War Signals?
By Dave Lindorff
09/21/06 "The
Nation" -- -- As reports circulate of a sharp debate within the White House
over possible US military action against Iran and its nuclear
enrichment facilities, The Nation has learned that the Bush
Administration and the Pentagon have issued orders for a major
"strike group" of ships, including the nuclear aircraft carrier
Eisenhower as well as a cruiser, destroyer, frigate, submarine
escort and supply ship, to head for the Persian Gulf, just off
Iran's western coast. This information follows a
report in the
current issue of Time magazine, both online and in print, that a
group of ships capable of mining harbors has received orders to
be ready to sail for the Persian Gulf by October 1.
As Time writes in its cover story, "What Would War Look Like?,"
evidence of the forward deployment of minesweepers and word that
the chief of naval operations had asked for a reworking of old
plans for mining Iranian harbors "suggest that a much
discussed--but until now largely theoretical--prospect has
become real: that the U.S. may be preparing for war with Iran."
According to Lieut. Mike Kafka, a spokesman at the headquarters
of the Second Fleet, based in Norfolk, Virginia, the Eisenhower
Strike Group, bristling with Tomahawk cruise missiles, has
received recent orders to depart the United States in a little
over a week. Other official sources in the public affairs office
of the Navy Department at the Pentagon confirm that this
powerful armada is scheduled to arrive off the coast of Iran on
or around October 21.
The Eisenhower had been in port at the Naval Station Norfolk for
several years for refurbishing and refueling of its nuclear
reactor; it had not been scheduled to depart for a new duty
station until at least a month later, and possibly not till next
spring. Family members, before the orders, had moved into the
area and had until then expected to be with their sailor-spouses
and parents in Virginia for some time yet. First word of the
early dispatch of the "Ike Strike" group to the Persian Gulf
region came from several angry officers on the ships involved,
who contacted antiwar critics like retired Air Force Col. Sam
Gardiner and complained that they were being sent to attack Iran
without any order from the Congress.
"This is very serious," said Ray McGovern, a former CIA
threat-assessment analyst who got early word of the Navy
officers' complaints about the sudden deployment orders.
(McGovern, a twenty-seven-year veteran of the CIA, resigned in
2002 in protest over what he said were Bush Administration
pressures to exaggerate the threat posed by Iraq. He and other
intelligence agency critics have formed a group called Veteran
Intelligence Professionals for Sanity.)
Colonel Gardiner, who has taught military strategy at the
National War College, says that the carrier deployment and a
scheduled Persian Gulf arrival date of October 21 is "very
important evidence" of war planning. He says, "I know that some
naval forces have already received 'prepare to deploy orders' [PTDOs],
which have set the date for being ready to go as October 1.
Given that it would take about from October 2 to October 21 to
get those forces to the Gulf region, that looks about like the
date" of any possible military action against Iran. (A PTDO
means that all crews should be at their stations, and ships and
planes should be ready to go, by a certain date--in this case,
reportedly, October 1.) Gardiner notes, "You cannot issue a PTDO
and then stay ready for very long. It's a very significant
order, and it's not done as a training exercise." This point was
also made in the Time article.
So what is the White House planning?
On Monday President Bush addressed the UN General Assembly at
its opening session, and while studiously avoiding even
physically meeting Iran's President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, who was
also addressing the body, he offered a two-pronged message. Bush
told the "people of Iran" that "we're working toward a
diplomatic solution to this crisis" and that he looked forward
"to the day when you can live in freedom." But he also warned
that Iran's leaders were using the nation's resources "to fund
terrorism and fuel extremism and pursue nuclear weapons." Given
the President's assertion that the nation is fighting a "global
war on terror" and that he is Commander in Chief of that "war,"
his prominent linking of the Iran regime with terror has to be
seen as a deliberate effort to claim his right to carry the
fight there. Bush has repeatedly insisted that the 2001
Congressional Authorization for the Use of Force that preceded
the invasion of Afghanistan was also an authorization for an
unending "war on terror."
Even as Bush was making not-so-veiled threats at the UN, his
former Secretary of State, Colin Powell, a sharp critic of any
unilateral US attack on Iran, was in Norfolk, not far from the
Eisenhower, advocating further diplomatic efforts to deal with
Iran's nuclear program--itself tantalizing evidence of the
policy struggle over whether to go to war, and that those
favoring an attack may be winning that struggle.
