Neoconservative godfather Norman Podhoretz has
written
that "as an American and as a Jew" he prays that President George
W. Bush will attack Iran. He rests his case on his belief that 2007 is really
1938, that Iran is Nazi Germany, and that Mahmoud Ahmadinejad is Hitler. His
most recent book, World
War IV: The Long Struggle Against Islamofascism, was described by a
reviewer
as "a hectoring, often illogical screed based on cherry-picked facts and
blustering assertions (often made without any supporting evidence), a book that
furiously hurls accusations of cowardice, anti-Americanism, and sheer venality
at any and all opponents of the Bush doctrine, be they on the right or the left."
Unlike people who subscribe to the view that a war with Iran would be a catastrophe
for the United States, Podhoretz reportedly has regular access to the White
House to promote his insightful historical analysis. But as Podhoretz is not
in government and he controls no carrier groups, he has only a limited capability
to bring about his dream of an emasculated Iran to take its place alongside
an emasculated Iraq and a presumably soon-to-be emasculated Syria.
But while Podhoretz cannot start a war alone, there are plenty of others in
the government, including Vice President Dick Cheney and the National Security
Council's Elliott Abrams, who share his enthusiasm for a preemptive attack on
Iran. The leader of Congress' Iran hawks is undoubtedly Sen. Joe Lieberman of
Connecticut. Lieberman, currently an independent, has long been regarded as
a "conservative Democrat," but his voting record reveals that his
conservatism is largely limited to foreign policy and more specifically to the
Middle East, where he is a strong and uncritical defender of Israel. When he
successfully ran for reelection as an independent in Connecticut in 2006, he
accused his Democratic opponent Ned Lamont of not being a forceful enough advocate
for Israel, claiming that Lamont was "surrounded by people who are either
naïve or are isolationists or, frankly, some more explicitly against Israel."
A former senior official of the pro-Israel lobby AIPAC also endorsed that view,
stating that "the pro Israel community … will stick with Joe Lieberman."
Lieberman has never counted the costs to the United States of pursuing Israeli
objectives in the Middle East. He continues to be a vocal supporter of the invasion
and occupation of Iraq, frequently mentioning Saddam's alleged links to terrorists
and invoking a variation of the White House line that if the U.S. does not fight
terrorists in Iraq it will be necessary to fight them in New Haven. In 1998
he co-sponsored the Iraq Liberation Act, which made regime change in Baghdad
official U.S. policy. His regular forays to Baghdad have convinced him that
Iraq has been transformed from "primitive,
killing tyranny" into "modern, self-governing, self-securing nationhood."
He saw clear evidence by 2005 of the democratization of Iraq: "Progress
is visible … there are many more cars on the streets, satellite television dishes
on the roofs, and literally millions more cell phones." More recently,
he enthusiastically supported last summer's Israeli invasion of Lebanon and
has tried to make Syria the newest member of the axis of evil, claiming
without any evidence that it is Syria "through which up to 80 percent of
the Iraq-bound extremists transit. Indeed, even terrorists from countries that
directly border Iraq travel by land via Syria to Iraq, instead of directly from
their home countries, because of the permissive environment for terrorism that
the Syrian government has fostered."
Lieberman has also been front and center in taking on the thorny problem of
Iran, promoting a military response as the most effective option. In an April
2006 interview in the Jerusalem Post, he freely discussed using military
force to disarm Iran, noting that the U.S. had learned a lesson from both Osama
bin Laden and Hitler that "sometimes when people say really extreme things
… they may actually mean it." In December 2006, Lieberman followed up by
explaining
that he opposed direct talks with Iran because it would be like going to "your
local fire department asking a couple of arsonists to help put out the fire.
These people are flaming the fire. They are extremists." On Dec. 29, 2006,
Lieberman wrote a Washington
Post
op-ed in which he explained the situation in the Middle East in simple terms:
"On one side are extremists and terrorists led and sponsored by Iran, on
the other moderates and democrats supported by the United States."
