logo
From Iraq to Iran: the US quest for Israeli military dominance

From Iraq to Iran: the US quest for Israeli military dominance

As Israeli jets and American bombers streaked across Iranian skies earlier this month, the world watched a familiar game plan unfold – one that had its origins in secret meetings, veiled ambitions and the relentless logic of regional dominance that has haunted the
Middle East for generations.
The process began decades earlier, in the smoke of American air strikes on Iraq and the calculations of US policymakers determined to keep
Israel unrivalled.
It was the late 1990s when a small, bipartisan delegation of senior US senators touched down in the
United Arab Emirates . Their visit coincided with the American strikes, part of a legacy of US intervention in the Gulf that had left the region in a state of perpetual unease since the guns of Operation Desert Storm fell silent in
Kuwait at the start of the decade.
One ranking Emirati official, exasperated by the endless cycle of violence, posed the question that had been whispered in the corridors of power throughout the Gulf: why didn't Washington simply topple Saddam Hussein and be done with it?
A US senator, unmoved by the query, offered a response with chilling candour. The objective, he told the official, was not regime change, but rather to 'reduce any regional state on a military and technological par with Israel to a pre-industrial society'. The official later shared that exchange with this reporter.
A US F-18 fighter jet flies over gas flares at an oil well in northern Kuwait in 1995. Photo: AFP
Such an agenda – once the preserve of neoconservative ideologues – soon became official US policy in the wake of the September 11 attacks.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

China to stay cautious as Iran seeks help amid clashes with US, Israel: Middle East expert
China to stay cautious as Iran seeks help amid clashes with US, Israel: Middle East expert

South China Morning Post

timean hour ago

  • South China Morning Post

China to stay cautious as Iran seeks help amid clashes with US, Israel: Middle East expert

Iran may look to China for weapons support amid conflicts with the US and Israel , but Beijing will remain cautious, considering strained economic ties with Tehran and its broader interest in balancing ties with Israel and other Western-aligned states in the region, according to a veteran Chinese expert on the Middle East. Advertisement In an exclusive interview with the South China Morning Post, Pan Guang, a Chinese scholar of Jewish and Middle East studies, said the conflict between Iran and Israel was unlikely to spiral into a broader war, but tit-for-tat retaliation could continue as Tehran pushes ahead with its nuclear programme, which is believed to persist despite US strikes. Tensions escalated after Israel launched strikes on Iran on June 13. The US joined days later, targeting three of Iran's nuclear facilities – marking the most significant Western military action against the Islamic Republic since 1979. Iran retaliated by attacking a US military base in Qatar and striking Israel's strategic port city of Haifa, home to Chinese projects under the Belt and Road Initiative US President Donald Trump brokered a ceasefire between Iran and Israel this week, which has largely held despite initial violations. However, prospects for a durable truce appear dim, as Iran's core nuclear capabilities are believed to remain intact and Israel remains determined to neutralise what it sees as an existential threat. Beijing, a close partner of Tehran, is being closely watched as the conflict unfolds. On Thursday, Iranian Defence Minister Aziz Nasirzadeh joined nine of his counterparts at the Shanghai Cooperation Organisation's defence ministers' meeting in Qingdao, China, where he called for a bigger Chinese role in easing the conflict. Pan said Iran might seek Chinese weapons in light of its escalating tensions with Israel, drawing lessons from Pakistan's recent conflict with India.

Why Israel's spy tactics against Iran have sparked fears in Taiwan
Why Israel's spy tactics against Iran have sparked fears in Taiwan

South China Morning Post

time3 hours ago

  • South China Morning Post

Why Israel's spy tactics against Iran have sparked fears in Taiwan

Israel's sweeping intelligence operations against Iran have jolted Taiwan's security community, raising concerns that Beijing could adopt similar tactics to cripple the island's leadership or critical infrastructure. As assassinations and sabotage rattle Tehran, analysts in Taipei warn that Beijing's infiltration of Taiwan is no longer a purely political threat, and it might be laying the groundwork for high-stakes covert warfare. In recent months, Taiwan has seen a surge in espionage cases implicating not only retired and active-duty military personnel, but also aides to senior government officials and lawmakers from the ruling Democratic Progressive Party (DPP). The breadth and depth of these cases have sparked concerns that Beijing's intelligence network has already penetrated the island's political and defence systems. 'What Israel has done to Iran – through a combination of precision, infiltration, and intelligence dominance – is something Beijing could try to replicate,' said Max Lo, executive director of the Taiwan International Strategic Study Society. 'The difference is, this time Taiwan may be the one under the microscope.' According to experts, Taiwan's vulnerabilities lie not only in its geographic proximity to mainland China but also in decades of cross-strait social and cultural exchange, which have enabled mainland Chinese intelligence operatives to blend in and recruit more easily.

Seaborne scare: how Israel-Iran war put global shipping on alert
Seaborne scare: how Israel-Iran war put global shipping on alert

South China Morning Post

time7 hours ago

  • South China Morning Post

Seaborne scare: how Israel-Iran war put global shipping on alert

Sometime in early 1988, while the nine-year war between Iran and Iraq was still raging, veteran British publisher Abdullah Jonathan Wallace paid a visit to his old friend, Bahrain's information minister Tariq Almoayed. As they drove out of Manama to Tariq's home on another island in Bahrain 's archipelago, Wallace looked seaward and was shocked to see a task force of US Navy ships moored in the Persian Gulf. 'Tariq! Look! Ships!' Wallace excitedly said to the Bahraini minister. Almoayed, who was driving, kept his eyes firmly fixed on the road. 'Ships? I see no ships,' he replied, giving Wallace an unforgettable anecdote to later relate to his Middle East team at the United Press International news agency, which included this reporter. That unprecedented deployment of US Navy ships in the territorial waters of a Gulf monarchy was in preparation for Operation Praying Mantis against Iranian naval assets.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store