July 12, 2008 

An Aggressive and Hypocritical US Policy Toward Iran 


by Ivan Eland



The chauvinistic American news media have focused on evil Iran's missile tests 
and the indignant Bush administration reaction, while missing some key causes 
of the event. As if the Iranians had started the entire dust up, the media 
reported Gordon Johndroe, the White House spokesman, barking, "The Iranian 
regime only furthers the isolation of the Iranian people from the international 
community when it engages in this sort of activity." The U.S. press then 
reported Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice as bristling that the U.S. would 
defend its allies and protect its interests against attack. 
The media could have given equal emphasis to the recent strident rhetoric and 
behavior of Israel and the Bush administration towards Iran, but didn't. Not 
only has the Bush administration pointedly declined to rule out military action 
against Iran, the United States was conducting provocative naval maneuvers in 
the Persian Gulf near Iran before the Iranian missile tests. In addition, last 
month, according to U.S. intelligence officials, Israel conducted an exercise 
that simulated a strike on Iranian nuclear facilities. In the American press, 
these provocations tend to get buried under sensational headlines implying 
Iranian aggressiveness in launching the missiles. For example, the headline for 
a New York Times article on the subject read, "Iran Launches 9 Missiles in War 
Games, One with Range Said to Include Israel." 
Via the missile firings and by bluntly saying that if attacked, a counterattack 
on Israel and the U.S. fleet would ensue, Iran was merely trying to deter any 
potential Israeli or Bush administration attack before the U.S. elections. Iran 
– not Israel or the U.S. – has the fear of being attacked.
The American public assumes that the U.S. being a democracy automatically 
translates into being right in disputes overseas. But statistics show that 
democracies are no less aggressive overseas than non-democracies. In fact, by 
far the most aggressive country in the post-World War II world – if measured in 
the numbers of military and covert interventions – is the United States. Iran 
may be indirectly supporting militias in Iraq, Gaza, and Lebanon, but the 
United States, just since 2001, has invaded and occupied two countries and 
changed their governments using armed force. 
Iran got permanently on the wrong side of U.S. policy after its fundamentalist 
Islamic revolution and the taking of U.S. diplomats hostage in 1979. However, 
the American people have always been oblivious to what caused that burst of 
anti-American venom. In 1953, the CIA ousted Mohammed Mossadeq, the elected 
leader of Iran, because he nationalized British oil interests. The U.S. 
government reinstated and supported the brutal Shah, who ruled until the 
revolution in 1978, and grabbed 40 percent of Iran's oil for American 
companies. 
Thus, the Iranian missile tests and taking of American hostages show that only 
in Heisenberg's uncertainty principle in quantum physics and in U.S. public 
opinion are events uncaused. Furthermore, the U.S. public has the impression 
that Iran is a totalitarian state of people wearing strange Darth Vader-style 
black costumes. But Iran does have some democratic tendencies and many more 
than the despotic U.S. allies of Egypt and Saudi Arabia. 
In addition to being excessively belligerent, the Bush administration' s Iran 
policy is loaded with hypocrisy. Despite all the saber rattling and "stringent" 
economic sanctions against Iran, U.S. trade with Iran has increased tenfold 
during the Bush administration – from $9 million in 2001 to $146 million last 
year. And of the $546 million in cumulative trade during that period, $169 
million, or almost a third, was in cigarettes. It would be too cynical to 
assume the Bush administration has an insidious plan to undermine the Iranian 
regime and nuclear program by giving the Iranian population lung cancer; this 
loophole in the sanctions clearly benefits the U.S. tobacco industry, which is 
very tight with the Republican Party.
Further hypocrisy is the U.S. reluctance to negotiate with those who believe in 
fundamentalist Islam, while negotiating with and even paying hostile secular 
groups not to shoot at U.S. troops. The United States has been dragging its 
feet on negotiating with the Iranian government and protests when the Pakistani 
government negotiates with Islamic militants in its country. Meanwhile, the 
U.S. has negotiated with and essentially paid secular Sunni guerrillas in Iraq, 
who had killed thousands of U.S. soldiers, to switch sides in that conflict.
Although Iran is not free of authoritarianism, has a fundamentalist Islamic 
government that seems strange to the West, and is probably attempting to get 
nuclear weapons because it lives in a rough neighborhood and fears an Israeli 
or U.S. attack, the U.S. needs to drop its aggressive and hypocritical stance 
and make a sincere attempt to negotiate away Iran's nuclear program. If that 
cannot be done, the United States should deter an Iranian nuclear attack using 
its formidable conventional and nuclear arsenals – as it did with radical 
Maoist China and more recently has done with North Korea.
 
http://www.antiwar. com/eland/ ?articleid= 13124





Satrio Arismunandar 
Executive Producer
News Division, Trans TV, Lantai 3
Jl. Kapten P. Tendean Kav. 12 - 14 A, Jakarta 12790 
Phone: 7917-7000, 7918-4544 ext. 4023,  Fax: 79184558, 79184627
 
http://satrioarismunandar6.blogspot.com
http://satrioarismunandar.multiply.com  
 


      

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