Share

Still Preparing to Attack Iran: The Neoconservatives in the Obama Era

by: Robert Dreyfuss  |  TomDispatch.com

photo
Douglas Feith. (Illustration: Paul Giambarba)

    What, exactly, does Barack Obama's mild-mannered choice to head the Department of Health and Human Services, former Senator Tom Daschle, have to do with neocons who want to bomb Iran?

    A familiar coalition of hawks, hardliners, and neoconservatives expects Barack Obama's proposed talks with Iran to fail - and they're already proposing an escalating set of measures instead. Some are meant to occur alongside any future talks. These include steps to enhance coordination with Israel, tougher sanctions against Iran, and a region-wide military buildup of U.S. strike forces, including the prepositioning of military supplies within striking distance of that country.

    Once the future negotiations break down, as they are convinced will happen, they propose that Washington quickly escalate to war-like measures, including a U.S. Navy-enforced embargo on Iranian fuel imports and a blockade of that country's oil exports. Finally, of course, comes the strategic military attack against the Islamic Republic of Iran that so many of them have wanted for so long.

    It's tempting to dismiss the hawks now as twice-removed from power: first, figures like John Bolton, Paul Wolfowitz, and Douglas Feith were purged from top posts in the Bush administration after 2004; then the election of Barack Obama and the announcement Monday of his centrist, realist-minded team of establishment foreign policy gurus seemed to nail the doors to power shut for the neocons, who have bitterly criticized the president-elect's plans to talk with Iran, withdraw U.S. forces from Iraq, and abandon the reckless Global War on Terrorism rhetoric of the Bush era.

    "Kinetic Action" Against Iran

    When it comes to Iran, however, it's far too early to dismiss the hawks. To be sure, they are now plying their trade from outside the corridors of power, but they have more friends inside the Obama camp than most people realize. Several top advisers to Obama - including Tony Lake, UN Ambassador-designate Susan Rice, Tom Daschle, and Dennis Ross, along with leading Democratic hawks like Richard Holbrooke, close to Vice-President-elect Joe Biden or Secretary of State-designate Hillary Clinton - have made common cause with war-minded think-tank hawks at the Washington Institute for Near East Policy (WINEP), the American Enterprise Institute (AEI), and other hardline institutes.

    Last spring, Tony Lake and Susan Rice, for example, took part in a WINEP "2008 Presidential Task Force" study which resulted in a report entitled, "Strengthening the Partnership: How to Deepen U.S.-Israel Cooperation on the Iranian Nuclear Challenge." The Institute, part of the Washington-based Israel lobby, was founded in coordination with the American-Israel Public Affairs Committee (AIPAC), and has been vigorously supporting a confrontation with Iran. The task force report, issued in June, was overseen by four WINEP heavyweights: Robert Satloff, WINEP's executive director, Patrick Clawson, its chief Iran analyst, David Makovsky, a senior fellow, and Dennis Ross, an adviser to Obama who is also a WINEP fellow.

    Endorsed by both Lake and Rice, the report opted for an alarmist view of Iran's nuclear program and proposed that the next president set up a formal U.S.-Israeli mechanism for coordinating policy toward Iran (including any future need for "preventive military action"). It drew attention to Israeli fears that "the United States may be reconciling itself to the idea of 'living with an Iranian nuclear bomb,'" and it raised the spurious fear that Iran plans to arm terrorist groups with nuclear weapons.

    There is, of course, nothing wrong with consultations between the United States and Israel. But the WINEP report is clearly predisposed to the idea that the United States ought to give undue weight to Israel's inflated concerns about Iran. And it ignores or dismisses a number of facts: that Iran has no nuclear weapon, that Iran has not enriched uranium to weapons grade, that Iran may not have the know-how to actually construct a weapon even if, sometime in the future, it does manage to acquire bomb-grade material, and that Iran has no known mechanism for delivering such a weapon.

