SI
SI
discoversearch

We've detected that you're using an ad content blocking browser plug-in or feature. Ads provide a critical source of revenue to the continued operation of Silicon Investor.  We ask that you disable ad blocking while on Silicon Investor in the best interests of our community.  If you are not using an ad blocker but are still receiving this message, make sure your browser's tracking protection is set to the 'standard' level.
Politics : Stockman Scott's Political Debate Porch -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Rick Faurot who wrote (24823)8/9/2003 8:33:20 AM
From: Rick Faurot  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 89467
 
Bush Administration Paralyzed Over Iran

by Jim Lobe WASHINGTON, Aug 7 - Does the administration of U.S. President George W. Bush still consider al-Qaeda and its associates the main target in its almost three-year-old ''war on terrorism'', or has its military victory in Iraq whetted its appetite for bigger game?

That is effectively the question that the powers-that-be in Iran appear to be posing to Washington at a critical moment in the war's evolution.

The administration appears deadlocked over an answer.

According to a series of leaks by U.S. officials, Iran has offered to hand over, if not directly to Washington then to friendly allies, three senior al-Qaeda leaders and might provide another three top terrorist suspects that Washington believes are being held by Teheran.

But its price -- for the U.S. military to permanently shut down the operations of an Iraq-based Iranian rebel group that is on the State Department's official terrorism list -- might be too high for some hard-liners, centered in the Pentagon and Vice President Dick Cheney's office, who led the charge for war in Iraq.

Members of this group see the rebels, the Mujahedin el Khalq (MEK), or People's Mujahedin, as potentially helpful to their ambitions to achieve ''regime change'' in Iran, charter member of Bush's ''axis of evil'' and a nation that is believed to have accelerated its nuclear weapons program in recent months.

The question of what to do about the reported Iranian offer is one of the issues being discussed this week in successive visits to Bush's Texas ranch by Secretary of State Colin Powell (who returned from there Wednesday night), Cheney, and Pentagon chief Donald Rumsfeld.

Iran has confirmed that it is holding three al-Qaeda leaders, including Seif al-Adel, considered the network's number three and chief of military operations who already has a 25-million-dollar bounty on his head; its spokesman, Suleiman Abu Gheith; and Saad bin Laden, Osama bin Laden's third oldest son.

In addition, Washington believes Teheran also has custody of three other much-sought-after targets: Abu Hafs, a senior al-Qaeda operative known as ''the Mauritanian''; Abu Musab Zarqawi, who has been depicted by the administration as a key link between al-Qaeda and former Iraqi President Saddam Hussein; and possibly Mohammed al Masri, an al-Qaeda associate active in East Africa, according to a recent report by a special investigative team of the Knight Ridder newspaper chain.

''If Washington could get its hands on even half these guys, it would be the biggest advance since the fall of Afghanistan in the fight against al-Qaeda,'' according to one administration official who declined to be identified. ''If we could get them all, that would be a huge breakthrough.''

The State Department has been pushing the administration to engage Iran more directly in pursuit of the best deal possible and was reportedly authorized to hold one meeting with the Iranians two weeks ago.

Washington and Teheran broke off bilateral relations during the U.S. embassy hostage crisis in 1980, but quiet meetings were held over the past year, until they were broken off in mid-May after administration hard-liners charged that a series of terrorist attacks carried out against U.S. and other foreign targets in Saudi Arabia May 12 were organized from Iranian territory, presumably with the approval of elements of its government.

But the same hard-liners reportedly oppose a deal with Teheran, which they depict not only as a sponsor of terrorism determined to acquire nuclear weapons, but also an exhausted dictatorship teetering on the verge of collapse that could be easily overthrown in a popular insurrection, with covert U.S. help or even military intervention.

The hawks are backed by the Likud government in Israel, which has been urging Washington to go after Iran since even before the war in Iraq. As soon as Iraq is dealt with, Prime Minister Ariel Sharon told the 'New York Post' last November, he ''will push for Iran to be at the top of the 'to do' list''.

Pentagon hard-liners, who exert the greatest control over the occupation authority in Iraq, last month authorized the re-birth of the arm of Saddam Hussein's intelligence service -- the Mukhabarat -- that worked on Iran, according to the Pentagon-backed Iraqi National Congress (INC), which is helping in the effort.

That was the same unit that worked closely with the MEK under Saddam Hussein.

The MEK, which began in the late 1960s as a left-wing Islamist movement against the Shah but broke violently with the leaders of the Islamic Republic after the 1978-79 revolution, was given its own bases, tanks and other heavy weapons by the Iraqi leader during the Iran-Iraq War, all of which it retained during his regime to use in raids against Iran, but also to help Hussein put down unrest, particularly after the 1991 Gulf War.

U.S. forces bombed the group's bases in the initial phases of the Iraq campaign earlier this year, but negotiated a cease-fire and eventually a surrender as Washington expanded its control over Iraq.

Yet the group has been permitted to retain most of its weapons, remain together, and, despite its listing by the State Department as a terrorist group and Teheran's demands that it be completely dismantled, continue radio broadcasting into Iran.

Although the MEK, which displays many of the characteristics of a cult in its hero-worship of its ''first couple'', Maryam and Massoud Rajavi, appears to have intelligence assets inside Iran -- the group was the first to alert Washington to the existence of a previously unknown nuclear facility earlier this year -- most Iran specialists believe it has no popular following there whatsoever, and is mostly despised due to its alliance with Hussein during the Iran-Iraq war.

