Friday, March 6, 2026

Trump, the US Congress and the Labor Hierarchy Supports this War on Iran. The American People Don't

Source: Al Jazeera


Richard Mellor

Afscme Local 444, retired
HEO/GED

 

The US rogue regime and its settler colony in the Middle East continues to carpet bomb Iran after assassinating the country’s political leadership with a direct missile attack. Such precision is made possible through the cooperation of the US tech industry moguls. The technology that could save human lives and advance human civilization is used to murder millions at unprecedented levels as it sets the world on fire. 

 

There are over 1000 Iranians killed, mostly civilians, among them over 150 children after the US bombed a school. In order to maximize damage and the human toll, that was a “double tap” hit. The first missile is followed by a second aimed at rescuers or the survivors.  “There is a continuous, sustained campaign across the country that is not sparing any region, city or area,” Al Jazeera’s Mohamed Vall reports from Tehran, adding,  “…. we know 300 children and adolescents have been hospitalised … with more than 6,000 [people] wounded,”.

 

The UN reports that between February 28 and March 1, an estimated 100,000 people fled Tehran due to the conflict. The longer this goes on, many Iranians will flee to neighboring countries whose services are already strained by refugees from the US invasion of Iraq and the Syrian and Lebanon crises, two countries that Israel is bombing as I write.

 

Refugees will likely head northward in to Europe where they will face anti-immigrant and racist assaults from right wing forces, like Britain’s Farage and the Reform party. The cause of immigrants flowing in to Europe from the Middle East (West Asia) is due to US and Israeli aggression in the region. I have no sympathy with those Europeans whining about immigration when the point of departure is not asking themselves why so many refugees arrive at their shores when the reason is obvious. 

 

The US has bombed their homes, they have none to return to. And the US is supported in this imperialist aggression by the UK, France and Germany in particular. Both Canada and Australia (other settler states) back the US Congress in these wars.

 

The Gulf states, also creations of western colonialism, particularly of the British kind, are led by semi-feudal families that are also armed to the teeth by the US in order to defend themselves primarily from an explosion from below. It is the revolutionary potential of the Arab masses these corrupt regimes fear most not Israel. They haven’t forgotten how quickly US dictators fell during the Arab Spring in 2011. Ben Ali in Tunisia was one of the first and even Hillary Clinton’s “family friend” Hosni Mubarak was forced out. Obama stuck with him as long as he could but he became too much of a liability in the end as the movement from below grew.

 

Only two countries in the world supported this illegal war against Iran, Israel and its patron the US. And only one in four Americans support it according to a March 1 Reuters/IPSOS poll.  I’ve spoken to a number of people over the past few days who all admitted that the situation is very distressing for them and it’s not only the cost of the war and what that means for us as far as prices go, but a genuine concern for human life. Just as the Mullahs don’t really speak for the Iranian working class, the sexual deviant in the White House and the gangster capitalists in the US Congress don’t speak for us.

 

The overwhelming source of stress I find is that people I spoke to felt completely helpless and unable to do anything about it. This mood exists in the US in general as people’s living standards and material conditions continue to deteriorate. I don’t need to go in to too much detail again here, but the country’s infrastructure is crumbling and the lack of health care, affordable housing and the absence of any real mass transit, particularly in the west and California where I live, means people sometimes have to commute three to four hours a day to get to one of their two or sometimes three jobs. 

 

There is so much anxiety over the insecurity people face day in day out and they are sick of the forever wars the US conducts. These wars would not be supported if Americans died in any significant numbers; of course one death is too many and hell for the family that experiences it. “Thank God for air power “, one person said. Many people try to avoid the news altogether as for the most part we get the usual propaganda of how everyone hates us, how the Iranians were threatening to invade and other such nonsense. Millions are tired of this and don’t believe it. I often say to clerks in stores, or in other interactions with people when the increased cost of living comes up, that we can’t spread peace and democracy around the world and not expect to pay for it. I almost always get a wry smile as no one believes that’s what the US is doing.

 

But where do people turn to for an answer?

 

The Democratic Party is despised and no opposition party at all, particularly when it comes to foreign policy. There are Democrats speaking out but as far as elections go, both parties are despised and in national elections some 100 million simply opt out. Only one in four registered voters voted for Trump. Throughout the world, most governments are pursuing policies that the majority of their populations oppose.

 

Organized labor and its national body the AFL-CIO, has some 14 million members, affiliated to it, a low union density but nevertheless, workers in all the crucial industries (barring tech) are organized. Communication, transportation, the docks, retail and so on. I think the weapons manufacturers are organized as well. But the trade union hierarchy, supporters of the Democratic Party and capitalism in these workers’ organizations, are silent on foreign policy and such issues as the misnamed defense budget.

