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The Increasing Encirclement of Iran
By Daan de Wit
Translation by Ben
Kearney
Earlier this month the Annual Threat Assessment was
released by the U.S. Director of National Intelligence,
Michael McConnell. The assessment, provided as a
testimony
for the U.S. Senate Intelligence Committee, offers an
insight into the current outlook of the president's most
important intelligence advisor.
In his
testimony McConnell emphasizes Iranian attempts to
enrich uranium as well as Iran's capacity to fire
long-range weapons. The combination of these two are now
being presented at the highest levels of power as the
central argument for branding Iran as a danger to world
peace. As if the National Intelligence Estimate never
even existed.
17/02/08 "DeepJournal"
-- - -The Annual Threat Assessment that Michael
McConnell presents is the first important document to be
released on this matter since the publication of the
National Intelligence Estimate (NIE) in December of
2007. McConnell
says that, looking back, he would like to have seen the now
infamous NIE formulated differently: 'If I had 'til now
to think about it, I probably would change a few things.
[...] I would have included that there are the component
parts, that the portion of it, maybe the least
significant, had halted'. In his Threat Assessment he
corrects the balance regarding something that he feels
was relatively unimportant - an Iranian program to
develop nuclear warheads. The testimony of 'the leader
of our entire intelligence community', as President Bush
calls him, makes it clear once and for all: The
American government was, and apparently still is, on a
collision course with Iran.
The American argument as it relates to
Iran is a dynamic process. In a
speech on global terrorism in 2006, President Bush
earned applause when he said that America would not bow down
to tyrants. Both before and after this, he explained to his
audience how Iran has it in for Americans, and that it wants
to destroy Israel. 'And now the Iranian regime is pursuing
nuclear weapons. The world is working together to prevent
Iran's regime from acquiring the tools of mass murder'. A
year later the tone is the same, though content-wise there
is a noticeable change, possibly with an eye to the upcoming
publication of the National Intelligence Estimate: Bush
says that anyone who is interested in preventing WWIII
should see to it that Iran never gets the knowledge
necessary to make a nuclear weapon. In December of 2007 the
NIE is being published which in the view of the world took
the wind out of the sails of those wanting a war with Iran.
Now at the beginning of 2008 the argument is shifting still
further. While any number of countries are capable of
enriching uranium and/or possess nuclear weapons, and at the
same time receive support from the United States - such as
Israel, India and Pakistan - Iran is presented as a threat
to world peace by the American government, even after the
publication of the NIE. This on account of the ambition to
master the process of uranium enrichment, suitable for the
generation of energy in nuclear power plants. Little by
little the White House has scaled back on their argument
concerning the Iranian threat. In the meantime the bar is
set so low that the country can comply with the greatest of
ease. With which it thus qualifies for an American response.
The merit of Washington's argument is now being beefed up
considerably by the new Threat Assessment by the Director of
National Intelligence, Michael McConnell.
The scaling back of the argument has also been noticed
by advisor and former counterterrorism specialist for
the CIA,
Phil Giraldi. In an
interview [12'45"] toward the end of January 2008,
he points out that Bush and Cheney 'have shifted the
terms of the debate. It's no longer a question of Iran
having a nuclear weapon or a nuclear weapons program.
It's having the knowledge to construct a nuclear weapon.
Which of course there are probably 130 countries in the
world where that knowledge exists. [...] Any kind of
Iranian access to anything that he or Dick Cheney are
suspicious about is [to them] clearly an act of war'.
According to Giraldi, Bush and Cheney are part of a
political spin process, with the purpose of achieving
something that goes well beyond American defense policy.
'That's called remaking the world, and you either buy
into that or you don't. I personally of course don't'.
Anyone who reads the
Annual Threat
Assessment can come to no less a conclusion than
that Iran is an unacceptably huge threat to world peace.
The subject matter of the document concerns the
threats to which America is exposed, and thus deals
with a broad spectrum of global issues that could
constitute a threat to the United States. Yet the word
'Iran' appears almost an average of two times per page
of McCollums testimony The report repeatedly points to
the nuclear ambitions of Iran - ambitions which once
materialized could be put to dual use, namely for the
production of energy and in advanced form the production
of weapons - after which the reader each time
immediately is reminded that Iran has missiles that they
are perfecting, and that those missiles are capable of
carrying a nuclear payload. The only way to read it is
as such: With the NIE
we said that Iran's secret nuclear weapon program was
suspended from 2003 up through mid-2007. It's possible
that the program has since been restarted. What we do
know for sure is that the country wants to learn how to
enrich uranium with which it will then be able to
produce nuclear warheads in the future, and that the
country has missiles capable of carrying a nuclear
payload. The formula that McConnell presents the
reader with is clear - uranium plus missiles equals the
end of our safety: 1 + 1 = 2. It's a
formula that, in spite of the publication of the
NIE, has been created in the same manner by the U.S.
