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Posts Tagged ‘iran sanctions’

Washington Post Reports Iran Sanctions Goal is Regime Change, Then It Doesn’t

Tuesday, January 10th, 2012

In a story that might best be described as–first we were for regime change, until we weren’t–the Washington Post reported that a senior U.S. intelligence official said that the ultimate goal of U.S. sanctions against Iran is to induce enough hatred of the regime to cause it to collapse.  Here’s how that passage read in the originally titled, “Goal of Iran Sanctions is Regime Collapse, U.S. official Says,” before it was quickly removed (here Blake Hounshell reports on the first version):

The goal of U.S. and other sanctions against Iran is regime collapse, a senior U.S. intelligence official said, offering the clearest indication yet that the Obama administration is at least as intent on unseating Iran’s government as it is on engaging with it.

The official, speaking this week on condition of anonymity to discuss intelligence matters, said the administration hopes that sanctions “create enough hate and discontent at the street level” that Iranians will turn against their government.

As soon as the administration got wind of the story, it applied pressure on the Post to erase the original official’s statement, since it contradicted the government’s stated policy, which is that sanctions are designed to force Iran to relinquish its nuclear program.  But despite a prominently placed Correction notice, most of the rest of us know that the original source expressed the covert (or overt) intent of most of the Iran hawks both inside and outside government.

The two reporters who published this story are veterans.  They know when an official is endorsing regime collapse and when he’s not.  Despite the fact that the Post has now renounced the original version, I’m certain it was correct.  Just as I’m certain that sanctions not only have no hope of toppling the regime, they have no hope of budging Iran’s nuclear policy a single inch.

In a remark that states the obvious Hounshell, who sometimes seems to be channeling the powers that be, concedes that though some may wish for regime change “as far as we can tell, they aren’t there yet.”  An understatement.

Tensions Ratchet Up in Straits of Hormuz, U.S. Announces ‘Unprecedented’ War Games in Israel, Thousands of Troops to Be Deployed

Tuesday, January 3rd, 2012
U.S. aircraft carriers in Straits of Hormuz

U.S. aircraft carriers in Straits of Hormuz

A high level Iranian navy officer warned the U.S. not to send the U.S.S. Stennis back to the Straits of Hormuz through which it passed last week.  The threat remained unspecified, but the implications were clear.  If you return, you do so at your peril.  The U.S. government responded defiantly that it would continue patrolling the body of water to ensure the free flow of international commerce:

The U.S. Navy maintains a “constant state of high vigilance” to “ensure the continued, safe flow of maritime traffic in waterways critical to global commerce,” George Little, a spokesman for the Pentagon, said…

These are regularly scheduled movements in accordance with our longstanding commitments to the security and stability of the region

Which is of course a lie since the reason the U.S. navy is there is to intimidate the crap out of the Iranians and enforce an embargo on Iranian oil and other trade.  It’s not yet officially come to that, but the Navy can and will place Iran under siege at the first opportunity, I’m certain.  Someone will have to explain to me how having almost the entire Fifth Fleet right up Iran’s tuchus ensures the security and stability of the region.  If the Chinese sent their new aircraft carrier to patrol off San Francisco would that ensure the security and stability of the region?

The Iranians test-fired a new medium-range missile during recent war games exercises, while the U.S. said it wouldn’t allow Iran to block the Straits.  Who knows what the outcome of such a confrontation would be.  The U.S. has might, the Iranians are fighting on their home ground.  I believe that in any such military confrontation the Iranians could cause us pain.

Everyone knows which way this is going.  The U.S. and Israel put the screws to the Iranians, trying to get them to cry “Uncle.”  When they don’t, things get worse. Eventually, there will be a war, although how it will start is undetermined.

U.S. officials and hawkish analysts are trumpeting the savage blows caused by the new oil embargo against the Iranian economy.  We hear about devaluations of currency and the like.  The implication is that the Iranians can’t go on like this forever.  That they will finally see the light and see it our way.  This is utter nonsense.  It’s simply wish-fulfillment and it is terribly naïve and destructive to base foreign policy on illusions as we are in this case.

