
	by Madison Ruppert
	Editor of End the Lie
	November 03, 2011
	
	from
	
	EndTheLie Website
	
	 
	
	 
	
	
	
	
	An Iranian military parade. 
	
	Mahmoud Amadinejad can be 
	seen observing in the background 
	
	(Credit: FARS)
 
	
	Just like Iraq, it begins with diplomatic and 
	economic sanctions and open threats which eventually snowball into military 
	action.
	
	One can only hope that all of this saber rattling coming from Israel, the 
	United States and the United Kingdom will not evolve into real military 
	strikes.
	
	However, the sweeping sanctions approved by the Foreign Affairs Committee of 
	the House of Representatives on Wednesday in the United States will still 
	significantly damage Iran and its people if they are enacted.
	
	While the sanctions that targeted the Iranian central bank and those who 
	trade with Iran are now being reconsidered according to U.S. officials, the 
	push from Israel might be able to force the hand of America even though it 
	would harm our national interests.
	
	Yet despite all of the posturing, there truly is no evidence that Iran is a 
	threat to the West.
	
	Even the Israeli news agency
	
	Haaretz has to point out this fact in 
	writing, 
	
		
		“Intelligence services now say it will take 
		Iran two or three years to get the bomb once it decides to (it hasn’t 
		made the decision yet).”
	
	
	The most dangerous aspect of these types of 
	sweeping sanctions is that the damage is not immediately apparent to the 
	outside world and especially the West which has its information spoon-fed to 
	it by highly biased corporate news sources.
	
	For instance, the sanctions against Iraq which began in August of 1990, just 
	four days after the Iraqi invasion of Kuwait, resulted in the deaths of an 
	estimated 500,000 dead Iraqis, most of them children
	
	according to British MP George Galloway.
	
	However, the Iraqi Baathist government estimated that
	
	1.5 million died as a result of the 
	sanctions and former U.S. Attorney General Ramsey Clark
	
	estimated a total of 1.5 million died from 
	sanctions, bombs and other weapons and depleted uranium (DU) poisoning.
	
	It is clear that the damage from sanctions are not readily apparent and they 
	usually do not end up harming those who they are intended to target in the 
	government but instead end up harming regular people who have no impact on 
	governmental operations or policies.
	
	An article
	
	recently published by AntiWar reveals just 
	how far-reaching these sanctions are and how damaging they could be for the 
	people of Iran.
	
	Some of these sanctions were radically unrealistic and harsh and as the 
	president of the National Foreign Trade Council, Bill Reinsch 
	pointed out, they,
	
		
		“fly in the face of facts on the ground, the 
		demonstrable failure of previous sanctions to achieve their stated 
		purpose, and the basic rules of diplomacy among nations”.
	
	
	Thankfully, it now appears that the U.S. is
	
	backing away from the sanctions which would 
	target the Iranian central bank over concerns that it would negatively 
	impact the already fragile international oil market.
	
	That being said, U.S. officials are now saying that they will opt instead to 
	seek to coerce Iranian’s major trading allies to join the United States in 
	enforcing the sanctions that are already in place.
	
	In addition, they are also reporting that the U.S. will create some more 
	narrowly focused sanctions against Iran according to Paul Richter of 
	the
	
	Los Angeles Times.
	
	Meanwhile, across the pond, Britain and Israel seem to be gearing up for 
	all-out war with Iran.
	
	For the first time since 2008,
	
	Israel tested the Jericho 3, an 
	intercontinental ballistic missile capable of carrying nuclear warhead long 
	distances on Wednesday.
	
	Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has been reportedly trying 
	to push what little opposition he has within his cabinet into getting behind 
	an attack on Iran with the help of Defense Minister Ehud Barak.
	
	In response to the Jericho 3 test, which was a clear instance of 
	antagonizing Iran at an all-too-inopportune time, Barak said it was an 
	“impressive technological achievement”.
	
	In another suspiciously timed event, Israel released the
	
	details of an air force exercise done in 
	concert with Italy, using a NATO base, over the Mediterranean Sea which 
	simulated a long-distance strike, much like what would be utilized against 
	Iran.
	
	 
	
	American President 
	Barack 
	Obama also said that he had spoken with French President 
	Nicolas Sarkozy and they both had come to the conclusion,
	
		
		“that international pressure must be 
		maintained on Iran” according to Israeli news agency
		
		Haaretz.
	
	
	A major factor in this push towards significant 
	action against Iran is the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) report 
	due next week.
	
	This report will allegedly show if Iran is meeting its “international 
	obligations” in its nuclear ambitions, although one might argue that this 
	report could be highly biased given it is coming from a United Nations body.
	
	Some American politicians are not being as coy as others, sticking to the 
	typical diplomatic language in dealing with Iran.
	
	Rick Perry, a former Bilderberg Group attendee, Republican 
	Presidential hopeful and current Governor of Texas, has openly said he would
	
	support attacks on Iran.
	
