We have now reached another of those recurring
tinderbox moments relating to Iran. Yesterday, the Iranians officially
relaunched their nuclear program, beginning a suspended process of uranium
conversion at a facility near Isfahan. In this, Iran's emboldened clerical regime
defies the European troika France, Germany, England with which
it has been in negotiations, and perhaps creates a moment for which Bush administration
officials have longed, but whose challenging arrival they may now regret. The
board of governors of the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) met Tuesday
essentially on an emergency basis and perhaps in the near future the matter
of the Iranian nuclear program may even go to
the UN Security Council with possible sanctions on the table. (The passage
of any sanctions measure there is unlikely indeed, given Russian and Chinese
backing for the Iranians, not to speak of "the sympathy of other non-nuclear
states on the 35-nation IAEA board"). And then...? Well, that's the $64
dollar (a barrel) question, isn't it?
The geopolitical fundamentalists of the Bush administration have been itching
for a down-and-dirty "regime change" fight with the clerical fundamentalists
of Iran at least since the president, in his 2002
State of the Union Address, linked Iran, Saddam Hussein's hated neighboring
regime with which it had fought an eight-year war of the utmost brutality, and
the completely unrelated regime in North Korea into an infamous "axis of evil."
(Perhaps what the president meant was "excess of evil.") As we now know, Saddam's
Iraq, with its non-existent nuclear program, was chosen as the administration's
first target on its shock-and-awe "cakewalk" through the Middle East (and then,
assumedly, the rest of the world) exactly because it was a military shell of
its former self, a third-rate pushover compared to either Iran or North Korea.
As it happened, the Second-Cousin-Twice-Removed of All Battles turned into
as Saddam Hussein predicted the Mother of All Battles and war against
the rest of the "axis" fell into abeyance.
Now, we're back to a potential face-off with a country that at least has
an actual nuclear program, if not (unlike the North Koreans) a weapon to go
with it. The nuclear world as imagined by the Bush administration is, in fact,
a jaggedly uneven place. On the one hand, you have Iran, considered (like Saddam's
Iraq) an imminent proliferation threat (even while that proliferator-in-chief
of a nation Pakistan remains our bosom buddy); and yet Iran has, for at least
17 years (yes, Virginia, that's years, not months!), had a secret nuclear
program (as well as an above-board one) aimed (possibly) at creating the means
to create nuclear weapons. A new U.S. National
Intelligence Estimate (the first on Iran since 2001) was just leaked to
the press. This is one
of those documents brokered every now and then among the 15 agencies that
make up the official U.S. intelligence "community" there are more than
15 actually, but the others are fittingly "in the shadows." It evidently claims
that Iran may need another ten years or so to create the means to make
nuclear weapons (not even to have the weapons in hand). If that's accurate,
then we have a 27-year-plus-long effort to create one bomb. That to
my untutored mind is not exactly an overwhelming stat when it comes
to threat deployment.
Just at this moment (shades of Iraq), Iranian exiles are releasing
new information on supposedly secret and illegal nuclear work being done
by the Iranians, while Donald
Rumsfeld is claiming that U.S. forces have found new weaponry in the hands
of the Iraqi insurgency that came "clearly, unambiguously" from Iran and that
these will "ultimately [be] a problem for Iran." (Forget that it's quite illogical
for the Iranians to be supporting the largely Sunni Iraqi insurgency against
an allied, mainly Shi'ite government.) In the meantime, there's an 800-pound
nuclear gorilla sitting starkly at the center of the Middle Eastern proliferation
living room. That's Israel,
of course, with its extra-legal, super-secret arsenal of nuclear weapons, an
estimated 200-300 of them, ranging from city-busters to battlefield-sized tactical
nukes, and yet no news piece on the Iranian nuclear danger would be complete
without the absence of the Israeli arsenal. Go look yourself. A thousand articles
are appearing right now in the U.S. press on the Iranian nuclear crisis and
you would be hard-pressed to find a mention of the Israeli nuclear arsenal in
any of them.
Israel and India, two nuclear weapons powers that have never signed the Non-Proliferation
Treaty, are treated by the Bush administration with kid gloves in the
Indian case, the president actually wants to
turn over "peaceful" nuclear technology to its government (despite a prohibition
against doing so in the NPT).
