BY GLENN GREENWALD
The most difficult challenge in writing about the
Iranian Terror Plot unveiled yesterday is to take it seriously enough to
analyze it. Iranian Muslims in the Quds Force sending marauding bands of
Mexican drug cartel assassins onto sacred American soil to commit Terrorism —
against Saudi Arabia and possibly Israel — is what Bill Kristol and John Bolton
would feverishly dream up while dropping acid and madly cackling at the
possibility that they could get someone to believe it. But since the U.S.
Government rolled out its Most Serious Officials with Very Serious Faces to
make these accusations, many people (therefore) do believe it; after all, U.S.
government accusations = Truth. All Serious people know that. And in the
ensuing reaction one finds virtually every dynamic typically shaping discussions
of Terrorism and U.S. foreign policy.
To begin with, this episode continues the FBI’s
record-setting undefeated streak of heroically saving us from the plots they
enable. From all appearances, this is, at best, yet another spectacular “plot”
hatched by some hapless loser with delusions of grandeur but without any means
to put it into action except with the able assistance of the FBI, which yet
again provided it through its own (paid, criminal) sources posing as Terrorist
enablers. The Terrorist Mastermind at the center of the plot is a failed used
car salesman in Texas with a history of pedestrian money problems. Dive under
your bed. “For the entire operation, the government’s confidential sources were
monitored and guided by federal law enforcement agents,” explained U.S.
Attorney Preet Bharara, and “no explosives were actually ever placed anywhere
and no one was actually ever in any danger.’”
But no matter. The U.S. Government and its mindless
followers in the pundit and think-tank “expert” class have seized on this
ludicrous plot with astonishing speed to all but turn it into a hysterical
declaration of war against Evil, Hitlerian Iran. “The US attorney-general Eric
Holder said Iran would be ‘held to account’ over what he described as a flagrant
abuse of international law,” and “the US says military action remains on the
table,” though “it is at present seeking instead to work through diplomatic and
financial means to further isolate Iran.” Hillary Clinton thundered that this
“crosses a line that Iran needs to be held to account for.” The CIA’s spokesman
at The Washington Post, David Ignatius, quoted an anonymous White House
official as saying the plot “appeared to have been authorized by senior levels
of the Quds Force.” Meanwhile, the State Department has issued a Travel Alert
which warns American citizens that this plot “may indicate a more aggressive
focus by the Iranian Government on terrorist activity against diplomats from
certain countries, to include possible attacks in the United States.”
In case that’s not enough to frighten you — and,
really, how could it not be? — some Very Serious Experts are very, very afraid
and want you to know how Serious this all is. Within moments of Holder’s news
conference, National Security Expert Robert Chesney – without a molecule of critical thought in
his brain — announced that this “remarkable development” was “very scary.”
Very, very scary. Chesney then printed large blocks of the DOJ’s Press Release
to prove it. Self-proclaimed “counter-terrorism expert” Daveed Gartenstein-Ross
tapped into his vast expertise to explain: ”Holder weighing in on the plot’s
connection to Iran means the administration is deadly serious about it.”
Progressive think-tank expert and Atlantic writer Steve Clemons decreed that if
the DOJ’s accusations are true, then ”the US has reached a point where it must
take action” and “this is time for a significant strategic response to the Iran
challenge in the Middle East and globally,” which “could involve military.”
The ironies here are so self-evident it’s hard to work
up the energy to point them out. Outside of Pentagon reporters, Washington Post
Editorial Page Editors, and Brookings “scholars,” is there a person on the
planet anywhere who can listen with a straight face as drone-addicted U.S.
Government officials righteously condemn the evil, illegal act of entering
another country to commit an assassination? Does anyone, for instance, have any
interest in finding out who is responsible for the spate of serial murders
aimed at Iran’s nuclear scientists? Wouldn’t people professing to be so
outraged by the idea of entering another country to engage in assassination be
eager to get to the bottom of that?