    WINEP is correct that the United States must communicate closely with Israel about Iran. Practically speaking, however, a U.S.-Israeli dialogue over Iran's "nuclear challenge" will have to focus on matters entirely different from those in WINEP's agenda. First, the United States must make it crystal clear to Israel that under no circumstances will it tolerate or support a unilateral Israeli attack against Iran. Second, Washington must make it clear that if Israel were indeed to carry out such an attack, the United States would condemn it, refuse to widen the war by coming to Israel's aid, and suspend all military aid to the Jewish state. And third, Israel must get the message that, even given the extreme and unlikely possibility that the United States deems it necessary to go to war with Iran, there would be no role for Israel.

    Just as in the wars against Iraq in 1990-1991 and 2003-2008, the United States hardly needs Israeli aid, which would be both superfluous and inflammatory. Dennis Ross and others at WINEP, however, would strongly disagree that Israel is part of the problem, not part of the solution.

    Ross, who served as Middle East envoy for George H.W. Bush and then Bill Clinton, was also a key participant in a September 2008 task force chaired by two former senators, Daniel Coats (R.-Ind.) and Chuck Robb (D.-Va.), and led by Michael Makovsky, brother of WINEP's David Makovsky, who served in the Office of the Secretary of Defense in the heyday of the Pentagon neocons from 2002-2006. Robb, incidentally, had already served as the neocons' channel into the 2006 Iraq Study Group, chaired by former Secretary of State James Baker and former Representative Lee Hamilton. According to Bob Woodward's latest book, The War Within: A Secret White House History 2006-2008, it was Robb who insisted that the Baker-Hamilton task force include an option for a "surge" in Iraq.

    The report of the Coats-Robb task force - "Meeting the Challenge: U.S. Policy Toward Iranian Nuclear Development" - went far beyond the WINEP task force report that Lake and Rice signed off on. It concluded that any negotiations with Iran were unlikely to succeed and should, in any case, be short-lived. As the report put the matter, "It must be clear that any U.S.-Iranian talks will not be open-ended, but will be limited to a pre-determined time period so that Tehran does not try to 'run out the clock.'"

    Anticipating the failure of the talks, the task force (including Ross) urged "prepositioning military assets," coupled with a "show of force" in the region. This would be followed almost immediately by a blockade of Iranian gasoline imports and oil exports, meant to paralyze Iran's economy, followed by what they call, vaguely, "kinetic action."

    That "kinetic action" - a U.S. assault on Iran - should, in fact, be massive, suggested the Coats-Robb report. Besides hitting dozens of sites alleged to be part of Iran's nuclear research program, the attacks would target Iranian air defense and missile sites, communications systems, Revolutionary Guard facilities, key parts of Iran's military-industrial complex, munitions storage facilities, airfields, aircraft facilities, and all of Iran's naval facilities. Eventually, they say, the United States would also have to attack Iran's ground forces, electric power plants and electrical grids, bridges, and "manufacturing plants, including steel, autos, buses, etc."

    This is, of course, a hair-raising scenario. Such an attack on a country that had committed no act of war against the United States or any of its allies would cause countless casualties, virtually destroy Iran's economy and infrastructure, and wreak havoc throughout the region. That such a high-level group of luminaries should even propose steps like these - and mean it - can only be described as lunacy. That an important adviser to President-elect Obama would sign on to such a report should be shocking, though it has received next to no attention.

    Palling Around With the Neocons

    At a November 6 forum at WINEP, Patrick Clawson, the erudite, neoconservative strategist who serves as the organization's deputy director for research, laid out the institute's view of how to talk to Iran in the Obama era. Doing so, he said, is critically important, but only to show the rest of the world that the United States has taken the last step for peace - before, of course, attacking. Then, and only then, will the United States have the legitimacy it needs to launch military action against Iran.

    "What we've got to do is to show the world that we're making a big deal of engaging the Iranians," he said, tossing a bone to the new administration. "I'd throw everything, including the kitchen sink, into it." He advocates this approach only because he believes it won't work. "The principal target with these offers [to Iran] is not Iran," he adds. "The principal target of these offers is American public opinion and world public opinion."

