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Rolling Out the New War Product


Tehran

Following-up on his post last week at Global Affairs, Barnett Rubin writes:

On the morning of Thursday, August 30, someone who is a professional in handling information called me to recount a conversation from the previous Thursday or Friday (August 23 or 24). In this conversation, someone whose proximity to knowledge of such things is so great that I cannot identify him in any other way, told my interlocutor that President Bush would be inclined to accept suggestions for withdrawing some troops from Iraq and moving as many as possible into more secure bases, as a safeguard against reprisals in the event of a U.S. attack on Iran.

In today’s reports from Iraq (see for example the New York Times and the Washington Post) President Bush is quoted as saying, “If the kind of success we are now seeing here continues it will be possible to maintain the same level of security with fewer American forces.” The president made a point of visiting and lauding the progress in predominantly Sunni Anbar province, where the U.S. would be more secure from reprisals by Shi’a militias sympathetic to Iran. Anyone who follows political thinking in the Middle East will realize that throughout the region this will be interpreted as confirming a shift in U.S. strategy toward allying with Sunnis to encircle Iran. The British withdrawal from Basra is also said have been accelerated to avoid reprisals on their highly exposed position there. 

Bush’s recent trip to Anbar Province may have illustrated his shifting policy away from support for the central Baghdad government to bolstering local Sunni leaders. Rubin writes:

Of course the government of Iraq, dominated by Shi’a groups with close ties to Iran, would oppose an attack on Iran. But it turns out that the central government in Baghdad is now irrelevant to success in Iraq!

The Wall Street Journal reports (from the news side) that: The new policy is a profound shift away from the Bush administration’s original goal of building a multisectarian democracy in the heart of the Middle East. Instead, the new strategy seems likely to lead to an Iraq with a very weak central government and largely self-governing and homogenous regions. Over the long term the goal is to connect these local leaders to the central government by making them dependent on Baghdad for funds. To qualify for U.S. assistance, local groups must pledge loyalty to the central government, though many Sunni leaders who are working with the U.S. complain the Shiite dominated government is illegitimate.

So when the central government in Baghdad opposes a U.S. attack on Iran, the administration can still announce success, because of support in Anbar, at the grassroots, where it really counts. If this war happens, we can count on journalists and “experts” traveling to Ramadi on Pentagon-escorted tours to report on Iraqi popular support for the attack on Iran and widespread opposition to the position taken by the “illegitimate,” pro-Iranian government in Baghdad.

Meanwhile, as Bush’s Iraq policy may be shifting, the Heritage Foundation has been running war-game scenarios against Iran for the past few months. The conclusions of those scenarios are being passed along to military and civilian war planners in the Bush administration. For example:

Administration officials are studying the lessons of the recent war game, which was set up to devise a way of weathering an economic storm created by war with Iran. Computer modelling found that if Iran closed the Straits of Hormuz, it would nearly double the world price of oil, knock $161 billion off American GDP in a single quarter, cost one million jobs and slash disposable income by $260 billion a quarter.

The war gamers advocated deploying American oil reserves – good for 60 days – using military force to break the blockade (two US aircraft carrier groups and half of America’s 277 warships are already stationed close to Iran), opening up oil development in Alaska, and ending import tariffs on ethanol fuel. If the government also subsidised fuel for poorer Americans, the war-gamers concluded, it would mitigate the financial consequences of a conflict.

The Heritage report concludes:

The results were impressive. The policy recommendations eliminated virtually all of the negative outcomes from the blockade.

While Bush rolls out the new war product, New Yorker’s George Packer says the news media ought to be asking the following questions:

“News organizations should ask certain questions, and keep asking them: Does the Administration expect the Iranian regime to fall in the event of an attack? If yes, what will replace it? If no (and it will not), why would the Administration deliberately set about to strengthen the regime’s hold on power? What will the Administration do to protect highly vulnerable American lives and interests in Iraq, Afghanistan, and around the world against the Iranian reprisals that will follow? What if Iran strikes against Israel? What will be the strategy when the Iranian nuclear program, damaged but not destroyed, resumes? How will the Administration handle the international alarm and opprobrium that would be an attack’s inevitable fallout?

“If this really is a return to the early fall of 2002 all over again, then I’m fairly sure that no one at the top of the Administration is worrying about the answers.”

Further, Dan Froomkin suggests that reporters stop talking to neoconservatives and instead seek out experts who actually understand the Middle East.

UPDATE: As predicted by the New Yorker’s George Packer, Fox News has begun a post-Labor Day push for war with Iran by interviewing Michael Ledeen on Hannity & Colmes. Not at all coincidentally, Ledeen has a new book out titled The Iranian Time Bomb: The Mullah Zealots’ Quest for Destruction.

  • sheerahkahn

    I have a few questions:

    1: I’m having a hard time believing Bush can honestly believe he can make radical decisions in what is a lame duck Presidency. What is the motivation for him to challenge Congress, and the American public?

