I've always thought the whole of the Western World are against Iran. It is after all an Islamic country which is not friendly with the major Western powers apart from Russia and Russia is not known to be friendly with the other major powers especially the USA. So it caught me by surprise to read an article by a white European warning the world of an attack on Iran.
Seumas Milne is a Guardian
columnist and associate editor. He was the Guardian's comment editor from
2001-07 after working for the paper as a general reporter and labour editor. He
has reported for the Guardian from the Middle East, Eastern Europe, Russia, south
Asia and Latin America. He previously worked for the Economist and is the
author of The Enemy Within and co-author of Beyond the Casino Economy.
They don't give up. After a decade of
blood-drenched failure in Afghanistan and Iraq, violent destabilisation of
Pakistan and Yemen, the devastation of Lebanon and slaughter in Libya, you
might hope the US and its friends had had their fill of invasion and
intervention in the Muslim world.
It seems not. For months the evidence has been
growing that a US-Israeli stealth war against Iran has already begun, backed by
Britain and France. Covert support for armed opposition groups has spread into
a campaign of assassinations of Iranian scientists, cyber warfare, attacks on
military and missile installations, and the killing of an Iranian general,
among others.
The attacks are not directly acknowledged, but
accompanied by intelligence-steered nods and winks as the media are fed a
stream of hostile tales – the most outlandish so far being an alleged Iranian
plot to kill the Saudi ambassador to the US – and the western powers ratchet up
pressure for yet more sanctions over Iran's nuclear programme.
The British government's decision to take the lead
in imposing sanctions on all Iranian banks and pressing for an EU boycott of
Iranian oil triggered the trashing of its embassy in Tehran by demonstrators
last week and subsequent expulsion of Iranian diplomats from London.
It's a taste of how the conflict can quickly
escalate, as was the downing of a US spyplane over Iranian territory at the
weekend. What one Israeli official has called a "new kind of war" has
the potential to become a much more old-fashioned one that would threaten us
all.
Last month the Guardian was told by British defence
ministry officials that if the US brought forward plans to attack Iran (as they
believed it might), it would "seek, and receive, UK military help",
including sea and air support and permission to use the ethnically cleansed
British island colony of Diego Garcia.
Whether the officials' motive was to soften up
public opinion for war or warn against it, this was an extraordinary admission:
the Britain military establishment fully expects to take part in an unprovoked
US attack on Iran – just as it did against Iraq eight years ago.
What was dismissed by the former foreign secretary
Jack Straw as "unthinkable", and for David Cameron became an option
not to be taken "off the table", now turns out to be as good as a
done deal if the US decides to launch a war that no one can seriously doubt would
have disastrous consequences. But there has been no debate in parliament and no
mainstream political challenge to what Straw's successor, David Miliband, this
week called the danger of "sleepwalking into a war with Iran". That's
all the more shocking because the case against Iran is so spectacularly flimsy.
There is in fact no reliable evidence that Iran is
engaged in a nuclear weapons programme. The latest International Atomic Energy
Agency report once again failed to produce a smoking gun, despite the best
efforts of its new director general, Yukiya Amano – described in a WikiLeaks
cable as "solidly in the US court on every strategic decision".
As in the run-up to the invasion of Iraq, the
strongest allegations are based on "secret intelligence" from western
governments. But even the US national intelligence director, James Clapper, has
accepted that the evidence suggests Iran suspended any weapons programme in
2003 and has not reactivated it.
The whole campaign has an Alice in Wonderland
quality about it. Iran, which says it doesn't want nuclear weapons, is
surrounded by nuclear-weapon states: the US – which also has forces in
neighbouring Afghanistan and Iraq, as well as military bases across the region
– Israel, Russia, Pakistan and India.
Iran is of course an authoritarian state, though
not as repressive as western allies such as Saudi Arabia. But it has invaded no
one in 200 years. It was itself invaded by Iraq with western support in the
1980s, while the US and Israel have attacked 10 countries or territories
between them in the past decade. Britain exploited, occupied and overthrew
governments in Iran for over a century. So who threatens who exactly?
As Israel's defence minister, Ehud Barak, said
recently, if he were an Iranian leader he would "probably" want
nuclear weapons. Claims that Iran poses an "existential threat" to
Israel because President Ahmadinejad said the state "must vanish from the
page of time" bear no relation to reality. Even if Iran were to achieve a
nuclear threshold, as some suspect is its real ambition, it would be in no
position to attack a state with upwards of 300 nuclear warheads, backed to the
hilt by the world's most powerful military force.
The real challenge posed by Iran to the US and
Israel has been as an independent regional power, allied to Syria and the
Lebanese Hezbollah and Palestinian Hamas movements. As US troops withdraw from
Iraq, Saudi Arabia fans sectarianism, and Syrian opposition leaders promise a
break with Iran, Hezbollah and Hamas, the threat of proxy wars is growing
across the region.
A US or Israeli attack on Iran would turn that
regional maelstrom into a global firestorm. Iran would certainly retaliate
directly and through allies against Israel, the US and US Gulf client states,
and block the 20% of global oil supplies shipped through the Strait of Hormuz.
Quite apart from death and destruction, the global economic impact would be
incalculable.
All reason and common sense militate against such
an act of aggression. Meir Dagan, the former head of Israel's Mossad, said last
week it would be a "catastrophe". Leon Panetta, the US defence
secretary, warned that it could "consume the Middle East in confrontation
and conflict that we would regret".
There seems little doubt that the US administration
is deeply wary of a direct attack on Iran. But in Israel, Barak has spoken of
having less than a year to act; Binyamin Netanyahu, the prime minister, has
talked about making the "right decision at the right moment"; and the
prospects of drawing the US in behind an Israeli attack have been widely
debated in the media.
Maybe it won't happen. Maybe the war talk is more
about destabilisation than a full-scale attack. But there are undoubtedly those
in the US, Israel and Britain who think otherwise. And the threat of
miscalculation and the logic of escalation could tip the balance decisively.
Unless opposition to an attack on Iran gets serious, this could become the most
devastating Middle East war of all.
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