K.S. Rajan (11
Feb 2012)
"JOHNMCTERNAN"
Romans 12:1 I beseech you therefore, brethren, by the mercies of
God, that ye present your bodies a living sacrifice, holy,
acceptable unto God, which is your reasonable service. (2) And
be not conformed to this world: but be ye transformed by the
renewing of your mind, that ye may prove what is that good, and
acceptable, and perfect, will of God
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Home > America, Israel, Iran: signals of war
America, Israel, Iran: signals of war
Paul Rogers, 03rd February 2012
Subjects:
International politics [1]
Democracy and government [2]
Conflict [3]
United States [4]
Israel [5]
Iran [6]
globalisation [7]
global security [8]
Paul Rogers [9]
A range of military and political developments, from the very
rare planned deployment of three huge United States armadas in
the Persian Gulf to Israeli fears of Barack Obama’s re-election,
is evidence of rising danger around Iran.
About the author
Paul Rogers is professor in the department of peace studies [10]
at Bradford University. He has been writing a weekly column [10]
on global security on openDemocracy since 28 September 2001, and
writes an international-security monthly briefing for the Oxford
Research Group [10]. His books include Why We’re Losing the War
on Terror [10] (Polity, 2007), and Losing Control: Global
Security in the 21st Century [10] (Pluto Press, 3rd edition,
2010). He is on twitter at: @ProfPRogers
Volusia is a small town in Florida, about sixty kilometres west
of the coastal resort of Daytona. This dot on the map [11],
straddling the St John River just off the state’s “black bear
strategic byway”, seems a very long way from the rising tensions
over Iran’s nuclear ambitions. In fact, the connection is
surprisingly close.
For Volusia also sits at the eastern border of the extensive
Ocala [12] national forest, which plays host to the United
States navy's only [13] firing-range - the “Pinecastle impact
range” - capable of dropping live air-to-surface weapons. The
town’s residents are used to living with noise, but since
mid-January 2012 they have been “hearing booms loud enough to
rattle their windows and scare their cats” (see Skyler Swisher,
“Naval bomb practice rattles Volusia-Flagler [14]”, Daytona
Beach News-Journal, 2 February 2012).
This exceptional level [15] of activity reflects the range’s
current intensive use as an aircrew-training site for pilots and
weapons officers from the USS Enterprise now cruising offshore.
The plan is that this will be redeployed to the Persian Gulf
some time in March 2012 as the leading vessel in a third US
carrier battle-group in the region, alongside the groups already
there led by the USS Abraham Lincoln and the USS Carl Vinson.
The Enterprise battle-group is normally assigned to the United
States navy's sixth fleet in the Mediterranean, though it has
also transited the Suez canal into the Red Sea and beyond. This
time [16], the Pentagon is making it clear that the Enterprise
deployment is intended specifically to send a strong message to
Iran.
The carrier message
To get a sense of what is happening, some context is helpful.
The Enterprise is as a 1960s-era vessel the oldest [17]
nuclear-powered carrier in the United States navy; its current
deployment will be the twenty-second and last before it is
decommissioned. Until that happens it remains one of eleven
potential carrier battle-groups in the US’s inventory, including
much more modern Nimitz-class [18] warships such as the Abraham
Lincoln and the Carl Vinson.
It is routine for carrier battle-groups (CBG), once assembled
and deployed in distant waters, to stay on station for up to six
months - though with resupply this can be extended. There is
often a short period of overlap between CBGs coming and going,
but rarely much more than this. What is most unusual about the
two CBGs now in the Persian Gulf - which have been there barely
a month - is precisely that there are two rather than one in the
same area; which also means that to have three on station,
potentially for several months, is very rare indeed.
This also poses a major task for the navy. There may be eleven
[19]CBGs in the entire US fleet, but each carrier (accompanied
by its cruiser, destroyers, supply-ship and submarine) can be
deployed only for about 40% of the time. The remaining period is
spent on transiting to and from the deployment area, crew
training (as with the Enterprise in Florida just now), shore
leave, minor repairs and major refits (which sometimes take a
year or more).
Amid these constraints it is rare enough for the US to have five
carriers at sea at the same time - and almost never in one part
of the world. Indeed, the last time this happened was in 1990-91
at the time of the first Gulf war following [20] Iraq’s invasion
of Kuwait (when the US navy had thirteen carriers).
A recent column in this series [9] highlighted the presence of
the Abraham Lincoln and Carl Vinson groups in the region, while
cautioning that this does not itself translate into a US plan to
attack Iran’s nuclear facilities. It means, instead, that the
Pentagon wishes to be ready for any crisis, whether this takes
the form of an Iranian provocation, an unintended escalation or
(most likely) the dangerous consequences of an Israeli attack
(see “The thirty-year: past, present, future [21]”, 20 January
2012).
That may continue to be the case, but it is worth pointing to
subsequent developments that in a fast-moving situation offer
fresh signals about what may lie ahead. On one side, a new
report from the Stockholm International Peace Research Institute
[22] by Robert Kelley casts a sceptical eye on the claim that
Iran is seeking an early nuclear capability (see "Nuclear arms
programme charge against Iran no sure thing [23]", 28 January
2012). Some recent inspections [24] by the International Atomic
Energy Agency (IAEA [25]), moreover, have revealed little of
concern.
