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And now for Iran
By Joschka Fischer

Can politics learn from history? Or is it subject to a fatal compulsion to repeat the same mistakes, despite the disastrous lessons of the past? President Bush's new strategy for Iraq has posed anew this age-old philosophical and historical question.

Ostensibly, the president has embarked on a new political and military strategy for war-torn Iraq. Bush's new course can be summarized under three headings: more American troops, more Iraqi responsibility and more U.S. training for more Iraqi troops.

If you apply this new plan to Iraq alone, two things immediately catch the eye: Almost all the proposals of the Baker-Hamilton report have been ignored, and the plan itself - in the face of the chaos in Iraq - is quite simplistic. In light of the failure of all previous "new strategies" for stabilizing Iraq, there is little to suggest that the newest "new strategy" will succeed any better, despite the additional 21,000 U.S. soldiers.

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What is interesting and really new in the U.S. administration's recently announced policy is the way it reaches beyond Iraq, to deal with Iran, Syria and the Gulf states. Here, unexpected and genuinely new decisions have been announced: An additional U.S. aircraft carrier group will be moved to the Persian Gulf; Patriot anti-aircraft missiles will be stationed in the Gulf states; and the additional 21,000 soldiers far exceed what the American generals had asked for to deal with Iraq. So one wonders about the purpose of this military build-up. One might almost think that Saddam was still alive and in power, so his overthrow had to be prepared all over again.

The surprise of Bush's new policy is its shift of political focus from Iraq to its two immediate neighbors. Bush accuses Syria and Iran of interfering in Iraq, threatening its territorial integrity and endangering American troops, and, more generally, of seeking to undermine America's allies in the region. If you add to this the seizure, on President Bush's orders, of Iranian "diplomats" by U.S. forces in the northern Iraqi town of Erbil, a completely new picture of the president's plan comes to the fore: The "new strategy" does not follow the advice of the Baker-Hamilton report, but harks back to the disastrous strategy of the neocons. Iran is now in the superpower's sights, and the U.S. approach brings to mind the preparatory phase of the Iraq war - down to the last detail.

Where does all this lead? Basically, there are two possibilities, one positive and one negative. Unfortunately, the positive outcome appears to be the less likely one.

If the threat of force - a force that the U.S. is quite obviously building - aims at preparing the ground for serious negotiations with Iran, there can and should be no objection. If, on the other hand, it represents an attempt to prepare the American public for a war against Iran, and a genuine intention to unleash such a war when the opportunity arises, the outcome would be an unmitigated disaster.

Unfortunately, this danger is all too real. Since the Bush administration views Iran's nuclear program and hegemonic aspirations as the major threat to the region, its new strategy is based on a newly formed, undeclared anti-Iranian alliance with moderate Sunni Arab states and Israel. The nuclear program is the dynamic factor here, because it will set a timeline for action.

But air strikes on Iran, which America may see as a military solution, would not make Iraq safer; they would achieve exactly the opposite. Nor would the region as a whole be stabilized; on the contrary, it would be plunged into an abyss. And the dream of "regime change" in Tehran would not come true, either; rather, Iran's democratic opposition would pay a high price, and the theocratic regime would only become stronger.

The political options for stabilizing Iraq, and the whole region, as well as for securing a long-term freeze of Iran's nuclear program, have not yet been exhausted. The current state of Iran's nuclear program does not call for immediate military action. Instead, the focus should be on diplomatic efforts to detach Syria from Iran and isolate the Tehran regime. But this presupposes American willingness to return to diplomacy and to talking to all the parties involved. Tehran is afraid of regional and international isolation. Moreover, the recent municipal elections in Iran have shown that betting on diplomacy and a transformation of Iran from within is a realistic option. So why the current threats against Iran?

The debacle in Iraq was foreseeable from the beginning, and America's numerous partners and friends predicted it quite clearly in their warnings to the Bush administration. The mistake that the U.S. may be about to make is equally predictable: A war that is wrong will not be made right by extending it - that is the lesson of Vietnam, Laos and Cambodia.

The ideologically driven strategy of regime change by means of military force led the U.S. into the Iraq war disaster. Getting into Iraq and defeating Saddam was easy. But today, America is stuck there and knows neither how to win, nor how to get out. A mistake is not corrected by repeating it over and over again. Perseverance in error does not correct the error; it merely exacerbates it.

