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Is Iran
An Immediate Threat?
by Mark Armstrong |
War
with Iran Soon?
by Michael Burkert |
Striking the US where it hurts
By Victor N Corpus
Editor's Note: I
include this story about China here for its EMP element spoken of in
this news commentary on Iran. Clearly we are seeing stories on
Chinese technology being introduced into the Middle East through various
arms sales and sharing of technologies.
Speaking Freely is an Asia Times Online feature that allows guest
writers to have their say.
A noted Chinese theorist on modern warfare, Chang Mengxiong, compared
China's form of fighting to "a Chinese boxer with a keen knowledge of
vital body points who can bring an opponent to his knees with a minimum
of movements".
| An EMP attack will damage
all electrical grids on the US mainland. |
It is like key acupuncture points in ancient Chinese medicine. Puncture
one vital point and the whole anatomy is affected. If America ever goes
to war with China, say, over Taiwan, then America should be prepared for
the following "acupuncture points" in its anatomy to be "punctured".
Each of the vital points can bring America to its knees with a minimum
of effort.
I Electro-magnetic Pulse (EMP) attack
China and Russia are two potential US adversaries that have the
capability for this kind of attack. An EMP attack can either come from
an intercontinental ballistic missile (ICBM), a submarine-launched
ballistic missile (SLBM), a long-range cruise missile, or an orbiting
satellite armed with a nuclear or non-nuclear EMP warhead. A nuclear
burst of one (or more) megaton some 400 kilometers over central United
States (Omaha, Nebraska) can blanket the whole continental US with
electro-magnetic pulse in less than one second.
An EMP attack will damage all electrical grids on the US mainland. It
will disable computers and other similar electronic devices with
microchips. Most businesses and industries will shut down. The entire US
economy will practically grind to a halt. Satellites within line of
sight of the EMP burst will also be damaged, adversely affecting
military command, control, communications, computers, intelligence,
surveillance and reconnaissance (C4ISR). Land-based intercontinental
ballistic missiles will be rendered unserviceable in their silos.
Anti-ballistic missile defenses will suffer the same fate. In short –
total blackout. And American society as we know it will be thrown back
to the Dark Ages.
Of course, the US may decide to strike first, but China and Russia now
have the means of striking back with submarine-launched ballistic
missiles with the same or even more devastating results. But knowing
China's strategy of "active defense", when war with the US becomes
imminent, China will surely not allow itself to be targeted first. It
will seize the initiative as mandated by its doctrine by striking first.
China has repeatedly announced that it will not be the first to use
nuclear weapons. But as an old Chinese saying goes: "There can never be
too much deception in war." If it means the survival of the whole
Chinese nation that is at stake, China will surely not allow a public
statement to tie its hands and prevent it from seizing the initiative.
As another saying goes: "All is fair in love and war."
2 Cyber attack
America is the most advanced country in the world in the field of
information technology (IT). Practically all of its industries,
manufacturing, business and finance, telecommunications, key government
services and defense establishment rely heavily on computers and
computer networks.
But this heavy dependence on computers is a double-edged sword. It has
thrust the US economy and defense establishment ahead of all other
countries; but it has also created an Achilles' heel that can
potentially bring the superpower to its knees with a few keystrokes on a
dozen or so laptops.
China's new concept of a "people's war" includes IT warriors coming, not
only from its military more than 2-million strong, but from the general
citizenry of some 1.3 billion people. If we add the hackers and
information warriors from Russia, Iran, North Korea, Venezuela, Cuba,
Syria and other countries sympathetic to China, the cyber attack on the
US would be formidable indeed.
So, if a major conflict erupts between China and America, more than a
few dozen laptops will be engaged to hack America's military
establishment; banking system; stock exchange; defense industries;
telecommunication system; power grids; water system; oil and gas
pipeline system; air traffic and train traffic control systems; C4ISR
system, ballistic missile system, and other systems that prop up the
American way of life.
