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Iran: The war begins

John Pilger

Published 05 February 2007

As opposition grows in America to the failed Iraq adventure, the Bush administration is preparing public opinion for an attack on Iran, its latest target, by the spring.

The United States is planning what will be a catastrophic attack on Iran. For the Bush cabal, the attack will be a way of "buying time" for its dis aster in Iraq. In announcing what he called a "surge" of American troops in Iraq, George W Bush identified Iran as his real target. "We will interrupt the flow of support [to the insurgency in Iraq] from Iran and Syria," he said. "And we will seek out and destroy the networks providing advanced weaponry and training to our enemies in Iraq."

"Networks" means Iran. "There is solid evidence," said a State Department spokesman on 24 January, "that Iranian agents are involved in these networks and that they are working with individuals and groups in Iraq and are being sent there by the Iranian government." Like Bush's and Tony Blair's claim that they had irrefutable evidence that Saddam Hussein was deploying weapons of mass destruction, the "evidence" lacks all credibility. Iran has a natural affinity with the Shia majority of Iraq, and has been implacably opposed to al-Qaeda, condemning the 9/11 attacks and supporting the United States in Afghanistan. Syria has done the same. Investigations by the New York Times, the Los Angeles Times and others, including British military officials, have concluded that Iran is not engaged in the cross-border supply of weapons. General Peter Pace, chairman of the US Joint Chiefs of Staff, has said no such evidence exists.

As the American disaster in Iraq deepens and domestic and foreign opposition grows, "neo-con" fanatics such as Vice-President Dick Che- ney believe their opportunity to control Iran's oil will pass unless they act no later than the spring. For public consumption, there are potent myths. In concert with Israel and Washington's Zionist and fundamentalist Christian lobbies, the Bushites say their "strategy" is to end Iran's nuclear threat. In fact, Iran possesses not a single nuclear weapon, nor has it ever threatened to build one; the CIA estimates that, even given the political will, Iran is incapable of building a nuclear weapon before 2017, at the earliest. Unlike Israel and the United States, Iran has abided by the rules of the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty, of which it was an original signatory, and has allowed routine inspections under its legal obligations - until gratuitous, punitive measures were added in 2003, at the behest of Washington. No report by the International Atomic Energy Agency has ever cited Iran for diverting its civilian nuclear programme to military use. The IAEA has said that for most of the past three years its inspectors have been able to "go anywhere and see anything". They inspected the nuclear installations at Isfahan and Natanz on 10 and 12 January and will return on 2 to 6 February. The head of the IAEA, Mohamed ElBaradei, says that an attack on Iran will have "catastrophic consequences" and only encourage the regime to become a nuclear power.

Unlike its two nemeses, the US and Israel, Iran has attacked no other countries. It last went to war in 1980 when invaded by Saddam Hussein, who was backed and equipped by the US, which supplied chemical and biological weapons produced at a factory in Maryland. Unlike Israel, the world's fifth military power - with its thermo nuclear weapons aimed at Middle East targets and an unmatched record of defying UN resolutions, as the enforcer of the world's longest illegal occupation - Iran has a history of obeying international law and occupies no territory other than its own.

The "threat" from Iran is entirely manufactured, aided and abetted by familiar, compliant media language that refers to Iran's "nuclear ambitions", just as the vocabulary of Saddam's non-existent WMD arsenal became common usage. Accompanying this is a demonising that has become standard practice. As Edward Herman has pointed out, President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad "has done yeoman service in facilitating [this]"; yet a close examination of his notorious remark about Israel in October 2005 reveals how it has been distorted. According to Juan Cole, American professor of modern Middle East and south Asian history at the University of Michigan, and other Farsi language analysts, Ahmadinejad did not call for Israel to be "wiped off the map". He said: "The regime occupying Jerusalem must vanish from the page of time." This, says Cole, "does not imply military action or killing anyone at all". Ahmadinejad compared the demise of the Israeli regime to the dissolution of the Soviet Union. The Iranian regime is repressive, but its power is diffuse and exercised by the mullahs, with whom Ahmadinejad is often at odds. An attack would surely unite them.

Nuclear option

The one piece of "solid evidence" is the threat posed by the United States. An American naval build-up in the eastern Mediterranean has begun. This is almost certainly part of what the Pentagon calls CONPLAN 8022-02, which is the aerial bombing of Iran. In 2004, National Security Presidential Directive 35, entitled "Nuclear Weapons Deployment Authorisation", was issued. It is classified, of course, but the presumption has long been that NSPD 35 authorised the stockpiling and deployment of "tactical" nuclear weapons in the Middle East. This does not mean Bush will use them against Iran, but for the first time since the most dangerous years of the cold war, the use of what were then called "limited" nuclear weapons is being discussed openly in Washington. What they are debating is the prospect of other Hiroshimas and of radioactive fallout across the Middle East and central Asia. Seymour Hersh disclosed in the New Yorker last year that American bombers "have been flying simulated nuclear weapons delivery missions . . . since last summer".

The well-informed Arab Times in Kuwait says that Bush will attack Iran before the end of April. One of Russia's most senior military strategists, General Leonid Ivashov, says the US will use nuclear munitions delivered by cruise missiles launched from the Mediterranean. "The war in Iraq," he wrote on 24 January, "was just one element in a series of steps in the process of regional destabilisation. It was only a phase in getting closer to dealing with Iran and other countries. [When the attack on Iran begins] Israel is sure to come under Iranian missile strikes . . . Posing as victims, the Israelis . . . will suffer some tolerable damage and then the outraged US will destabilise Iran finally, making it look like a noble mission of retribution . . . Public opinion is already under pressure. There will be a growing anti-Iranian . . . hysteria, . . . leaks, disinformation et cetera . . . It . . . remain[s] unclear . . . whether the US Congress is going to authorise the war."

