When Tel Aviv Decides, Washington Fights - CounterPunch.org

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When Tel Aviv Decides, Washington Fights

Jamal Kanj

American taxpayers are still hemorrhaging from the made-for-Israel war in Iraq, 
a war audaciously offered as one...
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When Tel Aviv Decides, Washington Fights
American taxpayers are still hemorrhaging from the made-for-Israel war in Iraq, 
a war audaciously offered as one that would “pay for itself.” Instead, it was 
paid in Iraqi and American blood, ruins, and financed by American debt. The 
promised democracy was a broken state, regional chaos, and the afterbirth of 
terror and resistance that continues to metastasize across the Arab world. 
Marketed as a short, decisive campaign, Iraq became a two-decade-long disaster 
with no exit in sight. Trillions were burned on lies manufactured by 
Israel-first Zionists in Washington, while generations of Americans—many not 
even born when the invasion began—were conscripted into inheriting the debt, 
the interest, and the moral stain.
The real balance sheet of that war is etched into nearly 5,000 American 
tombstones and the endless corridors of veterans’ hospitals. Before that 
blood-soaked bill is even paid, the very same architect, using the same lies, 
has succeeded again in dragging the U. S. into another made-for-Israel war, 
this time against Iran. Iraq was not an aberration; it was a rehearsal. Yet, 
Iran doesn’t appear to be the final act on the Israeli menu. In recent weeks, 
former Israeli Prime Minister Naftali Bennett declared that Turkey is next. And 
it is the U.S., not Israel, that is expected to keep paying for wars, America 
neither needed nor chose.
The evidence of who set the clock of this war is unmistakable. The most 
revealing admission did not come from Tehran, Moscow, or Beijing, but from the 
U.S. State Department. In an unguarded moment, the U.S. Secretary of State 
admitted that the timing of this war was not an American choice. This became 
painfully clear when the State Department was caught unprepared to help 
evacuate tens of thousands of Americans from the war zone. As U.S. ambassadors 
hurried to evacuate their staff and families, desperate citizens were told 
their government could not assist and were advised to arrange their own 
departures, after airports had already closed.
This is not a minor detail. It’s a government that is willing to sacrifice the 
well-being and security of its citizens by joining a war decided by someone 
else. It goes to the heart of sovereignty and democratic accountability. A 
nation that chooses to go to war prepares its people, its diplomacy, and its 
logistics. A nation that is dragged into war improvises and hopes for the best.
Iran, for its part, is not the caricature often presented by the American 
Secretary of War and Donald Trump. It is a country prepared for drawn-out 
conflict and strategic patience. During the nearly eight-year Iran-Iraq War, 
Tehran fought a grinding, no-win war against a better-armed adversary. Against 
the expectations of Western military analysts, Iran endured. In a grim irony, 
it even committed the greatest of all sins: purchasing weapons from Israel, 
falling into Tel Aviv’s cynical strategy to weaken both Baghdad and Tehran 
simultaneously. Israel was willing to arm its supposed arch-enemy as part of 
its broader calculus of exhaustion and division.
That history matters today. Iran has demonstrated, repeatedly, a willingness to 
absorb punishment and extend conflicts over time. At the end of the day, and by 
all means necessary, Iran is unlikely to surrender. In a protracted war of 
attrition to bleed the world economy, Tehran could move to close the Strait of 
Hormuz, an oil bloodline for world economies. Iran may be economically 
battered, and it has been for decades under severe sanctions, but that very 
weakness reduces its restraint. A country with little left to lose is more 
inclined to impose pain on others, including Western and neighboring welfare 
oil economies dependent on uninterrupted energy exports. Meanwhile, regional 
instability in the Gulf and prolonged American entanglement create the perfect 
parasitic symbiosis for Israel: a state that flourishes in the shadows of 
regional chaos like a scavenger thriving on the scrap of a landfill.
President Trump has suggested escorting oil shipments in the Strait to keep the 
oil flowing. The macho bravado may play well on television or for the stock 
market, but history, old and recent, offers daunting realities. The same was 
attempted during the Iraq-Iran war in the 1980s but failed. More recently, the 
U.S., the EU, and Israel combined failed to force a much smaller and poorer 
country—Yemen—to open the Red Sea. After months of bombardment, siege and naval 
pressure, Washington was forced into negotiations, and even then, Yemeni forces 
continued to block vessels linked to Israel until Gaza ceasefire.
The comparison is useful. The Red Sea shoreline area under Houthi control in 
northern Yemen (green map in the link) is a much wider maritime passage. The 
Strait of Hormuz, by contrast, is so narrow on a clear day that each shore is 
visible from the other. To borrow a simple image, in the Houthi area the width 
of the Red Sea is an Amazon River and where Hormuz is a stream. The narrowness 
of the Hormuz Strait makes control easier for Iran and exposes the 
vulnerability of U.S. naval ships. Before promising to escort commercial 
shipping, a responsible administration should ask a basic question: if a small, 
impoverished Yemen could not be subdued by the world’s most powerful 
militaries, how exactly will American warships be safer under the reach of fire 
in the narrower Strait?
There is another question Washington refuses to entertain: How will Americans 
feel when they realize they are risking lives, ships, and economic stability 
largely to advance Israel’s sole strategic objectives? This is not an abstract 
question. It is a political and economic reckoning, purposefully delayed. 
Especially since Americans are still reeling from the cost of previous Israeli 
wars, and now, they are asked to take on a new national debt—$200 billion—to 
bankroll yet another war, especially made for Israel.
The made-for-Israel wars may have begun in Iraq, but will not end with Iran. 
Israeli false flags are poised to provoke further escalations designed to 
entrap even states traditionally friendly to Tehran, such as Oman. For Israel, 
victory remains incomplete unless it drags Gulf Arab states into open 
confrontation with Iran, hardening divisions that may last generations. Iranian 
mistrust of the Gulf Arabs would likely endure even in the event of regime 
change. In this calculus, Israel “wins” not only on the battlefield but by 
entrenching lasting hostility between Iran and the Arab world, ensuring a 
permanently fragmented region.
More than two decades ago, the illegal war against Iraq was cooked in the dens 
of the Pentagon by Israel-first ideologues and sold to the American public 
through the managed media, ruse and weapons of mass deception. The current war 
is, in some ways, even more brazen. It was exclusively designed in the war 
ministry offices of Tel Aviv, and Trump obliged.
This is not America’s war. The decision was made elsewhere, and timed 
elsewhere, fought on behalf of someone else to serve the strategic objectives 
of a foreign country. Washington has subordinated the American national 
interest to the tribal agenda of Israeli-firsters inside the Beltway. Simply 
put: Tel Aviv chooses the war, and Washington pays the bill.
Jamal Kanj 
  


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