http://www.upi.com/Top_News/Analysis/2010/08/17/Commentary-Guns-of-August/UP
I-76331282056061/

 

Guns of August?

Published: Aug. 17, 2010 at 10:41 AM
By ARNAUD DE BORCHGRAVE, UPI Editor at Large 

WASHINGTON, Aug. 17 (UPI) -- For the first two weeks of August, the Internet
buzzed with "inside knowledge" of an Israeli airstrike against Iran's
nuclear facilities before the end of the month. One of most quoted warnings
came from Philip Giraldi, a polyglot former CIA operative who writes for the
American Conservative and is no friend of Israel.

"We spend $100 billion on intelligence annually and then ignore the best
judgments on what is taking place," Giraldi wrote on his blog recently and
"might as well use an Ouija board. Not only would we save a lot of money but
with an Ouija board there is always the chance you could arrive at the right
decision."

Five years ago, Giraldi wrote, "it is hardly a secret that the same people
in and around the administration that brought you Iraq are preparing to do
the same for Iran."

U.S. Vice President Dick Cheney, he wrote, had tasked the Strategic Command
with drawing up a contingency plan in response to another Sept. 11-type
terrorist attack on the United States. The plan was for a large-scale air
assault on Iran (never mind if Iran wasn't involved) employing both
conventional and tactical nuclear weapons. More than 450 major strategic
targets were listed in the plan -- evidently leaked to Giraldi by "appalled"
senior U.S. Air Force officers.

Tehran's propaganda machine has taken a leaf out of Bush 43's lexicon --
"bring 'em on." The Pasdaran, or Revolutionary Guards, trotted out their
latest acquisition -- the 51-foot "Bladerunner," the world's "fastest
warship," capable of 82 mph.

The Iran Times, published in Washington in both English and Farsi, reported
only two such "high-tech" speedboats had been built and that Iran was now
planning to mass-produce them. The one acquired by Iran was purchased in
South Africa and loaded onto a container ship. The Financial Times said the
United States was prepared to board it but the operation was called off
without explanation.

One Bladerunner was used to set a record for circumnavigating the British
Isles in 2005, when it averaged 61.5 mph over 27 hours.

For the past 20 years, Iran's seagoing Republican Guards have been
accumulating small, swift boats with a view to swarming U.S. warships going
in and out of the Hormuz Strait, and to mining the narrow waterway used by
supertankers that move 40 percent of all seaborne traded oil (which is 20
percent of all oil traded worldwide). Moving through the mile-wide exit
channel is also three-quarters of all of Japan's oil needs.

Iran also has an endless supply of seagoing suicide "volunteers." Hundreds
were used to walk across minefields during the Iraq-Iran war (1980-88).

Hormuz is the world's most important chokepoint and Iran's principal naval
base, Bandar Abbas, is smack in the middle. The Defense Intelligence Agency
knows from a former Iranian naval intelligence officer that there are
detailed plans to close the strait to supertankers that move some 17 million
barrels a day to the rest of the world. Oil would then quickly shoot up from
$80 a barrel where it is today to $400 or $500.

In January 2008, five Iranian speedboats darted in and out of a line of
three U.S. warships as they entered the Persian Gulf through the Strait,
dropping white boxes ahead of the vessels, forcing them to take evasive
action.

The USS Port Royal, a 9,600-ton cruiser, the 8,300-ton guided missile
destroyer USS Hopper and the 4,100-ton frigate USS Ingraham were prepared to
blast the Iranian boats out of the water with close-range, rapid-fire
Phalanx Gatlings but word came from the Pentagon to hold their fire.

The white boxes were designed to simulate mines. There is little doubt one
or two U.S. warships could have been damaged and the United States would
have found itself involved in a third war in the region.

The suicide boat attack against the 8,600-ton USS Cole, at anchor in Aden
Harbor in October 2000, which killed 17 U.S. sailors and immobilized a $1
billion warship for two years of repairs, demonstrated vulnerability to
small craft laden with explosives.

To demonstrate that fresh international sanctions won't weaken Iranian
resolve, Tehran published a new law mandating the production of
higher-enriched uranium and further limiting cooperation with the
International Atomic Energy Agency in Vienna.

At the same time, Iran and Russia announced they would begin loading "before
the end of August" Russian-supplied fuel into Iran's first nuclear power
plant. A cacophony of tweets amplified Giraldi's Guns of August scenario.

If Israel has decided to strike against what most Israelis see as an
existential threat, it would presumably wait until the U.S. Congress' return
from vacation Sept. 10. A resolution (HR 1553) is winding its way through
Congress that endorses an Israeli attack on Iran, which, writes Giraldi,
"would be going to war by proxy as the U.S. would almost immediately be
drawn into conflict when Tehran retaliates."

Leading neo-conservatives pooh-pooh Iran's asymmetrical retaliatory
capabilities as overblown anti-Israeli rhetoric. Reuel Marc Gerecht, a
neo-con commentator, predicts Iran's response would be minimal and
recommends Israel attack Iran to "rock the system" to make the regime "lose
face" and suffer a military defeat from which its recovery would be
doubtful.

This reporter first began covering Iran in August 1953 when the shah fled a
revolutionary upheaval (returning 10 days later after a military crackdown
and covert CIA assistance).

There is little doubt that an Israeli attack on Iran would trigger mayhem up
and down the Persian Gulf and trigger a third war that would be yet another
force multiplier for the U.S. deficit: Federal spending is now at $3.6
trillion; the national debt, $13.4 trillion; cost per citizen $43,000; cost
per taxpayer $120,000. Check the debt clock online -- in real time.

Gulf and other Arab rulers who wish secretly for aerial bombing action
against Iran's nuclear facilities will be the first to denounce Israel and
its only ally when and if the first Iranian target is hit.

 



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