On Syria: The U.S. Is No Lone Ranger and Should Put That Six Shooter Away
http://www.truthdig.com/report/item/on_syria_the_us_is_no_lone_ranger_and_should_put_that_six_shooter_away_20/
Posted
on Sep 2, 2013

By Juan Cole

The odd discourse in Washington around President Barack Obama’s
determination to bomb Syria over the country’s use of chemical weapons
assumes a moral superiority on the part of the United States and its allies
on this issue that can only astonish anyone who knows the history. At the
same time, the most propagandistic allegations are being made about Iran.
The creation of a fetish around some sorts of weapons (i.e., chemical ones)
takes the focus off others that are just as deadly to innocents. The U.S.
has had a checkered history in the use of unconventional arms, and is still
among the most dedicated to retaining the ability to make, stockpile and
use weapons that indiscriminately kill innocent noncombatants.

The British government as recently as 2012 licensed its
firms<http://www.independent.co.uk/news/uk/politics/revealed-government-let-british-company-export-nerve-gas-chemicals-to-syria-8793642.html>to
sell chemical agents that can be used as poison gas precursors to the
Baath government of Syria. Although critics of Prime Minister David Cameron
used phrases such as “astonishingly lax” to describe British government
policy in this regard, it seems clear that Western governments value
profits over morality when it comes to providing such material to seedy
dictatorships. Most of Syria’s chemical weapons production technology came
from<http://www.reuters.com/article/2013/08/28/us-syria-crisis-chemical-idUSBRE97R0GJ20130828>“large
chemical brokerage houses in Holland, Switzerland, France, Austria
and Germany,” according to security information provider
GlobalSecurity.org. Russia may have played a later role, though I find
Western charges of Iranian involvement unlikely for reasons I’ll get to
later.

Nor are U.S. hands clean with regard to chemical weapons use by allies. In
the Iraq-Iran War of 1980-1988, the Baath regime of Saddam Hussein deployed
chemical weapons against Iranian troops at the front. Iran had a
three-to-one manpower advantage over Iraq, and Hussein sought to level the
playing field with gas. Notoriously, his regime also deployed poison gas
against separatist Iraqi Kurds, whom he accused of allying with the enemy,
Iran, during wartime. As I
showed<http://www.truthdig.com/report/item/Hussein_trial/>in the early
days of Truthdig, the Reagan administration knew about the
chemical weapons use. It nevertheless sought an alliance with the Iraqi
government via Donald Rumsfeld, then-Reagan’s special envoy to the Middle
East. High administration officials deflected Iran’s complaint against Iraq
at the United Nations Security Council. The United States did not just
ignore Iraqi use of gas. It actively protected Baghdad from international
sanctions for it. At the same time, the Reagan administration licensed U.S.
firms to provide deadly agents such as anthrax to Saddam Hussein. At the
very least, President Obama should acknowledge the Reagan administration’s
actions and apologize for them to the people of Iran (where many veterans
still suffer from burned lungs) before he strikes an outraged pose toward
Syria and Russia. The U.S. has committed to destroying its own
once-extensive arsenal of chemical weapons, but 10 percent remain and their
final disposal keeps
slipping<http://www.nti.org/gsn/article/us-chemical-weapons-disposal-slippage-no-surprise-expert-says/>into
the next decade.

That Iran suffered so badly from U.S.-backed Iraqi chemical weapons use
makes it especially weird that American pundits and politicians should be
citing a need to deter Iran by bombing Syria. The Iranian political elite
refused to deploy chemical weapons against Iraq, and its religious leader,
Ali Khamenei, has condemned making, stockpiling and using weapons that kill
innocent noncombatants, including nuclear arms. The U.S. and Israeli case
that Iran has a militarized nuclear weapons program that seeks a warhead
has never been backed by any convincing proof, and so far resembles their
similar case against Saddam Hussein’s Iraq, which was groundless. That both
countries have big nuclear weapons stockpiles of their own also makes their
demand that Iran be sanctioned hypocritical at the least.

Although he later had to walk it back, former Iranian President Akbar
Hashemi-Rafsanjani<http://iranpulse.al-monitor.com/index.php/2013/09/2718/two-separate-rafsanjani-comments-on-syria-denied-deleted/>deplored
the Syrian government’s use of gas against its own people, and
Tehran-watchers are convinced that the Baath army’s action has provoked a
heated debate within the closed Iranian elite.

Current Iranian President Hasan Rouhani has
condemned<http://abcnews.go.com/International/wireStory/chemical-allegations-syria-haunt-ally-iran-20110252>all
chemical weapons use. Because Tehran backs the Syrian Baath
government,
it has publicly taken the same position as Russia, that the rebels gassed
themselves. That allegation is not plausible, and it is clear that even
some high ranking Iranian political figures have difficulty saying it with
a straight face.

