A Tonkin Gulf Incident in the Gulf of Oman?
August 6, 2021, by Patrick J. Buchanan
https://buchanan.org/blog/a-tonkin-gulf-incident-in-the-gulf-of-oman-149882
A week ago, the MT
Mercer Street, a Japanese-owned tanker managed by a U.K.-based company owned by
Israeli billionaire Eyal Ofer, sailing in the Arabian Sea off the coast of
Oman was struck by drones.
A British security guard and Romanian
crew members were killed.
Britain and the U.S. immediately blamed
Iran and the Israelis began to beat the war drums.
Monday, Israeli Defense Minister Benny
Gantz said action against Iran should be taken “right now.”
Tuesday, Prime Minister Naftali Bennett
warned Israel could “act alone.” “They can’t sit calmly in Tehran while
igniting the entire Middle East — that’s over,” said Bennett. “We are working
to enlist the whole world, but when the time comes, we know how to act alone.”
Wednesday, Gantz ratcheted it up, “Now
is the time for deeds — words are not enough. … It is time for diplomatic,
economic, and even military deeds. Otherwise, the attacks will continue.”
Thursday, Gantz went further: “Israel is
ready to attack Iran, yes. … We are at a point where we need to take military
action against Iran. The world needs to take action against Iran now.”
And what do the Americans say?
“We are confident that Iran conducted
this attack,” said Secretary of State Antony Blinken. “We are working with our
partners to consider our next steps and consulting with governments inside the
region and beyond on an appropriate response, which will be forthcoming.”
Iran, however, has
repeatedly denied that it ordered the attack.
What makes the attack puzzling is its
timing, as it occurred just days before the inauguration of the newly elected
president of Iran, the ultraconservative hardliner Ebrahim Raisi.
Query: Would Raisi have ordered a
provocative attack on an Israeli-owned vessel, just days before taking office,
when his highest priority is a lifting of the “maximum pressure” sanctions
imposed on his country by former President Donald Trump? Why?
Would Raisi put at risk his principal
diplomatic goal, just to get even with Israel for some earlier pinprick strike
in the tit-for-tat war in which Iran and Israel have been engaged for years?
Again, why?
If not Raisi, would the outgoing
president, the moderate Hassan Rouhani, have ordered such an attack on his last
hours in office and risk igniting a war with Israel and the U.S. that his
country could not win?
Could the attack have been the work of
rogue elements in the Iranian Republican Guard Corps? Gantz and Foreign
Minister Yair Lapid claimed that Saeed Ara Jani, head of the drones section of
the IRGC, “is the man personally responsible for the terror attacks in the Gulf
of Oman.”
Or was this simply a reflexive Iranian
reprisal for Israeli attacks?
For years, Israel and Iran have been in
a shadow war, with Iran backing Hamas in Gaza, Hezbollah in Lebanon, the Houthi
rebels in Yemen, and the Shia militia in Syria and Iraq.
Israel has both initiated and responded
to attacks with strikes on Iranian-backed militia in Lebanon, Syria, and Iraq,
and by sabotaging Iran’s nuclear program and assassinating its nuclear
scientists.
But whoever was behind the attack in the
Gulf of Oman, and whatever the political motive, the U.S. was not the target,
and the U.S. should not respond militarily to a drone strike that was not aimed
at us.
No one has deputized us
to police the Middle East, and we have not prospered these last two decades by
having deputized ourselves.
With America leaving Afghanistan and
U.S. troops in Iraq transiting out of any “combat” role, now is not the time to
get us ensnared in a new war with Iran.
Lest we forget. It was in an August, 57
years ago, that the Tonkin Gulf incident occurred, which led America to plunge
into an eight-year war in Vietnam.
President Joe Biden’s diplomatic goal
with Iran, since taking office, has been the resurrection of 2015 nuclear
deal from which former President Donald Trump walked away. In return for Iran’s
reacceptance of strict conditions on its nuclear program, the U.S. has offered
a lifting of Trump’s sanctions.
Whoever launched the drone strike sought
to ensure that no new U.S.-Iran deal is consummated, that U.S. sanctions remain
in place, and that a U.S. war with Iran remains a possibility.
But, again, why would Tehran carry out
such a drone attack and kill crewmen on an Israeli-owned vessel — then loudly
deny it?
Since he took office, Biden has revealed
his intent to extricate the U.S. from the “forever wars” of the Middle East and
to pivot to the Far East and China. By this month’s end, all U.S. forces are to
be out of Afghanistan, and the 2,500 U.S. troops still in Iraq are to be
repurposed, no longer to be designated as combat troops.
Those behind this attack on the
Israeli-owned vessels does not want to reduce the possibility of war between the
United States and Iran.
They want to make it a reality. We ought
not accommodate them.
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