Biden is bombing the Middle East using the same excuses for which Trump was lambasted
By: Rachel Marsden
PARIS — Does anyone recall the U.S. Congress voting on behalf of the American people to bomb three different Middle Eastern countries this month? Of course not. Because that’s never how things are done. Instead, what ends up happening is that an American president — Joe Biden, most recently — just unilaterally lobs some missiles onto sovereign nations using whatever pretext sounds most convincing to "low information" voters.
Generally speaking, Congress is supposed to decide when the U.S. goes to war,
but this almost never happens. Still, it’s legitimate for the p resident to use
military force unilaterally in certain limited scenarios, like in self-defense
against an imminent attack, or to rescue Americans abroad.
"If you harm an American, we will respond," Biden said of the attacks that he
ordered, ignoring that revenge doesn’t justify presidential unilateralism. It’s
also not up to the U.S. to decide what weapons or logistics are allowed inside
foreign countries on the other side of the planet. The U.S. doesn’t even want
Russian President Vladimir Putin doing that in neighboring Ukraine.
The fact that the Pentagon says that it hit logistics hubs of Iranian proxies
suggests a preemptive component, but nothing that seems any more valid than the
attacks for which President Donald Trump was chastised for four years ago.
In January 2020, Trump unilaterally ordered the bombing of Iranian general Qasem
Soleimani when he caught wind that the Iranian Revolutionary Guard’s elite Quds
Force commander was on a visit to Baghdad. Trump invoked self-defense against a
future attack on Americans that he attempted to qualify as imminent. Democrats
in particular didn’t buy it.
What about holding Biden to the same standard?
Why does Biden still have U.S. troops over there in a position to be killed,
anyway? Those targeted were hanging out on a base of 350 Army and Air Force
personnel in Jordan on a “defeat ISIS operation” that’s been in place since,
well, ISIS was defeated. Consider a Pentagon statement from December 2023
revealing that despite 40 anti-ISIS operations in the previous month, they only
managed to find four ISIS members to kill and 33 to detain. And who really knows
what passes for an ISIS member these days. It’s not like they have club cards or
toy drives.
French President Emmanuel Macron is so over fighting ISIS that he recommended
last October that the international coalition to defeat ISIS be expanded to
target Hamas. Clearly they don’t have enough to do.
There’s no ISIS caliphate, or threat thereof anymore — thanks in significant
part to Iran and U.S.-offed Soleimani. And there’s no evidence that ISIS is a
threat to the U.S. homeland. And even if it was, the solution would be more
troops on U.S. borders, not on Jordan’s. If anything, ISIS is more of an
existential threat to Iran, having actually bombed a memorial for Soleimani just
last month.
At any point has Team Biden stopped to think about the root causes of this whole
mess, and how they’re provoking escalation rather than mitigating it?
“Radical Iran-backed militant groups operating in Syria and Iraq” bombed the
base in Jordan, Biden said. Oh, so sworn enemies of ISIS, whom the U.S. says
it’s in the area to liquidate. So why would Iran have a problem with the U.S.
being there to target their common enemy? Unless, of course, that’s not actually
why the U.S. is still hanging around — and Iran knows it. It’s pretty clear what
the neocons of both parties have long wanted: a direct war with Iran. But both
Iran and the U.S. understand that would be the start of World War III, so
instead they’re exchanging blows indirectly, through third- party countries and
proxies in the same way that U.S.-led NATO is fueling Ukraine in a continued
conflict with Russia that’s effectively serving as a convenient pretext for U.S.
taxpayer cash to be mainlined into the military industrial complex.
The dozens of U.S. bombs that Biden also fired on Yemen were meant to target the
capabilities of Iranian-backed Houthis, who have been striking ships in the Red
Sea in support of Palestinian civilians currently being massacred by
Western-supplied and enabled Israel.
It seems that stopping the Gaza massacre is the solution here — just not the
most profitable one for the bombing business.
Team Biden claims the need to ensure that the conflict in Gaza doesn’t spread in
the region, but when the entire world is just standing by and talking while
Israel drives millions of people who have no army and no formal capacity for
self-defense out of Gaza, foisting a humanitarian burden on the entire region,
is it really reasonable for Washington to expect no response whatsoever?
Who would Washington prefer as its armed interlocutor if not Iranian proxies?
Iran directly? Another Arab state? Not if it wants to avoid escalation, as it
claims.
The bottom line is that Washington is widely seen by the Arab world as a
destabilizing force that’s aiding and abetting Israel’s attacks on Palestinian
civilians. Iran wants the U.S. out of the region entirely. Why would it even be
controversial at this point to give them all exactly what they want? The U.S. no
longer needs the Middle East for energy, and doesn’t have any formal defense
treaties there. So unless lobbing bombs is a strictly profitable enterprise, it
makes no sense why the U.S. is still there at all.
COPYRIGHT 2024 RACHEL MARSDEN