Target Iran: Washington's Countdown to War
The Iranian people know what it means to earn the enmity of the global godfather.
As William Blum documented in
Killing Hope: U.S. Military and CIA Interventions Since World War II,
1953's CIA-organized coup against Iranian Prime Minister Mohammed
Mossadegh, guilty of the "crime" of nationalizing the Anglo-Iranian Oil
Company, may have "saved" Iran from a nonexistent "Red Menace," but it
left that oil-rich nation in proverbial "safe hands"--those of the
brutal dictatorship of Mohammad Reza Shah Pahlavi.
Similarly today, a nonexistent "nuclear threat" is the pretext being
used by Washington to install a "friendly" regime in Tehran and
undercut geopolitical rivals China and Russia in the process, thereby
"securing" the country's vast petrochemical wealth for American
multinationals.
As the U.S. and Israel ramp-up covert operations against Iran, the
Pentagon "has laid out its most explicit cyberwarfare policy to date,
stating that if directed by the president, it will launch 'offensive
cyber operations' in response to hostile acts," according to
The Washington Post.
Citing "a long-overdue report to Congress released late Monday,"
we're informed that "hostile acts may include 'significant cyber attacks
directed against the U.S. economy, government or military'," unnamed
Defense Department officials stated.
However, Air Force General Robert Kehler, the commander of U.S. Strategic Command (
USSTRATCOM) told
Reuters, "I do not believe that we need new explicit authorities to conduct offensive operations of any kind."
The Pentagon report, which is still not publicly available, asserts:
"We reserve the right to use all necessary means--diplomatic,
informational, military and economic--to defend our nation, our allies,
our partners and our interests."
Washington's "interests," which first and foremost include "securing
its hegemony over the energy-rich regions of the Middle East and
Central Asia" as the
World Socialist Web Site observed,
may lead the crisis-ridden U.S. Empire "to take another irresponsible
gamble to shore up its interests in the Middle East ... as a means of
diverting attention from the social devastation produced by its
austerity agenda."
Recent media reports suggest however, that offensive cyber
operations are only part of Washington's multipronged strategy to
soften-up the Islamic Republic's defenses as a prelude to "regime
change."
Terrorist Proxies
For
the better part of six decades, terrorist proxies have done America's
dirty work. Hardly relics of the Cold War past, U.S. and allied secret
state agencies are using such forces to carry out attacks inside Iran
today.
Asia Times Online reported
that "deadly explosions at a military base about 60 kilometers
southwest of Tehran, coinciding with the suspicious death of the son of a
former commander of the Islamic Revolutionary Guards Corps (IRGC) in
Dubai in the United Arab Emirates, have triggered speculation in Iran on
whether or not these are connected to recent United States threats to
resort to extrajudicial executions of IRGC leaders."
And
Time Magazine,
a frequent outlet for sanctioned leaks from the Pentagon, reported that
the blast at the Iranian missile base west of Tehran, which killed
upwards of 40 people according to the latest estimates, including Major
General Hassan Moqqadam, a senior leader of Iran's missile program, was
described as the work "of Israel's external intelligence service,
Mossad."
An unnamed "Western intelligence source" told reporter Karl Vick:
"'Don't believe the Iranians that it was an accident,' adding that other
sabotage is being planned to impede the Iranian ability to develop and
deliver a nuclear weapon. 'There are more bullets in the magazine,' the
official says."
While Iranian officials insist that the huge blast was an
"accident," multiple accounts in the corporate press and among
independent analysts provide strong evidence for the claim that Israel
and their terrorist cat's paw, the bizarre political cult, Mojahedin-e
Khalq (MEK) were responsible for the attack.
Richard Silverstein, a left-wing analyst who writes for the
Tikun Olam web
site, said that the blast was a sign that "the face of the Israeli
terror machine may have reared its ugly head in the world."
Citing "an Israeli source with extensive senior political and
military experience," Silverstein's correspondent provided "an exclusive
report that it was the work of the Mossad in collaboration with the
MEK."
Hardly a stranger to controversial reporting, Silverstein published
excerpts of secret FBI transcripts leaked to him by the heroic
whistleblower Shamai Leibowitz. Those wiretapped conversations of
Israeli diplomats caught spying on the U.S., "described an Israeli
diplomatic campaign in this country to create a hostile environment for
relations with Iran."