Meanwhile, back in Washington, the Bush administration has just gotten a
new energy bill passed which does everything but dig the foundations for new
nuclear plants in your backyard (and, should a Chernobyl or two happen, also
lifts from the nuclear industry just about all responsibility for covering the
costs of catastrophe). And of course, the administration in its shock-and-awe
version of a nonproliferation policy simply forges ahead with its own plans
to create new, more usable generations of U.S. nuclear weapons and to implant
in
its global-strike planning various nuclear options, including the option
of taking out some of the Iranian nuclear program with nuclear weapons. It's
de-lovely. Honestly it is.
Don't even try to make sense of it! Fortunately, at this crucial moment when
rumors (and leaks) about administration plans for possible assaults on Iran
are multiplying think what that might do to oil prices, already hovering
at an unprecedented $64 a barrel Michael Schwartz offers us a soup-to-nuts
discussion of Iran, Iraq, and the Bush administration's boomerang policies when
it comes to both of them.
The Ironies of Conquest: The Bush administration's Iranian
Nightmare
by Michael Schwartz
In 1998, neoconservative theorist Robert
Kagan enunciated what would become a foundational belief of Bush administration
policy. He asserted that "a successful intervention in Iraq would revolutionize
the strategic situation in the Middle East, in ways both tangible and intangible,
and all to the benefit of American interests."
Now, over two years after Baghdad fell and the American occupation of Iraq
began, Kagan's prediction appears to have been fulfilled in reverse.
The chief beneficiary of the occupation and the chaos it produced has not been
the Bush administration, but Iran, the most populous and powerful member of
the "Axis of Evil," and the chief American competitor for dominance in the oil-rich
region. As diplomatic historian Gabriel Kolko commented: "By destroying a united
Iraq under [Saddam] Hussein the U.S. removed the main barrier to Iran's
eventual triumph."
The Road to Tehran Is Mined
At first, events looked to be moving in quite
a different direction. Lost in the obscure pages of the early coverage of the
Iraq War was a moment when, it seemed, the clerical regime in Iran flinched.
Soon after Saddam fled and Baghdad became an American town, Iran suddenly entered
into negotiations with Great Britain, France, and Germany on ending its nuclear
program, the most public point of friction with the U.S. After all, it was Saddam's
supposed nuclear program that had been the casus belli for the American
invasion, and Bush administration neoconservatives had been hammering away at
the Iranian program in a similar fashion.
Two developments ended this brief moment of seeming triumph for Washington.
As a start, American
officials, feeling their oats, balked at the tentative terms negotiated
by the Europeans because they did not involve regime change in Iran. This hard-line
American stance gave the Iranian leadership no room to maneuver and stiffened
their negotiating posture.
At the time, in the wake of its successful three-week war in Iraq, the Bush administration seemed ready, even eager, to apply extreme military pressure
to Iran. According to Washington
Post columnist William Arkin, the official U.S. strategic plan (formally
known as CONPLAN 8022-02) completed in November 2003 authorized "a preemptive
and offensive strike capability against Iran and North Korea." An administration
pre-invasion quip (reported by Newsweek on August 19, 2002) caught perfectly
the post-invasion mood ascendant in Washington: "Everyone wants to go to Baghdad.
Real men want to go to Tehran."
A second key development neutralized the American ability to turn its military
might in an Iranian direction: the rise of the Iraqi resistance. During the
several months after the fall of Baghdad, the Saddamist loyalists who had initially
resisted the U.S. occupation were augmented by a broader and more resilient
insurgency. As the character
of the occupation made itself known, small groups of guerrillas began defending
their neighborhoods from U.S. military patrols. These patrols were seeking out
suspected "regime loyalists" from the Ba'athist era by knocking down doors, shooting
whomever resisted, and arresting all men of "military age" in the household.
As the resistance spread, its various factions became more aggressive and resourceful.
Over the next year, it blossomed into a formidable and complex enemy that the
U.S. Army to the surprise of American officials in Washington and Baghdad
did not have the resources to defeat. It was, then, the swiftly growing
Iraqi resistance that, by preventing the consolidation of an American Iraq,
forced an Iranian campaign off the table and back into the shadows where it
has remained to this day.
