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Bombs Away?
Arms expert Scott Ritter says the U.S. plans to attack Iran. MT
asks why he's so sure.
By Curt Guyette and W. Kim Heron
11/30/07 "Metro
Times" -- - - It seems that with each passing
week there are more stories raising the specter of George Bush
turning Iraq and Afghanistan into a bloody trifecta by attacking
Iran.
In mainstream daily papers we
see pieces like one by Gannett's John Yaukey, who wrote in early
November that "confrontation could be near" because "Iran
continues to taunt the United States with its aggressive
posturing in Iraq and Lebanon while pushing ahead with its
nuclear research ..."
We are also witnessing what
appears to be a chilling rerun of the Iraq debacle. Confronted
with evidence that calls into question the status of Iran's
nuclear program, the Bush administration is shifting its
rhetoric.
"The Bush administration has
charged that Iran is funding anti-American fighters in Iraq and
sending in sophisticated explosives to bleed the U.S. mission,
although some of the administration's charges are disputed by
Iraqis as well as the Iranians," the Los Angeles Times
reported in October. "Still, ... diplomatic and military
officials say they fear that the overreaching of a confident
Iran, combined with growing U.S. frustrations, could set off a
dangerous collision."
Look beyond daily papers — from
Seymour Hersh's reporting in The New Yorker to articles
in The Nation — and the picture emerges of an
administration that is determined to attack Iran.
John H. Richardson's "The Secret
History of the Impending War With Iran That the White House
Doesn't Want You to Know" in the November issue of Esquire
magazine is particularly eye-opening. Richardson, using two
former high-ranking Middle East experts who worked for the White
House as his primary sources, warns that the Bush administration
is "headed straight for war with Iran" and that "it had been set
on this course for years."
"It was just like Iraq, when the
White House was so eager for war it couldn't wait for the UN
inspectors to leave," writes Richardson, who details the Bush
administration's success at scuttling diplomatic efforts —
notably involving then-Secretary of State Colin Powell — to
reach a peaceful accord with Iran. "The steps have been many and
steady and all in the same direction. And now things are getting
much worse. We are getting closer and closer to the tripline.
..."
With all this in mind, we
decided to talk with the man who literally wrote the book on
Bush's intentions. Nearly a year ago, Scott Ritter's Target
Iran was published, and he's been sounding the claxon of
impending war ever since.
A former Marine Corps
intelligence officer, Ritter served as chief United Nations
weapons inspector in Iraq from 1991 to 1998 when he left as a
pointed critic of the Clinton administration's commitment to
weapons inspection and its Iraq policy. Before the United
States' 2003 invasion, Ritter loudly disputed the Bush
administration's claims regarding weapons of mass destruction
under Saddam's control and predicted that, instead of the quick
and easy war being promised, Iraq would turn into a quagmire,
though not necessarily of the type he envisioned. His analyses
have been embraced by both the right and the left at various
points. He portrays himself as the straight-shooting analyst
unconcerned by who supports him or whom he offends.
To learn what he thinks the
future holds for Iran, and the consequences of a U.S. invasion,
we recently sat down for a 90-minute phone interview with
Ritter. What follows is a condensed version of that
conversation.
Metro Times: A year ago,
when your book Target Iran came out, you were sounding
the alarm about war being imminent. Why do you think that attack
hasn't occurred?
Scott Ritter: Let's
remember that this is an elective war, not a war of necessity. A
war of necessity would be fought at the point and time a
conflict is required, if somebody is threatening to invade you,
to attack, etc. But an elective war is one where we choose to go
to war. It will be conducted on a timescale that's beneficial to
those who are planning the conflict.
As far as why it hasn't
happened, there's any number of reasons. One, the Bush
administration has not been able to stabilize Iraq to the level
they would like to see prior to expanding military operations in
the region. Two, the international community has not rallied
around the cause of Iran's nuclear program representing a casus
belli to the extent that the Bush administration would like.
