The
Bomb Iran Lobby Gears Up for 2016
A tight-knit group of neocon
dead-enders is pushing Iran to the forefront of the GOP's foreign policy agenda
by Sina Toossi,
June 06, 2015
ANTIWAR.COM
In a recent TV ad,
a van snakes its way through an American city. As the driver fiddles with the
radio dial, dire warnings about the perils of a “nuclear Iran” spill out of the
speaker from Senator Lindsey Graham and Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin
Netanyahu.
The driver
then steers the vehicle into a parking garage, drives to the top level, and
blows it up in a blinding flash of white light. Words shimmer across the
screen: “No Iran Nuclear Treaty Without Congressional Approval.”
While diplomats from Iran and the “P5+1″ world powers work to
forge a peaceful resolution to the decade-long standoff over Iran’s nuclear
enrichment program, a well-financed network of “experts” – like the “American Security Initiative” that produced the above “Special
Delivery” ad – is dedicating enormous amounts of time and energy to weakening
public support for the talks in the United States.
These
think-tank gurus, special interest groups, and media pundits have peddled a
plethora of alarmist narratives aimed at scuttling the diplomatic process – and
they’ve relied far more on fear mongering than facts.
So who are
these people?
A Close-Knit Network
Despite
their bipartisan façade, these reflexively anti-Iran ideologues are in reality
a tight-knit group. Many were also prominent supporters of the Iraq War and
other foreign policy debacles from the last 15 years. They work in close
coordination with one another and are often bankrolled by similar funders.
Four GOP super-donors alone – the billionaires Sheldon Adelson, Paul Singer,Bernard Marcus,
and Seth Klarman – keep afloat an array of groups that
ceaselessly advocate confrontation with Iran, like the Foundation for Defense of Democracies, theAmerican Enterprise Institute, and the Washington Institute for Near East Policy.
Other groups forming the core of this network include the
neoconservative Hudson Institute and
the Foreign Policy Initiative, as well as more explicitly hardline
“pro-Israel” groups like the American Israel Public Affairs Committee, the Republican Jewish Coalition, the Emergency Committee for Israel, The Israel Project, and theJewish Institute for National Security Affairs.
Several of these outfits also rely on right-wing grant-making
foundations such as theLynde and Harry Bradley Foundation and the Scaife Foundations, which together funnel millions into
hardline policy shops.
Hardline Senators
Together
these groups have established what amounts to their own echo chamber. They’ve
built an anti-Iran communications and lobbying infrastructure that enjoys
substantial influence in Washington’s corridors of power, particularly in
Congress.
One of this network’s more prominent beneficiaries has been
Senator Tom Cotton (R-AR), a through-and-through neocon
disciple whose truculent opposition to the Iran talks has given pause to even
conservative figures like Fox News’ Megyn Kelly, whoasked him what
the “point” was of his infamous open letter to Iran last
March that was signed
by 47 Senate Republicans. Other prominent senators with close ties to this
network include Cotton’s Republican colleagues Lindsey Graham, Mark Kirk, Kelly Ayotte,
and John McCain.
Cotton’s successful run for Senate last year came on the heels
of massive financial contributions he received from
key members of the anti-Iran lobby, including Bill Kristol’s
Emergency Committee for Israel, which spent roughly $1 million to get Cotton
elected. Adelson, Singer, and Klarman, as well as the PAC run by former UN ambassador
and avowed militarist John Bolton,
also contributed significantly
to Cotton’s campaign.
While some pundits and politicians say they’re looking for a
“better deal” with Iran than the one the Obama administration has negotiated,
Cotton has explicitly said that
he’s looking for no deal at all. He’s called an end to the nuclear negotiations
an “intended consequence” of legislation he’s supported to impose new sanctions
on Iran and give Congress an up-or-down vote on the agreement.
Think Tank Warriors
In the think tank world, talking heads like the Hudson
Institute’s Michael Doran and the Foundation for Defense of
Democracies’ Mark Dubowitz and Clifford May still prefer the more cautious “better
deal” framing. But discerning readers will quickly realize that their motives
are bent towards pushing the United States into conflict with Iran.
Doran – who in the past has compared the
Middle East to a “disease” and argued that “a bias toward military action is the
best way to treat” it – has been one of the leading purveyors of the idea that
the Obama administration’s nuclear negotiations with Iran are geared towards turning
Iran into “a friend and a partner,” which he frames as essentially akin to the
sky falling.
In April, he lambasted this supposed strategic aim of the Obama
White House in hysterical terms, writing that
détente with Iran “will deliver disequilibrium, the exact opposite of the
effect intended. By negotiating an arms-control agreement, the president has
shifted the tectonic plates of the Middle East order.” He added: “And for
tectonic plates, it takes a move of just inches to level whole cities.”
Doran has also argued there are “many more options” than what he
calls Obama’s “ultimatum” of an “Iranian nuclear program or disaster.” He told Vox in April:
“If Ali Khamenei was put before a choice of ‘Your nuclear program or absolutely
crippling, debilitating economic sanctions,’ he would think twice. I think if
he were put before a choice of ‘Your nuclear program or severe military
strikes,’ he would think twice.”
