'The United States now estimates it will take one year for Iran to get nuclear weapons; Israel says some months.
Is Iran a Lunatic State or a Rational Actor? It is neither; it is a Rational Aggressor.
"One of the great unresolved questions of Barack Obama’s presidency," says Time Magazine, "is whether he can peacefully resolve America’s conflict with Iran over its nuclear weapons'
program."
Ridiculously wrong.
One of the great unresolved questions of Barack Obama’s presidency is whether he can successfully resolve America’s conflict with Iran over its nuclear weapons' program.
Time continues that the Obama-Rouhani handshake "would be the most important...handshake since the historic grip between Rabin and Arafat...."
Also
wrong. Remember that while it has still not been admitted by the United
States, that event 20! years later was a failure costly in lives.
Israel must satisfy seemingly monthly
American demands by releasing terrorists who murdered Israelis.
The
handshakes of Prime Minister Neville Chamberlain with Hitler (the
Munich agreement) and of the Nazi foreign minister and Stalin (the
Nazi-Soviet pact) were also a historic grip, at the time peaceful but
not ultimately successful.
Time continues,
"It would only be a symbolic act, to be sure. But when it comes to
international diplomacy, symbolism can go a long way."
But it is not a mere symbolic act but the start of a foolish deal that Iran will break.
So
is Iran a lunatic state or a rational actor? A hell of a lot more
rational than U.S. foreign policy is today, as apparently has been the
Muslim Brotherhood's policy and trickery. After all, the UN jus elected
Iran as Rapporteur for the General Assembly's main committee on
Disarmament &
International Security without Tehran having to do anything. And Obama will blame Congress for diplomatic failure if it increases sanctions. In fact diplomats doubt Iran will actually do anything anyway.
More
politely, Iran is a rational actor in terms of its own objectives. The
issue is to understand what Iran wants. Policy is always best served by
truth, and the truth is best told whether or not people like it. Iran is
an aggressive, rational actor.
Remember: The
problem is not that Iran is eager to use nuclear weapons but that the
Obama Administration is not going to apply containment properly and
credibly. And that encourages Iran's non-nuclear aggression and
terrorism.
The
hysteria over Iran, however, had also better get under control, even as
the real, very threatening situation should be understood. Armchair
theorists from far away may want to provoke a U.S.-Iran war. This is a
bad idea.
The
fact is that the history of the Iranian Islamic regime does not show
suicidal recklessness. A key reason for this is that the leaders of Iran
know they can be reckless without risking suicide. In other words, Iran
did face threats from the West commensurate with what Tehran was doing.
Therefore, the risks it took were not suicidal. If apparently suicidal
rhetoric does not produce suicide but serves a very specific purpose,
that rhetoric is not in fact suicidal.
What, then, did Iran want?
Its
basic goal was to be as powerful a regional hegemon as
possible--including control over Syria and Lebanon. It would like to
take leadership of all Muslims in the area. Today, however, it is clear
that the Sunni Arabs reject Tehran’s leadership and will fight against
it.
In
other words, the ultimate extent of Iran’s zone of influence could only
include part of Lebanon, Syria, Iraq, southwest Afghanistan, Bahrain,
and the eastern province of Saudi Arabia. That is the maximum, and Iran
is far from achieving that goal. And it
will probably never achieve it.
Iran's
influence is limited by the location of Shia Muslims. Not all Shia
Muslims favor Iran, and pretty much all Sunni Muslims oppose it.
Therefore, whatever the outcome is in Syria--in other words if the
regime wins--Iran will at most keep its current levels of influence. But
if the regime wins, the Sunnis will hate Iran even more and will fight
against it harder.
So Iran still wants to get the most power without fearing reprisal.
Nuclear weapons are a defensive shield to carry out conventional aggression.
As
I've insisted for many years, it is increasingly clear that Iran will
get nuclear weapons. We should start discussions in that framework. The
recent brilliant decision of the Iranian elite--who is not only more
ruthless but strategically smarter than Western leadership--to pick a
national
security insider, who is at best a slightly moderate extremist, as
president guarantees it.
The
question is only: when will Iran get nuclear weapons? The evidence
seems to show that this is several years away. (It would be interesting
if that development was too late to affect Syria’s civil war, and such
will probably happen.)
Why will Iran certainly get nukes?
First,
the West isn't going to take strong enough action to stop it, because
the alternatives are deemed--perhaps accurately so--too risky. No
surgical Israeli strike is going to stop it, and Obama will never
support such a strike. Of course, there is a great deal of indifference
about the potential victims and lots of greed about the money to be made
from Iran. The sanctions may seem tough, but there are more holes than
cheese.
After Ahmadinejad, though, there is
perhaps a better money-making climate. His successor will further soothe Western willingness to battle on this nuclear issue.
And of course they just don’t care that much about potential genocide in Israel.
Second,
with international support at a low point, the logistical difficulties,
and a U.S. president who is incredibly reluctant,
Israel is not going to attack Iran to stop it from getting nuclear
weapons. What Israel should and will do is to make clear it will attack
Iran if there is any reason to believe that Tehran might launch nuclear
weapons. It will build up a multilayer defensive and offensive system.
This is not mere passive containment but would mean assured massive retaliation.
Note
that there is more than one potential victim of Iran’s nuclear weapons.