They were hopeful that there would be more action from the
[United Nations] Security Council. It took a long time to get
the issue shifted from the International Atomic Energy Agency's
headquarters to the Security Council. And even when it got
shifted to the Security Council, the Council took very timid
steps, not decisive steps. The Bush administration sort of tied
its hands at that point in time. I think you are seeing
increasing frustration today at the slow pace.
Also, the need to redefine the
Iranian threat away from exclusively being focused on nuclear
activity, because now you have the difficulty of both the IAEA
saying there is no nuclear weapons program and the CIA saying
pretty much the same thing. So the Bush administration needs to
redefine the Iranian threat, which they have been doing
successfully, casting Iran as the largest state sponsor of
terror, getting the Senate resolution calling the Iranian
Revolutionary Guard Command a terrorist organization, and
creating a perception amongst the American people, courtesy of a
compliant media, that talks about the reason why things are
going bad in Iraq is primarily because of Iranian intervention.
They have been working very hard
to get back on track. I still believe that we are seeing
convergence here. The Bush administration is moving very
aggressively toward military action with Iran.
MT: Is your conclusion
that an attack is imminent based on the administration's
statements and actions, like labeling Iran's Revolutionary Guard
as a terrorist group, or do you also have sources within the
intelligence community and the military and the administration
telling you what's going on?
Ritter: I don't have any
current sources of the sort you just spoke of. I was plugged in
back in 2006 to good quality current information. But I haven't
been plugged in recently, so I have to use some sort of
analytical methodology as opposed to saying, "Aha, I got it from
the horse's mouth." But there's nothing that has occurred that
leads me to believe the Bush administration has changed its
policy direction. In fact there has been much that's occurred
that reinforces the earlier conclusions that were based on good
sources of information. We take a look at items in the defense
budget, the rapid conversion of heavy bombers to carry
bunker-busting bombs on a specific time frame, the massive
purchasing of oil to fill up the strategic oil reserve by April
2008. Everything points to April 2008 to being a month of some
criticality. It also matches my analysis that the Bush
administration will want to carry this out prior to the crazy
political season of the summer of 2008.
MT: Last year you
expressed hope that if Democrats took control of Congress it
might pass legislation that could block the march toward war. Do
you see them stepping up?
Ritter: No. They just
passed a resolution declaring the Iranian Revolutionary Guard
Command as a terrorist organization. Unless there is a radical
reawakening in Congress, I don't see them passing any sort of
pre-emptive legislation of that nature.
MT: But it is now clearer
than ever that our invasion of Iraq has been a disaster. How do
you explain the lack of opposition?
Ritter: It's difficult to
explain. First of all you have to note, from the public side,
that very few Americans actually function as citizens anymore.
What I mean by that are people who invest themselves in this
country, people who care, who give a damn. Americans are
primarily consumers today, and so long as they continue to wrap
themselves in the cocoon of comfort, and the system keeps them
walking down a road to the perceived path of prosperity, they
don't want to rock the boat. If it doesn't have a direct impact
on their day-to-day existence, they simply don't care.
There's a minority of people who
do, but the majority of Americans don't. And if the people don't
care — and remember, the people are the constituents — if the
constituents don't care, then those they elect to higher office
won't feel the pressure to change.
The Democrats, one would hope,
would live up to their rhetoric, that is, challenging the Bush
administration's imperial aspirations. Once it became clear Iraq
was an unmitigated disaster, one would have thought that when
the Democrats took control of Congress they would have sought to
reimpose a system of checks and balances, as the Constitution
mandates. But instead the Democrats have put their focus solely
on recapturing the White House, and, in doing so, will not do
anything that creates a political window of opportunity for
their Republican opponents.
