Bolton’s War
by Paul R. Pillar
National
Security Advisor John Bolton, aided by his comrade-in-arms Secretary of State
Mike Pompeo, is doing everything possible to instigate a war with Iran. Naked
aggression as a means of starting such a war may be too much for even Bolton to
pull off, so the strategy has been to try to pressure and goad Iran into doing
something—anything—that could be construed as a casus belli. So far, no
doubt to Bolton’s frustration, Iran has exercised remarkable restraint in the face of unrelenting and escalating hostility from the Trump administration.
Iran even continues to comply with its obligations under the Joint
Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA), the agreement that restricted Iran’s nuclear program, despite the U.S. reneging on the agreement and the resulting
absence of economic improvement for Iran that was part of the deal. But Bolton
keeps searching for still more ways to goad and to pressure.
One of the
most recent ways is a twist on the ever-expanding U.S. sanctions against Iran,
the main effects of which so far have been to make a life for ordinary Iranians
more uncomfortable and to poison relations with U.S. allies and other states
doing ordinary business with Iran. The twist—and another U.S. violation of the
JCPOA and of United Nations
Security Council Resolution 2231—is to sanction anyone who, in compliance with
the terms of the JCPOA and Resolution 2231, imports any heavy water or
low-enriched uranium from Iran, thereby keeping Iran’s own stocks of these
materials under the agreed limits. The U.S. move is a way of pressuring Iran
into exceeding those limits and violating the agreement. The move shows that
the campaign of goading Iran is taking precedence over even the
nonproliferation objective of keeping the Iranian nuclear program peaceful
through the enforcement of strict limits.
Unsheathing
the Saber
The very the latest escalation in the campaign is a saber-rattling statement that Bolton
issued over the weekend: “In response to a number of troubling and escalatory
indications and warnings,” the United States is deploying a carrier strike
group and bomber task force to the region “to send a clear and unmistakable
message to the Iranian regime that any attack on United States interests or on
those of our allies will be met with unrelenting force.” The statement was
issued in the name of Bolton himself, making the origin clear. No explanation
or details have been given about the supposed “troubling and escalatory
indications and warnings,” and nothing in the news suggests any heightened
Iranian interest in attacking U.S. interests or attacking anyone else, for that
matter. The phrasing of the statement is more of the obscurantist rhetoric of
the “malign, nefarious, destabilizing behavior” variety that has become an
anti-Iran mantra but almost never gets to specifics.
Follow-up
comments suggest that Bolton’s move does not respond to any specific Iranian
threat. One report sourced to Israeli
officials indicate that Israel was the origin of whatever information was
involved but that the information was “not very specific” and, in the words of
an Israeli official, “It is still unclear to us what the Iranians are trying to
do and how they are planning to do it.” A Reuters report quotes the U.S.
official as saying that the U.S. deployment, given the already high tensions
between Washington and Tehran, was made “as a deterrence to what has been seen
as potential preparations by Iranian forces and its proxies that may indicate
possible attacks on U.S. forces in the region.” The official said that the United States was not expecting any imminent attack and cited no specific
Iranian activities that raised any new concerns. If the Iranians have been
making preparations for possible military action, that would be only prudent on
their part given all the threats they have been hearing from Washington.
The
administration’s rhetoric about Iranian conduct has been internally
inconsistent. When Pompeo or President Trump wants to argue that all those U.S.
sanctions have been successful even though they have not brought Iran an inch
closer to a negotiating table, they contend that they
have curbed bad Iranian behavior in the Middle East. But when Bolton wants to
heat up the war fever, the contention is the opposite—that Iranian behavior is
worse than ever. In fact, the nature and tempo of Iranian regional activity
have not changed appreciably, one way or another, in the last couple of years.
The Iranians do what they do in the region for what they consider to be reasons
important to their security, and they do not ramp that activity up or down in
response to the state of their nation’s economy. What they are doing now is
basically the same as what they have been doing for some time.
The language
in Bolton’s statement about interests “of our allies,” as well as a later
reference in the statement to how the United States would respond to actions
“by proxy” as well as by Iran itself, is an open invitation to Iran’s regional
rivals to generate some incident that could spark a war. As former Secretary of
Defense Robert Gates once observed, the Saudis “want
to fight the Iranians to the last American.” Something similar could be said
about the Israeli government of Benjamin Netanyahu, who has made hostility
toward Iran a hallmark of his premiership and the all-purpose distraction from
things he would rather not talk about. A shooting war between Iran and the United States would be the best distraction of all.
The
opportunities for the regional rivals to ignite a spark are numerous and easy
to imagine, ranging from a sophisticated black-flag operation to a simple
encounter at sea. Bolton would exploit, rather than be deterred by, any
murkiness about responsibility for an incident.
A pretext for the war would not even require a manufactured incident and instead could involve
spinning the meaning of “proxy” and “ally.” Mark Dubowitz of the
misleadingly-named Foundation for Defense of Democracies, which has been
Bolton’s most influential pressure-group ally in stoking hostility toward Iran is using this gambit. He suggests that such
fighting as recently occurred in the Gaza Strip is somehow an Iranian way of
distracting Israel from Iranian plans “for strikes against U.S. assets and
allies.” In fact, the fighting in Gaza has everything to do with conditions in
Gaza and the unresolved Israeli-Palestinian conflict and nothing to do with
Iran.
Effects
of War
It probably
would be futile to try to get inside the war-mongering mind of John Bolton to
figure out why he
wants a war with Iran. Suffice it to note that Bolton to this day contends that
the 2003 war against Iraq—a colossal blunder of U.S. foreign and security
policy—was a good thing. He probably expects a war with Iran to trigger regime
change in Iran. That overlooks the likelihood that a war would be at least as
likely to trigger a rally-round-the-flag effect as it did during the
devastating Iran-Iraq War, when the Islamic Republic was less well established
and more vulnerable than it is today. It also overlooks that any regime change
that might occur probably would produce a government more hardline and less
democratic than what Iran has now.
Overlooked as
well, are the other destructive effects of such a war, including but not limited
to the direct physical and fiscal costs. They also would include wider economic
effects, especially given the disruption to the oil trade that a war in the
Persian Gulf region would entail. And they would include lasting animosity
toward the United States among future generations of Iranians.
Bolton is in a
position to accomplish much of this mayhem himself. He reportedly has caused
much of the usual policy-making machinery to be bypassed or simply to fall into
disuse. Meetings of National Security Council principals have become rare. There is a parallel
here, too, with the disastrous Iraq War. No policy process ever examined
whether launching that war was a good idea.
The person who
most need to pay attention to all this is the one in the Oval Office. Having
dismissed Steve Bannon when he came to perceive how much his once-influential the political advisor was manipulating him, Trump needs to realize how much Bolton
is manipulating him now. A war begun in the next few months would be past the
“mission accomplished” stage and into the stage of regrets and awareness of
costs when Trump—who won votes in 2016 by criticizing the excessive U.S.
involvement in Middle Eastern wars—is up for re-election. Trump already has
cashiered two previous national security advisors, one (Michael Flynn) for a good
cause and the other (H.R. McMaster) because Trump got impatient with an adult
in the room telling him what to do.
Trump’s
earlier hesitation to bring Bolton into his administration reportedly stemmed
from his dislike for Bolton’s
mustache. Surely getting the United States into another Middle East war, which
would be damaging to Trump’s presidency as well as highly damaging to the U.S.
interests would be a least as good a reason to separate Bolton from the levers
of power.
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