NUCLEAR SHOWDOWN WITH IRAN
Iran has thrown down the gauntlet to the US and EU by resuming uranium enrichment laboratory tests. Tehran is not heeding a mounting chorus of warnings from its foes in the west and even its friends in Moscow.
`We won’ be bullied,’ said Iran’s Persident, Mahmoud Ahamdinejad, who denied Iran has nuclear ambitions and insisted his nation had every right under the Nuclear Non-proliferation Treaty to enrich uranium to produce electrical power.
In a prime example of the pot calling the kettle black, the US and Israel - both nuclear powers - accuse Iran of secretly developing nuclear weapons in violation of the Non-Proliferation Treaty. They offer no confirming proof of this charge, just more so-called leaks from `high-level administration sources’ in the US accusing Iran of working on a nuclear delivery system. We saw precisely the same pattern in the run-up to the invasion of Iraq.
Tehran accuses the west of nuclear apartheid and hypocrisy, citing the Bush Administration’s recent pact to provide fuel and technology to India’s nuclear programs, which Washington formerly condemned. India has an estimated 100 nuclear weapons and is building land and sea-launched missiles that can strike the continental United States. Only Muslim nations, (Pakistan excepted since it’s a reliable US ally) it seems, are not to be allowed nuclear weapons.
Given that US and Israel are already probing Iran’s defenses and may soon outright attack Iran, and threats from the EU to impose sanctions, one suspects Iran would not likely risk so much unless it is racing to make nuclear weapons. Or, it has simply decided to seek a showdown with the US and its allies.
Note: Iran has not violated the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty(which nuclear-armed Israel, India, and Pakistan never even signed, North Korea signed initially but later withdrew). So Iran may be punished for agreeing to international inspection of nuclear facilities while those nations that refused to cooperate with efforts to limit nuclear weapons are being studiously ignored. In fact, the head of the UN nuclear agency was recently in Israel and failed to say anything about its secret nuclear arsenal, estimated at 200 nuclear warheads.
UN monitors say Iran may have concealed some questionable activities – even these charges are hotly disputed - but did not violate the treaty. Western experts believe if Iran is indeed secretly working on nuclear arms, it is still 5-10 years away from being able to develop deliverable nuclear weapons.
The US recently admitted to losing thousands of documents and tins of radioactive material from its nuclear program. Iran is being asked to adhere to a much higher level of accountability and record-keeping than the USA.
A `deliverable nuclear warhead’ means a compact, lightweight nuclear device that can withstand the g-forces and heat of being carried in a missile warhead. The recent brouhaha over a New York Times story claiming leaked data from a purloined Iranian laptop computer showing Iran was working on a nuclear missile warhead has been dismissed by a leading American expert as erroneous.
The design in question dealt with a conventional missile warhead, not one designed to carry a nuclear weapon. But no matter. The New York Times, continuing to act as a mouthpiece for administration war propaganda, trumpeted these latest spurious charges.
Why would Iran seek nuclear arms? What motivates Iran’s new president, Mahmoud Ahmadinejad to challenge the west?
Iranians see themselves threatened by the US, Britain, Israel and Russia. Iran is now surrounded by US bases in Iraq, Afghanistan, the Gulf, and Pakistan. Iranians feel historically exploited and victimized by the great powers – and indeed, they were.
In 1941, Britain and Soviets invaded Iran. This forgotten part of WWII was an aggression every bit as criminal as Hitler’s 1939 invasion of Poland.
In 1952, the US and Britain overthrew Iran’s democratic government after it tried to take the national oil company away from British control. They imposed their puppet, the grotesque Shah Reza Pahlevi, who inflicted a reign of terror and unbridled thievery on Iranians.
In 1980, the US and Britain engineered Saddam Hussein’s invasion of Iran in an attempt to crush its new revolutionary Islamic government. That war inflicted nearly one million casualties on Iran. President Ahmadinejad led volunteers in the war.
Iran’s suffering at foreign hands has produced national fury, paranoia, and xenophobia. Many Iranians have a `the world is against us’ mentality, fear and hatred of Israel, which threatens Iran with nuclear weapons, and belief the US or Russia intends to seize Iran’s oil.
The US invasion of Iraq has heightened these fears. Allocation of funds by the US Congress to overthrow Iran’s elected government, and the conviction among Iranians that Israel controls US foreign policy accentuates Iran’s sense of growing peril.
Accordingly, some militants insist Iran must have nuclear weapons for self-defense. They point to nuclear-armed North Korea, which forced Washington to back off threats of invasion when it dug and threatened to fight to the death. Iraq’s lesson is not lost on Iranians: if Saddam had nuclear weapons, the US would not have invaded his nation.
