What Would War Look Like?
A flurry of military maneuvers in the Middle East increases
speculation that conflict with Iran is no longer quite so
unthinkable. Here's how the U.S. would fight such a war--and the
huge price it would have to pay to win it
By Michael Duffy
09/19/06 "Time"
09/17/06 -- -- The first message was routine enough: a
"Prepare to Deploy" order sent through naval communications
channels to a submarine, an Aegis-class cruiser, two
minesweepers and two mine hunters. The orders didn't actually
command the ships out of port; they just said to be ready to
move by Oct. 1. But inside the Navy those messages generated
more buzz than usual last week when a second request, from the
Chief of Naval Operations (CNO), asked for fresh eyes on
long-standing U.S. plans to blockade two Iranian oil ports on
the Persian Gulf. The CNO had asked for a rundown on how a
blockade of those strategic targets might work. When he didn't
like the analysis he received, he ordered his troops to work the
lash up once again.
What's going on? The two orders offered tantalizing clues. There
are only a few places in the world where minesweepers top the
list of U.S. naval requirements. And every sailor, petroleum
engineer and hedge-fund manager knows the name of the most
important: the Strait of Hormuz, the 20-mile-wide bottleneck in
the Persian Gulf through which roughly 40% of the world's oil
needs to pass each day. Coupled with the CNO's request for a
blockade review, a deployment of minesweepers to the west coast
of Iran would seem to suggest that a much discussed--but until
now largely theoretical--prospect has become real: that the U.S.
may be preparing for war with Iran.
No one knows whether--let alone when--a military confrontation
with Tehran will come to pass. The fact that admirals are
reviewing plans for blockades is hardly proof of their
intentions. The U.S. military routinely makes plans for scores
of scenarios, the vast majority of which will never be put into
practice. "Planners always plan," says a Pentagon official.
Asked about the orders, a second official said only that the
Navy is stepping up its "listening and learning" in the Persian
Gulf but nothing more--a prudent step, he added, after Iran
tested surface-to-ship missiles there in August during a
two-week military exercise. And yet from the State Department to
the White House to the highest reaches of the military command,
there is a growing sense that a showdown with Iran--over its
suspected quest for nuclear weapons, its threats against Israel
and its bid for dominance of the world's richest oil region--may
be impossible to avoid. The chief of the U.S. Central Command (Centcom),
General John Abizaid, has called a commanders conference for
later this month in the Persian Gulf--sessions he holds at least
quarterly--and Iran is on the agenda.
On its face, of course, the notion of a war with Iran seems
absurd. By any rational measure, the last thing the U.S. can
afford is another war. Two unfinished wars--one on Iran's
eastern border, the other on its western flank--are daily
depleting America's treasury and overworked armed forces. Most
of Washington's allies in those adventures have made it clear
they will not join another gamble overseas. What's more, the
Bush team, led by Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice, has done
more diplomatic spadework on Iran than on any other project in
its 51/2 years in office. For more than 18 months, Rice has kept
the Administration's hard-line faction at bay while leading a
coalition that includes four other members of the U.N. Security
Council and is trying to force Tehran to halt its suspicious
nuclear ambitions. Even Iran's former President, Mohammed
Khatami, was in Washington this month calling for a "dialogue"
between the two nations.
But superpowers don't always get to choose their enemies or the
timing of their confrontations. The fact that all sides would
risk losing so much in armed conflict doesn't mean they won't
stumble into one anyway. And for all the good arguments against
any war now, much less this one, there are just as many
indications that a genuine, eyeball-to-eyeball crisis between
the U.S. and Iran may be looming, and sooner than many realize.
"At the moment," says Ali Ansari, a top Iran authority at
London's Chatham House, a foreign-policy think tank, "we are
headed for conflict."
So what would it look like? Interviews with dozens of experts
and government officials in Washington, Tehran and elsewhere in
the Middle East paint a sobering picture: military action
against Iran's nuclear facilities would have a decent chance of
succeeding, but at a staggering cost. And therein lies the
excruciating calculus facing the U.S. and its allies: Is the
cost of confronting Iran greater than the dangers of living with
a nuclear Iran? And can anything short of war persuade Tehran's
fundamentalist regime to give up its dangerous game?