Congress in a
law adopted and already signed by the president. As
a consequence of the weight that the words in the Threat
Assessment carry - this due to the fact that they come
from the pen of the head of the intelligence pyramid -
Iran comes off as extremely threatening to the reader.
One of those readers is President George Bush.
A sentence from the written testimony such as 'We do not
know if these [nuclear weapons] activities have been
restarted' is not a sentence that is going to please
President Bush. Recently he
said, NIE or no NIE, what he thought about Iran: 'I
believe they want a weapon, and I believe that they're
trying to gain the know-how as to how to make a weapon
under the guise of a civilian nuclear program. [...] The
problem is knowledge can be transferred from a civilian
program to a military program. [...] If you had a
military program once, you can easily start it up
again'. Should there have been any doubt about it
before, Bush and Cheney are again clearly on the same
page as far as how to deal with the problem of Iran.
Also for Cheney it's impossible to live with the notion
that Iran may have restarted its program, or is going to
restart it. For Cheney lives according to the 'rules'.
His own rules, to be precise. 'Action was liberated from
evidence. Even a '1 percent chance that some conjectured
terrorist threat would materialize was good enough for a
preemptive strike',
writes Sidney Blumenthal in reference to Ron
Suskind's
book,
The One
Percent Doctrine. 'They are trying very hard to
develop this nuclear bomb. The question is not if the
Iranians develop a nuclear bomb in 2009, 2010, or 2011.
The main question is are they going to have the
knowledge to do it?' The person
saying this is not George Bush during a recent
speech, but Israel's Foreign Minister Silvan Shalom in
February of 2005. It looks as if Bush has adopted this
Israeli line of reasoning and in so doing has
characterized Iran as a country that forms a huge threat
to the world and must be dealt with - NIE or no NIE.
Bush in
reaction to the NIE: 'Iran was dangerous. Iran is
dangerous. And Iran will be dangerous if they have the
knowledge necessary to make a nuclear weapon'. And now
there is McConnell's Threat Assessment which has
diverted the world's focus after the NIE from the
reassuring notion - that Iran had, but no longer has a
nuclear weapons program - to the terrifying prospects
created by Iran wanting to learn how to master the
uranium enrichment process for the production of nuclear
energy. Cheney and Bush's argument in response to the
NIE has been formalized with the Threat Assessment. This
means that it can be referred to later in the event of
war with Iran should there be any questions about the
decision making process.
The question is of course whether Iran ever had a
nuclear program at all. It's
written in black and white in the NIE, but publicly
there has been no evidence provided. Russian Foreign
Minister Sergei Lavrov
says: 'We have no information that such
efforts had been conducted before 2003, even though our
American colleagues said it was so'. Suspicions that
Iran had a nuclear weapons program
- on the basis of suspicious traces of highly enriched
uranium found in Iran - was repudiated in 2005 when it
appeared that the traces came from contaminated
equipment purchased from America's nuclear ally
Pakistan. Iran is responding to the unceasing
Why did you beat your
wife accusations coming from America by denying
that it desires a nuclear weapons capability.
Under the headline
How dangerous is Iran,
I
wrote previously that the Iranian leader Ahmadinejad
could be lying about his belief that his faith forbids
the production of a nuclear weapon. Depending on which
cleric you
ask, a nuclear weapon would actually be permitted,
so long as it is not used offensively (in contrary to
the U.S. view)'. Earlier this month the Iranian Foreign
Minister Manouchehr Mottaki
said to the national radio station Voice of Israel:
'Iran is not threatening Israel and does not want
nuclear weapons'. Mottaki said that it was Israel that
possessed nuclear weapons and that 'it is threatening
Teheran'
The release of McConnell's
testimony can be compared to the next blow in a boxing
match playing out at the highest levels. While the
rumble created by the NIE still reverberates in the ears
of the neoconservative inhabitants of the White House,
the next blow is parcelled out by way of the Threat
Assessment from January of 2008. John Negroponte, the
previous Director of National Intelligence, was
responsible to the creation of the NIE by the collective
American intelligence services. He
resigned suddenly in January of 2007
because he did not wish to rewrite the document.
Negroponte was replaced by Vice Admiral John Michael
'Mike' McConnell. 'Mike' is undoubtedly the way Dick
Cheney addresses McConnell, since he personally
approached McConnell for the post.