Following the launch of the new American policy, the old question of whether politics can learn from history will be answered again in the Middle East. Whatever the answer, the consequences - whether good or bad - will be far-reaching.

Joschka Fischer was Germany's foreign minister and vice chancellor from 1998-2005. A veteran leader in the Green Party, he is now a visiting professor at Princeton University's Woodrow Wilson School.

By arrangement with Project Syndicate, www.project-syndicate.org

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  1.   Hypocritical Joschka Fischer on Iran 11:30  |  Jonathan S 02/02/07
  2.   And what will Iran do? 12:16  |  Hannah 02/02/07
  3.   Bush and Iran 13:10  |  Marcos 02/02/07
  4.   27 years since the revolution, 13:19  |  Aussie 02/02/07
  5.   hannah, where are you? 13 militants killed in Gaza since collapse 13:30  |  Steven 02/02/07
  6.   Fisher is responsible for the wave of terror during Sharon`s era 13:39  |  Absolute Sweden 02/02/07
  7.   It is Iran that is setting the Agenda 14:10  |  Ronnie Wolman 02/02/07
  8.   bush, politics & learning from history 14:53  |  yaakov sullivan 02/02/07
  9.   Easy to talk about diplomatic solutions 14:55  |  Karl 02/02/07
  10.   #3, Ronnie 15:04  |  Hannah 02/02/07
  11.   WHICH DAY IN HISTORY WAS ANYTHING ACHIEVED BY DIPLOMACY ? 15:15  |  paul harris 02/02/07
  12.   SAIGON WAS NOT BAGHDAD 15:45  |  indrajaya 02/02/07
  13.   Hannah: Good Cops and Bad Ones 15:47  |  Ronnie Wolman 02/02/07
  14.   The US And Israel Setting the Agenda 15:49  |  Arik 02/02/07
  15.   Paul Harris: Diplomacy is like water 15:51  |  Ronnie Wolman 02/02/07
  16.   Beyond Iraq is Somalia and a coup against Hamas 16:01  |  Fritz 02/02/07
  17.   Joschka Fischer and Iran 16:19  |  Jonathan S 02/02/07
  18.   No use in pursuing diplomacy 16:38  |  Mark Lincoln 02/02/07
  19.   Paul Harris 16:39  |  Mark Lincoln 02/02/07
  20.   #10, Ronnie 16:47  |  Hannah 02/02/07
  21.   #11, Arik 16:48  |  Hannah 02/02/07
  22.   # 1 Hannah 17:22  |  Lynn 02/02/07
  23.   # 11 Arik 17:26  |  Lynn 02/02/07
  24.   # 6 Karl 17:32  |  Lynn 02/02/07
  25.   #18, Lynn 17:59  |  Hannah 02/02/07
  26.   #17, so what? 18:44  |  Fritz 02/02/07
  27.   Bravo, Joschka! 18:54  |  Axel 02/02/07
  28.   article And now for Iran 18:55  |  Bruce rubin 02/02/07
  29.   Talk to Iran on Iran`s terms 19:00  |  Tehrani 02/02/07
  30.   #2 Uh oh, uh oh!! 19:01  |  ballistic 02/02/07
  31.   #28, er, given bad intelligence on Iraq 19:15  |  ballistic 02/02/07
  32.   # 28 bruce rubin 19:18  |  Axel 02/02/07
  33.   #30, Ballistic 19:26  |  Hannah 02/02/07
  34.   To Bruce Rubin #28 19:57  |  Persian Kitty 02/02/07
  35.   #33 Hannah--Biden, Spector, Hagel 20:17  |  ballistic 02/02/07
  36.   Bravo Josef Fischer! 20:46  |  Jonathan S 02/02/07
  37.   They unmistakably find whom to defend, 21:41  |  Vladimir 02/02/07
  38.   #25 Hannah 23:22  |  Lynn 02/02/07
  39.   Fischer is Like Chamberlain; Naive 23:38  |  semsem 02/02/07