The Nuclear Conundrum
The rise of the Iraqi resistance drastically
changed the equation for the Iranian leadership. The threat of an imminent
U.S. assault had reduced the long-term Iranian nuclear option to near-pointlessness,
which was why the Iranian leadership was willing to negotiate it away in exchange
for a guarantee of safety from attack. Once the prospect of a protracted guerrilla
war in neighboring Iraq arose, however, the Iranian leadership suddenly found
itself with an extended time horizon for tactical and strategic planning. Becoming
(or at least continually threatening to become) a nuclear power again became
a promising path of deterrence against future American threats at least
if the North Korean experience was any guide. So the Iranians began pushing
ahead with their nuclear program; and while no
one could be sure whether their work was aimed at the development of peaceful
nuclear energy (their claim) or nuclear weapons (as the Bush administration
insisted), their moves made it conceivable that they might actually be capable
of building a bomb in the many years that it would take it now became
clear for the U.S. to have any chance of pacifying Iraq.
The increasingly destructive, devolving American occupation in Iraq also
deflected the anger of an Iranian population that had been growing restless
under the harsh clerical hand of Iran's political leaders. At the time of the
invasion, opinion
surveys in Iran indicated both "widespread discontent within the Islamic
Republic" and a generally positive attitude toward the United States. ("[T]he
average Iranian does not bear ill will against America.") American officials
interpreted this to mean that "the clerics may have lost the upper hand" in
Iran. However, this widespread discontent quickly dissipated under the pressure
of regional events; and two years later, Iranians elected as president Mahmoud
Ahmadinejad, a fundamentalist militant and electoral underdog, who eliminated
the U.S. favored "moderate" in the first round of voting and then, in a runoff
round, soundly defeated a less radical representative of the Iranian establishment.
Moreover, he ran on a platform that advocated making Iran's nuclear program
then at a halt while negotiations were once again underway with the
Europeans a priority. Unlike his defeated opponent, who said he would
"work to improve relations" with the U.S., Ahmadinejad claimed "he would not
seek rapprochement."
In other words, instead of deterring or ending the Iranian nuclear effort,
the U.S. invasion and botched occupation encouraged and accelerated it, lending
it national prestige and rallying Iranian public opinion to the cause.
The China Connection
Saudi Arabia, Iraq, and Iran stand one-two-three
in global estimated oil and natural gas reserves. The Iraq invasion, which unsettled
world energy politics in unpredictable ways, set in motion portentous activities
in China, an undisputed
future U.S. economic competitor. China's
leaders, in search of energy sources for their burgeoning economy long before
the American invasion of Iraq, had already in 1997 negotiated a $1.3 billion
contract with Saddam Hussein to develop the Al-Ahdab oil field in central Iraq.
By 2001, they were negotiating for rights to develop the much larger Halfayah
field. Between them, the two fields might have accounted for almost 400,000
barrels per day, or 13% of China's oil consumption in 2003. However, like Iraq's
other oil customers (including Russia, Germany, and France), China was prevented
from activating these deals by the UN sanctions then in place, which prohibited
all Iraqi oil exports except for emergency sales authorized under the UN's Oil
for Food program. Ironically, therefore, China and other potential oil customers
had a great stake in the renewed UN inspections that were interrupted by the
American invasion. A finding of no WMDs might have allowed for sanctions to
be lifted and the lucrative oil deals activated.
When "regime change" in Iraq left the Bush administration in charge in Baghdad,
its newly implanted Coalition Provisional Authority declared all pre-existing
contracts and promises null and void, wiping out the Chinese stake in that country's
oil fields. As Peter S. Goodman reported in the Washington
Post, this prompted "Beijing to intensify its search for new sources"
of oil and natural gas elsewhere. That burst of activity led, in the next two
years, to new import agreements with 15 countries. One of the most important
of these was a $70 billion contract to import Iranian oil, negotiated only after
it became clear that a U.S. military threat was no longer imminent.