    The Coats-Robb report, Meeting the Challenge," was written by one of the hardest of Washington's neoconservative hardliners, Michael Rubin of the American Enterprise Institute. Rubin, who spent most of the years since 9/11 either working for AEI or, before and during the war in Iraq, for the Wolfowitz-Feith team at the Pentagon, recently penned a report for the Institute entitled: "Can A Nuclear Iran Be Deterred or Contained?" Not surprisingly, he believes the answer to be a resounding "no," although he does suggest that any effort to contain a nuclear Iran would certainly require permanent U.S. bases spread widely in the region, including in Iraq:

"If U.S. forces are to contain the Islamic Republic, they will require basing not only in GCC [Gulf Cooperation Council] countries, but also in Afghanistan, Iraq, Central Asia, and the Caucasus. Without a sizeable regional presence, the Pentagon will not be able to maintain the predeployed resources and equipment necessary to contain Iran, and Washington will signal its lack of commitment to every ally in the region. Because containment is as much psychological as physical, basing will be its backbone."

    The Coats-Robb report was issued by a little-known group called the Bipartisan Policy Center (BPC). That organization, too, turns out to be interwoven with WINEP, not least because its foreign policy director is Michael Makovsky. Perhaps the most troubling participant in the Bipartisan Policy Center is Barack Obama's Ă©minence grise and one of his most important advisers during the campaign, Tom Daschle, who is slated to be his secretary of health and human services. So far, Daschle has not repudiated BPC's provocative report.

    Ross, along with Richard Holbrooke, recently made appearances amid another collection of superhawks who came together to found a new organization, United Against Nuclear Iran. UANI is led by Mark Wallace, the husband of Nicole Wallace, a key member of Senator John McCain's campaign team. Among UANI's leadership team are Ross and Holbrooke, along with such hardliners as Jim Woolsey, the former director of the Central Intelligence Agency, and Fouad Ajami, the Arab-American scholar who is a principal theorist on Middle East policy for the neoconservative movement.

    UANI is primarily a propaganda outfit. Its mission, it says, is to "inform the public about the nature of the Iranian regime, including its desire and intent to possess nuclear weapons, as well as Iran's role as a state sponsor of global terrorism, and a major violator of human rights at home and abroad" and to "heighten awareness nationally and internationally about the danger that a nuclear-armed Iran poses to the region and the world."

    Barack Obama has, of course, repeatedly declared his intention to embark on a different path by opening talks with Iran. He's insisted that diplomacy, not military action, will be at the core of his approach to Tehran. During the election campaign, however, he also stated no less repeatedly that he will not take the threat of military action "off the table."

    Organizations like WINEP, AIPAC, AEI, BPC, and UANI see it as their mission to push the United States toward a showdown with Iran. Don't sell them short. Those who believe that such a confrontation would be inconceivable under President Obama ought to ask Tony Lake, Susan Rice, Dennis Ross, Tom Daschle, and Richard Holbrooke whether they agree - and, if so, why they're still palling around with neoconservative hardliners.

    --------

    Robert Dreyfuss, an independent journalist in Alexandria, Virginia, is a contributing editor at The Nation magazine, whose website hosts his The Dreyfuss Report, and has written frequently for Rolling Stone, The American Prospect, Mother Jones, and the Washington Monthly. He is the author of "Devil's Game: How the United States Helped Unleash Fundamentalist Islam."

  

»


Comments

This is a moderated forum.  It may take a little while for comments to go live. Be civil and on-topic, don't threaten or advocate violence, please keep it under 300 words. Thanks for participating.

I just heard that Holbrooke

I just heard that Holbrooke was a key to the dismantling of the former Yugoslavia. A lot of good came out of that, like almost a decade of civil war and plenty of war crimes by people who, to most Americans, don't look very different from each other. What galls me the most about these groups who advocate for more war in the Middle East is that none of them to my knowledge served during the Vietnam War, taking advantage of all their deferments. If they have kids, I don't know of any of them serving in Iraq or Afghanistan. Of course McCain, Palin, and Biden had family there, as did Senator Webb. John Bolton? William Kristol? Douglas Feith? I don't think so, and you know these three I've listed are really behind this idea of expanding this War on a Noun called Terror to Iran. And I'd like to ask what gain (monetary) will be theirs by a continuation of war in the Middle East?

