Last Stand
The military’s problem with the President’s Iran policy.
By Seymour M. Hersh
07/02/06 "New
Yorker" -- -- On May 31st, Secretary of State
Condoleezza Rice announced what appeared to be a major change in
U.S. foreign policy. The Bush Administration, she said, would be
willing to join Russia, China, and its European allies in direct
talks with Iran about its nuclear program. There was a condition,
however: the negotiations would not begin until, as the President
put it in a June 19th speech at the U.S. Merchant Marine Academy,
“the Iranian regime fully and verifiably suspends its uranium
enrichment and reprocessing activities.” Iran, which has insisted on
its right to enrich uranium, was being asked to concede the main
point of the negotiations before they started. The question was
whether the Administration expected the Iranians to agree, or was
laying the diplomatic groundwork for future military action. In his
speech, Bush also talked about “freedom for the Iranian people,” and
he added, “Iran’s leaders have a clear choice.” There was an
unspoken threat: the U.S. Strategic Command, supported by the Air
Force, has been drawing up plans, at the President’s direction, for
a major bombing campaign in Iran.
Inside the Pentagon, senior commanders have increasingly challenged
the President’s plans, according to active-duty and retired officers
and officials. The generals and admirals have told the
Administration that the bombing campaign will probably not succeed
in destroying Iran’s nuclear program. They have also warned that an
attack could lead to serious economic, political, and military
consequences for the United States.
A crucial issue in the military’s dissent, the officers said, is the
fact that American and European intelligence agencies have not found
specific evidence of clandestine activities or hidden facilities;
the war planners are not sure what to hit. “The target array in Iran
is huge, but it’s amorphous,” a high-ranking general told me. “The
question we face is, When does innocent infrastructure evolve into
something nefarious?” The high-ranking general added that the
military’s experience in Iraq, where intelligence on weapons of mass
destruction was deeply flawed, has affected its approach to Iran.
“We built this big monster with Iraq, and there was nothing there.
This is son of Iraq,” he said.
“There is a war about the war going on inside the building,” a
Pentagon consultant said. “If we go, we have to find something.”
In President Bush’s June speech, he accused Iran of pursuing a
secret weapons program along with its civilian nuclear-research
program (which it is allowed, with limits, under the Nuclear
Non-Proliferation Treaty). The senior officers in the Pentagon do
not dispute the President’s contention that Iran intends to
eventually build a bomb, but they are frustrated by the intelligence
gaps. A former senior intelligence official told me that people in
the Pentagon were asking, “What’s the evidence? We’ve got a million
tentacles out there, overt and covert, and these guys”—the
Iranians—“have been working on this for eighteen years, and we have
nothing? We’re coming up with jack shit.”
A senior military official told me, “Even if we knew where the
Iranian enriched uranium was—and we don’t—we don’t know where world
opinion would stand. The issue is whether it’s a clear and present
danger. If you’re a military planner, you try to weigh options. What
is the capability of the Iranian response, and the likelihood of a
punitive response—like cutting off oil shipments? What would that
cost us?” Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld and his senior aides
“really think they can do this on the cheap, and they underestimate
the capability of the adversary,” he said.
In 1986, Congress authorized the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of
Staff to act as the “principal military adviser” to the President.
In this case, I was told, the current chairman, Marine General Peter
Pace, has gone further in his advice to the White House by
addressing the consequences of an attack on Iran. “Here’s the
military telling the President what he can’t do politically”—raising
concerns about rising oil prices, for example—the former senior
intelligence official said. “The J.C.S. chairman going to the
President with an economic argument—what’s going on here?” (General
Pace and the White House declined to comment. The Defense Department
responded to a detailed request for comment by saying that the
Administration was “working diligently” on a diplomatic solution and
that it could not comment on classified matters.)
A retired four-star general, who ran a major command, said, “The
system is starting to sense the end of the road, and they don’t want
to be condemned by history. They want to be able to say, ‘We stood
up.’ ”
The military leadership is also raising tactical arguments against
the proposal for bombing Iran, many of which are related to the
consequences for Iraq. According to retired Army Major General
William Nash, who was commanding general of the First Armored
Division, served in Iraq and Bosnia, and worked for the United
Nations in Kosovo, attacking Iran would heighten the risks to
American and coalition forces inside Iraq. “What if one hundred
thousand Iranian volunteers came across the border?” Nash asked. “If
we bomb Iran, they cannot retaliate militarily by air—only on the
ground or by sea, and only in Iraq or the Gulf. A military planner
cannot discount that possibility, and he cannot make an ideological
assumption that the Iranians wouldn’t do it. We’re not talking about
victory or defeat—only about what damage Iran could do to our
interests.” Nash, now a senior fellow at the Council on Foreign
Relations, said, “Their first possible response would be to send
forces into Iraq. And, since the Iraqi Army has limited capacity, it
means that the coalition forces would have to engage them.”
