Will Trump End or Escalate Biden’s Wars?
by Medea
Benjamin and Nicolas J. S. Davies
Posted on November 14, 2024
https://original.antiwar.com/mbenjamin/2024/11/13/will-trump-end-or-escalate-bidens-wars/
When Donald Trump takes office on January 20th, all
his campaign promises to end the war in Ukraine in 24 hours and almost as
quickly end Israel’s war on its neighbors will be put to the test. The choices
he has made for his incoming administration so far, from Marco Rubio as
Secretary of State to Mike Waltz as National Security Advisor, Pete Hegseth as Secretary of Defense and Elise Stefanik as UN
Ambassador make for a rogues gallery of saber-rattlers.
The only conflict where peace negotiations seem to be
on the agenda is Ukraine. In April, both Vice President-elect JD Vance and
Senator Marco Rubio voted against a $95 billion military aid bill that included
$61 billion for Ukraine.
Rubio recently appeared on NBC’s Today Show saying, “I think the
Ukrainians have been incredibly brave and strong when standing up to Russia.
But at the end of the day, what we’re funding here is a stalemate war, and it
needs to be brought to a conclusion… I think there has to be some common sense
here.”
On the campaign trail, Vance made a controversial suggestion that the best way to end the war was for Ukraine
to cede the land Russia has seized, for a demilitarized zone to be established,
and for Ukraine to become neutral, i.e. not enter NATO. He was roundly
criticized by both Republicans and Democrats who argue that backing Ukraine is
vitally important to U.S. security since it weakens Russia, which is closely
allied with China.
Any attempt by Trump to stop U.S. military support for
Ukraine will undoubtedly face fierce opposition from the pro-war forces in his
own party, particularly in Congress, as well as perhaps the entirety of the
Democratic party. Two years ago, 30 progressive Democrats in Congress wrote a
letter to President Biden asking him to consider promoting negotiations. The
party higher ups were so incensed by their lack of party discipline that they
came down on the progressives like a ton of bricks. Within 24 hours, the group
had cried uncle and rescinded the letter. They have since all voted for money
for Ukraine and have not uttered another word about negotiations.
So a Trump effort to cut funds to Ukraine could run up
against a bipartisan congressional effort to keep the war going. And let’s not
forget the efforts by European countries, and NATO, to keep the U.S. in the
fight. Still, Trump could stand up to all these forces and push for a rational
policy that would restart the talking and stop the killing.
The Middle East, however, is a more difficult
situation. In his first term, Trump showed his pro-Israel cards when he
brokered the Abraham accords between several Arab countries and Israel; moved
the U.S. embassy to a location in Jerusalem that is partly on occupied land outside Israel’s internationally recognized borders; and
recognized the occupied Golan Heights in Syria as part of Israel. Such
unprecedented signals of unconditional U.S. support for Israel’s illegal
occupation and settlements helped set the stage for the current crisis.
Trump seems as unlikely as Biden to cut U.S. weapons
to Israel, despite public opinion polls favoring such a halt and a recent UN human
rights report showing that 70% of the people killed by those
U.S. weapons are women and children.
Meanwhile, the wily Israeli Prime Minister Netanyahu
is already busy getting ready for a second Trump presidency. On the very day of
the U.S. election, Netanyahu fired his defense minister, Yoav Gallant, who
opposed a lasting Israeli military occupation of Gaza and had at times argued
for prioritizing the lives of the Israeli hostages over killing more
Palestinians.
Israel Katz, the new defense minister and former
foreign minister, is more hawkish than Gallant, and has led a campaign to falsely blame Iran for the smuggling of
weapons from Jordan into the West Bank.
Other powerful voices, national security minister Itamar Ben-Gvir and finance minister Bezalel Smotrich, who is also a “minister in the Defense Ministry,”
represent extreme Zionist parties that are publicly committed to territorial
expansion, annexation and ethnic cleansing. They both live in illegal Israeli
settlements in the occupied West Bank.
So Netanyahu has deliberately surrounded himself with
allies who back his ever-escalating war. They are surely developing a war plan
to exploit Trump’s support for Israel, but will first use the unique
opportunity of the U.S. transition of power to create facts on the ground that
will limit Trump’s options when he takes office.
The Israelis will doubtless redouble their efforts to
drive Palestinians out of as much of Gaza as possible, confronting President
Trump with a catastrophic humanitarian crisis in which Gaza’s surviving
population is crammed into an impossibly small area, with next to no food, no
shelter for many, disease running rampant, and no access to needed medical care
for tens of thousands of horribly wounded and dying people.
