Saturday 6 July 2019

How much crap should Iran be expected to take from the U.S.?

Iran under the Ayatollahs is hardly a model nation. Domestically, it is repressive and, due largely to sanctions imposed by the United States, impoverished. Its foreign policy is aggressive. It supports groups that Canada has labelled terrorist, such as Hezbollah and Hamas, aids President Bashar al-Assad in Syria's civil war, and does not recognize the legitimacy of Israel as a state. And it has been accused, but denies, that it intends to develop nuclear weapons. In short, in Western eyes it is a bad actor and, because of its suspected nuclear intentions, has long been subject to sanctions.

The sanctions were greatly eased after the signing of the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA), an agreement by which Iran promised not to develop nuclear weapons in return for the relief of sanctions. Signatories include Iran, China, France, Russia, the United Kingdom, the United States, Germany and the European Union. Iran has, up until very recently, kept its part of the bargain.

Nonetheless, the United States backed out of the deal and has since imposed crippling sanctions. The Americans want not only to prevent Iran from developing nuclear weapons but also to confine its foreign policy to what the U.S. considers acceptable.

Certainly Iran pursues an aggressive foreign policy, but it has certain justifications for doing so. As the major Shia nation it sees itself as a defender of Shia interests in a largely Sunni Middle East. It is also a nation that has a history of abuse by foreign powers, specifically Great Britain and the United States, and therefor has a legitimate fear of the West. This also partly explains its antipathy toward Israel which it sees as a colonial intrusion in the Middle East and Hezbollah and Hamas as legitimate opponents of that intrusion. And this is, after all, Iran's backyard. The United States has certainly never shrunk from interfering in affairs in its backyard, to say the least.

The U.S. sanctions amount to putting Iran under siege. The question arises: how much should a nation stand when another nation attempts to strangle it into submission? Must Iran simply accept that might is right?

The Americans have accused Iran of attacking two tankers in the Gulf of Oman, without producing any evidence. Iran denies the attacks. Iran has freely admitted to shooting down an American drone, but it claims the drone was in its air space. More recently, it has announced it would enrich its uranium above the limit in the agreement unless European powers do more to protect its economy from the U.S. sanctions.

The events in the Gulf could be Iran's doing or they could be the usual American strategy of creating an incident to justify an assault. Remember the Gulf of Tonkin incident in Vietnam? Or the babies and incubators scam in Kuwait? Or the weapons of mass destruction in Iraq?

In any case, the Americans are the ones who reneged on the agreement. They are the provocateurs. The Trump administration has said it will negotiate but why should the Iranians negotiate a new agreement when a perfectly good one is already in effect? And to negotiate under the U.S. sanctions would be negotiating with a gun to their heads. The U.S. demands humiliation. Iran can be forgiven for seeking leverage.

The United States is perhaps the world's most belligerent country. Its military has caused more death and destruction since the end of WWII than any other. By reneging on the JCPOA and imposing brutal sanctions on Iran, it has now thrown a match into the most volatile region in the world. If the Middle East suffers another conflagration as a result, the Americans will have a lot to answer for.

1 comment:

The Mound of Sound said...


I believe the American oppression of Iran is part of a looming Muslim civil war pitting Sunni against Shia.

You might recall how, during the Bush/Cheney years,the Saudi ambassador was prince Bandar bin Sultan, a.k.a. "Bandar Bush." After his stint in Washington Bandar went on to serve as Saudi war minister.

The former head of MI6, Sir Richard Dearlove, relates a congenial visit he received from Bandar prior to his departure from the service. At one point Bandar told Dearlove that the day was nearing when the Sunnis would put an end to the troublesome Shia for good. Shiite Islam was to be eliminated.

When the Syrian civil war broke out, Bandar was a fierce critic of Obama for his refusal to launch another US land war, this time to oust Allawite Assad. Bandar vowed that the Saudis would recruit, train and equip their own force to fight Assad. That, in the view of many, is what came to pass as ISIS.

ISIS, like the Taliban, al Qaeda, Boko Haram and other major terrorist groups is Sunni. It is this same radical Sunni Islam that has produced the terrorists responsible for the embassy bombings, the attack on USS Cole, the 9/11 attacks, the deaths of so many Americans in Iraq and Afghanistan, the terror attacks on European cities and capitals including London, Paris and Madrid. Yet, despite this overwhelming evidence, the US fingers Iran as a state supporter of terrorism. Why?

Because Iran emerged from America's conquest of Iraq as the major regional power in Persia/South Asia and because the Saudis have allied with Israel to crush Iran. These strongarm tactics and threats have only driven Iran deeper into the arms of Moscow and Beijing, another threat to American hegemony across the Middle East.

America's policy in the Middle East has become schizophrenic. They went to war against Sunni radicals in Afghanistan. When they topped Saddam it wasn't too long before they were at war with the Sunni resistance. When it came time to drive ISIS from Iraqi territory the US allied itself with Iranian ground forces. Now they threaten to attack Iran.