America, on the whole, has not adequately prepared itself for this kind
of attack. Neither has it prepared itself for a possible EMP attack.
Such attacks can bring a superpower like America to its knees with a
minimum of movement.
3 Interdiction of US foreign oil supply
America is now 75% dependent on foreign imported oil. About 23.5% of
America's imported oil supply comes from the Persian Gulf. To cut off
this oil supply, Iran can simply mine the Strait of Hormuz, using
bottom-rising sea mines. It is worthwhile to note that Iran has the
world's fourth-largest inventory of sea mines, after China, Russia and
the US.
Combined with sea mines, Iran can also block the narrow strait with
supersonic cruise missiles such as Yakhonts, Moskits, Granits and
Brahmos deployed on Abu Musa Island and all along the rugged and
mountainous coastline of Iran fronting the Persian Gulf. This single
action can bring America to its knees. Not only America but Japan (which
derives 90% of its oil supply) and Europe (which derives about 60% of
its oil supply from the Persian Gulf ) will be adversely affected.
In the event of a major conflict involving superpower America and its
allies (primarily Japan and Britain) on the one hand and China and its
allies (primarily Russia and Iran) on the other, Iran's role will become
strategically crucial. Iran can totally stop the flow of oil coming from
the Persian Gulf. This is the main reason why China and Russia are
carefully nurturing intimate economic, cultural, political, diplomatic
and military ties with Iran, which at one time was condemned by US
President George W Bush as belonging to that "axis of evil", along with
Iraq and North Korea.
This is also the reason why Iran is so brave in daring the US to attack
it on the nuclear proliferation issue. Iran knows that it has the power
to hurt the US. Without oil from the Gulf, the war machines of the US
and its principal allies will literally run out of gas.
A single blow from Iran or China or Russia, or a combination of the
three at the Strait of Hormuz can paralyze America. In addition, Chinese
and Russian submarines can stop the flow of oil to the US and Japan by
interdicting oil tanker traffic coming from the Middle East, Africa and
Latin America. On the other hand, US naval supremacy will have minimal
effect on China's oil supply because it is already connected to
Kazakhstan with a pipeline and will soon be connected to Russia and Iran
as well.
One wonders: what will be the price of oil if Iran blocks the Strait of
Hormuz. It will surely drive oil prices sky high. Prolonged high oil
prices can, in turn, trigger inflation in the US and a sharp decline of
the dollar, possibly even a dollar free-fall. The collapse of the dollar
will have a serious impact on the entire US economy.
This brings us to the next "acupuncture point" in the US anatomy: dollar
vulnerability.
4 Attack on the US dollar
One of the pillars propping up US superpower status and worldwide
economic dominance is the dollar being accepted as the predominant
reserve currency. Central banks of various countries have to stock up
dollar reserves because they can only buy their oil requirements and
other major commodities in US dollars.
This US economic strength, however, is a double-edged sword and can turn
out to be America's economic Achilles' heel. A run of the US dollar, for
instance, which would cause a dollar free-fall, can bring the entire US
economy toppling down.
What is frightening for the US is the fact that China, Russia and Iran
possess the power to cause a run on the US dollar and force its
collapse.
China is now the biggest holder of foreign exchange reserves in the
world, accumulating $941 billion as of June 30 and expected to exceed a
trillion dollars by the end of 2006 - a first in world history. A
decision by China to shift a major portion of its reserve to the euro or
the yen or gold could trigger other central banks to follow suit. Nobody
would want to be left behind holding a bagfull of dollars rapidly
turning worthless. The herd psychology would be very difficult to
control in this case because national economic survival would be at
stake.
This global herd psychology motivated by the survival instinct will be
strongly reinforced by the latent anger of many countries in the Middle
East, Eurasia, Southeast Asia, Africa and Latin America that silently
abhor the pugnacious arrogance displayed by the lone Superpower in the
exercise of its unilateral and militaristic foreign policies. They will
just be too happy to dump the dollar and watch the lone Superpower
squirm and collapse.
