| 
 Al-Jazeerah History
 
 Archives
 
 Mission & Name
 
 Conflict Terminology
 
 Editorials
 
 Gaza Holocaust
 
 Gulf War
 
 Isdood
 
 Islam
 
 News
 
 News Photos
 
 Opinion 
	
	
	Editorials
 
 US Foreign Policy (Dr. El-Najjar's Articles)
 
 www.aljazeerah.info
 
	  
           |  | 
  Israel Vying for War:  Attacking Iran Will Not Repeat History  By Ramzy Baroud Al-Jazeerah, CCUN, February 13, 2012 
 On April 10, 2002, then British Prime Minister Tony Blair told 
	the House of Commons, “Saddam Hussein's regime is…developing weapons of mass 
	destruction, and we cannot leave him doing so unchecked.”
 
 A year 
	later, Blair, enthusiastically joined a US-led coalition that launched an 
	illegal war against Iraq. Their hunt for weapons of mass destruction was 
	futile because no such weapons actually existed. The Iraq Survey Group, a 
	1,400 strong member organization set up by the CIA and the Pentagon, made 
	every attempt to prove otherwise, but only came back empty-handed. In its 
	final Duelfer Report, released in September 2004, the group “found no 
	evidence of concerted efforts to restart the [nuclear] program.”
 
 One would think that the years between 1991 – the first war on Iraq - and 
	2003 would have been enough to convince US-led western allies that 
	economically besieged, politically isolated and war torn Iraq had no 
	capacity for producing such weapons. Still, Iraq was attacked with a 
	ferocity that left hundreds of thousands dead and a destroyed country. The 
	outcome of the misadventure may be history to some, but it is a devastating 
	reality for millions of Iraqis.
 
 Considering all of this, shouldn’t 
	we at least expect a slight change of course?
 
 ‘Drums of war beat 
	louder as Iran and Israel step up rhetoric,’ declared a story headline in 
	the British Independent newspaper on February 4, while ABC news stated that 
	‘Fear of Israel War With Iran Grows Amid Heightened Nuke Concerns.’
 
 Of course, there is great deal of journalistic trickery in how the story is 
	being reported. Iran did promise retaliation if attacked, but the possible 
	war is being initiated and engineered by Israel.
 
 In fact, contrary 
	to popular perception, the potential war is not an exclusively 
	Israeli-Iranian matter. While Israel is sorting out logistical issues, 
	Western allies are actively working to both choke Iran economically and 
	isolate it politically. The strategy may give the impression that Israel is 
	the predator moving for the kill, but all other details are being sorted out 
	in Western capitals.
 
 As was the case with Iraq, Western allies are 
	now hatching up both legal and political discourses. As they continue to 
	escalate on multiple fronts, inspectors from the International Atomic Energy 
	Agency (IAEA) seem to conveniently run into all sorts of obstacles in Iran 
	itself.
 
 Meanwhile, mainstream media continues to hype the idea of 
	Iran as a threat to Israel and the United States. Comments made during a 
	Friday sermon by Iran's supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, which 
	threatened serious retaliation in case of attack, were stretched in every 
	possible direction to give an impression of dangerous Iranian leadership. 
	This was intended to retrospectively cement the bizarre Israeli narrative 
	that ‘Iran must be stopped before it’s too late’.
 
 U.N. Nuclear 
	Inspectors’ Visit to Iran Is a Failure, West Says,’ declared a headline in 
	the New York Times, although the story itself pointed to the fact that the 
	inspectors merely faced problems meeting a key scientists and would return 
	later in the month.
 
 The media anxiety reached an all time high with 
	the publishing of a report in the Independent, which suggested that US 
	Defense Secretary Leon Panetta “believes Israel could strike nuclear targets 
	in Iran before the summer after concluding that military action might be 
	needed before it was ‘too late’ to stop Tehran's nuclear program”.
 
 The saber-rattling that preceded the Iraq invasion prepared public opinion 
	for a war that should never have taken place. In the case of Iraq, Israel 
	was a central piece in the US justification for war. Defending Israel from 
	some imagined Iraqi threat was used by every war enthusiast in the US 
	government and media.
 
 Now, it’s Iran’s turn. The ugly deed this 
	time is likely to be perpetrated by Israeli hands as early as April, 
	according to Panetta. (One would argue that a dirty war is already underway 
	as a number of assassinations targeting Iranian scientists have been 
	committed.)
 
 While the very suggestion of war was an Israeli-US 
	‘option’ that has been tossed back and forth since at least 2005, no 
	sensible Iranian position is to be found in Western media reporting.
 
 “Iran argues that as a signatory to the Non-Proliferation Treaty and a 
	member of the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA), it has every right 
	to develop and acquire nuclear technology for peaceful purposes,” read a 
	news article published in Iranian Press TV website.
 
 No such claims 
	will be assuring enough to the Israeli leadership. When Hamas’ feeble 
	home-made rockets are viewed by Israel’s official discourse as an 
	‘existential threat’, one can imagine the trepidation of co-existing with a 
	militarily strong Iran. Israel’s Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and his 
	Defense Minister Ehud Barak are the two major proponents of the ‘bomb Iran 
	before it’s too late’ argument. Considering Israel’s existing arsenal of 
	nuclear weapons, subscribing to the Israeli logic is paramount to accepting 
	that only Israel somehow has the moral capacity to use WMDs wisely.
 
 Chillingly, officials used the annual conference of Israel's security 
	establishment at the Inter-Disciplinary Centre in Herzilya to mostly discuss 
	the ‘how’ and ‘when’ of launching their attacks. Vice Prime Minister, Moshe 
	Yaalon is determined that “one way or the other…(the) messianic-apocalyptic” 
	Iranian nuclear project would be stopped. Yaalon is a passionate supporter 
	of the theory that Iranian ungrounded facilities can in fact be penetrated 
	by bunker-buster bombs.
 
 However, using the Iraq war narrative for 
	comparison must end here. The fact is, there are also significant 
	differences between both cases. Iran is a major regional power, 
	geographically massive and cannot be politically ‘contained’ or economically 
	choked without exacting a high price from all parties involved. No ground 
	invasion is possible, for the US is counting its losses in Iraq and is 
	cutting down its military budget. Iran has had enough time to anticipate and 
	prepare for all grim possibilities. The American-British-Western public 
	willingness to subscribe to another war rationale is at an all time low. And 
	an act of war could destroy any remaining semblance of stability in a 
	strategically and economically precious region during a time of global 
	recession.
 
 If history ever repeats itself, it does so only when we 
	fail to learn its important lessons. Israel might be prepared to take such 
	chances, but why should the rest of the world?
 
 - Ramzy Baroud (www.ramzybaroud.net) 
	is an internationally-syndicated columnist and the editor of 
	PalestineChronicle.com. His latest book is My Father Was a Freedom Fighter: 
	Gaza's Untold Story (Pluto Press, London).
 
 
   
 
 |  |  |