Slam Dunk: The Bush Administration Is Trying to Provoke Iran
Slam Dunk: The Bush Administration Is Trying to Provoke Iran
The Bush Administration is once again escalating its confrontation with
But details have emerged from the recent escalation that strongly indicate what many have long suspected: the Bush Administration's fundamental conflict with
It's simply a great-power struggle for influence. And while there's nothing too shocking about that, people in the United States should ask themselves - and be asked by others - what sacrifices we are really willing to bear so that the Bush Administration can try to keep Iran from having the influence in Iraq that they would normally have - and almost certainly will have - if there is a democratic government in Iraq, given that 60% of the Iraqi population is Shiite and has strong cultural and religious ties to their co-religionists in Iran. How many
On Wednesday, the New York Times reported:
Members of an Iranian Energy Ministry delegation were arrested and held overnight by American troops in
A media adviser to the Prime Minister Nuri Kamal al-Maliki of Iraq told Reuters news agency that the group was in Baghdad at the invitation of Iraq's Ministry of Electricity to help build a power station in the Shiite city of Najaf.Why were these Iranians arrested by U.S. troops if, according to Iraqi officials, they were part of an Energy Ministry delegation invited to Baghdad to "help resolve Iraq's electricity crisis"? That
Not so, apparently, The Times reports. A manager at the hotel where the Iranians were staying said:
"I told [the
So, prior to the Iranians' arrest,
What was the point of arresting these officials? Surely the
Here is something very simple Congress could do to indicate that they are serious about preventing the Bush Administration from provoking a war with
Robert Naiman is Senior Policy Analyst and National Coordinator at Just Foreign Policy.


