Trump's neocons might get the war they wanted in the Middle East
By: Rachel Marsden
VANCOUVER, British Columbia — U.S. President Donald Trump kicked off 2020 by
authorizing the assassination of a powerful Iranian general on Iraqi soil, where
America still has a military presence. Trump then threatened sanctions against
Iraq if it followed through on a parliamentary resolution to expel U.S. troops.
Happy New Year!
This was like going over to a friend’s house to watch the big game and then
murdering one of your friend’s friends. Then, when the friend kicks you out, you
refuse to leave until he pays you for the pizza and beer you brought.
After the U.S. military droned Qassem Suleimani at Baghdad’s international
airport, the Iraqi parliament voted to do American taxpayers a favor and end the
17-year U.S. occupation of Iraq. Trump, who was elected largely on the promise
to get America out of its Middle Eastern entanglements, responded by threatening
Iraq with financial consequences. It was surreal to hear another extortion
threat from a president who was just impeached for withholding congressionally
approved military aid for Ukraine in exchange for political favors.
“We have a very extraordinarily expensive air base that’s there. It cost
billions of dollars to build,” Trump said. “We’re not leaving unless they pay us
back for it.”
Trump has gone from promising an end to useless forever wars to perpetuating the
U.S. engagement in Iraq and starting a war with Iran. The neoconservative
warmongering faction within the Trump administration that has long tried to goad
Trump into a war with Iran finally got what it wanted. So did the
military-industrial complex: Aerospace and defense companies saw their stock
prices soar after Suleimani was killed.
The neocons could see that they were losing their footholds in the Middle East,
from Afghanistan to Syria. Decades-long efforts to increase U.S. presence and
influence in the region has failed. The ultimate beneficiary was Iran.
Iran had beefed up its military role, kicking jihadists backed by the U.S. and
its Gulf State allies out of Middle Eastern countries. The man who led that
effort — and who prevented Islamic State terrorists from raising their flag over
Baghdad and Damascus — was Suleimani. And no one knows it more than all of the
people who spilled into the streets of Iraq and Iran to mourn his death.
But in neocon bizarro world, a known fighter of terrorists is labeled a
terrorist with American blood on his hands. Trump had never tweeted about
Suleimani before having him killed, yet the president now pretends that
Suleimani was another Osama bin Laden.
In the wake of the 9/11 terrorist attacks by Saudi nationals, Suleimani actually
cooperated to help America fight the Taliban in Afghanistan. He broke ranks with
the U.S. when George W. Bush said Iran was part of an “Axis of Evil” a few
months later in his 2002 State of the Union address. Teaming with Iran to fight
terrorism was never going to fit the neocon narrative when a coup d’état in Iran
— the strongest country in a region that the U.S. sought to dominate — was the
endgame.
A few years after the U.S. invaded Iraq on questionable intelligence, Suleimani
opposed what many citizens of the Middle East came to view as an American
occupation. Imagine the Iranian military invading Canada and a U.S. general
leading the effort to kick Iran out. Would anyone argue that Iran was there
justifiably to liberate Canada? Would anyone object to the U.S. military
entering Canada to remove Iranian soldiers from Canadian soil? Because that was
precisely Suleimani’s role in Iraq.
After 9/11, the U.S. embarked on an ambitious odyssey, led by interventionist
neocons, to install puppet governments across the Middle East under the guise of
democracy-building. Given the total failure of that project and the
proliferation of failed states as a result, it should come as no surprise that
the people of the region no longer welcome a U.S. military presence.
Suleimani’s assassination resulted from an escalation between U.S. forces and
Iranian-aligned Iraqi forces on Iraqi soil — a product of the power struggle
between Iran and the U.S in the Middle East. Experts have long feared that it
was only a matter of time before someone triggered a hot war. The Trump
administration has now pulled that trigger. In doing so, it has placed the fate
of the world in the hands of Iran, as we’re all left hoping that Iranian
leadership responds to the attack with restraint, discipline and calm.
Meanwhile, Trump is already threatening to bomb Iranian cultural sites — which
would be a war crime.
What Trump should be doing, instead of tweeting his way into the Twitter Hague
with his bellicose threats against Middle Eastern countries, is fulfilling his
election promise to simply leave the region. The failure of two decades of
neocon interventionism wasn’t Trump’s fault, but by acting like the neocons’
lapdog, he has become indistinguishable from them.
COPYRIGHT 2020 RACHEL MARSDEN