Asked about a US Senate resolution disapproving of the "surge" of US troops to Iraq, Vice-President Cheney said: "It won't stop us." Last November, a majority of the American electorate voted for the Democratic Party to control Congress and stop the war in Iraq. Apart from insipid speeches of "disapproval", this has not happened and is unlikely to happen. Influential Democrats, such as the new leader of the House of Representatives, Nancy Pelosi, and the would-be presidential candidates Hillary Clinton and John Edwards, have disported themselves before the Israeli lobby. Edwards is regarded in his party as a "liberal". He was one of a high-level American contingent at a recent Israeli conference in Herzliya, where he spoke about "an unprecedented threat to the world and Israel [sic]. At the top of these threats is Iran . . . All options are on the table to ensure that Iran will never get a nuclear weapon." Hillary Clinton has said: "US policy must be unequivocal . . . We have to keep all options on the table." Pelosi and Howard Dean, another liberal, have distinguished themselves by attacking the former president Jimmy Carter, who oversaw the Camp David Agreement between Israel and Egypt and has had the gall to write a truthful book accusing Israel of becoming an "apartheid state". Pelosi said: "Carter does not speak for the Democratic Party." She is right, alas.

In Britain, Downing Street has been presented with a document entitled Answering the Charges by Professor Abbas Edalat, of Imperial College London, on behalf of others seeking to expose the disinformation on Iran. Blair remains silent. Apart from the usual honourable exceptions, parliament remains shamefully silent, too.

Can this really be happening again, less than four years after the invasion of Iraq, which has left some 650,000 people dead? I wrote virtually this same article early in 2003; for Iran now, read Iraq then. And is it not remarkable that North Korea has not been attacked? North Korea has nuclear weapons.

In numerous surveys, such as the one released on 23 January by the BBC World Service, "we", the majority of humanity, have made clear our revulsion for Bush and his vassals. As for Blair, the man is now politically and morally naked for all to see. So who speaks out, apart from Professor Edalat and his colleagues? Privileged journalists, scholars and artists, writers and thespians, who sometimes speak about "freedom of speech", are as silent as a dark West End theatre. What are they waiting for? The declaration of another thousand-year Reich, or a mushroom cloud in the Middle East, or both?

http://www.johnpilger.com

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29 comments from readers

Keir H
03 February 2007 at 13:40

Can there be a more eye-opening article for all those who disbelieve that another Middle Eastern country is been made ready for invasion. Who knows what the next move will be from Bush's fanatical administration will be, but it all leads to Iran. It seems logical reasoning and well thought out policies are something that are as scarce as legal representation in Guantanamo. How blinkered are they to the mounting evidence of atrocities and downright injustices in Lebanon, Palestine and Iraq. Politicians in power at the moment seem to be unable to look back at the last century and learn from past mistakes. Did anybody mention Vietnam or even the Suez crisis before rushing to invade Iraq? How were these decisions made, were they thoroughly researched using past historical events as a guide or was it all decided by one person, without guidance or maybe it was all religious. We need more open debating in our flimsy democratic institutions before our weak politicians lamely vote for another invasion.

Barking_Mad
03 February 2007 at 16:45

The sad fact is that these policiticans are doing what in their view 'has to be done'. They are ready to take the risk of all out war of nuclear opitions because to them the risks of not doing so are too great.

This is real-politik at it's most brazen and dangerous. Can we stop them? Possibly, but it will require a superhuman effort of which was never been seen before by those who see a different world where violence and killing isn't left in the hands of a very small dangerous minority.

writeon
03 February 2007 at 22:00

What's the date? 2007 or 1914? Are we really that close to yet another war in the Middle East for control of even more oil? I agree with John Pilger, I too think we're sliding towards war with Iran. I really hope I'm proved wrong. It would be such a pleasure to be absurd. Is it too late to stop an attack on Iran - I think the answer is probably, yes, it's too late. Bush and Blair have a date with destiny and doom. I know this sounds over-dramatic and apocalyptic. But let's be brutally honest, our leaders are a gang of more or less insane, bloodthirsty, murdering criminals, who, if we really lived in a functioning democracy would be behind bars now, not leading us towards even more slaughter and destruction. Only something close to a mass popular revolt, the like of which we saw in eastern europe, that brought down the Soviet empire, will have an effect. Blair is hanging on to power so he can provide his lord and master with one final service. Though if the war goes badly and the Iranians fight back, Blair may be around for a lot longer than most of us realize. In my opinion Blair already knows Bush is getting ready to attack Iran and he fully intends to support him all the way, now matter what. In a less than perfect world, how could one stop a Blair dragging us into another and potentially even more disasterous war? Well, historically there are numerous casses of kings who had misterious "hunting accidents" and "accidentally" walked in front of stray arrows or bullets. But we don't live in the Middle Ages do we? Blair is not really a monarch is he? So that primitive option for dealing with an unpopular, dangerous and insane leader is not a realistic option anymore, not in a democracy at least. No, we much prefer to let young soldiers and civilians die instead, whilst we stand by and wring our hands impotently from the sidelines, hands that could be used more constructively for tearing down the walls.

srilrok
03 February 2007 at 22:18

Oh good gd it! You sit in your comfortable confines edifying with words deeds done with muscle and willpower. It is not the USA who is the aggressor but rather the last barbaric civilization. The English departure from Rome was not a pleasant time in history but we are all better for it having happened. Who among you can honestly state articulation is the only element lacking in the justifiable neutralizing of this enemy. If the President was a democrat of say, Truman's ilk, are any of you having these doubts? Pshaw.

