Glenn Greenwald reminds us of Candidate Obama's pledge to negotiate without precondition with the leaders of Iran and other countries, a far-sighted position that caused him to be labeled naive by many in the the punditocracy. Unfortunately, President Obama refuses to engage meaningfully with Iran through direct negotiations or diplomacy, leaving increasingly harsh sanctions as the only available course. As Michael Klare writes below, this misguided policy is making the Strait of Hormuz "the most combustible
spot on the planet, the most likely place to witness a major conflict
between well-armed adversaries." -- Lovechilde
By Michael T. Klare, cross-posted from Tom Dispatch
Ever since December 27th, war clouds have been gathering
over the Strait of Hormuz, the narrow body of water connecting the
Persian Gulf with the Indian Ocean and the seas beyond. On that day,
Iranian Vice President Mohammad Reza Rahimi warned that Tehran would
block the strait and create havoc in international oil markets if the
West placed new economic sanctions on his country.
“If they impose sanctions on Iran’s oil exports,” Rahimi declared,
“then even one drop of oil cannot flow from the Strait of Hormuz.”
Claiming that such a move would constitute an assault on America’s vital
interests, President Obama reportedly informed
Iran’s supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei that Washington would use
force to keep the strait open. To back up their threats, both sides
have been bolstering their forces in the area and each has conducted a series of provocative military exercises.
All of a sudden, the Strait of Hormuz has become the most combustible
spot on the planet, the most likely place to witness a major conflict
between well-armed adversaries. Why, of all locales, has it become so
explosive?
Oil, of course, is a major part of the answer, but -- and this may surprise you -- only a part.
Petroleum remains the world’s most crucial source of energy, and
about one-fifth of the planet’s oil supply travels by tanker through the
strait. “Hormuz is the world’s most important oil chokepoint due to
its daily oil flow of almost 17 million barrels in 2011,” the U.S.
Department of Energy noted
as last year ended. Because no other area is capable of replacing
these 17 million barrels, any extended closure would produce a global
shortage of oil, a price spike, and undoubtedly attendant economic panic
and disorder.
No one knows just how high oil prices would go under such
circumstances, but many energy analysts believe that the price of a
barrel might immediately leap by $50 or more. “You would get an
international reaction that would not only be high, but irrationally
high,” says
Lawrence J. Goldstein, a director of the Energy Policy Research
Foundation. Even though military experts assume the U.S. will use its
overwhelming might to clear the strait of Iranian mines and obstructions
in a few days or weeks, the chaos to follow in the region might not end
quickly, keeping oil prices elevated for a long time. Indeed, some
analysts fear that oil prices, already hovering around $100 per barrel,
would quickly double to more than $200, erasing any prospect of economic
recovery in the United States and Western Europe, and possibly plunging
the planet into a renewed Great Recession.
The Iranians are well aware of all this, and it is with such a
nightmare scenario that they seek to deter Western leaders from further
economic sanctions and other more covert acts when they threaten to
close the strait. To calm such fears, U.S. officials have been equally
adamant in stressing their determination to keep the strait open. In
such circumstances of heightened tension, one misstep by either side
might prove calamitous and turn mutual rhetorical belligerence into
actual conflict.
Military Overlord of the Persian Gulf
In other words, oil, which makes the global economy hum, is the most
obvious factor in the eruption of war talk, if not war. Of at least
equal significance are allied political factors, which may have their
roots in the geopolitics of oil but have acquired a life of their own.
Because
so much of the world’s most accessible oil is concentrated in the
Persian Gulf region, and because a steady stream of oil is absolutely
essential to the well-being of the U.S. and the global economy, it has
long been American policy to prevent potentially hostile powers from
acquiring the capacity to dominate the Gulf or block the Strait of
Hormuz. President Jimmy Carter first articulated this position in
January 1980, following the Islamic Revolution in Iran and the Soviet
invasion of Afghanistan. “Any attempt by an outside force to gain
control of the Persian Gulf region will be regarded as an assault on the
vital interests of the United States of America,” he told a joint session of Congress, “and such an assault will be repelled by any means necessary, including military force.”
In accordance with this precept, Washington designated itself the
military overlord of the Persian Gulf, equipped with the military might
to overpower any potential challenger. At the time, however, the U.S.
military was not well organized to implement the president’s initiative,
known ever since as the Carter Doctrine. In response, the Pentagon created a new organization, the U.S. Central Command
(CENTCOM), and quickly endowed it with the wherewithal to crush any
rival power or powers in the region and keep the sea lanes under
American control.
CENTCOM first went into action in 1987-1988, when Iranian forces
attacked Kuwaiti and Saudi oil tankers during the Iran-Iraq War,
threatening the flow of oil supplies through the strait. To protect the
tankers, President Reagan ordered that they be “reflagged”
as American vessels and escorted by U.S. warships, putting the Navy
into potential conflict with the Iranians for the first time. Out of
this action came the disaster of Iran Air Flight 655,
a civilian airliner carrying 290 passengers and crew members, all of
whom died when the plane was hit by a missile from the USS Vincennes,
which mistook it for a hostile fighter plane -- a tragedy long
forgotten in the United States, but still deeply resented in Iran.
