chroniclesmagazine.org 
<https://www.chroniclesmagazine.org/iran-no-escalation-no-war/?fbclid=IwAR2bfLe9rv4JSGdxYMcgTJH9K63thSzgtxwfCQN1cRXuqmQ-HDdSy40YuDU>
  


Iran: No Escalation, No War


6-8 minutes

  _____  

In his latest interview <https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6vWw7jBs4zE>  for 
Serbia’s top-rated Happy TV channel, Dr. Trifkovic dwells on the geostrategic 
and political dynamics behind the current crisis in the Middle East. The first 
question was whether we are at the threshold of a major war.
 
[Interview transcript below, translated from Serbian and abbreviated.]

  ST:      The odds of a major war are around 2.5-3 percent right now, no more. 
Iran has developed a strategic partnership with China and Russia, and only one 
day before Soleimani was killed they completed a joint naval exercise in the 
Gulf of Oman and the Indian Ocean. It is not far fetched to assume that the 
decision to kill him was partly meant to send a signal that Iran is still the 
weak link in this emerging geopolitical chain, and it was sent.

  Q:        But Iran is not Iraq, or Libya, or Afghanistan. It is a serious 
civilization, the heir to the Persian Empire, and attacking it would be 
dangerous. It seems that someone is pushing Trump into making the plunge?
 
ST:      But of course, and we know who exactly is pushing him—the 
neoconservatives, the same people who pushed America into the war against 
Saddam with their false claims that Iraq had the weapons of mass destruction. 
They have been lying, persistently, for almost 19 years about the war in 
Afghanistan, as we now know thanks to the Afghanistan Papers published by The 
Washington Post on December 9. America has been subjected to a systematic 
campaign of lies, and all along there has been no strategy to end the war…

  Back to Soleimani. He was a prominent commander and field operative, but he 
was not making strategic decisions. Media reports have exaggerated his 
political importance.

  Q:        It is even claimed that he was No. 2 in the regime, you are saying 
that is not correct?

  ST:      Yes. All key decisions on strategy are made by the Supreme Leader, 
Khamenei, and the President, Rouhani. Soleimani was there to see them executed 
on the ground, as evidenced by the fact that he was often on the road, between 
Damascus, Baghdad, and Tehran. He was notably effective in coordinating the 
operations of the Hezbollah, the Syrian Army, and the Iranian Revolutionary 
Guard against the Islamic State and other jihadists, the so-called moderate 
rebels in Syria, but he was not the one who was making decisions about Iran’s 
involvement in those operations in the first place… As we have seen before, it 
is always easier to replace a military or intelligence field operative than a 
key decision maker who designs the long-term political coordinates, which are 
subsequently followed by men like Soleimani.

  At this moment Trump is seeking to deescalate the crisis. The events of last 
summer indicate that he does not want to be pushed into this war. The Iranians 
attacked Saudi oil installations—which briefly crippled their production—and 
shot down an American drone, the markets responded with a major spike in the 
price of oil, yet Trump supposedly cancelled the air strikes as the planes were 
preparing for takeoff. The neoconservative hawks criticized him for 
indecisiveness and unwillingness to finally teach Iran a lesson. And yet he was 
aware that if he were to be drawn into war, he would risk losing the election, 
which now looks increasingly promising for him. The U.S. economy is in very 
good shape, it is growing at over two percent, unemployment is down to three 
and a half percent…

  Trump is aware there are people who want to push him into war. For that 
reason he replaced his National Security Advisor John Bolton last fall, who was 
the greatest hawk on his team. He was an unwavering upholder of the U.S. global 
hegemony, which was incompatible with Trump’s earlier promises that there would 
be no more regime change operations and no more endless wars in the Middle East 
which have never yielded any benefit to America—in fact nothing but blood, 
sweat, and tears. The main anti-Iranian hawk on Trump’s team now is Secretary 
of State Mike Pompeo. He was a great adversary of Bolton, but on this issue 
there was no difference between them.

  I hope that the generals, who are well aware of the potential risks of any 
Operation Iranian Freedom, will warn Trump that it would be very bloody, very 
expensive, and with an uncertain outcome. In ancient China, Sun Tzu warned 
against starting a war for which you have no end game in sight, and Clausewitz 
reiterated it 200 years ago. The failure to do so is manifest in all of 
America’s Middle Eastern wars: it is easy to enter Baghdad or Kabul, but it is 
not easy at all to execute the political wrapping up of the conflict. We have 
the remarkable situation that now—in 2020, almost 17 years since the war 
started—the Iraqi government is demanding the withdrawal of all American troops 
from its territory.

  In the meantime it is obvious that 48 hours after the last American soldiers 
leave Kabul the Taliban will be back. Whether this happens this year or in a 
hundred years is immaterial: sooner or later Afghanistan will revert to its 
natural, pre-2001 condition. As for Iraq, Soleimani’s killing has pushed the 
public opinion towards greater reliance on Tehran and against the United 
States. Last fall we saw demonstrations in Baghdad where protesters carried 
placards saying “No to America, no to Iran, yes to Iraq!” There was a great 
deal of support for the notion of reaffirming Iraqi sovereignty and autonomy of 
action which they have not had since 2003…

  Q:        So the Iraqis want U.S. withdrawal and America is threatening them 
with sanctions? After two Desert Storms?

  ST:      It is supremely ironic, looking at the U.S. position in the Middle 
East, that thousands of lives and several trillion dollars in treasure have 
been wasted to change the regime in Baghdad, which is now closer to Iran than 
Saddam Hussein could ever be. Saddam was the barrier to the projection of 
Iranian influence towards Syria and Lebanon, the Levant. With his removal, with 
the collapse of American proxies in Syria, with the closeness which has 
developed between Turkey and Russia—even though in Libya Erdogan and Putin 
support two opposite camps, but that is a different story—and with the emergent 
trilateral Moscow-Beijing-Tehran, I am of the opinion that Trump will make a 
sober assessment… We heard harsh and threatening statements last summer. There 
will be a deescalation yet again, the jug has remained whole one more time.  

 

-- 
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
"SERBIAN NEWS NETWORK" group.
To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email 
to [email protected].
To view this discussion on the web visit 
https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/senet/0ef601d5c8ba%2421025190%246306f4b0%24%40gmail.com.

Reply via email to