There is 'overwhelming evidence' that Tehran is
supporting insurgents in Iraq and it is abundantly clear
that the notorious explosives that are producing so many
American casualties in Iraq are traceable to Iran. These
are not the comments of Cheney, but of McConnell. Under
pressure from Vice President Dick Cheney, the NIE
was not immediately published after its completion;
publication of the report would wait for another year.
During that year McConnell also did his part to
influence the NIE and any effect it might have, by going
back and analyzing old information and by making it more
difficult to declassify the key judgments made in the
NIE (presumably this concerns passages that do not
support the political agenda of the White House).
Ultimately it was unavoidable that a NIE was published
in December of 2007 that was contrary to the views of
the White House. The world heaved a sigh of relief, and
the White House together with Israel chose to keep their
distance from the analysis of the American intelligence
community. Now there is McConnell's Threat Assessment
that the White House can point to: Iran is a huge
threat. Just like with a boxing match, it's all about
who manages to land the final, decisive blow. The
Annual Threat
Assessment is like a left uppercut, but the
question is - what will the right jab that's going to
end the match look like? The situation is causing fear
on all levels for the future of Iran. This gives way to
different possible scenarios, listed here in random
order.
1. Before leaving the White House, Bush can carry out an
attack on Iran. This option is
noted by the Cato Institute as well, a thinktank
specializing in American foreign policy and the Middle
East, by way of Leon T. Hadar. Bush in a recent
interview: 'You know, there's this great myth about
how the President, because there's an election, or
because it's the last year of his presidency, not much
is going to get done. Quite the contrary. We'll get a
lot done'. In his most important
speech of the year, the State of the Union Address,
which he made almost two months after the publication of
the NIE, he said that Tehran is developing missiles with
an ever-greater range and is continuing to develop
techniques that allow the enrichment of uranium, 'which
could be used to create a nuclear weapon'. He
underscored these threats with words that seem to
contain a double meaning, aimed at the Iranian people:
'We look forward to the day when you have your freedom'.
An attack on Iran by Bush is also something being taken
into
account at the highest levels of the Iranian defense
establishment, as well as
by Daniel Ellsberg, the man who once
demonstrated that an incident in the Gulf of Tonkin
was misused to start the American war against Vietnam.
2. Israel could launch a unilateral strike. It's an
option that the country is leaving open, something which
has been given serious consideration for some time
by Vice President Dick Cheney, and which was most
recently articulated by the French President Nicolas
Sarkozy. Just as it is with his colleagues in the White
House, a nuclear Iran for him is not an option. For
Sarkozy it
is 'unacceptable that Iran should have, at any
point, a nuclear weapon'.
According to him it would lead to war. And he
says that he isn't so much worried about America
intervening militarily in Iran, but more about Israel
doing so. German Chancellor Angela Merkel
met with Israeli Premier Olmert to talk about the
question of Iran and how to increase
pressure on the country. In 2006 Merkel
said that Iran should be prevented from developing a
nuclear program and compared the situation with Iran to
Germany at the beginning of the 1930's when Nazism was
on the rise and was allowed to go unchecked; 'Germany is
obliged to do something at the early stages'. The
comparison between Iran and Hitler's Germany is
made quite often in neoconservative circles in
America and Israel, as well as
by Richard Holbrooke,
advisor to presidential candidate Hillary Clinton.
If Iran attacks Israel, America will stand by Israel,
promised president Bush, 'no
ands, ifs or buts'. It's not said that America will
assist Israel in the event of an Iranian attack, but it
is quite probable. Iran is
considered by the Israeli intelligence service
Mossad to be the greatest threat and the Israeli Defense
Minister Ehud Barak is
convinced that Iran is working on a nuclear weapon,
in part by way of a clandestine project. He is getting
support on that point from American Secretary of Defense
Robert Gates, who
says that Iran could start its nuclear weapons
program at any moment, 'if it has not done so already'.
3. War against Iran as the result of a provoked
conflict. This option is discussed at length in the
previous part
of this series. Recently it's become clear that the
account of the incident in the Straits of Hormuz was
manipulated by the White House. It looks very much
as if the goal here was to create a second Gulf of
Tonkin incident whereby a
casus belli
would arise for an attack on Iran. Another
possibility is that the incident was manipulated in
order to lend weight to Bush's argument on his recent
tour of the Middle East.
4. One shot in the struggle surrounding Iran that no one
would have an answer for - a last resort that
is guaranteed to be successful - is a false flag
operation: an attack that seems to come from the enemy,
but is actually a product from one's own ranks. If this
happens in the case of Iran, then it will leave all
reports, internal strife and jabs at others far behind.
