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Are we going to war with Iran?

The Guardian | 19.10.2005 10:36

Dan Plesch evaluates the evidence pointing towards a new conflict in the Middle East


The Sunday Telegraph warned last weekend that the UN had a last chance to avert war with Iran and, at a meeting in London last week, the US ambassador to the UN, John Bolton, expressed his regret that any failure by the UN security council to deal with Iran would damage the security council's relevance, implying that the US would solve the problem on its own.
Only days before, the foreign secretary, Jack Straw, had dismissed military action as "inconceivable" while both the American president and his secretary of state had insisted war talk was not on the agenda. The UN's International Atomic Energy Agency inspectors have found that Iran has not, so far, broken its commitments under the nuclear non-proliferation treaty, although it has concealed activities before.


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It appears that the UK and US have decided to raise the stakes in the confrontation with Iran. The two countries persuaded the IAEA board - including India - to overrule its inspectors, declare Iran in breach of the non-proliferation treaty (NPT) and say that Iran's activities could be examined by the UN security council. Critics of this political process point to the fact that India itself has developed nuclear weapons and refused to join the NPT, but has still voted that Iran is acting illegitimately. On the Iranian side there is also much belligerent talk and pop music now proudly speaks of the nuclear contribution to Iranian security.
The timing of the recent allegations about Iranian intervention in Iraq also appears to be significant. Ever since the US refused to control Iraq's borders in April 2003, Iranian backed militia have dominated the south and, with under 10,000 soldiers amongst a population of millions, the British army had little option but to go along. No fuss was made until now. As for the bombings of British soldiers, some sources familiar with the US army engineers report that these supposedly sophisticated devices have been manufactured inside Iraq for many months and do not need to be imported.

But is the war talk for real or is it just sabre rattling? The conventional wisdom is that for both military and political reasons it would be impossible for Israel and the UK/US to attack and that, in any event, after the politically damaging Iraq war, neither Tony Blair nor George Bush would be able to gather political support for another attack.

But in Washington, Tel Aviv and Downing Street, if not the Foreign Office, Iran is regarded as a critical threat. The regime in Tehran continues to demand the destruction of the state of Israel and to support anti-Israeli forces. In what appeared to be coordinated releases of intelligence assessments, Israeli and US intelligence briefed earlier this year that, while Iran was years from a nuclear weapons capability, the technological point of no return was now imminent.

Shortly after the US elections, the vice-president, Dick Cheney, warned that Israel might attack Iran. Israel has the capability to attack Iranian targets with aircraft and long-range cruise missiles launched from submarines, while Iranian air defences are still mostly based on 25-year-old equipment purchased in the time of the Shah. A US attack might be portrayed as a more reasonable option than a renewed Israeli-Islamic confrontation.

The US army and marines are heavily committed in Iraq, but soldiers could be found if the Bush administration were intent on invasion. Donald Rumsfeld has been reorganising the army to increase front-line forces by a third. More importantly, naval and air force firepower has barely been used in Iraq. Just 120 B52 and stealth bombers could target 5,000 points in Iran with satellite-guided bombs in just one mission. It is for this reason that John Pike of globalsecurity.org thinks that a US attack could come with no warning at all. US action is often portrayed as impossible, not only because of the alleged lack of firepower, but because Iranian facilities are too hard to target. In a strategic logic not lost on Washington, the conclusion then is that if you cannot guarantee to destroy all the alleged weapons, then it must be necessary to remove the regime that wants them, and regime change has been the official policy in Washington for many years.

For political-military planners, precision strikes on a few facilities have drawbacks beyond leaving the regime intact. They allow the regime too many retaliatory options. Certainly, Iran's neighbours in Saudi Arabia and the Gulf who are worried about the growth of Iranian Shia influence in Iraq would want any attack to be decisive. From this logic grows the idea of destroying the political-military infrastructure of the clerical regime and perhaps encouraging separatist Kurdish and Azeri risings in the north-west. Some Washington planners have hopes of the Sunnis of oil-rich Khuzestan breaking away too.

A new war may not be as politically disastrous in Washington as many believe. Scott Ritter, the whistleblowing former UN weapons inspector, points out that few in the Democratic party will stand in the way of the destruction of those who conducted the infamous Tehran embassy siege that ended Jimmy Carter's presidency. Mr Ritter is one of the US analysts, along with Seymour Hersh, who have led the allegations that Washington is going to war with Iran.

For an embattled President Bush, combating the mullahs of Tehran may be a useful means of diverting attention from Iraq and reestablishing control of the Republican party prior to next year's congressional elections. From this perspective, even an escalating conflict would rally the nation behind a war president. As for the succession to President Bush, Bob Woodward has named Mr Cheney as a likely candidate, a step that would be easier in a wartime atmosphere. Mr Cheney would doubtless point out that US military spending, while huge compared to other nations, is at a far lower percentage of gross domestic product than during the Reagan years. With regard to Mr Blair's position, it would be helpful to know whether he has committed Britain to preventing an Iranian bomb "come what may" as he did with Iraq.