    2: Dick Cheney has plans, but here is the million dollar question: A war against Iran would require a matched national will, but a bombing campaign, ala Libya in the 80′s, requires a “press briefing.” The question is: Will Iran respond with a war footing, or bitch and moan to the international community about America?

    3: Lastly, and to be honest I have no clue but I’ll bring up the damnable question anyway because to ignore the elephant sitting in the room begs me too:
    In the 80′s and 90′s oil analyst forcasted Peak Oil production, and that it would be a downhill slide from there. Military anaylst, political analysts, along with energy analyst all concluded that the because of the Peak Oil situation, wars would break out for remaining supplies to secure lines. With Mr. Baker III, on PBS stating that part of US policy is to go to war to protect the Oil, is it now, at this time, that because of our dependency of Oil driving the innovative machinery of American industry, and the very real presence of Peak Oil crisis, that we are enacting our war clause of Oil Foreign policy to secure oil supplies from the Middle east?

    There are lots of questions…but I thinking…the answers are something we, as a nation, haven’t, and more than likely will never think about.

  • mudkitty

    Cheney’s big goal at this point is to rake it in while running out the clock.

  • rjj

    what clock?

    these people are playing a different game.

  • Mr.Murder

    The PR machine cranks one up, an announcement by us first, not our allies. Has jumping the Shark helped them realize which trails they should cover?

    By DAVID McHUGH, Associated Press Writer
    2 hours, 54 minutes ago

    BERLIN – “Three suspected Islamic terrorists from an al-Qaida-influenced group nursing “profound hatred of U.S. citizens” were arrested on suspicious of plotting imminent, massive bomb attacks on U.S. facilities in Germany, prosecutors said Wednesday.

    http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20070905/ap_on_re_eu/germany_terror

    A senior State Department official said German investigators had determined the Frankfurt International Airport and the nearby U.S. Ramstein Air Base were the primary targets of the plot but that those arrested may have also been considering strikes on other sites, particularly facilities associated with the United States.

    It was the second time in as many days that European officials said they had thwarted a major attack, following the arrest by Danish authorities on Tuesday of eight alleged Islamic militants with links to senior al-Qaida terrorists. It also comes less than a week before the sixth anniversary of the Sept. 11 attacks on the United States.”

    Let’s see, Europ[ean countries used due process and law enforcement techniques to stymie terror plots? Do tell…

  • Mr.Murder

    Could anyone not help but notice they trained in PAKISTAN, not in Iraq?

    You know, the country where Osama Been Forgotten…

    • PrchrLady

      yes, Pakistan… and the ‘alleged terrorists’ with ‘links’ to al queda… and ‘plotting immininent attacks’… how can something immminent still be in the ‘plotting’ stage??? and I also find it suspect that this is timed so nicely…
      I bet bushco needs another $50mil for the ‘war’ to pay off the people who are taking care of the photo and publicity ops for gdub’s folly… oh, wonder if heritage foundation is on the payroll for war PR too???

      • Shirin

        PrchrLady, my first reaction when I heard about this on the news this morning was absolute skepticism. I don’t believe a word of it. It then hit me very hard what that means. It means that I have grown so used to be lied to that I automatically assume that everything is a lie.

        This is the boy who cried wolf on steroids!

  • http://anangryneocon.blogspot.com/ nojo

    Bush sez: “If the kind of success we are now seeing here continues it will be possible to maintain the same level of security with fewer American forces.”

    Well, from the standpoint that Iraq is pretty bad, that may be true. If there’s a power vacuum, some Iraqi group will seize power and it’s very likely that the security situation would improve after a brief period of instability. However, it’s hard to believe that new leadership would be less anti-American than Saddam was….

  • Shirin

    Leslie, thank you for posting that photo of lovely Tehran. I hope everyone who looks at it will also imagine what it will look like after the Bushies finish with their lovely bombs. And also that everyone will understand at the deepest possible level that there are people – lots and lots and lots of people, all completely innocent – in those buildings and under those trees.

    It has been a long, long time since I was last in Tehran, and it has built up and changed a lot, but it has always been a lovely city in a lovely setting, and filled with real living, breathing human beings.

    • http://noquarterusa.net/blog/ Leslie

      Exactly, Shirin. That’s why I posted it. There were so many lovely photos of Iran, it was difficult to choose too.

      • http://noquarterusa.net/ SusanUnPC

        That could be Seattle or Portland, with the dramatic mountains in the background.

        I still can’t comprehend that Bush would bomb the Iranian people. The bomb is an excuse, imho. We’ve learned to live with a number of countries having the bomb. It’s about controlling the region. But an attack will make the opposite happen.

        • Shirin

          Susan, as I am sure you know, there is not a bit of evidence that the Iranians even plan to build a bomb ever (if I were in their position, I WOULD, though), and in any case they are not doing so now. They have an absolute right to develop nuclear technology for their own peaceful use, which is exactly what they appear to be doing so far.