So Doran’s answer is either a disastrous war or somehow applying
more sanctions on Iran. How he intends to apply these sanctions given the
fragile nature of the current sanctions regime and almost certain opposition
from the rest of the P5+1 remains a mystery. Perhaps more concessions to
Russia? Doran surely also knows that outside of harming ordinary Iranian
citizens, sanctions have been a resolute failure in
getting Iran to cease its uranium enrichment or change its fundamental
strategic calculations with respect to its nuclear program.
Doran’s doomsday preaching is in fact the modus operandi of the deal’s critics. Clifford May, the
president of the Foundation for Defense of Democracies (FDD), hasposited that
“Mr. Obama is prepared to accept a deal that will be dangerous for America and
the West – and, yes, life-threatening for Israel.” He has also wildly claimed that
Iran, were it to develop nuclear weapons, “might provide a bomb to al-Qaeda,”
the Sunni organization that is its avowed enemy.
Mark Dubowitz, FDD’s executive director, appears frequently in
the media and before Congress lambasting the nuclear talks. He’s called the
framework agreement between Iran and the P5+1 a “seriously flawed” deal and made no secret of his alternative
to the tentative agreement: “Critics of Mr. Obama’s efforts are going to get
lost in the technical details of this ‘framework’ agreement,” he wrote in a
recent Wall Street Journal op-ed co-authored
with fellow Iran hawk Reul Marc Gerecht. But “the ultimate issue remains: Are you
willing to threaten war to get a better deal, and prepared to preventively
strike if Tehran moves toward a bomb?”
The Republican Primaries
As the
Republican primaries kick off for the 2016 presidential election, the
candidates are doing their utmost to pander to these hawks – and especially to
their donors.
Sheldon
Adelson, whose massive spending on Republican candidates in the past has
steered the foreign policy debate of entire campaigns, stands out in this
regard. His annual gathering hosted by the Republican Jewish Coalition in Las
Vegas, which has become known as the “Adelson primary,” has seen Republican
trying to out-hawk each other to win his support.
At times,
the race for Adelson’s support has pushed the candidates into politically shaky
territory.
Prospective candidate Jeb Bush, for example, fell out of favor with
Adelson for appointing former Secretary of State James Baker – a foreign policy
realist disliked by the party’s neoconservative wing – as one of the few
non-neocons on his foreign policy team. Soon after, Adelson exalted former
President George W. Bush “for all he’d done for Israel and the Middle East,”
prompting the younger Bush to declare that he looksto his brother for advice on the Middle East – hardly a
source of comfort to the non-Adelson wing of the party. Later, the former
Florida governor even said he would hewould have authorized the
Iraq War even “knowing what we know now.”
“The Las Vegas mogul and Israel hawk,” Joan Walsh of Salon wrote of
Adelson, “thus took Bush’s biggest political problem – his brother – and made
him an asset.”
Florida Senator Marco Rubio,
the aspiring Republican presidential nominee who’s been one of the Senate’s
biggest critics of the Obama administration’s diplomacy with Iran and Cuba, has
been a major recipient of donations from Adelson and Singer. A recent report by Politico suggests that Rubio “has emerged as the clear
front-runner” to win the “Sheldon Adelson primary.”
A Failed Strategic Vision
Of course,
virtually all of the characters and organizations above were emphatic
supporters of the Iraq War. In examining their work, it becomes clear that
military force, particularly in the Middle East, is the default tool they advocate
for to deal with real or perceived threats.
In the case
of the Iran nuclear negotiations, this has proven to be the case even when more
long-lasting alternatives exist – like diplomacy – that better secure U.S.
interests.
If, as John
Lewis Gaddis said, strategy is “the discipline of achieving desired ends
through the most efficient use of available means,” and the desired end of this
militaristic faction is to maximize U.S. national security, their recommended
strategies have clearly been abysmal failures.
The Iraq War
they so fiercely championed, for instance, was a debacle that greatly weakened
the American position in the Middle East at a cost of hundreds of thousands of
lives. Ironically, that war was in large measure responsible for strengthening
Iran’s hand in the region – the very thing these hawks say a new war is
necessary to address.
A nuclear
deal with Iran presents the opportunity to avoid another catastrophic war in
the Middle East and potentially opens the door to working with Iran on critical
areas of mutual interest, such as Iraq and Afghanistan.
Yet by so
vigorously denouncing the Obama White House’s negotiations with Iran, these
armchair warriors are pushing for a war that wouldn’t only be terrible for the
region and the people who live there. It would harvest more lives and limbs
from American soldiers, waste trillions more taxpayer dollars, and undoubtedly
erode U.S. standing in the world even further.
Sina Toossi is the assistant
editor of Right Web, a project that monitors the efforts of militarists to
influence U.S. foreign policy. Reprinted
with permission from Foreign Policy In Focus.
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