The danger of the dollar collapsing is reinforced by the mounting US
current account deficit, which sky-rocketed to $900 billion at an annual
rate in the fourth quarter of 2005. This figure is 7% of US gross
domestic product (GDP), the largest in US history. The current account
deficit reflects the imbalance of US imports to its exports. The large
imbalance shows that the US economy is losing its competitiveness, with
US jobs and incomes suffering as a result.
These record deficits in external trade and current accounts mean that
the US has to borrow from foreign lenders (mostly Japan and China) $900
billion annually or nearly $2.5 billion every single day to finance the
gap between payments and receipts from the rest of the world. In
financial year 2005, $352 billion was spent on interest payment of
national debt alone - a national debt that has ballooned to $8.5
trillion as of August 24.
The International Monetary Fund has warned: "The US is on course to
increase its net external liabilities to around 40% of its GDP within
the next few years - an unprecedented level of external debt for a large
industrial country."
The picture of the US federal budget deficit is equally grim. Dennis
Cauchon, writing for USA Today said:
The federal government keeps two sets of books. The set the government
promotes to the public has a healthier bottom line: a $318 billion
deficit in 2005. The set the government doesn't talk about is the
audited financial statement produced by the government's accountants
following standard accounting rules. It reports a more ominous financial
picture: a $760 billion deficit for 2005. If social security and
medicare were included - as the board that sets accounting rules is
considering - the federal deficit would have been $3.5 trillion.
Congress has written its own accounting rules - which would be illegal
for a corporation to use because they ignore important costs such as the
growing expense of retirement benefits for civil servants and military
personnel. Last year, the audited statement produced by the accountants
said the government ran a deficit equal to $6,700 for every American
household. The number given to the public put the deficit at $2,800 per
household ... The audited financial statement - prepared by the Treasury
Department - reveals a federal government in far worse financial shape
than official budget reports indicate, a USA Today analysis found. The
government has run a deficit of $2.9 trillion since 1997, according to
the audited number. The official deficit since then is just $729
billion. The difference is equal to an entire year's worth of federal
spending.
The huge US current account and trade deficits, the mounting external
debt and the ever-increasing federal budget deficits are clear signs of
an economy on the edge. They have dragged the dollar to the brink of the
precipice. Such a state of economic affairs cannot be sustained for
long, and the stability of the dollar is put in grave danger. One push
and the dollar will plunge into free-fall. And that push can come from
China, Russia or Iran, whom superpower America has been pushing and
bullying all along.
We have seen what China can do. How can Russia or Iran, in turn, cause a
dollar downfall? On September 2, 2003, Russia and Saudi Arabia signed an
agreement on oil and gas cooperation. Russia and Saudi Arabia have
agreed "to exercise joint control over the dynamics of prices for raw
materials on foreign markets". The two biggest oil and gas producers, in
cooperation, say, with Iran, could control oil production and sales to
keep the price of oil relatively high. Sustained high oil prices, in
turn, could trigger a high inflation rate in the US and put extreme
pressure on the already weak dollar to trigger a more rapid decline.
Russia is now the world's biggest energy supplier, surpassing Saudi
Arabia in energy exports measured in barrel oil equivalent or boe (13.3
million boe per day for Russia vs 10 million boe per day for Saudi
Arabia). Russia has the biggest gas reserves in the world. Iran, on the
other hand, runs second in the world to Russia in gas reserves, and also
ranks among the top oil producers. If and when either Russia or Iran, or
both, shift away from a rapidly declining dollar in energy transactions,
many oil producers will follow suit. These include Venezuela, Indonesia,
Norway, Sudan, Nigeria and the Central Asian Republics.
