Why Bush will Choose War Against Iran
By Ray Close
08/25/06 "Information
Clearing House" -- -- Like many people, I find it extremely difficult to believe that
President Bush could actually do anything so crazy as to launch a
military attack against Iran, and that even if he wanted to, the
Congress, the Pentagon, and the American public would ever
countenance such action. But I remember in the spring of 2002
writing a "Dear Friends" memo just like this one predicting that the
apparent intentions of the Bush Administration to invade Iraq would
certainly turn out to be nothing but a bluff, and supporting that
assertion by listing all the reasons why actually doing so would
lead to utter disaster. Many of my friends told me at the time that
I was missing the point --- regime change was DEFINITELY going to
happen, and I was exaggerating the downside consequences. The
problem is that today the downside risks of attacking Iran seem even
more horrendous ---- and yet? (As George Will said last Sunday to
George Stephanopoulos -- "When was the last time this president ever
worried about getting approval in advance from the Congress or the
public?")
It makes me nervous when my president truly believes he is carrying
out the will of God.
So this is why I reluctantly believe today that Bush will indeed
launch an attack on Iran before the expiration of his term of
office:
1. As expected, Iran has offered to enter negotiations, but has
rejected the precondition that they discontinue uranium enrichment.
Iran will continue to stall indefinitely in the expectation that the
U.S. cannot summon the international political and economic clout to
damage Iran to any critical degree in the near future. Meanwhile,
Iran remains totally and sincerely convinced (with ample
justification) that the U.S. is committed to overthrowing the
Teheran regime on the tactical level, and waging a broader war
against Islam on the strategic level. Rightly or wrongly, Iranian
leaders interpret Israeli-US joint collaboration in Lebanon as the
final proof of both suspicions. Nothing will shake that conviction.
We can huff and puff, but the reality is that we will not succeed in
either persuading or intimidating the Iranian leadership into doing
what we want them to do. This is the nub of the problem in
Washington: none of the principal decision-makers --- Bush, Cheney, Rumsfeld or Rice --- (even Rice!) --- understands and accepts this
simple reality, and so all the expectations and calculations that go
into the formation of U.S. policy start from a faulty premise.
2. The U.S. will fail to get the UNSC to establish (and then
enforce) a regimen of sanctions that Washington considers tough
enough --- despite the unanimous concern of the larger powers,
including China and Russia, that a nuclear Iran would be
undesirable. The Bush Administration will fulminate about weakness
of resolve and false friendship of its “allies”, but this will only
exacerbate the divisions and further expose the enfeebled state of
American political and moral leadership and the deterioration of its
international credibility. Iran will watch this soap opera, smiling
like a Cheshire cat.
3. Whatever sanctions are eventually applied will have zero chance
of persuading Iran to abandon its nuclear ambitions; most certain is
the fact that Iran will continue its development program without any
slowdown until it has passed the US-Israel "red line" of possessing
the necessary raw material to produce a nuclear bomb whenever it
chooses to do so. (As we all know, possession of an operational bomb
may be as much as a decade or more in the future, but the "red line"
of achieving all the necessary technology, equipment and ingredients
could be crossed MUCH sooner than that --- and almost certainly
before Bush leaves office in January 2009.)
4. So this is the calculus facing Bush:
a. He has vowed that he will not leave office without first ensuring
that Iran cannot become a nuclear power. He has probably given the
leaders of Israel a similar promise --- privately and perhaps
explicitly. That means that he is effectively committed to attack
Iran militarily before January 2009 if all other means of
accomplishing the objective fail --- which they will. He believes
deeply that Iran poses an existential threat to our ally Israel and
an extremely dangerous threat to the American people, as well. Bush
also believes that Iran is determined to sabotage American hopes of
establishing a "new Middle East" ---- by covert support of
anti-American terrorist elements such as Hizballah and Hamas ---
backed up by the added power implicit in its eventual possession of
nuclear weapons. Given Bush’s overarching dedication to “winning the
Global War on Terrorism”, the neutralization of Iran has become a
sine qua non, equal if not higher on his list of priorities than
“victory” in Iraq --- another impossibility that he is stubbornly
unwilling to recognize, even privately --- much less acknowledge
publicly.