This agreement (Iran's largest since 1996) severely undermined, according
to Goodman, "efforts by the United States and Europe to isolate Teheran and
force it to give up plans for nuclear weapons." On this point, an adviser to
the Chinese government told Goodman: "Whether Iran would have nuclear weapons
or not is not our business. America cares, but Iran is not our neighbor. Anyone
who helps China with energy is a friend." This suggested that China might be
willing to use its UN veto to protect its new ally from any attempt by the U.S.
or the Europeans to impose UN sanctions designed to frustrate its nuclear designs,
an impression reinforced in November of 2004, when Chinese Foreign Minister
Li Zhaoxing told Iranian President Mohammed Khatami that "Beijing would indeed
consider vetoing any American effort to sanction Iran at the Security Council."
The long-term oil relationship between China and Iran, sparked in part by
the American occupation of neighboring Iraq, would soon be complemented by a
host of other economic ties, including an $836 million contract for China to
build the first stage of the Tehran subway system, an expanding Chinese auto
manufacturing presence in Iran, and negotiations around a host of other transportation
and energy projects. In 2004, China sought to deepen political ties between
the two countries by linking Iran to the Shanghai Cooperative Organization (SCO),
a political alliance composed of China, Russia, Uzbekistan, Tajikistan, Kazakhstan
and Kyrgyzstan. China and Russia soon began shipping Iran advanced
missile systems, a decision that generated angry protests from the Bush
administration. According to Asia
Times correspondent Jephraim P. Gundzik, these protests made good sense,
since the systems shipped were a direct threat to U.S. military operations in
the Middle East:
"Iran can target US troop positions throughout the Middle East and strike
US Navy ships. Iran can also use its weapons to blockade the Straits of Hormuz
through which one-third of the world's traded oil is shipped. With the help
of Beijing and Moscow, Tehran is becoming an increasingly unappealing military
target for the U.S."
At the June 2005 meeting of the SCO, after guest Iran was invited into full
membership, the group called for the withdrawal of U.S. troops from member states,
and particularly from the large base in Uzbekistan that was a key staging area
for American troops in the Afghanistan War. The SCO thus became the first international
body of any sort to call for a rollback of U.S. bases anywhere in the world.
A month later Uzbekistan made the demand on its own behalf. The Associated
Press noted: "The alliance's move appeared to be an attempt to push the
United States out of a region that Moscow regards as historically part of its
sphere of influence and in which China seeks a dominant role because of its
extensive energy resources." Not long afterward, Iranian President Mohammad
Khatami ended his first summit conference with Chinese President Jiang Zemin
with a joint statement opposing "interference in the internal affairs of other
countries by any country under the pretext of human rights," a declaration reported
by the Iran
Press Service to be a "direct criticism of Washington."
In other words, the war in Iraq and the resistance that it triggered
played a key role in creating a potentially powerful alliance between
Iran and China.
The Rise of Pro-Iranian Politics in Iraq
The combination of a thoroughly incompetent
American occupation and a growing guerrilla war also set in motion a seemingly
inexorable drift of Iraq's Shi'ite leadership many of whom had lived in
exile in Iran or already had close ties to Iran's Shi'ite clerics toward
an ever more multifaceted relationship with the neighboring power.
The first (unintended) American nurturing of these ties occurred just after
the fall of the Saddam Hussein regime, when U.S. military forces demobilized
the Iraqi army and police, and focused their military attention on tracking
down "regime remnants." The resulting absence of a police presence produced
a wave of looting and street crime that engulfed many cities. The Coalition
Provisional Authority found a remedy to the situation by tacitly supporting
the formation of local militias to deal with the problem.
