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Getting the Strait Story

News: The Pentagon spun a minor melee off the coast of Iran into a direct menace to U.S. interests. Why isn't Congress concerned?

February 22, 2008


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"You will explode in a few minutes." According to the Pentagon, those menacing words, directed at U.S. warships, came from an Iranian Guard Corps sailor aboard an armed speedboat that maneuvered uncomfortably close to the American ships in the Strait of Hormuz early last month. The incident very nearly escalated into a military confrontation with Iran.

But there's a problem with the Pentagon's version of events: it was highly misleading. The threat likely didn't come from an Iranian sailor, nor was the confrontation as dramatic as the Pentagon portrayed it. Yet, the administration nearly spun this fairly insignificant episode into a casus belli. How has the Democratic Congress reacted to the Pentagon's phony depiction of this encounter? It hasn't. Six weeks have passed without any hint of a congressional inquiry.

Should Congress decide to probe the administration's portrayal of the Hormuz confrontation, its jurisdiction over the issue would be fairly broad. An investigation into the matter could hypothetically involve any number of congressional committees, including the House and Senate Foreign Relations and Armed Services committees, as well as Henry Waxman's House oversight committee.

In the days following the January 6 confrontation, I asked staff members of all the relevant committees what action, if any, might be taken. The House Armed Services Committee, I was told, was following the matter closely. And in its first week back from the Christmas recess the Senate Armed Services Committee received a staff briefing on the incident. But since then neither committee has indicated that its members are concerned with the possibility that the Pentagon may have misled the public. (Aides on the House Foreign Affairs and the Senate Foreign Relations committees did not respond to repeated inquiries.)

The lone voice of congressional concern appears to be Rep. John Tierney (D-Mass.), who chairs the House Subcommittee on National Security and Foreign Affairs. Last fall, his committee held a series of hearings examining the tense relationship between the U.S. and Iran, including the possibility that a minor melee—quite like the one in the Strait—could trigger an accidental war.

"The recent incident in the Strait of Hormuz underscores the need for means to be developed to prevent inadvertent armed escalation between the U.S. and Iran," he says, adding that "incidents involving Iranian speedboats are not unforeseeable.... We've known about these tactics for many, many years." He notes that his subcommittee will continue to investigate "conflict de-escalation mechanisms that should be in place in order to ensure that our country does not fall into an armed conflict that would not be in our national security interests."

But the possibility of an accidental war is somewhat tangential to the matter at hand. The real question is whether key details of the Hormuz confrontation were distorted by the Pentagon.

And evidence suggests that they were.

During the January 6 confrontation, according to news accounts, three Navy ships crossed paths with five Iranian speedboats manned by perhaps one or two dozen Iranian sailors. The sailors taunted their American counterparts as they blazed through the Strait of Hormuz and passed near the Navy vessels. It was aggressive, to be sure, but too common an occurrence in this well-traveled waterway to be accurately described a threatening maneuver.

About a half-hour later, after warnings had been traded back and forth between sailors, a new male voice crept onto the radio frequency the Americans were using to communicate with the Iranians and issued the now infamous warning. He spoke in English, but, as an audio recording of the the encounter indicates, his accent was not Persian.

The Pentagon chose to describe the incident differently. Senior Pentagon officials attributed the mystery voice—now thought by many observers and Navy officials to belong to an infamous maritime prankster known as the "Filipino Monkey"—to the Iranians, ultimately releasing video footage of the confrontation with audio of the threat superimposed over it to the public.

What did the Bush administration stand to gain by emphasizing this confrontation? It's hard to say. But one possible explanation is that this was a way to play up the Iranian threat after the administration's claims about Iran's nuclear ambitions were seriously undercut by the latest National Intelligence Estimate on Iran, released in November, which found that the country had terminated its nuclear weapons program four years earlier.

With Iranian naval forces threatening Americans, Iran could be depicted as a direct menace. Is that why the Pentagon engaged in this cut-and-paste exercise? Who ordered it? Was there any vetting before the Pentagon released its misleading account of the incident? Was anyone held accountable? There are many questions that linger in the wake of the January confrontation. But for the most part Congress seems uninterested in seeking the truth.

Brian Beutler is the Washington correspondent for the Media Consortium, a network of progressive media organizations, including Mother Jones.