The Guardian

Comments

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yes we are

19.10.2005 13:19

and there is probably very little we can do about it

mayler


There will be no war with Iran

19.10.2005 14:39

The US will not invade Iran. The moral reasons against war (violation of Iran's sovereignty, violation of the right of the people of Iran to determine their own future and be free of foreign occupation and control, violation of the right to life, violation of the principle that life can only be taken in self-defence or the defence of others) will not stop the US, just as they did not stop the US from attacking Iraq. The absence of nuclear weapons in Iran will not act as a deterrent, just as the absence of weapons of mass destruction did not prevent the invasion and subsequent occupation of Iraq. The objections of its own people to war will not prevent an attack, just as unprecedented demonstrations did not stop the war against Iraq. The US wants a more compliant leadership in Iran and it wants more control over Iran's massive oil and gas reserves. So why will the US not invade?

Because as a matter of realpolitik, the US cannot invade. First, Iran will be an enormously more formidable foe than Iraq or Afghanistan. The people of Iran do not oppose their own government to the extent that the Afghans and Iraqis opposed the Taliban and Saddam, and so there will be greater resistance to foreign attack. Crucially, Iran is much better equipped to defend itself than either Afghanistan or Iraq, and US fatalities will be far higher in any land war against Iran. If the Americans can lose 2000 soldiers fighting a poorly equipped, hapless enemy like Iraq, then 20,000 will die attacking Iran. The people of Iran united to repel a technically superior foe when Iraq attacked in 1980, and the US knows that Iran will do the same again in the event of another invasion.

Secondly, the US is unable to commit resources and manpower to a war against Iran because of its present campaigns in Iraq and Afghanistan.

Thirdly, the US will be unable to isolate and weaken Iran in the way it did against Iraq. Before the invasion of Iraq, the US persuaded the UN Security Council to impose crippling sanctions for over 12 years. The US and the UK were also able to cling on to a UN resolution in order to claim that the war was legitimate. However, in the case of Iran, there are no UN Security Council sanctions or resolutions in place at all. Russia has already made it clear that it will veto any attempt to impose UN sanctions, and China too is a firm ally of Iran. Practically the whole developing world is behind Iran. The US will simply be unable to go down the usual route of weakening its enemy with UN sanctions, legitimising military action with UN resolutions, and ultimately attacking. It cannot isolate Iran in the way it has to before it can successfully attack.

So despite the immense power of the US, an invasion of Iran will be impossible, which shows that US power alone does not always determine the course of world affairs, and that there are meaningful countervailing power blocs. This leaves the US or one of its allies such as Israel with limited choice. The US could opt for air strikes against Iran outside the auspices of the UN, but this would not increase US control over Iran. Illegitimate airstrikes would not change the religious leadership of Iran or promote a more pro-American leadership, but entrench the anti-US and religious sentiments of the Iranian people and the government.

The only likely military action that could be taken against Iran would be by Israel. It is conceivable that Israel would destroy the nuclear facilities at Esfahan, Natanz and Bushehr, to prevent any possible Iranian nuclear threat to itself. In the event of such an attack, the loss of life would be relatively limited (the Israeli attack on the Iraqi nuclear plant of Osirak in 1981 led to one death). But even this kind of attack is unlikely, given Iranian belligerence towards Israel and the likely retaliation that Israel knows it would be subject to in the event of an attack on Iranian nuclear facilities. When Israel attacked Osirak, Iraq was an ally of the US and Israel was aware that the Americans could apply pressure on Iraq to desist from retaliation. However, the Israelis would not have any protection against retaliation if they attacked Iran.

The result of this? A military attack of any kind against Iran is highly unlikely to occur. It could be argued that as the global political situation changes over the next few years, an attack may become more likely. But the current changes in global politics make an attack less and not more likely in the forthcoming years. Iran is already in the process of building a gas pipeline to Pakistan and India, and India is emerging as one of the new powers of the 21st century. Iran has also entered into a huge gas deal with China and is solidifying its relations with Russia all the time. In short, Iran does not look like it will become more isolated over the coming years, but a central ally of the key emerging powers of China, India and Russia. This makes war against Iran in the next few years practically impossible. The US will not be able to control Iran through coercion and threats but will have to engage with the government in Tehran to exercise any influence whatsoever. It is this possible rapprochement, and not conflict, that we can look forward to.

Sarabjit Singh
mail e-mail: sabsingh@hotmail.com


Anti-cynicism

19.10.2005 17:34

Mayler - you may be correct in your first clause (may be, may not be -- let's hope not)

but you are utterly incorrect in your second.

I hate this defeatism to my very core. It expresses a sense of powerlessness that we choose for ourselves.

Stop living on your knees.

Fight the power!

Mercurious Britannicus
mail e-mail: mercuriousbritannicus@yahoo.co.uk