ROAD TO WAR
The crisis with Iran has been years in the making. Over the past
decade, Iran has acquired many of the pieces, parts and plants
needed to make a nuclear device. Although Iranian officials
insist that Iran's ambitions are limited to nuclear energy, the
regime has asserted its right to develop nuclear power and
enrich uranium that could be used in bombs as an end in
itself--a symbol of sovereign pride, not to mention a useful
prop for politicking. Iran's President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad has
crisscrossed the country in recent months making Iran's right to
a nuclear program a national cause and trying to solidify his
base of hard-line support in the Revolutionary Guards. The
nuclear program is popular with average Iranians and the élites
as well. "Iranian leaders have this sense of past glory, this
belief that Iran should play a lofty role in the world," says
Nasser Hadian, professor of political science at Tehran
University.
But the nuclear program isn't Washington's only worry about
Iran. While stoking nationalism at home, Tehran has dramatically
consolidated its reach in the region. Since the 1979 Islamic
revolution, Iran has sponsored terrorist groups in a handful of
countries, but its backing of Hizballah, the militant group that
took Lebanon to war with Israel this summer, seems to be
changing the Middle East balance of power. There is
circumstantial evidence that Iran ordered Hizballah to provoke
this summer's war, in part to demonstrate that Tehran can stir
up big trouble if pushed to the brink. The precise extent of
coordination between Hizballah and Tehran is unknown. But no
longer in dispute after the standoff in July is Iran's ability
to project power right up to the borders of Israel. It is no
coincidence that the talk in Washington about what to do with
Iran became more focused after Hizballah fought the Israeli army
to a virtual standstill this summer.
And yet the West has been unable to compel Iran to comply with
its demands. Despite all the work Rice has put into her
coalition, diplomatic efforts are moving too slowly, some
believe, to stop the Iranians before they acquire the makings of
a nuclear device. And Iran has played its hand shrewdly so far.
Tehran took weeks to reply to a formal proposal from the U.N.
Security Council calling on a halt to uranium enrichment. When
it did, its official response was a mosaic of half-steps,
conditions and boilerplate that suggested Tehran has little
intention of backing down. "The Iranians," says a Western
diplomat in Washington, "are very able negotiators."
That doesn't make war inevitable. But at some point the U.S. and
its allies may have to confront the ultimate choice. The Bush
Administration has said it won't tolerate Iran having a nuclear
weapon. Once it does, the regime will have the capacity to carry
out Ahmadinejad's threats to eliminate Israel. And in practical
terms, the U.S. would have to consider military action long
before Iran had an actual bomb. In military circles, there is a
debate about where--and when--to draw that line. U.S.
intelligence chief John Negroponte told TIME in April that Iran
is five years away from having a nuclear weapon. But some
nonproliferation experts worry about a different moment: when
Iran is able to enrich enough uranium to fuel a bomb--a point
that comes well before engineers actually assemble a nuclear
device. Many believe that is when a country becomes a nuclear
power. That red line, experts say, could be just a year away.
WOULD AN ATTACK WORK?
The answer is yes and no.
No one is talking about a ground invasion of Iran. Too many U.S.
troops are tied down elsewhere to make it possible, and besides,
it isn't necessary. If the U.S. goal is simply to stunt Iran's
nuclear program, it can be done better and more safely by air.
An attack limited to Iran's nuclear facilities would nonetheless
require a massive campaign. Experts say that Iran has between 18
and 30 nuclear-related facilities. The sites are dispersed
around the country--some in the open, some cloaked in the guise
of conventional factories, some buried deep underground.
A Pentagon official says that among the known sites there are
1,500 different "aim points," which means the campaign could
well require the involvement of almost every type of aircraft in
the U.S. arsenal: Stealth bombers and fighters, B-1s and B-2s,
as well as F-15s and F-16s operating from land and F-18s from
aircraft carriers.
GPS-guided munitions and laser-targeted bombs--sighted by
satellite, spotter aircraft and unmanned vehicles--would do most
of the bunker busting. But because many of the targets are
hardened under several feet of reinforced concrete, most would
have to be hit over and over to ensure that they were destroyed
or sufficiently damaged. The U.S. would have to mount the usual
aerial ballet, refueling tankers as well as search-and-rescue
helicopters in case pilots were shot down by Iran's aging but
possibly still effective air defenses. U.S. submarines and ships
could launch cruise missiles as well, but their warheads are
generally too small to do much damage to reinforced
concrete--and might be used for secondary targets. An operation
of that size would hardly be surgical. Many sites are in highly
populated areas, so civilian casualties would be a certainty.
