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The Big Lie: ‘Iran Is a Threat’
By Scott Ritter
10/08/07 "Common
Dreams" -- -- Iran has never manifested itself
as a serious threat to the national security of the United
States, or by extension as a security threat to global security.
At the height of Iran’s “exportation of the Islamic Revolution”
phase, in the mid-1980’s, the Islamic Republic demonstrated a
less-than-impressive ability to project its power beyond the
immediate borders of Iran, and even then this projection was
limited to war-torn Lebanon.
Iranian military capability reached its modern peak in the late
1970’s, during the reign of Reza Shah Pahlevi. The combined
effects of institutional distrust on the part of the theocrats
who currently govern the Islamic Republic of Iran concerning the
conventional military institutions, leading as it did to the
decay of the military through inadequate funding and the
creation of a competing paramilitary organization, the Iranian
Revolutionary Guard Command (IRGC), and the disastrous impact of
an eight-year conflict with Iraq, meant that Iran has never been
able to build up conventional military power capable of
significant regional power projection, let alone global power
projection.
Where Iran has demonstrated the ability for global reach is in
the spread of Shi’a Islamic fundamentalism, but even in this
case the results have been mixed. Other than the expansive
relations between Iran (via certain elements of the IRGC) and
the Hezbollah movement in Lebanon, Iranian success stories when
it comes to exporting the Islamic revolution are virtually
non-existent. Indeed, the efforts on the part of the IRGC to
export Islamic revolution abroad, especially into Europe and
other western nations, have produced the opposite effect
desired. Based upon observations made by former and current IRGC
officers, it appears that those operatives chosen to spread the
revolution in fact more often than not returned to Iran noting
that peaceful coexistence with the West was not only possible
but preferable to the exportation of Islamic fundamentalism.
Many of these IRGC officers began to push for moderation of the
part of the ruling theocrats in Iran, both in terms of
interfacing with the west and domestic policies.
The concept of an inherent incompatibility between Iran, even
when governed by a theocratic ruling class, and the United
States is fundamentally flawed, especially from the perspective
of Iran. The Iran of today seeks to integrate itself responsibly
with the nations of the world, clumsily so in some instances,
but in any case a far cry from the crude attempts to export
Islamic revolution in the early 1980’s. The United States claims
that Iran is a real and present danger to the security of the US
and the entire world, and cites Iranian efforts to acquire
nuclear technology, Iran’s continued support of Hezbollah in
Lebanon, Iran’s “status” as a state supporter of terror, and
Iranian interference into the internal affairs of Iraq and
Afghanistan as the prime examples of how this threat manifests
itself.
On every point, the case made against Iran collapses upon closer
scrutiny. The International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA),
mandated to investigate Iran’s nuclear programs, has concluded
that there is no evidence that Iran is pursuing a nuclear
weapons program. Furthermore, the IAEA has concluded that it is
capable of monitoring the Iranian nuclear program to ensure that
it does not deviate from the permitted nuclear energy program
Iran states to be the exclusive objective of its endeavors.
Iran’s support of the Hezbollah Party in Lebanon - Iranian
protestors shown here supporting Hezbollah leader Sayyed Hassan
Nasrallah during an anti-Israel rally - while a source of
concern for the State of Israel, does not constitute a threat to
American national security primarily because the support
provided is primarily defensive in nature, designed to assist
Hezbollah in deterring and repelling an Israeli assault of
sovereign Lebanese territory. Similarly, the bulk of the data
used by the United States to substantiate the claims that Iran
is a state sponsor of terror is derived from the aforementioned
support provided to Hezbollah. Other arguments presented are
either grossly out of date (going back to the early 1980’s when
Iran was in fact exporting Islamic fundamentalism) or
unsubstantiated by fact.
The US claims concerning Iranian interference in both Iraq and
Afghanistan ignore the reality that both nations border Iran,
both nations were invaded and occupied by the United States, not
Iran, and that Iran has a history of conflict with both nations
that dictates a keen interest concerning the internal domestic
affairs of both nations. The United States continues to
exaggerate the nature of Iranian involvement in Iraq, arresting
“intelligence operatives” who later turned out to be economic
and diplomatic officials invited to Iraq by the Iraqi government
itself. Most if not all the claims made by the United States
concerning Iranian military involvement in Iraq and Afghanistan
have not been backed up with anything stronger than rhetoric,
and more often than not are subsequently contradicted by other
military and governmental officials, citing a lack of specific
evidence.
Iran as a nation represents absolutely no threat to the national
security of the United States, or of its major allies in the
region, including Israel. The media hype concerning alleged
statements made by Iran’s President Ahmadinejad has created and
sustained the myth that Iran seeks the destruction of the State
of Israel. Two points of fact directly contradict this myth.
First and foremost, Ahmadinejad never articulated an Iranian
policy objective to destroy Israel, rather noting that Israel’s
policies would lead to its “vanishing from the pages of time.”
Second, and perhaps most important, Ahmadinejad does not make
foreign policy decisions on the part of the Islamic Republic of
Iran. This is the sole purview of the “Supreme Leader,” the
Ayatollah Khomeini. In 2003 Khomeini initiated a diplomatic
outreach to the United States inclusive of an offer to recognize
Israel’s right to exist. This initiative was rejected by the
United States, but nevertheless represents the clearest
indication of what the true policy objective of Iran is
vis-à-vis Israel.
The fact of the matter is that the “Iranian Threat” is derived
solely from the rhetoric of those who appear to seek
confrontation between the United States and Iran, and largely
divorced from fact-based reality. A recent request on the part
of Iran to allow President Ahmadinejad to lay a wreath at
“ground zero” in Manhattan was rejected by New York City
officials. The resulting public outcry condemned the Iranian
initiative as an affront to all Americans, citing Iran’s alleged
policies of supporting terrorism. This knee-jerk reaction
ignores the reality that Iran was violently opposed to
al-Qaeda’s presence in Afghanistan throughout the 1990’s leading
up to 2001, and that Iran was one of the first Muslim nations to
condemn the terror attacks against the United States on
September 11, 2001.
A careful fact-based assessment of Iran clearly demonstrates
that it poses no threat to the legitimate national security
interests of the United States. However, if the United States
chooses to implement its own unilateral national security
objectives concerning regime change in Iran, there will most
likely be a reaction from Iran which produces an exceedingly
detrimental impact on the national security interests of the
United States, including military, political and economic. But
the notion of claiming a nation like Iran to constitute a
security threat simply because it retains the intent and
capability to defend its sovereign territory in the face of
unprovoked military aggression is absurd. In the end, however,
such absurdity is trumping fact-based reality when it comes to
shaping the opinion of the American public on the issue of the
Iranian “threat.”
Scott Ritter was a Marine Corps intelligence officer from
1984 to 1991 and a United Nations weapons inspector in Iraq from
1991 to 1998. He is the author of numerous books, including
“Iraq Confidential” (Nation Books, 2005) , “Target Iran” (Nation
Books, 2006) and his latest, “Waging Peace: The Art of War for
the Antiwar Movement” (Nation Books, April 2007).
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