Sometimes when I try to post sensitive material I get electronically blocked and have to look for other solutions.
This is one such case.
“The US doesn’t need Middle Eastern oil”.
This statement has been taken by many Middle Eastern leaders as indicating the US government’s lack of appetite to defend their interests since many of these regimes base their yearly budget on oil income."
A NEW MIDDLE EAST
“MADE IN IRAN” IS ABOUT
TO BE BORN
Elijah Magnier
This brings us to another important point: Trump’s threat to Iran’s nuclear capability. Following the Ayn al-Assad bombing, it is clear the US will not be involved in bombing Iran any time in the future. The US has the destructive military capability, so does Iran. The lesson learned from the Iranian bombing is that Iran is ready to bomb and hit back US targets with great accuracy. Therefore, bombing Iran is off the table. However, Iran developing its nuclear capability is on the table. Tehran is likely to announce new developments in this area as we approach the anniversary of the US revocation of its commitment next April.
This is one such case.
“The US doesn’t need Middle Eastern oil”.
This statement has been taken by many Middle Eastern leaders as indicating the US government’s lack of appetite to defend their interests since many of these regimes base their yearly budget on oil income."
A NEW MIDDLE EAST
“MADE IN IRAN” IS ABOUT
TO BE BORN
Elijah Magnier
9 January, 2020
It
would be inaccurate to say the US will leave the Middle East. However,
it is certain that the assassination of one single man – the Iranian
General Qassem Soleimani – is diminishing US influence significantly.
This could not have happened without the (in) direct help of US
President Donald Trump.
Trump
is doing everything possible to undermine and degrade US hegemony in
the world. He doesn’t need any help in this endeavour, but his advisors
and cabinet members share his talent for mismanaging foreign policy and
national security affairs. With this bad advice US relations around the
world, and particularly in the Middle East, have been run as if by a
businessman, used to negotiating and intimidating with little subtlety
and altogether lacking diplomatic skills.
Every time Iran needs help, President Trump rushes headlong to boost its image in the world, particularly among the “Axis of the Resistance”
and above all in relation to China and Russia. These two countries will
now only strengthen their relationship with Iran, the country that has
effectively and publicly challenged the strongest country in the world.
Targeting
a base with thousands of officers and soldiers from hundreds of
kilometres away and deliberately avoiding human casualties shows
incredible self-confidence in Iran’s manufacture of their own missiles.
Iran has shown the strength and technical ability to bomb the most
powerful US base in Iraq with precision missiles and has now twice shown
mercy by not killing US servicemen.
The first time was in June 2019 when Iran declined to down a US spy plane carrying 38-officers that had violated Iranian space during the “Tanker’s war”. The second time was yesterday when
Iran deliberately chose not to bomb human targets at the Ayn al-Assad
base hosting in Iraq, home to thousands of US, British, Canadian,
Norwegian, Belgian and Dutch officers. Iran used precision missiles to
hit specific military objectives avoiding human casualties, by contrast
with Trump’s decision to assassinate an Iraqi commander (Abu Mahdi
al-Muhandes) and an Iranian general and diplomat on a mission of peace
(Sardar Qassem Soleimani).
The
Iranian hit on the Ayn al-Assad military base exposed the weakness of
the most sophisticated radar and interception missiles in the US
arsenal. President Trump has long bragged about these tools like the “best in the world”.
But the US defence system at the Iraqi-US base in al-Anbar (west of
Iraq) was incapable of intercepting one of the 13 ballistic missiles
launched. The consequences of this single act are devastating both to
the US armament industry and to US foreign policy in the Middle East.
This strike has shown US allies in the region that the hundreds of billions of dollars they have invested in
US weapons are an insufficient defence against Iran. These countries
now recognize they have no real deterrence against an Iranian attack.
This realisation will push the traditional enemies of Iran in the Middle
East to bypass their differences and take the road to Tehran to regain
good ties with the “Islamic Republic”. It should not be excluded that
many countries would be tempted to buy Iranian precision missiles that
must be much cheaper than the expensive US manufactured ones.
President Trump also sent a wrong signal when he announced:
“The US doesn’t need Middle Eastern oil”.
