplomatic, and military--the more likely we are to succeed.
Originally published at the Center for American ProgressFollow Joe Cirincione on Twitter: www.twitter.com/Cirincione
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"In short, the United States should adopt a pragmatic policy that neither exaggerates the threats nor underestimates the difficulti es."
Agreed and the US had lots of experience doing this during the Cold War. Unfortunately, Bush doesn't appear to read any history.
Remember the Cole!
Trust but verify. The Bush admin abdicated it's voracity when it produced campaigns to deliberately mislead Congress and voters. Bush has the credibility of Pravda.
It is high time to consider the use of force agains any nation or other dangerous organization that attempts to acquire the speed-boat technology with larger than 9 or 11HP outboard engines.
Brother these boys love their toys. Tape-tape here, tape-tape there.
. Or the thousands of E-mails that are disappeare d... Or Cheneys Oil cabal meeting... Or the tapes they've obviously been making while spying on us...
However, if this particular tape had anything worth seeing, this administration would NEVER have allowed any of us to see it. It would be with the other tapes, like the interrogation tapes, or the footage from Abu Ghraib that never made it to daylight..
This is such spoon-feeding of the MSM that they probably told them to open wide for the the airplane before they gave it to them.
The truth is that boat is not a threat period, no parsing, or editing.
Bush is whipping up another war and he is frustrated no one is buying his talk this time.
It has been said that Bush has a timetable in which he has to "fix the history books". In the supposed timetable he has 6 months to start a conflict to help his republicans who tout war and conflict in their speeches. The old "I can prtect you better than they can" is the point. Also his actual going to the region he has avoided doing any kind of diplomatic missions to also part of this "fix". He sees no matter what how "right" he was to invade and occupy Iraq. No one has brought up that they will go after Bin Laden, have you noticed?
I am a Navy Veteran of the USA, and I still believe in Heroes, genuine Heroes that is. The small vessel commander that clearly, soberly, and with common sense stood down instead of being a cowbor or reading into the situation more than it was worth, and is he now my Hero. This incident is because of the obvious MSM planned attention (CIA Psyops, again) is just use of military service and personnel as a political football (more of the same) by George Bush and his Handlers (the Elitist Ruling Class of left and right). It works to serve the staus quo power in Government and it is profound and offensive. The One Party 2 Faction Politics is in full stage production for the next year as we head towards the most choreoghraphed election in History. quite possibly close to a Billion dollars might be used to manipulate and massage the american electorate to fell good about voting again. It is 2008 and if you woke up from a coma induced back in 1962 you would think you missed a few minutes of what was going on around you by sneaking a smoking a Butt/cigarette on your watch. This Nation needs to get grip on its internal political machinations and problems and then, maybe, it can start to consider exporting its brand of Democracy.
Its not Iran we should be scared of, its South Carolina. They cheered when Huckabee said that! It’s no coincidence the civil war started here. If they can't kick Yankee ass they’ll kick Iranian ass or whoever, just point them in the right direction. And don’t ask them to think grownup thoughts like, the timing here is suspicious, or Iran has less motive than the war corporations.
Why not wait till Japan makes & releases an animated version of this event before blaming anybody? Iran's & the US's versions are low quality, amateur videos & both are poorly edited too. They do this much better in Japan. Even if both sides use state of the art cameras & other equipment from Japan neither side can be ranked as adequate producers of videos. We need the version from Japan now or sooner.
Bay of Tonkin. Here we go again. At least Bush doesn't claim they tried to torpedo our ships. As far as the tapes go ? The Iranian tape has a two way communication between an Iranian and an American officer. Hard to say that is a fake.
Gulf...of. ..Tonkin
The release of the video, with its manipulated soundtrack, sure looks like an orchestrated attempt to give Bush a reason to rattle his saber at Iran during the visit to Israel.
The problem is that the Bush administration has lied and misled the public so much, that anybody that would believe them would be a fool. It's a crying shame that we have to second guess everything that this administration says.
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