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Is Iran
An Immediate Threat?
by Mark Armstrong |
War
with Iran Soon?
by Michael Burkert |
US Headed for Confrontation With
Iran
by Leon Hadar
I've been embarrassed a few times in the past with my predictions (for
example, that it was going to be U.S. President John Kerry in 2004), but
I've also been right on a few occasions (for example, my book, Quagmire:
America in the Middle East, was published in 1992). So let me put my
credibility as a political analyst on the line again and make another
forecast: The news this year will be dominated by the growing
confrontation between Washington and Tehran (if that doesn't happen,
well, I promise not to remind you about that early next year).
| ...by destroying Iraq's
military power, the Americans have removed the major regional
counterbalance to Iran's power in the Persian Gulf... |
Notice that I'm hedging my bets here. I refer to "confrontation," as in
diplomatic and military confrontation, and not to war, as in the war
with Iraq. I don't think that the United States at this point has the
needed military resources and the necessary political support at home
and abroad for launching a full-scale attack on Iran, including the
possible American occupation of that country (or even parts of it).
In short, don't replace the "q" with an "n" and expect a rerun of Iraq
in Iran. The military and political realities are quite different than
they were three years ago when the Bush administration decided to oust
Saddam Hussein from power. One doesn't have to be a veteran military
expert or a diplomatic observer to recognize that the U.S. armed forces
are overstretched in Mesopotamia (150,000) and around the world, and
that the Bush administration wouldn't be able to persuade even Tony
Blair to invade Iran.
Most important of all, the American public is exhausted with the war in
Iraq. Hence, short of a 9/11-like terrorist attack that could be linked
(really, that is, and not through deceptive "intelligence") to the
ayatollahs in Tehran, Congress is not going to provide President Bush
with the green light to send U.S. ground troops to Iran, especially
since none are actually available (there are less than 400,000 combat
troops in the U.S. Army and only 150,000 of those are on active duty).
A total war with Iran, the world's second-largest oil producer, in 2006
could also lead to a huge hike in petrol prices in the United States
that would make it less likely that the American SUV owner would reelect
a Republican Congress in the November midterm elections.
But a U.S. confrontation with Iran is inevitable for several reasons.
Much of the public's attention has been focused of course on the
U.S.-led push, backed by the European Union (EU), to block what seems to
be Iran's drive to speed up its nuclear-development program. The recent
American efforts have been taking place through multilateral channels,
suggesting to some observers that the Bush administration has been
adopting a "realist" strategy. The EU-3 countries (Britain, France,
Germany) have been negotiating on and off with Iran, and meetings
between the Americans and the other 34 members of the International
Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) governing board have produced resolutions
calling on Iran to adopt a more cooperative approach.
But the Bush administration agreed last November to go along with a
European recommendation to delay asking the IAEA board members to refer
Iran to the United Nations Security Council for action, after Russia and
China indicated that they would block UN action to punish Tehran.
And while the EU-3 negotiations with Iran seem to be reaching a dead
end, there have been signs of growing tensions between the Iranians and
the Israelis. Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad has publicly
threatened to eliminate Israel and suggested that the Jewish Holocaust
didn't take place.
At the same time, Israeli officials have stressed that they would not
permit Iran to develop a nuclear military capability, igniting some
reports that they are planning an attack against Iran's Bushehr nuclear
reactor similar to the Israeli raid on Iraq's Osirak nuclear site in
1981.
But it seems very unlikely given the conditions that exist today in the
Middle East – with the United States occupying Iraq, a state that
borders Iran – that Israel would take military action against Tehran
that could affect U.S. interests without receiving a go-ahead from its
patron in Washington. The Israeli tail won't be allowed to wag the U.S.
dog.
More likely, the Israeli threats serve the U.S. strategy of pressing
Iran to make concessions over the nuclear issue. In fact, recent reports
in the German media that the Bush administration was preparing its NATO
allies for a possible military strike against suspected nuclear sites in
Iran in 2006, which appeared after similar news was published in the
Turkish press, should be regarded as part of the U.S. campaign to
pressure Tehran to agree to make compromises during the negotiations
with the EU-3 and the IAEA.
