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As Trump Backs Down, the Pips Squeak by Tom Luongo!
(2019-07-21 at 09:10:08 )
As Trump Backs Down, the Pips Squeak by Tom Luongo
Last week it was all fire and brimstone. The United States was threatening more sanctions on Iran, the Brits were seizing oil tankers and Iran was violating the JCPOA.
This week things look different all of a sudden. An oil tanker goes dark while passing through the Strait of Hormuz, the story fails to get any real traction and the United States allows Iranian Foreign Minister, recently sanctioned, to do his job at the United Nations.
Trump then holds a cabinet meeting where he reiterates that "We are not looking for regime change. We want them out of Yemen."
I thought National Security Advisor John Bolton said the United States would apply pressure until "the pips squeak."
Where the pips are squeaking is on the Arabian Peninsula, not across the Persian Gulf in Bandar Abbas.
Specifically, I am talking about the United Arab Emirates. The UAE sent a delegation to Tehran recently that coincided with its partial withdrawal of troops from Yemen.
That meeting, according to Elijah Magnier, focused on Emirates realizing they are in the middle of this conflict, up to their skyscrapers.
"The UAE would like to avoid seeing their country transformed into a battlefield between the United States and Iran in case of war, particularly if Trump is re-elected.
The Emirates officials noted that the United States did not respond to Irans retaliation in the Gulf and in particularly when the United States drone was downed.
This indicates that Iran is prepared for confrontation and will implement its explicit menace, to hit any country from which the United States carries out their attacks on Iran.
We want to be out of all this", an Emirates official told his Iranian counterpart in Tehran.
Iran promised to talk to the Yemeni officials to avoid hitting targets in Dubai and Abu Dhabi as long as the UAE pulls out its forces from the Yemen and stops this useless war.
Saudi Crown Prime Mohammad Bin Salman is finding himself without his main Emirates ally, caught in a war that is unwinnable for the Saudi regime.
The Yemeni Houthis have taken the initiative, hitting several Saudi strategic targets. Saudi Arabia has no realistic objectives and seems to have lost the appetite to continue the war in Yemen.
So, with the Houthis successfully striking major targets inside Saudi Arabia and the UAE abruptly pulling forces out, the war in Yemen has reached a critical juncture.
Remember, the Republican-controlled Senate approved a bill withdrawing support for the war back in March, which the White House had to veto in support of its fading hopes for its Israeli-Palestinian deal pushed by Jared Kushner.
But things have changed significantly since then as that deal has been indefinitely postponed with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu facing a second election this fall after he failed to secure a stable coalition.
After that there was the failed economic conference in Bahrain in June where Mr. Kushner revealed the economic part of the plan to a half-empty room where only the backers of the plan showed any real support.
And that is the important part of this story, because it was Mr. Kushners plan which was the impetus for all of this insane anti-Iran belligerence in the first place.
Uniting the Gulf states around a security pact leveraging the United States-Israeli-Saudi alliance was part of what was supposed to pressure the Palestinians to the bargaining table.
By placing maximum economic sanctions on both Hezbollah in Lebanon and Iran while continuing to foment chaos in Syria was supposed to force Israels enemies to fold under the pressure which would, in turn, see the Palestinians surrender to the will of Kushner and Bibi.
The problem is, it did not work.
And now President Trump is left holding the bag on this idiotic policy which culminated in an obvious provocation when Iran shot down a $220 million Global Hawk surveillance drone, nearly sparking a wider war.
But what it did was expose the United States and not Iran as the cause of the current problems.
Since then President Trump finally had to stand up and be the grown-up in the room, such as he is, and put an end to this madness.
The UAE understood the potential for Irans asymmetric response to United States belligerence.
The Saudis cannot win the war in Yemen that Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman began.
The fallout from this war has been to push Qatar out of the orbit of the rest of the Gulf Cooperation Council, cutting deals with Iran over developing the massive North Pars gas field and pipelines to Europe.
And now the UAE has realized it is facing an existential threat to its future in any confrontation between Iran and the United States
What is telling is that President Trump is making Yemen the issue to negotiate down rather than Irans nuclear ambitions.
Because it was never about the nuclear program. It was always about Irans ballistic missile program.
And Secretary of State Mike Pompeo would have us believe that for the first time Irans missile program is on the negotiating table.
I have no idea if that is actually true, but it is a dead giveaway that it is what the United States is after.
The main reason why President Trump and Netanyahu are so angry about the JCPOA is the mutual outsourcing of the nuclear ballistic missile program by Iran and North Korea.
North Korea was working on the warhead while Iran worked on the ballistic missile.
President Trump tweeted about this nearly two years ago, confirming this link. I wrote about it when he did this.
Nearly everything I said about North Korea in the blog post is now applicable to Iran. This was why he hated the JCPOA, it did not actually stop the development of Iran and North Korea into nuclear states.
But tearing up the deal was the wrong approach to solving the problem.
Stop pouring hundreds of billions of dollars in weapons to the region, as Irans Foreign Minister Javad Zarif pointed out recently, is the problem. By doing this he took both Russian President Vladimir Putin and Chinese Premier Xi Jinping off his side of the table.
Now he stands isolated with only the provocateurs - Israel, the United Kingdom, Saudi Arabia - trying to goad him forward into doing something he does not want to do.
And all of those provocations that have occurred in the past month have failed to move either President Trump or the Iranians.
They have learned patience, possibly from Putin.
Call it geopolitical rope-a-dope, if you will.
I said last month that the key to solving Irans nuclear ambitions was solving the relationship with North Korea.
President Trump, smartly, went there, doing what only he could do, talk with DPRK Chairman Kim Jong-Un and reiterate his sincere desire to end proliferation of nuclear weapons.
He can get Iran to the table but he is going to have to give up something.
So, now framing the negotiations with Iran around their demands we stop arming the Saudis is politically feasible.
President Trump can not, at this point, back down directly with Iran.
Yemen is deeply unpopular here and ending our support of it would be a boon to President Trump politically.
Trading that for some sanctions relief would be a good first step to solving the mess he is in and build some trust.
Firing John Bolton, which looks more likely every day, would be another.
He is already turning a blind eye to Iranian exports to China, and presumably, other places.
I think the Brits are acting independently trying to create havoc and burnish Foreign Secretary Jeremy Hunts resume as Prime Minister against Boris Johnson. That is why they hijacked the oil tanker.
But all the little distractions are nothing but poison pills to keep from discussing the real issues.
President Trump just cut through all that. So did Iran.
Let us hope they stay focused.
Reprinted here from the "Strategic Culture Foundation" provides a platform for exclusive analysis, research and policy comment on Eurasian and global affairs. We are covering political, economic, social and security issues worldwide. Since 2005 our journal has published thousands of analytical briefs and commentaries with the unique perspective of independent contributors. SCF works to broaden and diversify expert discussion by focusing on hidden aspects of international politics and unconventional thinking. Benefiting from the expanding power of the Internet, we work to spread reliable information, critical thought and progressive ideas.