On June 10, 2007, Lieberman
told Face the Nation, "I think we've got to be prepared to take
aggressive military action against the Iranians to stop them from killing Americans
in Iraq. And to me that would include a strike into … over the border into Iran
… where they are training these people coming back into Iraq to kill our soldiers."
He later stated that "By some estimates, they have killed as many as 200
American soldiers," and, for good measure, he added that if Iran is not
willing to live "according to the international rule of law and stopping,
for instance, their nuclear weapons development, we can't just talk to them."
On the following day, Weekly Standard editor William Kristol said "It
sure does," after being asked if the Lieberman statement would make it
easier for the White House to consider an attack against Iran.
On July 6, 2007, Lieberman wrote an op-ed for the Wall Street
Journal in which he claimed,
"The Iranian government, by its actions, has all but declared war on us
and our allies in the Middle East. American now has a solemn responsibility
to utilize the instruments of our national power to convince Tehran to change
its behavior," employing "credible force" because Iran is bringing
"about the death of American service members in Iraq." He described,
without providing any evidence, how the "Iranian government has been using
the Lebanese terrorist group Hezbollah to train and organize Iraqi extremists,
who are responsible in turn for the murder of American service members."
He called Iran's role as "hostile and violent" and complained that
Tehran's "fanatical government" demonstrates "expansionistic,
extremist behavior." After again referring to Iran's "fanatical regime,"
he cited "attacks on American soldiers" as a reason why Iran "must
be confronted head on."
Lieberman was the co-sponsor of the Kyl-Lieberman amendment to the recently
passed defense appropriations bill, which passed by a Senate vote of 76 to 22
on Sept. 26, 2007. The amendment stated that "the murder of
members of the United States Armed Forces by a foreign government or its agents
is an intolerable act of hostility against the United States." Lieberman's
press release
on the subject, dated July 11, 2007, accused Iran of "murdering our troops"
and quoted Sen. John Kyl, who blamed Iran for "actively supporting terrorists
who are killing our troops in Iraq." When the Kyl-Lieberman amendment was
debated in the Senate, James Webb of Virginia said, "At best, it's a deliberate
attempt to divert attention from a failed diplomatic policy. At worst, it could
be read as a backdoor method of gaining congressional validation for military
action, without one hearing and without serious debate." Webb also called
the amendment "Dick Cheney's fondest pipe dream" and noted correctly
that the attempt to categorize the Iranian Islamic Revolutionary guard as a
"foreign terrorist organization" would mandate military action against
Iran: "What do we do with terrorist organizations? … We attack them."
There is hardly any point in identifying Lieberman's numerous errors in fact
in an attempt to refute his assertions, as he is ideologically driven and not
interested in the truth. His sloganeering is more in the nature of propaganda
than a careful consideration of policy options or the U.S.' national interests.
He twists and embroiders the facts to enable him to rule out speaking to Iran
while at the same time blaming it for all of the problems in the region. Lieberman
also disregards the reality in Iraq, which is that Iran is deeply embedded there
as a result of the United States' invasion, which removed Tehran's traditional
rival and empowered the Shia.
Lieberman repeats over and over again that American soldiers are being killed
by Iran. Apparently, the neocons have found it too difficult to make the case
that Iran is actually seeking a nuclear weapon. That American soldiers are being
killed through the active intervention of the Iranian government is in any event
debatable, and most of the international media appears to believe that the allegations
lack hard evidence. That many Americans do not see the need to attack Iran does
not faze Sen. Joseph Isadore Lieberman, a man of self-proclaimed principle who
obviously has clearer vision and knows better than his fellow countrymen what
is right and what is wrong. If Iran turns into a major catastrophe not only
for the U.S. and Iran but also for the entire region, will Lieberman take the
blame as a principal enabler of the war so desired by Norman Podhoretz? If Lieberman's
lack of contrition over Iraq is anything to go by, almost certainly not.