09/24/07 "Salon" -- - Iranian President
Mahmoud Ahmadinejad's visit to New York to address the
United Nations General Assembly has become a media circus. But
the controversy does not stem from the reasons usually cited.
The media has focused on debating whether he should be
allowed to speak at Columbia University on Monday, or whether
his request to visit Ground Zero, the site of the Sept. 11
attack in lower Manhattan, should have been honored. His request
was rejected, even though Iran expressed sympathy with the
United States in the aftermath of those attacks and Iranians
held candlelight vigils for the victims. Iran felt that it and
other Shiite populations had also suffered at the hands of al-Qaida,
and that there might now be an opportunity for a new opening to
the United States.
Instead, the U.S. State Department denounced Ahmadinejad as
himself little more than a terrorist. Critics have also cited
his statements about the Holocaust or his hopes that the Israeli
state will collapse. He has been depicted as a Hitler figure
intent on killing Israeli Jews, even though he is not commander
in chief of the Iranian armed forces, has never invaded any
other country,
denies he is an anti-Semite, has never called for any
Israeli civilians to be killed, and allows Iran's 20,000 Jews to
have representation in Parliament.
There is, in fact, remarkably little substance to the debates
now raging in the United States about Ahmadinejad. His quirky
personality, penchant for outrageous one-liners, and combative
populism are hardly serious concerns for foreign policy. Taking
potshots at a bantam cock of a populist like Ahmadinejad is
actually a way of expressing another, deeper anxiety: fear of
Iran's rising
position as a regional power and its challenge to the American
and Israeli status quo. The real reason his visit is
controversial is that the American right has decided the United
States needs to go to war against Iran. Ahmadinejad is therefore
being configured as an enemy head of state.
The neoconservatives are even claiming that the United States
has been at war with Iran since 1979. As
Glenn Greenwald points out, this assertion is absurd. In the
'80s, the Reagan administration sold substantial numbers of arms
to Iran. Some of those beating the war drums most loudly now,
like think-tank rat Michael Ledeen, were middlemen in the Reagan
administration's unconstitutional weapons sales to Tehran. The
sales would have been a form of treason if in fact the United
States had been at war with Iran at that time, so Ledeen is
apparently accusing himself of treason.
But the right has decided it is at war with Iran, so a
routine visit by Iran's ceremonial president to the U.N. General
Assembly has generated sparks. The foremost cheerleader for such
a view in Congress is Sen. Joseph Lieberman, I-Conn., who
recently pressed Gen. David Petraeus on
the desirability of bombing Iran in order to forestall
weapons smuggling into Iraq from that country (thus cleverly
using one war of choice to foment another).
American hawks are beating the war drums loudly because they
are increasingly frustrated with the course of events. They are
unsatisfied with the
lack of enthusiasm among the Europeans and at the United
Nations for impeding Tehran's nuclear energy research program.
While the Bush administration insists that the program aims at
producing a bomb, the Iranian state maintains that it is for
peaceful energy purposes. Washington wants tighter sanctions on
Iran at the United Nations but is unlikely to get them in the
short term because of Russian and Chinese reluctance. The Bush
administration may attempt to create a "coalition of the
willing" of Iran boycotters outside the U.N. framework.
Washington is also unhappy with Mohammad ElBaradei, head of
the International Atomic Energy Agency. He has been unable to
find credible evidence that Iran has a weapons program, and he
told Italian television this week, "Iran does not constitute
a certain and immediate threat for the international community."
He stressed that no evidence had been found for underground
production sites or hidden radioactive substances, and he urged
a three-month waiting period before the U.N. Security Council
drew negative conclusions.
ElBaradei intervened to call for calm after French Foreign
Minister Bernard Kouchner said last week that if the
negotiations over Iran's nuclear research program were
unsuccessful, it could lead to war. Kouchner later clarified
that he was not calling for an attack on Iran, but his remarks
appear to have been taken seriously in Tehran.
Kouchner made the remarks after there had already been
substantial speculation in the U.S. press that impatient hawks
around U.S. Vice President
Dick Cheney
were seeking a pretext for a U.S. attack on Iran. Steven Clemons
of the New America Foundation probably
correctly concluded in Salon last week that President Bush
himself has for now decided against launching a war on Iran. But
Clemons worries that Cheney and the neoconservatives, with their
Israeli allies, are perfectly capable of setting up a
provocation that would lead willy-nilly to war.
David Wurmser, until recently a key Cheney advisor on Middle
East affairs and the coauthor of the infamous 1996 white paper
that urged an Iraq war, revealed to his circle that Cheney had
contemplated having Israel strike at Iranian nuclear research
facilities and then using the Iranian reaction
as a
pretext for a U.S. war on that country. Prominent and
well-connected Afghanistan specialist Barnett Rubin also
revealed that he was told by an administration insider that
there would be an
"Iran war rollout" by the Cheneyites this fall.
