Pentagon chief: US stance on Iran is about deterrence, not war

US President Donald Trump’s administration is
seeking to deter Iran but not start a war, Acting Defense Secretary Patrick
Shanahan said after he briefed members of Congress on Tuesday.
“This is about deterrence, not about war. We are not
about going to war,” Shanahan told reporters after exiting the closed-door
meeting with Secretary of State Mike Pompeo.
Shanahan credited robust US moves in recent weeks,
which included the deployment of an aircraft carrier strike group, with
thwarting Iranian threats.
“We have deterred attacks based on reposturing of
assets, deterred attacks against American forces,” Shanahan said.
“Our biggest focus at this point is to prevent
Iranian miscalculation. We do not want the situation to escalate,” he said.
Pompeo said that he and Shanahan placed Iranian
actions within the context of “40 years of terrorist activity,” since the 1979
Islamic revolution replaced the pro-Western shah with a staunchly anti-US
clerical regime.
The briefing did not satisfy many of the Democrats,
who say that the heightened tensions are the results of President Donald Trump
administration’s aggressive stance and shunning of diplomacy.
“I worry very much that, intentionally or
unintentionally, we can create a situation in which a war will take place,”
Senator Bernie Sanders, an independent running for the Democratic presidential
nomination, told reporters.
Saying that the Iraq and Vietnam wars were based on
lies by previous administrations, Sanders said: “I believe that a war with Iran
would be an absolute disaster, far worse than the war with Iraq.”