The Americans serving as advisers to the Iraqi police and military
may be at special risk, Nash added, since an American bombing “would
be seen not only as an attack on Shiites but as an attack on all
Muslims. Throughout the Middle East, it would likely be seen as
another example of American imperialism. It would probably cause the
war to spread.”
In contrast, some conservatives are arguing that America’s position
in Iraq would improve if Iran chose to retaliate there, according to
a government consultant with close ties to the Pentagon’s civilian
leaders, because Iranian interference would divide the Shiites into
pro- and anti-Iranian camps, and unify the Kurds and the Sunnis. The
Iran hawks in the White House and the State Department, including
Elliott Abrams and Michael Doran, both of whom are National Security
Council advisers on the Middle East, also have an answer for those
who believe that the bombing of Iran would put American soldiers in
Iraq at risk, the consultant said. He described the counterargument
this way: “Yes, there will be Americans under attack, but they are
under attack now.”
Iran’s geography would also complicate an air war. The senior
military official said that, when it came to air strikes, “this is
not Iraq,” which is fairly flat, except in the northeast. “Much of
Iran is akin to Afghanistan in terms of topography and flight
mapping—a pretty tough target,” the military official said. Over
rugged terrain, planes have to come in closer, and “Iran has a lot
of mature air-defense systems and networks,” he said. “Global
operations are always risky, and if we go down that road we have to
be prepared to follow up with ground troops.”
The U.S. Navy has a separate set of concerns. Iran has more than
seven hundred undeclared dock and port facilities along its Persian
Gulf coast. The small ports, known as “invisible piers,” were
constructed two decades ago by Iran’s Revolutionary Guards to
accommodate small private boats used for smuggling. (The Guards
relied on smuggling to finance their activities and enrich
themselves.) The ports, an Iran expert who advises the U.S.
government told me, provide “the infrastructure to enable the Guards
to go after American aircraft carriers with suicide water
bombers”—small vessels loaded with high explosives. He said that the
Iranians have conducted exercises in the Strait of Hormuz, the
narrow channel linking the Persian Gulf to the Arabian Sea and then
on to the Indian Ocean. The strait is regularly traversed by oil
tankers, in which a thousand small Iranian boats simulated attacks
on American ships. “That would be the hardest problem we’d face in
the water: a thousand small targets weaving in and out among our
ships.”
America’s allies in the Gulf also believe that an attack on Iran
would endanger them, and many American military planners agree.
“Iran can do a lot of things—all asymmetrical,” a Pentagon adviser
on counter-insurgency told me. “They have agents all over the Gulf,
and the ability to strike at will.” In May, according to a
well-informed oil-industry expert, the Emir of Qatar made a private
visit to Tehran to discuss security in the Gulf after the Iraq war.
He sought some words of non-aggression from the Iranian leadership.
Instead, the Iranians suggested that Qatar, which is the site of the
regional headquarters of the U.S. Central Command, would be its
first target in the event of an American attack. Qatar is a leading
exporter of gas and currently operates several major offshore oil
platforms, all of which would be extremely vulnerable. (Nasser bin
Hamad M. al-Khalifa, Qatar’s ambassador to Washington, denied that
any threats were issued during the Emir’s meetings in Tehran. He
told me that it was “a very nice visit.”)
A retired American diplomat, who has experience in the Gulf,
confirmed that the Qatari government is “very scared of what America
will do” in Iran, and “scared to death” about what Iran would do in
response. Iran’s message to the oil-producing Gulf states, the
retired diplomat said, has been that it will respond, and “you are
on the wrong side of history.”
In late April, the military leadership, headed by General Pace,
achieved a major victory when the White House dropped its insistence
that the plan for a bombing campaign include the possible use of a
nuclear device to destroy Iran’s uranium-enrichment plant at Natanz,
nearly two hundred miles south of Tehran. The huge complex includes
large underground facilities built into seventy-five-foot-deep holes
in the ground and designed to hold as many as fifty thousand
centrifuges. “Bush and Cheney were dead serious about the nuclear
planning,” the former senior intelligence official told me. “And
Pace stood up to them. Then the world came back: ‘O.K., the nuclear
option is politically unacceptable.’ ” At the time, a number of
retired officers, including two Army major generals who served in
Iraq, Paul Eaton and Charles Swannack, Jr., had begun speaking out
against the Administration’s handling of the Iraq war. This period
is known to many in the Pentagon as “the April Revolution.”