Three pre-existing groups with strong ties to Iran quickly established their
primacy in the major Shi'ite areas of Iraq. The Sadrists, centered largely in
Baghdad's enormous Shi'ite slum, now known as Sadr City, had historically been
the most visible leadership of internal Shi'ite resistance to Saddam and were
accused by the Hussein government of accepting all manner of clandestine support
from the Iranian government. The Supreme Council of Islamic Revolution in Iraq
(SCIRI), and Da'wa, on the other hand, had organized military and terrorist
attacks inside Iraq, working from bases in Iran. Both had long been openly associated
with the Iranians and were committed to an Iraqi version of Iranian-style Islamist
governance. Once Saddam fell, all three groups immediately sought leadership
within Iraqi Shi'ite communities, and dramatically increased their standing
by recruiting large numbers of unemployed young men into their militias and
assigning them to maintain order in their local communities. The Sadrists, with
their Mahdi Army militia, also became the backbone of Shi'ite resistance to
the occupation, leading two major revolts in Najaf in April and August of 2004,
and highly visible non-violent protests at other places and times. SCIRI and
Da'wa took a more moderate stance, following the lead of Grand Ayatollah Ali
al-Sistani, and working, however cautiously, with the occupation authorities.
At the same time, all three groups provided much of the actual local governance
in southern Iraq, including establishing offices where citizens could ask for
individual and collective help, and adjudicate local disputes.
As the occupation's military forces either withdrew to their bases in many
cities in the South or became completely occupied in countering an increasingly
resourceful and widespread armed revolt (mostly in the Sunni areas of central
Iraq), the militias became increasingly important parts of local life, only
adding to the ascendancy of the organizations they represented in Iraqi civil
society. Given their historical connections to Iran, this ascendancy cemented
a sort of fraternal relationship between the emerging Shi'ite leadership and Tehran's
clerical government.
As the economic situation in Iraq deteriorated under the weight of corrupt
reconstruction politics and the pressure of the resistance, Iran became an ever
more promising source of economic sustenance. Saddam Hussein had forbidden Iranian
pilgrimages to Iraqi Shi'ite holy sites in the twin cities of Karbala and Najaf,
so the toppling of the Ba'athist regime opened the way for a huge influx of pilgrims
and cash. Iranian entrepreneurs began to negotiate building projects for hotels
and other tourist-oriented facilities in the holy cities. Iranian financiers
offered to support the construction of a modern airport in Najaf to facilitate
tourism.
From this foundation other economic ties developed, though the hostility
of the American-run Coalition Provisional Authority and its appointed Iraqi-run
successor limited formal relationships. Nonetheless, a bustling
cross-border trade involved hundreds of trucks a day carrying a variety
of goods in both directions. These relatively unimpeded highways became even
more crowded as the escalating insurgency began to threaten, or actually close,
routes to Saudi Arabia, Syria, and Lebanon. When a combination of security and
infrastructural problems shut down the Iraqi port of Umm Qasr in 2004, Iraqi
merchants began using the nearby Iranian port of Bandar Khomeini to receive
shipments of Australian wheat. In one ironic twist, according to persistent
rumors, regular shipments of Johnny Walker Red and other imported American liquor
brands were being smuggled across the border into prohibitionist Iran to feed
an illegal market at bargain basement prices (as low as $10 per liter).
The Iranian-Iraqi Relationship Blossoms
The Iraqi elections in January 2005 and their
aftermath made the growing symbiosis between the two neighboring areas fully
visible. Though the Sadrists officially boycotted the election, the SCIRI and
Da'wa parties, having asserted leadership within Ayatollah Ali Al-Sistani's
Unified Iraqi Coalition, won a majority of the seats in the new parliament.
The prime minister they selected, Da'wa leader Ibrahim al-Jaafari, had spent
nine years in exile in Iran.
More open and formal relationships followed as soon as the new government
took office. As Juan
Cole, perhaps the foremost academic observer of Middle Eastern politics,
put it: "The two governments went into a tizzy of wheeling and dealing of a
sort not seen since Texas oil millionaires found out about Saudi Arabia." Beyond
facilitating pilgrimages in both directions across the border and formalizing
plans for the Najaf airport, the new government facilitated connections that
affected almost every economic realm in depressed Iraq. Among the many projects
settled upon were substantial improvements in Iraq's transportation system;
agreements for the exchange of products ranging from detergents to construction
materials and carpets; a shift of Iraqi imports of flour from the U.S. to Iran;
the Iranian refining of Iraqi crude oil pumped from its southern fields; and
a billion-dollar credit line to be used for the Iraqi purchase of Iranian "technical
and engineering services."
