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WSWS : News
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East : Iran
US Senate unanimously passes threatening measure against Iran
By Peter Symonds
14 July 2007
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A little publicised amendment to the defence spending bill
denouncing Iran for the murder of US soldiers in Iraq
was proposed by Independent Democrat Joseph Lieberman and passed
unanimously in the US Senate on Wednesday. Republicans and Democrats
all lined up to support the White Houses unsubstantiated
accusations that Tehran is funding, training and arming Iraqi
militias, who are contributing to the destabilisation of
Iraq and are responsible for the murder of members of the United
States Armed Forces.
For all their antiwar posturing, not a single Democrat, including
the leading presidential contenders Hilary Clinton, Barrack Obama
and Joseph Biden, opposed the amendment. Having supported the
Bush administrations crimes in Iraq, the Democrats are lending
credibility to another campaign of lies, half-truths and disinformation
aimed at justifying a new military adventure.
The vote demonstrates once again that the differences between
the White House and the Democrats are purely tactical. What unites
all factions of the American political establishment is their
defence of the strategic and economic interests of US imperialism
in the Middle East. None of them has any principled opposition
to a US military attack on Iran, if it would further American
domination in this key region.
In his speech, Lieberman pointed to the underlying US strategic
interests involved. One of them was to prevent Iran from
dominating parts of Iraq. Another was to preserve our credibility
in the region... that is important to us in so many ways. In the
most direct way... we continue to depend too much on oil and gas
that comes from the Middle East so we have an interest in keeping
it stable, he declared.
While it mandates no action beyond regular reports to Congress,
the Lieberman amendment effectively endorses the Bush administrations
propaganda against Iran. For months, the White House and the Pentagon
have maintained a steady drumbeat: the Iranian Revolutionary Guards
are training, financing and supplying arms, including deadly armour-piercing
devices, to militias that are killing US troops.
No concrete evidence has been provided beyond the occasional
display of Iranian manufactured arms and statements purportedly
made by militia members locked away in US detention. Iranian officials
have repeatedly dismissed the allegations. Nevertheless the accusations
have steadily escalated. On July 2, US military spokesman Brigadier
General Kevin Bergner for the first time accused the highest levels
of the Iranian government of direct involvement in attacks on
US forces, specifically the killing of five American troops in
Karbala in January.
The outrage and righteous indignation of Lieberman and others
over alleged Iranian meddling in Iraq is staggering
for its hypocrisy and arrogance. The Bush administration has 160,000
troops inside Iraq waging a criminal neo-colonial war for the
domination of the countrys resources. It has endorsed covert
operations inside Iran aimed at destabilising the regime and has
repeatedly declared that in dealing with Tehran all options are
on the table, including the military one.
The amendment was only passed 97-0 after Lieberman agreed to
include a proviso that nothing in the measure shall be construed
to authorise or otherwise speak to the use of armed forces against
Iran. But this purely legalistic caveat will not prevent
the Bush administration from taking military action against Iran
and could well be exploited to justify a US attack in the name
of self-defence. In fact, US accusations of Iranian
support for Iraqi militias have become increasingly shrill as
it has become clear that the UN Security Council is unlikely to
authorise the use of military force over a second pretextIrans
nuclear programs.
Lieberman, an unapologetic supporter of the Iraq occupation,
makes no bones about his stance. In a comment in the Wall Street
Journal last Friday, he bluntly accused Iran of waging a proxy
war against the US not only in Iraq, but also in Afghanistan,
Palestine and Lebanon. While calling for diplomatic efforts, he
declared: The fact is, any diplomacy with Iran is more likely
to be effective if it is backed by a credible threat of forcecredible
in the dual sense that we mean it, and the Iranians believe it...
It is time to restore that fear [of US retaliation], and to inject
greater doubt into the decision-making of the Iranian leaders
about the risks they are now running.
A credible threat of force can only mean one thing:
the willingness to attack Iranian military units and installations
allegedly involved in Iraq. As Lieberman told CBSs Face
the Nation last month, the US government must be prepared
to take aggressive military action against the Iranians.
The Pentagon has already provocatively stationed two aircraft
carrier battle groups in the Persian Gulf and reinforced the military
capability of US regional allies. A third aircraft carrier group
led by the USS Enterprise is currently heading towards the Middle
Eastreportedly to replace the existing two.
Whether or not the Bush administration will authorise military
strikes on Iran remains unclear. What attitude the US will adopt
towards Iran is part of the debate raging in ruling circles, including
in the White House, over the catastrophe in Iraq. Lieberman speaks
for a considerable layer of the American political establishment
that advocates the unrestrained use of US military might to pursue
its strategic and economic ambitions. Far from being held back
by the Iraqi quagmire, the advocates of regime change
in Tehran propose to extend the war into a broad regional conflict
against Iran and its proxies throughout the Middle
East.
At stake is the control of the regions oil and gas. Any
back down or compromise over Iran would leave Americas Asian
and European economic rivals holding all of the stakes in that
countrys resources. Likewise any US retreat from Iraq would
leave the field open for other powers to fill the vacuum. The
alternative is a macabre and reckless gamble that a war against
Iran would establish US domination over the region as a whole.
What was significant about Wednesdays vote was the willingness
of the entire US Senate to endorse the pretext for a new war.
It is a clear signal that the Democrats would rapidly fall into
line with any military adventure in Iran, despite the overwhelming
antiwar sentiment among the American population as a whole.
See Also:
New US accusations against Iran
[3 July 2007]
Senator Lieberman calls for
US military attack on Iran
[13 June 2007]
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