Israel
Planning a
September/October
Surprise?
By Ray
McGovern
17/07/08
"ICH"
-- -You
say you
expected
more
rhetoric
than reality
from
Senators
Obama and
McCain
yesterday in
their
speeches on
Iraq and
Afghanistan?
Well, that’s
certainly
what you
got.
What I find
nonetheless
amazing is
how they,
and the
pundits,
have taken
such little
notice of
the dramatic
change in
the
political
landscape
occasioned
by Iraqi
Prime
Minister
Nouri al-Maliki’s
bombshell on
July 7 — his
insistence
on a
“timetable”
for
withdrawal
of US troops
before any
accord is
reached on
their
staying past
the turn of
the year.
Responding
to a
question at
his press
conference
yesterday,
President
George W.
Bush showed
that he was
vaguely
aware that
the
timetable
is, as
Robert
Dreyfuss
says (in
Truthout,
July 7), a
“big deal.”
Bush even
alluded
haltingly to
the
possibility
of extending
the UN
mandate
still
further.
But it is
far from
clear that
Maliki, who
is under
great
domestic
pressure,
would be
able to sell
that to the
various
factions
upon which
he depends
for support,
much less to
those which
he must keep
at bay. As
Dreyfuss
points out,
Maliki and
his Shiite
allies are
also under
considerable
pressure
from Iran,
which
remains the
chief ally
of the
ruling
alliance of
Shiites.
Most
important,
Maliki is by
no means in
control of
what happens
next.
Israel
Here’s where
it gets
sticky. No
one who
knows about
third rails
in US
politics
would expect
the
candidates
or the
fawning
corporate
media (FCM)
to address
how those
now running
Israel are
likely to be
looking at
the
implications
of a large
US troop
withdrawal
from Iraq
next year.
I am
remembering
how I was
pilloried on
June 16,
2005,
immediately
after
Congressman
John
Conyers’
rump-Judiciary
Committee
hearing in
the bowels
of the
Capitol, for
a candid
answer to a
question
from one of
his
colleagues;
i. e., if
the invasion
of Iraq was
not about
WMD, and not
about
non-existent
ties between
Iraq and
al-Qaeda,
then why did
we attack?
In answer, I
used the
acronym OIL.
O for oil; I
for Israel;
and L for
Logistics,
meaning the
military
bases deemed
by
neoconservatives
as necessary
to protect
both.
Neither the
House
members
present nor
the media
people
seemed to
have any
problem with
oil and
military
bases as
factors-in
itself an
interesting
commentary.
However, the
suggestion
that one
main motive
was an
attempt to
make that
part of the
Middle East
safer for
Israel (yes,
folks, the
neocons
really
thought that
attacking
Iraq would
do that) —
well, that
was
anathema.
As it is
anathema
today to
suggest that
this is
still one of
the main
reasons,
besides oil,
that Elliott
Abrams,
other
neocons —
not to
mention Vice
President
Dick Cheney
and his team
— insist we
must stay,
Maliki and
his
associates
be damned.
(See the
cartoon in
the
Washington
Times today
showing
Maliki and
words
telling him
“We are NOT
leaving.”)
Here in
Washington
we can sit
back and
quibble over
the
implications
of such
remarks by
Maliki and
other Iraqi
leaders. The
Israelis
have to take
such
statements
seriously.
No agreement
on US forces
staying into
2009 without
a timetable
for
withdrawal?
For Tel
Aviv, this
is getting
very
serious.
My guess is
the Israeli
leaders are
apoplectic.
The fiasco
in Iraq
clearly has
made the
region much
more
dangerous
for Israel.
There are
actually
real
“terrorists”
and
“extremists”
now in Iraq,
and the
prospect of
US troops
leaving has
got to be a
cause of
acute
concern in
Tel Aviv.
Keeping the
US
Entangled:
Iran
This
dramatic
change — or
even just
the specter
of it —
greatly
increases
Israel’s
incentive to
ensure the
kind of US
involvement
in the area
that would
have to
endure for
several
years. The
Israelis
need to
create
“facts on
the ground”
— something
to guarantee
that
Washington
will stand
by what U.S.
candidates,
including
Sen. Obama,
call “our
ally.”
(Never mind
that there
is no mutual
US-Israel
defense
treaty.)
Israel is
all too
painfully
aware that
it has only
six more
months of
Bush and
Cheney.