b. Bush presently intends (with little faith or sincerity) to
exhaust all opportunities to achieve his objectives by diplomatic
means or through economic sanctions. Failing those, he will attempt
to achieve his purposes by intimidation --- by raising the threat of
military attack. This will only stimulate more internal support for
the regime inside Iran and more international opposition to U.S.
policies, especially in the Muslim world. Without question,
moreover, an escalating danger of US-Iranian military confrontation
will greatly intensify internal and regional opposition to US
objectives in Iraq. (Note: A mystifying disconnect in logic persists
on this point in Bush’s mind.)
c. The best hope for avoidance of war with Iran (the catastrophic
consequences of which are too numerous and wide-ranging even to
catalog) will be opposition to the idea from the U.S. military and
from American politicians of both parties who have an appreciation
of the weakened state of U.S. defense forces. I am told, on the
other hand, that Bush has been persuaded by some military advisers
that STRATCOM (Strategic Air Command) has a workable plan for a
comprehensive attack to be launched almost simultaneously against
1500 targets in Iran that will effectively prevent any Iranian
retaliation, and will obviate the need for a major ground operation
or post-conflict occupation. (The logic of this strategy apparently
depends on the hope that destruction of Iran’s nuclear potential and
its conventional military capabilities in a spectacular display of
shock and awe will trigger an internal revolt against the present
government, with moderate pro-western elements standing ready to
seize power in the name of freedom and democracy. This must be
another fantasy dreamed up in the twisted minds of people like
Michael Ledeen and other neocon illusionists.)
5. I believe that Iran wants very much to be accepted as a respected
member of the community of prosperous and influential modern states.
And an Iran that was indeed a trustworthy member of that community
would be an enormous benefit to America and to the world. That
should be the objective of American policy, therefore ---
accommodating and eventually modifying the legitimate national
aspirations of a self-interested and pragmatic Iran --- not
launching a potentially catastrophic preemptive war against a
potentially powerful and influential Muslim nation of seventy
million people. Coaxing Iran down a path leading toward successful
achievement of international respectability and acceptance is the
single most important “carrot” that we have to offer the Iranian
leadership today. The potential value of that positive incentive has
been completely squandered, however, by the pointless hostility and
belligerence of American “diplomatic” language --- starting with the
“axis of evil” and proceeding downhill from there to the most recent
offer of patently unacceptable ultimatums. This has greatly
diminished our own bargaining power while making the job of arriving
at a reasonable accommodation with Iran infinitely more difficult in
every way.
6. In order of importance, however, the attraction from Iran’s
perspective of moving toward desired international acceptance and
respectability is completely overshadowed by two other dominant
factors at this time: the need to reinforce and preserve Iran’s
national pride (recently enhanced by the apparent success of its
Hizballah surrogate in Lebanon) , and its conviction that the United
States is an implacable enemy whose aggressive bullying must be
resisted at all costs.
7. Adding up all those factors, it seems clear to me that Bush has
laid out the following course for American policy, adding up to a
Catch-22 from which I see no escape:
a. Continuing futile efforts to achieve Iranian capitulation through
weak and ineffective economic sanctions, to the accompaniment of
counterproductive vituperation and bombast;
b. Quickly followed by a period of rapidly escalating threats of
military action, during which international and domestic opposition
to American policy will increase dramatically, making Bush’s choices
increasingly more painful and difficult in every respect;
c. A judgment by Bush that the immediate risks and costs of
preemptive military action against Iran are, in the final analysis,
less formidable than the risks and costs of tolerating Iranian
nuclear possession --- and the personal and national humiliation
that would result from passive acceptance of that outcome.
d. Sometime before the end of his term, a massive air military
attack on a wide range of carefully selected targets in Iran, in
partnership with Israel, and against the advice of many of his
advisers --- justified by the conviction that a nuclear Iran would
pose an intolerable threat to American national security, firm in
his faith that God agrees with him on that point, and certain that
history will eventually recognize and properly appreciate his
courageous and visionary leadership.
Ray Close, member of Veteran Intelligence Professionals for
Sanity. He worked for the CIA for 27 years
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