Fanakapan
04 February 2007 at 01:25

Without wishing to appear unduly flippant, and having due regard for those unfortunates who will certainly loose their lives, I can only echo the words of the 'Decider' , Bring it On.

When this event occurs, and the certain fallout comes home, is it not reasonable to assume that, those gangsters who would pose as our leaders, will be persued by the rightious mob?

Of course I do assume that the burghers of the USA, are still aware of the Declaration of Independence, and also with the wise words of Mr Jefferson of Virginia,

The Tree of Liberty must occasionaly be watered with both the blood of Tyrants and of Patriots, it is its best manure.

phase3
04 February 2007 at 01:44

It seems to me that the world as a whole would get together to put a stop to the military ambitions of the united states. This war cannot be stopped by a few people but hundreds of millions of us speaking our minds can stop bush from delivering Genocide to the Irainian people as bush has done to the Iraqi's. It is my prediction that if bush is allowed to attack and slaughter the innocent people of Iran, it may be years in the future , but Iran will get even by sending several nucleur warheads into several american cities. It's just a matter of time until america reaps what it sows. By attcaking irans suspected nucleur sites, the united states is foolish enough to believe that irans nucleur programs will be shut down for a very long time, but I believe Iran is much too smart to allow that to happen. The programs will continue and Iran will get even with america in the future........Bush had better not attack the sovereign nation of Iran. If america attacks, iran will be justified in going nucleur.

phase3
04 February 2007 at 02:45

Well, it seems that bush needs to start ww3. This man will not be happy until america gets hit with several nucleur warheads. What amazes me most about the fact that bush is being allowed to make preparations for a second all out war of genocide on a sovereign nation is the fact that the american public is sitting here watching to see if this butcher will actually do it. Wake up america, its time to say something to your members of congress. Wake up justice department and united states supreme court justices, its time to stop this homicidal serial killer and put him in a strate jacket.....KING GEORGE BUSH IS CRAZY. Iran will absolutely come back in 10 to 15 years and nuke several U,S cities if bush is allowed butcher to their country and butcher the irainian people. Lets stop this sadistic president while we still can. It appears as though congress is refuing to stop him. They are authorizing bush to continue his genocide.

The Marine
04 February 2007 at 03:37

tom

As an American, and a former member of the Military, I'm willing and able to give my Life to DEFEND this country, so when “they” cross the border I will attempt to kick their a#$. However, I feel it is important to note the the “leaders” of the U.S. Of A will survive a nuclear Holocaust , We, the People of America are looking down the barrel of the same Gun the rest of the world is, and for the same reasons the Tyrants are in power around the world, they are in power here

cinder
04 February 2007 at 03:47

I read an interesting article about how Europe has entered the age of civilization that is predicated on the psychology of weakness.Since America has provided the security umbrella since WWII, Europe has been able to increase it's generous social contract. Europe peace has been imposed by America and now enjoys peace after hundreds of years of continental war. Since Europe does'nt have the capacity to wage war, it uses the mechanism of international treaties and organizations to try for diplomatic solutions. It can do that since they know if they fail, America will take up the security challenge.

America has been asking the civilized world to persude Iran to end it's nuclear ambitions.However even Europe has been watering down the sanctions even though that failure will increase the risk of war. America has said that Iran will not be allowed to develope nuclear weapons. The Iranian regime has behind Hizbolla who started the Israel mini war in Lebanon this summer. Hizbolla invaded Israel and killed soldiers and kidnapped another to divert world attention from the sanctions issue in the U.N. Even Nasrulla openly stated that Iran is the support behind that organization.

Iran has enacted several acts of war against the United States, from 1979 when it took the American Embasyy and held its diplomatic personeel hostage for 444 days. Hizbolla bombed the Marine barracks in Lebanon and killed 271 Americans. America has the justification to wage war against Iran but has requested help to get a diplomatic solution.

The current regime in Iran has explicited stated that Israel will be destroyed and the United States also. Since they have stated that , the regime can not be trusted with nuclear weapons. North Korea has been helping by having it s technicians over to Iran and developing Iran's missile program . At this time only the local area and Europe is in danger of nuclear missiles from Iran. But the ability to get a ballistic missile launch is feasible and can be reached in time if Iran is allowed to proceed without hindrance.

I know that the author of this writer does not like to acuurate or truthful since he uses such bogus number as 650,000 people killed in Iraq That has been proved False. Also he seems to think that the New York times and the Los Angeles Times are intelligence organizations when they are merely reporting what other people say. The simple fact that he considers news organization as reputable intelligent agencies undermines the credibility of his arguement.

chrisfromtoronto
04 February 2007 at 04:52

Most people on this planet thankfully see through the BushBlairs of the world. Unfortunately us "sheep" here in N Amerika are in a media-induced coma, purposely of course; but we also are wavering and have our doubts as to the veracity of our leader's statements. This is why I believe that in order for Iran to be next, these animals will need to unleash another Pearl Harbour, another false flag operation. What we will need to do, is to quickly and effectively rip apart their lie, and expose it as a lie. We've all got to be on our toes, ready to spread the word to all of our friends, colleagues, and loved ones.