Whatever the order of battle, a U.S. strike would have a lasting
impression on Iran's rulers. U.S. officials believe that a
campaign of several days, involving hundreds or even thousands
of sorties, could set back Iran's nuclear program by two to
three years. Hit hard enough, some believe, Iranians might
develop second thoughts about their government's designs as a
regional nuclear power. Some U.S. foes of Iran's regime believe
that the crisis of legitimacy that the ruling clerics would face
in the wake of a U.S. attack could trigger their downfall,
although others are convinced it would unite the population with
the government in anti-American rage.
But it is also likely that the U.S. could carry out a massive
attack and still leave Iran with some part of its nuclear
program intact. It's possible that U.S. warplanes could destroy
every known nuclear site--while Tehran's nuclear wizards,
operating at other, undiscovered sites even deeper underground,
continued their work. "We don't know where it all is," said a
White House official, "so we can't get it all."
WHAT WOULD COME NEXT?
No one who has spent any time thinking about an attack on Iran
doubts that a U.S. operation would reap a whirlwind. The only
mystery is what kind. "It's not a question of whether we can do
a strike or not and whether the strike could be effective," says
retired Marine General Anthony Zinni. "It certainly would be, to
some degree. But are you prepared for all that follows?"
Retired Air Force Colonel Sam Gardiner, who taught strategy at
the National War College, has been conducting a mock U.S.-Iran
war game for American policymakers for the past five years.
Virtually every time he runs the game, Gardiner says, a similar
nightmare scenario unfolds: the U.S. attack, no matter how
successful, spawns a variety of asymmetrical retaliations by
Tehran. First comes terrorism: Iran's initial reaction to air
strikes might be to authorize a Hizballah attack on Israel, in
order to draw Israel into the war and rally public support at
home.
Next, Iran might try to foment as much mayhem as possible inside
the two nations on its flanks, Afghanistan and Iraq, where more
than 160,000 U.S. troops hold a tenuous grip on local
populations. Iran has already dabbled in partnership with
warlords in western Afghanistan, where U.S. military authority
has never been strong; it would be a small step to lend aid to
Taliban forces gaining strength in the south. Meanwhile, Tehran
has links to the main factions in Iraq, which would welcome a
boost in money and weapons, if just to strengthen their hand
against rivals. Analysts generally believe that Iran could in a
short time orchestrate a dramatic increase in the number and
severity of attacks on U.S. troops in Iraq. As Syed Ayad, a
secular Shi'ite cleric and Iraqi Member of Parliament says,
"America owns the sky of Iraq with their Apaches, but Iran owns
the ground."
Next, there is oil. The Persian Gulf, a traffic jam on good
days, would become a parking lot. Iran could plant mines and
launch dozens of armed boats into the bottleneck, choking off
the shipping lanes in the Strait of Hormuz and causing a massive
disruption of oil-tanker traffic. A low-key Iranian mining
operation in 1987 forced the U.S. to reflag Kuwaiti oil tankers
and escort them, in slow-moving files of one and two, up and
down the Persian Gulf. A more intense operation would probably
send oil prices soaring above $100 per bbl.--which may explain
why the Navy wants to be sure its small fleet of minesweepers is
ready to go into action at a moment's notice. It is unlikely
that Iran would turn off its own oil spigot or halt its exports
through pipelines overland, but it could direct its proxies in
Iraq and Saudi Arabia to attack pipelines, wells and shipment
points inside those countries, further choking supply and
driving up prices.
That kind of retaliation could quickly transform a relatively
limited U.S. mission in Iran into a much more complicated one
involving regime change. An Iran determined to use all its
available weapons to counterattack the U.S. and its allies would
present a challenge to American prestige that no Commander in
Chief would be likely to tolerate for long. Zinni, for one,
believes an attack on Iran could eventually lead to U.S. troops
on the ground. "You've got to be careful with your assumptions,"
he says. "In Iraq, the assumption was that it would be a
liberation, not an occupation. You've got to be prepared for the
worst case, and the worst case involving Iran takes you down to
boots on the ground." All that, he says, makes an attack on Iran
a "dumb idea." Abizaid, the current Centcom boss, chose his
words carefully last May. "Look, any war with a country that is
as big as Iran, that has a terrorist capability along its
borders, that has a missile capability that is external to its
own borders and that has the ability to affect the world's oil
markets is something that everyone needs to contemplate with a
great degree of clarity."