In a
Truthout piece,
Silverstein wrote that Leibowitz, a former IDF soldier who refused to
serve in the Occupied Territories, "explained that he was convinced from
his work on these recordings that the Israel foreign ministry and its
officials in this country were responsible for a perception management
campaign directed against Iran. He worried that such an effort might end
with either Israel or the US attacking Iran and that this would be a
disaster for both countries."
Unfortunately, while Leibowitz sits in a U.S. prison his warnings are all but ignored.
According
to Silverstein's latest account, "it is widely known within
intelligence circles that the Israelis use the MEK for varied acts of
espionage and terror ranging from fraudulent Iranian memos alleging work
on nuclear trigger devices to assassinations of nuclear scientists and
bombings of sensitive military installations."
Silverstein noted that "a similar act of sabotage happened a little
more than a year ago at another IRG missile base which killed nearly
20."
Terrorist attacks targeting defense installations coupled
with the murder of Iranian scientist, five "targeted killings" have
occurred since 2010, aren't the only aggressive actions underway.
On Friday,
The Washington Post reported
that "a series of mysterious incidents involving explosions at natural
gas transport facilities, oil refineries and military bases ... have
caused dozens of deaths and damage to key infrastructure in the past two
years."
According to the Post,
"suspicions have been raised in Iran by what industry experts say is a
fivefold increase in explosions at refineries and gas pipelines since
2010."
With Iran's oil industry under a strict sanctions regime by the
West, maintenance of this critical industrial sector has undoubtedly
suffered neglect due to the lack of spare parts.
However,
"suspicions that covert action might already be underway were raised
when four key gas pipelines exploded simultaneously in different
locations in Qom Province in April," the Post disclosed.
"Lawmaker Parviz Sorouri told the semiofficial Mehr News Agency that
the blasts were the work of 'terrorists' and were 'organized by the
enemies of the Islamic Republic'," hardly an exaggerated charge given
present tensions.
Whether or not these attacks were the handiwork of Mossad, their MEK
proxies or even CIA paramilitary officers and Pentagon Joint Special
Operations Command (JSOC) commandos, as Seymour Hersh revealed more than
three years ago in
The New Yorker, it is clear that Washington and Tel Aviv are "preparing the battlespace" on multiple fronts.
'Collapse the Iranian Economy'
Along
with covert operations and terrorist attacks inside the Islamic
Republic, on the political front, a bipartisan consensus has clearly
emerged in Washington in favor of strangling the Iranian economy.
Indeed, congressional grifters are threatening to crater Iran's Central Bank, an unvarnished act of war.
IPS reported
that neocon Senator Mark Kirk (R-IL), "a key pro-Israel senator," has
offered legislation "that would effectively ban international financial
companies that do business with the Central Bank of Iran (CBI) from
participating in the U.S. economy."
"Dubbed the 'nuclear option' by its critics," Jim Lobe reported that
"the measure, which was introduced Thursday in the form of an amendment
to the 2012 defence authorisation bill, is designed to 'collapse the
Iranian economy'... by making it virtually impossible for Tehran to sell
its oil."
However, "independent experts," Lobe wrote, "including some
officials in the administration of President Barack Obama, say the
impact of such legislation, if it became law, could spark a major spike
in global oil prices that would push Washington's allies in Europe even
deeper into recession and destroy the dwindling chances for economic
recovery here."
That amendment was introduced as tensions were brought to a boil
over allegations by the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) in its
latest
report that Iran may be seeking to develop nuclear weapons.
IAEA Director General Yukiya Amano claims the Agency has "identified
outstanding issues related to possible military dimensions to Iran's
nuclear programme and actions required of Iran to resolve these."
"Since 2002," Amano averred, "the Agency has become increasingly
concerned about the possible existence in Iran of undisclosed nuclear
related activities involving military related organizations, including
activities related to the development of a nuclear payload for a
missile, about which the Agency has regularly received new information."
However, despite the fact that the "Agency continues to verify the
non-diversion of declared nuclear material at the nuclear facilities,"
to whit, that such materials have not been
covertly channeled towards military programs, Amano, reprising former
Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld's famous gaff that "the absence of
evidence is not the evidence of absence," the IAEA "is unable to provide
credible assurance about the absence of undeclared nuclear material and
activities in Iran, and therefore to conclude that all nuclear material
in Iran is in peaceful activities."
Far from being an independent "nuclear watchdog," the IAEA under
Amano's stewardship has been transformed into highly-politicized and
pliable organization eager to do Washington's bidding.