 

I went to the AFL-CIO’s web page to see what its main page might say about the bombing of Iran and the disastrous effect that has had on the region and the entire world; the dangers are real. We could see the use of a nuclear device especially if the fascist Apartheid regime in Israel feels it is losing ground as they are mad enough to use one . I have included screen shots of what I saw at the AFL-CIO’s website. The moribund clique that sits atop organized labor are also complicit in US imperialism’s wars of aggression against much weaker and former colonial countries. 


Yes, calling Congress will sort it out.

No mention of where our money goes or that it funds mass murder. The trade union bureaucracy is living in another world


I love the women's hockey team and glad they've unionized but really.


It’s staggering really to think that a mass murderer like Netanyahu, wanted by the world’s foremost court, and Donald Trump, a convicted felon, con man and serial rap*st have teamed up to inflict horror on a nation of 98 million people and is supported by the UK, Australian, German and Canadian governments, western European colonial powers basically.

 

I am convinced that here in the US the mood for change is strong like any other nation, the face of America that people around the world sees is not us; is not the people I have lived with and worked alongside for 51 years. The discontent has been fostering a long time. The absence of any real alternative, including the complicity of the AFL-CIO heads (The dogs that never bark I call them) is one of the major reasons for the rise of Trump and the right wing. There are 20 million or more Evangelical Christian who think the crisis in the Middle East is Biblical prophecy and their God will return and whisk them up to heaven. Yes, this is in the most advanced capitalist nation on earth in the 21st century.

 

It will take a mass movement of millions to make any serious change to US war imperialism’s war mongering and sooner than later is preferable because there are forces that will use nuclear weapons. But I am convinced the working class, not just in the US, but throughout the world will rise to the occasion and fulfil the task that history has set for us. 

 

The alternative is the end of life as we know it as if a nuclear war doesn't push us over the cliff, climate catastrophe will.

Israel planned this war on Iran for 40 years. Everything else is a smoke screen

Israel planned this war on Iran for 40 years. Everything else is a smoke screen

The embers of resistance – in Gaza, Iraq, Lebanon, Syria, Yemen - have not been snuffed out. With the attack on Iran, they are being fanned into a fire

[First published by Middle East Eye]

It is near impossible to make sense – at least from the justifications on offer – of what US President Donald Trump really hopes to achieve with his and Israel‘s blatantly illegal war of aggression on Iran.

Is it to destroy an Iranian nuclear weapons programme for which there has never been any tangible evidence, and which Trump claimed just a few months ago to have “completely and totally obliterated” in an earlier lawbreaking attack?

Or is it intended to force Tehran back to negotiations on its nuclear energyenrichment programme that were brought prematurely to an end when the US launched its unprovoked attack – talks, we should note, that were made necessary because in 2018, during his first term, Trump tore up the original deal with Iran?

Or is the war supposed to browbeat Iran into greater flexibility, even though Trump blew up the talks at the very moment Oman, the chief mediator, insisted that Tehran had capitulated on almost every one of Washington’s onerous demands and that a deal was “within our reach“?

Or are the air strikes designed to “liberate” Iranians, even though the early victims included at least 165 civilians in a girls’ school, most of them children aged between 7 and 12?

Or is the aim to pressure Iran to give up its ballistic missiles – the only deterrence it has against attack, and which would leave it utterly defenceless against US and Israeli malevolent designs?

Or did Washington believe Tehran was about to strike first, even though Pentagon officials have confided to congressional staff that there was zero intelligence an attack was about to happen?

Or is the goal to decapitate the Iranian regime, as the strikes have already achieved with the assassination of Iran’s supreme leader, Ali Khamenei? If so, to what purpose, given that Khamenei was so opposed to an Iranian nuclear bomb that he issued a religious edict, a fatwa, against its development?

Might Khamenei’s successor – having seen how utterly untrustworthy the US and Israel are, how they operate as rogue states unconstrained by international law – now decide that developing a nuclear bomb is an absolute priority to protect Iran’s sovereignty?

No clear rationale

There is no clear rationale from Washington because the author of this attack is not to be found in either the White House or the Pentagon. This plan was cooked up in Tel Aviv decades ago.

The Israeli prime minister, Benjamin Netanyahu, admitted as much on Sunday. He gloated: "This combined effort allows us to do what I have hoped to achieve for 40 years: to crush the regime of terror completely. That's my promise and this is what is going to happen."

Those four decades, let us note, were also the timeframe for an endless series of warnings from Netanyahu and other Israeli leaders that Tehran was only months away from developing a nuclear bomb.

Netanyahu has been peddling this same urgent, nonsensical pretext for attacking Iran all that time. For 40 years, each year has been proclaimed the very last opportunity to stop the “mad mullahs” from obtaining a bomb – a bomb that never materialised.

And all the while, Israel’s own arsenal of nuclear weapons, undeclared and therefore unmonitored, has been an open secret.

Europe helped Israel develop its bomb, while the US turned a blind eye, even as Israeli leaders espoused a suicidal doctrine known as the “Samson Option“, which posited that Israel would rather detonate its nuclear arsenal than suffer a conventional military defeat.