It's time to fight back.

johndri
04 February 2007 at 06:51

Once the population of the United States submits itself to a military draft, no one will be safe.

ozviking
04 February 2007 at 10:09

I agree that if the US attacks Iran it will be the proverbial straw and the US will reap what it sows, but I dont believe that the aforementioned retribution will come from the direction of Iran, but from a power much greater, just look around you, what in all reality is most threatening to your very survival, is it Iran? Those "warnings" are for real, and he is pissed!

Lorenze
04 February 2007 at 11:13

The certainty of all out nuclear war in the middle east

and adjacent states, will be a blood letting without

any known historical parallel. The end result will be

a phenominal benefit for all of mankind, although several billions will certainly die. The hydrocarbon fuel

cycle will end along with animal husbandry the true

cause of global warming. Cold fusion and related

technologies will totally dominate the energy supply.

While the racially homogeneous nation state will

form the key to human political, ethnic and cultural

organisation. In short Bush and his cohorts will be

doing the right thing for the wrong reasons.

Ray
04 February 2007 at 14:52

Bush is but a puppet of the new world order mentioned by his daddy back in 1991. The neocons wrote the Plan for a New American Century and was signed in 1997. If you haven't read it, I suggest that you do. It calls for a military buildup and aggression into the middle east and the world. It states that the american people will not support this agenda unless something happened to arouse fear and anger like a "New Pearl Harbor" event. Well, it is painfully obvious that 911 was engineered to shock americans into allowing the Bushites to illegally invade two countries and at the same time shred the constitution, remove the bill of rights and commence spying on citizens. The phoney war on terror is a sham. This once great and respected nation has been highjacked by the elite cabal of international bankers aka Illuminati and are now using the military to take control of the middle east in its plan of world domination. America will be just part of the north panamerican union and everyone who is not an elite will be just another micro chipped serf slaving for the corporate masters. WAKE UP AMERICA !!

peterdavidbeter
04 February 2007 at 18:33

Benjamin Freedman already warned us about danger od world Zionism in his speech in 1961. Full speech im mp3 is avaible here. Hear for yourself:

http://www.peterdavidbeter.com/docs/Benjamin-Freedman.html

Thoth-Hermes
04 February 2007 at 21:47

The fallout of "the attack" on Iran "will" bring about a cataclysmic revolution "within" the United States that will make what is going on in Iraq look like a day at the beach. The first indication will be the reinstatement of the draft and it "will come".

pjrsullivan
05 February 2007 at 01:24

Genocide is the Plan

The decision was made long ago to exterminate the mass of the human race with the use of nuclear weapons.

The presence of "ET" is still classified "Above Top Secret," and for good reason. If not for "ET" we all would have been turned into nuclear waste long ago.

Iran is but one more attempt to get the "Big" one, underway.

Our Predator classes understood from the beginning of the nuclear age, that if a build up was undertaken, then humanity would be exterminated.

The Predator classes made the decision to go ahead with a full scale nuclear build up, as to the rest of us they decided to : "Grant them Eternal Rest."

"ET" has so far prevented this from happening, but at some point in time, we need to address this continuing threat of nuclear destruction, and end it one way or the other.

We are the "Living Dead."

http://politicsofet.com

shamemahtabparizad
05 February 2007 at 12:02

im from iran there is no word if any disaser accour but hey world who hear our sound it is true that nuclear energy is our legal right but if it cause a tragedy we dont want it i want to live in a peacefull land and marry my beloved who live in acity neare to iran's nuclear construction even if i dont marry him i want to be sure that we live under same sky.i want to have child and want to say them that we have rich culture and a great historical background but if war accoure every thing will ruined and there would be nothing to give to our children we want to live in peace please help us we dont want to war we dont have capability and power either to figh and constancy we want to be alive not dying in erosion war

hbzadeh
05 February 2007 at 17:18

That the war with Iran is going to happen is not news. I, for one, have been writing about it for the last 2-3 years, mainly for Persian publications. And it would not happen only because of the American/British policies, but also because of the policies adopted by the Iranian government.

While every effort should be made to prevent this catastrophe (even though it may be too late now), it does not help the anti-war movement to concentrate wholly on the US government’s designs and exonerate the Iranian government of what it has been doing – as John Pilger does here.

Take the notorious statement by President Ahmadinejad that has been vaguely translated in the west as Israel being "wiped off the map". John makes a lot out of the fact that what Ahmadinejad has said was that “The regime occupying Jerusalem must vanish from the page of time.” This is true. But how much difference does that make in real terms? Indeed, as a Persian scholar I can say with authority that the meaning of what he has said, in the context he used to pronounce it, could be taken as much stronger than just saying that Israel should be wiped off the map. When you express it in terms of “time” (eternity) instead of “place” (map of the world) you are saying, in effect, that not only the regime must vanish “now” but “forever”. This fits well with the apocalyptical philosophy that guides Ahmadinejad’s policies and is manifest in many of his pronunciations, including those he has delivered at the United Nations.