Iraq was America’s de facto ally in the Iran-Iraq war, but when
Saddam Hussein invaded Kuwait in 1990 -- posing a direct threat to
Washington’s dominance of the Gulf -- the first President Bush ordered
CENTCOM to protect Saudi Arabia and drive Iraqi forces out of Kuwait.
And when Saddam rebuilt his forces, and his very existence again came to
pose a latent threat to America’s dominance in the region, the second
President Bush ordered CENTCOM to invade Iraq and eliminate his regime
altogether (which, as no one is likely to forget, resulted in a string
of disasters).
If oil lay at the root of Washington’s domineering role in the Gulf,
over time that role evolved into something else: a powerful expression
of America’s status as a global superpower. By becoming the military
overlord of the Gulf and the self-appointed guardian of oil traffic
through the Strait of Hormuz, Washington said to the world: "We, and we
alone, are the ones who can ensure the safety of your daily oil supply
and thereby prevent global economic collapse." Indeed, when the Cold
War ended -- and with it an American sense of pride and identity as a
bulwark against Soviet expansionism in Europe and Asia -- protection of
the flow of Persian Gulf oil became America’s greatest claim to
superpowerdom, and it remains so today.
Every Option on Every Table
With the ouster of Saddam Hussein in 2003, the one potential threat to U.S. domination of the Persian Gulf was, of course, Iran.
Even under the U.S.-backed Shah, long Washington’s man in the Gulf, the
Iranians had sought to be the paramount power in the region. Now,
under a militant Shiite Islamic regime, they have proven no less
determined and -- call it irony -- thanks to Saddam’s overthrow and the
rise of a Shiite-dominated government in Baghdad, they have managed to
extend their political reach in the region. With Saddam’s fate in mind,
they have also built up their defensive military capabilities and -- in
the view of many Western analysts -- embarked on a uranium-enrichment program
with the potential to supply fissile material for a nuclear weapon,
should the Iranian leadership choose someday to take such a fateful
step.
Iran thus poses a double challenge to Washington’s professed status
in the Gulf. It is not only a reasonably well-armed country with
significant influence in Iraq and elsewhere, but by promoting its
nuclear program, it threatens to vastly complicate America’s future
capacity to pull off punishing attacks like those launched against Iraqi
forces in 1991 and 2003.
While Iran’s military budget is modest-sized at best and its conventional military capabilities
will never come close to matching CENTCOM’s superior forces in a direct
confrontation, its potential pursuit of nuclear-arms capabilities
greatly complicates the strategic calculus in the region. Even without
taking the final steps of manufacturing actual bomb components -- and no
evidence has yet surfaced
that the Iranians have proceeded to this critical stage -- the Iranian
nuclear effort has greatly alarmed other countries in the Middle East
and called into question the continued robustness of America’s regional
dominance. From Washington’s perspective, an Iranian bomb -- whether
real or not -- poses an existential threat to America’s continued
superpower status.
How to prevent Iran not just from going nuclear but from maintaining
the threat to go nuclear has, in recent years, become an obsessional
focus of American foreign and military policy. Over and over again,
U.S. leaders have considered plans for using military force to cripple
the Iranian program though air and missile strikes on known and
suspected nuclear facilities. Presidents Bush and Obama have both
refused to take such action “off the table,” as Obama made clear most
recently in his State of the Union address. (The Israelis have also repeatedly indicated their desire to take such action, possibly as a prod to Washington to get the job done.)
Most serious analysts have concluded that military action would prove extremely risky,
probably causing numerous civilian casualties and inviting fierce
Iranian retaliation. It might not even achieve the intended goal of
halting the Iranian nuclear program, much of which is now being
conducted deep underground.
Hence, the consensus view among American and European leaders has been
that economic sanctions should instead be employed to force the Iranians
to the negotiating table, where they could be induced to abandon their
nuclear ambitions in return for various economic benefits. But those
escalating sanctions, which appear to be causing increasing economic pain for ordinary Iranians, have been described by that country’s leaders as an “act of war,” justifying their threats to block the Strait of Hormuz.
To add to tensions, the leaders of both countries are under extreme
pressure to vigorously counter the threats of the opposing side.
President Obama, up for re-election, has come under fierce, even
hair-raising, attack from the contending Republican presidential candidates (except, of course, Ron Paul)
for failing to halt the Iranian nuclear program, though none of them
have a credible plan to do so. He, in turn, has been taking an
ever-harsher stance on the issue. Iranian leaders, for their part,
appear increasingly concerned
over the deteriorating economic conditions in their country and, no
doubt fearing an Arab Spring-like popular upheaval, are becoming more
bellicose in their rhetoric.
So oil, the prestige of global dominance, Iran's urge to be a
regional power, and domestic political factors are all converging in a
combustible mix to make the Strait of Hormuz the most dangerous place on
the planet. For both Tehran and Washington, events seem to be moving
inexorably toward a situation in which mistakes and miscalculations
could become inevitable. Neither side can appear to give ground without
losing prestige and possibly even their jobs. In other words, an
existential test of wills is now under way over geopolitical dominance
in a critical part of the globe, and on both sides there seem to be ever
fewer doors marked “EXIT.”
As a result, the Strait of Hormuz will undoubtedly remain the ground zero of potential global conflict in the months ahead.
Michael T. Klare is a professor of peace and world security studies at Hampshire College, a TomDispatch regular, and the author, most recently, of Rising Powers, Shrinking Planet.
Tuesday, January 31, 2012
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