Iran Shows
Its Cards
By Scott
Ritter
15/07/08
"Truthdig"
-- -- There
can no
longer be
any doubt
about the
consequences
of any U.S.
and/or
Israeli
military
action
against
Iran.
Armchair
warriors,
pundits and
blustering
politicians
alike have
been
advocating a
pre-emptive
military
strike
against Iran
for the
purpose of
neutralizing
its
nuclear-related
infrastructure,
as well as
retarding
Iran’s
ability to
train and
equip
“terrorist”
forces on
Iranian soil
before
dispatching
them to Iraq
or parts
unknown.
Some,
including
me, have
warned of
the folly of
such action,
and now Iran
itself has
demonstrated
why an
attack would
be insane
I’ve always
pointed out
that no plan
survives
initial
contact with
the enemy,
and
furthermore
one can
never forget
that, in
war, the
enemy gets
to vote. On
the issue of
an American
and/or
Israeli
attack on
Iran, the
Iranian
military has
demonstrated
exactly how
it would
cast its
vote. Iran
recently
fired off
medium- and
long-range
missiles and
rockets, in
a clear
demonstration
of
capability
and intent.
Shipping
through the
Strait of
Hormuz,
regional oil
production
capability
and U.S.
military
concentrations,
along with
Israeli
cities,
would all be
subjected to
an Iranian
military
response if
Iran was
attacked.
The Bush
administration
has shrugged
off the
Iranian
military
display as
yet another
example of
how
irresponsible
the
government
in Tehran
is. But the
Pentagon for
one has had
to sit up
and pay
attention.
For some
time now,
the admirals
commanding
the U.S. 5th
Fleet in the
Persian Gulf
have
maintained
that they
have the
ability to
keep the
Strait of
Hormuz open.
But the fact
is, the only
way the
United
States could
guarantee
that the
strait
remained
open would
be to launch
a massive
pre-emptive
military
strike that
swept the
Iranian
coast clear
of the
deadly
Chinese-made
surface-to-surface
missiles
that Iran
would use to
sink cargo
ships in the
strategic
lane. This
strike would
involve
hundreds of
tactical
aircraft
backed up by
limited
ground
action by
Marines and
U.S. Special
Operations
forces which
would
involve
“boots on
the ground”
for several
days, if not
weeks. Such
a strike is
not
envisioned
in any
“limited”
military
action being
planned by
the United
States. But
now that it
is clear
what the
Iranian
response
would
entail,
there can no
longer be
any talk of
a “limited”
military
attack on
Iran.
The moment
the United
States makes
a move to
secure the
Strait of
Hormuz, Iran
will unleash
a massive
bombardment
of the
military and
industrial
facilities
of the
United
States and
its allies,
including
the oil
fields in
Iraq,
Kuwait,
Saudi
Arabia, the
United Arab
Emirates and
Qatar.
American
military
bases in
Iraq and
Kuwait,
large—fixed
and well
known— would
be smothered
by rockets
and missiles
carrying
deadly
cluster
bombs. The
damage done
would run
into the
hundreds of
millions, if
not into
billions, of
dollars, and
hundreds, if
not
thousands,
of U.S.
military
personnel
would be
killed and
wounded.
To prevent
or retard
any Iranian
missile
attack, the
United
States would
have to
commit
hundreds of
combat
sorties,
combined
with Special
Operations
forces, to a
counter-missile
fight which
would need
to span the
considerable
depth of the
Persian
landmass
from which
missiles
might reach
potential
targets.
While there
has been
some
improvement
in the U.S.
military’s
counter-missile
capability,
one must
never forget
that in 1991
not a single
Iraqi Scud
missile was
successfully
interdicted
by any
aspect of
American
military
action (airstrike,
ground
action or
antiballistic
missile),
and in 2003
the U.S.
military had
mixed
results
against the
far less
capable Al-Samoud
missiles.
Israel was
unable to
prevent
Hezbollah
from firing
large salvos
of rockets
into
northern
Israel
during the
summer 2006
conflict.
There is no
reason for
optimism
that the
U.S. and
Israel have
suddenly
found the
solution to
the Iranian
missile
threat.
There is
virtually no
chance the
U.S. Navy
would be
able to
prevent Iran
from
interfering
with
shipping
through the
strait.
