Iran sounds an awful lot like Iraq
There is a disturbing sense of dιjΰ vu in Washington's actions and rhetoric.
By Jon Sawyer
Jon Sawyer is director of the Washington-based Pulitzer Center on Crisis
Reporting. He has reported from Iran and throughout the Middle East.
Los Angeles Times
October 29, 2006
AN EMBATTLED president, a Congress distracted by a sex scandal, looming midterm
elections and yet overwhelming agreement, with scant debate or publicity, on
fateful legislation that set the nation on a path to war.
It happened eight autumns ago, when three-quarters of the House of
Representatives and every single senator voted for regime change in Iraq.
Has it happened again, on Iran?
Four weeks ago, Congress enacted and President Bush signed the Iran Freedom
Support Act, a resolution very much in the spirit of the 1998 Iraq Liberation
Act. It mandates sanctions against any country aiding Iran's nuclear programs,
even those to which that country is legally entitled under the Nuclear
Nonproliferation Treaty.
The new law got virtually no coverage in the congressional rush to adjourn and
amid the controversy surrounding e-mails between Rep. Mark Foley (R-Fla.) and
teenage boys serving in the House page program. It has been overshadowed since
by North Korea's explosion of a nuclear device and the world's debate about how
to respond.
But if the confrontation over Iran's alleged nuclear weapons program ends in war
initiated by this administration or the next you can bet this law will be
cited as proof that Congress was onboard all along.
The congressional action isn't the only sign of dιjΰ vu. Recent months have seen
the creation of an "Iran directorate" at the Pentagon, using some of the same
personnel as the Office of Special Plans, the shadowy Pentagon outfit led by
former Undersecretary of Defense for Policy Douglas J. Feith that was accused of
massaging raw intelligence on Iraq to make the case for war look far more solid
than in fact it was.
Iran has now supplanted Iraq as the greatest single threat to the United States,
according to the National Security Strategy released earlier this year. Articles
in the New Yorker and Time describe an accelerated rate of contingency military
planning in an environment in which many senior officials on the military and
civilian sides consider war with Iran more a question of when rather than if.
As in the run-up to the Iraq war, there are assertions of a broad consensus of
experts' views that Iran is intent on developing a nuclear weapons capability;
and, just as in 2003, there are muted voices questioning how definitive the
evidence is. (The most recent National Intelligence Estimate found that Iran's
progress toward weapons capability was actually slower than previously thought,
and Director of National Intelligence John D. Negroponte says that, in his view,
Iran is still four to nine years away from having the bomb.)
Once again, U.S. officials are discounting the work of U.N. weapons inspectors
on site, and, once again, those inspectors and the agencies for which they
work are saying that the best way to contain the nuclear threat is to keep
them in place.
"People confuse knowledge, industrial capacity and intention," Mohamed ElBaradei,
director of the International Atomic Energy Agency, told Newsweek magazine in an
interview last week. "A lot of what you see about Iran right now is assessment
of intentions."
He and other IAEA officials warn that the Bush administration's hard-line
suspicions of Iran could make reading those intentions even harder. Tehran has
already suspended IAEA access to some nuclear facilities and could expel the
international inspectors entirely. It happened in Iraq in 1998 and the vacuum
that followed made possible ever-more speculative estimates as to Iraq's
imagined progress toward fielding weapons of mass destruction.
The run-up to possible war is also marked, yet again, by the absence of
firsthand knowledge of the enemy.
The war to topple Saddam Hussein came 12 years after the rupture of diplomatic
relations, with U.S. policymakers dependent on questionable exile groups long
removed from direct knowledge of conditions inside the country. In the case of
Iran, the gap is longer still nearly 27 years since Ayatollah Ruhollah
Khomeini seized power.
Assistant Secretary of State R. Nicholas Burns announced earlier this year that
State Department diplomats would be based in Dubai and elsewhere in the Middle
East and Europe to monitor Iran, in a move he likened to Riga Station, the
Latvian capital where, during the 1920s and 1930s, diplomats such as George
Kennan kept tabs on the Soviet Union. The effort comes late. As Burns himself
acknowledged, as recently as early last year, "there were exactly two people
focusing full time on Iran" at the State Department.
To be sure, war with Iran is nowhere near as inevitable as the neoconservative
proponents of aggressive action would make it appear. The U.S. military is mired
in Iraq. The combination of vast oil reserves and 70 million people make Iran a
formidable adversary, one that has shown itself more than willing to rely on
groups such as Hezbollah or Hamas to wage terrorism on the United States, Israel
and allied nations. Here at home, meanwhile, public opinion surveys show little
appetite for another go at preventive war.
