http://english.daralhayat.com/opinion/commentators/03-2005/Article-20050317-b2048219-c0a8-10ed-0078-529dce62b55e/story.html

Attacking the Tehran-Damascus-Hezbollah Axis

Patrick Seale Al-Hayat 2005/03/18

Ever since the United States invaded Iraq two years ago -- toppling
Saddam Hussein, smashing the state, and killing tens of thousands of
Iraqis -- commentators have puzzled over America's war aims. What was
the strategic plan behind the carnage? What was Washington trying to
achieve? If there was a master-plan, where would the U.S. strike next?

The early justifications for the war were soon to prove false, even
fraudulent. Iraq had no weapons of mass destruction and no links to
Al-Qaeda. Was the real aim, then, to weaken Iraq permanently because
it posed a challenge to America's dominance of the oil-rich Gulf? Did
Washington hope that Iraq could be turned into a U.S. client state?
Was the expectation that Iraqi oil, under American control, could
serve as a replacement for Saudi oil?

Beyond these explanations was the ambitious neo-conservative agenda to
'restructure' the Arab world, a plan which involved 'regime change' in
a number of countries - beginning, but by no means ending, with Iraq
-- and a determined campaign to subdue the three forces seen as
irredeemably hostile to both Washington and Tel Aviv - namely Arab
nationalism, Islamic radicalism and Palestinian resistance.

It appeared that the aim was to bring about a fundamental change in
the regional balance of power to the benefit of the United States and
Israel.

To cloak these aggressive aims in a semblance of respectability, the
neo-conservatives then launched the slogan of Arab 'democratization'
as a cure for the region's ills - a campaign taken up enthusiastically
by President George W Bush himself in something like a personal crusade.

The argument was that the overthrow of despotic Arab regimes was not
only good in itself. It would also make America safe from terrorist
attack because terrorism, or so it was alleged, grew in a 'swamp' of
tyranny and backwardness, of violent religion and 'rogue' states.
'Draining the swamp' was the way to win the global 'war on terror'!

This explanation is as flimsy a fig leaf for America's real aims as
was the earlier pursuit of non-existent weapons.

The dangers of Bush's missionary zeal

No one can deny that encouraging Arab regimes to allow their citizens
greater freedoms is a worthy ambition and one long overdue. Arab
regimes are being forced to open up, under pressure from the forces of
globalization, from an increasingly educated middle class, from
satellite television, from a world-wide campaign in favor of human
rights, and from a rising tide of impatience with heavy-handed
security services and with profiteering by regime cronies.

In several Arab countries fear of the state is eroding. A new boldness
is finding expression in street demonstrations, of which a striking
example is the kifaya (enough) movement in Egypt in protest against
President Husni Mubarak standing for a fifth term of office.

>From Morocco to the Gulf, the demand for citizens' rights is
undeniable, although the response of the regimes has been slower and
more uneven than Arab democrats and civil rights activists would like.

American pressure is also a contributing factor but, whatever Bush and
the neo-cons may claim, it is by no means the determining one.
Destroying Iraq in order to 'liberate' it is not the model which even
the most impatient Arab democrats wish to emulate.

There are two clear dangers in President Bush's new obsession with
'spreading democracy'. The first is that it is distracting him from
the far more difficult, but necessary, task of resolving regional
conflicts - of which the American occupation of Iraq and the
Arab-Israeli conflict are by far the most important.

Clearly Bush finds it easier, and politically more attractive, to wax
eloquent about the 'forward march of freedom' than to devise a clear
exit- strategy from Iraq or to pressure Israel to end its occupation
of Palestinian territories. Yet without progress on these fronts
America will not be free from the threat of terrorist attack, nor will
genuine democracy be able to take root in Arab soil.

Almost without exception, Arab regimes are nervous. They do not know
what the United States has in mind and they are deeply suspicious of
Israeli influence on American decision-making in the Middle East.
Their inclination is to look to their defenses rather than to risk
democratic experiments.

The second danger from Bush's campaign to 'spread democracy' is that
it will provide cover for further American aggressions, this time
against the three centers of opposition to American and Israeli
hegemony -- Iran, Syria and the Lebanese Shiite movement, Hezbollah.

Iran 's nuclear ambitions

It has become clear that American policy is to deny Iran access to
nuclear technology - if necessary by force -- for fear that it might
acquire nuclear weapons. Towards Syria, U.S. policy is to ensure its
full withdrawal from Lebanon as a first step - an aim which has now
more or less been achieved - before proceeding with 'regime change'
somewhat later.

Regarding Hezbollah, while the United States has come round to
recognizing it as a powerful force on the Lebanese scene, it seems
determined to disarm it in the longer term to prevent it projecting
power outside its frontiers - notably against Israel.

Syria is seen in Washington as the weakest link in the
Tehran-Damascus-Hezbollah axis. In the language used by militant
neo-cons it is 'low-hanging fruit', ripe for picking. The argument is
that a knock-out blow to Syria would bring about the collapse of the
entire axis!

Syria is also accused of providing a 'rear base' for the insurgency in
Iraq. Overthrowing the Syrian regime is therefore promoted by the
neo-cons as the key to victory in Iraq. It is clearly being set up as
the next target for 'regime change'.

The immediate tactic would seem to be to destabilize the Damascus
government by exploiting the legitimate impatience of many Lebanese
with Syrian control.

Although Bush has declared that the 'free world would not tolerate' a
nuclear-armed Iran, the United States does not seem quite ready to
launch a military campaign against Iraq. The view in Washington would
appear to be that Iran can best be worn down by attrition.

To get the Europeans to join the campaign to deny Iran nuclear
technology, Washington has thrown a few crumbs in the direction of the
European troika - Britain, France and Germany - which has been
attempting to persuade Tehran to give up its nuclear ambitions.

In the event of Tehran agreeing to a complete freeze of its nuclear
programs, the U.S. is now ready to end its opposition to Iranian
membership of the World Trade Organization and to supply Iran with
some spare parts for its civilian aircraft.

Responding to these American concessions, the Europeans have declared
their 'determination' to prevent Iran from becoming nuclear-armed, and
they have undertaken to refer Iran to the UN Security Council if it
fails to cooperate fully with the International Atomic Energy Agency.

The IAEA has established that Iran has been experimenting with
enriching uranium and with separating plutonium, although it is still
some years away from producing sufficient quantities of fissile
material for bomb-making. But it has acquired considerable
technological expertise

No one seems to know Iran's ultimate intentions. Is it simply buying
time in order to proceed with a clandestine military program or is its
real aim to gain a major package of trade and financial benefits from
Europe and the U.S.

It may be that the truth lies somewhere in between. Surrounded on all
sides by American military bases in Iraq, Afghanistan, Pakistan,
Central Asia and the Gulf, and regularly threatened with attack by the
U.S. and Israel, Iran may wish to push its researches forward to the
point that it could cross the nuclear threshold quickly, if it needed
to do so in an emergency.






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