Ironically, hard-line President Ahmadinejad is the only democratically elected leader in the Mideast. But since taking office, he has ignited an international firestorm by calling for Israel to be `wiped off the map,’ and the Jewish holocaust `a myth.’ While popular at home, these inflammatory statements have brought international condemnation down in Iran.
This recalls the PLO’s idiotic former spokesman, Ahmad Shukairy, who proclaimed, on the eve of the 1967 Arab-Israeli War, `we will drive the Jews into the sea!’ This ludicrous bombast gave Israel a perfect excuse to launch a surprise attack on the Arabs, and seize large swathes of their territory.
Similarly, Ahmadinejad just gave Israel a perfect excuse to attack Iran. When this happens, there will be scant sympathy around the globe for Iran .
There is little doubt Israel is preparing to attack Iran’s nuclear infrastructure, repeating its 1981 destruction of Iraq’s Osirak reactor. The US has provided Israel long-ranged F-15I strike aircraft and new deep penetrating bombs for this mission. Israeli aircraft need only overfly Jordan, which is a virtual US-Israeli protectorate, then US-controlled Iraq, to reach Iran. A similar route would be used to attack Pakistan’s nuclear infrastructure.
The western media is saying a leader who utters such dangerous nonsense as Ahmadinejad cannot be trusted with nuclear weapons. Iranians would reply that unlike the US, Iran has not invaded any other countries.
Speaking of dangerous nonsense, was it not George Bush – who commands the US nuclear button – who claimed Iraq had wmd’s that menaced the world? Or that Iraqi germ-dispensing drones were poised to attack a sleeping USA from lurking freighters in the North Atlantic?
Ahmadinejad is picking this fight because his challenge to the west and Israel hugely appeals to most Iranians. He seems to be actually daring the US to attack Iran.
Some Islamic militants are actually hoping for a US invasion of Iran, which has 68 million people. Such an adventure, they believe, would result in a major American defeat, just as the Germans were broken in Russia.
Ahmadinejad comes from the generation of Shia fighters that faced eight years of savage, bloody war with Iraq – twice the length of World War I. During this holocaust, they faced massed bombardments, poison gas attacks, and the nightmare of trench warfare.
Iran used human wave suicide attacks, and sent teenage volunteers to clear Iraqi minefields with their bodies. It was the realization of the Shia creed of sacrifice and martyrdom in a fight against hopeless odds.
Having faced Saddam’s fury in an eight-year war in which 400,00 Iranian soldiers died and 600,000 were wounded, Iranians do not fear George Bush.
Like Bush, Ahmadinejad boasts, `bring’em on.’ He assumes the over-stretched US military can barely hold on to Iraq, never mind invade Iran. A shutoff of Iranian oil exports would send gas prices skyrocketing. And he knows that US forces in Iraq are hostages to its Shia majority. Any attack on Iraq would invite reprisals by Shias against US forces spread across Iraq.
So, at least for now, it appears President Ahmadinejad has decided to do a North Korea: that is, defy the western powers, dig in, and be ready to fight to the last man.
But Iran must also face the very real threat of punishing UN-imposed sanctions, , unless they are vetoed by China or Russia or even a US naval blockade The EU is proposing sanctions as a way of trying to divert the US from military action, which would damage Europe more than the United States.
Both Iran and its western oil customers may end up the losers in such a confrontation.
Copyright Eric S. Margolis 2006
WRITER’S NOTEBOOK
*This week we laud the United States for its superb technology and brilliant scientists who sent a space probe on a 3 billion mile, 7-year odyssey around the sun to collect space dust, and then returned, right on schedule, landing in Utah at the Dugway Proving Grounds just a few miles from its intended aim point. Truly, a near miraculous achievement in which all Americans should take enormous pride. Now, if they can just do something about all those perennially late airline flights……………………………….
*A US air strike on a Pakistani village late last week that killed at least 18 civilians, many of them children, at the religious feast of the Eid, provoked outrage and fury across Pakistan. Acting on reports al-Qaida number two, Dr Ayman al-Zawahiri was in the remote village, CIA Predator drones and Air Force F-16’s heavily bombed a tribal compound. This was an outright act of war against a close ally and worthy of Murder Inc. No such attacks are acceptable without positive identification of the intended targets. The attack once again shows Pakistanis their military regime has become more responsive to the demands of Washington than its own people.
