The following piece was written by a
friend, Adil Shamoo, born of a Chaldean family in Baghdad, who
teaches at the University of Maryland. It was published (9/18/12) by
Foreign Policy In Focus , a project of the Institute
for Policy Studies.
No to War with Iran
Israel
and the United States have waged a campaign of cyberwarfare and
covert operations against Iran for the past several years. If Iran
had taken similar actions toward Israel or the United States, we
would have considered it a declaration of open war. [Editor's note:
a recent Washington Post
article cited the State Department's top lawyer as saying that
cyberattacks may be considered an "act of war." - A.P.]
Iran is working hard to develop nuclear
capability—if not an actual weapon—despite its repeated denials.
After all, Iran is surrounded by the U.S. military might, and its
primary regional rival—Israel—has possessed a sizable nuclear
arsenal for decades. Nuclear proliferation is never desirable, but
for Iran it could fit with a perfectly rational strategic calculus.
Recent U.S. and Israeli
wars in the region drive this point home emphatically. In fact, these
conflicts—variously pitting the strongest military in the world and
the strongest in the Middle East against a host of weaker
rivals—cannot rightly be called wars. They are massacres. The kill
ratio of the powerful versus the weak fluctuates from 10 to 1 to over
one 100 to 1. Take the most glaring example, the 2008-2009 Israeli
invasion of Gaza. Gazans suffered 1,500 deaths and 5,000 wounded
compared to just 12 Israeli deaths.
Elsewhere, Americans were coerced into
war with Iraq by the myth of a mushroom cloud and the farcical notion
of eliminating terrorists in Afghanistan. These manufactured reasons
for war increased anti-American hatred and strengthened the
terrorists’ reach.
In Israel, Prime
Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has changed the conversation in the past
year or so from U.N. sanctions against Iran to war with Iran. He
wants a deadline for Iran’s noncompliance in stopping any uranium
enrichment for any purpose—a violation of Iran’s rights under the
Non-Proliferation Treaty, which permits peaceful enrichment. If the
election-season statements of both Barack Obama and Mitt Romney are
any indication, Netanyahu has succeeded in changing the U.S.
conversation on Iran as well to put military action on the front
burner.
Netanyahu is still not
satisfied and wants military action now, not eventually. Netanyahu
surrogate Danny Danon, Deputy Speaker of the Israeli Knesset, is
using the recent senseless killing of the U.S. ambassador in Libya
and the demonstrations in Cairo against a film insulting the prophet
Muhammad as another reason why we should attack Iran. This is what my
Jewish friends call chutzpah.
Given the threats to regional peace
posed by U.S.-Israeli dominance in the Middle East, some scholars
have even suggested that a stronger Iran could preserve stability in
the region by counterbalancing the aggressive Washington-Tel Aviv
axis.
Kenneth N. Waltz, a
respected professor of political science at Columbia University,
argues in Foreign Affairs that Iran’s nuclearization could improve
its behavior as an international actor. Waltz refutes the common
characterization of the “mad mullahs” who run the country and
cites how Pakistan, India, and China became more responsible once
they acquired the bomb. Meir Dagan, the former head of the Israeli
Mossad and architect of Israel’s covert war on Iran, told CBS that
Iran’s leaders are rational international actors and famously
called attacking the country a “stupid idea.”
It would serve this country well to
listen to rational voices apart from the drumbeat of war from Israeli
leaders and U.S. neoconservatives, who hope to reshape the Middle
East through Iran and Syria after failing to do so in Iraq. The
United States has already suffered two decade-long wars that brought
this country to financial catastrophe and military exhaustion. We
cannot afford another war.
A U.S. or Israeli war on Iran could
spark a regional conflagration that would cause untold suffering
across the Muslim world and spark deadly blowback for decades to
come. Such a war must be prevented, and this starts with shouting
“No!”
No comments:
Post a Comment