As a 2009 State Department cable released by
WikiLeaks revealed,
U.S. Ambassador Glyn Davies cheerily reported: "Yukiya Amano thanked
the U.S. for having supported his candidacy and took pains to emphasize
his support for U.S. strategic objectives for the Agency. Amano reminded
Ambassador on several occasions that he would need to make concessions
to the G-77, which correctly required him to be fair-minded and
independent, but that he was solidly in the U.S. court on every key strategic decision, from high-level personnel appointments to the handling of Iran's alleged nuclear weapons program." (emphasis added)
Although the new report "offered little that was not already known
by experts about Iran's nuclear programme" IPS averred, "it cited what
it alleged was new evidence that 'Iran has carried out activities
relevant to the development of a nuclear device' since 2003--the date
when most analysts believe it abandoned a centralised effort to build a
nuclear bomb'."
But as the United States, with the connivance of corporate media, bury the conclusions of not one, but two National
Intelligence Estimates issued by the U.S. Director of National
Intelligence, it is clear to any objective observer that
"nonproliferation" is a cover for aggressive geopolitical machinations
by Washington.
Both estimates, roundly denounced by U.S. neoconservatives and media
commentators when they were published, insisted that "in fall of 2003,
Tehran halted its nuclear weapons program," a finding intelligence
analysts judged with "high confidence."
In contrast, the highly-politicized IAEA report is a provocative
document whose timing neatly corresponds with the imposition of a new
round of economic sanctions meant to crater the Iranian economy. Never
mind that even according to the IAEA's own biased reporting, they could
find no evidence that Iran had
diverted nuclear materials from civilian programs (power generation,
medical isotopes) to alleged military initiatives.
Indeed, with sinister allusions that hint darkly at "undeclared
nuclear materials," the agency fails to provide a single scrap of
evidence that diverted stockpiles even exist.
Another key
allegation made by the Agency that Iran had constructed an "explosives
chamber to test components of a nuclear weapon and carry out a simulated
nuclear explosion," was denounced by former IAEA inspector Robert
Kelley as "highly misleading," according to an
IPS report filed by investigative journalist Gareth Porter.
With "information provided by Member States," presumably Israel and
the United States, the IAEA said it "had 'confirmed' that a 'large
cylindrical object' housed at the same complex had been 'designed to
contain the detonation of up to 70 kilograms of high explosives'. That
amount of explosives, it said, would be 'appropriate' for testing a
detonation system to trigger a nuclear weapon."
"Kelley rejected the IAEA claim that the alleged cylindrical chamber
was new evidence of an Iranian weapons programme," Porter wrote. "We've
been led by the nose to believe that this container is important, when
in fact it's not important at all," the former nuclear inspector said.
But as Mark Twain famously wrote, "A lie can travel half way around
the world while the truth is putting on its shoes." This is certainly
proving to be the case with the IAEA under Yukiya Amano.
Another
player "solidly in the U.S. court" is David Albright, the director of
the Institute for Science and International Security (
ISIS), a Washington, D.C. "think tank"
funded by the elitist Carnegie, Ford and Rockefeller Foundations.
In an earlier piece for
IPS,
Porter demolished Albright's "sensational claim previously reported by
news media all over the world that a former Soviet nuclear weapons
scientist had helped Iran construct a detonation system that could be
used for a nuclear weapon."
"But it turns out that the foreign expert, who is not named in the
IAEA report but was identified in news reports as Vyacheslav Danilenko,
is not a nuclear weapons scientist but one of the top specialists in the
world in the production of nanodiamonds by explosives," Porter wrote.
"In fact," Porter averred, "Danilenko, a Ukrainian, has worked
solely on nanodiamonds from the beginning of his research career and is
considered one of the pioneers in the development of nanodiamond
technology, as published scientific papers confirm."
"It now appears that the IAEA and David Albright ... who was the
source of the news reports about Danilenko, never bothered to check the
accuracy of the original claim by an unnamed 'Member State' on which the
IAEA based its assertion about his nuclear weapons background."
It is no small irony, that Albright, corporate media's go-to guy on all things nuclear, penned an alarmist
screed in
2002 entitled, "Is the Activity at Al Qaim Related to Nuclear
Efforts?", an article which lent "scientific" credence to false claims
made by the Bush White House against Iraq.
As investigative journalist Robert Parry pointed out on the
Consortium News web
site, "Albright's nuclear warning about Iraq coincided with the start
of the Bush administration's propaganda campaign to rally Congress and
the American people to war with talk about 'the smoking gun in the form
of a mushroom cloud'."
