April 29, 2010
Attack on Iran
By Saeed Qureshi
I would venture a bet that American attack on Iran is entirely improbable. The 
United States would not take this extremely risky undertaking, fraught with 
horrendous ramifications. The cardinal question is what for? Is it to keep her 
Middle East ally in good humor or to teach Iran a dire lesson for not winding 
up her nuclear program? 
Israel destroyed Iraq nuclear reactor at Osirak way back in 1981 by massive air 
strikes. Later Israel did the same thing by razing a budding Syrian nuclear 
project in late 2007. There was no retaliation from these two Arab countries. 
Ever since Ahmadinejad has been the president of Iran, there are unremitting 
rumor mongering that, a la Iraq and Syria, Israel would launch punitive air 
attack on Iran to destroy her nuclear sites.  But somehow, thus far, it has 
desisted from this stipulated insane adventure.
Now if America wants to embark upon this highly perilous path, in tandem or on 
behalf of Israel then it should ponder a thousand times before it leaps into 
that mindless assault or in plain words an audacious aggression against a 
sovereign country. While doing so United States must be supported and blessed 
both by Israel and Arab nations hostile to Iran. But it is not difficult to 
deduce that such a moronic and totally un- called use of power will have a 
disastrous spillover and lengthening shadows on the region because of the 
simple fact that the horrifying ramifications of such a massive air strike 
cannot remain strictly confined to the geographical boundaries of Iran.
 It should also be kept in mind that Iran is not another Iraq that was under 
the impulsive throbbing of a dictator who neither had his roots in the people 
nor did he enjoy any mentionable trust or goodwill among his Arab counterparts. 
Saddam had isolated Iraq by his expansionist designs as borne out by his 
invasion of Iraq and a decade long war with Iran.  
Iran, on the contrary, doesn’t suffer from such setbacks or blemishes. Iran is 
both ideologically and politically a united country. It’s a vast geographical 
contiguity. It’s rich by virtue of having large reserves of oil and gas. It has 
overcome its economic disabilities in three decades of clerical leadership 
firmly holding the reins of the country. It is a democracy although not in the 
stricter sense of American or Westminster formats of democracies. It holds 
elections and the elections by and large are fair and free, within the 
ideological framework provided by the constitution and religion.
United States has not been categorical in outright condemning Iran and closing 
the options and venue for interaction and dialogue. At present when U.S. is 
faced with a colossal economic crunch, it would be an utterly absurd and an 
extremely costly affair for her to repeat the same blunder that it committed by 
invading Iraq. Iraq’s invasion cost America a heavy toll of precious lives of 
soldiers, the infamy and economic bludgeoning of nearly 2 to 3 trillion 
dollars. 
If Obama administration’s plank and philosophy is to repair America’s image as 
an aggressor country by overarching to the hostile nations with peaceful 
mindset and mitigating the conflicts with the Muslim world, such an attack 
would rob the incumbent American administration of its stated good will that it 
has earned in the meantime.
The global economy would tailspin and dash to the ground because it would not 
be a brief attack that would end once the job of destroying nuclear 
installations is accomplished. Even if the nuclear reactors or sites are 
destroyed, the Iranian nation would still survive and fight back as the 
Afghanis or Iraqis have been doing. But there is a difference between the anti 
American insurgency in Afghanistan and Iraq and the one that would sprout out 
of Iran. Iran has a proper strong standing army and it has stockpiles of 
convential weapons. And above all it has a nation that has an indomitable will 
to fight because it is the only country that proclaims Shia faith and therefore 
it would assume a religious war: a war that would neither be contained nor 
finished by declaring, “The mission accomplished”. 
It can be surmised that once Iran comes under attacks and suffers losses, it 
would be free to launch  counter attacks against Israel which is not far away 
and for Iran to overrun it would not be a tall order. As we know about a 
million Iranians perished in their war with Iraq. They would die in millions 
more but would strike back with full force and fury. That situation might push 
the region and the world into the lap of a third world war: a conflagration 
that might terminate on the extinction of the human race.  Would such a 
dreadful outcome suite any civilized country, not to speak of the United States.
If the fundamental objective of such a mission impossible would be to 
debilitate Iran’s nuclear capabilities then the same yardstick should also be 
applied to North Korea which daringly and openly decries America and defiantly 
admits possessing nuclear arsenal, no matter how few these might be in number 
or smaller in size or made of primitive technology. Still you can name these as 
dirty bombs. Why do Israel and America not think of taking a similar military 
offensive against the North Korea if the purpose is to clear the planet of 
nuclear weapons feared to be possessed by so called rogue states? If a dormant 
and diplomatic policy is applicable to North Korea why not to Iran?
I cannot give much weight and credence to the deliberations of April 14 Senate 
Armed Services Committee’s hearing on Iran. According to press reports, In that 
committee the chairman, Carl Levin, pressed Michele Flournoy,  the Pentagon’s 
under secretary for policy, , to “assure him that the military option remains, 
on the table”. Even Joint Chiefs of Staff Chairman Admiral Michael Mullen who 
earlier warned of the grave consequences of launching an aerial attack on Iran 
as the CNN recently reported, later supported such an action and told “the 
military to update contingency plans for such an attack.”
In the wake of these rumours, it has been reported that such deadly airstrike 
would be launched from Diego Garcia the base for U, S. B-2 stealth bombers. So 
the inferences being drawn are that it would not be Israel but America that 
would be in a “far stronger position to cripple Iran’s nuclear program” (New 
York Times).
But in all probability, America would not opt for opening another war front 
when already it is bogged down in two other fruitless wars in Iraq and 
Afghanistan. The doubts are being expressed that in retaliation, while Iran 
would choke the strait of Harmus hampering the global trade, it would also move 
ahead to provide stinger missiles to Taliban to intensify their insurgency 
against the NATO forces in Afghanistan. So this is not going to be a one sided 
show of annihilating Iran and paralyzing its nuclear capability. 
As Anthony Cordesman of the Center for Strategic and International Studies in 
his two reports published last year and this year concedes, “we may not have 
good enough intelligence to know where still-hidden facilities may lie”, 
implying that it could prove to be a counterproductive venture. It could as 
well plunge the Middle East into another inferno of bloody and internecine 
conflict. The fears are also rife that in that if faced with a “do or die” 
situation, Iran might shower Israel with ballistic missiles inflicting 
irreparable damage to her infrastructure and economy and exposing it to the 
rocket attacks from Hezbollah and Hamas.
Finally such a conflict might escalate into a third war theater when the 
humanity would be exposed to the spin chilling risk of being annihilated. Would 
that dreadful scenario that looks like a fantasy at present, justify such a 
dare devil use of blatant force. There is no gainsaying that the best and the 
saner option is to utilize the diplomatic and peaceful channels to find a way 
out of this imbroglio. There is a strong possibility that Iran would be ready 
to positively respond to such meaningful dialogue and diplomacy. 


Saeed Qureshi

Website: http://www.uprightopinion.com

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