The Democrats don't want to be
explaining to an apathetic constituency, an ignorant
constituency whose ignorance is prone to be exploited because it
produces fear, fear of the unknown, and the global war on terror
is the ultimate fear button. The Democrats, rather than
challenging the Bush administration's position on the global war
on terror, challenging the notion of these imminent threats,
continues to play them up because that is the safest route
toward the White House. At least that is their perception.
The last thing they are gong to
do is pass a piece of legislation that opens the door for the
Republicans to say, "Look how weak these guys are on terror.
They're actually defending the Iranians. They're defending this
Ahmadinejad guy. They're defending the Holocaust denier. They're
defending the guy who wants to wipe Israel off the face of the
earth." The Democrats don't want to go up against that. They
don't have the courage of conviction to enter into that debate
and stare at whoever makes that statement and say they're a
bald-faced liar. They're not going to go that route.
MT: Do you think there is
anything that can happen at this point that will stop this
attack?
Ritter: You have to take
a look at external influences, not internal ones. I don't think
there is anything happening inside the United States that's
going to stop that attack. I do believe that, for instance, if
Pakistan continues to melt down, that could be something that
creates such a significant diversion the Bush administration
will not be able to make its move on Iran.
To attack Iran, they're going to
need a nice lull period. That's what they're pushing with this
whole surge right now. They're creating the perception that
things are quieting. I don't know how many people picked up on
it, but one day we're told that 2007's been the bloodiest year
for U.S. forces in Iraq, the next day we're told that attacks
against American troops are dropping at a dramatic pace. So,
what's the media focus on? The concept of attacks dropping at a
dramatic pace. No one's talking about the fact, wait a minute,
we've just lost more guys than we've ever lost before.
They are pushing the perception
that Iraq is now stable. If you have a situation in Pakistan
that explodes out of control, where you suddenly have nuclear
weapons at risk of falling into the hands of Islamic
fundamentalists, that could stop it. If Turkey attacks Kurdistan
and that conflict spins out of control, that could put a halt to
it. These are things that could overshadow even Dick Cheney's
desire to bomb Iran.
And there could be some other
unforeseen meltdown globally that's not on the radar at this
time, that, unfortunately, we have to be hoping for to stop an
attack on Iran. And that says a lot, that we have to hope for
disaster to prevent unmitigated disaster.
MT: What's the
motivation?
Ritter: The ideologues
who are in there believe the United States in the post-Cold War
environment needed to fill the gap created by the demise of the
Soviet Union so that no nation or group of nations would ever
again confront us as equals. And in order to do this, they
basically divided the world into spheres of strategic interest
and said we will impose our will. And the Middle East is one
such area. There's a whole host of reasons to do this.
It's not just supporting Israel.
It's not just taking down Saddam. It's about geopolitics. It's
about looking down the road toward China and India, the world's
two largest developing economies, especially the Chinese, and
the absolute fear that this resurgent Chinese economy brings in
the hearts of American industrialists and the need to dictate
the pace of Chinese economic development by controlling their
access to energy. And controlling central Asian and Middle East
energy areas is key in the strategic thinking of the Bush
administration.
So, there's a lot of complexity
at play here. But you say why do they want to do this? It's
about as Condoleezza Rice continuously says before the U.S.
Congress: It's about regional transformation, inclusive of
regime change. It turns the Middle East into a sphere of
interest that we have tremendous control over. That's what's
behind all this.
MT: And when Bush talks
about being an instrument of God, do you think he really
believes that or is that just political posturing, playing to
the religious base?
Ritter: That's a question
that can only be asked of George Bush. But I find it disturbing
that an American politician who is supposed to be the head of a
secular nation where religion is protected but there is no state
religion, and who has control over the world's largest nuclear
arsenal, not only openly talks about how God is his final
adviser, which pretty much negates the role of Congress or any
other system of governmental oversight, checks and balances of
the executive, but also embraces a kind of evangelicalism that
gives legitimacy to the notion of the rapture, Armageddon, the
apocalypse as a good thing.