There is a good chance that even Saudi Arabia and the other
oil-exporting countries in the Middle East may follow suit. They
wouldn't want to be left with fast-shrinking dollars when the shift from
petro-dollar to euro-dollar occurs. Again, the herd psychology will come
into play, and the US will eventually be left with a dollar that is
practically worthless. Considering the strong anti-American sentiments
in the world caused by American unilateralism, especially in the Middle
East, a concerted effort to dump the dollar in favor of the euro becomes
even more plausible.
When the dollar was removed from the gold standard in August 1971, the
dollar gained its strength through its use as the currency of choice in
oil transactions. Once the dollar is rejected in favor of the euro or
another currency for global oil transactions, the dollar will rapidly
lose its value and central banks all over the world will be racing to
diversify to other currencies. The shift from petro-dollar to petro-euro
will have a devastating effect on the dollar. It could cause the dollar
to collapse; and the whole US economy crushing down with it - a scene
reminiscent of the collapse of the Twin Towers on September 11, 2001.
But this one will be a thousand times more devastating.
A successful assault on the US dollar will make America crawl on its
knees with a minimum of movements. And this assault can come from China,
Russia or Iran - or a combination of the three - if they ever decide
that they have had enough of US bullying.
5 Diplomatic isolation
In 1991, when the Soviet Union collapsed from its own weight, the US
emerged as the sole superpower in the world. At that crucial period, it
would have been a great opportunity for the US to establish its global
leadership and dominance worldwide. With the world's biggest economy,
its control of international financial institutions, its huge lead in
science and technology (specially information technology) and its
unequaled military might, America could have seized the moment to
establish a truly American Century.
But in the critical years after 1991, America had to make a choice
between two divergent approaches to the use of its almost unlimited
power: soft power or hard power. The exercise of soft power would have
seen America leading the world in the fight against poverty, disease,
drugs, environmental degradation, global warming and other ills plaguing
humankind.
It would have pushed America in leading the move to address the debt
burden of poor, undeveloped or developing countries; promoting distance
learning in remote rural areas to empower the poor economically by
providing them access to quality education; and helped poor countries in
Asia, Africa and Latin America build highways, railways, ports,
airports, hospitals, schools and telecommunication systems.
Unfortunately, such was not to be. If there was any effort at the
exercise of soft power at all, it was minimal. In fact, it is not
America which is practicing soft power in diplomacy but a rising power
in the East - China. China has been busy in the past decade or so
exercising soft power in almost all countries in Africa, Latin America,
Central Asia, Southeast Asia, South Asia and the Middle East, winning
most of the countries in these regions to its side. Through the use of
soft power, China has created a de facto global united front under its
silent, low-key leadership.
The US, on the other hand, decided to employ mainly hard power in the
exercise of its global power. It adapted the policy of unilateralism and
militarism in its foreign policy. It discarded the United Nations and
even the advice of close allies. It unilaterally discarded signed
international treaties (such as the Anti-Ballistic Missile Treaty). It
adapted the policy of regime change and preventive war. It led the North
Atlantic Treaty Organization in the 78-day bombing of Serbia purportedly
for "humanitarian" reasons. It invaded Afghanistan and Iraq without UN
sanctions and against the advice of key European allies like France and
Germany.
The US-led war in Iraq was a tactical victory for the US initially, but
has resulted in strategic defeat overall. The Iraq war caused the US to
lose its principal allies in Europe and be isolated, despised and hated
in many parts of the world. Without too many friends and allies, the US
is likened to an "emperor with no clothes".
So in a major conflict between America and China, isolated America
cannot possibly win against a global united front led by China and
Russia.
This brings us to the question of alliances, another "acupuncture point"
in the anatomy of the superpower, which will be addressed in the second
part of this report.
Tomorrow, Part 2: Faced with a China-Russia-Iran triumvirate
Victor N Corpus is a retired brigadier general of the Armed Forces of
the Philippines (AFP); former chief of the Intelligence Service, AFP;
and holds a master's degree in public administration from the Kennedy
School of Government, Harvard University.
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