If America, Israel or Europe becomes the victim of a
shocking attack, and Iran 'appears' to be the culprit,
then there will be only one option left, and that is a
'counterattack' - a war against Iran. In his Threat
Assessment, the above-mentioned Director of National
Intelligence Michael McConnell
warns against attacks carried out in America by the
terrorist organization Al Qaida. An example of a false
flag operation that could lead to a war with Iran would
be a variation of the Al Qaida attacks
planned by the Israeli intelligence agency in Israël,
in 2002: for example Al Qaida attacks in the U.S.,
carried out by elements from within the intelligence
services of Israel and/or the U.S., for which Iran gets
the blame. A resulting American and/or Israeli attack on
Iran could be successful if two conditions in particular
are met: a) the establishment of a basis of suspicions
in which a given incident is the last straw for the
public at large and b) sufficient troop strength in the
theater of operations to bring into action quickly,
before it becomes clear that Iran is not involved in the
harm that was done to America, Israel or Europe.
Insinuations made about Iran are in ample supply thanks
to the excellent PR and propaganda machinery of America
and Israel - just like the troops on the coast of Iran.
The attack plans are ready to go. More about false flag
operations as they relate to Iran in the
previous installment of this series.
5. The next president of the United States will attack
Iran. It can be gathered from George Bush's statements
that his preference among Democratic presidential
candidates is Hillary Clinton. In November of 2007 he
called her a 'very formidable candidate' and went on
to
say: 'One of the interesting things that she brings
is that she has been under pressure. She understands the
klieg lights.' With this he is saying that he thinks she
can handle the burden of the presidency. The two
candidates who have spoken out the strongest against
Iran are the Democrat Hillary Clinton and the Republican
John McCain. It is
these
two
candidates whom the New York Times 'strongly
recommends' in its endorsment in early February of 2008.
Clinton voted for the notorious Kyl/Lieberman amendment.
By branding the Revolutionary Guard - a component of the
Iranian army - as a terrorist organization, a path has
been cleared to legally proceed against the 'terrorism'
of this army, and with it Iran. Clinton's vote was
called a 'vote for war' by Barack Obama, but Obama
himself chose not to vote against it, but instead simply
abstained from voting. What he did
support, together with Clinton, was a resolution in
the Senate with words to the effect of the amendment
(Resolution
970). Obama is less vocal and somewhat more
moderate on the issue of Iran than Clinton, yet he
has been
clear: though it would be a 'mistake' to attack
Iran, it's essential that a nuclear-armed Iran be
prevented and therefore all options should be left open.
'U.S. policy must be clear and unequivocal: We cannot,
we should not, we must not permit Iran to build or
acquire nuclear weapons. In dealing with this threat ...
no option can be taken off the table'. Those are the
words not of Bush, McCain or Obama, but of Hillary
Clinton, in February of 2007 at a
meeting of AIPAC, the most important part of the
Jewish lobby in America.
According to Hillary Clinton, the Iranians are
working on the construction of a nuclear weapon while at
the same time are sponsoring terror and committing
attacks in Iraq. With that the explosive situation is
this: Iran will choose not to stop the activity which
Clinton views as the path toward a nuclear weapon, while
at the same time it's well-known that she is prepared to
intervene militarily. With Clinton as president the
world is heading for a head-on collision in the Middle
East. Should the American people choose Republican candidate
John McCain for president, that will mean a continuation
of the Bush years. Senator Joe Lieberman, the man behind
the mentioned amendment,
sees in McCain the 'principled leader in time of
war'. McCain
is clear regarding the situation with Iran: 'There
is only one thing worse than military action [against
Iran], and that is a nuclear-armed Iran'.
McCain
recently: 'There's going to be other wars. I'm sorry
to tell you, there's going to be other wars. We will
never surrender, but there will be other wars'. Even one
of the most vociferous trendsetters behind the coming
war with Iran, John Bolton, is
supporting McCain: 'I think Senator McCain's
statement [...] on how he would handle the Iranian
program is stronger than the current Bush administration
policy'. Bolton has
given up hope that the Bush Administration will
start a war against Iran. At the same time Bolton, along
with neoconservative patriarch Norman Podhoretz, makes
these kinds of dramatic statements as an incitement to
Israel to take action. Presumably they do this with the
thought in the back of their heads that America will
show its solidarity with Israel as soon as their ally
comes under fire from an Iranian counterattack. Coming on the heels of the debacle that the presidency
of George Bush has been, it's quite possible on the one
hand that the American presidential elections will
result in the
election of the Democratic version of the right-wing
one-party state that seems to have maintained power in
America for so long. On the other hand the Republican
variant can't be ruled out either. For it could be the
case that the Republican Party has sustained less damage
from it's association with the Bush Adminstration than
is sometimes assumed. The extremist character of the
current administration might not be ascribed by voters
to the less extreme Republican Party, but instead only
to the members of the Bush Administration itself.
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