>From The Sunday Times
October 28, 2007
Will Bush really bomb Iran?
The rhetoric is getting stronger, the sanctions tougher and military planning 
more detailed. Iran is now the focus of attention in Washington
Sarah Baxter 
In the white desert sands of New Mexico, close to where the first atom bomb was 
detonated, America’s biggest conventional weapon was tested last spring. A 
30,000lb massive ordnance penetrator, known as the Big Blu or the Mother of All 
Bombs, was placed inside a tunnel to test its explosive power against hard, 
deeply buried bunkers and tunnels designed to conceal weapons of mass 
destruction. 
The monster bunker-buster was so heavy, it could not fly. But the blast was a 
huge success, rippling through the tunnels and destroying everything in its 
wake. 
Today the Big Blu might as well have “Tehran” written on its side in the same 
way that the Iranians love to parade missiles marked “Tel Aviv”. Tucked away in 
an emergency defence spending request, the US air force has just asked Congress 
for $88m to equip B2 stealth bombers, the black warriors of the skies, with 
racks strong enough carry the huge bomb. 
This was no casual request, but an “urgent operational need from theatre 
commanders”, according to the air force. Even a Republican congressman fretted: 
“This whole thing . . . reminds me of the movie Dr Strangelove.” 
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In the 1964 film starring Peter Sellers, a demented general launches a 
unilateral strike on the Soviet Union, convinced it is already stealthily 
undermining America. Global nuclear destruction ensues. THE end result might 
not be so grave, but are America’s B2s being readied for an attack on Iran? It 
would fit in neatly with President George W Bush’s recent warning about the 
dangers of a third world war, should Iran be allowed to obtain the “knowledge 
to make a nuclear weapon”. 
Iran-watchers noted with interest the use of the word knowledge. Bush, it 
appeared, was determined to act well before the mullahs got anywhere close to 
an actual bomb. 
Dick Cheney, the vice-president, piled on the pressure last week, calling Iran 
a “growing obstacle to peace in the Middle East” and vowing “serious 
consequences” if it persisted with its nuclear programme. 
A senior Pentagon source, who remembers the growing drumbeat of war before the 
invasion of Iraq, believes Bush is preparing for military action before he 
leaves office in January 2009. “This is for real now. I think he is signalling 
he is going to do it,” he said. 
But nobody is sure whether the president really will add a risky third front to 
the Afghan and Iraq wars that are already overstretching US forces. 
“If you’d asked me a year ago, I’d have said yes,” said John Bolton, the 
hawkish former US ambassador to the United Nations. “Today I’d say, I don’t 
know.” 
It is clear the military machinery for an attack is being put into place. More 
than 1,000 targets have been identified for a potential air blitz against 
Iran’s nuclear facilities, air defences and Revolutionary Guard bases, despite 
claims last week by Robert Gates, the defence secretary, that the planning was 
merely “routine”. 
As for the urgent request for the Big Blu, it has “bombing Iran written all 
over it”, said John Pike, a defence expert at the think tank 
Globalsecurity.org. 
Iran’s uranium enrichment halls at Natanz, about 150 miles south of Tehran, are 
buried 75ft deep, while there are believed to be nuclear sites buried under 
granite mountains in tunnels that are like the long roots of a tree. It is not 
enough to drop a smart bomb down a shaft – it has to have the capacity to blast 
sideways with massive force. 
The question of timing is becoming ever more urgent, now that Bush has fewer 
than 15 months left in the White House. Confidants say he is determined not to 
bequeath the problem of a nuclear Iran to his successor and regards it as an 
important part of his legacy. 
Although intelligence estimates vary as to when Iran will achieve the know-how 
for a bomb, the French government recently received a memo from the 
International Atomic Energy Agency stating that Iran will be ready to run 
almost 3,000 cen-trifuges in 18 cascades by the end of this month, in defiance 
of a UN ban on uranium enrichment. It is enough, say scientists, to produce one 
bomb within a year. If that is the case, the hour for action may soon be upon 
us. 
Against this backdrop, the US public is growing acclimatised to the threat of 
war. As the saying in Washington goes, “Iran is the new Iraq”. While 
controversy over the Iraq war is fading in intensity – even for the 2008 
presidential candidates – the problem of a nuclear Iran is rapidly moving up 
the political agenda. 
David Miliband, the foreign secretary, was in Washington last week for talks 
with Condoleezza Rice, the US secretary of state. Shortly before heading back 
to Britain, he declared that, for the first time, Iraq was not “the top item” 
for discussion, a sign of the growing stability and success of the American 
troop surge. 
According to a spokesman for US armed forces chiefs, there was not a single 
military casualty last week – Iraqi or American – in Anbar, formerly a hotbed 
of trouble. 
In so far as Iraq is presented as a threat to international security, it is 
increasingly in connection to growing friction with Iran. 
General David Petraeus, the US commander in Iraq, stated baldly last month that 
America was already fighting a proxy war with Iran, which is arming the 
sectarian militias and smuggling in weapons and sophisticated roadside bombs 
designed to kill American soldiers. 
The US is building a forward base in Iraq called Combat Outpost Shocker just 
five miles from the Iranian border as a sign of its new aggressiveness against 
interference from President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad’s regime. 
Bush’s decision to approve tough unilateral sanctions against Iran last week 
and to designate the Iranian Revolutionary Guard a terrorist organisation and 
proliferator of weapons of mass destruction marks a further escalation of the 
war of words and deeds with Tehran. 