Here's a man who speaks of World
War III and the apocalypse and he has his hand on the button and
he talks to God. I don't know, if it's a show, its a dangerous
show, if its real, we should all be scared to death.
MT: Even going back to
before the start of the Iraq war, the national mainstream media
just seemed to be beating the drum for it. Why do you think that
is?
Ritter: Again, only they
can really answer that question, but I think it is clear the
mainstream media, while not outright fabricators, are not there
to tell the truth, they're there to win over ratings. They will
package their programming in ways that sells well to an
audience. And we are dealing with a complacent American
audience, where in-depth reality stories are trumped by reality
TV. I don't see the programming director saying, "Look, we're
going to spend an hour explaining to the American people why
Ahmadinejad's speech wasn't that big of a deal." Or they can
say, "Hell, no; in three minutes we can lead with a story saying
he's a Holocaust denier and win everybody's attention."
MT: Do you think the
resolutions in 2001 and 2002 authorizing Bush to use military
force against Iraq give Bush the authority to attack Iran
without first obtaining congressional approval?
Ritter: I'd like to
believe it didn't, but unfortunately when you take a look at it,
and I've had constitutional scholars take a look at it, the
feeling is that, yeah, because of the terrorist threat, if you
take a look at the fine print on both of those resolutions, it
gives the president authorization to use military force to take
out groups, organizations, individuals, etc. who are linked to
the events of 9/11. And the president has continued to make the
case that Iran is linked to the attacks.
MT: Do you think an
attack on Iran would be an illegal war of aggression and a war
crime under international law?
Ritter: It depends on
what triggers it. If Iran engages in an action that legitimizes
a military response, the answer is no.
There are two conditions that we
are legally allowed to engage in military operations. Militaries
are bound by the charter of the United Nations' Article 51,
legitimate self-defense, and a Chapter 7 resolution passed by
the Security Council authorizing military force to be used. If
we attack Iran void of any of these, especially when it can be
shown that we have hyped up a threat in defense of pre-emption —
I think the Nuremberg Tribunals from 1946 have set a clear
precedent with Judge Jackson condemning German generals to death
for invading Denmark and Norway in the same premise of
pre-emption. It is quite clear this is illegal. Unfortunately
the Nuremburg Tribunals don't have any weight when it comes to
prosecution of the law.
The international community has
not agreed upon a definition of what pre-emptive aggression is,
and what the consequences of such are. Let's keep in mind if we
attack Iran we're guilty of no more than what we're already
guilty of in attacking Iraq. Hyping up a threat where one
doesn't exist, going to war void of any legitimacy, violating
everything we claim to stand for. Yet we don't see any war
crimes tribunals being convened for the Bush administration over
Iraq.
MT: One of the scenarios
that's been raised has Israel launching the first strike,
prompting a response from Iran that would then pull us in.
Ritter: I think Israel is
capable of doing a one-time limited shot into Iran. One has to
take a look at the distances involved and the complexity of
military operations ... the lack of friendly airspace between
corridors into and out of Iran. It's nice to talk about an
Israeli attack, but the reality is far different. Israel had
trouble dominating Hezbollah right on its own border with air
power.
I think Israel could actually go
into Iran and get their butts kicked. It may not go off as well
as they think it's going to go off. It is too long of a
distance, too much warning for the Iranians. The Iranians are
too locked-in; they're too well prepared. It doesn't make any
sense. Israel doesn't have the ability to sustain a strike. Like
I said, they might be able to pull off a limited one-time shot.
But I think the fallout from that would be devastating for the
United States. As much as we've worked to get an Arab alliance
against Iran, that would just fall apart overnight with an
Israeli attack. No Muslim state will stand by and defend Israel
after it initiated a strike against Iran. It just will not
happen. And the United States knows this. I just think it's
ludicrous to talk about an Israeli attack.
