Bush Attempts to Link Iran with Growing Iraq War Chaos

Febrero 2007
Radio Interview with Phyllis Bennis

To listen to the show click here (external site)

As President Bush began deploying more than 21,000 additional U.S. troops -- following through on his promised escalation of the Iraq war -- violence reached record levels with the bombing of a Baghdad market killing 135 people on Feb. 3rd. The bombing, the most deadly since the war began, and a death toll of 1,000 Iraqis in one week, underscored the growing chaos that has defined the U.S. occupation. Democrats in the U.S. Senate failed in their Feb. 5 attempt to pass a nonbinding resolution criticizing Bush's so-called troop surge, when Republicans blocked a motion to end debate.

While Baghdad burned, the president further raised tensions in the region when he announced that American soldiers are now under orders to capture or kill Iranian operatives inside Iraq that the administration claims are aiding Shiite militias targeting U.S. forces. This comes amid rising U.S. pressure on Iran to end their nuclear program and after Washington sent two aircraft carrier groups to the coast off Iran and arrested Iranian diplomats in Iraq. When an Iranian diplomat was abducted by men in Iraqi Army uniforms on Feb. 4, Iran warned that it held the United States responsible for his life.

Between the Lines' Scott Harris spoke with Phyllis Bennis, a fellow at the Institute for Policy Studies, who examines the effect of additional U.S. troops in Iraq and the attempt by the Bush administration to link the worsening conflict in Iraq with what they allege is interference by Iran.

Phyllis Bennis' forthcoming book Understanding the Palestinian-Israeli Conflict: A Primer at Interlink Books

Directora del proyecto Nuevo Internacionalismo del Institute for Policy Studies.

Phyllis Bennis es investigadora asociada del TNI y del Institute for Policy Studies de Washington DC, donde dirige el proyecto Nuevo Internacionalismo. Phyllis está especializada en política exterior estadounidense, especialmente con respecto a Oriente Medio y las Naciones Unidas, organización donde trabajó como corresponsal de prensa durante diez años. Actualmente, colabora también como asesora especializada de varios cargos de alto nivel de la ONU sobre cuestiones relacionadas con Oriente Medio y la democratización de la ONU.

Columnista habitual en varios medios, Phyllis es también autora de muchos artículos y libros, sobre todo centrados en Palestina, Iraq, la ONU y la política exterior de los Estados Unidos. Entre sus últimos libros, cabe destacar: Understanding the U.S.-Iran Crisis: A Primer (Interlink, 2008), Ending the Iraq War: A Primer (Interlink, 2008), Understanding the Palestinian-Israeli Conflict: A Primer (Interlink, 2007), Challenging Empire: How People, Governments and the UN Defy U.S. Power (Interlink, 2005).