In a separate development, the U.S. military announced it would hold major war game exercises in Israel during which thousands of U.S. troops would be deployed there.  The Jerusalem Post described the size of the operation as “unprecedented.”  While I’m not an expert on specific military exercises of this fashion, I don’t believe I’ve ever heard of such a large contingent of our troops being based in Israel for such a length of time.  This is clearly a warning to Iran not to attack Israel.  It also highlights more than almost anything could the symbiotic relationship between our two countries.  It isn’t clear whether Israel is our protectorate or whether Israel is actually the tail wagging our dog.  But the fact that U.S. troops are stationed now in Israel offers that country the relationship we’ve had with Germany and South Korea for decades.

The difference is that those two countries were always sensitive to the highly flammable nature of relations between the U.S. and its enemies.  They strove not to escalate tensions and force the U.S. to clean up the mess they made.  Israel is an entirely different matter.  Israel will not curb its appetite or perceived interests in order to protect the U.S. from such hostilities.  If Israel wants to go to war it will.  If it can use the death of U.S. soldiers to manipulate U.S. involvement in such hostilities, it will do that as well.  If Israel attacks Iran and the latter retaliates and in doing so kills U.S. troops stationed on Israeli soil, does that become a causus belli?  You bet it does in the eyes of national security hawks like Obama.

U.S. troops should not be in Israel.  It does not need our troops to defend it.  Iran will not attack Israel unless the latter attacks it first.  Placing our troops there is yet another escalation on the road to certain war.

Further, the worse this situation becomes the less pressure there will be to resolve the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, which is a good part of Bibi’s political calculation here.  While the Israeli PM may half-believe the nonsense he’s peddling about Iran as an existential threat.  He far more likely considers ending the Israeli-Palestinian conflict as an existential threat to the settler-nationalist dream of controlling all of Eretz Yisrael.  His highest priority is not stopping Iran from getting a bomb, but maintaining Israeli hegemony over its territorial patrimony (as he defines it).

On a separate note, I wanted to promote a new book by Trita Parsi, president of the National Iranian American Council and a friend of this blog.  Trita is one of the most important voices for moderation and pragmatism in U.S.-Iran relations. His book will be published later this month. You can preorder now and a small portion of your payment will benefit Tikun Olam.

Iran Threatens U.S. With Closure of Vital Strait If It Invokes New Oil Sanctions

Tuesday, December 27th, 2011

What do Howard Berman, Brad Sherman, Jane Harman, Gary Ackerman and all the other Congressional water-carriers for Aipac care about the impact of their vote for closing Iran’s oil spigot, even if it might force Iran to close the Strait of Hormuz in retaliation and start a regional war?  This is precisely the danger foreseen by the Founding Fathers when they arrogated the conduct of foreign policy to the executive branch and not the legislature.  Members of Congress grandstand and posture for their constituents.  They pander for votes.  Of course, they will vote for everything Aipac tells them to and more, in return for unlimited cash from pro-Israel donors.  Who the hell cares if their actions bring the region closer to conflagration?  When the shit hits the fan, they’ll blame Obama and say it’s the president who conducts foreign policy, not them.

strait of hormuz mapIran today warned that if Obama signs into law the new sanctions regime approved by Congress, it will close the Straits.  If it does that it will throw a huge wrench into the flows of Middle East oil around the world and send the price of oil through the roof.  Obama claims he has a plan to counteract such an Iranian act.  What might that be?  He’s not saying.  But it’s highly likely that anything the U.S. might do to respond to such an Iranian closure would escalate tensions even further.  How much higher can they go before real hostilities break out?  And perhaps that’s precisely what the U.S. and Israel want–to ratchet up pressure gradually so that Iran finally breaks and does something that will be a cause for war.  If they do this incrementally, they believe the world won’t be as likely to blame THEM for starting the war.  But we know better, don’t we?

On a slightly different note, UPI is reporting the settlement of a lawsuit brought by the government against the defense contractor which provides the fuses for the bunker buster bombs Obama gave the Israelis for use in penetrating Iran’s underground nuclear facilities.  The lawsuit alleged that fuses for the weapons were defective.  This may have some impact on Israel’s plans for attacking Iran, unless they’ve already solved the problem.