The Samson Option implicitly rejects the idea that any other state in the Middle East can be allowed to acquire a bomb and thereby level the military playing field with Israel.

It is that very premise that, for decades, has guided Israeli policy towards Tehran. Not because Iran has shown an inclination to develop a weapon. Nor because its supposedly “mad mullahs” would be foolish enough to fire them at Israel were they ever to acquire them.

No, it was for other reasons. Because Iran is the largest and most unified state in the region, one with a rich history, a strong cultural identity and a formidable intellectual tradition. Because Iran has repeatedly shown itself – whether under secular or religious leaders – unwilling to submit to western, and Israeli, colonial domination.

And because it is looked to as a source of authority and leadership by Shia religious communities in neighbouring countries – Iraq, Lebanon, Syria, Yemen – that have a history of similarly refusing to bow to Israeli hegemony.

Israel’s fear was that, were Iran to follow North Korea and acquire a nuclear weapon, Israel would be finished as the West’s most useful militarised client state in the oil-rich Middle East.

Stripped of its ability to terrorise its neighbours, stoke sectarian division and help project US imperial power into the region, Israel would lose its rationale. It would become the ultimate white elephant.

Israeli leaders – grown fat on endless military subsidies paid for by US taxpayers and given licence to plunder the Palestinians’ resources – were never going to willingly step off their gravy train.

Which is why Iran has rarely been out of Israel’s sights.

‘Birth pangs’

The extent of Israel’s extraordinary deception over the case for war on Irancan be gauged by comparing it to the hoax perpetrated by the George W Bush administration in launching its invasion of Iraq in 2003.

Iraq was another strong military state – if one more inherently fragile because of its deep sectarian and ethnic divisions – that Israel feared could develop a nuclear capacity that would wreck its top-dog status.

In the build-up to this illegal war – again cheered on by Israel – Bush claimed Iraqi leader Saddam Hussein had large, secret stockpiles of weapons of mass destruction that predated the introduction in 1991 of a United Nations weapons inspection regime.

The inspectors, who enjoyed extensive powers in Iraq, assessed that to be improbable. They also pointed out that, even had some of Iraq’s known chemical weapons eluded their inspections, they would by then have been so old as to have turned into “harmless goo“.

After the invasion, no WMD were ever found. Nonetheless, western politicians and media readily bought into the big lie. At least on that occasion, they could claim to have had only months to assess the credibility of the allegations.

In the case of Iran, by contrast, the politicians and media have had 40 years to investigate and weigh the plausibility of Israel’s claims. They should long ago have worked out that Netanyahu is an utterly unreliable narrator of a supposed Iranian “threat”.

And that does not even factor in that he is also a fugitive war crimes suspect who has spent more than two years lying about Israel’s genocidal destruction of Gaza. No one should trust a word that comes out of his mouth.

As with the ongoing eradication of Gaza, and the earlier occupation of Iraq, the current attack on Iran is another US-Israeli criminal co-production – in fact, a continuation of the same project.

The sales pitch is clear.

Netanyahu talks of wishing to “crush the terror regime”, just as he earlier spoke of “eradicating” Hamas in Gaza.

Trump similarly claims a defeated Iran is the key to a “totally different Middle East“. After the launch of air strikes at the weekend, he urged Iranians to overthrow their “repressive theocracy“ and build a “free and peace-seeking Iran”.

It is all designed to echo fantasies about engineering a new Middle East that Israel and its ideological agents in Washington – known as the neoconservatives, or neocons – have been peddling for more than a quarter of a century, since before the futile invasions of Afghanistan and Iraq.

Condoleezza Rice, Bush’s secretary of state, spoke in 2006 of painful “birth pangs“ the region would have to endure while the US and Israeli militaries acted as midwife to this new era.

The first time around, the plan quickly came unstuck. US troops could not overcome fierce Iraqi resistance. Afghanistan was slowly recovered by the Taliban from its US and British occupiers. And Hezbollah dealt Israel a bloody nose when it tried to reoccupy south Lebanon in 2006.

Nonetheless, Round One was a horror show. It involved the mass slaughter of populations across the region by the US and Israel. Special US military black sites were established where torture flourished. International law was shredded. And the displacement of millions of people by war drove them towards Europe and stoked the rise of an anti-immigrant far right.

‘Regime change’ myth

Round Two, which Israel and the neocons have been champing at the bit to start ever since, was always going to be even uglier.

Its moment arrived in late 2023 with Hamas’s lethal, one-day breakout from the Gaza concentration camp where Palestinians – some 2.3 million in number by that time – had been imprisoned by Israel for decades.

Insisting on the right to “retaliate”, Israel launched a genocidal campaign of indiscriminate air strikes. The tiny coastal enclave was levelled, many tens – more likely, hundreds – of thousands of Palestinians were killed, and the entire population left homeless and destitute.

