The following was published by
Consortium News.com (8/12/12) under the title "Israel’s ‘Bomb
Iran’ Timetable." The author, Ray McGovern, works with Tell
the Word, a publishing arm of the non-denominational, community-minded Church of the Saviour in
Washington, DC. He served 27 years in the CIA, doing intelligence
analysis.
Exclusive: As the clock ticks down to
the U.S. elections in November, another clock is ticking in Tel Aviv
and Jerusalem, whether Israeli forces should exploit the American
political timetable to pressure President Obama to support an attack
on Iran’s nuclear sites, writes ex-CIA analyst Ray McGovern.
More Washington insiders are coming to
the conclusion that Israel’s leaders are planning to attack Iran
before the U.S. election in November in the expectation that American
forces will be drawn in. There is widespread recognition that,
without U.S. military involvement, an Israeli attack would be highly
risky and, at best, only marginally successful.
At this point, to dissuade Israeli
leaders from mounting such an attack might require a public statement
by President Barack Obama warning Israel not to count on U.S. forces
— not even for the “clean-up.” Though Obama has done pretty
much everything short of making such a public statement, he clearly
wants to avoid a confrontation with Israel in the weeks before the
election. However, Obama’s silence regarding a
public warning speaks volumes to Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin
Netanyahu.
The recent pilgrimages to Israel by
very senior U.S. officials — including the Secretaries of State and
Defense carrying identical “PLEASE DON’T BOMB IRAN JUST YET”
banners — has met stony faces and stone walls.
Like the Guns of August in 1914, the
dynamic for war appears inexorable. Senior U.S. and Israeli
officials focus publicly on a “window of opportunity,” but
different ones.
On Thursday, White House spokesman Jay
Carney emphasized the need to allow the “most stringent sanctions
ever imposed on any country time to work.” That, said Carney, is
the “window of opportunity to persuade Iran … to forgo its
nuclear weapons ambitions.”
That same day a National Security
Council spokesman dismissed Israeli claims that U.S. intelligence had
received alarming new information about Iran’s nuclear program. “We
continue to assess that Iran is not on the verge of achieving a
nuclear weapon,” the spokesman said.
Still, Israel’s window of opportunity
(what it calls the “zone of immunity” for Iran building a nuclear
bomb without Israel alone being able to prevent it) is ostensibly
focused on Iran’s continued burrowing under mountains to render its
nuclear facilities immune to Israeli air strikes, attacks that would
seek to maintain Israel’s regional nuclear-weapons monopoly.
But another Israeli “window” or
“zone” has to do with the pre-election period of the next 12
weeks in the United States. Last week, former Mossad chief
Efraim Halevi told Israeli TV viewers, “The next 12 weeks are
very critical in trying to assess whether Israel will attack Iran,
with or without American backup.”
It would be all too understandable,
given Israeli Prime Minister Netanyahu’s experience with President
Obama, that Netanyahu has come away with the impression that Obama
can be bullied, particularly when he finds himself in a tight
political spot.
For Netanyahu, the President’s
perceived need to outdistance Republican presidential candidate Mitt
Romney in the love-for-Israel department puts Obama in a box. This, I
believe, is the key “window of opportunity” that is uppermost in
Netanyahu’s calculations.
Virtually precluded, in Netanyahu’s
view, is any possibility that Obama could keep U.S. military forces
on the sidelines if Israel and Iran became embroiled in serious
hostilities. What I believe the Israeli leader worries most about is
the possibility that a second-term Obama would feel much freer not to
commit U.S. forces on Israel’s side. A second-term Obama also might
use U.S. leverage to force Israeli concessions on thorny issues
relating to Palestine.
If preventing Obama from getting that
second term is also part of Netanyahu’s calculation, then he also
surely knows that even a minor dustup with Iran, whether it escalates
or not, would drive up the price of gasoline just before the election
— an unwelcome prospect for Team Obama.
It’s obvious that hard-line Israeli
leaders would much rather have Mitt Romney to deal with for the next
four years. The former Massachusetts governor recently was given a
warm reception when he traveled to Jerusalem with a number of
Jewish-American financial backers in tow to express his solidarity
with Netanyahu and his policies.
Against this high-stakes political
background, I’ve personally come by some new anecdotal information
that I find particularly troubling. On July 30, the Baltimore Sun
posted my op-ed, “Is Israel fixing the intelligence to justify an
attack on Iran?” Information acquired the very next day increased
my suspicion and concern.
Former intelligence analysts and I were
preparing a proposal to establish direct communications links between
the U.S. and Iranian navies, in order to prevent an accident or
provocation in the Persian Gulf from spiraling out of control.
Learning that an official Pentagon draft paper on that same issue has
been languishing in the Senate for more than a month did not make us
feel any better when our own proposal was ignored. (Still, it is
difficult to understand why anyone wishing to avoid escalation in the
Persian Gulf would delay, or outright oppose, such fail-safe
measures.)
Seeking input from other sources with
insight into U.S. military preparations, I learned that, although
many U.S. military moves have been announced, others, with the
express purpose of preparation for hostilities with Iran, have not
been made public.