Then there’s the War on Terror irony: our Hated Enemy
here (Iran) is a country which had absolutely nothing to do with the 9/11 attack. Meanwhile, our
close ally, the victim on whose behalf we are so outraged (Saudi Arabia), is
not only one of the most tyrannical and aggressive regimes on the planet, but
produced 15 of the 19 hijackers and had extensive and still-unknown involvement
in that attack. If the U.S. is so deeply offended by the involvement of a
foreign government in an attack on U.S. soil, it would be looking first to its
close friend Saudi Arabia, where “elements of the government” were likely
involved in an actual plot rather than a joke of a plot.
To make sure you understand just how dastardly and
evil the Iranian plotters here are, the DOJ in its complaint highlighted that
the used-car-salesman-Terrorist-Mastermind said that he preferred that nobody
else be killed when the Saudi Ambassador was assassinated, but if it were
absolutely necessary, he could accept some unintended deaths! Here’s how the
NYT summarizes that:
The complaint quotes Mr. Arbabsiar as making
conflicting statements about the possibility of bystander deaths; at one point
he is said to say that killing the ambassador alone would be preferable, but on
another occasion he said it would be “no big deal” if many others at the
restaurant — possibly including United States senators — died in any bombing.
What kind of monster thinks that way, we are supposed
to ponder. Behold the warped mind of the Terrorist! He’s actually willing to
accept that others die besides his intended targeted! Is that not the mentality
that drives U.S. behavior in multiple countries around the world every day? The
U.S. flattened an entire civilian apartment building in Baghdad with a
2,000-pound bomb when it thought Saddam Hussein was there (he wasn’t — oops —
but lots of innocent people were). NATO repeatedly bombed structures in Tripoli
where it thought (mistakenly) Moammar Gadaffi was located, in the process
almost certainly killing large numbers of unintended targets. The U.S. just
killed one of its own citizens that it insists (not very credibly) it did not
intend to kill in order to eradicate the life of Anwar Awlaki, and killed
dozens of innocent people when it previously tried to kill Awlaki with cluster
bombs.
The U.S. is the living, breathing symbol of this
“collateral damage” rationale. It’s what drives all the multi-nation American
wars and occupations and drone campaigns and assassinations that continuously
pile up the corpses of innocent people. But we’re all going to gather in
righteous disgust at the idea that this monstrous International Terrorist would
be willing to incur some unintended civilian deaths in order to assassinate an
official of the peaceful, freedom-loving Saudi regime. Really, for brazen
irony, how can this be beat?
Tom Kean, former chairman of the 9/11 Commission said
the alleged plot “surprises me.” Speaking to CNN’s Erin Burnett, Kean said the
plot is “pretty close to an act of war. You don’t go in somebody’s capital to
blow somebody up.”
Meanwhile, President Obama decried this plot as “a
flagrant violation of US and international law.” But maybe some Persian Marty
Lederman in Tehran wrote a secret legal memo concluding that this was all in
accordance with domestic and international law, which — as we know — is
conclusive and provides a full shield of immunity.
So facially absurd are the claims here — why would
Iran possibly wake up one day and decide that it wanted to engage in a
Terrorist attack on U.S. soil when it could much more easily kill Saudi
officials elsewhere? and if Iran and its Quds Force are really behind this
inept, hapless, laughable plot, then nothing negates the claim that Iran is
some Grave Threat like this does — that there is more skepticism expressed even
in establishment media accounts than one normally finds about such things. Even
the NYT noted — with great understatement — that the allegations “provoked
puzzlement from specialists on Iran, who said it seemed unlikely that the
government would back a brazen murder and bombing plan on American soil.” The
Post noted that “the very rashness of the alleged assassination plot raised
doubts about whether Iran’s normally cautious ruling clerics supported or even
know about it.” The Atlantic‘s Max Fisher has more on why this would be so out
of character for Iran.
But while some attention has been devoted to asking
what motive Iran would have for doing this, little attention has been paid to
asking what motive the U.S. would have for exaggerating or concocting the
connection of Iran’s government to this plot. Aside from the benefits the FBI and
DOJ receive when breaking up a “very scary” plot — the bigger, the better — it
has been one of Obama’s highest foreign policy priorities to isolate Iran and
sanction it further: as a means of placating Israel and punishing Iran for
thwarting America’s natural right to rule that region (so monstrous is Iran
that, as the U.S. has repeatedly complained, they actually continue to
“interfere” in Iraq as well as in Afghanistan!). As Ignatius explains, the U.S.