Returning to the NY Times story, I found this passage in David Sanger’s report to be foolhardy:

…A White House spokesman said there would be no comment on the Iranian threat to close the strait. That seemed in keeping with what administration officials say has been an effort to lower the level of angry exchanges, partly to avoid giving the Iranian government the satisfaction of a response and partly to avoid spooking financial markets.

You mean passing a law to destroy Iran’s ability to feed its people wasn’t provocation enough?  And not responding to the Iranian threat will somehow assuage them?  And do Sanger and Obama think that the financial markets don’t read the NY Times and won’t understand the full import of the Iranian threat?

As I’ve written here, any attempt to stop Iran’s access to world oil markets is likely to blow up in our faces.  It will send the price of oil sky-high, it will not necessarily shut Iran out of the markets, and will benefit Iran which stands to gain a financial windfall from increased oil prices.   In fact, today world oil prices broke the $100/barrel  barrier.  Hey, the sky’s the limit.  Howard Kohr and the boys from Aipac are probably working up some new ploy which will send them even higher.  I can’t wait to find out what they have in store for us next.  And this couldn’t have happened at a more opportune moment economically when the 99% (which excludes Obama, Sherman, Harman, Berman, et al.) face a looming recession and nearly 10% unemployment.

Don’t ya just love the cool certainty of this Treasury Department wise man who assures us the administration knows precisely how to handle this situation so that it will cause maximum harm to Iran and minimum harm to the U.S.:

“We have flexibility here, and I think we have a pretty good opportunity to dial this in just the right way that it does end up putting significant pressure on Iran.”

Why didn’t you say so?  Now I know we’re in good hands and nothing bad can come of this nonsense.

So here’s the U.S. plan in all its brilliance:

…The administration’s aim is to reduce Iran’s oil revenue by diminishing the volume of sales and forcing Iran to give its customers a discount on the price of crude.

Got that?  Through some sort of magical hocus-pocus we’re going to cut Iran’s ability to sell oil to anyone.  That won’t send the price of oil for us through the roof by some sleight of hand.  Luckily, there are some sane analysts out there who take a dim view of the practicalities of this:

Some economists question whether reducing Iran’s oil exports without moving the price of oil is feasible, even if the market is given signals about alternative supplies. Already, analysts at investment banks are warning of the possibility of rising gasoline prices in 2012, due to the new sanctions by the United States as well as complementary sanctions under consideration by the European Union.

Note that the administration plans to offer “alternative supplies” to Iran’s trading partners so that they can wean themselves from that country’s oil.  We haven’t ever been able to get the Saudis to do anything we wanted regarding raising or lowering their oil production.  Now all of a sudden not only will the Saudis answer the call, but they’ll have enough to replace what the world supply will lose from Iran.  Libya, Iraq (with it’s Shiite majority largely sympathetic to Iran) and Angola will take up the slack.  Oh, and we’ve got to approve the Keystone pipeline too and approve all those new fracking wells that threaten to destroy the water supply for hundreds of thousands of Americans.  If you believe this fairy tale, I’ve got a rusting hulk of a NYC bridge to sell you.

Another alarming intended effect of the new sanctions is to wreck the Iranian economy, which is supposed to be in free-fall.  But this appears to be a game of chicken: who will such a collapse hurt more–the country’s rulers or the tens of millions of ordinary Iranians who will be bankrupted and starved by the destruction of their national economy?  I strongly doubt that the common folk will rise up to smite their rulers because of the impact of these sanctions.  In fact, it’s liable to have precisely the opposite effect.  While we’re playing this game of Russian roulette determining who will lose the most, thousands of Iranian babies will begin dying from lack of basic sustenance and available health care just as happened in Saddam’s Iraq.  Is this really a moral burden Barack Obama wants to shoulder?  Of course, George Bush was happy to do so.  And the Aipac crowd will be happy to do so as well.  But does Obama want to be called the killer of Iranian babies?

