Biden Eschews Diplomacy, Chooses Path to War with Iran
by Connor Freeman | Jul 7, 2022
https://libertarianinstitute.org/articles/biden-eschews-diplomacy-chooses-path-to-war-with-iran/
There can now be little doubt—if there ever was
any—that Washington’s intransigence is preventing the Iran nuclear deal’s
restoration. Even in the face of an unending series of new U.S. sanctions,
Israeli bombings in Syria,
as well as Tel Aviv’s repeated covert operations, cyberattacks, drone strikes, and murders inside Iran itself,
Tehran has remained steadfastly committed to diplomacy. Paying an immense political cost,
the so-called hardliners in Tehran, led by President Ebrahim Raisi, even made
the unprecedented decision to
drop their demands for the elite military unit, the Revolutionary Guard Corps
(IRGC), to be delisted from the State Department’s Foreign Terrorist
Organization (FTO) blacklist.
The Iranians called Biden’s bluff.
In yet another sign that they earnestly wish to
conclude the essentially finalized deal, Tehran even purged their
negotiating team of hardliners. Whereas the Americans went into last week’s
Doha talks with “very low expectations,”
and reportedly offered Iran no guarantees of economic benefits.
After Doha, it looks as though Biden’s team will only continue to prove they
were lying all along about rejoining the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action
(JCPOA). This permanently aggressive policy will surely kill the deal, increase
regional tensions, stoke war, and once again soil America’s reputation for
future diplomatic endeavors.
Since 2019, the IRGC has been the only state military
organization on this FTO blacklist. Former president and ultra-Zionist Donald
Trump made the provocative move precisely because it is what the neocons, Tel Aviv, Riyadh, Abu Dhabi, and Manama wanted.
The FTO issue is designed to
keep the Democrats from ever returning to the JCPOA. The neocons’ “sanctions wall”
plan is working well.
The State Department has cynically pretended it is
Tehran that has irrevocably stalled talks, laughably suggesting they want to “bury”
the deal because of their refusal to budge on this allegedly “extraneous”
issue. Tellingly, the Biden team has yet to acknowledge the massive concession.
In fact, it is rare to see any mention of this critical news even in the
independent media, let alone the corporate press. Those interested would have
to read Middle East Eye, Antiwar.com, or the Libertarian Institute to even know
Tehran dropped this understandable demand.
They were certainly not obligated to concede either,
for this sweeping sanction against
all current and former IRGC members, including many men—including doctors and musicians—who
were conscripted often into non-combat roles acts
as a de facto travel ban, breaks up families,
and causes numerous disruptions.
The sanction is an indisputable ancillary of
Trump’s “Maximum Pressure” campaign.
The European Union diplomats such as nuclear
negotiator Enrique Mora and
more recently foreign policy chief Josep Borrel have
traveled to Tehran and desperately tried to keep negotiations going in the face of
Biden’s Maximum Pressure and Israel’s attacks. In May, Mora made the trip,
broke a two months-long deadlock, announced talks would resume soon, and
announced a deal was within sight.
The Israelis answered this positive news with an
assassination campaign that has probably killed six Iranians, including a drone strike on a military complex
that killed an engineer. Assassination targets are
namely IRGC members and scientists working in the aerospace industry, missile,
and drone programs. While the Israelis have carried out drone strikes inside
Iran for years, currently one of the main focuses in terms of their propaganda
vis a vis Iran’s military is their so-called “UAV terror.”
Late last year, this was apparently noted by Iran
hawks in Congress who have sought the expansion of sanctions to
target Tehran’s drone program. These
lawmakers attempt to blame Iran
for the Houthis’ retaliations against their Saudi enemies. Of course, the
missing context is that the U.S.-backed Saudis and Emiratis have waged a seven-year genocide against the Houthis and the helpless Yemeni civilian population,
bombing virtually all critical civilian infrastructure, killing people by the hundreds of
thousands, mostly children under five. During the
war, the entire country, the region’s poorest nation, has been blockaded by
the Americans and the Saudis,
precluding the unproven Iranian drone transfers.
But despite America’s war in Yemen is the world’s
worst humanitarian crisis, these legislators,
echoing the Israelis, liberally peddle claims of an Iranian air, missile, and
drone threat to justify further U.S. entrenchment in the Middle East as well as
the main objective of
forging an American led, anti-Iran, NATO-style alliance. With Biden’s upcoming
Middle East trip, he will reportedly be offering security guarantees
to Abu Dhabi and Riyadh.