*Canadian elections are about as exciting as votes in Finland, but this weekend marks a really interesting race between the party of power, the Liberals, and the upstart Conservatives. The Liberals have been in power far too long, becoming deeply corrupt and arrogant. But they have frightened many Canadians seeking change and cleaner government by comparing the Conservative leader, Stephen Harper, to….George Bush. Well, Harper is no Bush. In fact, he’s a rather unimpressive politician with no charisma or strategic view, but at least he has not been named in corruption.
Alas, Canada’s Conservatives have missed a golden opportunity to turn their country into an economic powerhouse and world pace setter by slashing high taxes, trimming regulations, and reducing the size of their do-nothing, largely unnecessary, bloated and voracious federal government. Canada would shine if it adopted Switzerland’s system of powerful Cantons and minimalist federal government.
*It’s amazing that the major US TV networks keep using Pentagon-issued terminology in their new broadcasts long after we have learned that much of what we were told about Iraq was a pack of outright lies. US forces are `rebuilding Iraq,’ says US TV, heedless that it was the US that destroyed Iraq, which was one of the Arab World’s most developed nations before 1991. `Terrorists’ are attacking US troops in Iraq, even though the Geneva Conventions give all peoples the right to oppose foreign invaders. Whenever civilians are killed by the US military, the Pentagon promises `an investigation,’ which, of course, never happens. Iraq is the `frontline in the war on terror’ – except there was no terrorism there before the US invasion. And so on…..
*I am saddened to watch the new Boeing 777 twin-engine airliner outselling the excellent Airbus four-engined A340 by ten to one. Operating the 777 is cheaper, so airlines are snapping it up. But think next time you are flying over the North Atlantic or Pacific if you would rather be aboard a two or four-engine plane. Engines are very reliable these days, but accidents and shut-downs do happen – you just don’t read about them. I always prefer the A340 – it’s just more comfortable and secure.
*A propos, I find American Airlines has pulled up its socks and now again has pretty decent service and on-time ops. The same cannot be said for Air Canada, which used to be a fine airline, but is now degenerating into an ugly little sister of evil Aeroflot – socialist services at capitalist prices. I find British Airways to be very good and fly them often; ditto for Air France. Lufthansa is austere and unfriendly but gets you there alive. Avoid dreaded Alitalia, the flying labor strike.
***
Posted by Eric Margolis on January 16, 2006 03:08 PM
Comments:
About that airstrike in Pakistan….
1. Pakistan’s Govt. itself was involved, for sure. So it isn’t exactly an act of war.
2. Even though it all went tits-up, I.. we Pakistanis.. still have faith in our Govt. I didn’t even know there was a protest in Karachi. I live here and I didn’t see it. Nobody really cares what happens to a bunch of Taliban supporters.
3. Our relationship with the US is growing. Despite everything.
4. Somebody just rocket attacked a post in Bannu. This isn’t an American attack. Somebody wants to crack the US-Pakistan alliance.
5. Our intelligence sources say, Al-Qaeda was present in the area and 4 or 5 of them did die. So some good came out of it, I guess. If Zawahiri or any Al-Qaeda dies, it is good for the country. These people don’t belong here.
Having said all that, I have to say, I’m not comfortable with the Americans at all. I don’t trust them or like them. They are crazy. They talk funny, they walk funny and they are sexually dysfunctional. And worst of all, they don’t play Cricket.
——————————-
“a similar route would be used to attack Pakistans nuclear infrastructure”
Yeah… right…
If they could’ve, they would’ve.
Posted by Rampart at January 17, 2006 01:01 PM
About the A340 versus 777 thing, are you sure that it isn’t a case of the Boeing aircraft being superior in some way. If you want to do a fair two versus four engines comparison, you may wish to compare A340 and A330 sales, as the Airbus A330 is essentially the same airframe as the A340, but with two engines instead of four.
Also, I know that Eric wants to restore flight engineers, but I’d be interested to know what his role would be. Is Eric a full-bore traditionalist when it comes to flight deck design, or would he be essentially as a backup for the electronic flight instruments?
Posted by George Carty at January 18, 2006 04:34 AM
If there is any dysfunctional party in this whole gamble, it’s the Govt. of Pakistan and not the American people.
The rocket attack is not to crack US-Pakistan Alliance but to create hatred among the two nations which of course is Indian strategy to first Isolate Pakistan and then crush it, an old dream which they will never achieve.