Note also how the alleged Iranian plot to assassinate the Saudi ambassador has become real in this passage from Sanger’s report:

…A plot to assassinate the Saudi ambassador to the United States…

Now here I always thought it was the responsibility of the government to prove its claims in a court of law.  How foolish of me.  I didn’t realize reporters could decide for themselves that a government allegation was actually a proven fact.

Israeli Company Sold Internet Surveillance Software to Iran for Years

Saturday, December 24th, 2011

Bloomberg News reports that an Israeli high tech company, Allot Communications sold a web monitoring product called NetEnforcer to Iran for six years through a Danish distributor. The business news service confirmed the story through three former sales agents who said the sales were a widely known fact within the company.

Israel formally bans commerce with Iran and such sales would’ve been a violation of Israeli law and U.S. economic sanctions against that country. However, as I’ve reported here previously, this has not stopped trade between Israel and Iran. Iranian oil finds it’s way to Israel and an Israeli shipping company owned by one of Israel’s richest families, the Ofers, sold its ships to the Iranian state shipping company. This caused the U.S. government to place the Ofer company on a banned list.

In other words, profits best ideology when money is to be made by Israeli entrepreneurs. Israelis can talk about patriotic duty and wax horrified at the notion of betraying the national good through such dealings, but the facts tell a different story.

Allot’s dealings also betray the hypocrisy of the State of Israel railing against western governments for not doing enough to bring down the Iranian regime, when Israel itself is doing far less than it could on that score. And why should these same nations be cowed by Israel’s righteous indignation under such circumstances?

The Israeli high tech company claims it knew nothing about the Iranian sales and that the Danish distributor violated terms its contract if it sold to Iran. It also claims that its product cannot be used for monitoring wide scale Internet traffic in the way the Iranian government controls and suppresses free speech on the web. Bloomberg however reports that experts working for NGOs advocating freedom of access on the internet treat these claims dubiously.

So Allot faces the double whammy of violating Israel’s embargo on trade with Iran AND empowering the web police inside that country to ferret out resistance to the regime and punish it. It’s an odious record and the company’s stock fell sharply on the news.

Not a word from Bibi Netanyahu or Ehud Barak about this schandeh, though they are the country’s chief cheerleaders for an attack on Iran. Apparently, it doesn’t disturb them that one of Israel’s high-flying tech companies made a mockery of their demonization of Iran as an existential threat to their existence.

Barclays Risk Assessment: Chance of Iran Attack Tripled in 2011

Friday, December 9th, 2011

Reuters is reporting that Barclays Bank’s geopolitical risk analyst says that the chances of an attack on Iran have risen threefold in the past year.  Though they rate the chances right now at 25-30%, personally I think they’re underestimating.

But just as interesting was this statement about the unintended consequences of the oil sanctions now being proposed by European and U.S. nations:

“If EU sanctions on Iranian oil were aimed at significantly reducing the flow of revenues to Tehran, they would perhaps seem no more likely to be successful than U.S. sanctions have been since 1988,” the note said.

“An inevitable knock-on effect of an EU embargo would be to push more Iranian oil eastward, without removing Iran’s ability to market all its crude available to export. In other words, the concentration of Iran’s buyers would increase, but the total volume would not be affected.”

In related news, Congress is considering legislation that would criminalize any contact with any representative of Iran or any group having any connection to it:

No person employed with the United States Government may contact in an official or unofficial capacity any person that–(1) is an agent, instrumentality, or official of, is affiliated with, or is serving as a representative of the Government of Iran; and (2) presents a threat to the United States or is affiliated with terrorist organizations.

The idea that the executive branch is the one charged by the Constitution with formulating foreign policy seems to have escaped them.  It means, of course, that if the State Department was doing its job properly, several of its diplomats would soon be in leg irons.  A pretty sight to envision.  Maybe Barack and Hillary can bring them chicken soup at the federal pen.

Chairman of Joint Chiefs: Israel Disagrees Sanctions Can Be Effective, May Strike Iran Without Warning

Thursday, December 1st, 2011

Pro-Israel uber-hawks in Congress like to say there isn’t an ounce of daylight between the positions of the U.S. and Israel whenever an Israeli PM comes to Washington.  But that’s apparently not the case regarding our respective views of Iran.  Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff Martin Dempsey gave an eye-opening interview to Reuters in which he admitted to several discordant notes in our view of Iran as opposed to Israel’s:

The top U.S. military officer told Reuters on Wednesday he did not know whether Israel would alert the United States ahead of time if it decided to take military action against Iran.

