On
To Iran?
by William S. Lind
Between
now and January, the Bush administration must decide whether to
take the last dignified exit from Iraq. That is to announce before
the Iraqi elections that we will be leaving soon after them. If
Bush and his neo-con handlers miss this opportunity, our only choice
will be to remain in Iraq until we are driven out in a humiliating
defeat. Like the kid who knows he has to eat his spinach, we will
be better off pretending to choose the inevitable.
What
is the chance this will happen? Behind the scenes, a growing number
of conservative leaders are working to make it happen. But events
are moving the other way. The elevation of the Tea Lady, Condoleezza
Rice, Ph. D, to Secretary of State is intended to silence any voice
of prudence from that Department. New CIA Director Porter Goss recently
told his people, “As agency employees we do not identify with,
support, or champion opposition to the administration or its policies.”
If you want to guarantee disaster, there is no better tool than
turning your intelligence agency into a closed system. Most indicative
is the fact that not a single neo-con has been given his walking
papers. So long as they are running the show, substantive change
is unlikely.
But
what are the neo-cons going to do about Iraq? The insurgency is
growing, American casualties are rising, and at some point the American
public will demand something better than the nonsense being mouthed
by our commanders. (My favorite last week was the American general
who claimed Falluja had “broken the back” of the insurgency.
Insurgencies, like octopi, are invertebrate.)
With
other fools throughout history, the neo-cons’ answer to defeat
will probably be escalation. What I had predicted as a likely “October
Surprise” may instead be a Christmas present: a joint Israeli-American
air and missile attack on Iran’s nuclear facilities.
Amazingly,
Secretary of State Colin Powell already has launched a repeat of
the same strategy that led us to war in Iraq. Based on a single,
unvetted intelligence source, he last week accused Iran of attempting
to weaponize nuclear warheads to fit on ballistic missiles. It is
improbable Iran has any nuclear devises to weaponize (though it
is certainly trying to get them, for obvious reasons). But apparently
just an accusation is enough to justify preemption. And we recently
sold Israel several hundred deep-earth penetrator bombs. It is safe
to bet they are not for destroying tunnels between Egypt and the
Gaza Strip.
We
may, of course, officially deny any role in a strike on Iran, leaving
Mr. Sharon to take full credit. But Iran, which expects such an
attack and has prepared for it, already has said it will hold the
US as accountable as Israel.
Knowing
nothing about war, the neo-cons probably expect any Iranian response
to be symmetrical: an air and missile counterstrike. But Iran cannot
do much that way, and surely knows it. Why shoot a few ineffective
missiles at Israel when you have two juicy targets right next door,
in the form of American troops in Afghanistan and Iraq?
An
Iranian riposte in Afghanistan probably would come slowly, in the
form of a guerilla war in that country’s Shiite regions. That
might also be Iran’s response in Iraq, where it already has
Revolutionary Guard troops in Shiite areas. But there is another
possibility. Under the cover of bad weather, which winter often
provides, Iran could strike suddenly into Iraq with several armored
divisions. Our forces are scattered throughout Iraq, and they cannot
mass rapidly because Iraqi guerillas control the roads. With skill
that is not beyond what Iran might manage (the Iranian Army is better
than Saddam’s was) and a bit of luck, they could roll us up
before American airpower could get the clear weather it needs to
be effective. America would not only lose a war in Iraq; it would
lose an army.
At
that point the analogy I have suggested from the outset would have
come to full fruition: Athens’ Syracuse Expedition. Like the
Syracuse Expedition, a victory in Iraq would have given America
little in the war against its real enemies, Islamic non-state forces.
But a defeat that resulted in loss of an entire army would be a
catastrophe.
Unfortunately,
the only Syracuse Expedition most neo-cons will know about was a
college road-trip to some school in upstate New York. Take it from
me, guys; the hangover this time could be a whole lot worse.
William
S. Lind, expressing his own personal opinion, is Director for the
Center for Cultural Conservatism for the Free Congress Foundation.
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