“An event like this doesn’t get papered over very quickly,” the
former official added. “The bad feelings over the nuclear option are
still felt. The civilian hierarchy feels extraordinarily betrayed by
the brass, and the brass feel they were tricked into it”—the nuclear
planning—“by being asked to provide all options in the planning
papers.”
Sam Gardiner, a military analyst who taught at the National War
College before retiring from the Air Force as a colonel, said that
Rumsfeld’s second-guessing and micromanagement were a fundamental
problem. “Plans are more and more being directed and run by
civilians from the Office of the Secretary of Defense,” Gardiner
said. “It causes a lot of tensions. I’m hearing that the military is
increasingly upset about not being taken seriously by Rumsfeld and
his staff.”
Gardiner went on, “The consequence is that, for Iran and other
missions, Rumsfeld will be pushed more and more in the direction of
special operations, where he has direct authority and does not have
to put up with the objections of the Chiefs.” Since taking office in
2001, Rumsfeld has been engaged in a running dispute with many
senior commanders over his plans to transform the military, and his
belief that future wars will be fought, and won, with airpower and
Special Forces. That combination worked, at first, in Afghanistan,
but the growing stalemate there, and in Iraq, has created a rift,
especially inside the Army. The senior military official said, “The
policymakers are in love with Special Ops—the guys on camels.”
The discord over Iran can, in part, be ascribed to Rumsfeld’s testy
relationship with the generals. They see him as high-handed and
unwilling to accept responsibility for what has gone wrong in Iraq.
A former Bush Administration official described a recent meeting
between Rumsfeld and four-star generals and admirals at a military
commanders’ conference, on a base outside Washington, that, he was
told, went badly. The commanders later told General Pace that “they
didn’t come here to be lectured by the Defense Secretary. They
wanted to tell Rumsfeld what their concerns were.” A few of the
officers attended a subsequent meeting between Pace and Rumsfeld,
and were unhappy, the former official said, when “Pace did not
repeat any of their complaints. There was disappointment about
Pace.” The retired four-star general also described the commanders’
conference as “very fractious.” He added, “We’ve got twenty-five
hundred dead, people running all over the world doing stupid things,
and officers outside the Beltway asking, ‘What the hell is going
on?’ ”
Pace’s supporters say that he is in a difficult position, given
Rumsfeld’s penchant for viewing generals who disagree with him as
disloyal. “It’s a very narrow line between being responsive and
effective and being outspoken and ineffective,” the former senior
intelligence official said.
But Rumsfeld is not alone in the Administration where Iran is
concerned; he is closely allied with Dick Cheney, and, the Pentagon
consultant said, “the President generally defers to the
Vice-President on all these issues,” such as dealing with the
specifics of a bombing campaign if diplomacy fails. “He feels that
Cheney has an informational advantage. Cheney is not a renegade. He
represents the conventional wisdom in all of this. He appeals to the
strategic-bombing lobby in the Air Force—who think that carpet
bombing is the solution to all problems.”
Bombing may not work against Natanz, let alone against the rest of
Iran’s nuclear program. The possibility of using tactical nuclear
weapons gained support in the Administration because of the belief
that it was the only way to insure the destruction of Natanz’s
buried laboratories. When that option proved to be politically
untenable (a nuclear warhead would, among other things, vent fatal
radiation for miles), the Air Force came up with a new bombing plan,
using advanced guidance systems to deliver a series of large
bunker-busters—conventional bombs filled with high explosives—on the
same target, in swift succession. The Air Force argued that the
impact would generate sufficient concussive force to accomplish what
a tactical nuclear warhead would achieve, but without provoking an
outcry over what would be the first use of a nuclear weapon in a
conflict since Nagasaki.
The new bombing concept has provoked controversy among Pentagon
planners and outside experts. Robert Pape, a professor at the
University of Chicago who has taught at the Air Force’s School of
Advanced Air and Space Studies, told me, “We always have a few new
toys, new gimmicks, and rarely do these new tricks lead to a
phenomenal breakthrough. The dilemma is that Natanz is a very large
underground area, and even if the roof came down we won’t be able to
get a good estimate of the bomb damage without people on the ground.