          They also have a good reason to do so, as reportedly their revenues from oil exports have been decreasing due to increased domestic demand. If they can use nuclear power for themselves, they can export a whole lot more of their oil, plus they will be prepared when the oil runs out.

          For the Iranians it is a perfectly logical thing, and it is completely their right to develop nuclear power technology, which so far is all they are doing as far as anyone can tell.

  • Shirin

    Nojo, I think your prediction is basically correct. I would add, though, that while the internecine violence (I hesitate to call it sectarian, because for the most part it is not about religion, but about power) may increase in the short term, it is virtually out of the question that the overall violence could increase for the simple reason that American forces are the single greatest cause of death and destruction, and once they are gone and can no longer bomb and destroy and torture and kill, no one who is left will have even close to the numbers or the fire power to equal what they do on a daily basis. There will also be a reduction of the violence caused by the resistance – those who are targetting the occupation.

    I would expect some local increases in violence, but an overall decrease. What I am absolutely certain of is that there is no chance of anything starting to turn around as long as the U.S. is there.

    As for whatever new leadership/regime/whatever emerges, the U.S. will be lucky if they are MERELY as anti-American as Saddam was after what the U.S. has done (I would also point out that Saddam was not anti-American out of some ideology or natural inclination of his, but as a result of U.S. actions).

    I hope whatever new regime arises will be sufficiently anti-American to kick out every last troop, “advisor”, and contractor, cut all relations with the U.S., and empty out that abomination of an imperial command and control center the U.S. insists upon calling an “embassy”. They can turn it, and the entire green zone into a home for the Iraqi widows, orphans, and refugees created by the Bushite war criminals. Ditto for the giant permanent – excuse me, “enduring” – American military bases. That would be a decent start on the reparations the U.S. should be forced to pay.

  • PrchrLady

    “Further, Dan Froomkin suggests that reporters stop talking to neoconservatives and instead seek out experts who actually understand the Middle East.” –Larry Johnson

    I agree with Froomkin, but this is hardly news to most who read this blog… you have been saying so ever since I started coming here,and for ages before… The problem is how to get them to listen to people like you, and Col. Lang, and not only listen, but to do the right thing.

    Those with a military or intelligence background have so much to offer to help, but they (bushco and minions) intentionally do not listen. They do not want peace, only more war. An awakening is occuring in the sheeple, but it may be too late, as the PR campaign is in full speed ahead, and the groundwork to this point has been well thought out, by the dismantling of the constitution and the court system…

    wonder how much they have to pay FAUX news out of the ‘war funds’ congress has appropriated???

    • http://noquarterusa.net/blog/ Leslie

      Zip! Remember, Tony Snow quit Fox to become the White House press secretary. Then he had to quit because they weren’t paying him enough.

  • Blunt Force Trauma

    What the hell is the deal with needing to attack Iran anyway? Oil? Power? Money? All of it? Someone should explain that, just like everyone else, they’ll die too. You can’t take it with you.

    I cannot wrap my head around this “need”. Especially after reading Larry’s story with regards to the B-52 flying nukes to a staging/supply point for Mid-East Ops airbase in Louisiana. There is no evidence that Iran is complicit with regards to IEDs. Now there is a possibility of either of planting a nuke or outright dropping/firing of one,two,three….five?

    All the rhetoric and blather surrounding this “need” is all so simliar sounding to when there was a “need” to attack Iraq, even though Iraq did not attack the U.S., had no WMD, had no ties to Al Qeada.

    When and where does all this stop? When we’re all dead? Nearing death? Perhaps the planet will just eradicate us once and for all. I have just read that scientists worry that the Artic will be free of ice by 2030. Reduced from 2070 and 2050.

    Let’s see how we’re coping then. Badly, I’d gather.

  • mudkitty

    …the Persian People…sophisticated, gentle…

  • peter

    What a planing A war? According to differnt sources
    read(“American free Press.net”)and others we do the dirty job for International Zionist Caball of Izrael
    And all this has been decided in Tel-Aviv.All the bidding of love for land which they Stolled from Arabic people and it is not enough for them.They posess more then 500 nucklear weapens and additional
    assortement including 5 submarines nuclearly armed.

    Thing again Please:nothing is done in the area
    of Middle east without Zionist approval,but this time they AIPAC pushing the GOYA’S to lot more for
    Zionist Israel.

    May GOD bless you all.

    • Simon

      What a planing A war? According to differnt sources
      read(”American free Press.net”)and others we do the dirty job for International Zionist Caball of Izrael

      Where does OPEC oil enter into this equation, have they suddenly become the protectors of the Jews, those Arab money men who support Bush and Cheney?

      Where does Russia, and OPEC, or the Chinese, even, fit into this equation?

      The more I see, the more I think Israel, even AIPAC, was duped.

      The Israeli people, like the Palestinians, deserve better.

  • mudkitty

    Which god?

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