In the face of those hurdles, and the acknowledged gaps in proven facts, it is
remarkable that the neoconservative handmaidens of the Iraq war are so assertive
on Iran, as to the inevitability of war and the rightness of waging it.
Last April, the Weekly Standard ran an article nearly 8,000 words long laying
out the case for war, why diplomacy and sanctions are doomed to fail and why
letting Tehran actualize its nuclear weapons potential would be more threatening
to the U.S. and to the world than the consequences of whatever it takes even
land invasion on the scale of Iraq to prevent that from happening. The
article's author was Reuel Marc Gerecht, a former CIA Middle East specialist and
resident fellow at the American Enterprise Institute who has a record of being
articulate, confident and in the case of Iraq wrong.
An issue brief that Gerecht wrote for the American Enterprise Institute in
August 2002 predicted that the U.S. invasion of Iraq would likely prompt
"simultaneous uprisings" by freedom-seeking Iranians. A November 2002 column
dismissed concerns that war with Iraq would destabilize the Middle East. "The
one truly unsettling thing a second Persian Gulf war might unleash," Gerecht
wrote, "is Iraqi democracy." In February 2003, he brushed aside concerns that
the Iraq war might inspire acts of terrorism by Muslims in Europe. "The coming
war in Iraq," he wrote, "will probably diminish, not enhance, the odds that
young Muslim males will become holy warriors
."
But at a time when a majority of Americans have turned against the Iraq war,
when Bush's long advantage on national security issues is under fire and when
Democrats dream of wresting control of not just the House of Representatives but
the Senate too, the most extraordinary parallel to the pre-Iraq-war environment
is that so many Democrats have given the administration a vote on Iran that
amounts to yet another blank-check endorsement of U.S. unilateralism even as
diplomats struggle in New York to craft a multilateral approach to Iran.
Rep. Maxine Waters (D-Los Angeles) voted for the Iran Freedom Support Act. So
did House Minority Whip Steny Hoyer (D-Md.). So did all but 21 members of the
House and every member of the Senate, which approved the measure by unanimous
voice vote.
The law they backed codifies existing U.S. sanctions against Iran and extends
those sanctions to any countries or companies deemed to have aided Iran in the
development or acquisition of nuclear weapons or of "destabilizing numbers and
types" of advanced conventional weapons. It states the sense of Congress that
the United States shall not enter into any form of cooperation with the
government of any country that so aids Iran, unless and until Iran has suspended
all uranium enrichment-related and reprocessing-related nuclear activity and has
"committed to verifiably refrain from such activity in the future" even though
such activities are permitted under the terms of the Nuclear Nonproliferation
Treaty.
Democrats who voted for the measure were at pains to distinguish it from the
Iraq Liberation Act, noting, for example, that the legislation specifically
rejected military aid to opponents of Iran's current government, and that it
calls for Iran's "democratic transformation," not regime change. Among those who
favor both, however, this is seen as little more than a wink and a nod.
Michael Ledeen, an American Enterprise Institute scholar, has beaten the Iran
war drums for years. He told the House International Relations Committee in
testimony last March that he was untroubled that the new law stops short of
explicitly calling for regime change. "People are just afraid of coming out and
using the language," he said. "You cannot have freedom in Iran without bringing
down the mullahs, so what are we talking about?"
In 1998, the Clinton administration went along with the Iraq Liberation Act
reluctantly, fearing that the law's stark anti-Saddam Hussein line would tie its
hands. Republican leaders were demanding a tough line, and Democrats, facing
midterm elections in the shadow of President Clinton's pending impeachment, were
eager to go along.
For all its bellicose rhetoric on Iran, the Bush administration appeared to have
similar reservations about the Iran Freedom Support Act. It staved off
congressional action for more than a year, contending that mandatory sanctions
would short-circuit the delicate diplomacy of taking Iran to the U.N. Security
Council. To critics within the administration, the law raised the specter of
U.S. unilateralism at a moment when Washington needed allies more than ever.
The administration eventually gave in to congressional insistence on tough talk
not just from Republicans but from Democrats, the latter seizing the chance to
draw a foreign policy red line while at the same time assailing Bush for wasting
lives and dollars in Iraq.
Smart politics? Most Republicans and most Democrats appear to believe that it is
that it's a good idea to take Iran off the table, to make sure it doesn't
figure as an issue in the Nov. 7 elections. It's reminiscent of the decision
many of them made before the midterms in 1998 and again in 2002, when the
bipartisan vote authorizing use of force against Iraq made the looming war
almost a nonissue in that year's midterm elections.
Maybe this time, on Iran, someone will yet decide that it's worth taking the
debate to the people.