CAN IT BE STOPPED?
Given the chaos that a war might unleash, what options does the
world have to avoid it? One approach would be for the U.S. to
accept Iran as a nuclear power and learn to live with an Iranian
bomb, focusing its efforts on deterrence rather than
pre-emption. The risk is that a nuclear-armed Iran would use its
regional primacy to become the dominant foreign power in Iraq,
threaten Israel and make it harder for Washington to exert its
will in the region. And it could provoke Sunni countries in the
region, like Saudi Arabia and Egypt, to start nuclear programs
of their own to contain rising Shi'ite power.
Those equally unappetizing prospects--war or a new arms race in
the Middle East--explain why the White House is kicking up its
efforts to resolve the Iran problem before it gets that far.
Washington is doing everything it can to make Iran think twice
about its ongoing game of stonewall. It is a measure of the
Administration's unity on Iran that confrontationalists like
Vice President Dick Cheney and Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld
have lately not wandered off the rhetorical reservation.
Everyone has been careful--for now--to stick to Rice's
diplomatic emphasis. "Nobody is considering a military option at
this point," says an Administration official. "We're trying to
prevent a situation in which the President finds himself having
to decide between a nuclear-armed Iran or going to war. The best
hope of avoiding that dilemma is hard-nosed diplomacy, one that
has serious consequences."
Rice continues to try for that. This week in New York City, she
will push her partners to get behind a new sanctions resolution
that would ban Iranian imports of dual-use technologies, like
parts for its centrifuge cascades for uranium enrichment, and
bar travel overseas by certain government officials. The next
step would be restrictions on government purchases of computer
software and hardware, office supplies, tires and auto
parts--steps Russia and China have signaled some reluctance to
endorse. But even Rice's advisers don't believe that Iran can be
persuaded to completely abandon its ambitions. Instead, they
hope to tie Iran up in a series of suspensions, delays and
negotiations until a more pragmatic faction of leadership in
Tehran gains the upper hand.
At the moment, that sounds as much like a prayer as a strategy.
A former CIA director, asked not long ago whether a moderate
faction will ever emerge in Tehran, quipped, "I don't think I've
ever met an Iranian moderate--not at the top of the government,
anyway." But if sanctions don't work, what might? Outside the
Administration, a growing group of foreign-policy hands from
both parties have called on the U.S. to bring Tehran into direct
negotiations in the hope of striking a grand bargain. Under that
formula, the U.S. might offer Iran some security guarantees--
such as forswearing efforts to topple Iran's theocratic
regime--in exchange for Iran's agreeing to open its facilities
to international inspectors and abandon weapons-related
projects. It would be painful for any U.S. Administration to
recognize the legitimacy of a regime that sponsors terrorism and
calls for Israel's destruction--but the time may come when
that's the only bargaining chip short of war the U.S. has left.
And still that may not be enough. "[The Iranians] would give up
nuclear power if they truly believed the U.S. would accept Iran
as it is," says a university professor in Tehran who asked not
to be identified. "But the mistrust runs too deep for them to
believe that is possible."
Such distrust runs both ways and is getting deeper. Unless the
U.S., its allies and Iran can find a way to make diplomacy work,
the whispers of blockades and minesweepers in the Persian Gulf
may soon be drowned out by the cries of war. And if the U.S. has
learned anything over the past five years, it's that war in the
Middle East rarely goes according to plan.
With reporting by Reported by Brian Bennett/Baghdad, James
Graff/Paris, Scott MacLeod/ Cairo, J.F.O. McAllister/ London,
Tim McGirk/ Jerusalem, Azadeh Moaveni/ Tehran, Mike Allen, SALLY
B. DONNELLY, Elaine Shannon, MARK THOMPSON, DOUGLAS WALLER,
MICHAEL WEISSKOPF, Adam Zagorin/ Washington
Copyright © 2006 Time Inc. All rights reserved.
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