"Yet," Parry noted, "when the
Washington Post cited
Albright on Monday, as the key source of a front-page article about
Iran's supposed progress toward reaching 'nuclear capability,' all the
history of Albright's role in the Iraq fiasco disappeared."
History be damned. Congressional warmongers and corporate media who
cite these fraudulent claims, are "spurred by Israel's whisper campaign
to create a sense of urgency on Capitol Hill where the Israel lobby,
acting mainly through the American Israel Public Affairs Committee,
exerts its greatest influence," as IPS noted, and punish Iran for the
"crime" of opening its nuclear facilities to international inspection!
That "whisper campaign" has now bloomed into a full court press for
war by "liberal" Democrats and "conservative" Republicans alike, even as
public approval of Congress's work by the American people tracks only
slightly higher than the popularity enjoyed by child molesters or serial
killers.
As tensions are dialed up, the United States is spearheading a relentless drive to throttle Iran's economy.
The New York Times reported
that "major Western powers took significant steps on Monday to cut Iran
off from the international financial system, announcing coordinated
sanctions aimed at its central bank and commercial banks."
A strict sanctions regime was also imposed on Iran's "petrochemical
and oil industries, adding to existing measures that seek to weaken the
Iranian government by depriving it of its ability to refine gasoline or
invest in its petroleum industry," theTimes reported.
In a move which signals that even-more stringent sanctions are on
the horizon, the U.S. Treasury Department "named the Central Bank of
Iran and the entire Iranian banking system as a 'primary money
laundering concern'."
That's rather rich coming from an administration which slapped
Wachovia Bank on the wrist after that corrupt financial institution, now
owned by Wells Fargo Bank, pleaded guilty to laundering as much as $378
billion for Mexico's notorious drug cartels as
Bloomberg Markets Magazine reported last year!
Going a step further, France's President Nicolas Sarkozy called on
the major imperialist powers "to freeze the assets of the central bank
and suspend purchases of Iranian oil."
The Guardian reported
that Britain "went the furthest by, for the first time, cutting an
entire country's banking system off from London's financial sector."
Playing catch-up with war-hungry Democrats and Republicans,
President Obama stated that the "new sanctions target for the first time
Iran's petrochemical sector, prohibiting the provision of goods,
services and technology to this sector and authorizing penalties against
any person or entity that engages in such activity."
"They expand energy sanctions, making it more difficult for Iran to
operate, maintain, and modernize its oil and gas sector," Obama said.
"As
long as Iran continues down this dangerous path, the United States will
continue to find ways, both in concert with our partners and through
our own actions, to isolate and increase the pressure upon the Iranian
regime."
Last summer, Rep. Brad Sherman (D-CA), a strong backer of punishing
sanctions, echoed Richard Nixon's vow to "make the economy scream" prior
to the CIA's overthrow of Chile's democratically-elected socialist
president, Salvador Allende, and wrote in
The Hill that "critics ... argued that these measures will hurt the Iranian people. Quite frankly, we need to do just that."
With a new round of crippling economic sanctions on tap from the West, "liberal" Democrat Sherman might just get his wish.
Targeting Civilian Infrastructure
While the Obama administration claims that their aggressive stance
towards Iran is meant to promote "peace" and "help" the Iranian people
achieve a "democratic transformation," ubiquitous facts on the ground
betray a far different, and uglier, reality.
Anonymous U.S. "intelligence officials" told
The Daily Beast "that
any Israeli attack on hardened nuclear sites in Iran would go far
beyond airstrikes from F-15 and F-16 fighter planes and likely include
electronic warfare against Iran's electric grid, Internet, cellphone
network, and emergency frequencies for firemen and police officers."
According to Newsweek national
security correspondent Eli Lake, "Israel has developed a weapon capable
of mimicking a maintenance cellphone signal that commands a cell
network to 'sleep,' effectively stopping transmissions, officials
confirmed. The Israelis also have jammers capable of creating
interference within Iran's emergency frequencies for first responders."
But Israel isn't the only nation capable of launching high-tech
attacks or, borrowing the Pentagon's euphemistic language, conduct
"Information Operations" (IO).
The U.S. Air Force Cyberspace & Information Operations Study Center (
CIOSC)
describe IO as "The integrated employment of the core capabilities of
electronic warfare, computer network operations, psychological
operations, military deception and operations security, in concert with
specified supporting and related capabilities, to influence, disrupt,
corrupt or usurp adversarial human and automated decision making while
protecting our own."