General Martin Dempsey, the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, also acknowledged differences in perspective between the United States and Israel over the best way to handle Iran and its nuclear program.

He said the United States was convinced that sanctions and diplomatic pressure was the right path to take on Iran, along with “the stated intent not to take any options off the table” – language that leaves open the possibility of future military action.

I’m not sure the Israelis share our assessment of that. And because they don’t and because to them this is an existential threat, I think probably that it’s fair to say that our expectations are different right now,” Dempsey said in an interview as he flew to Washington from London.

Asked whether he was talking about the differences between Israeli and U.S. expectations over sanctions, or differences in perspective about the future course of events, Dempsey said: “All of the above.” He did not elaborate.

In other words, despite assurances by everyone from Bibi Netanyahu on down that Israel is content to allow sanctions to work and isn’t yet ready to turn to the military option, this is false.  Israel doesn’t believe sanctions will work and only believes that military force will achieve its objective.  We knew from press reports that Leon Panetta had sought repeatedly an assurance from Ehud Barak and Netanyahu that Israel would inform its ally before attacking Iran, and the defense secretary did not get it.  But this interview is the first direct confirmation by a senior U.S. figure that this is the case.

We should read into this that Israel will attack first and ask questions later.  Its clear from this that the latter doesn’t believe in waiting to see if sanctions work and is prepared to attack now.  It may hope and perhaps expect the U.S. to join in the attack after Israel begins it.  But Israel is fully prepared to go it alone.

Of course, Dempsey may be posturing, hoping it might spook the Iranians to think that the Yanks are the cool-headed ones who can’t control the hot-blooded Israelis who’re liable to go off and do something stupid.  But at this point, I don’t think anyone on either side is fooled by such things.  It’s well past time for leaders to stop posturing and lay their cards on the table.  I believe it’s more than likely that Dempsey truly does believe Israel will do a first-strike.

All this reveals the level of dysfunction in the U.S.-Israel relationship regarding Iran.  Israel will pursue its own interests without regard to those of the U.S.  This of course assumes Obama doesn’t want Israel to attack Iran.  But there’s always the possibility that a president whose only real foreign policy successes have involved counter-terror victories like murdering Osama bin Laden in cold blood would be quite attracted by the idea of using military muscle to show the Ayatollahs a thing or two.  That would mean that if Israel attacked, we’d likely do so as well.  Time will tell.

At the time of the recent Isfahan nuclear enrichment plant explosion my own Israeli source could not confirm Israeli involvement.  But he has now confirmed that this attack like the one on November 12th was another joint operation with Mossad and MEK.  I asked him whether these attacks may no longer be part of a black ops program meant to substitute for a frontal military assault, but rather a deliberate degrading of the Iranian (and Hezbollah) arsenal in the lead-up to an Israeli attack.  The thinking might be taking out as many Iranian missiles, IRG generals, etc. as possible before an Israeli strike would degrade Iran’s capability to respond with its own second strike.

I reported here that Sheera Frenkel wrote in the Times of conversations with Israeli intelligence officials who confirmed the attack was sabotage (though they were cagey about Israeli authorship).  She also was shown satellite images of damage from the attack, which gives the lie to both Iranian and other sources who denied any explosion took place in Isfahan.  Ynet reports that the Times actually displayed the photos with the story, but this is apparently false.

As far as my source knows, Tamir Pardo, the Mossad chief continues to believe, as did his predecessor Meir Dagan, that covert ops inside Iran will delay the country’s ability to secure WMD by at least a few years.  A military attack is not the Israeli intelligence agency’s end game (though it may be Bibi’s).  However, I should point out that even if this is true, these continued attacks would benefit Bibi and Barak if they succeed eventually in getting approval for a first strike.  The less missiles Iran and Hezbollah have to fire at Israel, the weaker their response will be to Israel’s assault.