The comparison with the demise of the Soviet Union does not help to dispel the enormity of what Ahmadinejad has said about Israel either. Ahmadinejad knows well that the Soviet Union was not a democratic system, but an oligarchy – like the one he represents himself. It needed only a free election to get rid of the system. However, no such an election would do the same in Israel – except only if it disappears as a State first, and then the election is held in the whole of Palestine as a single country. So the comparison, too, implies that Israel must vanish as a State – something that can only be done by force. And think of what would have been the reaction of John Pilger and many on the Left in the west if President Reagan had used similar terms in reference to the Soviet Union in early 1980’s – even though he may have defended his position by saying that he didn’t mean the use of force to achieve that end, but only through free elections…

The tragedy of the Iranian people is not only that they have become the next target of the American neocon policies, but also that they are being ruled by the most brutal and ideologically backward-looking and fatalist government in their recent history. The Iranian government has managed to concentrate the world opinion on its nuclear policies and as a result to push aside its horrible human rights record off the agenda. And the Left in the west has been playing into its hands by ignoring the plight of the Iranian people and concentrating solely on the American designs. This is not the way to effectively fight the impending war. An anti-war stand should be combined with a worldwide campaign for democracy and human rights in Iran – not only to help relieve Iranians of their sufferings, but also as the best means to diminish the tension in the area and remove any excuse for an American/Israeli attack on Iran.

Ahmadinejad should be condemned for the statements he has made about Israel and Holocaust. Calls should be made for free and fair elections in Iran. Iran’s horrible human rights records should be condemned and those implicated of human rights crimes (many of them in the government) should be brought to justice. And of course, war should be opposed in any circumstances. The Left should be in the vanguard of these campaigns – if it wants to have any credibility in its campaign against the war…

Hossein Bagher Zadeh

musantk5
06 February 2007 at 00:13

This situation was is and always will be.Dangerous human races do not leave their solar systems.They self destruct before they reach the level of technology where they can.

Judith
06 February 2007 at 18:04

I believe we can take the oil-war with Iran for granted:

President Bush, the recovering alcoholic, unfortunately is commander-in-chief. Therefore, he is in charge of signaling the go-ahead. At least, this time there does not need to be a 9-11 as a pretext.

The use of "tactical nuclear weapons" serves to fatally and literally sicken any resistance with radiation sickness via nuclear radiation.

America's propaganda icily aims at frightening the populace:

The war is justified to prevent Iran from gladly selling non-existent nukes to terrorists who happily will unleash them on their nemisis, the hated West.

The event to be afraid of has to be close to home, not far away in the East.

Hence the recent mysterious plot to behead a soldier-hostage:

This crime has a fatal end either way.

The police would use deadly force to liberate the hostage or the hostage takers spend life in prison without parole. Either way they are eager martyrs determinedly striving to end their lives for a higher purpose.

But are the alleged suspects so suicidal ?

Or are they set-up by an undercover CIA/Mossad plot ?

Not Britain, but the CIA and the Mossad have a history of horror.

After all, America is in desperate need for Britain's help in the oil-war with Iran.

So the alleged war-on-terror needs renewed justification.

It is a shame that the House of Saud is so afraid of the spread of democracy invading Saudi Arabia. Their fearful dependance on American protection excludes the option to vote in OPEC for an oil-embargo a la 1973-74.

This would quickly bring the engines of the war on terror to a grinding halt.

Maybe one should hope for Scotland Yard to find a Sherlock Holmes somewhere.

In the meantime we should support our local economies - and not buy "made in America" .

tropisca
06 February 2007 at 21:37

Iran: the significance of cover and the fate of diplomacy

On 26 January, the Washington Post reported a comment by a Bush administration official: "The Iranians respond to the international community only when they are under pressure, not when they are feeling strong." This paper is going to demonstrate that though this is a valid statement, the Iranian regime’s response with or without pressure will be deceitful, and even more deceitful when under pressure. The Guardian reported just the day before that a close ally of Hashemi Rafsanjani (the latter a so-called moderate and ex-president during years of Iran’s clandestine nuclear activity who is now under arrest warrant for ordering the bombing of a cultural centre in Argentina) has stated that on the nuclear issue, it “is necessary to take one step backwards now, in order to take two steps forwards later.”

Over the three decade history of Iranian theocracy, the regime has systematically deployed shift of clerical and other figures on its front political stage in order to deceive outsiders and protect a highly dangerous core. Sometimes those at the front stage pretend moderation in order to save the regime, but remain privately fiercely loyal to the radical core presided by the Supreme Leader, Khamenei. An example is Mr Khatami, ex-president who never acted up to people’s expectations to curb the regime core’s tyranny. On the other hand, when the regime feels more confident, the front players are left free to openly and brazenly advocate some of the terrorist policies of the core. A prime example is Ahmadinejad who has been till now relatively free to reveal some of the aims of the core. The core, coward, fascist, deceitful and uncompromising as it is, manipulates the front players and can replace them if and when necessary for its own survival.

Considerations of the historical and social psychological structure of the Iranian society help understand why diplomacy is not going to work with the Iranian regime. Iranian clerics of all political convictions have one important feature in common: moderate or radical, they collaborate extensively to help the regime as they all have a vested interest in its survival. The government in Iran consists of a despotic system led by about 15 Ayatollahs who mostly possess, in common, a particular psychological structure, characterized by paranoia, with two elements to this paranoid trait, the first, a grandiosity related to their shared belief that their version of Islam is the most enlightened ideology in the world, past, present and future; and the second, their extreme suspicion and fear of the ‘outsider’, the ‘enemy’, and the ‘over thrower’ of the regime. These persecutory beliefs torment them and, to the same degree that they feel threatened, they execute, torture, intimidate, and spread fear in their own population. The experience of the past 28 years demonstrates that, when popular discontent increased, Mullahs’ fear for their survival led to a direct increase in the number of arrests, tortures and executions, as well as terrorist activities abroad in which hundreds of other nationalities including Americans lost their lives. The latter is what happened in Lebanon, Saudi Arabia and in now happening in Iraq. Both in relation to dissidents or multinational forces, the regime kills and maims direct or by proxy trying to leave no trace.

