Another global disaster derailed
By JAMAL KANJ
,
Posted on » Thursday, November 01,
2012
http://www.gulf-daily-news.com/NewsDetails.aspx?storyid=340889
LAST August I predicted that as the US election drew closer,
and as the President's re-election became certain, a credible scenario would be
for Israel to strike Iran - pre-empting Barack Obama's new term in the White
House.
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's performance at
the United Nations (UN) General Assembly deflated that possibility.
From his speech it seems an Israeli strike is now less
likely. Not only because Obama's re-election next Tuesday is becoming less
certain, but because Netanyahu was a victim of his own vain, swaggering
arrogance.
Politicians tend to get intoxicated in private room
meetings, losing their inhibitions when articulating, off the record, their
candid opinions.
In a 2001 closed room meeting, unbeknown to him, Netanyahu
was caught on video bragging to an Israeli settler's family about how easily he
could manipulate the US. "I know what America is... America is a thing you
can move very easily," he said.
He also boasted on his plans to sabotage the Oslo Peace
Accord with Palestinians. "I'm going to interpret the accords in such a
way that would allow me to put an end to this galloping forward to the '67
borders," he said.
But on Iran, ex-furniture salesman Netanyahu was blinded by
his condescending view of American democracy - failing to appreciate the role
the US military might play.
The American Israel Public Affairs Committee (AIPAC) is
undeniably one of the strongest lobbying groups in Washington, DC and arguably
the undisputed foreign lobby leader in the US capital, but it is no match for
the US military's influence.
Pre-empting Netanyahu, AIPAC and Israeli firsters from both
parties, Obama mobilised his military and sent the Chairman of the US Joint
Chiefs of Staff, General Martin Dempsey, to Tel Aviv in late January to
reiterate the President's demand that Israel refrain from any unilateral
military move without giving prior notice to Washington.
In a characteristic salesman's bluff, Netanyahu responded by
cancelling the largest ever US-Israel war exercise scheduled to take place in
April. The Prime Minister wanted to send an indirect message to the Obama administration
that a possible unilateral strike could take place in the spring.
The US military was unmoved by Israel's tactics and
continued to verbalise its opposition to war. The American military's public
position neutralised Israeli supporters and war advocates in both houses.
The Israeli lobby's inability to pressure the US military
meant a back-pedalling Netanyahu surrogate told Ynet news on August 11 that
Israel was willing to "reconsider" a unilateral attack if Obama set
an ultimatum for Iran to stop uranium enrichment.
Refusing to back down, the US military went on the
offensive. General Dempsey was quoted in the UK's Guardian newspaper on August
30 saying that an Israeli strike would only succeed in unravelling
"crippling international sanctions" against the Iranian government.
He went further by making a statement no US politician would
dare to utter: "I don't want to be complicit if they [Israel] choose to do
it."
Only American military leaders are invulnerable to political
intimidation from Israeli firsters and lobbyists. Unlike the myopic view of
elected officials, military leaders understand the cost of war and the
limitation of its own might in what could be a very costly, protracted
conflict.
Next Wednesday America will wake up to the start of a new
presidential term at the White House. To the chagrin of Israeli leaders, the US
military might have derailed, for now, another world disaster.
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