There is
every chance
the Navy
would take
significant
casualties,
in both
ships lost
and
personnel
killed or
wounded, as
it struggled
to secure
the strait.
There would
be a need
for a
significant
commitment
of ground
forces to
guarantee
safe passage
for all
shipping,
civilian and
military
alike. The
longer
ground
forces could
operate on
Iranian
soil, the
better the
chances
Iranian
missiles
would not be
able to
effectively
interdict
shipping.
Conversely,
the longer
ground
forces
operated on
Iranian
soil, the
greater
likelihood
there would
be of
decisive
ground
engagement.
With U.S.
air power
expected to
be fully
committed to
the missile
interdiction
mission, any
large-scale
ground
engagement
would create
a situation
in which air
power would
have to be
redirected
into
tactical
support, and
away from
missile
interdiction,
creating a
window of
vulnerability
which the
Iranians
would very
likely
exploit.
Iran has
promised to
strike
targets in
Israel as
well,
especially
if Israel is
a
participant
in any
military
action. Such
Israeli
involvement
is highly
unlikely,
since to do
so in any
meaningful
fashion
Israel would
need to fly
in Iraqi air
space, a
violation of
sovereignty
the Iraqi
government
will never
tolerate.
The
anti-American
backlash
that would
be generated
in Iraq
would be
immediate
and severe.
In short,
virtually
every
operation
involving
the training
of Iraqi
forces would
be
terminated
as the U.S.
military
trainers
would need
to be
withdrawn to
the safety
of the
fortified
U.S. bases
to protect
them from
attack. U.S.
civilian
contractors
would
likewise
need to be
either
withdrawn
completely
from Iraq or
restricted
to the
fortified
bases. All
gains
alleged to
have been
made in the
“surge”
would be
wiped away
instantly.
Worse, the
Iraqi
countryside
would become
a seething
mass of
anti-American
activity,
which would
require a
huge effort
to reverse,
if it ever
could be.
Iraq as we
now know it
would be
lost, and
what would
emerge in
its stead
would not
only be
unsympathetic
to the
United
States but
actually a
breeding
ground for
anti-American
action that
could very
well expand
beyond the
boundaries
of Iraq and
the Middle
East.
The chances
of
preventing
an
Iranian-Israeli
clash in the
event of a
U.S. strike
against Iran
are slim to
none. Even
if Iran
initially
showed
restraint,
Hezbollah
would
undoubtedly
join the
fray,
prompting an
Israeli
counterstrike
in Lebanon
and Iran
which would
in turn
bring
long-range
Iranian
missiles
raining down
on Israeli
cities.
Neither the
Israeli nor
the American
(and for
that reason,
European and
Asian)
economy
would emerge
intact from
a U.S.
attack on
Iran. Oil
would almost
instantly
break the
$300-per-barrel
mark, and
because the
resulting
conflict
would more
than likely
be longer
and more
violent that
most are
predicting,
there is a
good chance
oil would
top $500 or
even more
within days
or weeks.
Hyperinflation
would almost
certainly
strike every
market-based
economy, and
the markets
themselves
would
collapse
under the
strain.
The good
news is that
the military
planners in
the Pentagon
are
cognizant of
this
reality.
They know
the
limitations
of American
power, and
what they
can and
cannot
achieve.
When it was
uncertain
how Iran
would
respond to a
limited
attack,
either on
their
nuclear
facilities
or bases
associated
with the
Revolutionary
Guard
Command,
some
planners
might have
thought that
the U.S.
could
actually
pull off a
quick and
relatively
bloodless
attack. Now
that Iran
has made it
crystal
clear that
even a
limited U.S.
attack would
bring about
a massive
Iranian
response,
all military
planners now
understand
that any
U.S.
military
attack will
have to be
massive.
Simply put,
the United
States does
not now have
the military
capacity in
the Middle
East to
launch such
a strike,
and any
redeployment
of U.S.
forces into
the region
could not go
undetected,
either by
Iran, which
would in
turn
redeploy its
forces, or
the rest of
the world.
Because a
U.S. attack
against Iran
would have
such
horrific
detrimental
impact on
the entire
world, it is
hard to
imagine the
international
community
remaining
mute as
American
military
might is
assembled.
