Games,
Cock-Fights And Fandangos In The Persian Gulf
Originally at http://www.countercurrents.org/iran-maavak080506.htm
The Fifa World Cup begins next month. It's a quadrennial event that
grips the entire world in a month-long state of sustained frenzy. Football
- or soccer as it is known in the United States - unites the world like
nothing ever does or did. The sole exceptions are a few Europeans who
can transform a place like Belgium's Heysel Stadium into a shrine for
the art of ripped-up concrete warfare. Yes, in Old Europe, people do
kick the bucket before the ball.
Call it a clash within a civilization.
Yet, it is quite ironic that German cities like Munich and Berlin will
host this universal sublimation of man's atavistic energies. Seven decades
back, in these very places, one guttural voice roused a nation to do
just the opposite. He marched them off to a titanic world war.
But wars and games are inverse sides of the same passion. While the
ball is being kicked in Germany, both the United States and Iran may
be facing one big showdown.
For now, it's still tentative, much like roosters squaring up before
pecking the daylights out of each other in a cock-fight.
In an April 7 column, headlined A Global Game of Chicken, Fred Kaplan
described the possible confrontation between both nations in game terms:
Two cars speed toward each other, head-on, late at night. There are
three possible outcomes. One driver gets nervous and veers away at the
last second; he loses.
Both drivers veer away; the game's a draw. They both keep zooming straight
ahead; everybody dies. Back in the early '60s, the flamboyant nuclear
strategist Herman Kahn wrote that one way to win at chicken was to detach
the steering wheel and wave it out of the window; the other driver,
seeing you can't pull off the road, will be forced to do so himself.
The dreadful thing about the current showdown between America and Iran
is that both drivers seem to be unscrewing their steering wheels; they're
girding themselves so firmly in their positions—the Americans
saying Iran's enrichment is an intolerable threat to security, the Iranians
saying it's an absolute ingredient of national integrity—that
backing down is a course neither is willing to take.
There's another dangerous thing about chicken. One or both drivers
might intend to veer off, but they know they don't have to until the
last second. They might accelerate, to step up the pressure, as the
cars approach each other; miscalculations—of time, distance, and
intentions—could ensue; a collision could happen by accident.
Accidents can be triggered through a variety of ways. With saber-rattling
expected to reach fever pitch in the coming days and weeks, nerves will
be frayed close to the war zone. A tensed commander from a US or Iranian
vessel might fire a torpedo or missile at an adversarial vessel floating
too close for comfort. Something could be accidentally fired across
from the Iraqi border.
Or Al Qaeda might help along by dispatching its camel brigade, decked
in Iranian uniform to add some color to the morbid drama. Call that
Osama bin Laden's idea of a costume party, replete with bangs, pow-wows
and fireworks. It will be a strictly all-male stag affair, with neither
Shi'ites nor infidels nor anyone not circumcised with a box-cutter on
an airplane allowed in. Outsiders would be restricted to the belly dancers
platform, where they can swish daggers in sync with lethal gyrations.
This is already happening in Iraq and Afghanistan.
And this may be an excellent variant to the game of chicken by borrowing
elements from bull-fighting. Here, the turbaned matador can kill two
bulls at one go by waving a red flag at horns charging from opposite
ends, exiting in time for the fatal lock.
There can be escalated attacks against US forces in Afghanistan, where
some unfortunate soldier could be unwittingly invited into a Talibanized
version of buzkashi - the Afghan traditional game where "goat dragging"
beats out polo. Genghiz Khan and those Somalian warlords would be put
to shame. If such horrors are televised, it can be blamed on Iran, the
same way 9/11 was magically pinned on Saddam Hussein. Or some lunatic,
dreaming of Saddam's good ole days, may carry out a spectacular terrorist
attack on a major US base in Iraq. It can also be blamed on Iran. Haven't
you heard of elite Revolutionary Guards performing pirouettes in camouflaged
tutus and bal masques in Najaf and Basra? It doesn’t take much
for ballet to go ballistic; both derive from the word ballo, the former
from Italian (ball) and the latter from Greek (throw).
