Who Will Stop The Next
War?
By Patrick J. Buchanan
03/03/07 "American
Conservative" -- - If Americans sickened by
the carnage of Iraq wish to stop an even more disastrous war
on Iran, they had best get cracking.
For the “On-to-Baghdad!” boys are back, warning us that the
only way to prevent an atom bomb from being detonated in an
American city is to attack and destroy Iran’s nuclear sites.
And the forces needed to execute an attack are moving into
place. Army Gen. John Abizaid has been replaced as CENTCOM
commander by Adm. “Fox” Fallon, commander of U.S. forces in
the Pacific, who knows little about counterinsurgency but a
lot about co-ordinating air strikes.
The carrier group Stennis is headed for the Gulf to join the
Eisenhower. Minesweepers are headed for the Strait of
Hormuz. American fighter-bombers have returned to Incirlik.
Iranian officials have been seized in Iraq. Patriot missiles
are being moved into Kuwait and Qatar. Why all this
firepower—to secure Anbar province and Sadr City?
Bush’s anti-Iran rhetoric has been ratcheted up. Announcing
his surge, Bush interjected that Tehran “is providing
material support for attacks on American troops. … [W]e will
seek out and destroy the networks providing advanced
weaponry and training to our enemies in Iraq.” This threat
was followed by shoot-to-kill orders to U.S. troops
encountering Iranians aiding the insurgency.
And Democrats are not going to let Bush get to their right.
At the Herzliya Conference, John Edwards said that keeping
Iran from nuclear weapons “is the greatest challenge of our
generation.” “To ensure that Iran never gets nuclear
weapons, we need to keep all options on the table. Let me
reiterate—all options.”
At AIPAC, Hillary echoed Edwards: “In dealing with this
threat … no option can be taken off the table. … We need to
use every tool about our disposal including … the threat and
use of military force.”
To Mitt Romney, this was wimpish. For Hillary had said she
favors “engagement” with Iran. Roared Romney to Hill
Republicans, “[W]e don’t need a listening tour about Iran. …
Someone who wants to engage Iran displays a troubling
timidity toward a terrible threat of a nuclear Iran.”
Anybody think that Giuliani and McCain will let Edwards,
Hillary, or Mitt be more menacing toward Tehran than they?
Consider the correlation of forces behind a new war.
If Bush goes home with Iran’s nuclear program not shut down,
his legacy will be Iraq and a failed presidency. The Bush
Doctrine—no nukes in rogue states—will have been defied by
Pyongyang and Tehran.
Israel wants Iran attacked yesterday. The neocons need a new
war to make America forget the disaster that they wrought in
Iraq. Democratic candidates must be seen as hawkish as
Giuliani and McCain. And the deadline for Iran to comply
with UN Security Council directives to halt its enrichment
of uranium is Feb. 23. What then is holding us back from
war?
It is the realization, even on the part of the noisiest
hawks, that war on Iran could precipitate a disaster worse
than defeat in Iraq. A Shia uprising against U.S. troops
could turn the Green Zone into Dien Bien Phu. Attacks on
tankers and pipelines could send oil to $200 a barrel.
America would have no international support and would
receive virtually universal condemnation.
And like the Japanese bombing of Pearl Harbor, bombing Iran
could unite Iranians behind their rulers. Shia insurgencies
could be ignited against Saudi Arabia and the Gulf states.
Hezbollah could bring down the Lebanese government and
attack Americans in the Middle East and perhaps here in the
United States.
And what would an attack accomplish besides setting back an
Iranian nuclear-enrichment program that by most reports is a
bust?
What is the threat? Iran has no missiles that can reach us,
no atom bombs. Though the Mullahs have been in power 27
years, they have yet to launch their first war. The war they
fought was in self-defense. They can no more want a Sunni-Shia
regional war than we, for they would be in the isolated
minority. They want the Taliban kept out of Kabul and Iraq
to remain united under a Shia majority, as do we.
It is said that we cannot negotiate with men responsible for
the Khobar Towers. But Bush negotiated with Muammar
al-Gaddafi, who was responsible for Pan Am 103, and Gaddafi
agreed to forego nuclear weapons. Sanctions were lifted and
relations restored.
If FDR can talk to Stalin, and Nixon to Mao, and Bush to the
North Vietnamese (who tortured John McCain), why can’t we
talk to Mullahs who held 52 Americans hostage for a year?
Rep. Walter Jones (R-N.C.) has introduced a resolution
declaring that in the absence of an imminent threat or an
attack upon us from Iran, President Bush has no authority to
attack Iran.
Next step: get Chuck Hagel and Jim Webb to sign on