US
War Plans and the "Strait of Hormuz Incident": Just Who Threatens Whom?
By
Michel Chossudovsky
Global Research, January 11, 2008
Instigated
by the Pentagon, a bungled media disinformation campaign directed against Iran
has unfolded.
Five
Iranian patrol boats, visibly with no military capabilities, have been accused
of threatening three US war ships in the Strait of Hormuz. According to a Pentagon
spokesman:
The
Iranian vessels ``showed reckless, dangerous and potentially hostile intent,''
Pentagon spokesman Bryan Whitman said. The encounter [on 6 January 2008] lasted
between 15 and 25 minutes, he said.
``We
haven't had an event of this serious nature recently,'' Whitman said, referring
to encounters between U.S. Navy vessels and Iranian warships. (Bloomberg, January
7, 2008)
At
one point the U.S. ships received a threatening radio call from the Iranians,
"to the effect that they were closing (on) our ships and that the ships would
explode the U.S. ships would explode," Cosgriff said. The Associated
Press Pentagon Says Ships Harassed by Iran)
The
Pentagon said the incident was serious. It described the Iranian actions as careless,
reckless and potentially hostile and said Tehran should provide an explanation.
(Arab Times, 7 January 2008)
Media
Disinformation
Coinciding
with Bush's Middle East trip, the intent of the Pentagon's propaganda ploy is
to present Iran as the aggressor.
The
patrol activities of these boats are presented as "a serious threat"
and an act of "provocation". The London Times goes even further: in
its January 7 morning headlines the Iranian speed boats, barely 30 feet long,
were apparently preparing "a suicide attack" against US war ships equipped
with advanced state of art weaponary:
"Iran
speedboats 'threatened suicide attack on US' in Strait of Hormuz" (London
Times headlines, January 7, 2008)
Iranian
patrol boats to be used in a kamikaze style "terrorist" mission, to
"explode the American vessels"? (see photos above)
What
US war vessels are we dealing with?
How
do the speedboats compare in size and military capabilities to the US destroyers
and frigates, which Iran is allegedly threatening to blow up?
According
to the reports there were five Iranian speedboats and three American warships
which had entered the Strait of Hormuz:
USS
Hopper (DDG-70) is an Arleigh Burke-class guided missile destroyer equipped inter
alia with Tomahawk cruise missiles, which could instantly blow the "living
day lights" out of the Iranian speed boats.
The
second vessel threatened by the Iranian suicide speedboats is a Ticonderoga-class
guided missile cruiser USS Port Royal CG73 which carries a sophisticated weapons
arsenal including Tomahawk and Harpoon missiles, a Phalanx CIWS 2, not to mention
Sikorsky SH-60 and Seahawk LAMPS III helicopters. Again the threatening speedboats
would be destroyed almost instantly.
The
third vessel threatened by the Iranian patrol boats is frigate USS Ingraham also
equiped inter alia with launchers for Mark 46 torpedoes and LAMPS III helicopters
What
we are dealing with?
"Iranian
speedboats harassed US warships and threatened to blow them up in a radio communication."
A naval "suicide attack" in international waters says the Times of London.
But
in fact with the exception of alleged verbal abuse on the part of the Iranian
coastguard, which Tehran denies in a carefully worded statement, nothing happened
other than a routine patrol operation.
Just
Who is Threatening Whom?
The
incident must be put in a historical perspective.
Realities
are turned upside down. Known and documented since 2003, the Pentagon has drawn
up detailed and precise plans for U.S. sponsored attacks on both Iran and Syria.
Israel and NATO are partners in this military adventure.
Moreover,
barely mentioned by the Western media, there has since Summer 2006, been a massive
concentration of US Naval power in the Persian Gulf and the Arabian Sea, which
are part of those war preparations. Since 2006, US war ships with advanced weapons
systems have been stationed almost continuously within proximity of Iranian territorial
waters.
Large
scale US war games have been conducted.
Numerous
acts of provocation directed against Iran have been undertaken.
These
war vessels are deployed in the context of US-NATO-Israeli war plans in relation
to Iran. The first phase of these war plans was formulated in the immediate wake
of the US led Iraq invasion in July 2003, under a scenario entitled "Theater
Iran Near Term". (TIRANNT). (See Michel Chossudovsky, "Theater Iran
Near Term", Global Research, February 2007)
The
alleged Iranian Nuclear Threat
The
Pentagon's war plans continue to be based on the justification that Iran is in
defiance of the "international community" and is actively involved in
developing nuclear weapons.
In
a bitter irony, the first phase of these war plans under TIRANNT was formulated
at a time when US intelligence confirmed that Iran had abandoned its nuclear weapons
program.
The existence of this Fall 2003 intelligence was made available in the recently
released 2007 National Intelligence Estimate (NIE):
"We
judge that in the fall of 2003, Tehran halted its nuclear weapons program... We
continue to assess with moderate-to-high confidence that Iran does not currently
have a nuclear weapon. (See Iran: Nuclear Intentions and Capabilities, NIE
2007. http://www.dni.gov/press_releases/20071203_release.pdf)
This
classified 2003 intelligence, declassified four years later in the 2007 was in
all likelihood available to the White House and Pentagon in Fall 2003, which suggests
that the main justification for US and allied war preparations is based on a big
lie. The 2007 NIE report states that Iran abandoned its nuclear weapons program.
There is no concrete evidence to the effect that Iran had a nuclear program.
Let
us return to the speedboat incident and examine how realties can be twisted by
the Western media. .
There
is currently a massive concentration of naval power in the Persian Gulf and the
Arabian Sea.
In
addition to the three war ships which apparently had been harassed by Iran speedboats,
the entire US Fifth Fleet is stationed within proximity of the Strait of Hormuz
and the Iranian coastline. The Fifth Fleet is under U.S. Naval Forces Central
Command stationed in the Bahrain off the Strait of Hormuz Fleet.