By Eric Margolis
Israel launched waves of air attacks and ground shelling on a score of
alleged Iranian military positions in Syria this week. Was this a big
step forward in the plan by Israel’s leader Benjamin Netanyahu and his
ally Donald Trump to provoke a major war with Iran?
It certainly looks so. The US, Saudi Arabia and Israel all recently
suffered a stinging defeat in Syria. Their campaign to overthrow the
Assad government in Damascus by using the rag-tag ISIS movement, then
Sunni Muslim jihadist wild men, was defeated by the Syrian Army, backed
by Russian air power, Lebanon’s Hezbollah and some Iranian militia
groups and army advisors.
Israel now claims to have wiped out more than a score of Iranian
positions in Syria. As far as we can tell, these were minor logistics
or communications facilities, not the backbone of a supposed Iranian
offensive against Israel.
In fact, the alleged Iranian rocket barrage was directed at the
Israeli-occupied Golan Heights that were illegally annexed and occupied
after the 1973 Arab-Israeli War and are still held, legally, as part of
Syria. Israel is very nervous about having world attention drawn to its
continued occupation of the strategic Golan Heights from which Israeli
heavy artillery can reach Damascus.
But now that the Trump administration has fallen fully under the
influence of the pro-war neocons, an attempt to overthrow the Iranian
government appears highly likely, using both military intervention and
intensified economic warfare.
Iran has been under siege by the US since the American/British
installed shah was overthrown by a popular revolution in 1979. The CIA
and Britain’s MI6 have mounted numerous attempts to oust the Islamic
Republic and re-install a client ruler.
Ironically, the ‘democratic’ western powers – the US, Britain and
France – rely on medieval monarchs and dictators to control the Mideast
while democratic politicians and movements are ignored. Iran, in spite
of its many rigidities and failings, remains one of the region’s more
democratic states. Ask our Saudi or Kuwaiti allies when was the last
time they held a real election?
The failure of western intelligence services to provoke serious
uprisings in Iran (or Russia), means that the military option is
increasingly tempting. This probably means provoking military clashes
with Iran in the Gulf leading to full-scale attacks on its nuclear
infrastructure and industry. US warplanes and warships are actively
probing Iran’s borders. In addition, US forces are getting ever more
deeply involved in the Yemen War.
When the US last considered a major attack on Iran during the Bush
years, the Pentagon (which opposed the idea) estimated it would need
2,800 air strikes against Iran on Day One alone.
Many of the same war party crowd that engineered the 2003 US invasion
of Iraq are now running the Trump administration. Their goal is to
cripple Iran and leave the Mideast to joint Saudi-Egyptian-Israeli
control.
Recall President George W. Bush’s assertion that once he had crushed
Iraq the next targets of US military intervention would be Lebanon,
Syria, Iran and then Pakistan.
Invading Iran would not be easy. Iran has very little capability to
project power beyond its borders. Its air force, artillery and tanks
are decrepit. America controls the skies from Morocco to Afghanistan.
Iran is vulnerable to raids and small incursions but subjugating this
large, mountainous nation of 80 million would be very difficult.
In fact, and Iranian Revolutionary Guards commander once told me,
‘let the Americans invade. They will break their teeth on Iran.’
Over-confidence, of course, but he had a point. Fighting on the
defensive in urban areas, Iran could offer fierce resistance.
America’s imperial machine, like its British Imperial predecessor,
likes small, easy wars against small, backwards nations. Iran would be
very different.
As we have just seen with North Korea, Iran’s best survival strategy,
short of security guarantees by Russia and China, would be to race to
produce a small number of nuclear weapons to deter attacks by the US and
Israel.
Europe, which co-sponsored the Iran nuclear act and is now
humiliated by Trump reneging on the deal, is too weak and disorganized
to guarantee the pact and stand up to Washington. This is too bad. Now
would have been a fine time for the EU to assert its independence from
US hegemony and begin building its own independent European military
forces.
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