We don’t even know where it goes underground, and we won’t have much
confidence in assessing what we’ve actually done. Absent capturing
an Iranian nuclear scientist and documents, it’s impossible to set
back the program for sure.”
One complicating aspect of the multiple-hit tactic, the Pentagon
consultant told me, is “the liquefaction problem”—the fact that the
soil would lose its consistency owing to the enormous heat generated
by the impact of the first bomb. “It will be like bombing water,
with its currents and eddies. The bombs would likely be diverted.”
Intelligence has also shown that for the past two years the Iranians
have been shifting their most sensitive nuclear-related materials
and production facilities, moving some into urban areas, in
anticipation of a bombing raid.
“The Air Force is hawking it to the other services,” the former
senior intelligence official said. “They’re all excited by it, but
they’re being terribly criticized for it.” The main problem, he
said, is that the other services do not believe the tactic will
work. “The Navy says, ‘It’s not our plan.’ The Marines are against
it—they know they’re going to be the guys on the ground if things go
south.”
“It’s the bomber mentality,” the Pentagon consultant said. “The Air
Force is saying, ‘We’ve got it covered, we can hit all the
distributed targets.’ ” The Air Force arsenal includes a cluster
bomb that can deploy scores of small bomblets with individual
guidance systems to home in on specific targets. The weapons were
deployed in Kosovo and during the early stages of the 2003 invasion
of Iraq, and the Air Force is claiming that the same techniques can
be used with larger bombs, allowing them to be targeted from
twenty-five thousand feet against a multitude of widely dispersed
targets. “The Chiefs all know that ‘shock and awe’ is dead on
arrival,” the Pentagon consultant said. “All except the Air Force.”
“Rumsfeld and Cheney are the pushers on this—they don’t want to
repeat the mistake of doing too little,” the government consultant
with ties to Pentagon civilians told me. “The lesson they took from
Iraq is that there should have been more troops on the ground”—an
impossibility in Iran, because of the overextension of American
forces in Iraq—“so the air war in Iran will be one of overwhelming
force.”
Many of the Bush Administration’s supporters view the abrupt change
in negotiating policy as a deft move that won public plaudits and
obscured the fact that Washington had no other good options. “The
United States has done what its international partners have asked it
to do,” said Patrick Clawson, who is an expert on Iran and the
deputy director for research at the Washington Institute for Near
East Policy, a conservative think tank. “The ball is now in their
court—for both the Iranians and the Europeans.” Bush’s goal, Clawson
said, was to assuage his allies, as well as Russia and China, whose
votes, or abstentions, in the United Nations would be needed if the
talks broke down and the U.S. decided to seek Security Council
sanctions or a U.N. resolution that allowed for the use of force
against Iran.
“If Iran refuses to re-start negotiations, it will also be difficult
for Russia and China to reject a U.N. call for International Atomic
Energy Agency inspections,” Clawson said. “And the longer we go
without accelerated I.A.E.A. access, the more important the issue of
Iran’s hidden facilities will become.” The drawback to the new
American position, Clawson added, was that “the Iranians might take
Bush’s agreeing to join the talks as a sign that their hard line has
worked.”
Clawson acknowledged that intelligence on Iran’s nuclear-weapons
progress was limited. “There was a time when we had reasonable
confidence in what we knew,” he said. “We could say, ‘There’s less
time than we think,’ or, ‘It’s going more slowly.’ Take your choice.
Lack of information is a problem, but we know they’ve made rapid
progress with their centrifuges.” (The most recent American
intelligence estimate is that Iran could build a warhead sometime
between 2010 and 2015.)
Flynt Leverett, a former National Security Council aide for the Bush
Administration, told me, “The only reason Bush and Cheney relented
about talking to Iran was because they were within weeks of a
diplomatic meltdown in the United Nations. Russia and China were
going to stiff us”—that is, prevent the passage of a U.N.
resolution. Leverett, a project director at the New America
Foundation, added that the White House’s proposal, despite offering
trade and economic incentives for Iran, has not “resolved any of the
fundamental contradictions of U.S. policy.” The precondition for the
talks, he said—an open-ended halt to all Iranian enrichment
activity—“amounts to the President wanting a guarantee that they’ll
surrender before he talks to them. Iran cannot accept long-term
constraints on its fuel-cycle activity as part of a settlement
without a security guarantee”—for example, some form of mutual
non-aggression pact with the United States.
