[expect the price of oil to start rising again...]

The New York Times / July 18, 2008

Op-Ed Contributor
Using Bombs to Stave Off War
By BENNY MORRIS

Li-On, Israel

ISRAEL will almost surely attack Iran's nuclear sites in the next four
to seven months — and the leaders in Washington and even Tehran should
hope that the attack will be successful enough to cause at least a
significant delay in the Iranian production schedule, if not complete
destruction, of that country's nuclear program. Because if the attack
fails, the Middle East will almost certainly face a nuclear war —
either through a subsequent pre-emptive Israeli nuclear strike or a
nuclear exchange shortly after Iran gets the bomb.

[This presumes that Iran will get the bomb and has a "nuclear program"
that goes beyond power generation.]

It is in the interest of neither Iran nor the United States (nor, for
that matter, the rest of the world) that Iran be savaged by a nuclear
strike, or that both Israel and Iran suffer such a fate. We know what
would ensue: a traumatic destabilization of the Middle East with
resounding political and military consequences around the globe,
serious injury to the West's oil supply and radioactive pollution of
the earth's atmosphere and water.

But should Israel's conventional assault fail to significantly harm or
stall the Iranian program, a ratcheting up of the Iranian-Israeli
conflict to a nuclear level will most likely follow. Every
intelligence agency in the world believes the Iranian program is
geared toward making weapons, not to the peaceful applications of
nuclear power. And, despite the current talk of additional economic
sanctions, everyone knows that such measures have so far led nowhere
and are unlikely to be applied with sufficient scope to cause Iran
real pain, given Russia's and China's continued recalcitrance and
Western Europe's (and America's) ambivalence in behavior, if not in
rhetoric. Western intelligence agencies agree that Iran will reach the
"point of no return" in acquiring the capacity to produce nuclear
weapons in one to four years.

[Didn't the CIA say that Iran had given up on nuclear weapons in 2003?]

Which leaves the world with only one option if it wishes to halt
Iran's march toward nuclear weaponry: the military option, meaning an
aerial assault by either the United States or Israel [or both].
Clearly, America has the conventional military capacity to do the job,
which would involve a protracted air assault against Iran's air
defenses followed by strikes on the nuclear sites themselves. But, as
a result of the Iraq imbroglio, and what is rapidly turning into the
Afghan imbroglio, the American public has little enthusiasm for wars
in the Islamic lands. This curtails the White House's ability to begin
yet another major military campaign in pursuit of a goal that is not
seen as a vital national interest by many Americans.

[If the military campaign is largely done by the US Air Force, it
wouldn't put that much of a strain on the US armed forces. With a
previous build-up of the right propaganda, including this article, the
American public's "enthusiasm" could be raised.]

Which leaves only Israel — the country threatened almost daily with
destruction by Iran's leaders. [true?] Thus the recent reports about
Israeli plans and preparations to attack Iran (the period from Nov. 5
to Jan. 19 seems the best bet, as it gives the West half a year to try
the diplomatic route but ensures that Israel will have support from a
lame-duck White House). [This time schedule also avoids hurting McCain
in the election.]

The problem is that Israel's military capacities are far smaller than
America's and, given the distances involved, the fact that the Iranian
sites are widely dispersed and underground, and Israel's inadequate
intelligence, it is unlikely that the Israeli conventional forces,
even if allowed the use of Jordanian and Iraqi airspace (and perhaps,
pending American approval, even Iraqi air strips) can destroy or
perhaps significantly delay the Iranian nuclear project.

Nonetheless, Israel, believing that its very existence is at stake —
and this is a feeling shared by most Israelis across the political
spectrum — will certainly make the effort. Israel's leaders, from
Prime Minister Ehud Olmert down, have all explicitly stated that an
Iranian bomb means Israel's destruction; Iran will not be allowed to
get the bomb.

The best outcome will be that an Israeli conventional strike, whether
failed or not — and, given the Tehran regime's totalitarian [!!] grip,
it may not be immediately clear how much damage the Israeli assault
has caused — would persuade the Iranians to halt their nuclear
program, or at least persuade the Western powers to significantly
increase the diplomatic and economic pressure on Iran.

[sure, the Iranian government is authoritarian, but "totalitarian"? in
many ways they have a republic and a market economy.]

But the more likely result is that the international community will
continue to do nothing effective and that Iran will speed up its
efforts to produce the bomb that can destroy Israel. The Iranians will
also likely retaliate by attacking Israel's cities with ballistic
missiles (possibly topped with chemical or biological warheads); by
prodding its local clients, Hezbollah and Hamas, to unleash their own
armories against Israel; and by activating international Muslim
terrorist networks against Israeli and Jewish — and possibly American
— targets worldwide (though the Iranians may at the last moment be
wary of provoking American military involvement).

[Methinks that he thinks that Hezbollah and Hamas are much more
obedient to Iran than they are.

[Also, he seems to fall for the myth the Iranian government wants us
to believe, i.e., that its ballistic missiles are adequate for a real
war.]

Such a situation would confront Israeli leaders with two agonizing,
dismal choices. One is to allow the Iranians to acquire the bomb and
hope for the best — meaning a nuclear standoff, with the prospect of
mutual assured destruction preventing the Iranians from actually using
the weapon. The other would be to use the Iranian counterstrikes as an
excuse to escalate and use the only means available that will actually
destroy the Iranian nuclear project: Israel's own nuclear arsenal.

Given the fundamentalist, self-sacrificial mindset of the mullahs who
run Iran, Israel knows that deterrence may not work as well as it did
with the comparatively rational men who ran the Kremlin and White
House during the cold war. They are likely to use any bomb they build,
both because of ideology and because of fear of Israeli nuclear
pre-emption. Thus an Israeli nuclear strike to prevent the Iranians
from taking the final steps toward getting the bomb is probable. The
alternative is letting Tehran have its bomb. In either case, a Middle
Eastern nuclear holocaust would be in the cards.

[How about the fundamentalist mind-set in the White House?]

Iran's leaders would do well to rethink their gamble and suspend their
nuclear program. Bar this, the best they could hope for is that
Israel's conventional air assault will destroy their nuclear
facilities. To be sure, this would mean thousands of Iranian
casualties and international humiliation. But the alternative is an
Iran turned into a nuclear wasteland. Some Iranians may believe that
this is a worthwhile gamble if the prospect is Israel's demise. But
most Iranians probably don't.

[all of this ignores the fact that Ahmadinejad is likely going to be
out of office next year, at least according to my Iranian friend.]

Benny Morris, a professor of Middle Eastern history at Ben-Gurion
University, is the author, most recently, of "1948: A History of the
First Arab-Israeli War."

Copyright 2008 The New York Times Company
-- 
Jim Devine / "Segui il tuo corso, e lascia dir le genti." (Go your own
way and let people talk.) -- Karl, paraphrasing Dante.
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