In this light, The Daily Beast disclosed
that "Israel also likely would exploit a vulnerability that U.S.
officials detected two years ago in Iran's big-city electric grids,
which are not 'air-gapped'--meaning they are connected to the Internet
and therefore vulnerable to a Stuxnet-style cyberattack--officials say."
The anonymous officials cited by Lake informed us that "a highly
secretive research lab attached to the U.S. joint staff and combatant
commands, known as the Joint Warfare Analysis Center (JWAC), discovered
the weakness in Iran's electrical grid in 2009," the same period when
Stuxnet was launched, and that Israeli and Pentagon cyberwarriors "have
the capability to bring a denial-of-service attack to nodes of Iran's
command and control system that rely on the Internet."
But as Ralph Langer, the industrial controls systems expert who first identified the Stuxnet virus warned in an interview with
The Christian Science Monitor, the deployment of military-grade malicious code is a "game changer" that has "opened Pandora's box."
Among a host of troubling questions posed by Stuxnet, Langer said:
"It raises, for one, the question of how to apply cyberwar as a
political decision. Is the US really willing to take down the power grid
of another nation when that might mainly affect civilians?"
But as we have seen, most recently during the punishing air campaign
that helped "liberate" Libya--from their petrochemical resources--the
U.S. and their partners are capable of doing that and more.
Future
targeting of Iran's civilian infrastructure may in fact have been one
of the tasks of the recently-discovered Duqu Trojan, which Israeli and
U.S. "boutique arms dealers" are suspected of designing for their
respective governments.
And whom, pray tell, has the means, motives and expertise to design weaponized computer code?
As
BusinessWeek disclosed
in July, when one of America's cyber merchants of death, Endgame
Systems, pitch their products they "bring up maps of airports,
parliament buildings, and corporate offices. The executives then create a
list of the computers running inside the facilities, including what
software the computers run, and a menu of attacks that could work
against those particular systems."
According to BusinessWeek,
"Endgame weaponry comes customized by region--the Middle East, Russia,
Latin America, and China--with manuals, testing software, and 'demo
instructions'."
"A government or other entity," journalists Michael Riley and Ashlee
Vance revealed, "could launch sophisticated attacks against just about
any adversary anywhere in the world for a grand total of $6 million.
Ease of use is a premium. It's cyber warfare in a box."
Kaspersky Lab analyst Ryan Naraine, writing on the
Duqu FAQ blog
averred that Duqu's "main purpose is to act as a backdoor into the
system and facilitate the theft of private information. This is the main
difference when compared to Stuxnet, which was created to conduct
industrial sabotage."
In other words, unlike Stuxnet, Duqu is an espionage tool which can
smooth the way for future attacks such as those described by The Daily Beast.
As
The Washington Post disclosed
last May, while the military "needs presidential authorization to
penetrate a foreign computer network and leave a cyber-virus that can be
activated later," it does not need such authorization "to penetrate
foreign networks for a variety of other activities."
According to the Post,
these activities include "studying the cyber-capabilities of adversaries
or examining how power plants or other networks operate," and can
"leave beacons to mark spots for later targeting by viruses."
Or more likely given escalating tensions, Iranian air defenses and
that nation's power and electronic communications grid which include
"emergency frequencies for firemen and police officers" who would
respond to devastating air and missile attacks.
Countdown to War
We
can conclude that Israel, NATO and the United States are doing far more
than placing "all options on the table" with respect to the Islamic
Republic of Iran.
Along with ratcheting-up bellicose rhetoric, moves to collapse the
economy, an assassination and sabotage campaign targeting Iranian
scientists and military installations, cyberwarriors are infecting
computer networks with viruses and "beacons" that will be used to attack
air defense systems and civilian infrastructure.
After all, as Dave Aitel, the founder of the computer security firm
Immunity told BusinessWeek, "nothing says you've lost like a starving city."
As
Global Research analyst
Michel Chossudovsky warned last year, now confirmed by CIA and Pentagon
leaks to corporate media: "It is highly unlikely that the bombings, if
they were to be implemented, would be circumscribed to Iran's nuclear
facilities as claimed by US-NATO official statements. What is more
probable is an all out air attack on both military and civilian
infrastructure, transport systems, factories, public buildings."