Leverett told me that, without a change in U.S. policy, the balance
of power in the negotiations will shift to Russia. “Russia sees Iran
as a beachhead against American interests in the Middle East, and
they’re playing a very sophisticated game,” he said. “Russia is
quite comfortable with Iran having nuclear fuel cycles that would be
monitored, and they’ll support the Iranian position”—in part,
because it gives them the opportunity to sell billions of dollars’
worth of nuclear fuel and materials to Tehran. “They believe they
can manage their long- and short-term interests with Iran, and still
manage the security interests,” Leverett said. China, which, like
Russia, has veto power on the Security Council, was motivated in
part by its growing need for oil, he said. “They don’t want punitive
measures, such as sanctions, on energy producers, and they don’t
want to see the U.S. take a unilateral stance on a state that
matters to them.” But, he said, “they’re happy to let Russia take
the lead in this.” (China, a major purchaser of Iranian oil, is
negotiating a multibillion-dollar deal with Iran for the purchase of
liquefied natural gas over a period of twenty-five years.) As for
the Bush Administration, he added, “unless there’s a shift, it’s
only a question of when its policy falls apart.”
It’s not clear whether the Administration will be able to keep the
Europeans in accord with American policy if the talks break down.
Morton Abramowitz, a former head of State Department intelligence,
who was one of the founders of the International Crisis Group, said,
“The world is different than it was three years ago, and while the
Europeans want good relations with us, they will not go to war with
Iran unless they know that an exhaustive negotiating effort was made
by Bush. There’s just too much involved, like the price of oil.
There will be great pressure put on the Europeans, but I don’t think
they’ll roll over and support a war.”
The Europeans, like the generals at the Pentagon, are concerned
about the quality of intelligence. A senior European intelligence
official said that while “there was every reason to assume” that the
Iranians were working on a bomb, there wasn’t enough evidence to
exclude the possibility that they were bluffing, and hadn’t moved
beyond a civilian research program. The intelligence official was
not optimistic about the current negotiations. “It’s a mess, and I
don’t see any possibility, at the moment, of solving the problem,”
he said. “The only thing to do is contain it. The question is, What
is the redline? Is it when you master the nuclear fuel cycle? Or is
it just about building a bomb?” Every country had a different
criterion, he said. One worry he had was that, in addition to its
security concerns, the Bush Administration was driven by its
interest in “democratizing” the region. “The United States is on a
mission,” he said.
A European diplomat told me that his government would be willing to
discuss Iran’s security concerns—a dialogue he said Iran offered
Washington three years ago. The diplomat added that “no one wants to
be faced with the alternative if the negotiations don’t succeed:
either accept the bomb or bomb them. That’s why our goal is to keep
the pressure on, and see what Iran’s answer will be.”
A second European diplomat, speaking of the Iranians, said, “Their
tactic is going to be to stall and appear reasonable—to say, ‘Yes,
but . . .’ We know what’s going on, and the timeline we’re under.
The Iranians have repeatedly been in violation of I.A.E.A.
safeguards and have given us years of coverup and deception. The
international community does not want them to have a bomb, and if we
let them continue to enrich that’s throwing in the towel—giving up
before we talk.” The diplomat went on, “It would be a mistake to
predict an inevitable failure of our strategy. Iran is a regime that
is primarily concerned with its own survival, and if its existence
is threatened it would do whatever it needed to do—including backing
down.”
The Iranian regime’s calculations about its survival also depend on
internal political factors. The nuclear program is popular with the
Iranian people, including those—the young and the secular—who are
most hostile to the religious leadership. Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, the
President of Iran, has effectively used the program to rally the
nation behind him, and against Washington. Ahmadinejad and the
ruling clerics have said that they believe Bush’s goal is not to
prevent them from building a bomb but to drive them out of office.
Several current and former officials I spoke to expressed doubt that
President Bush would settle for a negotiated resolution of the
nuclear crisis. A former high-level Pentagon civilian official, who
still deals with sensitive issues for the government, said that Bush
remains confident in his military decisions. The President and
others in the Administration often invoke Winston Churchill, both
privately and in public, as an example of a politician who, in his
own time, was punished in the polls but was rewarded by history for
rejecting appeasement. In one speech, Bush said, Churchill “seemed
like a Texan to me. He wasn’t afraid of public-opinion polls. . . .
He charged ahead, and the world is better for it.”