 

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I can't believe after what happened to the USS Cole, that the US NAVY didn't "Open Fire" and kill every one fo those little Iranians.. Anything that approaches closer that 1,000 yards fo a US Naval vessel, should be blown out of the water... BIll
Posted by:Bill NighFebruary 22, 2008 2:22:45 PMRespond ^
After everything we've seen Uncle Sam do to provoke a "needed" war, I can't believe anyone really believes this actually happened.
Posted by:MacJrFebruary 22, 2008 2:55:32 PMRespond ^
And, Mr. Nigh, I find it incredibly uncomfortable that there are still supposedly-intelligent Americans who would still unquestioningly accept the current administration's version of events--about ANYTHING, really--especially, after said version has already been shown to be false & misleading!
Truth be told, maybe, if their vessels approached so closely, in sovereign U.S. waters, I might be a bit troubled, but, seeing as we're in THEIR neighborhood, uninvited, AND, under false pretenses/fraudulent motives, I'm infinitely more inclined to understand the hesitancy to engage in yet more unprovoked, unilateral inhumanity.
Posted by:William ThomasFebruary 22, 2008 3:22:37 PMRespond ^
Congress? There is no Congress. There is the New World Order, period.
Posted by:wilsonFebruary 23, 2008 10:32:35 AMRespond ^
With a slight modification, The Who said it all in "Won't get fooled again"

"I'll tip my hat to the new constitution
Take a bow for the new revolution
Smile and grin at the change all around
Pick up my guitar and play
Just like yesterday
Then i'll get on my knees and pray"

"We have been fooled again"
Posted by:zFebruary 23, 2008 1:42:35 PMRespond ^
Eh, because is was a show.

It doesn't take a genius to recognize that sending an aircraft carrier into shallow and restricted water is tactically suicide. Much bigger war nerds than me saw this way before I did...

Looks like Bush and Putin are joined at the hip then - it's just too easy to lead you guys on. Come on, the Russians fly a couple of 50 year old bombers over a US carrier and suddenly there is this huge military threat from Russia.

The same is true of this 'incident'. It's bullsh*t and you bought it.


Posted by:A+February 23, 2008 3:42:14 PMRespond ^
I think the size of the military needs to be reduced, and our forces recalled, as Dr. Paul has recommended. If the neighbor kids were always in your backyard, stealing your stuff and messing with YOUR kids, how would YOU feel? As between neighbors, so between nations. If the leaders are the 'parents', then they need to get a handle on their 'kids'. OUR 'kids' have been screwing around all OVER, mis-conducting themselves because DAD is a LUSH/not really paying attention.

There needs to be a parents' meeting.
And, probably, some profuse apologies.
Posted by:BertFebruary 24, 2008 12:00:26 PMRespond ^
Furthermore, maybe we need Jack Nicholson as Speaker Of The House. I think people would show up for work if he was 'on'...public speaking is an art, as well as a science, you gotta get to the microphone, and not get all full of yourself, you can't do the Hitlery/redcoat wave, some people just don't 'get' it. Whatever happened to the 3-pointed hat? Let's get all RETRO with this 'government' stuff. Down to flintlocks. Stop selling manufactured bullets. You want a gun? Fine. Sell black powder ONLY. Dump the rest of it.
It's all symptomatic of industry gone runaway. I'll bet people would go for it. Think 'pirates of the carribean'.
A flint-lock pistol will shoot someone just as well as a 9mm. And, if all anyone has is a flint-lock, well, that'll take care of some problems, too.
We have over-technologized in SO many ways, we have so much technology that we're literally stumbling over it, left and right, and going into personal debt to buy MORE. It's NUTS. In-sane. IN-sulate. Bush said he didn't want isolationism. Well, maybe if that's what the 'doctor' orders, you get sent to an isolation ward if you've got the plague. Well, we've got fiscal plague. Reverse the controls, there, 'pilot'.
LOL He's the decidererer, ok, well, make a decision, there, sparky. You're in my chair, dammit!;)

LOL
Posted by:BertFebruary 24, 2008 12:06:43 PMRespond ^
The sad part is this... whether you beleive the military or the Iranians ( remember the Gulf of Tonkin Incident0 one can not argue with the strategic importance of this area... Who ever controls this area controls the shipping of oil period! having stated this, I personally do not see the Iranians or anyone for that matter trying to sabatoge the staight as this would be economically suicidal to those countries that realy upon ships to transport their oil... but then again I could be wrong. better to be prepared then sorry. personaly i would have created an international incident and " lit' the Iranians up, but then again that's me.... and that depends if the incident really ever happened.
Posted by:Chris MorganFebruary 25, 2008 11:58:40 AMRespond ^
Congress...TRUTH...an oxyMORON(s) if there ever was one...
Posted by:Christopher FlynnFebruary 25, 2008 2:20:35 PMRespond ^
There is not enough time for Bush to get into Iran.
will thet next president become less violent or less Iran needed war than Bush?
I still proclame that it should have been solved at dessert one.
Posted by:Dr.QFebruary 26, 2008 3:29:41 AMRespond ^
Can anyone say......Tonkin Gulf?
Posted by:jonnyFebruary 27, 2008 10:52:10 AMRespond ^

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