With the global economy in deep crisis as a result of capitalism's
economic meltdown, and as the first, but certainly not the last
political actions by the working class threaten the financial elite's
stranglehold on power, the ruling class may very well gamble that a war
with Iran is a risk worth taking.
As Chossudovsky warned in a subsequent
Global Research report,
"there are indications that Washington might envisage the option of an
initial (US backed) attack by Israel rather than an outright US-led
military operation directed against Iran."
"The Israeli attack--although led in close liaison with the Pentagon
and NATO--would be presented to public opinion as a unilateral decision
by Tel Aviv. It would then be used by Washington to justify, in the
eyes of world opinion," Chossudovsky wrote, "a military intervention of
the US and NATO with a view to 'defending Israel', rather than attacking
Iran. Under existing military cooperation agreements, both the US and
NATO would be 'obligated' to 'defend Israel' against Iran and Syria."
This prescient analysis has been borne out by events. As regional
tensions escalate, the USS George H.W. Bush, "the Navy's newest aircraft
carrier, has reportedly parked off the Syrian coast,"
The Daily Caller reported.
Earlier this week, the financial news service
Zero Hedge disclosed that "the Arab League (with European and US support) are preparing to institute a no fly zone over Syria."
"But probably the most damning evidence that the 'western world' is
about to do the unthinkable and invade Syria," analyst Tyler Durden
wrote, "and in the process force Iran to retaliate, is the weekly naval
update from Stratfor."
According to Zero Hedge,
"CVN 77 George H.W. Bush has left its traditional theater of operations
just off the Straits of Hormuz, a critical choke point, where it
traditionally accompanies the Stennis, and has parked... right next to
Syria."
In an earlier report, citing Kuwait's Al Rai daily,
Zero Hedge warned
that "Arab jet fighters, and possibly Turkish warplanes, backed by
American logistic support will implement a no fly zone in Syria's skies,
after the Arab League will issue a decision, under its Charter, calling
for the protection of Syrian civilians."
The
BBC reports
that the Arab League "has warned Syria it has one day to sign a deal
allowing the deployment of observers or it will face economic
sanctions."
"Meanwhile," BBC averred, "France has suggested that some sort of
humanitarian protection zones," à la Libya, "be created inside Syria."
American
moves towards Syria are fraught with dangerous implications for
international peace and stability. As analyst Pepe Escobar disclosed in
Asia Times Online the Arab League, a wholly-owned subsidiary of Saudi Arabia and repressive Gulf emirates, dances to Washington's tune.
"Syria is Iran's undisputed key ally in the Arab world--while
Russia, alongside China, are the key geopolitical allies. China, for the
moment, is making it clear that any solution for Syria must be
negotiated," Escobar wrote.
"Russia's one and only naval base in the Mediterranean is at the
Syrian port of Tartus. Not by accident," Escobar notes, "Russia has
installed its S-300 air defense system--one of the best all-altitude
surface-to-air missile systems in the world, comparable to the American
Patriot--in Tartus. The update to the even more sophisticated S-400
system is imminent."
"From Moscow's--as well as Tehran's--perspective, regime change in
Damascus is a no-no. It will mean virtual expulsion of the Russian and
Iranian navies from the Mediterranean."
"In other words," Zero Hedge warned,
"if indeed Europe and the Western world is dead set upon an aerial
campaign above Syria, then all eyes turn to the East, and specifically
Russia and China, which have made it very clear they will not tolerate
any intervention. And naturally the biggest unknown of all is Iran,
which has said than any invasion of Syria will be dealt with swiftly and
severely."
Despite, or possibly because no
credible evidence exists that Iran is building a nuclear bomb as a
hedge against "regime change," belligerent rhetoric and regional
military moves targeting Syria and Iran simultaneously are danger signs that imperialism's manufactured "nuclear crisis" is a cynical pretext for war.
Tom Burghardt is a researcher and activist based in the San Francisco Bay Area. In addition to publishing in Covert Action Quarterly and Global Research,
an independent research and media group of writers, scholars,
journalists and activists based in Montreal, he is a Contributing Editor
with Cyrano's Journal Today. His articles can be read on Dissident Voice, The Intelligence Daily, Pacific Free Press, Uncommon Thought Journal, and the whistleblowing website WikiLeaks. He is the editor of Police State America: U.S. Military "Civil Disturbance" Planning, distributed by AK Press and has contributed to the new book from Global Research, The Global Economic Crisis: The Great Depression of the XXI Century.