But that devastation – just like Israel’s parallel campaign to starve Gaza’s people – was not simply a response to Hamas’s attack on 7 October 2023, though it has been taboo to suggest otherwise.

Israel long had a plan for “remaking” the Middle East, one that dated back even before Netanyahu’s rise to power.

It is still unclear how much Israel’s template for a transformed Middle East accords with Washington’s, though analysts usually refer loosely to both in terms of “regime change”. But that is a misnomer. Even for Washington, regime change precludes installing a democratic leader representing the will of the Iranian people.

Secretary of War Pete Hegseth, who served in Iraq, was more honest than recent predecessors in dismissing the idea that anything benevolent would emerge from this illegal attack.

“No stupid rules of engagement, no nation-building quagmire, no democracy-building exercise, no politically correct wars,” he told reporters.

There is good reason for that aversion. The last time Iran had a democratic government, in the early 1950s, its secular, socialist prime minister, Mohammad Mossadegh, outraged the West by nationalising Iran’s oil industry for the benefit of Iranians.

The CIA’s Operation Ajax toppled him in 1953 and reinstated the brutal Mohammad Reza Pahlavi as monarch, or Shah, allowing the US and Britain to take back control of Iran’s oil.

The backlash was 26 years coming. Islamic clerics rode an outpouring of popular hatred for the US and Israeli-backed Shah to launch their revolution.

Unhinged minority

Washington would doubtless like “regime change” in the form of installing Reza Pahlavi, the eldest son of the Shah, as a new autocratic, western puppet.

Israel might be happy with that conclusion too.

But no one in either Washington or Tel Aviv really imagines Iran can be bombed into accepting the return of a cruel client leader like the Shah.

All that the US has managed to prove so far is the obvious: that large numbers of Iranians can be driven to the streets in protest, as they were in late December, if they and their country are impoverished beyond endurance by a sustained and pitiless regime of US economic sanctions.

But whatever the insinuations of western politicians and media, Iranians angry at being driven into penury are neither a coherent political movement nor are they likely to be receptive to supplications from the very US elites that have spent years bankrupting their country.

If the idea that an Iranian opposition is poised to sweep to power looks plausible, it is only because western media has been priming their audiences with two likely falsehoods.

First, that the Iranian regime has no mass support. And second, that those out protesting exclusively blame their plight on their own rulers rather than reserving a share of their anger for external actors meddling maliciously in their lives.

A few wealthy Iranian exiles – those keen once again to profit from selling off Iran’s silverware to colonial western masters – may be cheering on the bombing of Iranian schoolchildren from the safety of western TV studios. But it would be unwise to imagine they represent anything more than a small, unhinged minority.

Maga turmoil

Unlike the muddle caused in Washington by the need to placate the US public, Israel’s long-term plan for “remaking” the Middle East is clear-sighted.

In Tel Aviv, there is no interest in “regime change” unless the new regime is willing to subordinate itself – as the Gulf states have done – to Israel as regional overlord.

With no likelihood of that, Israel wants what would be better termed “regime overthrow” or “regime collapse”: the wholesale destruction of Iran’s infrastructure, the dissolution of all governmental and military authority, and the creation of a power vacuum in which Israel can manipulate rival actors and foment a permanent and enervating civil war.

Sounds familiar?

That is because the attack on Iran accords with the same disastrous US military strategy employed by Israel’s neocon allies in Washington in the assaults on Afghanistan, Iraq, Libya, Syria and Yemen before October 2023.

Trump was brought to power precisely because he promised he would stop the “forever wars“ – wars for Israel – that have created chaos across the Middle East and directly fed new forms of militant Islamic extremism, from al-Qaeda to Islamic State.

Understandably, his Maga movement is now in turmoil over the attack on Iran.

But Trump, electorally dependent on the votes of the vehemently pro-Israel Christian evangelicals and financially dependent on big Israel donors like Miriam Adelson, was never going to stray far from the existing playbook.

Since October 2023, backed by the Biden administration, Israel has rolled out its regime overthrow wars in Gaza, in Lebanon, and once again in Syria. Each is now militarily eviscerated and barely governable.

Trump did not object to those wars – and their primary purpose was to pave the way to Iran’s isolation from its regional allies, leaving it exposed enough for the current attack.

This has followed an entirely predictable script, as the four-star general Wesley Clark admitted back in 2007. Shortly after the 2001 Twin Towers attack, he was shown a classified briefing paper for a Pentagon plan to “take down” seven countries, starting in Iraq and ending with Iran.

Pact with the devil

Washington’s western allies may be privately uncomfortable at being visibly associated with another illegal US-Israeli war. But in supporting more than two years of genocide in Gaza, they already made their pact with the devil. There is no going back now.

Which is why Britain, France, Germany, Canada and Australia all dutifully lined up behind the Trump administration as the mayhem began. 

The first reaction of Mark Carney, Canada’s prime minister, was to eat the words he delivered at Davos in January: that it was time for “middle powers” like his to stop “living within a lie“ of US-led benevolence and instead establish their own strategic autonomy to advance a more honest foreign policy.