China is both an important and a cautioning factor in the whole
equation. It is the biggest customer for Iran’s oil and thus a
very reluctant supporter of international sanctions against
Tehran (see Antoaneta Becker, “China Looks Both Ways on Iranian
Oil [26]”, TerraViva/IPS, 2 February 2012). China is also well
aware its strategic rival India is itself both a major market
for Iran and maintaining its links with Tehran.
But if these developments would seem on the surface to work
against confrontation, they are being outweighed by others that
suggest almost that one or more of the major players is clearing
a path to war (see Donald Macintyre, "Drums of war beat louder
as Israel and Iran step up rhetoric [27]", 3 February 2012).
The path to war
In particular there is a hardening of rhetoric against (as well
as from within [28]) Iran, from multiple sources. Here are but
six examples, four from American and two from Israeli
representatives:
* the Washington-based Bipartisan Policy Center [29] publishes a
widely quoted report urging Barack Obama’s administration to
make threats of force against Iran more credible, including
arming Israel with more GBU-31 “bunker-buster” bombs (see
Meeting the Challenge: Stopping the Clock [30], 1 February 2012)
* the US’s director of national intelligence, James R Clapper
Jr, says that Iran is more willing to strike within the
continental United States (see Greg Miller, “Iran, perceiving
threat from West, willing to attack on US soil, US intelligence
report finds [31]”, Washington Post, 31 January 2012)
* the US defence secretary Leon Panetta refuses to backtrack on
an attributed [32] comment that an Israeli attack on Iran was
likely by June 2012 (see "Panetta lets stand report that Israel
may attack Iran by June [33]", Ha'aretz, 3 February 2012)
* the experienced US negotiator and diplomat Dennis Ross [34]
cites the Israeli view of Iran's acquisition of nuclear weapons
as an "existential" threat to argue that Israel could
"unilaterally" attack Iran within a definite "timeframe from
their end" of "nine to twelve months" (see Alex Spillius,
"Israel ready to attack Iran 'within months' [35]", Telegraph, 2
February 2012)
* Israel’s deputy prime minister (and minister of strategic
affairs), Moshe Ya'alon, says the Israeli military is capable of
hitting all of Iran's nuclear sites (see "Vice PM: Military
strike can destroy all of Iran's nuclear facilities [36]",
Ha'aretz, 3 February 2012)
* Israel’s head of military intelligence, Major-General Aviv
Kochavi, estimates that around 200,000 missiles are targeted at
Israel at any one time (see Amos Harel, "Some 200, 000 missiles
aimed consistently at Israel, top IDF officer says [37]",
Ha’aretz, 2 February 2012). The great majority may be
short-range unguided rockets held [38] by Iran’s ally Hizbollah
[39] in Lebanon and militias in Gaza, thus the comment links a
range of threats (see Con Coughlin, "Israel will not pull out of
the next Middle East war until Hizbollah is annihiliated [40]",
Telegraph, 2 February 2012).
Several columns in this decade-long series [9], since 2005
especially, have identified the danger [41] of armed conflict
being triggered by the Israel-United States-Iran nexus; all,
however, have insisted that even escalating tensions [42] do not
make war inevitable or imminent. Yet the mix of incidents and
statements during the past week do suggest that a “ratchet
effect” is underway [43], which at the very least prepares the
way for a conflict and appears to render it the natural outcome
- even if that is not the specific intention.
An additional and often missed aspect of this situation makes it
even more worrying: namely, Israel’s calculation of the US’s
political prospects [44]. A notable shift is underway here, from
the widespread expectation that President Obama would find it
very difficult to be re-elected [45] to a view - shared
privately even among leading Republicans - that, especially if
more positive economic trends [46] persist, he is becoming more
of a favourite.
Israel thus, more acutely than ever, must assess the “risk” a
second Obama victory in November 2012 may pose [47] to its - and
especially the more hawkish elements in its political and
military establishment - perceived security interests. For
example, that the president will in the precious first two years
of his second term exert sustained pressure on Israel to settle
the Palestinian issue, in ways that will make confrontation [48]
with Iran increasingly problematic. For those in Israel who see
in Iran and its nuclear plans an existential threat, the logic
of curbing its ambitions as far as possible is intimately bound
up with the US’s electoral timetable - a calculation [49] that
points in the direction of taking action by around September
2012 at the latest.
If these current factors are considered together - including
Israeli and US statements, and (again) the very unusual
deployment of three [50] carrier battle-groups within reach of
Iran for the next several months - the risk of war with Iran
does seem closer now than at any time since the early months of
2006
The homosexual agenda is once again in high gear. The federal
court in California and the legislature in Washington are
advancing homosexual marriage. This is the death knell for
America. God is not going to tolerate this for much longer.
May the Holy God of Israel bless and protect you
God's Final Warning to America
So far, I have not seen any judgment connected to these
advancements of the homosexual "marriage" agenda. What came to
mind was the recent earthquakes off the coast of Washington and
of course the San Andreas fault in California. I have always
believed the final judgment on California and the West Coast
would be connected directly to homosexuality. These two
political acts advance what the Bible calls the "Ordinances of
the Ammorites." It is these types of ordinances which triggers
God's judgment on a nation