Alex Fishman: U.S. Sees in Ahmadinejad Possible Partner for Nuclear Deal, If Not…Expect War in 2012

Friday, November 18th, 2011

Today, there are two interesting reports with divergent points of view about U.S. strategy toward Iran. But each is worth noting. First, readers will know the respect in which I hold Alex Fishman, the military correspondent of Yediot. He was the only mainstream journalist willing to take on the IDF’s lies about the Eilat attack and call them what they were. He also wrote a compelling story about the tension between the U.S. and Iran regarding how to proceed with Iran.

Frankly, I think a good deal of what Fishman reports here is wishful thinking on the part of his American interlocutors [my interpolations are inside brackets]. But still it’s worth considering as a window into the mind of a centrist, pragmatic Israeli journalist and U.S. policymakers. These officials are telling him that they believe they have a secret weapon in the struggle to bring Iran to the negotiating table and resolve the nuclear issue: Mahmoud Ahmadinejad. Because of the split between the president and Ayatollah Khamenei, whom the latter has allied himself with the most obstreporous clerical hardliners, Americans are hoping that the president might be willing to broker a deal regarding the nuclear program.

If this really is American thinking, it seems bound to fail as Ahmadinejad is in no position to face down and best Khamenei on this issue.  Foreign and security policy are the bailiwicks of the Ayatollah, not the president.  For this reason, I half wonder if the Americans are putting this forward knowing that it is almost sure to fail, and that they can then proceed with equanimity to Plan B, military attack.

Returning to Fishman’s story, the parameters of the deal the U.S. is offering involve: 1. ending the effort to enrich uranium to 20% and restricting enrichment to the 5% level. In return a third country will provide nuclear fuel for its Bushehr reactor. 2. Iran will agree to transfer to a third country the 80 KG of uranium already enriched to 20% purity. 3. Cessation of all advanced nuclear research at the secret Qom facility. The U.S. and Israel see the impregnability of this facility and the fact that Iran’s most advanced centrifuges are being moved there as a sign that the secret work toward building a bomb will proceed there. Once ensconced there, the nuclear program is fully protected from attack.

If Iran agrees to the third condition, the U.S. will freeze all sanctions it has imposed [I presume this means it will cease enforcing them though the meaning of the word "freeze" is open to question]. The Russians and Europeans have already agreed to this proposal. Ahmedinejad, if this story can be believed, is willing to return to talks on the basis of this plan because his primary goal is to relieve pressure imposed on the nation’s economy by the sanctions regimen.

The Americans are holding out to Iran what they call the “Doomsday Weapon.” Putting Iran’s central bank under sanction, which, so the article claims, would grind Iran’s entire economy to a halt because, supposedly, it will no longer be able to sell its oil on the international market. The U.S. claims that even if the Security Council refuses to approve this extreme measure it can impose it effectively with the support of several other leading nations.

If this offer isn’t reciprocated (which it’s highly unlikely it would), the Americans are telling the Iranians that all bets are off and Israeli jets and missiles will be on their way to their targets in the spring of 2012. By then, there will few U.S. troops remaining in Iraq and Iraqi airspace will no longer be controlled by the U.S. That would allow Israel free reign to overfly Iraq on its way to Iran.

Fishman also notes the announcement this week that the U.S. was deploying a new 15,000 ton bunker buster bomb that would be capable of penetrating Iranian bunkers. On a separate note, readers of this blog have noted that Israeli air power could not convey such a large weapon, which would require delivery by a U.S. B-2 stealth bomber, and hence U.S. participation in any strike.

The Israeli reporter notes that last September, the Iranians organized a massive display of military power in Teheran in which they displayed their most advanced new missile systems. They didn’t even leave it to the intelligence photographic analysts to figure out the technical details of the weapons. The Iranians provided them explicitly.  This massive exhibition of firepower confirmed that the Iranians the missile program is one of the three “legs” of its nuclear program.  Fishman coyly notes that “someone” (hint, hint) was so “impressed” with the display that they decided they needed to eliminate the program’s architect. That was how the decision was made to assassinate Brig. Gen. Hassan Moghadam a few days ago. Though the Iranians immediately denied the event had been sabotage, this was the greatest nightmare to befall the project and meant that someone had penetrated the project security and who knows what they did or left behind?