Carney issued a statement at the weekend throwing Canada’s full weight behind the US and Israel’s egregiously illegal war of aggression on Iran – what international law defines as the “supreme international crime” – only to have to walk it back when faced with a domestic backlash. 

British Prime Minister Keir Starmer, meanwhile, has handed Trump the keysto UK airbases for what he duplicitously terms “defensive purposes”.

Someone needs to explain to Starmer, once a famed human rights lawyer, that you cannot assist “defensively” a war of aggression. In doing so, you become an aggressor too.

The timeline of the Pentagon’s 2001 regime overthrow plan seen by Gen Clark was “seven countries in five years”. As events have proved a quarter of a century on, that scenario was wildly unrealistic.

There is no reason to assume that the US or Israel has any clearer insight than it did in 2001 into how this will play out. The only certainty is that it will not go according to plan.

Israel has wiped tiny Gaza off the map, but Hamas is still standing and in charge of the ruins, doubtless filled with an anger and desire for revenge burning even more intensely.

Iran is a far, far bigger proposition than Gaza, or any of the other previous targets of Israeli-US attacks.

The embers of resistance – in Gaza, Iraq, Lebanon, Syria, Yemen, and potentially in new sites like Bahrain – have not been snuffed out. And now, with the attack on Iran, they are being fanned into a fire with every new crime, every new outrage, every new atrocity.

Thursday, March 5, 2026

Ken Klippenstein: The Public Fires Kristi Noem

The Public Fires Kristi Noem

That's not the story you'll hear from Washington

Kristi Noem during a better time in her life

Donald Trump today announced his decision to remove Kristi Noem as Secretary of Homeland Security, the first cabinet level official firing of his second term.

The media will credit her fall to some shady no-bid contract she was behind, her use of a private jet, or administration rivals like Stephen Miller and whatever boring DC drama. But the real reason is obvious: public activism.

The revolution is here, as I wrote last month, and the people of Minneapolis, Chicago and Los Angeles deserve credit for forcing Donald Trump to reassess the nature of his immigration war, and creating a massive shift in public opinion.

Yet the major media, which sees Washington as the main character in every story, remains oblivious to people power. Just take a look at The New York Times’ story on Noem’s departure. It solely ties it to her Congressional testimony about a shady border security ad campaign contracted out to former homeland spokesperson Tricia McLaughlin’s husband. It finally mentions Minneapolis for the first time in the seventeenth paragraph(!)

The first cabinet member ousting of his administration—before Hegseth, Bondi, or Kash Patel—is a big deal. 

One senior ICE official I asked about Noem’s firing attributed it in large part to the Minneapolis protests, saying the whole episode has been devastating for ICE and its morale. The evidence for this seems overwhelming, with Congress repeatedly raising the killings of Alex Pretti and Renee Good repeatedly throughout Noem’s Senate hearing yesterday.

Trump seemed to hint at his frustration with Noem’s my-way-or-the-highway arrogance in his announcement on Truth Social. Touting her replacement, Senator Markwayne Mullen, Trump said: “Markwayne truly gets along well with people.”

Ouch.

Something tells me Americans were more incensed by the flagrant and needless killing of two American protesters than some sketchy contract award or incomprehensible Trumpworld beef that the media will point to.

The real story here is the political revolution that led to the fall of ICE Barbie. This is the same revolution that led to Zohran Mamdani’s victory in New York City, deemed impossible (until it wasn’t) by the news media and expert consensus. It's the revolution that just produced the biggest Senate primary turnout in Texas since 2008—with Democrats Talarico and Crockett both outpolling their Republican opponents (again, in Texas). It is the same revolution that has shifted public opinion regarding “ironclad” support for Israel in its many wars, and is skeptical about Trump’s war in Iran. 

And the revolution isn’t a partisan phenomenon. Just look at the Epstein transparency movement, an everything-bagel of American politics that seems to run the gamut of public opinion, from liberal feminists and Me Too advocates to Evangelical and QAnon anti-human trafficking warriors. If this motley group seems weird to you, well, America is weird, so democracy will reflect that. Gone are the days of politics being the exclusive hangout of the silver-haired blue bloods, solemn statesmen and A-students.

Maybe that’s why Congress is seeing a record-shattering number of incumbent politicians who are not seeking reelection, while a strikingly high number of gubernatorial races are also up for grabs. The House of Representatives is on track to break a record, with some 32 Republicans and 21 Democrats not seeking re-election. The Senate is in a similar retreat, an effect not only of a tired and distrustful public that is sick of the status quo, but one precipitated by earlier clamoring for the gerontocracy to step away.

Unlike the Tea Party or the so-called Democratic Tea Party, the punditocracy keeps missing the point by framing this as a partisan battle when it's really just people who are fed up and getting louder.