  40.   Are the Mullahs Paying Fisher? 23:40  |  Laila 02/02/07
  41.   learning from history 23:47  |  Uwe 02/02/07
  42.   joschka fischer-why would you not 23:47  |  yahn goodey 02/02/07
  43.   uns Uwe from Bremen 00:12  |  Axel 03/02/07
  44.   to Bruce rubin 00:15  |  Angel of wind 03/02/07
  45.   An answer for Laila about J. Fischer 00:28  |  Jonathan S 03/02/07
  46.   #38 Lynn; you have more faith than the rest 00:39  |  ballistic 03/02/07
  47.   #7 Yes Ronnie, I see it now 00:49  |  Johnboy 03/02/07
  48.   hannah goes one better to the middle east phds 01:30  |  ezra baqqal 03/02/07
  49.   Johnboy: Presents from Teheran 01:39  |  Ronnie Wolman 03/02/07
  50.   @ 27 Axel, Iraq was for uncle Cheney´sHulliburton. 01:40  |  Karl 03/02/07
  51.   Sorry Karl it is the same 02:09  |  Mark Lincoln 03/02/07
  52.   AXEL 02:16  |  uwe 03/02/07
  53.   axel in Germany 02:20  |  roland 03/02/07
  54.   #46 ballistic 02:55  |  Lynn 03/02/07
  55.   Now For Iran response to Axel 03:40  |  Bruce Rubin 03/02/07
  56.   # 8 Death Wish: New York Style 03:43  |  Tony Anthony 03/02/07
  57.   # 46 ballistic good news 05:26  |  Lynn 03/02/07
  58.   #54 Again, I vote with your and hope 06:19  |  ballistic 03/02/07
  59.   #57 Kurds 06:26  |  ballistic 03/02/07
  60.   #56 my advice; learn to bend over 06:32  |  ballistic 03/02/07
  61.   #49 Ronnie, those rockets can *already* reach Israel 07:22  |  Johnboy 03/02/07
  62.   Diplomacy Succeeds? 10:36  |  ATLAS 03/02/07
  63.   #59 ballistic once again displays her TOTAL IGNORANCE 11:52  |  paul harris 03/02/07
  64.   re bruce rubin 12:01  |  Axel 03/02/07
  65.   uns Uwe 12:09  |  Axel 03/02/07
  66.   Its fine to focus on diplomacy 12:32  |  Stephen Connor 03/02/07
  67.   johnboy@homemaderockets.com 12:49  |  alicespring 03/02/07
  68.   #65 AXEL CONFUSAES DIPLOMACY WITH APPEASEMENT AND DANE GELDT 12:49  |  paul harris 03/02/07
  69.   Johnboy: Irans bigger capability 13:54  |  Ronnie Wolman 03/02/07
  70.   Chirac, V?drine, Fischer, and many others 14:08  |  ben 03/02/07
  71.   # 69 ronnie woolman 16:27  |  Axel 03/02/07
  72.   # 70 ben 16:31  |  Axel 03/02/07
  73.   #63 the operative word in your post 17:36  |  ballistic 03/02/07
  74.   #43 AS IT TURNED OUT AXEL !! BUT THE WORD IN THE 17:39  |  paul harris 03/02/07
  75.   # 59 ballistic 17:46  |  Lynn 03/02/07
  76.   # 63 paulharris 17:55  |  Lynn 03/02/07
  77.   Joschka exaggerates somewhat 17:55  |  Tosefta 03/02/07
  78.   Ben # 70 18:02  |  Stephen Connor 03/02/07
  79.   uns UWE 18:02  |  Lynn 03/02/07
  80.   Tosefta 18:39  |  Axel 03/02/07
  81.   #77 A BAD STRATEGY!!! NUCLEAR SITES LAST 18:39  |  paul harris 03/02/07
  82.   #79 Hey Paul, sounds like a replay 19:36  |  ballistic 03/02/07
  83.   It`s probably a bit arrogant... 20:11  |  christoph 03/02/07
  84.   ###69, 74., 81 paul harris 20:35  |  Arik 03/02/07
  85.   #50 Karl 20:44  |  Arik 03/02/07
  86.   #5 Karl 20:47  |  Arik 03/02/07
  87.   Lesson from the Iran-Iraq War (Axel #80) 21:01  |