''It's hard to see how they could ever be seen as a political asset to the United States in Iran,'' one administration official who favors a deal told IPS recently. ''The (MEK) is precisely the kind of common enemy against which both the reformists and the conservatives -- and even the students -- are likely to rally against.''

A deal would also re-confirm to an increasingly skeptical Islamic world that al-Qaeda was indeed the primary target of Bush's war on terror and not simply a pretext for a major intervention in the Middle East and the Gulf to ensure U.S. and Israeli domination of the entire region, say analysts here.

''Our priority should be al-Qaeda, and if we can engage the Iranians tactically to get some high-ranking al-Qaeda operatives, we should'', Flynt Leverett, the top Mideast expert on the National Security Council under both Clinton and Bush until his departure earlier this year, told the 'New York Times' Saturday.

The same analysts argue that disbanding the MEK would help demonstrate that Washington is not applying a double standard to different terrorist groups, depending on their usefulness.

But the Pentagon reportedly remains resistant to stronger action against the group.

''There is no question that we have not disbanded them, and there is an ongoing debate about them between the office of the Secretary of Defense and the State Department,'' Vince Cannistraro, a former counter-terrorism director in the Central Intelligence Agency, told 'USA Today' this week.

It appears that some officials believe the MEK could yet serve some purpose.

Copyright 2003 IPS

Published on Friday, August 8, 2003 by the Inter Press Service
commondreams.org



To: Rick Faurot who wrote (24823)8/9/2003 8:46:36 AM
From: Crimson Ghost  Respond to of 89467
 
Imperial Rules Compared
By Boris Kagarlitsky
It has become a commonplace of late to speak of the "American empire." The United States has occupied the same place in the contemporary world that the British empire occupied during the reign of Queen Victoria. The United States enjoys not just economic and military superiority, but like the former British empire it exercises political control over a growing number of countries.

Ironically, America's imperial incursion into Asia has begun in those very countries where British expansionism broke down: Afghanistan and Iraq. The British fought a number of wars in Afghanistan, suffering but a single serious military defeat. True, that defeat was devastating. During the war of 1839-42, the British garrison was obliterated by local tribes after abandoning Kabul and setting out for the safety of India. Only one British soldier reached his destination. British military superiority did not produce the desired results. Her Majesty's forces easily occupied major cities and routed the native armies only to discover that they controlled nothing but the ground they were standing on.

In India, the British had installed a system of "indirect rule," whereby most of the work of governing was handled by the local bureaucracy, police force and military. This system did not work in Afghanistan. Agreements reached with the British were immediately broken and local leaders continually switched sides. Promises were not kept. There was no one to trust and no one to rely on. Not only did local leaders have no desire to serve their conquerors, they couldn't even agree on anything amongst themselves. Having spent more than half a century in Afghanistan, Britain settled for the nominal recognition of its dominion. In 1919, the British left the country for good.

To Our Readers

Has something you've read here startled you? Are you angry, excited, puzzled or pleased? Do you have ideas to improve our coverage?
Then please write to us.
All we ask is that you include your full name, the name of the city from which you are writing and a contact telephone number in case we need to get in touch.
We look forward to hearing from you.

Email the Opinion Page EditorIraq, which came under British control after World War I, also proved a tough nut to crack. Rebellions were forever breaking out, and local authorities used the powers they had been given against their imperial patrons. The country was declared independent in 1932, though it was occupied again in 1941 in order to prevent it from falling under the influence of Nazi Germany.

In Afghanistan and Iraq today, the Americans have run into exactly the same problems. They have no reliable allies, and they have been unable to convert military presence into effective political control. But the United States has another problem that Britain didn't face: its reluctance to admit it is an empire.

When the British colonized countries in Asia and Africa, they at least assumed formal obligations toward the local population. The legal status of the colonial administration and its powers were clearly defined. You can't say anything definite about the U.S. presence in Iraq and Afghanistan. How long will it last? What is the legal basis for it? How are responsibilities divided between the occupying powers and the local authorities? The Bush administration can't even bring itself to utter the word "occupation," much less openly declare that it has conquered these countries. The status of an occupied territory is more or less regulated by international law, but the United States won't admit that it is an occupying power.

The ideology, culture and institutions of the American republic do not jibe with its new imperial role in the world. America must conceal its ambitions, not so much from the world community which understands very well what's going on, but from its own people who were raised on very different traditions. The "free Briton" of the imperial era understood and supported the country's colonial policy. Even the socialists at the time were prepared to adopt imperial slogans -- with certain reservations, of course. The average American, by contrast, is never more supportive of their country's foreign policy than when they have only the vaguest idea what it actually entails. And since the existence of a U.S. empire is denied, public discussion of the problems of empire is impossible. In this, the United States closely resembles the Soviet Union, which passed off its occupation of Afghanistan as "fraternal assistance."

Hypocrisy is a shaky foundation for foreign policy, particularly in a country that considers itself a democracy. When the British empire was putting down uprisings in India, it could still boast of upholding democracy for "its own." The situation in America is fundamentally different. U.S. imperial policy will either lead to the erosion of the country's democratic institutions, or American democracy will rise up and bring an end to the grand imperial design.

Boris Kagarlitsky is director of the Institute of Globalization Studies.