It’s a revolution against what is supposedly possible, practical, or plausible—cudgels Washington uses to get ordinary people to check out because they don’t have the right credentials to have an authorized opinion and this is all just more complicated than you can understand. The message is to be happy with what they’re given, with what’s doable. People are done with these limp dick excuses for inaction.

The protests I’ve covered this year like No Kings make it clear that people are done waiting for change to come from Washington. They laugh at the notion that meaningful opposition might come from the Democrats, or the notion that the Republicans might stand up to Trump.

When I first read about Rep. Tony Gonzales of Texas allegedly pressuring a married female staffer into having a relationship, leading to her committing suicide by setting herself on fire, my first thought was how quickly they were going to sweep this under the rug. But staffers in his office—conservative Republicans, mind you—got the word out and kept the pressure up enough that now other congresspeople (including Republicans) are calling for his resignation, which seems inevitable at this point.

If only such energy were acknowledged and encouraged by the media.

This fall, the Democrats will win at least one chamber of Congress and the “story” will be that it’s all about Trump and the renewal/resurgence/recovery of the Democratic Party. From day one, the media will focus on the next horse race, the 2028 presidential elections, and the sage will talk about the “fight” for the future. In my mind, this is a people-powered, anti-incumbency uprising aiming to kick out far more than just Donald Trump—or Kristi Noem, for that matter. 

On that note, Trump has appointed Noem to be Special Envoy for “The Shield of The Americas”—whatever that is. The people won this fight.

Subscribe if you have no idea wtf “The Shield of The Americas” is 

Jonathan Cook: In Iran, Israel’s morbid military cult now has the US fully in its grip

 In Iran, Israel’s morbid military cult now has the US fully in its grip

In this catastrophic war of choice, it is Tehran fighting a rearguard action to restore geopolitical sanity. If Iran loses, god only knows where Israel and the US will drag the world next

Jonathan Cook

March 5 

The admission this week by US secretary of state Marco Rubio, echoed by Mike Johnson, Speaker of the House of Representatives, that Israel forced Washington’s hand in attacking Iran has rightly caused consternation. 

Breathing life into something that would normally be treated as an antisemitic trope, Rubio argued that the Trump administration had been left with no choice but to attack Iran because, had it not, Israel would have launched an attack anyway, exposing US soldiers to retaliation.

Rubio stated: “The president made the very wise decision: We knew that there was going to be an Israeli action, we knew that that would precipitate an attack against American forces, and we knew that if we didn’t preemptively go after them before they launched those attacks, we would suffer higher casualties.” 

Rubio was using the term “preemptively” in a highly irregular and misleading way.

In international law, aggression is an illegal application of force – the “supreme international crime”, according to the 1950 principles set out by the Nuremberg war crimes tribunal. But there is a potential mitigating factor if the attacking state can show it was acting pre-emptively: that is, it was acting to prevent a plausible, immediate and severe threat of attack.

Rubio, however, was not suggesting that the US acted “preemptively” against a threat from Iran. He meant Washington had acted preemptively to stop its ally, Israel, from setting off a chain of military events that would lead to US soldiers being harmed.

Had the Trump administration really been acting preemptively in these circumstances, the US should have attacked Israel, not Iran.

Paper tiger

But Rubio’s comment begged a further question: Why didn’t Washington simply tell Israel it was forbidden from starting a war against Iran without US approval?

After all, Israel would be incapable of mounting any kind of attack on Iran without the critical support provided by the US.

Israel has had to rely on help from US military bases dotted around the region, as well as the Arab states that host those bases.

The attack would have been quite inconceivable without the backup of a massive armada of US war ships sent to the region by Trump.

Israel can withstand Iranian retaliation only because it gets a degree of protection from missile interception systems provided and funded by the US.

And on top of all that, Israel is regional hegemon only because it gets massive subsidies from the US – worth many billions of dollars a year – to preserve it as one of the strongest militaries in the world.

In other words, Israel would have found it impossible to wage war on Iran alone. It is a paper tiger without the US.

Rubio’s comment suggested one of two possibilities: either that the US, with the strongest military in world history, is under the thumb of the tiny state of Israel; or that Trump has made his own military, the strongest-ever, servile to Israel.

Whichever it is, it is hard to square with Trump’s repeated assertion that he is putting America First.

This point is so glaringly obvious it is presumably the reason why Rubio was forced to walk back his comments the next day. Meanwhile, Trump hurriedly suggested it was he who had forced Israel’s hand to attack Iran, not the other way round. 

Geopolitical insanity

The more likely truth is not that Israel forced Trump’s hand. It is that he was seduced by Israeli prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s false claim that an attack on Iran would be a cakewalk – if they struck at a moment when they could be sure of killing Iran’s supreme leader, Ali Khamenei.

Such a decapitation strike, Trump was led to believe, would be a repeat of his Venezuela “success”, when he kidnapped President Nicolas Maduro from Caracas to bring him to trial in New York.