This statement has been taken by many Middle Eastern leaders as
indicating the US government’s lack of appetite to defend their
interests since many of these regimes base their yearly budget on oil
income.
This brings us to another important point: Trump’s threat to Iran’s nuclear capability. Following the Ayn al-Assad bombing, it is clear the US will not be involved in bombing Iran any time in the future. The US has the destructive military capability, so does Iran. The lesson learned from the Iranian bombing is that Iran is ready to bomb and hit back US targets with great accuracy. Therefore, bombing Iran is off the table. However, Iran developing its nuclear capability is on the table. Tehran is likely to announce new developments in this area as we approach the anniversary of the US revocation of its commitment next April.
Iran
has no choice but to totally pull out from the nuclear deal due to the
incapacity and unwillingness of the European signatories of the Iran
deal (known as the JCPOA) to honour their commitments, to offer Iran any
alternative, and to confront Trump’s unilateral abrogation of the US
treaty obligation. Such an announcement will be the Iranian “gift” to
Trump for his forthcoming electoral campaign, providing political
ammunition to Trump’s political opponents.
Trump
has done everything in his power to unify Iran behind their leaders by
imposing sanctions on the Iranian people and assassinating their
general. Iran played the US sanctions skilfully when attacking tankers
in the Strait of Hormuz, gathering public support for the regime and
fuelling nationalist feeling. The US assassination of Sardar Qassem
Soleimani brought millions onto the street and unified Iran under one
flag: the return of Iranian dignity, power and sovereignty. Only Trump
could have achieved such a critical goal, regenerating the Iranian
regime at the right and most needed moment.
Trump’s call for
NATO to assume its responsibility in the Middle East has been
interpreted in the region as indicating a serious decline of US
hegemony. The US President is showing his inability or unwillingness to
deal with Middle Eastern affairs. This could reflect the incompetence of
his advisors, or a strategic decision by the US to let go of its
influence.
Iran
showed its power as a regional country capable of facing the US in its
most difficult state. There is little doubt the 40 years of US sanctions
on the “Islamic Republic” were a total fiasco even with Trump’s
“maximum pressure” of sanctions. It would be difficult to imagine the
results if Iran was not under these sanctions all these years.
The
US primary ally in the Middle East, Israel, is watching the events with
a lot of focus. Iran’s threat to hit the US or Israel is real today.
Not only that, throughout the years, Iran has delivered these precision
missiles to its partners in the Middle East. Iran (or its allies) showed
its capability in the most complicated and
coordinated attack ever, as proved during the destruction of Saudi
Arabia oil facility. Drones and precision missiles launched hundreds of
kilometres away hit simultaneously their target. This spectacular attack
was claimed by Yemen, the poorest country in the Middle East that
initiated its weapon supply and retaliation only in recent years. What
about Hezbollah, the fully equipped and highly trained organised but an
irregular non-state actor with 38 years of experience? Hezbollah has
received precision missiles from Iran and deployed these on the
Syrian-Lebanese borders under the mountain chain in underground silos.
The Iran bombing of the US-dominated base in Iraq marks the end of the
Israeli-Hezbollah war. Israel can see what Iran and its allies are
capable of. It should maybe start thinking about a different approach
towards the Palestinians.
The US President – who promised to end the “endless wars”
– killed the Iraqi commander Abu Mahdi al-Muhandes and the Iranian
Major General Qassem Soleimani believing he could win control of Iraq
and achieve regime change in Iran. On the brink of triggering a major
war, Trump has spectacularly lost Iran and is about to lose Iraq.
“Beautiful military equipment doesn’t rule the world, people rule the world, and the people want the US out of the region”, said Iran
Foreign Minister Jawad Zarif. President Trump doesn’t have many people
in the Middle East on his side, not even among his allies, whose leaders
have been repeatedly insulted.
Iran could not have dreamt of a better President to rejuvenate its
position domestically and regionally. All Iran’s allies are jubilant,
standing behind the “Islamic Republic” that fulfilled its promise to
bomb the US. A “New Middle East” is about to be born; it will not be
“Made in the USA” but “Made in Iran”.
Let us hope warmongers’ era is over. The time has come to recognise and rely on intelligent diplomacy in world affairs.
Proofread by: C.G.B and Maurice Brasher
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: only a member of this blog may post a comment.