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Politics : Proof that John Kerry is Unfit for Command -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Andrew N. Cothran who wrote (18322)10/13/2004 12:23:07 PM
From: Richnorth  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 27181
 
No, I was not talking about the UN.

By the way, here's an interesting article. Remember that my "revisionist" history projected an attack on Iran?


Is Iran the October Surprise?

By Gwynne Dyer

American intelligence sources are busily leaking hair-raising tales
of Iran's alleged nuclear weapons programme. Norman Podhoretz, editor of
"Commentary" and godfather of the neo-conservatives, tells an interviewer:
"I am not advocating the invasion of Iran at this moment, although I
wouldn't be heartbroken if it happened." Israel has recently taken
delivery of 500 "bunker-buster" bombs from the United States -- just the
thing for destroying deeply buried nuclear facilities. Is the
long-predicted "October Surprise" that clinches the US election for
President George W. Bush going to be an attack on Iran?

Some senior Iranian military people seem concerned about it, and
last month Yadollah Javani, head of the Revolutionary Guards political
bureau, reassured Iranians that neither the US nor Israel would dare to
attack their country. "The entire Zionist territory, including its nuclear
facilities and atomic arsenal, are currently within range of Iran's
advanced missiles," he said. "Therefore, neither the Zionist regime nor
America will carry out its threats."

Some of this is obvious nonsense. Norman Podhoretz's grasp of
military realities is inferior to that of the average beauty queen: the
United States is far too over-stretched militarily in Afghanistan and Iraq
to contemplate invading Iran, which is much bigger and stronger than both
of them put together, and Israel cannot invade Iran, having no common
border with it. There will not be an invasion.

Yadollah Javani is also talking through his hat. Iran's Shahab-3
missiles can reach Israel and strike at American forces all over the Middle
East, but since Iran certainly has no nuclear weapons at the moment, that
only means that it can drop a few high-explosive warheads on them, without
much in the way of accuracy, if it doesn't lose its missiles on the ground
first. There is no effective Iranian deterrent to American or Israeli air
strikes aimed at destroying the country's nuclear facilities, which is far
more likely than an actual invasion.

What is conspicuously lacking (as in the case of Iraq) is any
reason for arguing that an attack is urgent. Even if Iran's uranium
enrichment programme is really intended to produce weapons-grade material
for nuclear bombs and not, as it claims, to fuel nuclear reactors for
electrical power, nobody is seriously suggesting that it will have bombs
soon. There is still time for negotiations, inspections, and deals, and
there is certainly no threat so imminent that it requires military action
before November. An attack now would be driven by political calculations.

Israel's Prime Minister Ariel Sharon would be seriously tempted to
launch a "preemptive" strike against Iranian nuclear facilities if he could
get a green light from the US, as it would eliminate a potential threat to
Israel's nuclear weapons monopoly in the region and also boost his
popularity in a difficult period at home. From the Israeli leader's point
of view, moreover, October would be better than later, because he can be
sure that President Bush (who just gave him the "bunker-busters") is still
in office. John Kerry might say no.

From the White House's vantage point, it's probably too soon to
say. At the moment, the numbers are looking good for Bush and he probably
doesn't need an "October Surprise" to win -- but it's something you might
want to have up your sleeve to distract the public's attention just in case
the Kerry campaign started to take off.

Happily, that's the sort of thing you can decide on a few days'
notice, since it only involves air strikes. An Israeli attack on Iran,
with or without direct US participation, would cause turmoil throughout the
Muslim world, but that's a pretty minor consideration in Washington if an
American election is at stake.

And here's the funny thing: the Islamic radicals who took back
control of the Iranian parliament in rigged elections last spring and hope
to unseat moderate President Mohammad Khatami next year would privately
welcome an attack. They know that most of their fellow-countrymen are fed
up with repression at home and confrontation abroad and want a more normal
life. They need something to drive ordinary Iranians back into their camp,
and what better than the patriotic fury that would be unleashed by an
unprovoked Israeli or American attack?

Even if they do have a nuclear weapons programme to hide, their
advisers would be telling them that a single round of air attacks on widely
dispersed and deeply buried facilities would be unlikely to cripple it
permanently -- and if there isn't one, then they have absolutely nothing to
lose. In either case, they have a lot to gain politically from Israeli or
US attacks, and their evasive and uncooperative behaviour towards the
International Atomic Energy Agency since last spring suggests that they
fully understand that.

When all the relevant decision-makers on both sides of the argument
have something to gain politically from a certain action, it becomes a
possibility. No more than that, for the moment, and the final decision
would have to be made in Washington even if it were Israelis who did the
actual bombing. But if George W. Bush's poll numbers are looking shaky in
mid-October, the possibility of that sort of an attack on Iran probably
rises considerably.

gwynnedyer.net