Fishman explicitly calls Moghadam’s death an ‘assassination,’ and compares it with the assassination of three previous Iranian nuclear scientists which many have attributed to the Mossad. He claims, and here I disagree with him, that these breaches have persuaded the Iranians that they’re exposed and that their program is naked to the world. This sense of vulnerability, he claims, will cause them to hesitate before proceeding to the stage of building an actual weapon.

Iranian engineers have told the senior figures in the regime that they are ready to proceed to weaponization, but the regime is afraid of a major project failure and therefore hasn’t yet given its assent. They don’t know how the U.S. and Israel (possibly to avoid censorship he refers to them by the names “Big Satan” and “Little Satan”) penetrated the project [this is the first indication I've seen that attributes U.S. involvement in the missile base explosion, but I've thought from the beginning that this was possible and even likely]. And that, more than sanctions and even more than a possible attack, troubles and gives them pause.

This, at any rate, is the U.S.’ thinking and they don’t appreciate anyone else (i.e. Israel) attempting to impose its own agenda on the proceedings by implementing an attack on Iran before the potential for this plan has been exhausted.

The second article is by Harper, one of the contributing authors at Pat Lang’s blog. He offers an alternate picture of U.S. policy planners as he’s talking mostly to defense analysts, who have a different perspective than the political operatives Fishman likely consulted with inside the adminstration. Harper says that the U.S. is engaged in a low-intensity conflict with Iran which it hopes might propel Iran into an extreme reaction that could be used to launch a full-scale attack against it. This, of course, is why Iran doesn’t admit that the missile base attack was sabotage since it doesn’t want to play into such expectations.

One option under consideration aside from the current policy approach is:

A full scale war, involving a massive U.S. bombing campaign that would go on for 3-6 months, wiping out the entire infrastructure of the Iranian Revolutionary Guard Corps and other power centers. This option has been unanimously rejected by the Joint Chiefs of Staff and by a vast majority within the U.S. intelligence community as “premature” and far too costly. However, there are grave uncertainties over how President Obama would respond to a preemptive Israeli strike, that would do little damage to Iran’s nuclear energy sector, but would put the U.S. on the spot to “finish the job.” Given electoral considerations, the demonstrated power of AIPAC and the Christian Zionists in the Congress, military brass and intelligence community leaders worry that Obama could draw the United States into an escalating war that could get out of control under virtually every scenario considered.

In the past, I would’ve ruled out entirely the possibility that Obama would allow himself to be sucked into such a conflict. But given his flaccid approach to Israel on so many fronts I think we can no longer rule out that he might agree to a follow-on to an Israeli attack. This would threaten to turn it into a full-scale regional conflict, since a number of Iranian proxies and possibly a nation like Turkey might take an exceedingly dim view of such goings on.

Harper portrays the current black ops strategy as an alternative to an Israeli attack, which is precisely why Meir Dagan was such a devout adherent of the approach:

[The idea behind the] “war avoidance” plan [according to] some U.S. military planners I have spoken with…is to disrupt and delay the Iranian nuclear program, as a way of forcing Israel to back off from their threats of preemptive action.

This passage echoes one in Fishman’s report:

An Iran specialist, with whom I spoke recently, posed a challenging question: At what point are the Iranians forced to take action against this clandestine war? There have been bombings, kidnappings and assassinations on the streets of Tehran that have been impossible to conceal from the Iranian population. Is this going to prove to be a war delay/war avoidance strategy, or a provocation that leads Iran to retaliate and provide Israel or others with the pretext for general war? This question is yet to be answered. So far, the Iranians have been restrained, choosing not to even retaliate with a low-level attack on Israeli or American targets outside of the region (the bombing of the Jewish Center in Buenos Aires more than a decade ago is a good example of past such Iranian retaliatory actions).