The Mullahs use the idea of ‘the enemy’, the ‘outsider’, ‘the plotters’ along with a pathological interpretation of Islam extensively, in their brainwashing of the Army, Revolutionary Guards, Basijis (plain-clothed violent militia), and other informal militia, Ansar-e-Hezbollah (Helpers of the Party of God), and the 25000 strong Army of Suicide Bombers (Headquarters for the Commemoration of the Martyrs of the International Islamic Movement) as well as in school children, and in their media, radio and television, addressed to both their people and Arab nations in the region.

The danger of a fascist system is not so much its being a dictatorial system, but its being based on a pathological interpretation of human issues. This pathological stance in fascist leaders is based on one common, essential experience in their life history: a pervasive, deep-rooted feeling of humiliation. In the case of the governing Ayatollahs and their cronies in Iran, this humiliation is exacerbated by their realization that Western intellectual, philosophical, technological and scientific advancements are a threat to their historical belief that they are the centre of all, and above all in the universe. Indeed, this more or less unconscious self-doubt is a deep feature of the psychology of the governing Mullahs in Iran. The governing Mullahs have proved to have an unconscious and tormenting dilemma whether they are ‘Evil’ themselves, and the proof is their forceful projection of the idea of the ‘Great Satan’ onto the US. The United States with all its power and might is, to Mullahs, the reminder of their humiliation, and this is why they refer to the US as ‘The World Arrogance’ which is indeed another form of projection of their own stance on the world. But these projections would not end in a world without the US. There are Sunni countries, the Western Europe, and then non-Islamic countries of the world to target. Yet, paranoia dictates choosing the biggest ‘adversary’ for now, as after ‘defeating’ the US, it would be easier to exterminate other ‘adversaries’.

In the same way that a cancerous tissue invades healthy organs of the body, a fascist system corrupts and destroys the democratic textures of other societies. The long-term ambitions of the Mullahs is to overthrow the governments in the world replacing them with political systems copied from themselves, yet as they have thought this is going to be the work of several generations, they have learned to act in secret in order not to be attacked in retaliation. Killing through proxies with cowardice, they have learned to adapt their positions deceitfully to the circumstances of the day in order not to attract any suspicion about their undercover work. So, getting on headlong with their dangerous, undercover killing and maiming, they enter, when necessary, into disingenuous ‘diplomacy’, replace the front figures to pretend to their dissidents or to gullible foreign politicians that they have changed their nature but in fact the ominous fascist activities runs ahead with full force.

In his Editorial in Washington Times, on 15 January, Lord Waddington refers to Mullahs as “masters of deception”. Though lying, dissimulation and diplomacy can be elements of any political system, the double-dealing, deceit, dishonesty, and hypocrisy in the Iranian regime is fundamental to its very strategy. The deceit directed both at the Iranian people, and at the world, is based on the belief that power must be secured, in the long-term, by any means including deception, duplicity, pretence, and underhandedness. In this sense, the regime cannot be trusted with any agreement, as according to the fundamental belief of the core of the regime, there is no written text above Koran as interpreted by the Supreme Leader and all agreements and tactical undertakings, if any, are merely means to the strategic end.

Understanding the symbolic manifestations of the barriers and shields between the inside and the outside in the Iranian society is of huge political importance. If the US and the West miss this concept they will never be able to figure out the meaning of the Iranian political shifts, and make the right decisions vis-à-vis the Iranian government. To consider the Iranian society to be like any other society, is the greatest mistake we may make. The social psychological symbol of deceit in the Iranian politics is represented by the concept of ‘COVER’. Distinguished anthropologists such as DelVecchio Good MJ, Good BJ in their seminal paper “Ritual, the state, and the transformation of emotional discourse in Iranian society” in Culture, Medicine and Psychiatry suggest that in post revolutionary Iranian society, the distance between public and private domains is one of largest compared to that in all other human societies. In today’s Iran, one can do what one wishes, so far as it is not done in the public domain. Privacy is highly encouraged and rigorously practiced by the regime. There are reports that in Iran where prostitution is prohibited, men after having sexual intercourse with prostitutes, advise them to put their Chador on. This is a society in which the government emphasizes ‘surface’, appearance’, and ‘ritual’ in order to divert attention from what is dangerous to unveil: ‘private’, ‘secret’ and ‘deep truth’. The ‘inside’ is considered, by the system, as something that must remain ‘dark’, ‘cryptic’, ‘secret’ and ‘sacred’ so the rule of propriety is to hide it by a crust, mantle, or cloak (both literally and figuratively) to keep the appearance, and let the ‘inner show’ go on. Though wearing cloaks is common among religious men, it is used by the Iranian governing Mullahs to cover up an inside which is unconsciously considered by them as ‘dangerous to reveal’. The cloak needs to be most clean, of finest material, and well adjusted to detract attention from the ‘inside’. The truth is this: all actions, appearances, positioning and tactics of the regime are decoys for their most sinister plots.