I think what we're looking at is
an American attack. It's the only viable option both in terms of
initiation and sustainment of the strike. Israel might be drawn
in after that. There's no doubt in my mind the Iranians will
launch missiles against Israeli targets, either directly or
through proxies, and that Israel will suffer. This is something
I try to warn all my Israeli friends about. If you think Saddam
Hussein firing 41 missiles was inconvenient, wait until the
Iranians fire a thousand of them. It goes well beyond an
inconvenience; it becomes a national tragedy. And then the
escalation that can occur from there.
I think right now what the Bush
administration is conceiving is a limited strike against Iran to
take out certain Revolutionary Guard sites and perhaps
identified nuclear infrastructure. Not a massive, sustained
bombardment, but a limited strike. But we were always told in
the Marine Corps that the enemy has a vote and no plan survives
initial contact with the enemy. So we may seek to have a limited
strike, but if the Iranians do a massive response, things could
spin out of control quickly.
MT: What do you foresee
as some of the possible consequences? No one is talking about
putting troops on the ground in Iran are they?
Ritter: A while back
there was talk about having forces move in on Tehran via
Azerbaijan. But I think those plans have gone to the wayside. If
Iran is successful in shutting down the Straits of Hormuz, it
will force our hand and we'll have to put the Marines in to
secure the Straits. If the conflict drags on and air power is
not sufficient to break the will of the Iranian resistance, the
Army may have to activate its option to put a reinforced corps
into Azerbaijan and punch down the Caspian Sea coast. But these
are definitely not the leading options at this point in time.
MT: When you say a
"limited strike," what might that look like in more detail?
Ritter: Iran is a big
country. There are a number of target sites we have to look at.
To give an example, to take out a number of air defense sites
during the Gulf War, a sortie required over 100 aircraft. It's
not just one airplane coming in, firing a missile and going out.
You have to secure a corridor, you have to put a combat air
patrol over it, you have to have air-to-air refueling, you have
to have aircraft protecting the refuelers, and then you have to
have the strike aircraft themselves. You have to have pre- and
post-reconnaissance. When you replicate this, let's say, over 20
targets, we don't have enough airplanes to do it all at once.
So, it's something that will occur in phases. What you look at
is maybe a three- to five-day bombardment where we take out
sites, radar sites and air defense sites the first day, the
second we pound the nuclear sites, the third day we take the
Revolutionary Guard Command sites, the fourth and fifth days we
do follow-up strikes to make sure all targets are destroyed,
then we're done. That's probably what we're looking at.
MT: How much damage could
be done to the Iranian nuclear program?
Ritter: No damage would
be done to it. Remember, the problem the Iranians face isn't the
manufacture of this equipment. They've already mastered that.
And if you think for a second machine tools that are used to
manufacture enrichment equipment are going to be stored out in
the open where we can bomb them, you're wrong. They've been
dispersed. The Iraqis were masters of this. We spent a lot of
money blowing up concrete, but we never got the machine tools,
because they were always hidden. They were always evacuated the
day before — they'd take it to palm groves or warehouses that we
didn't know about, or hidden in narrow streets. And we never
detected that, and we never got them. The Iranians are even
better. They've been mastering the technology of deep-earth
tunneling, so they can hide things underground that we can't
reach with our conventional weapons. So I just think it is
absurd to talk about bombing these sites, because all we'll do
is blow up buildings that can be rebuilt.
A couple of sites are more
sensitive; I think the uranium conversion facility at Isfahan,
that'll be a major blow. It's a site that can be rebuilt
however. It was a facility put in by the Chinese, but the
Iranians have the blueprints. It'll take time, but they can
rebuild it. At the best we are talking about retarding an
Iranian program. But what's worse is if we bomb them, we may
retard it, but we might also make it a militant program. Meaning
that if their objective is only nuclear energy and suddenly
they're being attacked and the world is doing nothing, we may
push the Iranians into weaponization even though that is
something they don't want to do. That's not in the cards right
now. But our attack will have little or no impact on anything.
