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 Is Iran Next for US Shock and Awe?  By Monica Hill Freedom Socialist newspaper  Al-Jazeerah, CCUN, February 27, 2011 
 Military families and friends fiercely embrace traumatized and 
	  exhausted soldiers from Iraq. The White House victoriously announces the 
	  war is over. Yet the press and politicians shout fear and danger — this 
	  time against Iran.
 
 How real is the threat of war? That revolves 
	  around two powerful forces pitted against each other. One is worldwide 
	  revulsion against war and poverty by workers and other determined 
	  protesters. The other is an alarmed ruling class desperate to smother 
	  dissent and salvage its rotting economic system.
 
 A driving force 
	  in this human drama is the global economic depression. Its miseries have 
	  ignited massive opposition against dictators and presidents, the likes of 
	  which today’s ruling class has never seen. Alas, the poor masters in Iran 
	  and the United States have not only insoluble economic problems. They are 
	  beset by militant political dissent!
 
 Why Iran?
 
 Iran is a 
	  major and historic power in the energy-rich Middle East and Central Asia, 
	  not under any other country’s thumb. Oil is its primary resource — it 
	  holds the world’s fourth-largest oil reserves and second-largest natural 
	  gas reserves. Eighty percent of Iran’s exports are related to oil flowing 
	  mostly to Europe, Russia, China and Japan.
 
 U.S. capitalism has 
	  long sought control of the region, which is the trade passageway between 
	  the east and west. Significantly, Iran lies between Iraq and Afghanistan, 
	  those decimated countries and peoples from the last two U.S. invasions.
 
 Endless sanctions, trade blockades and austerity measures, 
	  induced by the United States, have taken their toll on Iranians. 
	  Unemployment has shot up to 34 percent. Inflation is raging near 40 
	  percent, personal and political freedom is non-existent, political 
	  dissidents languish in prisons and are often executed.
 
 The United 
	  States could care less about democracy or women’s rights or separation of 
	  church and state in the Islamic Republic of Iran. In competition with 
	  China, Russia and the European Union, Empire America is hungry for 
	  dominant military and economic power there. That’s why they’re all playing 
	  some very scary war games.
 
 The nuclear card.
 
 The major 
	  pretext for making war on Iran is the unsubstantiated threat of nuclear 
	  attack. Iran insists its nuclear program is for energy and cancer 
	  treatment radioisotopes, not nuclear weaponry.
 
 On the nuclear 
	  question in general, no sane person supports nuclear proliferation. But it 
	  is absurd for the U.S. to hype hysteria about nuclear attacks when it is 
	  the only country to have ever used nuclear weapons against another nation. 
	  For America to posture as the world’s protector against such weapons is 
	  quite preposterous.
 
 Not just saber-rattling.
 
 The United 
	  States is already waging covert war on Iran. Five nuclear scientists have 
	  been assassinated, the most recent in mid January, 2012. Joint U.S. and 
	  Israeli efforts have bombed nuclear research facilities over the last 
	  decade. Just recently they sabotaged Iranian nuclear facilities with a 
	  computer worm.
 
 Iran’s nuclear program was initiated with U.S. 
	  help. But ever since the “hostage crisis” and counter-revolution in 1979, 
	  the U.S. has demonized Iran and bullied businesses and banks in numerous 
	  countries into blocking investments and financial transactions with Iran.
 
 Determined to maintain its military primacy in the region, Israel is 
	  delighted with the escalating sanctions and furiously fanning flames for 
	  war. According to the Jerusalem Post, the White House will be deploying 
	  several thousand troops to Israel to establish “joint task forces in the 
	  event of a large-scale conflict in the Middle East.”
 
 Israel 
	  relentlessly harasses other countries to join in launching air attacks 
	  against Iran, just as the U.S. grasps for a “coalition of the willing” to 
	  share the blame and cost of its invasions. As in the United States, 
	  Israeli rulers are beleaguered with popular protests and desperate to 
	  distract dissidents.
 
 Resistance accelerating.
 
 The rebels 
	  of Iran rose up in June 2009 in the millions. They fought against vicious 
	  repression and for democracy, jobs, and release of political prisoners. 
	  That insurrection was crushed, but nobody forgot the lessons. As Yassamine 
	  Mather, Iranian exile and organizer says, “The working class, student, 
	  youth and women’s movements in Iran have not only Ahmadinejad in their 
	  sights, and not only Khamenei. They want to see the defeat of the whole, 
	  oppressive Islamic state.”
 
 The movement is more broad-based than 
	  in 2009. In southeast Iran, 6,000 petrochemical casual laborers went on 
	  strike last September to win equal status and pay with permanent workers. 
	  Six hundred expelled temporary teachers organized a sit-in at the 
	  Parliament building.
 
 Steel workers spent three days at a 
	  governor’s mansion demanding back benefits after their plant was 
	  privatized and closed. Kurdish dam workers went on strike for six months 
	  of back wages. In every case, the lowest-paid, most discriminated-against 
	  workers are leading the charge. On May 15, 2011 students organized a 
	  nationwide strike and closed down 30 university campuses.
 
 International solidarity.
 
 Political repression never stops 
	  protest. It provokes it — in Iran, the United States, Israel, and far 
	  beyond.
 
 At this stage it is not likely that the U.S. will start a 
	  conventional–weapon war against Iran, let alone press the nuclear key. But 
	  it is clear they intend to keep feeding fear and trying to suppress 
	  dissent.
 
 Standing in solidarity with Iranian workers and other 
	  warriors for democracy, and organizing a sustained anti-war movement in 
	  the U.S. is the urgent task. This reduces the threat of imperialist war 
	  and adds to the building blocks of today’s global revolutionary movement.
 
 Send feedback to Monica Hill at
	  fsnews@mindspring.com .
 Freedom Socialist newspaper, Vol. 33, No. 1, 
	February-March 2012www.socialism.com
 
 
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