In Venezuela, the flagrant flouting of international law by the US was intended to be the equivalent of pointing a loaded shotgun at the head of Maduro’s replacement, Delcy Rodriguez. Do as we say, or the new president gets it from both barrels.

Netanyahu knew exactly how to sell Trump, still giddy on the noxious fumes of this lawbreaking venture, the idea that he could repeat the exercise in Iran. The ayatollah’s successor would similarly be putty in his hands.

Which is why, in this catastrophic war of choice by the US and Israel, it is Tehran fighting a rearguard action to restore a little geopolitical sanity. If Iran loses, or the US succeeds without paying a fearsome price, god only knows where Israel and Washington will drag the world next.

The world’s fate, in a real sense, is Tehran’s hands.

‘Israelisation’ of the US

What the joint attack on Iran demonstrates most clearly is how much Netanyahu has succeeded over the past quarter of a century in “Israelising” Washington and the Pentagon.

The US has always waged illegal wars of aggression. It has always been more gangster than global policeman. But just because Washington was run by ruthless criminals, it did not mean it was incapable of getting still more deranged, still more psychopathic.

That is what Netanyahu has been working on. And Trump is now giving full rein to the Israelisation of the US. The clues are everywhere.

On Wednesday secretary of war Pete Hegseth – the traditional title of “secretary of defence” presumably sounded too law-abiding – dropped any pretence of being the good guy.

He insisted US forces were acting “without mercy” and that the Iranian regime “are toast”. The US would deliver “death and destruction all day long”. 

The previous day he had set out the game plan: “No stupid rules of engagement, no nation-building quagmire, no democracy building exercise, no politically correct wars.”

This isn’t the traditional rhetoric of US administrations seeking to flaunt the West’s superior values, or claiming to be on a civilising mission to the rest of the world.

This is the rhetoric of colonial arrogance, of the same military medievalism long espoused by Israeli leaders.

Hegseth sounded all too much like General Moshe Dayan, Israel’s defence minister in the 1960s. He famously set out Israel’s overarching military doctrine: “Israel must be like a mad dog, too dangerous to bother.” 

‘Mad dog’ tactics

Before its attack, the US had spent years trying to starve the people of Iran into an uprising, just as Israel blockaded and starved the people of Gaza for some 16 years on the assumption that they would be encouraged to overthrow Hamas.

The strategy failed in both cases. Why? Because it ignored the simplest of facts: that the people being abused are human beings, who will always choose freedom and dignity over degradation and subordination.

Now led by the nose into a humiliating war of attrition with Iran, the US is lashing out like a “mad dog” – just as Israel did in Gaza after it was humiliated by Hamas’ one-day breakout from the concentration camp Israel had created for Palestinians there.

Hegseth’s “no rules of engagement” means the US is now open about the fact that all of Iran has been turned into a free-fire zone, just as Gaza was.

Which explains why one of the first targets of the US and Israeli strikes was a primary school where more than 170 people were killed, most of them children under the age of 12. 

According to reports even in the rightwing Telegraph newspaper, US and Israeli attacks have already created an “apocalypse” in Tehran. Essential civilian infrastructure is being targeted, such as hospitals, schools and police stations. Residential areas are being carpet-bombed, and food and medical supplies are rapidly running out. 

Rubio has vowed that much worse is to come.

The US has evidently been captured by the depraved logic of the Dahiya doctrine, which Israel developed in its repeated attacks on Lebanon and further refined over two and a half years in Gaza.

Smouldering ruin

The Dahiya doctrine goes much further than simply the idea of asymmetric warfare inherent to attacks by a stronger party on a weaker party.

Under the doctrine, civilian casualties are no longer unfortunate “collateral damage” from strikes against military assets. Rather, the civilian population are treated as no less legitimate targets of attack than military infrastructure. 

For Israel, the Dahiya doctrine grew out of an acceptance that there were no meaningful war aims that Israel could achieve in its battles against the Palestinians it ruled over or against Hizbullah’s resistance in Lebanon.

Israel was unsatisfied simply with pacifying the Palestinians. It knew they could not be pacified indefinitely, given that it had no intention of ever arriving at a political settlement with them. The fabled two-state solution was purely for western consumption; it never had any meaningful constituency of support in Israel.

Rather, Israel’s goal was to use overwhelming and indiscriminate violence to terrify the Palestinians into ethnically cleansing themselves from the region, as had partially occurred in 1948.

Similarly, in Lebanon, where the Dahiya doctrine was first developed, the goal was not to reach a political accommodation with Hizbullah through a show of force. Hizbullah had made clear it would never resign itself to watching the Palestinians erased from their homeland.

The goal was to wreak so much pain on Lebanon that other religious sects would turn on Hizbullah and plunge the country into protracted civil war, leaving Israel free to get on with the expulsion – and now genocide – of the Palestinian people.

