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Suddenly, a Dangerous Turn
by Robert Parry
Two seemingly disconnected events have created a suddenly dangerous turn regarding the future of U.S. wars in the Middle East.
One was the abrupt resignation of the person who has been the biggest obstacle to a U.S. military strike against Iran, Admiral William Fallon, the chief of Central Command which oversees U.S. military operations in the volatile region.
The second is the ugly direction that the Democratic presidential competition has taken, with Hillary Clintons campaign intensifying its harsh rhetoric against Barack Obama, reducing the likelihood that he can win the presidency and thus raising the odds that the next president will be either John McCain or Sen. Clinton, both hawks on Iran.
Throughout the campaign, Clinton has mocked Obama as
inexperienced for his desire to engage in presidential-level diplomacy
with Iran and other adversarial states. And she recently judged him as
unqualified to serve as Commander in Chief, while declaring that both
she and Sen. McCain have crossed that threshold.
The
cumulative effect of Clintons attacks on Obamas qualifications
combined with her campaigns efforts to turn many white voters against
him as the black candidate has buoyed Republican hopes for November.
By
simultaneously marginalizing and dirtying up Obama, the Clinton
campaign also has tamped down the excitement of many Democrats,
especially the young, for a candidate that they see as offering a
refreshing message of hope and change.
Replacing Obamas message
of reform and reconciliation is a Clinton message of resentment and
victimization, as voiced by former Rep. Geraldine Ferraro who claimed
that Clinton confronts sexist media bias as a woman while Obama gets
an easy ride because hes black.
If Obama was a white man, he
would not be in this position, Ferraro, the former Democratic vice
presidential candidate, told The Daily Breeze of California. And if he
was a woman (of any color) he would not be in this position. He happens
to be very lucky to be who he is.
The idea that a black man in
America, who was raised by a single mother and who bears an exotic
foreign-sounding name, would be deemed very lucky struck many
Americans as a bizarre choice of words. But it fits with a key sub rosa
theme of the Clinton campaign, that an unqualified black man was
cutting line in front of a better qualified white woman.
Clinton
gingerly distanced herself from Ferraros comments and Ferraro resigned
from Clintons finance committee. But even political analysts who are
fond of Clinton found the larger picture of her campaign strategic
demeaning of Obama offensive.
MSNBCs Keith Olbermann said he decided reluctantly that he must speak out against the Clinton campaigns behavior.
As
it has reached its apex in their tone-deaf, arrogant and insensitive
reaction to the remarks of Geraldine Ferraro, your own advisers are
slowly killing your chances to become president, Olbermann said in a
Special Comment on March 12.
Senator, their words, and your
own, are now slowly killing the chances for any Democrat to become
president. You are now campaigning as if Barack Obama were the
Democrat and you were the Republican. As Shakespeare wrote, Senator,
that way madness lies.
Into the Abyss
If followed to its
logical yet crazed conclusion, the madness also might be leading
the United States into the ever deepening abyss of Middle East wars.
After
all, both McCain and Clinton were staunch supporters of the Iraq War,
now nearing its fifth anniversary with no end in sight.
McCain
remains an Iraq War advocate, even he says if the U.S. occupation must
last a century or more. Clinton only reversed herself on the war as she
prepared to run for the Democratic nomination, realigning herself with
the anti-war views of most Democrats, but she refused to admit that her
2002 war-authorization vote was a mistake.
Both McCain and Clinton also favor a hard line toward Iran.
During
a South Carolina campaign stop in April 2007, as the Bush
administration was pounding the war drums with Iran, McCain veered off
into a musical rendition, changing the lyrics of an old Beach Boys song
to Bomb, bomb, bomb, bomb, bomb Iran.
In September 2007,
Clinton supported a Senate resolution co-sponsored by neoconservative
Sen. Joe Lieberman that sought to have Irans Revolutionary Guard
designated a global terrorist organization, a move that Sen. James
Webb, D-Virginia, warned could be tantamount to a declaration of war.
A
month later, however, President George W. Bush opted for a less extreme
position than the one Sen. Clinton favored. He designated only the Quds
Force, a special operations branch of the Revolutionary Guard, as a
global terrorist group.
Now, however, the abrupt resignation
of Admiral Fallon, who had publicly challenged the saber-rattling
toward Iran coming from the White House, removed one of the chief
obstacles to the use of military force against Iran over its nuclear
program.
Intelligence sources have told me that President Bush
and Vice President Dick Cheney were eyeing possible air strikes against
Iranian targets in 2007 before they encountered Fallons stiff
opposition.
The White House hardliners also met resistance from
the U.S. intelligence community, which released a National Intelligence
Estimate reporting that Iran had shut down a key element of its nuclear
weapons program.
Since Fallons sudden resignation, intelligence
sources have said they do not foresee an imminent U.S. assault on Iran,
although one source said Fallon quit, in part, over a new White House
demand for an updated attack plan.
More likely, the sources say,
the issue of how to deal with Iran will pass to the next president. In
that regard, McCain and Clinton promise more tough talk and
belligerence, while Obama vows to speak directly with Irans leaders
over how to reduce tensions.
Yet, the combined events of the
past several days the sudden ouster of the chief military opponent of
an expanded war in the Middle East and the apparent decline in the
political fortunes of the most dovish candidate suggest that the
Bush-Cheney belligerent strategies may well outlast their terms of
office.
Robert Parry broke many of the Iran-Contra stories in
the 1980s for the Associated Press and Newsweek. His latest book, Neck
Deep: The Disastrous Presidency of George W. Bush, was written with two
of his sons, Sam and Nat, and can be ordered at neckdeepbook.com. His
two previous books, Secrecy & Privilege: The Rise of the Bush
Dynasty from Watergate to Iraq and Lost History: Contras, Cocaine, the
Press & 'Project Truth' are also available there. Or go to
Amazon.com.