Is Trump baiting Iran into an
armed confrontation?
Analysts
warn of heightened probability of conflict with Iran as 'hardliners' take
control of Trump's foreign policy.
Iran's top
commander recently said Tehran could shift from a defensive to offensive
military approach [Ebrahim Noroozi/AP]
With US President Donald Trump’s's top diplomat ramping up his
campaign to confront Iran's "malevolent influence" in the Middle
East, and his top national security adviser reportedly seeking military options
to attack the Islamic Republic, Iran observers are warning the US may be
provoking Tehran into an armed conflict that could quickly spread to the whole
region.
Sina Toossi,
a Washington, DC-based security and nuclear policy analyst, said the Trump
administration's Iran policy now "seems firmly under the control of
hardliners" such as US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo and National
Security Adviser John Bolton, both of whom had previously advocated regime
change in Iran.
"Even
if Trump does not desire further military entanglements in the Middle East,
Pompeo and Bolton appear to be edging the US towards military
confrontation," said Toossi, research associate with the National Iranian
American Council (NIAC), which advocates diplomacy with Iran.
"Already
Pompeo is suggesting that a 'regional conflict' is inevitable if the world
fails to latch onto the White House's Iran strategy," he told Al Jazeera.
Azadeh
Shahshahani, an Iranian American human rights lawyer
and peace activist, said with the US president entangled in political
controversies at home, he may be trying to "build up"
tensions with Iran to divert attention abroad.
"They
probably think that the war with Iran is a good way to distract from all of
that," she said. "So, as a result, every day you hear a new
announcement from the administration about allegations against Iran."
Shahshahani also
described the strategy as "very similar" to what the world saw in the
run-up to the US-led
invasion of Iraq in 2003.
"The
Pompeo and the Bolton crowd, they have a very clear goal in mind," she
told Al Jazeera.
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In recent
days, there have been more indications of the "maximum pressure"
Pompeo vowed to apply against Iran and its allies in the region.
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In his recent Middle East
tour, US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo emphasised the need to confront
Iran's activities [Andrew Cabellero-Reynolds/AP]
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On Thursday, the US Treasury
announced new sanctions against the Fatemiyoun Division and the Zaynabiyoun Brigade, two militia groups fighting in
Syria and backed by Iran's Revolutionary Guard. An airline company with
ties to Iran's Mahan Air was also targeted.
In a
statement, US Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin accused Tehran of using the
sanctioned entities "to export terrorism and unrest across the
globe".
'Ill-timed
measures'
Under
pressure by the US government, Germany has
also banned Iran's
Mahan Air, which is already on the sanctions list. An Iranian minister was also
quoted as saying the national flag carrier, Iran Air, is also on Germany's
banned list.
Earlier in
January, Pompeo also threatened Iran with increased economic and
diplomatic isolation, if it continues to launch satellites using
space vehicles similar to ballistic missiles.
On Friday, France also warned it could slap Iran with more sanctions if there is no
progress over its ballistic missile programme, which Tehran has insisted is not
covered by the 2015 nuclear deal, and is solely designed for defensive
purposes.
The US has
also organised what is seen as an anti-Iran
summit in Poland, viewed by Tehran as a "hostile
act".
The danger
is these series of actions by the US and its allies could push Iran into
abandoning the historic
nuclear deal - a course of action that could quickly escalate,
analysts said.
Diako
Hosseini, director of the World Studies programme at Tehran's Center for
Strategic Studies, told Al Jazeera these "ill-timed measures" could
endanger the nuclear agreement.
Hosseini
also counselled Europe to
resist US pressure and "stay committed" to the nuclear deal, instead
of imposing more sanctions that could force Tehran to reconsider its options.
So far, Iran has said it will stay with the agreement.
Iraq war
playbook
But if Pompeo
and Bolton succeed "in baiting Iran" into leaving the 2015 deal, it
is likely the neo-conservative establishment will replay the Iraq war playbook
and "begin pushing for a military attack under the pretext of stopping the
Iranian nuclear programme", Toossi said.
In an
article published on Friday, the foreign policy website Lobe Log also warned a
war against Iran is "becoming ever more likely".
"Donald Trump's domestic
troubles, combined with the current makeup of his foreign policy team, provide
a confluence of circumstances, perhaps a perfect storm, to pull the United
States into a war with Iran," wrote Jim Lobe and Ben Armbruster.
Iran is not taking kindly of the
threats either, responding with a bluster against the US and its allies.
In December,
Iranian Foreign Minister Javad Zarif said the US was turning the Middle East
into a "powder keg",
with the number of weapons it is directing to its allies.
Last week,
Iran's air force commander, Brigadier-General Aziz Nasirzadeh, was quoted as
saying the country is "impatient and fully ready to confront the Zionist
regime and eliminate it from the Earth" - a reference to the US' closest
ally in the region, Israel.
On Thursday,
Iran's ground forces wrapped up a "massive drill" in the desert of
Esfahan province, wherein Brigadier-General Kioumars Heydari warned "the
enemy ... to better think twice before attacking Iran".
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"They
might be able to start a new war. But they would not be the one to finish
it," said Heydari.
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Iran's army in an infantry drill
in central Esfahan province on Friday [Iranian army via AP]
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On Sunday, the army's chief of
staff, General Mohammad Baqeri, also hinted it could shift its military
doctrine from a defensive to offensive approach at the "tactical level to
preserve the country's national interests".
Trump's
'unpredictability'
The
"unpredictability" of Trump could mean "anything is
possible", according to Mehran Haghirian, an Iranian analyst and doctorate
student of Gulf Studies at Qatar University.
"What I
believe is that Trump himself is not really pushing for a war," Haghirian
told Al Jazeera, saying the American public would not support him.
Trump had
previously shown disdain for American military engagements abroad, while noting
his top advisers such as Pompeo and Bolton are the people more eager for
confrontation, he said.
"They
are not credible enough for the international community to support an
action," said Haghirian.
"But anything in the US is
possible" under Trump, he added. Still, he also did not discount
the likelihood of talks with Iran, pointing to Trump's strategy of mixing
rhetoric and diplomacy in dealing with North Korea.
However, Toossi, the Iranian American analyst, warned the current
"aggressive rhetoric of Trump" and the absence of communication and
deconfliction channels between Washington and Tehran "creates a high risk
of miscalculation and conflict".
"The
spark for a massive military conflict could come from multiple directions, whether
a clash in contested [Gulf] waterways, US efforts to remove Iranian influence
in Syria, or Iranian retaliation for perceived foreign support for terror
within Iranian borders," said Toossi.
Already
there have been a series of Israeli air raids on reported Iranian targets
in Syria in
recent days, and some worry it could draw the US into
the mix if hostilities escalate.
In response,
a commander of the Revolutionary Guard said on Monday Iran's strategy was to
wipe "the Zionist regime" off the political map, Iran's state TV
reported.
"We
announce that if Israel takes any action to wage a war against us, it will
definitely lead to its own elimination and freeing occupied territories,"
Brigadier-General Hossein Salami, deputy head of the organisation, was quoted
as saying.
"Israelis
won't even have a cemetery in Palestine to bury their corpses," he said.
Shahshahani,
the Iranian American peace activist, called on the opposition in the US
Congress and the American public to be "vigilant" about the dangers
of the Trump administration going to war with Iran.
"People
seem to be more sceptical about the US administration's foreign
policy. Hopefully, people are waking up and understanding that they need
to fight back against any attempts at initiating a war with Iran."
by Ted Regencia
28 Jan 2019
Reference:
https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2018/12/trump-baiting-iran-armed-confrontation-181208112950681.html

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