Nothing better than a metaphor is going to clarify the nature of the ruling system in Iran. The Iranian political system resembles an onion, with the difference that the outside concentric layers are borrowed and do not identify its true species. Each layer, hiding a more central layer, acts as a mantle, protecting the underlying layer, hiding its real identity. Each layer is a veneer or a cloak to provide an outside appearance to the layer it covers up. A more central layer can undo an outer layer, replacing it, as required, both to deceive onlookers and to protect the core, when the outer layer becomes useless or harmful to the core’s survival.

Indeed, the concept of cover, surface and depth are reflected in the existence of the parallel forces, parallel financial institutions, parallel prisons, and parallel police, etc. in Iran. There is not one army, but two, a regular army and a revolutionary one, in the latter there is one army for ‘protecting’ the ‘revolution’ inside Iran (Pasdaran), and another for exporting it outside (Quds Force). The core is the government behind the decoy government, having its parallel forces (Niroohaye Movazee) revolutionary guards, militia, secret service and additional independent finance through foundations called Bonyad as well as full control over the decoy government. It is this decoy government the Europeans have been trying to engage, a façade government with virtually no impact on the core, other than acting as another instrument of deceit in service of the regime.

The hard core of the onion consists of the Ayatollahs, their ambition being to dominate the world by purging the ‘infidel’ governments and individuals from the earth, very similar to Al Queda’s strategy. The fundamental strategy of the regime can be compared with fascist ambitions of the SS High Command. This core rarely expresses the extent of their fascist plans explicitly. It is shielded by a ‘COVER’, a layer of cronies and forces, most conservative and reactionary, the Revolutionary Guards including the Quds Force, the shadowy informal militia, Basijis, and Ansar-e-Hezbollah, the plain-clothed security forces who kidnap people from the streets, and are involved in disappearances and political murders, as well as suicide-bomber trainers at the Headquarters for the Commemoration of the Martyrs of the International Islamic Movement. The heads of these groups are in direct contact with the ruling Ayatollahs in the central core, subserviently following their orders. They are mostly married into the families of the corrupt clergy, and their vested interest is beyond mere ideological complicity.

The next layer consists of the regular army in which especially the younger recruits, though bombarded by ideological courses, brainwashing, and indoctrination by the regime agents, are well aware of the vested interests of their commanders and their links to the corrupt clergy, nevertheless, in order to protect themselves, a considerable number have to pretend allegiance to the regime while in private they show considerable discontent.

The next layer consists of some reactionary spokespersons and judges who are scared of the change of the regime, for fear of retribution for injustice they have inflicted on people over the years, some journalists in pay of the regime, and groups who are either duped by the regime propaganda or have economic advantages by having the right connection with the clergy. The regime has also bought the service of a number of social psychologists who promote allegiance to the regime, using ardent, zealous interpretation of Islam and the regime, exploiting the religious feelings which are readily present in the population. As such a large number of technicians, specialists, engineers and scientists have been brainwashed into collaborating with the regime as it was the case in Nazi Germany.

This outermost, formal face of the regime that is the decoy Government can be dismantled, at will, by the core, when it loses its utility. There is a huge deceit in using this layer, as a cover-up, to continue with extremely dangerous projects such as secret developments of weapons of mass destruction, at full speed. The core of the system has realized that, without atomic bombs, its survival is doubtful, and with it, almost no power could stop it following the second stage of the plan in the region and beyond.

As the discourse of the West is that of parliamentarian system, presidency elections and other democratic concepts and institutions, the West tends to be outwitted by the most outward layer of the onion structure, a decoy government which has a sham similarity to democratic structures in the West, but far from it, consists of a puppet president and his allies who can be as easily allowed, by the core, into that layer as removed. As such even if the Mullahs in Iran remove someone like Ahmadinejad, the true nature of the regime remains utterly intact.

The facades the regime has created around its core have contributed to years of delay in getting to the meaning and real nature of Iranian regime, while the core has found space, time and opportunity to strengthen its grip on the Iranian people, and engage in projects such as developing nuclear technology for war purposes and extending its tentacles throughout the middle east and beyond. The majority of people in Iran are dissatisfied with the regime. As their secret plans and involvement in terrorist activities come to surface, the regime will tend to make false reparations, replacing political puppets with others who will make other insincere promises o their people, or suggest negotiation to the outside world as a procrastination technique and out of fear of a military attack by the US, without having really changed an inch in their fundamental fascist dogmas.

In summary, the Iranian political organization is one of multilayer cover-ups for a deviant and fascist hard core which would not negotiate anything in a true sense. Therefore, some fractions of American politicians hoping to engage the system in Iran by attempts at negotiating with those in the surface layer are missing a hard fact, and will ultimately find themselves played in the hands of the core elements. Those who try to change the regime’s behaviour through political, financial or military threats must know that the repression of a cherished dogma will not make it die, on the contrary it will be waiting to rebound much stronger than before. There are no such entities as moderate and radicals in Iran, these are sham players pushed onto the political stage to justify tactical stances of the Supreme Leader, in direct service of the most ominous hard-core terrorism history has ever known.

Ergo
07 February 2007 at 20:06

Attacking Iran, especially with nuclear weapons, will constitute an even greater crime than that against iraq, and may draw the rest of the world into a larger war.

Iran's internal troubles have been engendered by Western interference as in the ousting of Mossadegh in 1953, and the US fueling of the long Iran Iraq war.

The pretense that Iran poses a real threat, nuclear or otherwise, to Israel or anyone else is simply ludicrous. To read more than was meant in Ahmadinejad's comments on Israel is a bad joke considering the disproportionate consequences,and considering the comments made by any number of Israeli politicians and leaders about Muslims and Arabs. On his recent visit to Washington, Olmert remarked that Israel needed all of Palestinian territorty. Maybe he didn't mean that in a negative way, but you know how people interpret things.