Though the Bush administration, with its control over both the purse strings
and the armed forces of the new Iraqi government, undoubtedly had the power
to nullify these unwelcome agreements, circumstances on the ground made it difficult
for its officials to intervene. Any overt interventions in matters that touched
on Iraqi economic sovereignty would surely have triggered loud (and perhaps
violent) protests from at least the Sadrists, who might well have been joined
by the governing parties in the regime the U.S. had just installed. The most
spectacular agreement, a proposed mutual defense pact between Iraq and Iran,
was indeed abrogated under apparent pressure from the Bush administration, but
American officials said
nothing when "the Iraqi government did give Tehran assurances that they
would not allow Iraqi territory to be used in any attack on Iran presumably
a reference to the United States."
The increasingly desperate circumstances that constrained Bush administration
actions when it came to the developing Iranian-Iraqi relationship were addressed
by Middle East scholar Ervand
Abrahamian, who pointed to a similarly precarious American situation in
Afghanistan. He concluded that the U.S. could not afford a military confrontation
with Iran, since the Iranians were in a position to trigger armed revolts in
the Shi'ite areas of both countries: "If there's a confrontation, military confrontation,
there would be no reason for them to cooperate with the United States. They
would do exactly what would be in their interests, which would be to destroy
the U.S. position in those two countries."
A "senior international envoy" quoted by Christopher Dickey in NewsweekOnline,
offered an almost identical opinion: "Look at what they can do in Iraq, in Afghanistan,
in Lebanon. They can turn the whole Middle East into a ball of fire, and [American
officials] know that."
In light of all these developments, Juan Cole commented: "In a historic irony,
Iran's most dangerous enemy of all, the United States, invaded Iran's neighbor
with an eye to eventually toppling the Tehran regime but succeeded only
in defeating itself."
The Ironies of Conquest
In a memorable insight, Rebecca
Solnit has suggested that the successes of social movements should often
be measured not by their accomplishments, but by the disasters they prevent:
"What the larger movements have achieved is largely one of careers undestroyed,
ideas uncensored, violence and intimidation uncommitted, injustices unperpetrated,
rivers unpoisoned and undammed, bombs undropped, radiation unleaked, poisons
unsprayed, wildernesses unviolated, countryside undeveloped, resources unextracted,
species unexterminated."
The Iraqi resistance, one of the least expected and most powerful social
movements of recent times, can lay claim to few positive results. In two years
of excruciating (if escalating) fighting, the insurgents have seen their country
progressively reduced to an ungovernable jungle of violence, disease, and hunger.
But maybe, as Solnit suggests, their real achievement lies in what didn't happen.
Despite the deepest desires of the Bush administration, to this day Iran remains
uninvaded the horrors of devolving Iraq have, so far, prevented the
unleashing of the plagues of war on its neighbor.
Not only will that "success" be small consolation for most Iraqis, but such
a negative victory might in itself only be temporary. Reading the geopolitical
tea leaves is always a perilous task, especially in the case of Bush administration
intentions (and capabilities) toward Iran. While there are signs that some American
officials in Washington and Baghdad may be accepting the defeat of administration
plans for "regime change" in Iran; other signs remind us that a number of top
officials remain as committed as ever to a military confrontation of some sort
and that frustration with a roiling defeat in Iraq, which has, until
now, constrained war plans, could well set them off in the end.
Among signs that a major military strike against Iran may not be in the offing
are increasingly visible fault lines within the Bush administration itself.
This can be seen most politely in various calls for accommodation with Iran
from high-profile former Bush administration officials like Richard Haass. The
Director of the State Department's Policy Planning Staff from 2001 to 2003,
Haass published his appeal in Foreign
Affairs, a magazine sponsored by the influential Council for Foreign
Relations. More tangible signs of a surfacing accomodationist streak can be
found in modest gestures made by the administration, including the withdrawal
of a longstanding U.S. veto of Iran's petition for membership in the World Trade
Organization. Beyond this, one would have to note the rather pointed leaking
of crucial secret documents, including the Military Quadrennial Report, in which
top commanders gave a negative assessment of U.S. readiness to fight two wars
simultaneously, and a National
Intelligence Estimate the first comprehensive review of intelligence
about Iran since 2001 which evidently declared Iran about than ten years
away from obtaining "the key ingredient for a nuclear weapon." And, finally,
the Bush administration
endorsed a European-sponsored nuclear treaty with Iran that was almost identical
to one it had opposed two years earlier.