		
		“Obviously, we are going to support Israel. 
		And I’ve said that we will support Israel in every way that we can, 
		whether it’s diplomatic, whether it’s economic sanctions, whether it’s 
		overt or covert operations, up to and including military action,” Perry 
		said in an interview on CNN.
	
	
	This kind of blind support for Israel is what 
	plagues American politics today. Even when such a move could result in the 
	death of Americans and/or a significant negative economic impact, 
	politicians like Perry will happily back Israel to the detriment of our own 
	nation.
	
	The support within Israel for a strike on Iran is quite considerable as well 
	with a Dialog Polling Institute poll showing that
	
	41% of those polled backed an Israeli 
	attack on Iranian nuclear facilities.
	
	However, 39% of those polled oppose such an attack while 20% were undecided 
	on the matter.
	
	The margin of error was 4.6% and only 495 people were polled so one must 
	consider the small sample size in giving credence to the figure. Dialog 
	claims that their random sampling represents Israeli adults but the numbers 
	are far from conclusive at this stage.
	
	Despite the split in the Israeli public, the support for an attack on Iran 
	amongst the Israeli cabinet does not seem so divided.
	
	
	Haaretz reports that Israel’s Foreign 
	Minister, Avigdor Lieberman, previously did not support an attack on 
	Iran but was recently persuaded by Prime Minister Netanyahu and Defense 
	Minister Barak to get behind the move.
	
	The Israeli Strategic Affairs Minister, Moshe Ya’alon, reportedly 
	said that he would prefer an American military strike against Iran to an 
	Israeli one.
	
	Why would we have any interest in attacking Iran? In reality, Iran is not a 
	threat to the United States but the Israel Lobby likely easily sway 
	Washington into carrying out the strike for Israel, putting American lives 
	and money on the line instead of their own.
	
	Similarly, Dan Meridor, the Israeli Intelligence and Atomic Energy 
	Minister said that he supports an American offensive against Iran.
	
	The London Guardian has reported that Britain is developing military plans 
	for an attack on Iran in preparation for the IAEA report which has been 
	characterized as “a game changer”.
	
		
		“The MoD [Ministry of Defense] says there 
		are no hard and fast blueprints for conflict but insiders concede that 
		preparations there and at the Foreign Office have been under way for 
		some time”, according to
		
		The Guardian.
	
	
	This dovetails with the reports of Obama 
	planning to increase the American presence in the Persian Gulf, as I 
	previously
	
	reported.
	
	It appears that the contingency plans have been in the works for some time 
	and they are seemingly being implemented as I write this.
	
	However, some are speculating that all of this public talk and open threats 
	are just a covert push to pressure the international community into taking a 
	hard line against Iran.
	
	For instance, the former director of the Jaffee Center for Strategic 
	Studies, Yossi Alpher, said that the discussion of air strikes 
	against Iran,
	
		
		“might be more to do with persuading the 
		international community to tighten sanctions, which have so far proved 
		ineffective, after the IAEA report is published next week”, according to
		
		The Week.
	
	
	Meanwhile, in Iran, the reaction has been one of 
	marked antagonism with the Iranian Foreign Minister Ali Akbar Salehi
	
	saying that Iran is “ready for war” with 
	Israel.
	
	Salehi told the Turkish news outlet Hürriyet Daily, 
	
		
		“We have been hearing threats from Israel 
		for eight years. Our nation is a united nation… such threats are not new 
		to us”.
	
	
	Salehi also said that any attack would bring 
	retaliation and Iranian General Hassan Firouzabadi said that Israel 
	and the U.S. would be harshly punished for an attack in Iran.
	
		
		“We would make them regret such a mistake 
		and would severely punish them,” Firouzabadi said, adding, “In case of 
		an attack by the Zionist regime, the United States would also be hit”.
	
	
	The head of the Iranian Supreme National 
	Security Council, Saeed Jalili, will
	
	reportedly detail the proof of U.S.-led terrorist plots against Iran at 
	a ceremony marking the anniversary of the 1979 U.S. Embassy hostage crisis 
	in Tehran.
	
	This evidence is allegedly so damning that it could bring the U.S. 
	government down according to an Iranian lawmaker and Deputy Chairman of the 
	Majilis Committee on National Security and Foreign Policy, Hossein Ebrahimi.
	
		
		“Once Tehran publicizes the evidence in its 
		possession on the US being a terrorist [state] and [Washington's] 
		massacres, the American nation would certainly unite to topple their 
		[ruling] regime”, Ebrahimi reportedly
		
		said.
	
	
	Furthermore, in late September the head of the 
	Iranian Navy, Rear Admiral Habibollah Sayyari,
	
	threatened to send military ships off the 
	Atlantic Coast of the United States.
	
	The tensions are rising and the rhetoric is heated from all sides. 
	
	 
	
	All we can do at this point is gather 
	information and hope the worst doesn’t occur.