Government instantly converted this plot into a vehicle for furthering those
policy ambitions:
With its alleged plot to assassinate the Saudi
ambassador to Washington, Iran has handed the United States an opportunity to
undermine Tehran at a moment when U.S. officials believe the Iranian regime is
especially vulnerable. . . . “We see this as a chance to go out to capitals
around the world and talk to allies and partners about what the Iranians tried
to do,” the [White House] official said. “We’re not going to tolerate targeting
a diplomat in Washington. We’re going to try to use this to isolate them to the
maximum extent possible.”
Meanwhile, Joe Biden announced today that the U.S. is
“working to unite the world” behind a response to Iran’s “outrageous” actions
and that ”nothing has been taken off the table.” So Iran’s supposed involvement
in this plot is the ideal weapon for the U.S. to advance its long-standing
goals with regard to that country. Maybe that warrants some serious skepticism
about whether the U.S. Government’s claims are true? But we all know that only
Bad Muslim countries exploit foreign policy exaggerations or fabrications for
political gain, and not the United States of America (especially not with
Barack Obama, rather than a Republican, in the White House).
What’s most significant is that not even 24 hours have
elapsed since these allegations were unveiled. No evidence has been presented
of Iran’s involvement. And yet there is no shortage of people — especially in
the media — breathlessly talking about all of this as though it’s all clearly
true. If the Obama administration decided tomorrow that military action against
Iran were warranted in response, is there any doubt that large majorities of
Americans — and large majorities of Democrats — would support that? As I said
when discussing the Awlaki killing, the truly “scary” aspect of all of this is
that the U.S. Government need only point and utter the word “Terrorist” and
hordes of citizens will rise up and demand not evidence, but blood.
UPDATE II: On NPR this morning, Ray Takeyh of the
Council on Foreign Relations — and Ken Pollack’s co-author on Iran — said this
when asked if he has any doubts about the accuracy of U.S. government
statements: “The only unusual aspect of this is actually having a terrorist
operation on American territory. I don’t know what the evidence about this is,
but I’m not in a position to doubt it.” That perfectly summarizes the
political, media and “expert” class’ attitude toward U.S. Government claims:
they’re keeping everything secret about their accusations, so there’s no reason
to doubt what they’re claiming. The National Security Priesthood that
uncritically amplified every U.S. Government claim and fanned the flames of war
against Iraq is alive, well, and more mindless and dutiful than ever.
UPDATE III: The Christian Science Monitor details the
many reasons why “Iran specialists who have followed the Islamic Republic for
years say that many details in the alleged plot just don’t add up.”
UPDATE IV: On Good Morning America this morning, Joe
Biden warned that “the Iranians are going to have to be held accountable” and
“nothing has been taken off the table,” and then promised: “And when you see
the case presented you will find there is compelling evidence for the assertion
being made.” Except — after 24 hours of media hysteria — there’s this Reuters
article, which — under the headline “Officials concede gaps in U.S. knowledge
of Iran plot” — reports:
Iran’s supreme leader and the shadowy Quds Force
covert operations unit were likely aware of an alleged plot to kill Saudi
Arabia’s ambassador to the United States, but hard evidence of that is scant,
U.S. officials said on Wednesday.
The United States does not have solid information
about “exactly how high it goes,” one official said. . . .The U.S. officials,
who spoke on condition of anonymity, said their confidence that at least some
Iranian leaders were aware of the alleged plot was based largely on analyses
and their understanding of how the Quds Force operates.
I wouldn’t exactly call that — what was the phrase
Biden used? — “compelling evidence for the assertions being made.” In fact, it
reminds me of the language anonymous government officials began using to
describe their “knowledge” of Anwar Awlaki’s alleged operational role in plots
against the U.S. once they killed him: “patchy”; “partial”; “suspicion.” But
what we learned with Awlaki is likely what we’ll see here: many people
reflexively believe government accusations even when unaccompanied by evidence,
and that belief is not diluted even when government officials began
acknowledging (albeit anonymously) that they do not possess and never did
possess any conclusive evidence to support their accusations.
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