Israel case is unique they did destroyed the Iraqi nuclear reactor; they made attempts on Pakistan nuclear facilities. So, why not they can try their luck again but they don’t need to fly from Israel when they can fly from an aircraft carrier. But one thing which I don’t understand is the Israel fear, because Israel is a tiny place and there are a lot of Muslims living in Israel and no one will try to kill Muslims even if they hat Jews nobody will go to such an extent. It’s not possible. Second, it will not be possible for an extremist government at all to use nuclear weapon as they will be following the strict code of Islam which strictly prohibit killing innocent people whether Jews or any other religion.
Posted by Peace at January 18, 2006 11:09 AM
Peace:
Though I don’t agree with you about the Govt. of Pakistan being dysfunctional, I certainly do agree with you 200% about who is behind these other rocket attacks which target our para-military posts. Of course India is being it. Ever since the Yarami Yindoos slithered back into Afdirtistan, we’ve had many little troubles…. including the arms being supplied to criminals in Balochistan.
As for nukes… the Israeli fear is based on the fact that 80% of the Jewish population lives on a strip of land that is 10 miles wide and 100 miles long. As they say… “they are only one nuke wide”. They can’t afford to take a single hit.
And yes, killing civilians is un-islamic. But I doubt that will stop anyone from pressing DA BUTTON.
Posted by Rampart at January 18, 2006 01:33 PM
Rampart:
>I certainly do agree with you 200% about who is behind these other rocket attacks which target our para-military posts.<
Aaaaah, do you think that maybe the one behind the paramilitary “posts” on this forum (the one with the interestingly obscene prose) is from India too? I wonder. (I’m chuckling to myself, because your phrase rang a bell in my mind on the subject)
Posted by JonnyBoy0416 at January 19, 2006 11:44 AM
Eric: 777’s? A340? Bring back the Boeing 314, the Yankee Clipper flying boats. Now THERE was a plane. And why the hell doesn’t my typewriter work on this thing???
Bill
Posted by Bill at January 19, 2006 11:46 AM
Osama’s truce offer => “It is obvious now that Bush has been misleading the people. It is better for you not to fight the Muslims on their territory and we offer a long-term truce.”
…soooo… PR strategy to make himself look like a peace-maker - or the crushing realisation that
1. (since 1776) America is willing to endure endless attrition and global condemnation in order to win any war that is important to them; and
2. Their bombs-by-remote-control will never stop (given the latest assertion that the widely-condemned recent US drone-bombing killed 4 Al-Quaida execs)
…just wondering.
Posted by JonnyBoy0416 at January 19, 2006 12:16 PM
• The sorrows of empire : militarism, secrecy, and the end of the Republic, by Johnson, Chalmers A.
• The new Pearl Harbor : disturbing questions about the Bush administration and 9/11 by Griffin, David Ray.
• Ghost wars : the secret history of the CIA, Afghanistan, and bin Laden, from the Soviet invasion to September 10, 2001 by Coll, Steve.
• In the Hand of the Taliban: Her Extraordinary Story by Yvonn Ridley.
http://www.lewrockwell.com/orig/margolis12.html
May be it won’t make any sense either.
Posted by Peace at January 19, 2006 03:57 PM
JonnyBoy:
I’m sorry, you’ve lost me. There be an Indian here? Who are you talking about? Tell me so I can bite his arse off.
A “post” btw, is our english for “checkpoint” or “observation-post”. Someone is busy blowing ours up and it doesn’t make sense for the Americans to be doing that. (this is a separate issue than the missile-strike)
And what phrase did I use that rang a bell? “Yarami Yindoo”? Substitute the “Y”s with “H”s and you get a swear-word that ought to be tattooed on every Indian’s forehead. We just use the “Y” in case Eric has automatic swear-word blocking enabled.
Posted by Rampart at January 20, 2006 07:34 AM
Hello there!
Concerning Iran.
Greenback versas Euro.
The smoke and mirrors of nuclear technolgy is great for the read. ***Chuckle Chuckle***
IRAN HAS OIL, JUST LIKE CANADA.
Iran has created a new monetary burse. This means that to buy oil from Iran you must use EURO dollars to exchange for the Iranian Oil. The GREENBACK will no longer be accepted. This said, what would happen to the GREENBACK, and all BANKS dealing in the GREENBACK. What will those with interest owed and interest in do? Maybe PROTECT THE INTEREST.
The ships are already at sea.
^^Pray for all those whom choose freedom to choose.^^
Posted by Why is a Cause, Not an Effect at January 21, 2006 05:33 PM
What will happen to greenback? Greenback will turn into toilet paper, thats what will happen.
What does the US make anyway? Everything … every consumer item of any use… can be had from China… or any of dozens of Asian countries. The Dollar can’t fly on its own.
The only option for them to stop this from happening is to do something very stupid… like attack Iran.