People, including the Israelis, talk a lot about Israel. Yet the Sunni
Arab states are increasingly involved in shooting situations with
Iranian proxies. Unlike Israel, they won’t do anything and perhaps
can’t, except to beg the United States to take strong action. But the
U.S. won’t do so.
And of course everyone can just hope everything will turn out all right.
A
rare piece of good news, however, is that before the “Arab Spring,” it
was conceivable that Iran might become leader or hegemon of the
Arabic-speaking world. Israel-bashing was an important tool to do so.
Now the Sunni Muslims have their own successful--even
U.S.-backed!--Muslim Brotherhood movement. They not only don’t need Iran
any more, they fight against Tehran.
Pushed
on the defensive with more limited prospects--and knowing the Israel
card won’t work--Tehran has lots
less incentive to stake its survival on that issue. The nuclear weapons
arsenal isn't intended for a big bang to get revenge on Israel, it’s
intended to keep the current regime in power against a growing number of
enemies.
Put
bluntly, Iran won’t waste its nuclear weapons on Israel or, as they
might put it in Tehran, to give Israel an "excuse" to attack Iran. No
pile of quotes from Iranian leaders to the contrary changes anything.
The key factor is not an appeal to the “international
community” to protect Israel. Israel’s power rests precisely in old-fashioned credibility and deterrence:
Only Israel can credibly destroy the Islamic regime. And the Islamic regime in Iran knows that.
Israel
was so important in Iranian verbal declarations precisely because
Israel could at one time be turned into a card that strengthened Iran’s
appeal with the Arabs and the Sunni. Iran certainly
had very few other cards. But the Sunni and Arabs don’t care about
this, given the big change of the last two years. The Israel card--as
shown by the Syrian regime’s failure with it--is worthless.
Note
that while Iran has been the leading sponsor of international terrorism
and poured invective out against Israel, Iran did not notably take any
material action against Israel beyond terror attacks and its sponsorship
of Hizballah, Hamas, and Syria--which were its allies at the time.
Compared to Arab efforts in the second half of the twentieth century,
this was not very much.
In other words, against Israel, the Tehran regime talked a big game but did relatively little.
On
other issues, too, Iran did not act like a country bent on suicide.
Against its Arab enemies, it did not take considerable risks. Iran could
wage a proxy war against America in Iraq, because the United States
didn't do very much about it.
All
of the above in no way discounts an Iranian threat. Yes, of course,
Iran sponsored terrorism and sought to gain influence and to spread
revolution. Yet it did not attack a single country in open terms of
warfare. Remember, Iran was invaded by Iraq. And when Ayatollah Ruhollah
Khomeini himself was persuaded that the United States was entering the
war against him, he quickly ended it, though he said that doing so was
like eating snakes and scorpions; but that was necessary to preserve the
regime.
Iran is the kind of aggressor who was once described by Winston
Churchill as a thief who went down the street rattling doors to find one that was open.
Second,
Iran sought to defend itself by threatening antagonists with total
destruction and by obtaining the ultimate deterrence, nuclear weapons.
This does not mean one should sympathize with Tehran since, after all,
it sought nuclear weapons to ensure its defense while it continued
aggressive policies.
Iran
can also complain about American encirclement. Of course, if it did not
follow the policies that were being practiced, there wouldn't be a U.S.
motive for any such efforts. The point, however, is that the claim that
Iran is seeking nuclear weapons so it could destroy itself by attacking
Israel is just not demonstrated.
Thus,
Iran is not a demonic, crazed, kamikaze country. It is simply a typical
aggressor who wants to have insurance against having to pay the price
of such continued activity. North Korea and Pakistan sought nuclear
weapons for the same reason, and it is working for
them.
Let’s
approach the issue in another way. Suppose Iran helped the Syrian
regime win the civil war. Would the danger to Israel be increased? No,
certainly it would not be from a nuclear standpoint. Assad would
reestablish control over a wrecked and tottering country where the
damage would take years to rebuild. But the problem is that Iran will be
more secure in defending itself which means it will be more aggressive,
but now with nuclear weapons.
The use of nuclear weapons loses whatever the possession of nuclear weapons gains.
Iran
would be relieved at the Syrian regime’s survival but would not be
better able to carry on a (nuclear) war against Israel. The Sunnis would
be prepared to cooperate with the United States against Iran and even,
covertly, with Israel up to a point. Indeed, the ability of Sunni
Islamists to attack Israel would be reduced because of their obsession
with the principal danger.
Again,
I don’t want Assad to win in Syria. I believe that Iran is a threat. I
think Iran will succeed in getting nuclear weapons. I don't think the
Tehran regime consists of lunatics who cannot wait to immolate
themselves in a fiery funeral pyre. They want to stay in power for a
long time. Israel has an alternative of preemption if necessary. But the
United States will never help stop Iran’s getting of nukes.
This
analysis should be conducted in a sober fashion. I believe, indeed I
see clearly, that Israeli policymakers understand these issues. We
should remember that Iran is not an insane state and that there are
threats other than
Iran in the Middle East.
Is Iran a Lunatic State or a Rational Actor? It is neither; it is a Rational Aggressor.
The
problem is not that Iran is eager to use nuclear weapons but that the
Obama Administration is unlikely to apply containment properly and
credibly. And then its version of containment might fail.
No comments:
Post a Comment