The Israelis have insisted for years that Iran has a clandestine
program to build a bomb, and will do so as soon as it can. Israeli
officials have emphasized that their “redline” is the moment Iran
masters the nuclear fuel cycle, acquiring the technical ability to
produce weapons-grade uranium. “Iran managed to surprise everyone in
terms of the enrichment capability,” one diplomat familiar with the
Israeli position told me, referring to Iran’s announcement, this
spring, that it had successfully enriched uranium to the
3.6-per-cent level needed to fuel a nuclear-power reactor. The
Israelis believe that Iran must be stopped as soon as possible,
because, once it is able to enrich uranium for fuel, the next
step—enriching it to the ninety-per-cent level needed for a nuclear
bomb—is merely a mechanical process.
Israeli intelligence, however, has also failed to provide specific
evidence about secret sites in Iran, according to current and former
military and intelligence officials. In May, Prime Minister Ehud
Olmert visited Washington and, addressing a joint session of
Congress, said that Iran “stands on the verge of acquiring nuclear
weapons” that would pose “an existential threat” to Israel. Olmert
noted that Ahmadinejad had questioned the reality of the Holocaust,
and he added, “It is not Israel’s threat alone. It is a threat to
all those committed to stability in the Middle East and to the
well-being of the world at large.” But at a secret intelligence
exchange that took place at the Pentagon during the visit, the
Pentagon consultant said, “what the Israelis provided fell way
short” of what would be needed to publicly justify preventive
action.
The issue of what to do, and when, seems far from resolved inside
the Israeli government. Martin Indyk, a former U.S. Ambassador to
Israel, who is now the director of the Brookings Institution’s Saban
Center for Middle East Policy, told me, “Israel would like to see
diplomacy succeed, but they’re worried that in the meantime Iran
will cross a threshold of nuclear know-how—and they’re worried about
an American military attack not working. They assume they’ll be
struck first in retaliation by Iran.” Indyk added, “At the end of
the day, the United States can live with Iranian, Pakistani, and
Indian nuclear bombs—but for Israel there’s no Mutual Assured
Destruction. If they have to live with an Iranian bomb, there will
be a great deal of anxiety in Israel, and a lot of tension between
Israel and Iran, and between Israel and the U.S.”
Iran has not, so far, officially answered President Bush’s proposal.
But its initial response has been dismissive. In a June 22nd
interview with the Guardian, Ali Larijani, Iran’s chief nuclear
negotiator, rejected Washington’s demand that Iran suspend all
uranium enrichment before talks could begin. “If they want to put
this prerequisite, why are we negotiating at all?” Larijani said.
“We should put aside the sanctions and give up all this talk about
regime change.” He characterized the American offer as a “sermon,”
and insisted that Iran was not building a bomb. “We don’t want the
bomb,” he said. Ahmadinejad has said that Iran would make a formal
counterproposal by August 22nd, but last week Ayatollah Ali
Khamenei, Iran’s supreme religious leader, declared, on state radio,
“Negotiation with the United States has no benefits for us.”
Despite the tough rhetoric, Iran would be reluctant to reject a
dialogue with the United States, according to Giandomenico Picco,
who, as a representative of the United Nations, helped to negotiate
the ceasefire that ended the Iran-Iraq War, in 1988. “If you engage
a superpower, you feel you are a superpower,” Picco told me. “And
now the haggling in the Persian bazaar begins. We are negotiating
over a carpet”—the suspected weapons program—“that we’re not sure
exists, and that we don’t want to exist. And if at the end there
never was a carpet it’ll be the negotiation of the century.”
If the talks do break down, and the Administration decides on
military action, the generals will, of course, follow their orders;
the American military remains loyal to the concept of civilian
control. But some officers have been pushing for what they call the
“middle way,” which the Pentagon consultant described as “a mix of
options that require a number of Special Forces teams and air cover
to protect them to send into Iran to grab the evidence so the world
will know what Iran is doing.” He added that, unlike Rumsfeld, he
and others who support this approach were under no illusion that it
could bring about regime change. The goal, he said, was to resolve
the Iranian nuclear crisis.
Mohamed ElBaradei, the director general of the I.A.E.A., said in a
speech this spring that his agency believed there was still time for
diplomacy to achieve that goal. “We should have learned some lessons
from Iraq,” ElBaradei, who won the Nobel Peace Prize last year,
said. “We should have learned that we should be very careful about
assessing our intelligence. . . . We should have learned that we
should try to exhaust every possible diplomatic means to solve the
problem before thinking of any other enforcement measures.”
He went on, “When you push a country into a corner, you are always
giving the driver’s seat to the hard-liners. . . . If Iran were to
move out of the nonproliferation regime altogether, if Iran were to
develop a nuclear weapon program, we clearly will have a much, much
more serious problem.”
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