But perhaps the most striking sign that some acceptance of regional realities
and limitations is afoot can be found in the strident complaints by various
neoconservatives about Bush administration failures in Iran. Michael Rubin,
a key figure in the development of Iraq policy, spoke for many when he complained
in an American
Enterprise Institute commentary that the Bush administration showed "little
inclination to work toward" regime change there. He followed this claim with
a catalogue of missed opportunities, policy shifts, and other symptoms of a
lack of will to confront the Iranians.
On the other hand, as military analyst Michael
Klare reports, the Bush administration has never ceased its search for an
on-the-cheap, few-boots-on-the-ground military solution to its Iranian dilemma.
While the U.S. military (like any modern military) develops contingency plans
for all manner of battles and campaigns, and while most such plans are never
executed, their existence and persistence give credence to the claims that an
attack on Iran is still possible.
Most of the extant contingency plans evidently take into account the "immense
stress now being placed on US ground forces in Iraq" and therefore seek "some
combination of airstrikes and the use of proxy [non-American ground] forces."
One plan, for example, evidently envisions several brigades of American-trained
Iranian exiles entering Iran from Afghanistan. Other plans involve simultaneous
land and sea assaults, coordinated with precision bombing of various military
sites currently being charted by manned and unmanned aerial invasions of Iranian
airspace.
Ominously, the Bush administration appears to recognize that these sorts
of assaults would not even fully destroy Iranian nuclear facilities, no less
topple the Iranian regime itself, and that an added ingredient might be needed.
Since 2004, therefore, contingency plans authorized by the Department
of Defense have mandated that the use nuclear weapons be an integral part
of the overall strategy. Washington
Post reporter William Arkin, citing the already adopted CONPLAN 8022,
mentions "a nuclear weapons option" specifically tailored for use against underground
Iranian nuclear plants: "a specially configured earth-penetrating bomb to destroy
deeply buried facilities." Such a nuclear attack would at least on paper
be coordinated with a variety of other measures to insure that the Iranian
government was replaced with one acceptable to the Bush administration.
Recently, former CIA official Philip Giraldi asserted in the American Conservative
magazine that, as of late summer 2005, the Pentagon, "under instructions from
Vice President Dick Cheney's office," was "drawing up a contingency plan to
be employed in response to another 9/11-type terrorist attack on the United
States. The plan mandates a large-scale air assault on Iran employing both conventional
and tactical nuclear weapons. As in the case of Iraq, the response is not conditional
on Iran actually being involved in the act of terrorism directed against the
United States." The breadth and depth of the assault, according to Giraldi's
Air Force sources, would be quite striking: "Within Iran there are more than
450 major strategic targets, including numerous suspected nuclear weapons program
development sites. Many of the targets are hardened or are deep underground
and could not be taken out by conventional weapons, hence the nuclear option."
Since many targets are in populated areas, the havoc and destruction following
such an attack would, in all likelihood, be unrivaled by anything since Hiroshima
and Nagasaki.
After escaping the Cold War specter of nuclear holocaust, it seems unimaginable
that the world would be forced to endure the horror of nuclear war in a regional
dispute. However, the record of Bush administration belligerence makes it difficult
to imagine America's top leadership giving up the ambition of toppling the Islamic
regime in Iran. And yet, given that the conquest of Iraq led the administration
unexpectedly down strange Iranian paths, who knows where future Washington plans
and dreams are likely to lead perhaps to destruction, certainly to bitter
ironies of every sort.
Michael Schwartz, Professor of Sociology at the State University of New
York at Stony Brook, has written extensively on popular protest and insurgency,
and on American business and government dynamics. His work on Iraq has appeared
on the internet at numerous sites, including TomDispatch, Asia Times, MotherJones,
Antiwar.com, and ZNet; and in print at Contexts, Against the Current,
and Z Magazine. His books include Radical Politics and Social Structure,
The
Power Structure of American Business (with Beth Mintz), and Social
Policy and the Conservative Agenda (edited, with Clarence Lo).