Told you didn't I that games and wars didn't differ in essence. And
dances too, and I checked that connection at Oxford's Concise Ninth
Edition on a hunch. There was an old classic case where a fight over
a chicken led to a vendetta, and a duel over the honor and reputation
of a lady at a promenade. And then it went back to vendetta and chickens.
Don't believe me? Read Alexander Dumas' The Corsican Brothers!
One could fight for the less noble oil and nukes as well; ugly items
more inviting for the golden pheasants of the Gulf Arab states. Many
of them are itching for this geopolitical cock-fight as the Persian
rooster still struts like a proverbial peacock.
What they couldn't achieve through Saddam's genocidal war against the
Iranians - with chemical weapons no less - could be wrought through
the Americans, even after their societies supplied most of the 9/11
hijackers. They prefer an Iran destroyed more than Israel, as the latter
unites the Arab world like nothing ever did or does.
Der Fuhrer must be squirming in the river Styx. Here are Semites, Arab
and Jew, united in pitching one Aryan nation against the other.
Mustafa Alani, a military analyst at Dubai's Gulf Research Center,
captured the general Arab mood over Tehran recently.
"If the Security Council imposes restrictions on Iran, these (Gulf
Arab) countries will be happy to join those sanctions or boycott against
Iran."
That's just days away, by latest calculation, though those deadlines
for Iran keep getting stretched because never in history has one nation
held an entire world to ransom without those conventional qualifications
like a strong military, economic or technical muscle. This, after all,
is the birthplace of Purim, where an endangered minority managed to
turn the tables all of a sudden.
Still sanctions will bite.
Among the top five oil exporting nations, Iran is the only one with
a major budget deficit. Sanctions would be more than a kick in the teeth.
It provokes hunger, anger and accidents.
If an accident happens, God only would know who drew first blood. The
United States -- post-Korean war -- had fallen for every short-term
interventionist trap the world could offer. It's neo-liberal, free market
fandango at the expense of democracy in Latin America and elsewhere
have been blunders of such colossal proportions - and loss of lives
- that Secretary of State Condoleeza Rice had to publicly refurbish
Uncle Sam's new benign foreign policy recently
"The United States has no trouble, no difficulty, dealing with
countries from either side of the political spectrum," assured
Rice just before attending the March inauguration ceremony of Chilean
President-elect Michelle Bachelet in Valparaiso. She cited Chile and
Brazil as leftist-oriented governments which enjoyed good ties with
Washington. "The issue for us is that when you're elected democratically
that you govern democratically."
Fair enough. US citizens are asking the same of their current president
and people elsewhere are still seeking the mere privilege of asking
the same.
Let's hope it's not too late. For Latin America still views the US
with deep suspicion. Hugo Chavez has not ceased taunting Uncle Sam with
his muleta. There are just too many of them being flailed on the global
arena, with too few bulls available for the show.
After Osama bin Laden kicked off the game on 9/11, the bulls veered
off their objective and geography to perform a bloodsport in Iraq and
Afghanistan. Now, Iran may get into the game.
Bulls don't die in this sport; people and soldiers do. The chickenhawks
and longhorns will indeed be safe in Crawford (Texas!), Pennsylvania
Avenue, and some cavern in Waziristan, where, a bearded goat often appears
for an Internet show, bleating and gloating over the gored and slain.
It has been ruminating this way for the past five years, regurgitating
its cuds in peace, and possibly perplexed by the war on terror supposedly
unleashed in its name.
Time to separate the goats from the sheep, and stop this charade?
Sounds like a passage from the Good Book but it is our misfortune that
the United States and Iran are now led by messianic poseurs, each eager
to hasten the return of either the Savior or the Imam Mahdi. But not
before one almighty Armageddon both feel to have a prophetic role in
fulfilling. The heavy thuds of a stampede are afoot and it behooves
us to rally for peace. At least some of us.
Let us hope both parties chicken out in time, or limit their duels
to nothing more than a diplomatic cock-fight.