A
Phony
Crisis –
And
a Real One
By Patrick
J. Buchanan
15/07/08
"WND"
-- --
WASHINGTON –
Last week,
the front
pages of the
world press
blossomed
with photos
of four
Iranian
rockets,
fired in
salvo,
heading
skyward.
The image
was powerful
and the
message
reinforced
by the head
of the
Iranian
Revolutionary
Guard.
Should
Israel
attack Iran,
said Ali
Shira, Tel
Aviv will be
"set on
fire."
U.S.
reaction was
swift and
bristling.
"Rice Says
U.S. Will
Defend
Gulf,"
declared the
headline
over the AP
story that
began:
"Condoleezza
Rice flexed
America's
muscles in
the Middle
East
Thursday,
forcefully
warning Iran
the U.S.
won't ignore
threats and
will take
any action
necessary to
defend
friends and
interests in
the Persian
Gulf. ...
"Rice said
Iran's
leaders
should
understand
that
Washington
won't
dismiss
provocations
from Tehran
and has the
ability to
counter
them. 'I
don't think
the Iranians
are too
confused,
either,
about the
capability
and the
power of the
United
States to do
exactly
that.'"
And what
were the
results of
last week's
missile
crisis in
the Gulf?
Tensions
rose,
strengthening
Tehran's
embattled
Mahmoud
Ahmadinejad.
And oil
prices shot
from $136 a
barrel to a
record $147.
That
$11-a-barrel
spike alone
translates
into $25
million a
day in fresh
revenue for
Ahmadinejad
and Co. And
as the
United
States
imports 13
million of
the 20
million
barrels we
daily
consume,
that $11
spike in
price
translates
into $143
million more
sucked out
of the U.S.
economy
every day –
into the
coffers of
Canada,
Mexico,
Venezuela,
Saudi Arabia
and OPEC.
Can we not
see who
benefits and
who pays for
this war
talk?
Every day
the war
drums beat,
the mullahs
get richer
and we get
poorer.
Which raises
the
question:
Was this
mini-missile
crisis
cooked up by
the mullahs
to rip off
Uncle Sam?
For by
week's end
it appeared
the
Americans
had been
had,
big-time.
Saturday's
New York
Times
reported
that that
photo of the
four Iranian
missiles
fired in
salvo had
been
doctored.
One rocket
appears
twice in the
same photo.
The large
missile, on
inspection,
was not the
new
Shahab-3b,
which has a
range of
1,200 miles,
but a
Shahab-3a,
with a range
of 900
miles. It is
no longer in
production.
The missiles
fired with
the
Shahab-3a
turned out
to be Scuds,
a
short-range
missile that
is no threat
to Israel.
The second
day's firing
turns out to
have been of
a single
anti-ship
missile.
Iranian TV
showed one
firing from
three
angles,
making it
appear as
though three
missiles had
been fired
in
succession.
"The bottom
line is that
the Iranians
are tweaking
our noses,"
said Charles
Vick, an
expert on
Iran's
missile
forces.
Under
Secretary of
State Nick
Burns then
splashed
cold water
on Iran's
alleged
crash
program to
acquire
nuclear
weapons.
"Iran has
not yet
perfected
(uranium)
enrichment,"
said Burns,
"and, as a
direct
result of
U.N.
sanctions,
Iran's
ability to
procure
technology
or items of
significance
to its
missile
programs,
even
dual-use
items, is
being
impaired."
Though the
ex-head of
Mossad,
Shabtai
Shavit, says
Iran may be
one year
away from a
bomb – and
will use it
on Israel –
according to
the latest
U.S.
National
Intelligence
Estimate,
Iran shut
down its
nuclear
weapons
program in
2003.
Iran, says
Burns, has
not yet
mastered the
technology
of
converting
uranium gas
into fuel
for use in
power
plants, let
alone the
stuff of
bombs. And
even if Iran
is one day
able to
enrich to
weapons
grade, she
would still
have to
build and
test a
nuclear
device, then
weaponize it
to fit atop
a missile
and deploy a
missile
force. All
in all, says
Burns,
Iran's
progress
with uranium
enrichment
has been
"modest."
There is
thus no
imminent
crisis to
justify war
on Iran.
Yet, what is
Nancy
Pelosi's
Democratic
House doing?
Some 220
members, a
majority,
have
endorsed
House
Concurrent
Resolution
362. This
virtual war
resolution
"demands"
that
President
Bush
initiate a
blockade to
halt all
Iranian
imports of
refined
petroleum
products and
impose
"stringent
inspection
requirements
on all
persons,
vehicles,
ships,
planes,
trains, and
cargo
entering or
departing
Iran."
A Democratic
House that
came to
power
denouncing
the rush to
war on Iraq
is about to
vote to
demand that
Bush commit
an act of
war against
Iran.
The front
men for 362
are liberal
Gary
Ackerman of
New York and
conservative
Mike Pence
of Indiana.
But the
juice behind
them is that
of the
Israeli
lobby AIPAC,
which is
marching in
step with
Israel.
Last week,
Mossad's
chief, Meir
Dagan, was
here to make
the case for
war on Iran.
This week,
Defense
Minister
Ehud Barak
visits Dick
Cheney and
maybe Bush.
Next week,
it is the
head of
Israel's
armed
forces.
Israel and
its Fifth
Column in
this city
seek to
stampede us
into war
with Iran.
Bush should
rebuff them,
and the
American
people
should tell
their
congressmen:
You vote for
362, we
don't vote
for you.