Posted by Rampart at January 22, 2006 01:47 AM
Rampart: I understood the post thing, just an innocent “double-entrendre” (military “post” vs internet “post”). The gentleman I was referring to is the one who posts the obscene gibberish, and I think had a spat with you recently as to your citizenship - which made me suspect it was in fact his citizenship that was dubious. Too bad, he may have something useful to say but I never have the patience to wade through it.
Posted by JonnyBoy0416 at January 23, 2006 06:17 AM
Oh… him….
He can’t speak English… or proper Urdu (I can tell even if you’re writing in english…. there are some common grammatical errors we tend to make) so he’s most likely pretending to be a moron… just coming here to muck things up. And since he can’t speak urdu, he sure as hell ain’t from here.
Then again… he might be a language challenged blithering idiot for real. Just hard to believe how such a person hasn’t been locked up yet.
Posted by Rampart at January 23, 2006 01:26 PM
And no, he hasn’t got anything useful to say.
He writes like some of the Indians (hindi speakers) from the early days of the internet… when we all went to Usenet and soc.culture.pakistan. We always found his type there. All Indians with bad language skills but very eager to mouth off, no matter what.
Posted by Rampart at January 23, 2006 01:30 PM
RamPart:
Thanks for all the insult.
Posted by Peace at January 23, 2006 02:25 PM
May be the world is run by the smartest guys like you, the kind of guys who sank Enron.
Posted by Peace at January 23, 2006 03:37 PM
Peace:
Actually, JonnyBoy and I were talking about (at least I was..) that odd fellow named “Salamscion” or something. He has serious mental problems. Therefore he must be an Indian.
But as you thought I was talking about YOU… well… The old cop trick works! Cop barks loud enough and the real thief pisses his pants.
So you’re an Indian too, huh? With a left-wing hippy name like “Peace” (and your stilted english)… of course you are.
And you’re welcome.
Posted by Rampart at January 23, 2006 04:45 PM
I am the one who talked something about your citizenship and so, at least JonnyBoy was talking about me. Anyway, I am a proud Pakistani and need no certificate from anyone. But I do believe that our problems will be solved the day our Generals start loving Quran more then they love Shakespeare.
Posted by Peace at January 23, 2006 05:59 PM
I also had an argument with that Salam-arsehole about his citizenship (he was trying to speak Spanish), so I assumed Jonnyboy might be talking about him. He does post what can only be described as “obscene gibberish”.
As for YOU… I still have my suspicions about you mister. Only an Indian would still mention Enron, for example.
Stay away from me.
Posted by Rampart at January 24, 2006 03:41 AM
To get back on track…
Maybe Ahmed-Nijad is a CIA mole? Such a high level of blatancy can’t come out of anyone who loves their country. Specially since it is all unnecessary.
Or has he got a nuke already and all that radiation has gone to his head?
Ali… the 4th Caliph and Mohamed’s cousin… once said, “a man’s wisdom can be judged by how much he keeps his mouth shut”.
I would’ve thought the Iranians… being Shia-muslims… would take special care to keep Ali’s sayings in mind.
I also have to say, I am glad someone else can see the New York Times for the propaganda mouthpiece it is.
Posted by Rampart at January 24, 2006 04:03 AM
I meant Salamscion. Sorry for the confusion. Idealogues are scary enough, but that type is the worst. His speech has always made me suspect him of being a certain type of person (who happened to be an Indian extremist misrepresenting himself), that’s all. Extremists of all sorts are, in my vernacular, dinks.
Posted by JonnyBoy0416 at January 24, 2006 07:11 AM
RamPart & JonnyBoy:
My apologies to both of you.
Posted by Peace at January 24, 2006 09:18 AM
Rampant/rampart rat you’re tryin to be a naughty professor, this movie was coming from HBO day b4 yesterday and I was thinkin bout rampart-rat in other words king of cesspool, and I’m a King of Jungle (LEO) I’ve got one sandal of genuine Cheetah skin in which I fixed MRF tyre sole, I gotcha dis killing sandal last month since then I’ve been killed several rats like rampart so be scared of it.It has been killing Rampart dy-Nasty.
Posted by Salamscion at January 24, 2006 01:16 PM
Yes, you little Indian bastard, your slip is showing. You have always been so obvious, even non-Pakistanis can see through your pathetic little act.
“MRF Tyre” is it? India’s largest tyre company? Just couldn’t help it could you? LOL
You are out of of your depth, Yarami-Yindoo.
Case closed.
Posted by Rampart at January 24, 2006 03:09 PM