War to end all Mideast wars
07/15/2011
By
DOVID EFUNE
Jerusalem Post
Even among the proponents of interventionism
and its theorists, a full-scale invasion of Iran is far from popular.
Perhaps it is a combination of closer-to-home concerns and widespread Middle East unrest that has allowed the
compelling threat of Iranian nuclear belligerency to slink from the forefront
of public foreign policy discourse. It seems it wasn’t long ago that the sense
of urgency over the matter was more pronounced, and yet now it appears to be
largely relegated to lip service or afterthought status. Even within the realm
of nuclear nonproliferation activism, one can sense a degree of enervation over
the issue.
However, the picture rapidly coming
into focus is that there is a burgeoning case for the expedient invasion of
Iran.
Never has there been so much at stake –
and never has there been a more opportune moment as now.
A July 2 Wall Street Journal article,
entitled “Iran Funnels New Weapons to Iraq and Afghanistan,” asserts that “Iraq
has in recent years been a proxy battlefield for the US and Iran,” and that
“military officials and defense analysts cite Iran as a prime justification for
extending the US presence” in Iraq. The writer also notes, as has been
documented, that “Iran has grown increasingly aggressive in trying to influence
the political rebellions across the Middle East and North Africa,” adding that
“in recent months, according to US officials, Iran has also increased its intelligence
and propaganda activities in Egypt, Bahrain and Yemen.”
Of course, the US and the international
community have directed significant resources to all of these vital fronts. But
it was an active US serviceman expressing his personal thoughts to me this week
who said that “we need to go after the head of the snake, and it’s time we
stopped chasing shadows in Afghanistan and fought a real war.”
Last Thursday on The Daily Show, the
matter came to the fore when host Jon Stewart commented to Weekly Standard
editor Bill Kristol, “In terrorism we play whack-a-mole,” concluding in
Yiddish, “Isn’t our whole strategy farkakteh (lousy, messed-up, ridiculous)?” Kristol
(editors’ observation: he
does not care about your kids, only money and power) responded by
explaining that “there is no one solution for each part of the world.”
But maybe there is? Instead of chasing
Iranian tentacles as they emerge around the globe, wouldn’t the most effective
strategy be to slay Medusa? Even among the proponents of interventionism and
its theorists, a full-scale invasion of Iran is far from popular, yet the
limited effectiveness of air strikes, either American or Israeli, has been
widely acknowledged. Last year, commenting in Time magazine, Joe Klein
mentioned an assessment by the Joint Chiefs of Staff at the Pentagon that air
strikes “could take out some of Iran’s nuclear facilities, but there was no way
to eliminate all of them.
Some of the nuclear labs were located
in heavily populated areas and others were deep underground.”
Additionally, the Saban Center for
Middle East Policy documented the significant threat of retaliation when it
conducted a day-long simulation of the potential diplomatic and military
fallout from an Israeli military strike against the Iranian nuclear program.
Although from a military perspective
the Iranian army is superior to that of Iraq in 2003, the country is known to
be internally weak, as evidenced by the recent Green Revolution uprisings.
Also, as it is effectively sandwiched between Iraq and Afghanistan, there is a
greater opportunity to incorporate surprise elements in an invasion. Among the
many options is having military columns rapidly advance in a pincer movement
across the country, cutting off the North from the South.
Iran’s reliable partner in crime,
Syria, is currently in no position to lend any serious assistance.
The support for stunting Iran’s nuclear
program and the spread of its malicious meddling is widespread throughout the
Western world, as well as the Islamic one.
The full extent of this was only
disclosed through WikiLeaks, revealing that both Saudi King Abdullah and King
Hamed Ibn Isa Khalifa of Bahrain are among the Arab leaders who have lobbied
the US to strike Iran. In recent weeks, Saudi Arabia has even indicated that it
might be compelled to pursue a nuclear weapons program of its own if Iran is
allowed to continue, in an effort to balance regional influence.
The weak domestic economy brings
possible concern over America’s ability to sustain further military efforts,
but as David Broder wrote last year in The Washington Post, “Look back at FDR
and the Great Depression. What finally resolved that economic crisis? World War
II.”
He continued, “With strong Republican
support in Congress for challenging Iran’s ambition to become a nuclear power,
[President Barack Obama] can spend much of 2011 and 2012 orchestrating a
showdown with the mullahs. This will help him politically because the
opposition party will be urging him on. And as tensions rise and we accelerate
preparations for war, the economy will improve.”
The anti-war movement often uses the
slogan “Bring our troops home,” insinuating that they may be tired, weary or
fed up with the challenges they have been presented by their country. But the
movement underestimates the mettle of America’s heroes. Soldiers to whom I have
spoken are insulted by the suggestion.
“The US army is all volunteer,” one
told me. “Those who sign up know what they are in for.” Regarding Iran, the
soldier added that “a fresh battle against a known enemy would be a good change
of pace for us; it’s only the American public that’s tired of the fight for our
ideals.”
Make no mistake, it would be a costly
battle on many fronts, and possibly the greatest US military challenge since
World War II. Consider, however, what is at stake: no less than the future
stability of the world order as we know it – the lives, safety, freedom and
security of individuals and nations across the globe. If this is indeed the war
to end all Middle East wars, we know with certainty that it will not be fought
in vain.
The writer is the director of the Algemeiner Journal and the GJCF.