Biden’s goal is to help Tel Aviv build this Middle
East mini-NATO including Israel’s fellow Abraham Accords members who are
collectively encircling Iran.
As Dave DeCamp, Antiwar.com news editor, reports,
Israel has increased military ties with regional
countries as a result of the U.S.-brokered Abraham Accords, which saw Israel
normalize relations with the UAE and Bahrain. Saudi Arabia has been hesitant to
open up relations with Israel, but the two nations have quietly increased military
cooperation.
“Part of the purpose is…is to deepen Israel’s
integration in the region, which I think we’re going to be able to do and which
is good—good for peace and good for Israeli security,” Biden told reporters at the NATO
summit in Madrid. “And that’s why Israel leaders have
come out so strongly for my going to Saudi,” he added.
Israel has been lobbying Biden to visit Saudi Arabia
and reportedly wants the U.S.’s approval to send Riyadh a new laser missile
defense system, known as the Iron Laser. The
alliance that Israel is working to build in the region is focused on integrated air defense
systems, according to Israeli Defense Minister Benny
Gantz.
It is not difficult to see where this policy is
leading us. The U.S. Empire is pivoting to Asia and Europe. This shift away
from the Middle East is unacceptable for America’s client states. Seeing the
writing on the wall, these states first turned to diplomacy to
resolve long-held issues among neighboring adversaries, including importantly a
series of Baghdad-brokered talks between
Tehran and Riyadh which may resume soon.
However, Washington and Israel will not allow this
rebalancing. Along with China and Russia becoming more involved in the region,
these ostensibly positive developments pose a threat to
Israel and America’s regional hegemony. Biden’s Maximum Pressure and this
burgeoning alliance, are intended to reassure the restive satellites, the
policy increases the chances of war with
Iran beyond anything we have seen in decades.
America’s brutal myriad wars in the Middle East,
Central Asia, and North Africa have claimed millions of lives,
shredded our bill of rights, and—including interest—have
cost more than ten trillion dollars. The Empire has wrecked our economy for
generations. Fighting yet another war against not just one of Iran’s allies
like Syrian President Bashar al-Assad, but
as Naftali Bennett says the “head of the octopus”
itself, for apartheid Israel and
its Gulf dictatorship partners are
something Americans simply cannot afford.
The U.S. is broke, with more than $30 trillion in debt,
oil prices are soaring, inflation is skyrocketing, shortages have been
normalized, civil unrest is boiling, and all the while the Blob is playing
nuclear chicken with Russia and China.
Veterans still commit suicide at alarming rates over
their experiences in prior, illegal, and unconstitutional wars.
As the Cato Institute’s Doug Bandow has written,
Alas for the US, it is not only foreigners who suffer,
often in prodigious numbers,
from Washington’s myriad military misadventures. Americans do too. More than 7000
US personnel and nearly 8000 contractors have died in combat since 9/11. Some
30,000 military personnel and veterans of the “terrorism” wars committed
suicide over the last two decades. Another 52,000 were wounded in combat, but the Watson Institute for
International and Public Affairs contends that the
number harmed by their service “is exponentially larger” since Pentagon
accounting does not include other injuries in theater as well as conditions
diagnosed after personnel return home.
Americans urgently need to thoroughly rebuke the
Bush-Clinton foreign policy consensus that dragged us into this devastating and
chaotic era.
Barack Obama and Trump promised to be different,
respectively to end the mindset that led to the Iraq war and leave the Middle
East where we should never have been in the first place. But they lied.
Instead, both doubled down on
the wars in the Middle East and Africa and picked unnecessary fights with Russia and China.
Along with diplomacy eschewing Biden, they made global thermonuclear war a
serious possibility.
Hopefully, we have finally learned some hard lessons during
these last 30 years of mass murder and destruction.
We cannot allow Biden—“Israel’s man in Washington,”
the man who wrote the Patriot Act and whipped the Senate into supporting the
Iraq War—to now start a war with Iran.
The JCPOA is key to taking war off the table, and
hence why it has practically no support in Washington.
About Connor Freeman
Connor Freeman is a writer at the Libertarian
Institute, primarily covering foreign policy. He is a co-host on Conflicts of
Interest. His writing has been featured in media outlets such as Antiwar.com
and Counterpunch, as well as the Ron Paul Institute for Peace and Prosperity.
He has also appeared on Liberty Weekly, Around the Empire, and Parallax Views. You can follow him on Twitter at @FreemansMind96
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