Biden’s Israel Policy Has Led Us to the Brink of War on Iran
by Medea
Benjamin and Nicolas J. S. Davies Posted
onOctober 03, 2024
On October 1, Iran fired about 180 missiles at Israel
in response to Israel’s recent assassinations of leaders of its
Revolutionary Guard (IRGC), Hezbollah and Hamas. There are conflicting reports about how many of the missiles struck
their targets and if there were any deaths. But Israel is now considering
a counterattack that could propel it into an all-out war with Iran, with the
U.S. in tow.
For years, Iran has been trying to avoid such a war.
That is why it signed the 2015 JCPOA nuclear agreement with the United States,
the U.K., France, Germany, Russia, China and the European Union. Donald
Trump unilaterally pulled the U.S. out of the JCPOA in 2018, and despite Joe
Biden’s much-touted differences with Trump, he failed to restore U.S.
compliance. Instead, he tried to use Trump’s violation of the treaty as leverage to demand further concessions from Iran. This
only served to further aggravate the schism between the United States and Iran,
which have had no diplomatic relations since 1980.
Now, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu sees
his long-awaited chance to draw the United States into war with Iran. By
killing Iranian military leaders and Hamas leader Ismail Haniyeh on Iranian
soil, as well as attacking Iran’s allies in Lebanon and Yemen, Netanyahu
provoked a military response from Iran that has given him an excuse to widen
the conflict even further. Tragically, there are warmongering U.S. officials
who would welcome a war on Iran, and many more who would blindly go along with
it.
Iran’s newly elected president, Masoud Pezeshkian,
campaigned on a platform of reconciling with the West. When he came to New York
to speak at the UN General Assembly on September 25, he was accompanied by
three members of Iran’s JCPOA negotiating team: former foreign minister Javad
Zarif; current foreign minister Abbas Araghchi; and deputy foreign minister
Majid Ravanchi.
President Pezeshkian’s message in New York was
conciliatory. With Zarif and Araghchi at his side at a press
conference on
September 23, he talked of peace, and of reviving the dormant nuclear
agreement. “Vis-à-vis the JCPOA, we said 100 times we are willing to live up to
our agreements,” he said. “We do hope we can sit at the table and hold
discussions.”
On the crisis in the Middle East, Pezeshkian said that
Iran wanted peace and had exercised restraint in the face of Israel’s genocide
in Gaza, its assassinations of resistance leaders and Iranian officials, and
its war on its neighbors.
“Let’s create a situation where we can co-exist,” said
Pezeshkian. “Let’s try to resolve tensions through dialogue…We are willing to
put all of our weapons aside so long as Israel will do the same.” He added that
Iran is a signatory to the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty, while Israel is
not, and that Israel’s nuclear arsenal is a serious threat to Iran.
Pezeshkian reiterated Iran’s desire for peace in his
speech at the UN General Assembly.
“I am the president of a country that has endured
threats, war, occupation, and sanctions throughout its modern history,” he
said. “Others have neither come to our assistance nor respected our declared
neutrality. Global powers have even sided with aggressors. We have learned that
we can only rely on our own people and our own indigenous capabilities. The
Islamic Republic of Iran seeks to safeguard its own security, not to create
insecurity for others. We want peace for all and seek no war or quarrel with anyone.”
The U.S. response to Iran’s restraint throughout this
crisis has been to keep sending destructive weapons to Israel, with which it
has devastated Gaza, killed tens of thousands of women and children, bombed
neighboring capitals, and beefed up the forces it would need to attack Iran.
That includes a new order for 50 F-15EX long-range bombers, with 750
gallon fuel tanks for the long journey to Iran. That arms deal still has to
pass the Senate, where Senator Bernie Sanders is leading the opposition.
On the diplomatic front, the U.S. vetoed successive
cease-fire resolutions in the UN Security Council and hijacked Qatar and
Egypt’s cease-fire negotiations to provide diplomatic
cover for
unrestricted genocide.
Military leaders in the United States and Israel
appear to be arguing against war on Iran, as they have in the past. Even
George W. Bush and Dick Cheney balked at launching another catastrophic war based on
lies against Iran, after the CIA publicly admitted in its 2006 National
Intelligence Estimate that Iran was not developing nuclear weapons.
When Trump threatened to attack Iran, Tulsi
Gabbard warned him that a U.S. war on Iran would be so catastrophic
that it would finally, retroactively, make the war on Iraq look like the
“cakewalk” the neocons had promised it would be.
But neither U.S. Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin nor
Israeli Defense Minister Yoav Gallant can control their countries’ war
policies, which are in the hands of political leaders with political agendas.
Netanyahu has spent many years trying to draw the United States into a war with Iran, and has kept escalating the Gaza crisis for a year,
at the cost of tens of thousands of innocent lives, with that goal clearly in
mind.
Biden has been out of his depth throughout this
crisis, relying on political instincts from an era when acting tough and
blindly supporting Israel were politically safe positions for American
politicians. Secretary of State Antony Blinken rose to power through the
National Security Council and as a Senate staffer, not as a diplomat, riding
Biden’s coat-tails into a senior position where he is as out of his depth as
his boss.
Meanwhile, pro-Iran militia groups in Iraq warn that, if the U.S. joins in strikes on Iran, they
will target U.S. bases in Iraq and the region.
So we are careening toward a catastrophic war with
Iran, with no U.S. diplomatic leadership and only Trump and Harris waiting in
the wings. As Trita Parsi wrote in Responsible Statecraft, “If U.S. service members
find themselves in the line of fire in an expanding Iran-Israel conflict, it
will be a direct result of this administration’s failure to use U.S. leverage
to pursue America’s most core security interest here — avoiding war.”
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