The hawks are only using

The hawks are only using Iran as an excuse to keep stirring up the hornets nest in the middle east. It keeps the middle east in chaos so that public opinion can be manipulated. If Iran attacked anyone with a nuclear weapon, they would be blown back to the stone age and they know it. Our current policy is rediculous. Get our troops out of the entire area and set up diplomatic relations.

I don't know why this should

I don't know why this should surprise anyone, especially anyone who read what Mr. Obama himself has written and said. It's AIPAC all the way with this administration, all Israel all the time and the anti-Iran propaganda fest will be right up Hillary's alley to be sure. Of course they all want war, but first you have to grease the public up, especially since they are not too supportive of the present mess in Iraq/Afghanistan. I mean, if you don't gin up some real mushroom cloud type fear, you'll have all sorts of opposition. We have elected another Israeli president and he has chosen a fine Israeli cabinet, so I'd say we should get us a war with Iran before too long, especially if there is some terrorist "attack" attributable to those villainous Iranians.

to L.D Freitas. The answer

to L.D Freitas. The answer is oil - access, control. If you flip forward from the Project for a New American Century - neocon Das Kapital circa 1992, you see why the neocons believe the middle east, Iraq and Iran are key. Even if US gained oil independence, neocons still want the middle east so they can control the development in India, China. For the neocons, everything is about control.

These are the same deranged,

These are the same deranged, warped and sick unmentionables that wove the web of lies used as the excuse for us to invade Iraq. Now they are busy building the fantasy that they will use to convince the US to attack Iran. Haven't we learned yet? I hope so, but I fear not. Going to war against Iran would not be the cake-walk the the Iraq invasion was, with most of Saddam's troops not wanting to fight. If Obama is serious about engaging Iran in frank and serious dialog focused on easing the tensions between us, I sure hope that none of the aforementioned idiots are involved in those discussions, as they have made it clear that they expect them to fail, and would likely engage in activity if they can get away with it to ensure such failure. Yes, we can expect Iran to eventually develop nuclear weapons. This is a situation that the US is creating by its policy of isolating Iran. However, even if they do, I don't think that it is reasonable to believe that they would start lobbing them around the region, since they would be targeted in return as well and have a lot to lose. And I don't believe that they would allow terrorist groups or regimes outside of Iran to get access to such weapons either, unlike our "ally", Pakistan, did. Thinking about all of this NeoCON instigated saber rattling directed towards Iran because of a real or perceived nuclear threat that does not even exist yet, where were they during the the time leading up to North Korea developing their nuclear arsenal? It seems to me that North Korea is much more likely to use their weapons and engage in proliferation than Iran or even Pakistan and India, but there is dead silence from the NeoCONs. Bolton, Kristol, Feith and many other members of the NeoCON cabal are so eager to push the US into wars of aggression, but they themselves have no first hand experience with anything even remotely resembling a war. I think that they all should be issued a set of body armor and then sent for a month hump the mountains in eastern Afganistan or ride with patrols in Iraq. If they make it back alive, perhaps they might have a different viewpoint (no guarantees, though).

The "bomb, bomb, bomb Iran"

The "bomb, bomb, bomb Iran" crowd never left quietly in the night after the McCain-Palin loss ? Say it aint so. There is something about our so-called 2 party system that abhors Iran and Muslims... and that something is that this is the region where much of our oil and gas comes from and where Israel is situated. Absent these, nobody would want to bomb Iran. Yes, the neo-cons are ready to strike but there is too much at state for them to do so: namely, India, Pakistan, Kashmir, Afghanistan, Iraq and greater wars possibly involving nuclear weapons. . Honestly, we're going broke fighting the Arabs and Muslims. We could soon be a basket case liked the old Soviet Union after it pulled its 150,000 troops out of Afghanistan and promptly collapsed. Is it possible to let John Bolten, Andrew Ross, Anthony Lake, the WINEP/AIPAC crowd, etc. to just stew in their own acidic juice and work for detente? Everyone loves oil, the money that comes from it, the cars that run on it—surely we can talk our way through this.