The Israelis will count on Trump to accept whatever
final solution they propose, most likely to drive Palestinians out of Gaza,
into the West Bank, Jordan, Egypt and farther afield.
Israel threatened all along to do to Lebanon the same
as they have done to Gaza. Israeli forces have met fierce resistance, taken
heavy casualties, and have not advanced far into Lebanon. But, as in Gaza, they
are using bombing and artillery to destroy villages and towns, kill or drive
people north and hope to effectively annex the part of Lebanon south of the
Litani river as a so-called “buffer zone.” When Trump takes office, they may
ask for greater U.S. involvement to help them “finish the job.”
The big wild card is Iran. Trump’s first term in
office was marked by a policy of “maximum pressure” against Tehran. He
unilaterally withdrew America from the Iran nuclear deal, imposed severe
sanctions that devastated the economy, and ordered the killing of the country’s top general. Trump did not support a war on Iran in his first
term, but had to be talked out of attacking Iran in his final days in office by
General Mark Milley and the Pentagon.
Colin Powell’s former chief of staff, retired Colonel
Lawrence Wilkerson, recently described to Chris Hedges just how catastrophic a war with
Iran would be, based on U.S.military wargames he was involved in.
Wilkerson predicts that a U.S. war on Iran could last
for ten years, cost $10 trillion and still fail to conquer Iran. Airstrikes
alone would not destroy all of Iran’s civilian nuclear program and ballistic
missile stockpiles. So, once unleashed, the war would very likely escalate into
a regime change war involving U.S. ground forces, in a country with three or
four times the territory and population of Iraq, more mountainous terrain and a
thousand mile long coastline bristling with missiles that can sink U.S.
warships.
But Netanyahu and his extreme Zionist allies believe
that they must sooner or later fight an existential war with Iran if they are
to realize their vision of a dominant Greater Israel. And they believe that the
destruction they have wreaked on the Palestinians in Gaza and Hezbollah in
Lebanon, including the assassination of their senior leaders, has given them a
military advantage and a favorable opportunity for a showdown with Iran.
By November 10, Trump and Netanyahu had reportedly spoken on the phone three times since the
election, and Netanyahu said that they see “eye to eye on the Iranian threat.”
Trump has already hired Iran hawk Brian Hook, who helped him sabotage the JCPOA nuclear agreement
with Iran in 2018, to coordinate the formation of his foreign policy team.
So far, the team that Trump and Hook have assembled
seems to offer hope for peace in Ukraine, but little to none for peace in the
Middle East and a rising danger of a U.S.-Israeli war on Iran.
Trump’s expected National Security Advisor Mike Waltz
is best known as a China hawk. He has voted against military aid to Ukraine in
Congress, but he recently tweeted that Israel should bomb Iran’s nuclear and oil
facilities, the most certain path to a full-scale war.
Trump’s new UN ambassador, Elise Stefanik, has led
moves in Congress to equate criticism of Israel with anti-semitism, and she led
the aggressive questioning of American university presidents at
an anti-semitism hearing in Congress, after which the presidents of Harvard and
Penn resigned.
So, while Trump will have some advisors who support
his desire to end the war in Ukraine, there will be few voices in his inner
circle urging caution over Netanyahu’s genocidal ambitions in Palestine and his
determination to cripple Iran.
If he wanted to, President Biden could use his final
two months in office to de-escalate the conflicts in the Middle East. He could
impose an embargo on offensive weapons for Israel, push for serious ceasefire
negotiations in both Gaza and Lebanon, and work through U.S. partners in the
Gulf to de-escalate tensions with Iran.
But Biden is unlikely to do any of that. When his own
administration sent a letter to Israel last month, threatening a cut in
military aid if Israel did not allow a surge of humanitarian aid into Gaza in
the next 30 days, Israel responded by doing just the opposite–actually cutting
the number of trucks allowed in. The State Department claimed Israel was taking
“steps in the right direction” and Biden refused to take any action.
We will soon see if Trump is able to make progress in
moving the Ukraine war towards negotiations, potentially saving the lives of
many thousands of Ukrainians and Russians. But between the catastrophe that
Trump will inherit and the warhawks he is picking for his cabinet, peace in the
Middle East seems more distant than ever.
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