Pentagon stopped Bush, Cheney nuking Iran
Sherwood Ross
Middle East Times
August 10, 2006

WASHINGTON --  US President George W. Bush and his
vice president abandoned a plan to include "the
possible use of a nuclear device" to destroy Iran's
uranium-enrichment plant at Natanz over Pentagon
opposition, investigative reporter Seymour Hersh has
said. 

"Bush and [Vice President Dick] Cheney were dead
serious about the nuclear planning," a former senior
intelligence official told Hersh. But Joint Chiefs of
Staff's Chairman Marine General Peter Pace "stood up
to them," he said. "Then the word came back: 'Okay,
the nuclear option is politically unacceptable." 

Hersh termed this a "major victory" for the military,
but one that has left "bad feelings" between it and
the civilian hierarchy in Washington. 

In an article published in The New Yorker magazine,
Hersh reported senior commanders inside the Pentagon
"increasingly challenged the president's plans" on
grounds the nuclear attack likely would not succeed in
destroying Iran's nuclear program and "could lead to
serious economic, political, and military
consequences" for the United States. 

The possibility of using tactical nuclear weapons to
destroy Natanz's buried laboratories was held to be
"politically untenable" as the device could "vent
fatal radiation for miles [kilometers]," Hersh wrote.
Natanz is about 300 kilometers (roughly 200 miles)
south of Tehran. 

Instead, the US Air Force has proposed dropping large
"bunker-buster" conventional bombs in quick succession
on Natanz to "generate sufficient concussive force to
accomplish what a tactical nuclear warhead would
achieve, but without provoking an outcry over what
would be the first use of a nuclear weapon in a
conflict since Nagasaki," Hersh wrote. 

This approach, however, might fail because the
enormous heat generated by the first bomb would
liquefy the soil, one Pentagon consultant said. "It
will be like bombing water, with its currents and
eddies. The bombs would likely be diverted." 

Besides, as Hersh noted, over the past two years "the
Iranians have been shifting their most sensitive
nuclear-related materials and production facilities,
moving some into urban areas in anticipation of a
bombing raid." 

Robert Pape, a University of Chicago professor who has
taught at the air force's School of Advanced Air and
Space Studies, is quoted as saying Natanz is "a very
large underground area, and even if the roof came down
we won't be able to get a good estimate of the bomb
damage without people on the ground." 

"We don't even know where it goes underground, and we
won't have much confidence in assessing what we've
actually done. Absent capturing an Iranian nuclear
scientist and documents, it's impossible to set back
the program for sure," Pape said. 

One Pentagon adviser told Hersh America's allies fear
a US assault against Iran would place them in
jeopardy. The Iranians, he said, "have agents all over
the Gulf, and the ability to strike at will." 

Last May, the emir of Qatar learned during a visit to
Iran that his country, the site of the US Central
Command's regional headquarters, "would be its first
target in the event of an American attack," Hersh
wrote. Qatar, a leading gas exporter, operates
offshore oil platforms which would be extremely
vulnerable in the event of war. 

Some Pentagon officers oppose an attack against Iran
as it could heighten the risks to US forces in Iraq.
"What if 100,000 Iranian volunteers came across the
border?" retired Army Major General William Nash
asked. And Navy officers worry about "suicide water
bombers" attacking US aircraft carriers in the Gulf. 

Nash, now a senior fellow at the council on Foreign
Relations, said US bombing of Iran "would be seen not
only as an attack on Shiites but as an attack on all
Muslims. Throughout the Middle East, it would likely
be seen as another example of American imperialism. It
would probably cause the war to spread." 

The US military has also dissented from a bombing
campaign against Iran in the absence of specific
intelligence evidence "of clandestine activities or
hidden facilities," the magazine article said. One
high-ranking general told Hersh, "We built this big
monster (WMD) with Iraq, and there was nothing there.
This is son of Iraq." 

Sherwood Ross is an American columnist and magazine
writer. Contact him at [EMAIL PROTECTED] 



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