The
legislation
drafted by
the American
Israel
Public
Affairs
Committee (AIPAC)
being so
zealously
promoted in
Congress
calls for
the
equivalent
of a
blockade of
Iran. That
would be one
way to
entangle;
there are
many others.
The point is
that the
growing
danger that
the Israelis
perceive
will
probably
prompt them
to find a
way to get
the US
involved in
hostilities
with Iran.
Cheney and
Bush have
pretty much
given them
that
license,
with the
president
regularly
pledging to
defend “our
ally” if
Israel is
attacked.
All Israel
has to do is
to arrange
to be
attacked.
Not a
problem.
There are
endless
possibilities
among which
Israel can
choose to
catalyze
such a
confrontation
— with or
without a
wink and a
nod from
Cheney and
Abrams. The
so-called
“amber
light” said
to have been
given to the
Israelis is,
I believe,
already seen
as quite
sufficient;
they are not
likely to
feel a need
to wait
until it
turns green.
So far, the
resistance
of U.S.
senior
military has
been the
only real
obstacle to
the madness
of
hostilities
with Iran.
(And one
need only
read Scott
Ritter’s
article on
Truthdig
this week to
get a sense
for why they
would be
chary.)
Joint Chiefs
of Staff
Chairman,
Adm. Mike
Mullen, has
been
described as
warning the
Israelis
that a
“Third
Front” in
the Middle
East would
be a
disaster. I
think,
rather, he
was trying
to warn
anyone who
might listen
in
Washington,
including
until now
tone-deaf
lawmakers.
Even if the
pundits are
correct in
suggesting
that Mullen
is joined by
Defense
Secretary
Robert Gates
in trying to
resist the
neocons and
Cheney,
Mullen’s
tone at his
press
conference
two weeks
ago
suggested he
is fighting
a rear guard
action-against
the
“crazies” in
the White
House, as
well as
those in Tel
Aviv. And
when is the
last time
the crazies
lost a
political
battle with
such
implications
for Israel?
Mullen had
just
returned
from Tel
Aviv. He
appreciates
better than
most the
fecklessness
of endless
speculation
over whether
Israel or
the U.S.
might strike
Iran first.
Even if the
Israeli
leaders have
no explicit
assurances
from the
White House,
they almost
certainly
calculate
that, once a
casus belli
is
established,
their
friends in
Washington —
and the
troops they
command —
are likely
to be
committed to
the fray big
time.
Seatbelts
Please…
Viewed from
Tel Aviv it
appears an
increasingly
threatening
situation,
with more
urgent need
to “embed”
(so to
speak) the
United
States even
more deeply
in the
region — in
a
confrontation
involving
both
countries
with Iran.
A perfect
storm is
brewing:
– Petraeus
ex Machina,
with a
record of
doing Vice
President
Dick
Cheney’s
bidding,
takes
command of
CENTCOM in
September;
– Sen.
McCain’s
numbers are
likely to be
in the
toilet at
that point
(because of
the economy
as much as
anything
else);
– McCain
will be seen
by the White
House as the
only
candidate
with
something to
gain by a
wider war
(just as by
another
“terrorist
incident”);
– The
Bush/Cheney
months will
be down to
three;
– And Maliki
will not be
able to cave
in to
Washington
on the
timeline
requirement
he has
publicly
set.
In sum,
Israel is
likely to be
preparing a
September/October
surprise
designed to
keep the US
bogged down
in Iraq and
in the wider
region by
provoking
hostilities
with Iran.
And don’t be
surprised if
it starts as
early as
August.
Israel’s
leaders may
well plead
for
understanding
on the part
of those
U.S.
officials
not tipped
off in
advance,
claiming
that they
could not
distinguish
amber from
green with
their
night-vision
goggles on.
Would they
hesitate?
Please tell
me who…just
who is
likely to
turn on the
siren, pull
them over,
and even
think of
giving them
a
summons-once
the patrol
car computer
confirms
their
privileged
licenses?
Ray
McGovern
works with
Tell the
Word, the
publishing
arm of the
ecumenical
Church of
the Saviour
in
inner-city
Washington.
A former
Army
intelligence
officer and
CIA analyst,
he is now on
the Steering
Group of
Veteran
Intelligence
Professionals
for Sanity
(VIPS).
A shorter
version of
this article
appeared
first on
www.Consortiumnews.com
.
