‘Only Americans and
America’s friends
are now afraid of George-the-Bully’
Editorial
The International Herald
Tribune
Given America's bitter experience in
Iraq, one would think that President
George W. Bush could finally figure out that threats and brute force aren't a
substitute for a reasoned strategy. But Bush is at it again, this time trying to
bully Iran into stopping its
meddling inside Iraq.
We have no doubt about
Iran's malign intent, just as
we have no doubt that Bush's serial failures in Iraq have made it far easier for Tehran to sow chaos there
and spread its influence in the wider region. But more threats and posturing are
unlikely to get Iran to back down. If Bush isn't
careful, he could end up talking himself into another disastrous war, and if
Congress is not clear in opposing him this time, he could drag the country
along.
The drumbeat began during
Bush's recent speech on Iraq, when he vowed to "seek out and
destroy" Iranian and Syrian networks he said were arming and training
anti-American forces. Bush also announced that he was sending a second aircraft
carrier to the Gulf.
Hours earlier,
U.S. troops raided an Iranian
diplomatic office in Iraq. If anyone missed the point,
aides let it be known that the president had authorized the military to kill or
capture Iranian operatives in Iraq.
Iran certainly is helping arm and
train Shiite militias. But the administration is certainly exaggerating the
salutary effect of any cutoff as long as these militias enjoy the protection of
Iraq's prime minister, Nuri Kamal
al-Maliki. If Bush is genuinely worried — and he should be — he needs to be as
forceful in demanding that Maliki cut ties to these groups and clear about the
consequences if he refuses.
In what passes for grand
strategy, the president's aides say he is betting that bloodying Iranian forces
in Iraq, and raising the
threat of a wider confrontation, will weaken Tehran's regional standing and force its
leaders to rethink their nuclear ambitions. Never mind that Bush's last big idea
— that imposing democracy on Iraq would weaken Iran's
authoritarians — has had the opposite effect.
Bush seems to be grossly
misreading Iran's domestic politics and ignoring
his own recent experience. In a rare moment of subtlety, the Treasury Department
has quietly persuaded some banks and investors to rethink their dealings with
Tehran. That has
made some in Iran's permanent religious elite —
already worried about future oil production — express doubts about President
Mahmoud Ahmadinejad's defiance of the Security Council.
As ever, the one tactic the
administration is refusing to consider is diplomacy. Bush has resisted calls to
convene a meeting of Iraq's neighbors to discuss ways to
contain the crisis. There is no guarantee that Ahmadinejad can be persuaded that
Iraq's further implosion is
not in Iran's interest. But others in
Tehran may have
clearer heads. And any hope of driving a wedge between Iran and Syria will have to start by giving Damascus hope that there
is a way in from the cold.
Bush's bullying may play well
to his ever shrinking base. But his disastrous war in Iraq has done so much damage to
U.S. credibility — and so
strained its resources— that it no longer frightens America's
enemies. The only ones really frightened are Americans and America's
friends.
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