It should also be stressed that some elements in the U.S.
officer corps and the Defense Intelligence Agency are clearly
spoiling for a fight with Iran because the Iranian-supported
Shiite nationalists in Iraq are a major obstacle to U.S.
dominance in Iraq. Although very few U.S. troops in Iraq are
killed by Shiites, military spokesmen have been attempting to
give the impression that Tehran is ordering hits on U.S. troops,
a clear casus belli. Disinformation campaigns that accuse Iran
of trying to destabilize the Shiite-dominated Iraqi government
-- a government Iran actually supports -- could lay the
groundwork for a war. Likewise, with the U.S. military now
beginning patrols on the Iran-Iraq border, the possibility is
enhanced of a hostile incident spinning out of control.
The Iranians have responded to all this bellicosity with some
chest-thumping of their own, right up to the final hours before
Ahmadinejad's American visit. The Iranian government
declared "National Defense Week" on Saturday, kicking it off
with a big military parade that showed off Iran's new Qadr-1
missiles, with a range of 1,100 miles. Before he left Iran for
New York on Sunday morning, Ahmadinejad inspected three types of
Iranian-manufactured jet fighters, noting that it was the
anniversary of Iraq's invasion of Iran in 1980 (which the
Iranian press attributed to American urging, though that is
unlikely).
The display of this military equipment was accompanied by a
raft of assurances on the part of the Iranian ayatollahs,
politicians and generals that they were entirely prepared to
deploy the missiles and planes if they were attacked. A top
military advisor to Supreme Jurisprudent Ali Khamenei told the
Mehr News Agency on Saturday, "Today, the United States must
know that their 200,000 soldiers in Iraq and Afghanistan are
within the reach of Iran's fire. When the Americans were beyond
our shores, they were not within our reach, but today it is very
easy for us to deal them blows." Khamenei, the actual commander
in chief of the armed forces,
weighed in as well, reiterating that Iran would never attack
first but pledging: "Those who make threats should know that
attack on Iran in the form of hit and run will not be possible,
and if any country invades Iran it will face its very serious
consequences."
The threat to target U.S. troops in Iraq and Afghanistan and
the unveiling of the Qadr-1 were not aggressive in intent, but
designed to make the point that Iran could also play by Richard
M. Nixon's "madman" strategy, whereby you act so wildly as to
convince your enemy you are capable of anything. Ordinarily a
poor non-nuclear third-world country might be expected to be
supine before an attack by a superpower. But as Mohammad Reza
Bahonar, the Iranian deputy speaker of Parliament, warned: "Any
military attack against Iran will send the region up in flames."
In the end, this is hardly the kind of conflagration the
United States should be enabling. If a spark catches, it will
not advance any of America's four interests in the Middle East:
petroleum, markets, Israel and hegemony.
The Middle East has two-thirds of the world's proven
petroleum reserves and nearly half its natural gas, and its
fields are much deeper than elsewhere in the world, so that its
importance will grow for the United States and its allies. Petro-dollars
and other wealth make the region an important market for U.S.
industry, especially the arms industry. Israel is important both
for reasons of domestic politics and because it is a proxy for
U.S. power in the region. By "hegemony," I mean the desire of
Washington to dominate political and economic outcomes in the
region and to forestall rivals such as China from making it
their sphere of influence.
The Iranian government (in which Ahmadinejad has a weak role,
analogous to that of U.S. vice presidents before Dick Cheney)
poses a challenge to the U.S. program in the Middle East. Iran
is, unlike most Middle Eastern countries, large. It is
geographically four times the size of France, and it has a
population of 70 million (more than France or the United
Kingdom). As an oil state, it has done very well from the high
petroleum prices of recent years. It has been negotiating
long-term energy deals with China and India, much to the dismay
of Washington. It provides financial support to the Palestinians
and to the Lebanese Shiites who vote for the Hezbollah Party in
Lebanon. By overthrowing the Afghanistan and Iraq governments
and throwing both countries into chaos, the United States has
inadvertently
enabled Iran to emerge as a potential regional power, which
could challenge Israel and Saudi Arabia and project both soft
and hard power in the strategic Persian Gulf and the Levant.
And now the American war party, undeterred by the quagmire in
Iraq, convinced that their model of New Empire is working, is
eager to go on the offensive again. They may yet find a pretext
to plunge the United States into another war. Ahmadinejad's
visit to New York this year will not include his visit to Ground
Zero, because that is hallowed ground for American patriotism
and he is being depicted as not just a critic of the United
States but as the leader of an enemy state. His visit may,
however, be ground zero for the next big military struggle of
the United States in the Middle East, one that really will make
Iraq look like a cakewalk.