Your average American who followed the debate
over the Iran deal would
have gotten the impression that Tehran is a
military giant, with a Wehrmacht that even without nuclear weapons is capable
of unleashing a blitzkrieg across the entire Middle East.
The hard facts are different. In a valuable recent article in Foreign Policy, Trita Parsi and Tyler
Cullis point out:
* Iran spends $15 billion a year on
its military.
* By contrast, Saudi
Arabia spends $80 billion — five times as much — and the United Arab Emirates
budgets another $23 billion.
Parsi and Cullis conclude,
Far
from being a hegemonic power, able to domineer and subdue its regional rivals
with impunity, Iran
has a regional position that remains untenable, all while its regional rivals
procure weapons systems that make themselves increasingly invulnerable.
And what about Israel? The International Institute
for Strategic Studies estimates its annual spending at $23.2 billion, over 50
per cent more than Iran.
Approving the Iran
deal will not end the efforts to demonize Tehran
and grossly exaggerate its military potential. In another vital piece in Foreign Policy, Stephen Walt warns that
the attempts to undercut the arrangement are already starting. He explains,
. .
. having secured a landmark agreement rolling back Iran’s nuclear program, a
bunch of influential people are now demanding the United States take a variety
of steps whose avowed purpose and likely effect will be to keep U.S.-Iranian
relations trapped in a spiral of suspicion, demonization, and counterproductive
rivalry.
And what motivates some of these hostile people?
Professor Walt again:
For
AIPAC and the rest of the hard-line wing of the Israel lobby, this agreement is a
rare but telling defeat. Their consolation prize, however, is the opportunity
to extort some more military aid for Israel
and to do whatever they can to ensure Iran remains a pariah state. The
last thing they want is a Middle East where the United
States can talk readily to all the significant actors,
and where the Iranian bogeyman is no longer there to distract people from the
still-unresolved conflict between Israel and its Palestinian
subjects.
17/09/2015 en MONDOWEISS.
http://mondoweiss.net/2015/09/spends-military-israel?utm_source=Mondoweiss+List&utm_campaign=ce060ae6ec-RSS_EMAIL_CAMPAIGN&utm_medium=email&utm_term=0_b86bace129-ce060ae6ec-398519201
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