War, war, war or Jaw, jaw, jaw?
by William Bowles
It’s amazing isn’t it how the media, given the appropriate cues from the state, so readily slips into a warring state of mind. I’m talking of course about Iran.
All the major media outlets have shifted into top gear over the past couple of weeks and, for the first time, talked about Israel’s role as the frontline ‘dog of war’ on behalf of its paymaster, the US.
You have to ask, what’s changed?
I venture to guess that all the war talk coming out of the US has
fallen on deaf ears, so let Israel take the heat instead. But make no
mistake no matter what some, even on left say about the ‘tail wagging
the dog’, the Zionists makes no major move without the nod from the
Beltway bandits.
But in order to wind up the anté it was first
necessary to erase the UN from the propaganda blitz. Instead, it’s the
‘international community’, code for the US, UK and the EU. This came
about because the IAEA (the International Atomic Energy Agency) didn’t
‘play ball’ over Iran’s alleged nuke weapons program. No matter, simply
ignore the agency’s findings, which is precisely what’s happened.
And
given the blanket and homogenous media coverage, erasing anything that
doesn’t fit the current imperial reality is as simple as throwing a
switch. Any ‘inconvenient’ fact is simply airbrushed out.
The BBC of course, did its bit for the dogs of war. Here’s the lead para from the BBC’s Website story:
- “A
day after a major Iranian ballistic missile test provoked international
condemnation, the front pages in Iran are covered with pictures of the
missiles soaring into the sky.†— ‘Mounting sense of crisis over Iran’
By Jon Leyne, BBC News, Tehran.
Note the use of the phrase
“international condemnation†and just in case we don’t get the message,
the following paras ram home the message:
- “There is a note of
pride in the coverage, and perhaps just a little satisfaction that Iran
has finally got the world's attention.
- “For days, Iranian military leaders have been issuing ever more blood-curdling warnings about Iran's response to any attack.â€
But
no mention of “blood-curdling warnings†in the BBC’s coverage of
Israel’s threats to launch pre-emptive strikes against Iran. Instead we
read:
- “Ehud Barak, speaking in Tel Aviv, said Israel had “proved
in the past that it won't hesitate to act when its vital security
interests are at stakeâ€.†— ‘Israel 'ready to act' over Iran’
The
key phrase is “vital security interestsâ€, which tells us absolutely
nothing about Iran’s intentions but speaks reams about Israel’s.
And
given all the bellicose threats made by Israel, Iran has every right to
test whatever defensive weapons it chooses and moreover, buy whatever
it needs to defend itself against the US and Israel.
Yet this
obvious and justifed reaction to Israel’s war-mongering escapes the
attention of the BBC’s coverage. Instead in the same piece ‘Mounting
sense of crisis over Iran’, we read that:
- “What seems to have
provoked this is a recent Israeli military exercise, apparently a
rehearsal for bombing Iran's nuclear facilities.â€
So why didn’t the
Israeli military exercise receive the same coverage as Iran’s response
to it? In fact it deserved even more coverage given the aggressive
nature of it (including apparently the use of Iraqi airspace).
Elsewhere on the BBC Website, the ever-faithful (to the empire) Paul Reynolds, the BBC’s world correspondent tells us:
- “The
warning by the senior US military commander Adm Mike Mullen that an
attack on Iran would be "extremely stressful" for US forces must lessen
the chances of the US taking part in any strike against Iran.†—
‘America's Israeli option on Iran’.[1]
The story reveals the reality
of the actual relationship between the US and Israel but most
importantly, the story also reveals the truth about Iran’s alleged
drive to acquire nuclear weapons. Quoting the IAEA’s assessment we
read,
- “Iran is not making highly enriched uranium suitable for
a weapon, only low-enriched uranium useable as nuclear power fuel.
(Update 4 July: the evidence for this comes from the 26 May 2008 report
from the IAEA, released on 5 June. This states that “the results of the
environmental samples... indicate that the [enrichment] plants have
been operated as declared. The samples show low-enriched uranium...
particles.â€)â€
So why is the IAEA’s assessment not central to the
coverage? Indeed, why is it not the story? Instead, it’s relegated to
no more than a footnote, which, for the sake ‘objectivity’ is exactly
what the BBC have done.
The issue here is the totally
contradictory coverage of Israel and Iran, after all it’s Israel
issuing all the threats of pre-emptive attack, not Iran, yet the BBC’s
coverage is heavily weighted in Israel’s favour with its talk of
“blood-curdling warningsâ€, though again there is no mention of what
these “blood-curdling warnings†consist of, it’s enough to use the
phrase as this and every other BBC story on the subject fills in all
blank spots.