Short of weapons of mass destruction, the United States has a rather sick
attachment to land mines and cluster munitions. Washington used land mines
in World War II, and for decades after civilians in countries such as
Tunisia were still being killed by them on occasion. In Cambodia and Laos,
bomb disposal teams continue the tedious and deadly work of removing
munitions dropped during the Vietnam War some 40 years prior. The United
States placed tens of thousands of land mines between North and South
Korea, though control of them has now been given to Seoul. U.S. allies in
Afghanistan also laid thousands of land mines, and years later Afghans were
still losing their feet to them. The 2001 Iranian film “Kandahar” showed a
gaggle of Afghans hopping on one foot. The U.S. has refused to
sign<http://latimesblogs.latimes.com/world_now/2012/04/mine-treaty-us-ottawa-convention.html>the
international convention against land mines, and insists that it now
has “non-persistent” land mines that can be deployed and then remotely
destroyed. This theory of civilian-safe land mines remains untested and
seems implausible on the face of it.

The U.S. makes, stockpiles and sells cluster
munitions<http://www.clusterbombs.us/>,
which deploy thousands of “bomblets.” These weapons sometimes do not
explode, and form a persistent danger to civilian populations in the
aftermath. They are inevitably indiscriminate in their impact on
noncombatants and have no place in contemporary warfare. Often children
will pick them up and play with them, with fatal results. Some 83 countries
have banned them, and 31 are currently suffering from the aftereffects of
their use. As the 2006 Lebanon War was winding down, the Israeli military
used 
<http://www.hrw.org/reports/2008/02/16/flooding-south-lebanon-0>American-supplied
cluster munitions on southern Lebanon, dropping an
estimated 4 million bomblets. This action was certainly a war crime, since
the U.N. Security Council had already called for a cease-fire, which
everyone knew would end the war shortly. The bombs had no conceivable
military use. They were intended to make it
dangerous<http://electronicintifada.net/content/israels-cluster-bombs-continue-kill-and-maim-lebanon/10376>for
Shiite farmers to return to their homes just north of Israel. That is,
they were aimed at the civilian population. Some 40 percent of the bomblets
failed to explode immediately.

In the year after the war ended, some 200 Lebanese noncombatants were
killed by Israeli cluster bombs in south Lebanon. The United States imposed no
penalties<http://www.theguardian.com/world/2007/jan/29/israelandthepalestinians.usa>on
Israel for this action, despite its own laws that forbid
indiscriminate
use of U.S.-supplied cluster bombs. Just this summer, the U.S. announced
the sale of $630
million<http://www.aljazeera.com/indepth/features/2013/08/2013824111348685130.html>worth
of cluster munitions to Saudi Arabia. That country and Israel are
among the most vigorous proponents of an attack on Syria because of its
deployment of a weapon that indiscriminately killed noncombatants. They
have also condemned Damascus for using cluster munitions.

I am not arguing that because the United States and its allies have
indiscriminately killed large numbers of innocent noncombatants in the
past, the Syrian government should be held harmless for its own gas attack
at Ghouta, which killed hundreds of innocent civilians. Two wrongs never
make a right. I am arguing that the United States is in no moral or legal
position to play the Lone Ranger here. The first steps Washington should
take are to acknowledge its own implication in such atrocities and to
finish destroying its chemical stockpiles and join the ban on land mines
and cluster bombs.

Now that we’re in the 21st century, moreover, it is time to cease using the
supposedly macho language of violence in response to political challenges.
Tossing a couple of Tomahawk cruise missiles on a few government facilities
in Damascus is not going to deter the Syrian government from using chemical
weapons, and it will not affect the course of the war. Sonni Efron, a
former State Department official and now a senior government fellow at
Human Rights First, has
argued<http://blogs.reuters.com/great-debate/2013/08/29/in-syria-try-banks-before-bombs/>that
the United States and Europe could have a much more effective impact
by announcing that in response to the Baath provocation they were going to
close the loopholes that allow Syrian banks to continue to interface with
world financial institutions. This strategy would involve threatening
third-party sanctions on Russian banks that provide Damascus with a
financial backdoor. A united U.S.-EU push on this front would be far more
consequential for the Syrian government than a limited military strike.

Indeed, the Syrian regime will almost certainly welcome the cruise
missiles. In the aftermath, Syria can portray itself as a hero of Arab
nationalism, standing up to a bullying, imperialist West. Pro-regime
demonstrations are already being planned in Iraq, Egypt and Tunisia.
Domestically, President Bashar al-Assad portrays his foes as al-Qaida
cadres trained and paid for by Qatar, Saudi Arabia and the United States.
(Although there are al-Qaida affiliates among the rebels, the vast majority
of the demonstrators and rebels are ordinary Syrians tired of the regime’s
tyranny and economic stagnation). Assad will be in a better position to
make this argument after the Tomahawks land, and some Syrians who have been
on the fence may well declare for the regime for nationalist reasons. In
1998, then-President Bill Clinton fired cruise missiles at the Sudan of
President Omar al-Bashir. If you don’t know, do a quick Google search for
whom the sitting president of the Sudan is now. Bombs are seldom the answer
to geopolitical problems.