"I think the plan's been picked: bomb the nuclear sites in
Iran," says Gardiner. "It's a terrible idea, it's against US law
and it's against international law, but I think they've decided
to do it." Gardiner says that while the United States has the
capability to hit those sites with its cruise missiles, "the
Iranians have many more options than we do: They can activate
Hezbollah; they can organize riots all over the Islamic world,
including Pakistan, which could bring down the Musharraf
government, putting nuclear weapons into terrorist hands; they
can encourage the Shia militias in Iraq to attack US troops;
they can blow up oil pipelines and shut the Persian Gulf." Most
of the major oil-producing states in the Middle East have
substantial Shiite populations, which has long been a concern of
their own Sunni leaders and of Washington policy-makers, given
the sometimes close connection of Shiite populations to Iran's
religious rulers.
Of course, Gardiner agrees, recent ship movements and other
signs of military preparedness could be simply a bluff designed
to show toughness in the bargaining with Iran over its nuclear
program. But with the Iranian coast reportedly armed to the
teeth with Chinese Silkworm antiship missiles, and possibly even
more sophisticated Russian antiship weapons, against which the
Navy has little reliable defenses, it seems unlikely the Navy
would risk high-value assets like aircraft carriers or cruisers
with such a tactic. Nor has bluffing been a Bush MO to date.
Commentators and analysts across the political spectrum are
focusing on Bush's talk about dialogue, with many claiming that
he is climbing down from confrontation. On the right, David
Frum, writing on September 20 in his National Review blog,
argues that the lack of any attempt to win a UN resolution
supporting military action, and rumors of "hushed back doors"
being opened in Washington, lead him to expect a diplomatic
deal, not a unilateral attack. Writing in the center, Washington
Post reporter Glenn Kessler saw in Bush's UN speech evidence
that "war is no longer a viable option" in Iran. Even on the
left, where confidence in the Bush Administration's judgment is
abysmally low, commentators like Noam Chomsky and Nation
contributor Robert Dreyfuss are skeptical that an attack is
being planned. Chomsky has long argued that Washington's leaders
aren't crazy, and would not take such a step--though more
recently, he has seemed less sanguine about Administration
sanity and has suggested that leaks about war plans may be an
effort by military leaders--who are almost universally opposed
to widening the Mideast war--to arouse opposition to such a move
by Bush and war advocates like Cheney. Dreyfuss, meanwhile, in
an article for the online journal TomPaine.com, focuses on the
talk of diplomacy in Bush's Monday UN speech, not on his
threats, and concludes that it means "the realists have won" and
that there will be no Iran attack.
But all these war skeptics may be whistling past the graveyard.
After all, it must be recalled that Bush also talked about
seeking diplomatic solutions the whole time he was dead-set on
invading Iraq, and the current situation is increasingly looking
like a cheap Hollywood sequel. The United States, according to
Gardiner and others, already reportedly has special forces
operating in Iran, and now major ship movements are looking
ominous.
Representative Maurice Hinchey, a leading Democratic critic of
the Iraq War, informed about the Navy PTDOs and about the orders
for the full Eisenhower Strike Group to head out to sea, said,
"For some time there has been speculation that there could be an
attack on Iran prior to November 7, in order to exacerbate the
culture of fear that the Administration has cultivated now for
over five or six years. But if they attack Iran it will be a
very bad mistake, for the Middle East and for the US. It would
only make worse the antagonism and fear people feel towards our
country. I hope this Administration is not so foolish and
irresponsible." He adds, "Military people are deeply concerned
about the overtaxing of the military already."
Calls for comment from the White House on Iran war plans and on
the order for the Eisenhower Strike Group to deploy were
referred to the National Security Council press office, which
declined to return this reporter's phone calls.
McGovern, who had first told a group of anti-Iraq War activists
Sunday on the National Mall in Washington, DC, during an ongoing
action called "Camp Democracy," about his being alerted to the
strike group deployment, warned, "We have about seven weeks to
try and stop this next war from happening."
One solid indication that the dispatch of the Eisenhower is part
of a force buildup would be if the carrier Enterprise--currently
in the Arabian Sea, where it has been launching bombing runs
against the Taliban in Afghanistan, and which is at the end of
its normal six-month sea tour--is kept on station instead of
sent back to the United States. Arguing against simple rotation
of tours is the fact that the Eisenhower's refurbishing and its
dispatch were rushed forward by at least a month. A report from
the Enterprise on the Navy's official website referred to its
ongoing role in the Afghanistan fighting, and gave no indication
of plans to head back to port. The Navy itself has no comment on
the ship's future orders.
Jim Webb, Secretary of the Navy in the Reagan Administration and
currently a Democratic candidate for Senate in Virginia,
expressed some caution about reports of the carrier deployment,
saying, "Remember, carrier groups regularly rotate in and out of
that region." But he added, "I do not believe that there should
be any elective military action taken against Iran without a
separate authorization vote by the Congress. In my view, the
2002 authorization which was used for the invasion of Iraq
should not extend to Iran."
Copyright © 2006 The Nation
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