Will They Nuke Iran?
Intelligence Briefings to NYT Notch Up Tension
By Alexander Cockburn
02/11/07 "Counterpunch" -- -- President Nixon, a very
good poker player, once defined the art of brinkmanship
as persuading your opponent that you are insane and,
unless appeased by pledges of surrender, quite capable
of blowing up the planet.
By these robust standards George Bush is doing a
moderately competent job in suggesting that if balked by
Iran on the matter of arming the Shi'a in Iraq or
pursuing its nuclear program he'll dump high explosive,
maybe even a couple of nukes, on that country's relevant
research sites, or tell Israel to do the job for him.
In Washington there are plenty of rational people in
Congress, think tanks and the Pentagon who think he's
capable of ordering an attack,-- albeit not a nuclear
one -- with bombers carrying conventional explosive and
with missiles from US ships in the Persian Gulf.
Colonel Sam Gardner, who's taught at the National War
College recently sketched out on this site the plan as
it could unfold: already the second naval carrier group
has been deployed to the Gulf area, joined by naval mine
clearing ships. "As one of the last steps before a
strike, we'll see USAF tankers moved to unusual places,
like Bulgaria. These will be used to refuel the US-based
B-2 bombers on their strike missions into Iran. When
that happens, we'll only be days away from a strike."
Gardiner cautioned that "It is possible the White House
strategy is just implementing a strategy to put pressure
on Iran on a number of fronts, and this will never
amount to anything. On the other hand, if the White
House is on a path to strike Iran, we'll see a few more
steps unfold.
"First, we know there is a National Security Council
staff-led_group whose mission is to create outrage in
the world against Iran. Just like before Gulf II, this
media group will begin to release stories to sell a
strike against Iran. Watch for the outrage stuff."
As regards "the outrage stuff", here on cue comes the
New York Times' Michael Gordon with a front page story
today, February 10, headlined "Deadliest Bomb in Iraq is
Made by Iran, US Says", and beginning "The most lethal
weapon directed against American troops in Iraq is an
explosive-packed cylinder that United States
intelligence asserts is being supplied by Iran."
It's no doubt true that Iran has been arming the Shi'a.
What Gordon fails to mention is that over 90 per sent of
the IEDs used against US troops in Iraq have been
detonated by the Sunni insurgents , who of course are
not supplied by Iran. More generally, the prime point of
interest of the intelligence briefings given to Gordon
and other journalists is the timing. At any point in the
past couple of years the US could have gone public with
roughly the same accusations.
Shades of the Ho Chi Minh trail! Year after year first
Johnson then Nixon would claim that the resistance in
south Vietnam was not indigenous but created and armed
by North Vietnam, backed by the Soviet Union and
China--which these days has flourishing economic ties
with Iran, particularly in the field of energy.
Another tripwire for escalation would be the UN Security
Council Feb 21 deadline for Iran to suspend "all
enrichment-related and reprocessing activities,
including research and development, to be verified by
the IAEA," the International Atomic Energy Agency.
There's certainly disquiet in Congress, particularly
after Bush's State of the Union address January 17 where
he reprised his notorious "Axis of Evil" address of
January 2002, identifying Iran as the number one
troublemaker and fomenter of terror in the region.
"Is it the position of this administration that it
possesses the authority to take unilateral action
against Iran, in the absence of a direct threat, without
Congressional approval?" the Virginia Democrat, Senator
James Webb recently asked Secretary of State Condoleezza
Rice. Rice said she'd get back to him.
The Bush administration is capable of almost any folly,
but is it likely that it would bomb Iran's nuclear
research labs? Would it really prod Israel into taking
on the job?
Israel of course has been making plenty of quite
predictable hay out of President Ahmadinejad's crack
about how "the regime occupying Jerusalem must vanish
from the pages of time." Of course the let's-stay- calm
types say it was just a stale old one-liner from the
Ayatollah Khomeini and please to note he used the word
"regime", not "Israel". Plant that one in the graveyard
of wimpy rationalizations. Along with the
recent"holocaust conference", it's probably the biggest
leg-up for Israeli bond drives since the Yom Kippur war.
Prime minister Olmert quotes it on an almost daily
basis, echoed by his rival, Netanyahu.
Aside from the rhetorical haymaking, the notion of
Israel nuking Iran's N-plants is very far-fetched.
Indeed, the military wisdom here is that as a practical
enterprise, it can't, since among many technical
limitations Israel's bombers would require refueling
over hostile territory.
Aside from this, Israel still won't officially admit to
having a nuclear arsenal. It would a stupefying jump,
from that disingenuous posture to being the first power
in the region to explode a nuclear device. The point of
having a nuclear deterrent is to deter, not to use. Iran
is well aware that in 1999 and 2004 Israelis bought
Dolphin submarines from Germany reportedly capable of
carrying nuclear-armed cruise missiles. As President
Chirac asked in his recent press conference, what good
it would do Iran to have a nuclear bomb, or even two.
"Where would it fire that bomb? At Israel? It wouldn't
have traveled 200 meters through the atmosphere before
Tehran would be razed."
(Reservations among Irael's elites about attacks on Iran
are the topic of an excellent piece by Gabriel Kolko on
this site today.)
So the job of attacking would fall to the US Air force
and US Navy and there are certainly generals,
particularly in the Air Force, telling Bush it would be
a snap, just as Curt LeMay, at that time head of the
Strategic Air Command, told President Kennedy during the
Cuban Missile Crisis that SAC could "reduce the Soviet
Union to a smouldering irradiated ruin in three hours".
But Air Force credibility is low at the moment. LeMay's
heirs told Bush that "shock and awe" bombing in 2003
would prompt Saddam to run up the white flag. It didn't.
US ground forces carried the day--at least at the
outset. But there aren't any US ground forces available
to invade a country many times bigger than Iraq, filled
with a large population mostly loyal to the regime.
After sorties against Iran with bombs and missiles what
would the US do?
The problem is that brinkmanship suits everyone's book.
Ahmadinejad, facing serious political problems, can
posture about standing up to the Great Satan. Olmert can
say Ahmadinejad wants to finish off Israel and kill all
the Jews. Bush sees Iran as a terrific way of changing
the subject from the mess in Iraq and putting the
Democrats on the spot.
The Democrats take the lead of their presidential
hopefuls, who have no intention of being corralled by
the Republicans as symps of holocaust deniers who want
to destroy Israel. These days, to be a player, any
candidate for the US presidency has to raise about $100
million, of which a large tranche will come from
American Jews. Barack Obama and John Edwards call for
swift withdrawal of US forces from Iraq. When it comes
to Iran they roar in unison with Hillary Clinton that no
option can be left off the table. In other words, if it
comes to it, nuke 'em .
Is there room for sanity here? The best hope will be for
Iran to finish its testing cycle, declare mission
accomplished and figure out some sort of face-saving
halt in its program by February 21. Can we hope for
prudence from the White House? Who knows? Bush is a
nutty guy. It was his insistence on democratic elections
in Iraq that put the Shi'a in control. Now he's blaming
Iran for trying to capitalize on the consequences. This
is not a regime that thinks things through very
sensibly.