Biden wastes little time launching his own Middle Eastern bombing campaign
By: Rachel Marsden
PARIS — It took U.S. President Joe Biden barely a month in office to drop
bombs in the Middle East. At this point, you’d think it was some kind of
initiation ritual for anyone who steps into the role, regardless of party
affiliation.
When Donald Trump claimed that a January 2020 airstrike at Baghdad’s airport
that killed Iranian Gen. Qasem Soleimani was to prevent a future attack on U.S.
personnel in the region, the Iraqi parliament voted to kick American troops out
of the country. Yet Biden just approved the bombing of Iranian-backed fighters
in Syria in retaliation for attacks on U.S. personnel … in Iraq. Why are
Americans still there when Iraq already asked them to leave?
If U.S. personnel actually did leave Iraq and the rest of the Middle East, there
would be no reason to keep bombing countries in self-defense. So what’s the
holdup? What’s preventing the U.S. from packing up and leaving the Middle East
to sort out its own affairs? There’s only one reason that Iran is a problem for
America. It’s because the U.S. keeps hanging out in Iran’s neighborhood — on the
other side of the planet.
But what about protecting Israel, you say? Israel is armed to the teeth with
U.S. weapons and fires rockets at its neighbors on a near-weekly basis. It
doesn’t need America to hold its hand or to step into the fray like some kind of
white knight against schoolyard bullies.
Oh, but Iran is an oppressive violator of human rights that punishes dissidents
and limits free speech! All right, let’s take that rationale at face value for
argument’s sake.
The Biden administration just declassified and released a U.S. intelligence
assessment entitled: “Assessing the Saudi Government’s Role in the Killing of
Jamal Khashoggi.” The U.S. government determined that Saudi Crown Prince
Mohammed bin Salman “approved an operation in Istanbul, Turkey to capture or
kill Saudi journalist Jamal Khashoggi,” who wrote for the Washington Post and
was a U.S. resident.
To put a finer point on it, Biden has acknowledged that the Saudi government was
found by U.S. intelligence to be responsible for the murder and dismemberment of
a member of the American press. And what exactly was Biden’s response? Did he
slap economic sanctions on Saudi Arabia or on the crown prince personally for
human rights abuses? Nope. It’s hard to imagine any other country not being
sanctioned under the same circumstances.
“Saudi Arabia faces missile attacks, UAV (drone) strikes and other threats from
Iranian-supplied forces in multiple countries,” Biden said just last month.
“We’re going to continue to support and help Saudi Arabia defend its sovereignty
and its territorial integrity and its people.”
By all means, the U.S. must protect poor, weak Saudi Arabia from big, bad Iran.
Did it ever occur to Biden or any of the other establishment neocon
interventionists on both sides of the political aisle that maybe Iran is as fed
up with Saudi antics as some of us in the rest of the world are? Why are
flagrant Saudi human rights violations worthy of kid gloves, yet Iran can’t
catch the slightest break from any U.S. administration?
The reason is simple. Notice how many weapons Saudi Arabia has bought over the
decades from the U.S. and its Western allies such as France and Canada? And yet
rarely has the Kingdom ever actually used those weapons in any kind of conflict.
It’s one reason that no Western nation has had any qualms about selling arms to
the Saudis until the recent war in Yemen — in which the U.S. isn’t involved
beyond making a fortune peddling weapons to the Saudis for Iran-backed Houthis
to blow up. When the Saudis have bought weapons from Western powers over the
years, they’ve always known that the real purchase was something much more
valuable than hunks of metal that would sit gathering sand in the desert.
What the Kingdom was really buying was a guarantee that the U.S. and its allies
would come to its defense if it faced aggression. Which is exactly what Biden
has just promised to do, even as his own intelligence services acknowledge
grotesque Saudi human rights violations.
It’s time to let Saudi Arabia and its regional allies — Israel, the United Arab
Emirates and Bahrain — deal with Iran like big boys without the constant
presence of U.S. hall monitors. There’s a really easy way to not have to bomb
the Middle East under pretext of protecting U.S. interests: Just don’t have any
U.S. interests there.
COPYRIGHT 2021 RACHEL MARSDEN