“[Bolton]
calls for the preemptive bombing of Iran with dreary regularity during his many
Fox News appearances,” I wrote after he became Donald Trump’s national security
adviser in March of 2018, “and has labored for years to arrange the proper set
of circumstances that would allow Tehran to be rendered into a pile of rubble.”
I was
actually foolish enough to indulge in a brief moment of optimism after Bolton
was unceremoniously shown the door last week. There was talk of Secretary of
State Mike Pompeo taking on Bolton’s role like some dual use neo-Kissinger, but
that idea guttered out quickly. Trump could replace Bolton with Ghidorah the
Three-Headed Monster, I told myself, and war with Iran — the issue over which
Bolton reportedly lost his gig — would still be less likely. It felt like a
tiny reprieve in a chaotic age.
Yeah, about
that.
Yemen’s
Houthi rebels claimed responsibility on Saturday for drone attacks on the crown
jewel of Saudi Arabia’s petroleum empire: the Abqaiq oil facility, the centerpiece
of Saudi Arabia’s petroleum infrastructure, which sits astride the massive
Hijra Khurais oil field. Secretary of State Pompeo immediately accused Iran of
direct involvement in the attack. On Monday afternoon, Saudi Arabia claimed
that Iranian weapons were used in the attack. Iran has vehemently denied the
accusation.
Oil markets
reeled as news of the attack spread. In a world that runs on fossil fuels, the
attack was the equivalent of a punch in the heart.
Approximately
100 million barrels of oil are burned globally each day. With a stroke, the
drones wiped out nearly six percent of the oil that is globally consumed, and a
price hike is almost certain to follow. How high and for how long will depend
upon the speed with which Saudi Arabia can repair the facility. After the
attack, smoke from the fires at Abqaiq could be seen from space, and the rebels
have warned of further attacks to come against Saudi Arabia’s petroleum
centers.
Think of it
as Saudi Arabia’s 9/11, but without the enormous death toll. The U.S. was hit
in the money when the Twin Towers were attacked, causing enormous financial
disruption. By hitting Abqaiq, the attackers hit Saudi Arabia in its petroleum
breadbasket.
The Abqaiq
attack and 9/11 are both examples of a far less powerful group striking back at
an aggressor at a vulnerable, sensitive point of weakness. The Houthi rebels
have been at the receiving end of a brutal war Saudi Arabia has been waging in
Yemen since 2015. Some 90,000 Yemeni civilians have been killed by weapons sold
to Saudi Arabia by the U.S., and the U.S. has stood solidly by its staunch
regional ally amid howls of international outrage over the ongoing carnage.
Saudi Arabia
has been accused of deliberate atrocities during the Yemen war, such as
targeting civilians at hospitals, weddings and marketplaces, and in one notable
instance, a bus filled with children. The U.S., for its own part, spent years
before 9/11 raining bombs and fire on various portions of the Middle East.
Pompeo was
immediately out of the gate on Saturday with statements about possessing
“intelligence” that confirms Iran’s role in the attack, but failed to provide
it to the press. Trump, ever the balanced internationalist, tweeted that the
U.S. military is “locked and loaded depending on verification.”
If Trump
does commit the U.S. to a war in Iran on behalf of Saudi Arabia, it would
unsurprisingly be one of the worst calamities of an administration made of
calamities. The only surprise here is the fact that John Bolton will have to
watch it all on his flat-screen at home.
This is
particularly worrisome because relations with Iran are already disastrously
bad. During the period when Bolton enjoyed actual influence as Trump’s Shiny
New Thing, the U.S.’s poor relationship with Iran deteriorated noticeably. Over
the course of Bolton’s time in the White House, the Trump administration bailed
on a nuclear treaty with Iran that was working, and tried to turn an incident
in which oil tankers were attacked into casus belli for a war. Bolton wanted to
cry havoc after a U.S. drone was shot down in the region back in June, but
Trump did not let that dog off the leash.
That drone
incident was the moment Trump and Bolton’s relationship began to deteriorate.
That relationship went into a death spiral after Trump suggested opening talks
with Iran about its nuclear program and other issues. Bolton, of course, hated
the idea because peace with Iran would put a final end to his lifelong dream of
wiping that nation off the map.
With such
talks now in serious doubt, the idea of an Iran summit has transformed into a
bitter point of contention between the president and the media. In the
aftermath of the Abqaiq attack, news outlets pointed out that Trump has twice
said he would meet with Iranian leaders with “no conditions,” an assertion
later confirmed by Pompeo.
“The Fake
News is saying that I am willing to meet with Iran, ‘No Conditions,’” Trump
rage-tweeted on Saturday. “That is an incorrect statement (as usual!).” On
Monday, when asked in the Oval Office about the potential for war with Iran,
Trump unspooled yet another one of his verbal blue-plate specials for the
assembled media.
“Because we
were in a position where with a certain country, I won’t say which one, we may
have had conflict,” Trump said, for reasons no one can quite explain. “And he
said to me, sir, if you could delay it because we’re very low on ammunition.
And I said, you know what, general, I never want to hear that again from
another general. So we are very high on ammunition now. That is a story I’ve
never told before. Breaking news. But we were very low. I could even say it
stronger. I don’t want to say no ammunition but that gets a lot closer.”
Nothing like
steady, focused leadership in a crisis, right? Please let me know when you see
some, c/o Truthout’s general mailbox.
“In short:
it’s all super unclear,” writes Jack Crosbie for Splinter News, “but the
president’s public vow to bomb whoever Saudi Arabia tells us to is not
reassuring. The Saudis are perfectly capable of fighting their own battles —
we’ve sold them more than enough weaponry — but Trump’s stance throughout the
crisis has been that, essentially, the U.S. military stands by to defend our
favorite brutal authoritarian theocracy at any cost.”
If Trump
does commit the U.S. to a war in Iran on behalf of Saudi Arabia, it would
unsurprisingly be one of the worst calamities of an administration made of
calamities. The only surprise here is the fact that John Bolton will have to
watch it all on his flat-screen at home, or from the office of his
now-anti-Trump super PAC. Maybe irony has a pulse after all.
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