That's for certain.
MT: So what do you think
the United States should be doing to keep Iran from getting
nuclear weapons?
Ritter: I think that is
the wrong question. That presumes Iran is seeking nuclear
weapons. There's no evidence of that whatsoever. So rather than
pose a question that legitimizes a certain point, I think the
question should be, "What should the United States be doing in
regards to Iran?" I think we should be seeking to normalize
relations with Iran. We should be seeking stability in the
region. This concept that the United States gets to dictate to
sovereign people the makeup of their government is absurd. First
of all, the theocracy in Iran, while not a model, for instance
... it's an Iranian problem, not an American problem. The day of
the exportation of the Islamic revolution is long gone. The
Iranians are not seeking to convert by the sword anybody. It's a
nation that has serious internal problems. Economic. Huge
unemployment. It's a nation that recognizes these problems. And
they are in desperate need of not only political stability but
also the economic benefits that come with this stability.
The Iranians want a
normalization of relations with the United States that would be
inclusive of peaceful coexistence with Israel. They've said this
over and over and over again.
So what the United States should
be doing is exploiting the olive branch that is being held out
by the Iranians. We should be engaging them diplomatically. We
should be terminating economic sanctions and seeking to exploit
the leverage that comes with having American businesses working
inside Iran to try and change them from within. We should be
doing everything to get Iran to be a positive player in the
region, especially considering the debacle that's unfolding in
Iraq. Having the Iranians working with us to engender stability
as opposed to being at cross-purposes.
The same can be said in
Afghanistan and the entire central Asian region. We keep putting
our hopes on allies like Saudi Arabia and Pakistan. Saudi
Arabia, which produced 14 of the hijackers who slaughtered
Americans on 9/11. Pakistan, which was the political sponsor of
the Taliban and al-Qaeda in Afghanistan and continues to have
ties to radical Islamic terror organizations. These are our
allies? And we call Iran the enemy? We've got it backward. The
Iranians are actually the ones we should be working with to
oppose dictatorships like Pakistan and irresponsible governments
like Saudi Arabia's.
MT: Even under Iran's
current president, Mahmoud Ahmadinejad? It seems like before
him, just after 2001, there was a window where the Iranians were
seeking rapprochement and doing things perhaps quietly and not
well-known to Americans to stabilize things.
Ritter: You have to
remember that Ahmadinejad doesn't make any policy. He is more
than a figurehead, but constitutionally he's hampered by the
reality that the power resides with the theocrats. It's the
theocrats we need to be engaging, not Ahmadinejad. You engage
the people who make the decisions. In the end we should be
sending people to talk to the National Security Council, the
Guardian Council, the representatives of the supreme leader.
That's where the power is, that's where the decisions are made.
Ahmadinejad is in reality just a minor inconvenience. The bottom
line is, not only doesn't he account for much, his words haven't
created a problem at all. Half the things we claim he said, he
never said at all. And the other half we put out of context and
exaggerate.
I'm not here to defend what the
guy says. But the notion that just because a man dared question
a 100 percent interpretation of the history of the Holocaust as
put forward by Israel — and again, I'm not saying he's right to
do that — I'm just saying that because he dared do that, he's
suddenly evil incarnate and we need to go to war against this
guy? No. At worst he's a joke. He's a guy whose words mean
nothing, have no power, have no relevance. It's the supreme
leader that matters. And, yes, today the supreme leader
continues to want to seek to normalize relations with the United
States.
MT: You are getting ready
to go to Iran at the start of December. What's the purpose of
that trip?
Ritter: I've been trying
to get there for some time now to talk with Iranian government
officials trying to ascertain firsthand what's going on in Iran.
We get a lot of rhetoric here at home, we get the media saying a
lot of things that are derived not so much from on-the-ground
truth in Iran but rather from talking points put out by the
White House. I think it is imperative that if we are going to
have a national debate, discussion and dialogue about Iran, that
we get all sides of the story.