Most observers are speculating that without any breakthrough in the
talks with Iran, Washington will demand that the UN Security Council
impose sanctions on Iran, and if the Russians and/or the Chinese decide
to veto a resolution along those lines, the Bush administration will
urge the Europeans and other governments to join in an embargo on
technologies that Iran can use in its nuclear program.
Both the Americans and the Iranians are aware that such moves, assuming
the Europeans and others back them, would have very little effect on
Iran. With the continuing rise in oil prices, the Iranians are now awash
with oil and money, while the Russians, the Chinese, and probably the
Indians remain important trade partners for the Iranians and can be
expected to reject a U.S. call to isolate Iran and to continue to make
major economic deals with Tehran on energy and arms.
Moreover, the Iranians are familiar with the argument made above, that
the United States won't be able to "do an Iraq" in Iran, among other
reasons because of the high military and economic costs for the United
States involved in maintaining the occupation of Iraq. If anything, the
Iranians could probably raise those costs for the Americans by
encouraging their political and military allies in the majority Shi'ite
community in Iraq, some of whom are now in power in Baghdad, to make
life miserable for the occupiers through violence (the use of the
Shi'ite militias) or by sabotaging moves toward political accommodation
in Iraq.
As an Iran expert suggested to me: "All the Iranians need is to push
their Shi'ite button, and Iraq would explode in the face of the
Americans." Indeed, note the irony here. By ousting Saddam Hussein and
his Arab-Sunni allies in Baghdad and by destroying Iraq's military
power, the Americans have removed the major regional counterbalance to
Iran's power in the Persian Gulf on which other Sunni-Arab regimes in
the region, including Saudi Arabia, have counted as a way of containing
the Shi'ite ayatollahs in Tehran, who seem to have adopted an even more
radical style than before.
Compounding this sense of irony is the fact that democracy and free
elections in Iraq – under U.S. occupation! – are bringing to power a
Shi'ite political coalition with strong ties to anti-American Tehran
(where another exercise in democracy led to the election of the
Holocaust denier and anti-American Ahmadinejad).
It's not surprising, therefore, that the Saudis and other Arab Gulf
states, not unlike the Israelis, have been putting pressure on the
Americans to "do something" about Iran before a regional Shi'ite bloc
led by Iran emerges in the Gulf and threatens the interests of the
Saudis (who also have a large Shi'ite minority).
All of which means that if the Americans want to make sure that Iraq
under Shi'ite rule doesn't turn into a satellite of Iran, they need to
use their own diplomatic and military power to contain Tehran while
continuing to occupy Iraq.
The Iranians, however, assume that they are in a win-win situation. They
can drag out the negotiations with the EU-3 and the IAEA, create a sense
of a diplomatic brinkmanship, and make a few last-moment, minor
concessions on the nuclear issue. That option would leave Washington
isolated and with no support to take action against Tehran.
Or the Iranians could decide to raise the diplomatic ante and reject any
compromise, counting on the Russians and/or the Chinese to block UN
action and on Venezuela's Hugo Chavez and other anti-American Third
World nations to join them in countering U.S. diplomatic moves, which in
turn would put enormous pressure on oil prices.
Doing nothing about Iran would not only demolish what remains of the
U.S.-led nuclear arms-control regime, it would also turn the balance of
power in Iraq and the Persian Gulf against the United States and create
incentives for the Saudis and others to make deals with Tehran.
Short of trying to open direct diplomatic channels with Iran (very
unlikely), the United States will probably try to increase the
diplomatic and military pressure on Iran in the coming months,
demonstrating that the Pax Americana project in the Middle East is
becoming more expensive.
That the central banks of China and other Asian economies are paying for
it is probably the most intriguing element in this evolving story.
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