One source reported that U.S. forces
are on hair-trigger alert and that covert operations inside Iran
(many of them acts of war, by any reasonable standard) have been
increased. Bottom line: we were warned that the train had left the
station; that any initiative to prevent miscalculation or provocation
in the Gulf was bound to be far too late to prevent escalation into a
shooting war.
Searching for a Casus Belli
A casus belli — real or contrived —
would be highly desirable prior to an attack on Iran. A provocation
in the Gulf would be one way to achieve this. Iran’s alleged
fomenting of terrorism would be another.
In my op-ed of July 30, I suggested
that Netanyahu’s incredibly swift blaming of Iran for the terrorist
killing of five Israelis in Bulgaria on July 18 may have been
intended as a pretext for attacking Iran. If so, sadly for Netanyahu,
it didn’t work. It seems the Obama administration didn’t buy the
“rock-solid evidence” Netanyahu adduced to tie Iran to the attack
in Bulgaria.
If at first you don’t succeed …
Here’s another idea: let’s say there is new reporting that shows
Iran to be dangerously close to getting a nuclear weapon, and that
previous estimates that Iran had stopped work on weaponization was
either wrong or overtaken by new evidence.
According to recent Israeli and Western
media reports, citing Western diplomats and senior Israeli officials,
U.S. intelligence has acquired new information — “a bombshell”
report — that shows precisely that. Imagine.
Israeli Defense Minister Ehud Barak
told Israeli Radio that the new report is “very close to our
[Israel’s] own estimates, I would say, as opposed to earlier
American estimates. It transforms the Iranian situation to an even
more urgent one.”
Washington Post neocon pundit Jennifer
Rubin was quick to pick up the cue, expressing a wistful hope on
Thursday that the new report on the Iranian nuclear program “would
be a complete turnabout from the infamous 2007 National Intelligence
Estimate that asserted that Iran had dropped its nuclear weapons
program.”
“Infamous?” Indeed. Rubin warned,
“The 2007 NIE report stands as a tribute and warning regarding the
determined obliviousness of our national intelligence apparatus,”
adding that “no responsible policymaker thinks the 2007 NIE is
accurate.”
Yet, the NIE still stands as the
prevailing U.S. intelligence assessment on Iran’s nuclear
intentions, reaffirmed by top U.S. officials repeatedly over the past
five years. Rubin’s definition of “responsible” seems to apply
only to U.S. policymakers who would cede control of U.S. foreign
policy to Netanyahu.
The 2007 NIE reported, with “high
confidence,” the unanimous judgment of all 16 U.S. intelligence
agencies that Iran stopped working on a nuclear weapon in the fall of
2003 and had not restarted it. George W. Bush’s own memoir and
remarks by Dick Cheney make it clear that this honest NIE shoved a
steel rod into the wheels of the juggernaut that had begun rolling
off toward war on Iran in 2008, the last year of the Bush/Cheney
administration.
The key judgments of the 2007 NIE have
been re-asserted every year since by the Director of National
Intelligence in formal testimony to Congress.
And, unfortunately for Rubin and others
hoping to parlay the reportedly “new,” more alarmist
“intelligence” into an even more bellicose posture toward Iran, a
National Security Council spokesman on Thursday threw cold water on
the “new” information, saying that “the U.S. intelligence
assessment of Iran’s nuclear activities had not changed.”
Relying on the unconfirmed Israeli
claim about “new” U.S. information regarding Iran’s nuclear
program, Rubin had already declared the Obama administration’s Iran
policy a failure, writing:
“Foreign policy experts can debate
whether a sanctions strategy was flawed from its inception,
incorrectly assessing the motivations of the Iranian regime, or they
can debate whether the execution of sanctions policy (too slow, too
porous) was to blame. But we are more than 3 1/2 years into the Obama
administration, and Iran is much closer to its goal than at the
start. By any reasonable measure, the Obama approach has been a
failure, whatever the NIE report might say.”
Pressures Will Persist
The NSC’s putdown of the Israeli
report does not necessarily guarantee, however, that President Obama
will continue to withstand pressure from Israel and its supporters to
“fix” the intelligence to “justify” supporting an attack on
Iran.
Promise can be seen in Obama’s
refusal to buy Netanyahu’s new “rock-solid evidence” on Iran’s
responsibility for the terrorist attack in Bulgaria. Hope can also be
seen in White House reluctance so far to give credulity to the latest
“evidence” on Iran’s nuclear weapons plans.
An agreed-upon casus belli can be hard
to create when one partner wants war within the next 12 weeks and the
other does not. The pressure from Netanyahu and neocon cheerleaders
like Jennifer Rubin — not to mention Mitt Romney — will increase
as the election draws nearer, agreed-upon casus belli or not.
Netanyahu gives every evidence of
believing that — for the next 12 weeks — he is in the catbird
seat and that, if he provokes hostilities with Iran, Obama will feel
compelled to jump in with both feet, i. e., selecting from the vast
array of forces already assembled in the area.
Sadly, I believe Netanyahu is probably
correct in that calculation. Batten down the hatches.
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