And with all the talk of Iran’s ‘nuclear
ambitions’, it’s Israel alone in the Middle East that has an estimated
200 nuclear weapons, a fact not mentioned in any of the BBC’s so-called
coverage.
Of course the question still remains, will they,
won’t they bomb Iran? To attempt to answer this question we have to
look at the wider context.
Iraq has now formally requested
that the US leave and soon and the situation in Afghanistan is now
disastrous for the occupying forces. So, the pirates need a
diversion—again.
Second, oil. Even talking about trashing Iran
jacked up the price of oil a few more dollars, so strategically,
attacking Iran (whether it’s the US or Israel makes no difference), is
unlikely at least in the near future and indeed the US military have
already articulated this view.
But of course the wording
leaves open the option of using their proxy, Israel. Would Israel ‘go
it alone’? Frankly, without US blessing I find the idea inconceivable
but then given that Israel’s giant confidence trick on world opinion is
unravelling, it can’t be ruled out.
And then there are those
who say that the situation has gotten so desperate for capitalism that
only the wholesale destruction of ‘real estate’ will ‘solve’ the
problem of the over-accumulation of capital (aka WWI and WWII). A
‘fresh start’ so-to-speak and it would certainly solve the ‘credit
crunch’, bank meltdowns and the rest of the assorted crises confronting
capitalism.
But such ‘solutions’ take a considerable amount of
‘engineering’. First you need a really credible ‘enemy’ and Iran, in
spite of all the effort expended on demonizing Iran still doesn’t quite
fit the bill.
Perhaps some kind of ‘Tonkin Gulf’ provocation?
Again, we have to look at the context and importantly public sentiment
and judging by the BBC’s ‘Have your say’ section on its Website, the
great majority of respondents are not fooled by the propaganda blitz.
And yes, it’s not ‘scientific’ but then not much on the BBC’s website
is.
I still maintain as I have done for the past couple of
years that the endless threats are designed primarily for domestic
consumption and clearly the public ain’t buying war, war, war,
preferring jaw, jaw, jaw (if they express a preference for anything at
all given the total alienation between rulers and ruled).
And
surely the whole sorry, pathetic story of the pirates’ attempts to
(re)build an empire, the sheer ineptitude and incompetence of ‘our’
leaders should surely be apparent to everyone.
Gone are the
days of ‘grand plans’ of world domination for one hundred years such as
those hatched toward the end of 19th century. Instead, we have a bunch
of ignorant and incompetent gangsters purportedly running the show, but
who nevertheless, judging by their actions are capable of almost any
vile act.
And this is the really scary aspect of the situation
where the ‘Chicago School’s Creative Destruction’ takes on a whole new
and truly ominous meaning.
Mobilizing public opinion is the
obvious response but here in the UK, the Stop The War Coalition have
proved incapable of capitalizing on the initial success back in March
2003.
Compare Stop The War to Code Pink in the US for example.
Code Pink have been imaginative and innovative in their approach,
punching well above their weight.
Here it seems the anti-war
movement is trapped in its own inertia and locked in some kind of 20th
century time warp, when what is needed is daring and innovative
approaches that capture the public’s attention and offer some hope to a
public that has lost all belief and trust in the political class.
Notes
1.
For one analysis of US covert operations against Iran see 'Preparing
the Battlefield: The Bush Administration steps up its secret moves
against Iran' by Seymour M. Hersh July 7, 2008 but whether these are
intended as a precursor to an attack is not clear. And moreover, even
covert operations from within Iran by the CIA and its proxies do not
have the support of all sections of the US government.
Quoting a Pentagon consultant Hersh informs us that:
- “There
is huge opposition inside the intelligence community to the idea of
waging a covert war inside Iran, and using Baluchis and Ahwazis as
surrogates. The leaders of our Special Operations community all have
remarkable physical courage, but they are less likely to voice their
opposition to policy. Iran is not Waziristan.â€
But one thing is
clear, the US ruling elite is divided over the issue of whether ‘regime
change’ should be achieved by overt or covert means but obviously not
over the objective.
For some useful historical background on
the history of US-Iranian nuclear relations see, ‘ The Nuclear Showdown
Between The US And Iran’ By Tim Buchholz,13 July, 2008
This essay is archived at:
http://www.creative-i.info/?p=291
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