Global Research
Prof. Marjorie Cohn
Prof. Marjorie Cohn
Neocons in Israel and the United
States are escalating their rhetoric to prepare us for war with Iran.
Even the infamous John Yoo, architect of George W. Bush’s illegal
torture and spying programs, is calling on the Republican presidential
candidates to “begin preparing the case for a military strike to destroy
Iran’s nuclear program.”
Under the 1968 Nuclear
Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT), Iran has the legal right to produce
nuclear power for peaceful purposes. The United Nations International
Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) has found no evidence that Iran is
developing a nuclear weapons program.
Defense Secretary Leon Panetta
recently said on CBS that Iran is not currently trying to build a
nuclear weapon.
Nevertheless, the United States and
Israel are mounting a campaign of aggression against Iran. The United
States has imposed punishing sanctions against Iran that are crippling
Iran’s economy, and pressuring other countries and strong-arming
financial institutions to stop buying oil from Iran, the world’s third
largest exporter. The Obama administration is also preparing new
punitive measures that target the Central Bank of Iran. And the House of
Representatives voted overwhelmingly to pass the Iran Threat Reduction
Act of 2011 which would outlaw any contact between U.S. government
employees and some Iranian officials.
There is also evidence that Israel,
with the possible assistance of the United States, has orchestrated the
assassinations of at least five Iranian nuclear scientists or engineers
since 2007. The New York Times reported: “The campaign, which
experts believe is being carried out mainly by Israel, apparently
claimed its latest victim on [January 11] when a bomb killed a
32-year-old nuclear scientist in Tehran’s morning rush hour.” These
assassinations constitute acts of terrorism. There have also been
cyber-attacks on Iranian centrifuges and an explosion at a missile
facility last year that killed a senior general and 16 other people.
These acts of aggression are designed
to provoke Iran to retaliate, including possibly closing the Strait of
Hormuz, which will spark a war that could spread to the entire Middle
East.
In addition, the United States has
shifted combat troops and warships to the Middle East, and supplied
Israel with bunker-busting bombs. Moreover, President Barack Obama has
deployed 9,000 U.S. troops to Israel to participate later this year with
thousands of Israeli troops in “war games” to test the U.S./Israeli air
defense system; this exercise will be the largest ever joint drill
between the two countries. Panetta said the exercise is designed “to
back up our unshakable commitment to Israel’s security.”
Iran is not a threat to Israel’s
security. Iran has not attacked any country in some 200 years. In 1953,
the CIA engineered a coup that replaced a democratic government in Iran
with the vicious Shah. He ruled Iran with an iron hand for 25 years,
wreaking torture and terror on Iranians while keeping Iran open to
Western investment. When I visited Iran in 1978 as a human rights
observer, there were dozens of U.S. corporations in downtown Tehran. One
year later, the chickens came home to roost. The Iranian revolution
overthrew the Shah, replacing him with a tyrannical theocracy that
continues to violate the rights of the Iranian people. But that does not
mean that Iran, if it does obtain nuclear weapons, will attack Israel.
The Iranian government knows that Israel and the United States would
retaliate with unimaginable military force that would devastate Iran and
much of the Middle East.
Article 2 of the United Nations Charter
requires the peaceful settlement of international disputes between Iran
and the United States. Both the U.S. and Iran are signatories of the
Kellogg-Briand Peace Pact of 1928, which states, “The High Contracting
Parties agree that the settlement or solution of all disputes or
conflicts of whatever nature or of whatever origin they may be, which
may arise among them, shall never be sought except by pacific means.”
Yet the United States has been illegally threatening war against Iran,
dating back to the administration of President George W. Bush.
Security Council Resolution 687, that
ended the first Gulf War, requires a weapons-of-mass-destruction-free
zone in the Middle East. Israel, which reportedly has an arsenal of
200-300 nuclear weapons, stands in violation of that resolution. Israel
refuses to sign the NPT, thus avoiding inspections by the IAEA. As
Shibley Telhami and Steven Kull advocate in a recent op-ed in the Times,
we should work toward a nuclear weapons-free zone in the Middle East,
and that includes Israel. They cite a poll in which 65 percent of
Israeli Jews think it would be best if neither Israel nor Iran had the
bomb, even if that means Israel giving up its nukes.
AIPAC (American Israel Public Affairs
Committee), the Israel lobby in the United States, has tremendous
support in the U.S. Congress. Even Zionist Thomas Friedman wrote in the Times last
month that the standing ovation Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin
Netanyahu got in Congress “was bought and paid for by the Israel lobby.”
AIPAC also exerts considerable pressure on Obama to be tough on Iran.
When the new Chairman of the joint Chiefs of Staff and the new head of
CENTCOM told Obama late last year they were disappointed that he was not
firmly opposing an Israeli strike on Iran, Obama replied that he “had
no say over Israel” because “it is a sovereign country.”
Obama does indeed have a say – a strong
say – over Israel. The United States has pledged $30 billion to Israel
over the next 10 years. Obama should inform his counterparts in Israel
that if it launches a military attack on Iran, the U.S. will withhold
foreign aid from Israel. Although pressure from the neocons to support
an Israeli attack on Iran will increase as the presidential elections
draws near, Obama has a legal duty to refrain from actions that will
lead to war with Iran.
Additionally, the U.N. Security
Council, which has the duty to prevent threats to international peace
and security, should order Israel and the United States to cease their
aggressive provocation against Iran.
The same voices who brought us the
illegal, tragic, and ill-advised war with Iraq will continue to try to
dominate the national conversation with battle cries against Iran. It is
up to us to prevail upon our elected officials to avoid a tragic
conflagration in Iran by pressuring Israel to cease and desist.
Marjorie Cohn
is a professor at Thomas Jefferson School of Law, past president of the
National Lawyers Guild, and deputy secretary general of the
International Association of Democratic Lawyers. Her most recent book is
The United States and Torture: Interrogation, Incarceration, and
Abuse. Visit her blog at www.marjoriecohn.com.
No comments:
Post a Comment