 Source: Global Research
Source: Global ResearchBen Schreiner
With
 seemingly each passing day, the tensions between the US and Iran over 
the latter’s nascent nuclear program mount.  And with the voices 
clamoring for conflict growing ever louder, the clouds of war darken.  
As Mark Helprin warns in a January 18 Wall Street Journal op-ed,
 the Iranian nuclear program poses “a mortal threat” to the US.  As he 
explains, “we cannot dismiss the possibility of Iranian nuclear charges 
of 500 pounds or less ending up in Manhattan or Pennsylvania Avenue.”
Jamie Fly and Gary Schmitt, meanwhile, argue in a January 17 Foreign Affairs piece
 for outright regime change.  As they state: “After all, Iran’s nuclear 
program is a symptom of a larger illness—the revolutionary 
fundamentalist regime in Tehran.”  (An anonymous US official was quoted 
in the Washington Post on January 10 to hold regime change aspirations as well, before the paper later "clarified" the official’s remarks.)
Such frenzied and war hungry rhetoric,
 however, has not been limited to the standard purveyors of 
neoconservative drivel.  In fact, dramatically escalating the tensions 
and sense of fear amongst the American public has been the nation’s 
mainstream press corps, which has readily abandoned any and all 
pretensions of journalistic integrity in the service of propaganda.  
 Indicative of this is the fact that it
 is now a common occurrence to have dire warnings of an Iranian nuclear 
weapons program splashed across the pages of the nation’s preeminent 
newspapers.  This endless chorus, though, comes despite the fact that an
 Iranian nuclear weapons program—as does its purported desire to 
even develop such a program—currently exists only in one’s imagination. 
 This much we know from the latest US National Intelligence Estimate.
Indicative of this is the fact that it
 is now a common occurrence to have dire warnings of an Iranian nuclear 
weapons program splashed across the pages of the nation’s preeminent 
newspapers.  This endless chorus, though, comes despite the fact that an
 Iranian nuclear weapons program—as does its purported desire to 
even develop such a program—currently exists only in one’s imagination. 
 This much we know from the latest US National Intelligence Estimate.  
Nonetheless, the sheer and utter 
invention of an Iranian nuclear weapons program has increasingly come to
 be held by the American press as fact.  For as Joseph Goebbels would 
have it: “If you tell a lie big enough and keep repeating it, people 
will eventually come to believe it.”
Illustrative of this dark axiom at work, we read in a January 12 Los Angeles Times editorial that: “Iran’s development of nuclear weapons [emphasis
 added] poses a grave threat to world stability and possibly an 
existential threat to this country’s Middle Eastern ally, Israel.”  In a
 January 10 Washington Post editorial we read that, “Iran may be feeling some economic pain, and it may be isolated.  But its drive for nuclear weapons continues [emphasis added].”  And in a January 4 New York Times
 piece we learn that, “The threats from Iran, aimed both at the West and
 at Israel, combined with a recent assessment by the International 
Atomic Energy Agency that Iran's nuclear program has a military objective [emphasis added], is becoming an important issue in the American presidential campaign.”
Of course, the hysteria over a 
hypothetical Iranian nuclear weapons program has by no means been 
limited to US print media.  The cable broadcast network CNN (i.e., “the 
most trusted name in news”) has also reported the fictitious claim that 
Iran's nuclear program has a military objective as fact. 
On December 20, CNN aired an interview
 by Pentagon Correspondent Barbara Starr with Chairman of the Joint 
Chiefs of Staff, Army General Martin Dempsy.  Starr went on to inform 
the CNN viewer in her report that, “Behind the scenes Dempsy is quietly 
leading the ongoing military planning for an attack against Iran’s nuclear weapons
 [emphasis added] if the president gives the order to do so.”  She 
continued by noting that; “Other countries are also on edge about Iran's progress toward a nuclear weapon [emphasis added].”    
Then, on January 3, CNN”s Zain Verjee commented on the murder of Iranian nuclear scientist, Mostafa Ahmadi-Roshan, by stating:
Then, on January 3, CNN”s Zain Verjee commented on the murder of Iranian nuclear scientist, Mostafa Ahmadi-Roshan, by stating:
"This man 
was a really important man in Iran because he was actually a 
supervisor…at the Natanz uranium enrichment facility.  Now that’s an 
important site for the US to kept its eye on because it’s said to have 
something like 8,000 centrifuges in operation.  And the reason we care 
about it is because the US believes Iran is using this program to build a nuclear weapon [emphasis added]."
But the US government, as previously 
noted, does not actually make such assertions.  In fact, Secretary of 
Defense Leon Panetta stated as much on a January 8 appearance on CBS’s Face the Nation.  As Panetta said, “Are they [Iran] trying to develop a nuclear weapon? No.”  
This assessment is one also apparently shared by Israeli intelligence.  According to the Israeli newspaper Haaretz, Israeli intelligence believes “Iran has not yet decided whether to make a nuclear bomb.”
It is thus nothing less than a 
remarkable triumph of propaganda when the biggest lies are disseminated 
not from official state organs and regime mouthpieces, but rather from 
the highly celebrated American fourth estate: the nation’s free 
press.    
Somewhat paradoxically, though, the 
lies and propaganda proliferating through the mainstream US media are 
illustrative of a larger and more fundamental truth.  For all the 
belligerent posturing and fear mongering around a nuclearized Iran have 
never been about a genuine threat to the US.  Rather, Iran’s nuclear 
program merely happens to be the lie of convenience used to feed the US 
war machine at the moment—a la the once alleged Iraqi weapons of mass 
destruction.  
In the end, then, the present confrontation with Iran is really about what Ismael Hossein-zadeh deems in this 2007 book, The Political Economy of US Militarism,
 to be “parasitic imperialism.”  As Hossein-zadeh explains, “under 
parasitic imperialism, military adventures abroad are often prompted not
 necessarily by a desire to expand the empire’s wealth beyond the 
existing levels but by a desire to appropriate the lion’s share of the 
existing wealth and treasure for the military establishment.”  
And with the Pentagon presently facing
 looming budgetary cuts, the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq winding to an 
end, and the specter of al-Qaeda fading from popular American 
consciousness, the all-powerful US military-industrial complex has begun
 to flail about for external threats in order to maintain its 
disproportional share of the national wealth. (By some estimates, now 48% of the entire US budget.)  Enter, then, Iran.
Yet what makes parasitic imperialism particularly dangerous is that it is not, nor can it ever be, satisfied by the mere specter of external threats. It requires nothing less than actual conflict. After all, given that the US military-industrial complex is “subject to market imperatives,” as Hossein-zedeh writes, “actual wars are needed in order to generate ‘sufficient’ demand for war-dependent industries and their profitability requirements.”
Yet what makes parasitic imperialism particularly dangerous is that it is not, nor can it ever be, satisfied by the mere specter of external threats. It requires nothing less than actual conflict. After all, given that the US military-industrial complex is “subject to market imperatives,” as Hossein-zedeh writes, “actual wars are needed in order to generate ‘sufficient’ demand for war-dependent industries and their profitability requirements.”
Of course, no matter the market 
imperatives, no war can be launched without first attaining a minimal 
threshold of popular support.  Hence the fabrications and 
lies coming from the media continue to accumulate.  And, unfortunately, 
through their constant and near ubiquitous repetition, it won’t be long 
before a greater share of the American people come to believe them.  
Military confrontation, we see, nears.  
Ben Schreiner
 is a freelance writer living in Salem, Oregon whose work has appeared 
in al-Akhbar English, Asia Times Online, CounterPunch, Z Magazine and 
others.  He may be reached at bnschreiner@gmail.com