Under the Dahiya doctrine, Israel implicitly acknowledged that it was not fighting simply against militants but against the wider society from which those militants were drawn. It had to accept that there could be no victory, no surrender, assessed in traditional military terms. So what it had to do instead was leave a smouldering ruin.

Time and again, Israel has used massive firepower on civilian infrastructure and residential areas to break the will of a society – to drive it back into “the Stone Age”, to use the terminology of Israeli generals – so that the population would expend their energies on survival rather than resistance.

This is what Hegseth and Rubio are now declaring as Washington’s war aims in Iran. A wilful, savage demonstration of mass destruction to no purpose other than the demonstration itself.

Jonathan Cook 5d
If you want to understand the terrifying logic behind Trump's attack on Iran, Marco Rubio laid it out at Munich this month. I explain it here: https://jonathancook.substack.com/p/rubio-declared-a-return-to-brutal
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Morbid pathology

This is not a winning strategy, military or political. It is not even a failed strategy. It is the morbid pathology of a cult.

Which explains a flood of complaints over the initial days of Tump’s war on Iran from US soldiers about their commanders. There have been at least 110 so far, according to reporting by Jonathan Larsen here on Substack.

In one to the Military Religious Freedom Foundation (MRFF), a non combat-unit commander told non-commissioned officers that Trump was “anointed by Jesus to light the signal fire in Iran to cause Armageddon and mark his return to Earth”.

The Department of War under Hegseth, an evangelical Christian who believes the West is on a “crusade” against Islam, appears to be riding roughshod over First Amendment rules against proselytizing within the armed forces.

The theocratisation of US armed forces is not new. George W Bush spokes in terms of a “crusade” against terror nearly a quarter of a century ago. But the process appears to have reached a point now that the top ranks of the US chain of command are deeply imbued with an evangelical fervour for war in which Israel plays a central part.

Mikey Weinstein, the president of MRFF and an Air Force veteran who served in Ronald Reagan’s White House, told Larsen his group had been “inundated” with soldiers reporting the “euphoria of their commanders and command chains as to how this new ‘biblically-sanctioned’ war is clearly the undeniable sign of the expeditious approach of the fundamentalist Christian ‘End Times’.” 

In “End Times” beliefs, based on the Book of Revelations, a terrible battle between good and evil takes place at Armageddon – a site in present-day northern Israel – which leads to the Messiah’s return to Earth and a Great Rapture in which believing Christians rise up to be with God.

Weinstein added: “Many of their commanders are especially delighted with how graphic this battle will be, zeroing in on how bloody all of this must become in order to fulfill and be in 100% accordance with fundamentalist Christian end-of-the-world eschatology.”

The word of God

Central to these beliefs is the gathering of Jews, as God’s Chosen People, into the Land of Israel – a much larger area than that covered by the modern state of Israel.

For Christian fundamentalists such as Hegseth and a growing number of US commanders, Israel is the catalyst for the End Times.

For very obvious reasons, Israel has been nuturing its ties with the huge numbers of Christian fundamentalists in the US. They are politically active – their vote secured the presidency for Trump – and they treat Israel as a critically important domestic issue rather than a foreign policy matter.

They are eager for Israel to seize wide swathes of the Middle East, and largely indifferent about what that entails for the Palestinians or the other peoples of the region.

This all neatly dovetails with the ideology espoused by Netanyahu and the Israeli military command, which years ago was taken over by the same religious-extremist zealots who lead the violent settler movement that systematically attacks Palestinians in the West Bank and steals their land.

As the Israeli military launched its genocide in Gaza, Netanyahu urged soldiers on by telling them they were fighting the nation of Amalek – the enemy of the ancient Israelites.

In the Bible, God commanded King Saul to carry out the total annihilation of the Amalekites, putting to death every single man, woman, child and infant, as well as all livestock.

As can be seen in the erasure of Gaza, Israeli soldiers accepted their mission quite literally. After all, they were not just carrying out Netanyahu’s orders, but an order from God.

‘Clash of civilisations’

Netanyahu has not relied solely on the sacralisation of indiscriminate warfare by his own and the US army. He has also cultivated a wider, racist, anti-Muslim mood in the US and Europe to smooth Israel’s path as it levels large parts of the Middle East.

He has vigorourly promoted the idea of a “clash of civilisations”, the idea that a “Judeo-Christian West” is engaged in a permanent, joint war against the supposed barbarism of the Islamic world.

The synergy between a US military in thrall to Christian fundamentalism and an Israeli military in thrall to a biblically inspired Jewish supremacism is all to clearly on show now in Iran.

This combined military juggernaut has no interest in safeguarding human rights.

It recognises no distinction between civilian and military targets.

It prioritises its own soldiers’ safety – as enforcers of God’s providence – over the civilians those soldiers are attacking.

And it believes, in crushing the life out of the people of Iran, it is advancing divine will.

This is the true face of the war machine that upholds “western civilisation”. These are the real values the West is fighting for in Iran. The rest is a smokescreen.