No one seems ever to want to

No one seems ever to want to challenge Patrick Clawson, Michael Rubin and their ilk either on their facts, which they continually misrepresent, or on what they think that a military attack on Iran will yield. Every Iran expert, including me, will tell you that the Iranian will neither be changed nor challenged by such an attack. Nor will Iran stop enriching uranium until the United States publicly admits that they are allowed to do so explicitly by the Nuclear Non-proliferation treaty. Still Clawson, Rubin and their supporters and ueber-bosses persist in their policy death march. It is both tragic and frightening.

This bumbling bundling of

This bumbling bundling of federal agencies needs to be kicked to the damn curb, Health & Human Services has nothing more to do with Homeland Security than Easter Seals does colored eggs or barking sea mammals and the second thing Tom Daschle needs to do in tangent with departmental re-division is to define welfare in and of itself separate completely from citizens on disability and curb administrative waste! Whenever I get a notice from HHS, a proceeding letter telling me the notice is coming arrives a day before which is followed by a separate copy of the release regulations that too has it`s own pre confirmation letter thus 4 envelopes @$1.50 postage each containing no less than 4 sheets of paper @ $0.25/page amounts to $10 which doesn`t sound like much until you consider 1/5th of the US population are disabled and these come virtually every month often the same item 2 or more times in aggregate they are throwing away enough in tax dollars annually to purchase every rural disabled client a fully licensed and insured small car or pick up truck and have a reserve fund left for fuel vouchers!

Hilary Clinton during the

Hilary Clinton during the primaries said that if Iran lunched a nuke they would be pretty much bombed back to the stone age. I don't believe that Iran will use nukes with a (vapor) trail all the way back to Tehran but passing out nuclear material to terrorists might be an untraceable move on their part. They don't even need anything highly enriched either. Dirty bombs do a lot of damage. Especially in a small country like Isreal. I believe everything must be done to stop the Neocon-job to attack Iran. It is foolishness at the highest degree. China is good buddies with Iran and would surely but stealthly support them. Proxy war anyone?

It all started with Bush's

It all started with Bush's speech where he set this NeoCon machine in motion by saying "AXIS of EVIL". What would you think when you consider that we attacked Iraq after this speech? I believe that Ahmadinijad was elected in direct response to this aggressive expression. I also believe that North Korea exploded a nuclear device knowing we were watching. The Bush administration finally agreed to take N. Korea off the list of countries sponsoring terrorism. I believe that more than any bullet or bomb, "AXIS of EVIL" was one of the worst statements ever uttered in all of history.

I must agree with radline9

I must agree with radline9 that a solution will come only when the US pulls back militarily from the region and substitutes creative diplomacy that recognizes the legitimate fears and needs of all of the conflicting parties, including Iran. Let's not fret, as Mr Dreyfuss does, that President Obama will fall victim to Neocon conspiracies. He's better than that. That's why we elected him.

I might point out that

I might point out that Ahmadinijad doesn't actually have that much power in Iran. The mullahs are the ones that are really in charge. I believe that Iran is enriching uranium. However, I think that the idea that they could build nuclear weapons in short order itself may be what they are trying to do. That itself is a potent deterrence strategy. Furthermore, I may point out that Iran's centrifuges are according to the IAEA (which has much more credibility than a bunch of neocons in my eyes) are under their safeguards. In any event, American foreign policy is filled with double standards such as the talk by these same deranged neocons of possibly using nuclear weapons against non-nuclear states or detonating a weapon in space (in violation of the 1967 Outer Space Treaty). I believe that criticism that the policies that the US has taken may be encouraging other nations to attempt to acquire nuclear power to be entirely valid.

America is doomed if we

America is doomed if we continue to let those who put Israel first run our foreign policies. War is only attractive to those who don't have to fight it. The NEOCONS are mere lackeys for Israel.