Likewise,
despite the
disposition
of Congress
to either
remain
silent on
the issue or
actively
facilitate
military
action
against
Iran, it
would become
increasingly
difficult
for American
lawmakers to
ignore the
consequences
of a
military
strike on
Iran,
economically
and
politically.
The same can
be said of
both major
presidential
candidates.
The decision
by Iran to
show its
hand on how
it would
respond to
any American
aggression
has cleared
the air, so
to speak,
about what
is actually
being
discussed
when one
speaks of
military
action
against
Iran. In
many ways,
the Iranian
missile
tests have
made it less
likely that
there will
be a war
with Iran,
simply
because the
stakes of
any such
action are
so plainly
obvious to
all parties
involved.
Iran
continues,
based upon
all
available
intelligence
information,
to pursue a
nuclear
program
which is
exclusively
intended for
peaceful
energy
purposes.
Any concerns
which may
exist about
the dual-use
potential of
Iran’s
uranium
enrichment
programs can
be mitigated
through
viable
nuclear
inspections
conducted by
the
International
Atomic
Energy
Agency. IAEA
inspections
should be
improved
upon by
getting Iran
to go along
with an
additional
inspection
protocol,
rather than
pursuing
military
action which
will destroy
the
inspection
process and
remove the
very
verification
processes
which
provide the
international
community
with the
confidence
that Iran is
not pursuing
a nuclear
weapons
program.
The reality
is that
Iran’s
nuclear
program is
here to
stay. Iran
has every
right under
international
law to
pursue this
program, and
regional and
global
tensions
would be
greatly
reduced
(along with
the price of
oil) if
American
policies,
and in
related
fashion U.N.
Security
Council
mandates,
were
adjusted
accordingly.
Israeli
paranoia—derived
not so much
from any
genuine
Iranian
threat but
rather an
affront to
Israeli
nuclear
hegemony in
the Middle
East—must in
turn be
subdued.
This can be
done through
a mixture of
international
pressure
designed to
punish
Israel
diplomatically
and
economically
for any
failure to
adhere to
international
norms when
it comes to
peaceful
coexistence
with its
neighbors,
and
international
assurances
that
Israel’s
sovereignty
and
viability as
a
nation-state
will forever
be respected
and
defended.
Of course,
there can be
no
meaningful
international
pressure
brought to
bear on
Israel
without
American
participation,
and herein
lies the
crux of the
problem.
Until the
U.S.
Congress
segregates
legitimate
national
security
concerns
from narrow
Israeli-only
issues, the
pro-Israel
lobby will
have
considerable
control over
American
national
security
policy. The
American
Israel
Public
Affairs
Committee’s
continued
push for
congressional
action
concerning
the
implementation
of what is
tantamount
to a naval
blockade of
Iran (and as
such, an act
of war) by
pushing
House
Resolution
362 and
Senate
Resolution
580 is
mind-boggling
given the
reality of
the
situation.
Congress
must stop
talking
blockade,
and start
discussing
stability
and
confidence-building
measures.
There has
never been a
more
pressing
time than
now for
Congress to
conduct
serious
hearings on
U.S. policy
toward Iran.
Such
hearings
must not
replicate
the
rubber-stamp
hearings
held by the
U.S. Senate
and House in
the summer
of 2002.
Those
hearings
were simply
a
facilitating
vehicle for
war with
Iraq. New
hearings
must expand
the body of
witnesses
beyond
administration
officials
and those
who would
mirror their
policy
positions,
and include
experts and
specialists
who could
articulate a
counter
point of
view,
exposing
Congress to
information
and analysis
that might
prompt a
fuller
debate. This
is the last
thing AIPAC
and the Bush
administration
want to see.
But it is
the one
thing the
American
people
should be
demanding.
Only an
irrational
person or
organization
could
continue to
discuss as
viable a
military
strike
against
Iran. Sadly,
based upon
past and
current
policy
articulations,
neither
AIPAC nor
the Bush
administration
can be
considered
rational
when it
comes to the
issue of
Iran. It is
up to the
American
people,
through
their
elected
representatives
in Congress,
to inject a
modicum of
sanity into
a situation
that
continues to
be in danger
of spinning
out of
control.
Scott Ritter
was a U.N.
weapons
inspector in
Iraq from
1991 to
1998. He is
the author
of “Target
Iran”
(Nation
Books,
2007).
Copyright
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