US plans envision broad
attack on Iran -analyst
By: Reuters
01/20/07 "Reuters" -- -- WASHINGTON, Jan 19 (Reuters) -
U.S. contingency planning for military action against
Iran's nuclear program goes beyond limited strikes and
would effectively unleash a war against the country, a
former U.S. intelligence analyst said on Friday.
"I've seen some of the planning ... You're not talking
about a surgical strike," said Wayne White, who was a
top Middle East analyst for the State Department's
bureau of intelligence and research until March 2005.
"You're talking about a war against Iran" that likely
would destabilize the Middle East for years, White told
the Middle East Policy Council, a Washington think tank.
"We're not talking about just surgical strikes against
an array of targets inside Iran. We're talking about
clearing a path to the targets" by taking out much of
the Iranian Air Force, Kilo submarines, anti-ship
missiles that could target commerce or U.S. warships in
the Gulf, and maybe even Iran's ballistic missile
capability, White said.
"I'm much more worried about the consequences of a U.S.
or Israeli attack against Iran's nuclear
infrastructure," which would prompt vigorous Iranian
retaliation, he said, than civil war in Iraq, which
could be confined to that country.
President George W. Bush has stressed he is seeking a
diplomatic solution to the dispute over Iran's nuclear
program.
But he has not taken the military option off the table
and his recent rhetoric, plus tougher financial
sanctions and actions against Iranian involvement in
Iraq, has revived talk in Washington about a possible
U.S. attack on Iran.
The Bush administration and many of its Gulf allies have
expressed growing concern about Iran's rising influence
in the region and the prospect of it acquiring a nuclear
weapon.
Middle East expert Kenneth Katzman argued "Iran's
ascendancy is not only manageable but reversible" if one
understands the Islamic republic's many vulnerabilities.
Tehran's leaders have convinced many experts Iran is a
great nation verging on "superpower" status, but the
country is "very weak ... (and) meets almost no known
criteria to be considered a great nation," said Katzman
of the Library of Congress' Congressional Research
Service.
The economy is mismanaged and "quite primitive,"
exporting almost nothing except oil, he said.
Also, Iran's oil production capacity is fast declining
and in terms of conventional military power, "Iran is a
virtual non-entity," Katzman added.
The administration, therefore, should not go out of its
way to accommodate Iran because the country is in no
position to hurt the United States, and at some point
"it might be useful to call that bluff," he said.
But Katzman cautioned against early confrontation with
Iran and said if there is a "grand bargain" that meets
both countries' interests, that should be pursued.
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