10/30/07 "The
Guardian" --- -- The US has opened up a new
front in its now sharply accelerated war drive on
Iran. The
announcement last week by Condoleezza Rice,
branding Iran's Revolutionary Guards Corps a
terrorist organisation, and imposing the strongest
sanctions yet since 1979 Iranian Revolution, alarmed
several democratic presidential candidates who
described it as an indication that the White House
had begun its "march to war".
In his
article in today's Guardian, Max Hastings
correctly predicts that within six months these
sanctions could only lead to a military attack on
Iran, a prospect that he opposes. However, he plays
right into the hands of warmongers by giving
unequivocal support to the two main US accusations
against Iran:
"Few
strategists dispute either that Iranian
revolutionaries are playing a prominent role in
frustrating the stabilisation of Iraq, or that
Iran is doing its utmost to build nuclear
weapons."
These are precisely
the allegations that are used by the
neoconservatives and Israel to demonise the
Revolutionary Guards and the government of
Ahmadinejad, justify the latest sanctions and pave
the way for a military attack.
The Islamic
Revolutionary Guards Corps is an army of 125,000 and
an indispensable part of the Iranian military. It
was formed during the eight-year war waged against
the Islamic Republic by Saddam Hussein, who was at
the time fully supported by the US and its European
allies. With this historic role in defeating foreign
aggression, the Corps occupies a special place in
the Islamic Republic, has a large domain of
operation and runs a significant part of the
economy.
The US designation is the first time in
international relations that a military body of a
sovereign state is branded as terrorist. Given the
Revolutionary Guards' credibility in defending the
country, the US measures will be seen in the eyes of
ordinary people as an attack by the US on Iran's
sovereignty, along the lines of the US-UK engineered
coup against the democratically elected government
of Dr Mossadegh in 1953.
As a justification
for the new sanctions against Iranian banks,
companies and individuals, Rice accused the
Revolutionary Guards of being "proliferators of WMD".
This accusation has been repeatedly contradicted by
the head of the International Atomic Energy Agency,
Dr ElBaradei's unambiguous assertions that there is
absolutely no evidence of a nuclear weaponisation
programme in Iran. In August, the IAEA
cleared Iran of its plutonium experiments and
confirmed the peaceful nature of all of Iran's
declared enrichment activities.
"We have not come to
see any undeclared activities or weaponisation of
their programme", Dr Mohammad ElBaradei
said in September, "Nor have we gotten
intelligence to that effect." This Sunday,
he
repeated the same assertion in a CNN interview.
But Rice's
accusation against the Revolutionary Guards is not
only totally unfounded, it turns the truth
outrageously on its head. Throughout its eight-year
war of aggression, the Iraqi army used chemical
weapons on the Iranian Revolutionary Guards,
soldiers and civilians. The US was
complicit in both the proliferation and the use
of WMD against the Revolutionary Guards, who were
amongst the 52,000 Iranian
victims of this war crime.
In response to the
latest US measures against Iran, Vladimir Putin, who
along with the Chinese, has refused to back further
sanctions against Iran, saying: "Running around like
a mad man with a blade in one's hand is not the best
way to solve such problems."
Also, Rice's
accusation against the Quds force, a division of the
Revolutionary Guards, of support for terrorism in
Iraq and beyond, is in sharp contrast to British
government's own evidence. David Miliband, the
foreign secretary, in an interview with the
Financial Times in July admitted that there was no
evidence of Iranian involvement in the violence and
instability in Iraq. Afghanistan's foreign minister
has recently contradicted the US accusations against
Iran by
pointing out that there is no evidence for Iran
arming the Taliban forces. Prime Minister Maliki and
President Karzai too have repeatedly stressed Iran's
positive role in Iraq and Afghanistan.
The unfounded
allegations by the US and Rice's declaration to the
Congress that Iran was "perhaps the single greatest
challenge" for US security, is part of the
unmistakable chorus of war from the US
administration, following Bush's invocation of the
"World War III" and Cheney's threat of "serious
consequences" for Iran, the week previously. It is
an ominous indication that the voices of dialogue
have been decidedly drowned by the war camp who are
pushing for a military attack on Iran.
In Britain, Gordon
Brown has been quick to support the latest US
measures and refused to rule out the military
option. The new sanctions will not avert the
military option by the US, as a number of leading
politicians in the UK, France and Germany claim, but
would only be the prelude to a military attack.
Brown is placing Britain in the path of another
unprovoked and illegal war with catastrophic
consequences for the people of Iran, the region and
the whole world.
Seymour Hersh wrote
in a
recent article in the New Yorker that this
summer in a closed circuit video discussion between
Bush and Ian Crocker, the US ambassador in Iraq,
Bush said that he wanted all along the border inside
Iran to be bombed and that "the British were on
board".
The British public
should wake up to the disastrous foreign policy the
UK government is continuing to pursue after the
invasion of Iraq and urgently demand their MPs to
table an emergency motion in the House of Commons to
oppose sanctions and any military attack on Iran
Abbas
Edalat is professor of computer science
and mathematics at Imperial College
London and founder of the Campaign
Against Sanctions and Military
Intervention in Iran.
Mehrnaz
Shahabi is a journalist and executive
editor of
www.campaigniran.org