An Attack on Iran Must be Stopped | Common Dreams
Andrew Murray, The Guardian/UK,February 4, 2012
Andrew Murray, The Guardian/UK,February 4, 2012
The Anglo-American aggression addicts haven't kicked the
habit. The team that brought you shock and awe and Operation Infinite Justice is gearing up for yet
another crack at winning a senseless war in the Middle East.
'Today’s anti-war campaign must break the parliamentary consensus for war which proved so calamitous in 2003.' (Photograph: Mike Kemp/In Pictures/Corbis)
This time the target is Iran, the pretence the regime's
imminent possession of nuclear weapons. But some things will remain the same –
it will lead to slaughter and end in disaster.
A brief recap of the Anglo-American "war on
terror" in the Middle East, 2001 to date: Afghanistan was occupied to
"eliminate terrorism" but, many thousands of dead later,
terror has spread to Pakistan and beyond, leaving Kabul with the most corrupt
government on earth.
Iraq was invaded to disarm Saddam of weapons he didn't have.
US troops have finally withdrawn, leaving millions
dead or displaced and the country broken in dysfunctional sectarian
misery.
Libya, far from being the war that went well, was bombed to
"protect civilians" with the result that 30,000 died and thousands more remain in prison
reportedly being tortured by the regime Nato
installed.
"They couldn't be so crazy" is therefore not an
unreasonable response to the speculation about yet another Middle East war. But
here we go again.
The US national intelligence director James Clapper's unsubstantiated claim
that Iran is preparing attacks in the US itself – without even a 45-minute
warning, apparently – is one sign among many that the familiar spook-media
propaganda coalition is in overdrive again, selling another cock-eyed conflict.
An attack against Iran will not stop the regime acquiring
nuclear weapons if it wishes to do so. It can only make it more likely that it
will decide to acquire them, and will eventually surely succeed.
Along the way thousands more will die, conflict will extend
across the region, oil supplies will be disrupted and the Iranian regime will
be strengthened domestically.
Iran is not a liberal democracy. That is an issue which, as
the Arab spring shows, is more likely to be addressed by the Iranian people
themselves than by a foreign attack sponsored by Saudi Arabia, most recently
the butchers of Bahraini democracy.
The central case for attacking Iran is animated by the
determination that Washington and its allies have the right to dominate the
Middle East come what may.
That is the argument offered by Matthew Kroenig, until six
months ago the Pentagon's special adviser on Iran, in an article in Foreign Affairs
baldly titled Time to Attack Iran: "A nuclear-armed Iran would immediately
limit US freedom of action in the Middle East … Iran could threaten any US
political or military initiative in the Middle East with nuclear war, forcing
Washington to think twice before acting in the region."
The pragmatic case against war is overwhelming. But the
principled case is even stronger. Britain and the US have launched a series of
wars across the Middle East for no better purpose than maintaining their
control over a region whose peoples they dare not allow to be self-governing
and independent.
Can an attack be stopped? If Britain can be detached that
would help derail the war drive. Five British warships sail alongside the US
navy in the Gulf, and we can be sure that Diego Garcia will be a base for the
bombing onslaught – it was ethnically cleansed by the Wilson government for
precisely this sort of purpose.
William Hague has made plain government support for US
policy so far. The delight of the Commons exchanges on the issue was Jack
Straw, whose only contribution to diplomacy was marketing the novel concept of
the "unreasonable UN veto" at the time of the Iraq aggression,
insisting that Britain should not act without clear UN authority now.
Millions of British people peacefully
and democratically opposed the Iraq war and were ignored by Tony
Blair. He got his war but lost his political momentum, reputation and job, in
that order, as a result.
Today's anti-war campaign must learn from the Occupy movement and UK Uncut,
as well as breaking that bipartisan parliamentary consensus for war which proved
so calamitous in 2003, if the cycle of war is to end. A nationwide day
of action on Saturday 11 February against attacking Iran is the
start.
© 2012 Guardian News and Media
Limited
Andrew Murray is deputy president of the Stop the War Coalition
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