Hopefully, I'll have an
opportunity to meet with Iranian government officials, and have
a chance to speak with some religious officials, and maybe even
have a chance to talk about hypotheticals, not only what the
current situation is, but how the Iranians would like to see
this thing resolved and what mechanisms might need to be
employed and maybe come back with some ideas that people in
Congress might be interested in.
MT: You've been to Iran
before, haven't you?
Ritter: Yes. And having
been to Iran, I can tell you that it is the last nation in the
world we should be saying these are people we have to fight.
When you visit Iran and you see the Iranian people and you get
the chance to talk to them, you realize that these are peaceful
people. These are highly educated people. They are more like us
than we can possibly imagine. They are very Western in their
approach, although they reject the term Western because they say
think those in the West are Neanderthals compared to the Persian
culture. But they are very modern in their approach. They are a
very modern people.
I always say the best way to
stop a war with Iran would be to issue every American a passport
and roundtrip ticket and money for a two-week stay and let them
go there and when they came back they'd say there's no way we
should bomb this place. Once you've been to Iran you realize
just how utterly useless the concept of militaristic
confrontation is.
MT: I think it is fair to
say you are perceived as a champion of the left at this point.
But 10 years ago, when you were criticizing the Clinton
administration for undermining efforts to root out Saddam's
weapons, you were being heralded by the right. Saddam accused
you of being an American spy. And you were criticized for being
too close with the Israelis and sharing information with them.
But when you go to Iraq prior to the war there, people on the
right are calling you a traitor. The FBI put you under
surveillance. What do you make of all that?
Ritter: What I make of it
is my consistency and the inconsistency of those who seek to
gain political advantage by manipulating the truth. When the
right embraced what I was saying, they didn't embrace the
totality of what I was saying. They only embraced that aspect
that was convenient for their political purposes. I would say
today that the left is guilty of the same thing. I'm only
convenient to the left when that which I espouse mirrors what
they are pursuing. It will be interesting to see, if Hillary
Clinton wins the White House, how popular I will be in certain
circles, because I can guarantee I will go after her with all
the vengeance I go after the Bush administration.
It's not about being Republican,
it's not about being Democrat, it's about being American. It's
about doing the right thing. And in the 1990s the right thing
was to implement the [United Nations] Security Council
resolutions calling for the disarmament of Iraq. That was the
law. That was what I was tasked with doing, and the Clinton
administration was not permitting the task to be accomplished.
By holding them to account, if
that suddenly made me popular with the right, then so be it.
It's not something that I sought; it wasn't the purpose of what
I was doing. But when the complexity of my stance became
inconvenient to the right, when they found out it wasn't just
about taking down the Clinton administration, but rather
criticizing an American political position that put unilateral
policy objectives and regime change higher up in the chain of
priorities than disarmament, suddenly it wasn't convenient
anymore to be saying, "Hey, we like this guy."
One cannot be held accountable
for the words and actions of those who seek to selectively
embrace what you say.
MT: When Bush talks about
World War III, how likely is the scenario that an attack by us
would escalate into that?
Ritter: I don't know
about likely, but what I say is that I can sit here and spin
scenarios that have it going in that direction. And these aren't
fantastic scenarios.
MT: Would that be having
Russia or China coming in?
Ritter: No, no, no. It
would be something more like the destabilization of Pakistan to
the point where a nuclear device gets in the hands of Islamic
fundamentalists who are aligned with al-Qaeda and there's some
sort of nuclear activity on the soil of the United States of
America. That's more what I'm looking at. I don't think the
Russians or the Chinese would become involved. They don't need
to. All they have to do is sit back and wait and pick up the
pieces — because it is the end of the United States as a global
superpower. That's one thing I try to tell everybody. The danger
of going after Iran is that it is just not worth it. What we can
lose is everything, and what we gain is nothing. So why do it?
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