After Miliband was briefed on the move during his visit to Washington, Gordon 
Brown batted for America in the House of Commons by promising Britain would 
lead the effort to secure a tough sanctions resolution against Iran at the 
United Nations security council. 
All the evidence appears to point in the direction of increasing diplomatic and 
military hostilities. As Robert Byrd, a Democrat member of the Senate armed 
services committee, put it, the action by the Bush administration “not only 
echoes the chest-pounding rhetoric” which preceded the invasion of Iraq in 
2003, “but also raises the spectre of an intensified effort to make the case 
for an invasion of Iran”. 
Yet a Downing street source said: “They are not at that stage.” 
Could it all be an elaborate game of “chicken”, using the growing threat of an 
attack to force Ahmadinejad to back down on his nuclear ambitions? 
Nick Burns, the State Department’s leading negotiator on Iran, said last week 
the imposition of new sanctions merely “supports the diplomacy and in no way, 
shape or form does it anticipate the use of force”. 
Even the urgent request to fund the Big Blu may not be all that it seems. “We 
could be trying to turn up the volume to get the ayatollahs to pay attention,” 
said Pike. “It could be part of the diplomatic pressure to see if the Iranians 
will move voluntarily.” 
If Ahmadinejad is to be believed, nothing will deter Iran from pursuing its 
nuclear programme, which he claims is for peaceful energy purposes while at the 
same time boasting that Israel will one day be wiped off the map. 
In a surprise announcement, Iran’s top nuclear negotiator, Ali Larijani, was 
replaced by Saeed Jalili, a hardliner close to the president. Confusingly, 
however, Larijani still appeared to lead last week’s talks in Rome with Javier 
Solana, the European Union’s foreign policy chief. 
“I found the same Larijani and he had the role of chief negotiator,” said 
Solana. It suggests a power struggle over the extent to which Iran can continue 
to thwart the West. 
Until recently, most Iranians discounted the threat of an attack on the grounds 
that America had its hands full with Iraq, but their mood is altering. At 
gatherings in Tehran, the talk has turned to possible American bombing raids. 
Ali Nazeri, 35, a shopkeeper in the Iranian capital, said: “The government says 
the Americans cannot do a damn thing, but they are also changing the leadership 
of the Revolutionary Guard and saying they will fire thousands of missiles at 
US targets within the first few minutes of a confrontation. I think it is a 
matter of putting two and two together and coming to the conclusion that war is 
very likely.” 
In the wider Middle East, the conviction is growing that America is determined 
to launch an attack. Some well-placed Israeli and Palestinian sources suggest 
that next month’s Middle East peace conference in Annapolis, near Washington, 
could be the catapult for an ambitious plan to establish a Palestinian state 
and disarm Iran. 
“The idea is to tie Palestine to Iran,” said an Israeli Middle East expert. 
“Israel will be obliged to accept the establishment of a Palestinian state 
within a short and firm timetable and the US administration will guarantee that 
the Iranian nuclear issue will be solved before Bush leaves office.” 
If Israel is prepared to move towards the creation of a Palestinian state, the 
hope is that Sunni Arab regimes such as Saudi Arabia and Egypt will not protest 
too loudly about a US attack on Iran, given their own private fears about the 
impact of a nuclear Iran on the balance of power in the region. 
As with the Israeli bombing of a suspected Syrian nuclear site last month, they 
could simply stay mum. In theory, Bush could thus broker a settlement in the 
Middle East, while denuclearising Iran – a tempting legacy. 
But such a “grand bargain” is far too delicate and complicated to be attempted, 
according to Washington sources, even if it provides a subtext for some of the 
negotiations. “We’re not smart enough for that,” Bolton said bluntly. 
The most convincing explanation for the sabre-rattling is that Bush has 
embarked on a course of action that may lead to war, but there are many stages 
to pass, including the imposition of tougher sanctions, before he concludes a 
military strike on Iran is worth the risk. As his generals have warned, it 
could unleash a new round of terrorism, destabilise Iraq and send oil prices 
way above the $100-a-barrel mark. 
If muscular diplomacy can stop the mullahs, so much the better. If it cannot, 
Bush may decide to launch an attack as one of the final acts of his presidency. 
The preparations are under way, but only he knows if he will make that fateful 
decision. 
Additional reporting: Uzi Mahnaimi, Tel Aviv 
The pros and cons of launching an attack on Iran
The arguments for
- Protects Israel from a potential nuclear holocaust. President Ahmadinejad has 
stated that Israel will be wiped off the map 
- Reduces the risk to the West of a “dirty” bomb in big cities. Iran is a 
sponsor of terrorist groups such as Hezbollah 
- Forestalls the development of Iranian long-range nuclear missiles aimed at 
Europe and America 
- Prevents Iran from intimidating or attacking its Sunni Arab neighbours 
- Creates the space for potential regime change and installation of a 
pro-western government in Tehran 
The arguments against
- Sets back Iran’s nuclear ambitions by only a few years. US intelligence has 
not mapped out all the potential Iranian nuclear sites 
- Unleashes a wave of attacks on Israel and the West by Hezbollah and other 
terrorist proxy groups Closes the Strait of Hormuz, sending oil prices soaring 
above $100 a barrel and possibly creating a global economic crisis 
- Destabilises Iraq, plunging the country into a new round of terror, creating 
further regional instability 
- Creates a global public relations disaster. Intensifies antiAmericanism which 
critics argue that President Bush has made worse. Fosters a new generation of 
fundamentalist militants and terrorists

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