I see no evidence whatsoever that the sabotage/black ops plan will deter Iran in the least. Nor do I see full-scale military assault as one that would work. The Iranians have fought tough battles before. There are at least as many dangers facing Israel and the U.S. from such a strategy as facing Iran.  It will be a lose-lose proposition for all.  Which doesn’t mean the parties won’t either choose or fall into such a confrontation.  Unfortunately, the policymakers on all sides have shown little propensity for pragmatism or common sense.  The worst could easily happen.

Who’s Right About Iran Attack: Doomsayers or Naysayers?

Wednesday, November 2nd, 2011

There are a considerable number of Middle East analysts and bloggers who dismiss the idea that Israel will attack Iran.  My good friend Max Blumenthal doesn’t believe it for a minute.  He says there’d be too much “blowback.”  Others point out that operationally Israel doesn’t have the means to carry out such a complex military operation without direct U.S. assistance, if not participation.  At this point in the argument, many say the U.S. simply won’t play.

I’m not a military analyst so I can’t say that Israel can go it basically alone and attack Iran using the resources it has on hand from its own military stockpile (which include much U.S.-supplied weaponry like bunker buster bombs).  But while I believe that Israel’s military is nowhere near as sturdy and quasi-invincible as it once was (long ago), the IDF has shown itself in the past to be quite good at improvisation and taking audacious risks.  That’s why I believe that if Israel truly wanted to attack it would figure out ways of doing so.

These naysayers generally argue that the real purpose of the current round of saber-rattling is a sort of psychological warfare against Iran.  The hope is that by turning the screws with ever more draconian sanctions and threats of war, that Iran will at some point come to its senses and agree that discretion is the better part of valor.  At that point, a chastened Iran will return to the realm of the reasonable and become an obedient servant of U.S. and Israeli interests in the region (or something close to that).

There’s only one problem with this–and it’s a big one.  I think Iran is a hardened target not just physically but psychically.  The Iranians lost hundreds of thousands in the Iran-Iraq War which they fought for eight years.  Persia in general is a place that has known wars for millennia.  Does anyone think that Israel, even with its nuclear weapons, can spook them?  I just don’t see it.  The only way I can see Iran changing course in the context of military action is if Israel can strike a blow and bring the regime to its knees.  But barring dropping a nuclear weapons on Teheran, it can’t do that.  Not even if it wanted to.

Likewise, some argue that the Israeli drumbeat of war is meant to persuade the Russians and Chinese, who have resisted the newest round of sanctions, that if they continue doing so the only alternative is war.  Some see Israel in this scenario as Uri Avnery does, as the U.S. Rottweiler, whom we unleash in order to scare recalcitrant Security Council members into voting our way.

There is only one problem with this overall concept.  And it’s a big one.  No one believes or cares.  If the U.S. and Israel want to turn this into a Las Vegas poker hand bluff, I think the Russian and Chinese are willing to wait them out to see what kind of cards they’re holding.  If you think about it, why would they care that Israel would bomb Iran?  They realize, just as much of the world realized in 2003, that once the U.S. invaded Iraq, it would only be a matter of time before the decision came back to haunt us–and it did.  Similarly, the Recalcitrant Ones would like nothing better than to watch Israel sink into a Persian miasma, while taking us along with them.  It would leave them sitting pretty to pick up the pieces after we messed up things royally.

Yes, it’s true that China might be concerned that its energy supplies could be cut off in the event of an Iranian shut-down of the Straits of Hormuz.  But the question is whether the Chinese might be willing to withstand such a short-term hit in order to allow the U.S. and Israel to so embarrass themselves that China will come out of it in an event stronger position regionally and internationally.  The general rule is if your competitor wants to bet the store and make a fool of himself in the process, you clear out of the way and give him plenty of room.

This means that one of two things can happen: either Bibi Netanyahu and Ehud Barak are bluffing and don’t really intend to go to war.  If that’s true, I’m afraid they are fools and will find this strategy an abject failure.  Or the doomsayers are right and the Dynamic Duo do intend to strike Iran.  I’d say I’m a doomsayer who wants to be proven wrong, but is increasingly doubtful I will be.

On a slightly different subject: I adapted this from an Israeli tweet that noted the dichotomy between the J14 social justice movement and an Iran attack.  My take:

Bibi to J14: if you don’t have bread, go eat Jericho IIIs.

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