Source: 48 Hills
For the first time, the Biden Administration ordered a cross-border military attack in the Middle East.
On February 26, seven US missiles slammed into a facility used by Iranian-backed militias in Syria. Washington was retaliating for the February 15 attack on a US base in northern Iraq.
The Pentagon claims self-defense. āWe have acted in a deliberate manner that aims to de-escalate the overall situation in both eastern Syria and Iraq,ā said Pentagon Press Secretary John Kirby.
At the same time, the US āsends an unambiguous message,ā according to the Pentagon. āPresident Biden will act to protect American and Coalition personnel.ā
Whoever was supposed to get the message didnāt. On March 3, missiles hit an Iraqi base occupied by troops from the US and its allies.
So let me get this straight: The recent fighting began when the Pentagon murdered Iranian General Qasem Soleimani last year. There have been several tit-for-tat airstrikesāall proving Tehran is the bad guy aggressor while Washington is the good guy acting in self-defense.
James A. Russell, associate professor at the Naval Postgraduate School, Monterey, tells me this policy of retaliation hadnāt worked for Obama or Trump, and Biden wonāt do any better. (He stresses that his views are his own, not necessarily those of the Navy Postgraduate School.)
āWhat are we doing in Iraq in the first place?ā he asks. āWe lost the war.ā
If the US hadnāt occupied Iraq in 2003, and Saddam Hussein was still in power, the Islamic State wouldnāt have grown as an opposition force and Iran wouldnāt have influence in Baghdad.
āWe have a record of disastrous policies across the Middle East,ā Russell says.
Obama, despite his claims to be an anti-interventionist, expanded missile and drone attacks in the region. Trump left office with occupation troops remaining throughout the region.
āThe Trump Administration didnāt even rise to the level of rank amateurism,ā Russell says. āBut the recent bombings show Biden has the same predilections as previous administrations. Somehow bombs are a substitute for picking up the phone to carry out diplomacy.ā
Hypocrisy
While out of power, mainstream Democrats had no problem criticizing missile attacks carried out by Trump. In April 2017, the Trump Administration bombed Syria for its alleged use of chemical weapons.
At the time Jen Psaki, now White House press spokesperson, tweeted, āWhat is the legal authority for strikes? Assad is a brutal dictator. But Syria is a sovereign country.ā
Today Psaki declines to comment on her tweet but defends Bidenās military attack. Senator Bernie Sanders, on the other hand, has remained consistently opposed to military intervention.
āThis is the same path weāve been on for almost two decades,ā Sanders says in a press statement. āFor far too long, administrations of both parties have interpreted their authorities in an extremely expansive way to continue military interventions across the Middle East region and elsewhere. This must end.ā
Some 2,500 US troops remain in Iraq and, to date, Biden has made no announcements about withdrawal.
Hawks v doves
During the 2020 presidential campaign, I wrote that certain Biden advisors were Iran hawks, ready to continue Trumpās disastrous policies of maximum pressure. They used their past connections to benefit corporations and foreign governments. Now those advisors are government officials.
Gareth Smyth, a journalist who covered the Middle East for 29 years, tells me from his home in County Mayo, Ireland, that some in the administration think āBiden can keep the Trump sanctions. They call it āleverageā instead of āmaximum pressure.ā ā
Beginning under the administration of George W. Bush, Washington devised a sophisticated, unilateral and illegal system to prevent Iran and other sanctioned countries from using the international banking system. When the Obama Administration applied these sanctions, it caused economic havoc in Iran.
Starting in 1979, with the takeover of the US Embassy in Tehran, Washington imposed many complicated sanctions on Iran. Today most international companies have stopped trade with Iran, fearing US economic and judicial retaliation. Over time certain groups in Washington developed a vested interest in maintaining those sanctions.
Specialized lawyers, lobbyists, and think tanks developed a āsanctions empire,ā Smyth says. Some think tanks āpose as neutral academics but they have an agenda.ā
For example, the Foundation for Defense of Democracies describes itself as āa nonprofit, nonpartisan . . . research institute focusing on foreign policy and national security.ā And itās the go-to source for the media looking to bash Iran.
Future Negotiations
Bidenās attack on the Iraqi militias was intended to serve many purposes, including an effort to bolster the US position in nuclear talks. It had the opposite effect. A few days after the bombing, Iranian officials rejected efforts by European powers to facilitate new discussions.
Both sides could reach an agreement based on each othersā minimum demands. Iran wants Washington to rejoin the nuclear accord and stop sanctions. The US wants Iran to limit its nuclear power program so it canāt be used to build a nuclear weapon. Both sides should be able to agree; they did it in 2015.
But the US also demands that Iran stop supporting Lebanonās Hezbollah, Yemenās Houthis, and Syriaās President Bashar al Assad.
Under the 2015 accord Iran agreed to abide by special provisions in the Non-Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons Treaty, which would make building Ā a nuclear bomb even more difficult. Says analyst Russell: āThe US should be satisfied to have Iran as a constructive member of the NPT community.ā
According to journalist Smyth, Bidenās military attacks wonāt succeed any more than previous Presidents. Decades of military pressure and sanctions havenāt changed Iranās foreign policy. āLogic says you should negotiate,ā he says. āThe cycle of revenge wonāt work.ā
Freelance journalist Reese Erlichās nationally distributed column, Foreign Correspondent, appears every two weeks. Follow him on Twitter, @ReeseErlich; friend him on Facebook; and visit his webpage.
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