I'm not always real crazy about Tom Hayden, but I think his analysis about the 
possibility of war on Iran is worth reading.

HR

Preventing the Coming War with Iran 
Wednesday, January 11, 2012 at 3:09PM 
http://tomhayden.com/home/preventing-the-coming-war-with-iran.html

During  the past decade, this writer has remained skeptical 
about prospects of a  US-supported war against Iran. The potential costs 
outweighed the  benefits. Now, as the 2012 election year unfolds, I am 
not certain. The  political and geo-political dynamics underscore the 
growing threat of  war.  
It’s not that Barack Obama wants an airstrike against Iran, 
whether by  the Israelis, the Americans, or the Israelis with covert US 
support. My  respected friends Juan Cole and Mark Weisbrot are not so 
sure. They  think Obama is laying the groundwork, and may be right. 
Obama hardly  needs another war with unknown costs and consequences. But 
presidents  are not all-powerful, and Obama can be forced to acquiesce 
unless there  is a sharp increase in serious public opposition. As Trita Parsi, 
director of the National Iranian American Council, told DemocracyNow on January 
12:
“We may very well end up in a situation in which, rather  than the 
governments controlling the dynamic, the dynamics will control  the 
government...this could escalate into a full-scale war.”
Here’s the dynamic at  work:
First, the Israeli government and the powerful Israeli lobby, 
in  evaluating the Arab revolutions in Egypt and beyond, are extremely  
concerned that time is against them. They perceive the diplomatic  
efforts of the Palestinians to secure United Nations recognition as a  
mortal peril, and went to great extremes to pressure Obama to threaten a veto 
of the Palestinian bid. This was an overreaction inimical to US  
interests, leaving the Obama administration extremely isolated from the  rest 
of the world on these issues. Employing a US veto threat played  
into the hands of all those in the Palestinian and Islamic worlds who  
believe that armed struggle is the only path open to them. 
Second, the Israeli Lobby, or AIPAC, already has learned that 
Obama is  isolated at home, or at least from Congress, on these 
questions. Obama  was forced under pressure to back down on his demand 
for an end to  settlements. His more progressive appointees, whether 
Chas Freeman or  George Mitchell, were forced from their positions or 
resigned in  frustration. 
Third, the Iranians have been far from helpful, if they ever 
intended to  be. They reinforce the depiction of themselves as 
irrational, unstable,  fundamentalist, theocratic extremists. Any ideas 
that they are rational  actors in an ongoing crisis -- which began with 
the US overthrow of their  democratically-elected government in 1954; 
which continues to threaten regime change on a daily basis; in which the 
Israelis have  scores of nuclear weapons available for use -- are 
dismissed as fuzzy  foolishness. 
Fourth, and most important at the moment, the Israeli Lobby is 
using the  Republican Party as a Trojan Horse. Mitt Romney is a former 
business  partner of Benjamin Netanyahu (see the excellent screed at Daily 
Kos). And if the Romney-Netanyahu alliance doesn’t work out, there’s always  
Newt Gingrich to call the Palestinians an “invented people”, the better  to 
collect millions from his chief financier Sheldon Adelson, a Las  
Vegas casino developer, and close ally of Netanyahu. Adelson, who says  
the Palestinians have no historical claims to statehood, just saved  
Gingrich with a $5 million bailout for the South Carolina primary, on  
top of millions more, including $7 million to Gingrich committees in  
2006 alone. Adelson not only saved Gingrich this month, but his free  
newspapers in Israel are credited with having saved Netanyahu, too. (New York 
Times, January 10, 2012)
Fifth, the latest rationale is “Time To Strike Iran” in the current  issue of 
Foreign Affairs, by Matthew Kroenig, who until July was Obama’s  special 
adviser on Iran at the Pentagon. Koenig asserts that the US,  not Israel, 
should attack Iran as the least-bad option. Koenig claims  the goal should not 
be 
regime change, merely the careful destruction of  Iran’s nuclear sites. 
He assures us that an attack on Iran’s Natanz  nuclear facility with a 
30,000 pound bunker-busting bomb can  be so  carefully done that Teheran will 
not react by closing of the Straits of  Hormuz or launch missile 
assaults on European cities. The US should  assure Iran that we have no 
interest in overthrowing their government,  only in destroying their 
nuclear facilities. Sounds neat, and perhaps  Kroenig should not be 
dismissed as a Dr. Strangelove. But if the US  considers Iran’s 
leadership irrational now, why would Teheran become  more reasonable 
after being attacked at Natanz, Isfahan, Arak, and  
centrifuge-manufacturing sites near Teheran itself? (The target list is  
Kroenig’s)
As the presidential campaign proceeds, Obama will be hammered 
by  either/or Romney and Gingrich, backed by the neo-cons and Israeli 
hawks,  who will be legitimized by mainstream media commentary about 
Iran’s  alleged menacing intentions. In the deep background there are 
concerns  about oil supplies in the Straits of Hormuz. There may be an 
October  Surprise. 
Who will back Obama against these pressures, especially if they seem to  
threaten his re-election? At this point, there is no serious 
organized  opposition, although public opinion is on his side. 
There may be 200 House members against Iraq and Afghanistan, 
but few if  any against striking Iran. The media prefers sanctions and 
diplomatic  pressure but will not draw a red line against military 
intervention. The  humanitarian hawks want regime change. Russia, China 
and the UN General  Assembly count for little in American presidential 
elections. That  leaves Ron Paul and a small unfunded anti-war chorus of 
protesters.
The national security and diplomatic implications may be too 
great to  permit a US-Israeli intervention. But rational self-interest 
is not  always enough to prevent what Barbara Tuchman has called “the 
march to  folly”. Only a serious campaign to protect Obama from 
repeating the same  concessions to neo-con pressure that led to Iraq and 
Afghanistan might  have a chance in 2012. 
Perhaps the clergy should lead, the intellectual experts should engage  and, at 
the grass-roots level, the peace movements in both 
Israel and  America will expand a serious dialogue in the Jewish 
communities – and  all communities - where reason might prevail against 
extremism.
Otherwise, the barking you will hear all this year is from the dogs of war. 

[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]



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