It now appears that the idea of attacking Iran is again moving forward.
The Eisenhower strike force, armed with some 800 Tomahawk cruise
missiles as well as a fleet of strike aircraft, and already on station
in the Arabian Sea for over a month and a half, has moved into the
Persian Gulf. A second carrier group, led by the USS Stennis, is
steaming toward the Gulf, too. Already in position are three
expeditionary strike groups and an amphibious warship, all suitable for
landing Marines on Iranian beaches. On December 20, the
New York Times,
citing Pentagon sources, reported that both Britain and the U.S. are
moving additional naval forces into the region "in a display of
military resolve toward Iran that will come as the United Nations
continues to debate possible sanctions against the country." (We’ve all
seen what "displays of force" by the Bush administration actually turn
out to be.)
The idea of hitting Iran may make sense from the Bush-Cheney bunker,
where the only consideration is not what's good for the country, but
what's good for Bush and Cheney. After all, if you’re losing your war
in Iraq, and if you have hit bottom politically at home (Bush's ppublic
support ratings are now down in the 20s, where Nixon's were just before
his resignation, and Cheney's numbers have been in the teens for
months), and if the public is clamoring for an end to it all--and maybe
for your heads, too--expanding the conflict and putting the nation on a
full war footing can look like an attractive even if desperate gambit.
From the nation's point of view, of course, an attack on Iran would be
an unmitigated disaster. There are no more troops that the U.S. could
throw into battle (the Pentagon is scrambling just to find another
20,000 or so bodies that Bush wants to throw into the Iraq quagmire),
so an attack would have to be basically that--an attack.
Certainly the forces the Navy is assembling in the Persian Gulf,
together with the B-52s and B-1s and B-2s available at Diego Garcia in
the Indian Ocean and at bases in other countries in the region, are
capable of destroying most of Iran's nuclear facilities, as well as its
military infrastructure. But in terms of conquering territory, the most
the U.S. could hope to do would be to perhaps hold a beachhead on the
Straits of Hormuz, where the Persian Gulf links to the Arabian Sea. And
even that would be a bloody challenge.
There is no way the U.S. could hope to conquer Iran.
Nor would the Iranian people rise up and overthrow their theocratic
leaders--the same neoconservative fantasy that Bush war-mongers
promised ahead of the Iraq invasion, and which they are re-cycling now
to justify an attack on Iran. In fact, an attack on Iran, far from
sparking a rebellion against the government there, would crush the new
wave of reform that was evidenced in last week's local elections in
Iran, which dealt a blow to the country’s hardliners. Iran is a proud
nation with a history reaching back thousands of years. If attacked,
its people can be counted on to rally around their current rulers, and
its war-hardened soldiers can be counted on to fight to the death to
defend their country.
Moreover, while its military may be no match for America's, Iran has
many asymmetrical options for retaliation. As the key player in Iraq,
with close links to Iraq's Shia factions, Iran's military has trained
and armed the Badr Brigades--the largest and best-armed faction in
Iraq, and one which to date has stayed out of the fighting against US
forces. Iran is also close to the Mahdi Army of Moqtada al Sadr, and
could unleash his fanatical troops too, against US forces in Iraq. If
this happens, count on American casualty rates leaping to or even
surpassing Korea or Vietnam-era levels overnight.
Additionally, Iraq's intelligence services have connections with Shia
groups in Saudi Arabia and other oil-producing countries, and can be
expected to quickly organize cells to strike at economic and US
military targets there.
More seriously, of course, an attack on Iran will jack the price of oil
to levels never seen before. Even if the US managed to militarily
control the Straits of Hormuz, Iran's hundreds of stockpiled anti-ship
missiles, which are buried in bunkers all along the Persian Gulf, would
cause insurance rates to soar so high that no tanker could afford to
sail that route, effectively cutting off over one quarter of the
world’s oil supply. Virtually all of the oil produced in Iraq, Saudi
Arabia, Iran, Kuwait and the Arab Emirates would be trapped in the
ground. As well, the network of pipelines that bring oil from wellheads
to refineries and to storage and pier facilities would be virtually
indefensible against Iran-inspired sapper attacks.
Oil industry analysts have talked of oil leaping in price to $200 a
barrel or more in the event of a US war with Iran, and given how
panicked this country got when oil reached $80 a barrel recently,
there's no need to go into detail explaining what $200/barrel oil would
do to the U.S. economy--or to the global economy.
Of course, the biggest issue is that attacking Iran would be yet
another war crime by this craven administration. No one can argue that
Iran poses an imminent threat to anyone, least of all to the U.S.--the
only legitimate grounds under the U.N. Charter and the Nuremburg
Charter, to which the U.S. is a signatory, for initiating a war.
Attacking a country that poses no such threat is defined as the most
heinous of war crimes: a Crime Against Peace.
If Bush and Cheney perpetrate this crime, the Congress should initiate
immediate impeachment proceedings and should simultaneously pass
legislation terminating funding for the war. The important thing now is
for the American people to register their opposition to this war before
it happens. Call your senators and your representative and let them
know you don’t want it to happen, and you want impeachment if it does.
And add your name to the
petition against war. Also mark down January 27 in your calendar, for the big
march and rally against war and for impeachment in Washington, D.C. (to be followed by two days of lobbying Congress on Jan. 28-29.
Finally, send this story to everyone you know, and urge them to do the
same. At this point, with Democrats still cowering in their offices,
only the American people can stop this madness.