AP/Pablo Martinez Monsivais

---------------------
Former Iranian President Slams Syria for Gassing own People: Sign of deep
Divisions in 
Tehran<http://www.juancole.com/2013/09/president-gassing-divisions.html>

Posted on 09/03/2013 by Juan Cole

Former Iranian president Akbar Hashemi-Rafsanjani has roiled Iranian
politics by admitting that the Syrian government gassed its own people at
Ghuta in the eastern suburbs of Damascus. He was lamenting the calamities
that are befalling the hapless Syrian people. He attacked the regime of
President Bashar al-Assad for filling what he called “football stadiums”
full of political prisoners, as well as for using gas on the rebels.

This sign of division in the Iranian elite would ideally be used by
Washington to put diplomatic pressure on that country. However, the
American fixation with gunboat diplomacy will probably forestall that
diplomatic approach.

Bloghnews carried the original phone
video.<http://www.bloghnews.com/news/21183/%D9%BE%D8%A7%DB%8C%D8%A7%D9%86-%DB%8C%DA%A9-%D8%A7%D8%A8%D9%87%D8%A7%D9%85-/-%D9%81%DB%8C%D9%84%D9%85-.html>

This site translates the key remarks this
way<http://seenthis.net/messages/171563>:
“The Syrian people have suffered much during the past two years. More than
100,000 were killed and seven to eight million have become displaced.
Prisons are overflowing with people and they have turned stadiums into
prisons. On the one hand the people have suffered a chemical attack by
their own government. On the other, they have to await for US bombs today.”

The audio is also at Youtube <http://youtu.be/FtCcIAVz2M0>

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FtCcIAVz2M0


The Iranian press has scrubbed the original article on the former
president’s speech.

The leaders of the Islamic Republic of Iran are sensitive to poison gas
use, since the regime of Saddam Hussein in Iraq deployed mustard gas
against Iranian troops during the Iraq-Iran War of 1980-1988. Many Iranian
veterans still suffer from burning lungs and other bad health effects of
exposure. It is a sore issue with the older leadership of the army and the
Revolutionary Guards.

Even a representative of the Iranian Supreme Leader, Ali Khamenei, such as
the Iranian representative at the UN, Mohammad Khazaei , felt it necessary
tocondemn the use of poison gas in
Syria.<http://english.farsnews.com/newstext.aspx?nn=13920609001042>
Some
Iranian spokesmen have taken up the same line as Russia, that the rebels
gassed themselves, though this conclusion is absurd on the face of it and
contradicted by French, British, US and Israeli intelligence, including
telephone intercepts that make it clear that the Syrian military deployed
the gas. Khazaei was non-committal in his statement, saying that the UN
inspectors should be allowed to do their job. However, the UN inspectors
are not charged with identifying the perpetrator, only with determining if
poison gas was used and if so, what kind.

President Hassan Rouhani has been unusually quiet about the Syrian issue,
despite US threats to bomb Syria over the gas use.

The Iranian elite seems starkly divided. The Supreme Leader is backing the
Syrian regime to the hilt. But the reform faction, as exemplified by
Rafsanjani, despises the Baathist dictatorship and is disgusted by the
regime’s use of toxic gas on its own people. It may have been only an
accident that Rafsanjani’s remarks were recorded on a cell phone and became
known. He has embarrassed Khamenei and had to retract his statement.

It is also not impossible that Rafsanjani was deliberately embarrassing
Khamenei, in a minor sort of way (he was speaking at a small town in the
northern province of Mazandaran). Rafsanjani supported the Green Movement
of 2009, which demanded more personal liberties from Khamenei and disputed
the official story that Mahmoud Ahmadinejad had easily won a second term.
He was slapped down by Khamenei and his fanatical devotees, and the Green
Movement was repressed. Rafsanjani could just be taking revenge on Khamenei
by condemning Iran’s policy of supporting al-Assad no matter what. The
implication of what Rafsanjani said, after all, is that Khamenei is
supporting a dictator guilty of crimes against humanity. Although
Westerners demonize the Islamic Republic, its supporters tend to see it as
a repository of humane values, so that support for the Baath government of
Syria sits uneasily on them.

Whatever the case, it seems to me that Rajsanjani’s admission points to
severe polarization within the Iranian elite over continued support for
al-Assad.

Syria is a land bridge whereby Iran resupplies the Lebanese Shiite
party-militia, Hizbullah. If Iran lost Syria, its ability to intervene in
Palestine would be severely set back.


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



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