Here's another take:

http://www.nypost.com/postopinion/opedcolumnists/68536.htm

IRAN'S (COSTLY) WAR ON AMERICA

May 16, 2006 -- ALTHOUGH "silly season" is still several weeks away,
the media are al ready in frenzy about a new war in the Middle East -
this time involving the Islamic Republic of Iran.
A few American "investigative reporters," quoting anonymous sources,
even insist that the war has already started, with U.S. Special Forces
operating "deep inside Iran" since last summer. One "expert" who had
fixed the date for a U.S. invasion of Iran for June of last year has
just provided a new date: June of this year.

Well, there is not going to be a war involving Iran. As for The New
Yorker's report of U.S. Special Forces operating in Iran, it is
unlikely that the Islamic Republic has not found any of them after
nearly 14 months.

And the Iran-U.S. war is not going to start in June - because it
started on Nov. 4, 1979, when a group of "students" raided the
American embassy compound in Tehran and seized its diplomats hostage.
By any standards, that was a clear causus belli. It did not lead to a
straightforward war because the American side chose not to treat the
embassy raid as an act of war.

Apart from a brief moment in which the Reagan administration tried to
wage a low-intensity war against the Islamic Republic, successive
administrations in Washington adopted President Jimmy Carter's policy
of "patience and forbearance" vis-à-vis Tehran.

The Islamic Republic, however, consistently maintained its war posture
vis-à-vis the United States all along. In 1984, Muhammad Khatami, then
minister of Islamic Orientation, wrote that the Islamic Republic was
waging war "against Global Arrogance led by the United States" on
behalf of mankind as a whole. In 1986, Hashemi Rafsanjani, then
speaker of the parliament, went further: "We are at war with the
United States - a war which must end with the victory of Islam over
the Infidel led by America."

Perhaps Khatami and Rafsanjani were merely repeating the regime's
mantra and did not really seek full-scale war against the United
States. But anyone familiar with the history of the last two decades
would know, whenever and wherever possible, that the Islamic Republic
has waged a low-intensity war against the U.S. since 1979.

All along, the Iranian regime was content with small and incremental
successes, taking care not to provoke a major confrontation that might
force the Americans to hit back with any degree of determination. The
idea was to wear the United States down with an endless campaign of
small-scale violence and terror aimed against its citizens and allies.

The American policy of absorbing the small shocks administered by the
Islamic Republic allowed Tehran to maintain its anti-U.S. posture at
minimal cost to itself. But the policy was not cost free. Washington's
refusal to recognize the Khomeinist regime as a legitimate member of
the international community has cost Tehran dearly. For almost three
decades, Iran has been shut out of the global capital market and
prevented from normal access to the fruits of scientific and
technological progress. The Islamic Republic's persistent economic
failure must, at least in part, be imputed to the U.S. boycott.

Nowhere is the cost of the so-called "War against the Infidel" more
apparent than in Iran's oil industry. Projections made in 1977
envisaged the Iranian oil off-take to reach a daily capacity of 6.5
million barrels, with another 1.5 million available as emergency
reserves. The capacity of the Kharg terminal, the chief export
facility for Iranian oil, was increased from 5.5 million barrels a day
to 8 million.

But lack of investment, and the virtual impossibility of accessing
highly complex technology, has meant a steady decline. Today, the
Islamic Republic produces something like 3.8 million barrels a day - a
level Iran had surpassed in 1973.

Worse still, Iran has become an importer of petroleum products.
Because the Islamic Republic failed to build enough refining capacity,
it is now forced to secure nearly half of the nation's needs in
gasoline and special fuels through imports. So nearly 30 percent of
Iran's income from oil exports is spent on imports of petroleum
products.

Iran's gas industry is in even poorer shape. Projections made in 1977
saw Iran emerging as the world's largest exporter of liquefied natural
gas by the year 2000. Iran owns the second-largest deposits of natural
gas in the world, after Russia, almost 20 percent of the global
reserves. Yet it is importing natural gas from Turkmenistan to feed
the country's only gas-turbine power station (at Neka on the Caspian
Sea).

And Oil Ministry officials say much worse is yet to come. Last month,
the ministry unveiled invitations for investments worth more than $100
billion in Iran's oil and gas industries. Part of those investments is
needed to prevent the total collapse of some of the country's largest
oilfields (including Bibi Hakimeh, Maroun and Ahvaz), which now
produce 25 to 30 percent less than in 1971.

Against that background, it would not be hard to see that the Islamic
Republic has been the bigger loser in the low-intensity war it has
waged against the United States. The U.S. is now four times richer, in
constant dollars, than it was in 1979. Iran, however, is almost 50
percent poorer.

The Islamic Republic has succeeded in securing a foothold in Lebanon,
through the Hezballah, and in the Palestinian territories through
Hamas and Islamic Jihad. It also has allies in Iraq, Afghanistan and
among the Shiite communities in the Gulf. Politically and
diplomatically, however, the Islamic Republic today is more isolated
than in 1979.

The United States, on the other hand, has made a spectacular incursion
in what could be regarded as Iran's geopolitical habitat in West and
Central Asia, the Caspian Basin, Transcaucasia and the Middle East.
The Americans are now militarily present in all but two of Iran's 15
neighboring countries.

In a sense, the war that the Islamic Republic says it is waging
against the United States has hurt it more than its designated enemy.
The recent rise in tension has helped put that issue at the center of
the debate inside the Islamic Republic. This is why people like
Rafsanjani and Khatami, who once took pride in describing themselves
as "jihadists" against the Americans, are now publicly critical of
President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad's more militant anti-Americanism.

In other words, the real problem is an Iranian one, not an
Irano-American one. At some point, the Islamic Republic must decide
whether it is in its own interest to review a policy that has produced
nothing but disaster over the last three decades. Ahmadinejad may well
turn out to be the man who pushed such a review into the agenda of the
leadership in Tehran.

Iranian author and journalist Amir Taheri is a member of Benador Associates.


On 5/19/06, Gruss Gott wrote:
> > Weegs wrote:
> > and FUCK i wish i could blame shrub for this one!
> >
>
> You can!  Bush's "feck all y'all ferenyurs" foreign policy has
> emboldened this moron and showed him how weak America can be.  This
> bozo knows we can't and won't do sh1t - Bush removed any doubt about
> that while at the same time ensuring that any fears of a western
> alliance is out the window AT LEAST until the next election.
>
> Now, granted, this dude is responsible for his own behaviour, but Bush
> has created a the-cat's-away global atmosphere.

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