Should this terrible crime of aggression take place the blame is squarely on the heads of the apologists for Israel in Lebanon and US adventurism in Iraq. They have created the climate for this ultimate

aggression.

John
08 February 2007 at 02:51

Of the 23 comments thus far we have possibly 5 that realize what is happening. The America we were born in is dead. We are loosing our freedoms at a rapid rate. Most of you are to afraid of loosing what you have to do anything and just such inactivity will result in you loosing everything. This is not a video game folks and all your writing and bitching will do no good as those you are writing about already know what they want and pleasing you is not in the picture. As a vet let me say that I have no death wish, would like to work, retire and fade into the sunset but such inactivity will result, I'm affraid, in no one being able to do just that. There comes a time when one must say enough is enough, lock and load and face the bastards head on. Thomas Jefferson said that when your government no longer listens it's time for a new government. Ours no longer listens. Many will say that there is no way that the American people can win such a conflict. Well let's see, there's a little country in South East Asia that held up fairly well and there's one with a lot of mountains that I can think of that is holding it's own. In short, there is no way in hell that a p.o.'ed populas such as ours can loose. Such would have a tremendous cost but then all things of value have a cost. You can't have it both ways and each one of you must decide. Are you going to sit there and write your complaints to those who could care less about how you feel, until they come to pick you up, or take a more active approach where at least you have a chance for survival.

GideonPolya
10 February 2007 at 07:39

From the latest medical literature and UN agency data, the post-invasion excess deaths (avoidable deaths, deaths that did not have to happen) in the Occupied Palestinian Territory (2005 pop. 3.8 million) , Occupied Iraq (pop. 27 million) and Occupied Afghanistan (pop. 26 million) total 0.3, 1.0 and 2.2 million, respectively - largely Women and Children and due to gross Occupier violation of the Geneva Conventions; the refugees in or from these 3 Occupied Territories total 6, 3.7 and 3.7 million, respectively; and these horrors amounting to a Palestinian Genocide, an Iraqi Genocide and an Afghan Genocide, with Genocide as defined by the UN Genocide Convention Article II (a)-(d) (for details and documentation see regularly updated assessments by Dr Gideon Polya on MWC News).

Iran has a population of 70 million. I desperately hope that my outstanding fellow countryman John Pilger is wrong.

Judith
12 February 2007 at 09:28

Ahmadinejad's comment to the effect that

"Israel should be wiped off the map",

by now is truly notorious.

After all, it serves as one justification for

oil-war with Iran - and oil-war to protect frightened Israel from this omnious statement.

But what if Ahmadinejad simply made reference to the fact that:

Israel was created with the stroke of a pen: the signature of the Balfour Treaty,

that created Israel with the stroke of a pen on the map ?

Ahmadinejad


06 March 2007 at 11:56

"...For the Bush cabal, the attack will be a way of "buying time" for its disaster in Iraq...... 'neo-con' fanatics such as.... Dick Cheney believe their opportunity to control Iran's oil will pass unless they act...". Screaming about fake WMD's in Iraq once worked - now they only need to scream and it will suffice! Its not even about the oil - although that would help slow China a little. For some strange reason, that is significant to the Americans.

"America must always remain great", they keep telling themselves. What they mean is world domination at any price is reasonable to them. The neocons still hope to use the "let's nuke the Ayatolla" rhetoric of the 1970's oil shock. It will be very expensive for all involved .....but they don't care. "...The 'threat' from Iran..." is more like something the Hitler and the Nazis raved about in the 1930's when they wished to invade Poland or the Rhineland, etc etc.

To the people living in the region, it is not the "middle east" as it is known in the West but actually West Asia. "...The regime occupying Jerusalem must vanish from the page of time...... this does not imply military action or killing anyone at all...". Ahmadinejad compared the demise of the US-backed Israeli regime to the dissolution of the Soviet Union .....and why not? That is the usurped state of Palestine .....historically a place for Christian, Jew and Moslem.

To update this piece by John Pilger, see March on the Pentagon, March 17th http://www.ichblog.eu/content/view/760/1/ and Can You Spell Impeachment?: http://www.ichblog.eu/content/view/757/1/

Berti
02 April 2007 at 16:04

I have greart respect for authors who bring the facts contained in such articles as this into the public domain. I for one would welcome further advice from the author as to the best course of action that concerned readers (ordinary citizens) can take to make a marked and effective protest.

ybot
26 October 2007 at 10:55

The statement saying Iran has not provided arms in Afghanistan is so naive, the Iranian people are being held hostage by a second rate extremist who is testing the patience of his own peers. There is obviously a two tiered control in the country and no amount of liberal platitudes can describe the revolutionary aspect of that part as anything other than medieval. They chose the wrong country with Iraq, its an unpalitable choice which at least Isreal and USA know they will have to make rather than allow the Europeans to sleep walk into global blackmail.

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About the writer

John Pilger

John Pilger, renowned investigative journalist and documentary film-maker, is one of only two to have twice won British journalism's top award; his documentaries have won academy awards in both the UK and the US. In a New Statesman survey of the 50 heroes of our time, Pilger came fourth behind Aung San Suu Kyi and Nelson Mandela. "John Pilger," wrote Harold Pinter, "unearths, with steely attention facts, the filthy truth. I salute him."

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