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Looking for a Gulf of Tonkin-like Incident Rodrigue Tremblay "The spirit of this country is totally
adverse to a large military force." Thomas Jefferson (1743-1826) 3rd American President "Force is the vital principle and immediate
parent of despotism." Thomas Jefferson (1743-1826) 3rd American President "If there is one principle more deeply
rooted in the mind of every American, it is that we should have nothing
to do with conquest." Thomas Jefferson (1743-1826) 3rd American President "I fully understand that they [the Congress] could try to
stop me from doing it. But I’ve made my decision. And we’re going forward." President
George W. Bush, (in an interview broadcast on CBS 60
Minutes, Jan. 14, 2007) Obviously, President
George W. Bush is busily looking for a Gulf of Tonkin-like incident
in order to further escalate the war in
Iraq and to start a fresh one with Iran. Let us remember that when
the administration of President Lyndon B. Johnson, another Texan, wanted
to escalate the war against North Vietnam, in 1964, it fabricated a
tale about a maritime incident in the Gulf of Tonkin, which many historians
believe never happened. Congress was then steamrolled into passing the
Gulf of Tonkin Resolution, which was used by the Johnson
administration, and later by the Nixon administration, to escalate U.S.
military involvement in Indochina. Tens of thousands of young Americans
and hundreds of thousands of Vietnamese died as a consequence of this
resolution. And the same scenario is repeating itself today. Politicians, when
facing a quagmire of their own making and feeling powerless
and under attack, will spend unlimited amounts of public money
and will sacrifice unlimited numbers of other people's lives, in order
to save face. —Anxious to provoke Iran into a military confrontation,
George W. Bush authorized,
in early January, an attack on an Iranian consulate in the town of Irbil,
in Iraq, capturing five staff members. This was an act of war, because
it was carried out on a diplomatic compound. The Iraqi and Iranian governments
have both called for the men's release. This aggression came after the Bush-Cheney administration sent two
large nuclear aircraft carriers,
the USS Dwight D. Eisenhower
and the USS John C. Stennis, each
accompanied by guided-missile cruisers,
destroyers, frigates, submarine escorts and supply ships, to the Persian
Gulf. As a consequence, the Persian
Gulf is teeming with American military gear. In this relatively small sea, such a concentration of military equipment
is bound to result in accidents. Indeed, around January 8, a U.S.
nuclear submarine hit a Japanese oil tanker in the Strait of Hormuz
near the Arabian Sea. The Strait of Hormuz connects the Persian
Gulf with the Arabian Sea and is a most strategic shipping lane for
transporting oil products from countries such as Saudi Arabia and Iran. All
this military gear is deployed in order to blockade two
Iranian oil ports on the [Persian] Gulf and to start bombing Iran, possibly
with nuclear weapons, as soon as Bush can invent a pretext to
launch a war against Iran. It seems the only thing this politician knows
how to do is to launch wars. Countries such as Israel and the Gulf states
are being equipped with advanced Patriot missile systems, in preparation
for missile counter-attacks that Iran is expected to launch, after it
has been bombed. As soon as some 'Persian Gulf incident' can
be orchestrated, the table will be set for starting a bombing campaign
of Iran, possibly, according to some observers, sometime in April (2007).
As the neocon plan calls for, such a war is designed to create "a new power balance" in the Middle East, beneficial
both to Israel's strategic interests and to American oil interests.
In fact, what the Bush-Cheney administration and its neocon advisors
ideally would hope to accomplish is to repeat the 1953 CIA coup
that ousted from power the democratically elected prime minister of
Iran, Mohammad Mossadegh, after the latter nationalized the oil industry.
The result was a concentration of all power in a puppet, the Shah of
Iran. What can be expected from another illegal war in the Middle East? First,
politically, it will further weaken the United Nations, a long held
goal of the Neocons, because it is most unlikely that the Security Council
will go along with a war of aggression. Such wars are against the U.N.
Charter, which calls for the maintenance of international peace and
security, not for initiating wars of aggression.
Second, economically, the U.S. blockade of Iranian ports would automatically stop the flow of oil from Iran, one of the world's major
petroleum exporting nations, and will precipitate an international oil crisis.
This in turn is likely to provoke a worldwide stock market crash and
initiate an international economic recession. —But Bush doesn't care.
—Saving face has no price in his mind. Besides, he enjoys playing war
with America's large stocks of military gear, like kids like to play
cowboy. Most Americans disapprove of the way he is governing and they
told him so democratically in the November 2006 election. Bush's approval rating
has fallen to 30 percent, but he doesn't care what the American people
think. He couldn't care less for democracy. The same infamous think tank, the American Enterprise Institute, which was directly instrumental in pushing Bush II into escalating the Iraq war in early January, is also deeply involved in the push for a larger war of aggression against Iran. Its so-called 'fellows' have been laying out the case for war by hyping the threat that a nuclear Iran would pose to Israel and other Gulf states. The Neocons say that the Iranian clerics' atomic weapons program must be destroyed because the mullahs see the world through a 'good-versus-evil' lens. How ironic that this also seems to be the perspective on the world that permeates Bush's White House! As for Iran, it doesn't matter that this country is in breach of no international agreement, since the Non-Proliferation Treaty allows signing nations to develop nuclear technology for their own energy needs. It doesn't matter either that even if Iran, in a more or less remote future, were to opt out of the Treaty and acquire defensive nuclear armaments, it would only be joining a club of regional countries that already have nuclear arms, i.e. Israel, Pakistan and India. In fact, the main impetus for many nations today to acquire a nuclear capacity is to gain some protection against unlawful states that feel justified in attacking non-nuclear states at will. That is why North Korea went nuclear, (and has been left alone since), and other countries such as Brazil and even Australia are considering doing the same. The truth is that nuclear armaments may be the only way for a country to protect its sovereignty in a world where international law seems to have collapsed. In this sense, a government that does take all the necessary steps to protect its sovereignty may be considered in dereliction of duty. This is an issue that the new U.N. Secretary General, Ban Ki-moon should place high on his agenda and on the United Nations General Assembly's agenda. —As for Bush's neocon escalation plan for Iraq, it is not only illegal according to American law, being in violation of the 1973 War Powers Act, but it is profoundly anti-democratic since only 12 percent of Americans support it. When you come down to 10 percent approval in any democracy, you are usually left with the support of only the lunatic fringe. In these circumstances, and to confront the surrounding hypocrisy, U.S. representatives and senators who really believe in democracy and in the rule of law may want to sign on to Republican Representative (N.C.) Walter Jones' resolution HJR 14 that upholds the right of the elected Congress to prevent a warmongering president from initiating wars of aggression of his own volition. --------------------------------------------------- Prison Planet.tv: The Premier Multimedia Subscription Package: Download and Share the Truth! Please help our fight against the New World Order by giving a donation. As bandwidth costs increase, the only way we can stay online and expand is with your support. Please consider giving a monthly or one-off donation for whatever you can afford. You can pay securely by either credit card or Paypal. Click here to donate. |