Magic Carpet Ride Over Iran
Since 04-15-06
Arnaud de Borchgrave
Wednesday, April 12, 2006
http://www.newsmax.com/archives/articles/2006/4/11/225413.shtml
If you liked the "cakewalk" through Iraq, you'll love a ride on the magic carpet
over Iran.
While Condoleezza Rice said this was not the time to try and come to a
conclusion about what the next step on Iran's nuclear defiance might be, those
who assured us Operation Iraqi Freedom would be a walk in the park are now
telling us Operation Silence Mullahs would be casualty-free – at least for the
good guys.
A prominent "neocon," still in good odor at the White House and OSD (Office of
the Secretary of Defense), speaking privately, assured us that by the time
President Bush leaves office in January 2009, Iran's nuclear weapons ambitions
would be history.
Assuming tough sanctions – draconian or otherwise – don't bring Iran's mullahs
to heel, we inquired, trying not to sound too wimpish, what would be Mr. Bush's
next step?
"B-2s," not nukes, this prominent armchair strategist replied. "Two of them
could do the job in a single strike against multiple targets." With a crew of
two per bomber, only four American lives would be at risk, an all-time record in
the history of warfare.
So we looked up B-2s. The U.S. Air Force has only 21 of them. Perhaps price had
something to do with it. They came in at $2.2 billion a copy. But they can carry
enough ordnance to make Iranians nostalgic for the Shah and his role as the Free
World's gendarme in charge of the West's oil supplies in the Gulf.
These stealthy bombers have one major drawback in the Persian magic carpet mode.
They can attack only 16 targets simultaneously – one short of the 17 underground
nuclear facilities pinned red on Mossad's target-rich PowerPoint presentations
to the political leadership. Presumably, that's why two B-2s would be required.
For the cognoscente, the B-2's payload offers a rich and varied menu of
seriously harmful goodies/nasties. Either the multibillion-dollar bomber can
carry 34 CBUs (laser-guided Cluster Bomb Units), or 16 JDAMs (Joint Direct
Attack Munition), or 8 BLU-28s (daisy-cutting, satellite-guided bunker-busters),
or 16 JSOW (Joint Standoff Weapon), or 16 JASSM (Joint Air to Surface Standoff
Missile). Whatever the option selected for Iran, it would be 40,000 pounds of
explosives delivered with a standoff capability, or about 15 miles from the
target.
Most of Iran's secret nuclear installations are not only underground, but also
close to population centers. The first pictures of a B-2 raid would be dead
women and children on Al-Jazeera television newscasts, now as globally
ubiquitous as CNN and Fox. The collateral damage would then rival Abu Ghraib's
devastating impact on America's good name. The perceived American indifference
over the loss of Arab lives would now be seen as spreading to another Muslim
country.
At almost half a trillion dollars by year's end, the Iraqi "cakewalk" turned out
to be (thus far) a costly boondoggle, which translated into a gain for Chinese
and Russian influence on the global chessboard and a corresponding loss of U.S.
influence. While we continue to dig a deeper hole in Iraq, China cuts deals to
dig deeper oil wells.
The neocon informant says there is "absolutely no way" Mr. Bush will accommodate
to an Iranian nuke or two, the way he blinked first with North Korea. His
uncompromising view of the Iranian nuclear danger and his determination to
prevent it by force of two B-2s if necessary is "as solid as his resolve to rid
Iraq of Saddam Hussein."
This is also the British assessment of Mr. Bush's intentions against Iran, a
power whose president has vowed to wipe Israel off the map. Last week, senior
British officials met with defense and intelligence chiefs to assess the
consequences of air strikes against Iran – as well as European and global
repercussions.
Neocons are unfazed by the fact Iran is an ancient civilization of 70 million
people with retaliatory assets that range from a choke hold on the world's most
important oil route in the Strait of Hormuz, to an anti-U.S. Shi'ite coalition
in Iraq with two private militias, funded and armed by Iran, to terrorist groups
throughout the Middle East that have a global reach. Iran is also a power that
not only resisted an Iraqi invasion but also fought Saddam Hussein's legions to
a standstill in an eight-year war of attrition that killed about 1 million
soldiers on both sides.
If, as Mr. Bush has indicated, U.S. troops were still in Iraq in 2009 under the
next president, Tehran, in retaliatory animus, would pull out all the stops to
ensure a Vietnamlike send-off for remaining U.S. forces in Iraq.
For the time being, Tehran is delighted to keep U.S. troops in Iraq as
protective cover for Iran as it consolidates its influence throughout 60 percent
of the country.
At the recent Berlin conference of the world's major powers – the veto-wielding
big five of the U.N. Security Council plus Germany – there was opposition to any
kind of sanctions against Iran. International Atomic Energy Agency's Mohamed
ElBaradei, the world's nuclear watchdog, threw a damper on U.S. expectations by
saying, "We need to lower the pitch."
For the time being, Iran's "cakewalkers" appear to be those in charge of
diplomatic choreography. The Chinese are not about to blow their $100 billion
long-range deal for guaranteed oil supplies. Iran is also a good Russian
customer. Germany, it now turns out, supplied Iran with some of the technology
needed for enrichment of nuclear fuel to weapons-grade standards.
A muscular sanctions policy does not appear to be Germany's thing either. So
Iran's stealthy uranium enrichment is likely to continue unimpeded until the
stealthy B-2s get the order to discombobulate the mullahs' nuclear plans. The
ranking neocon thought this would be sometime between next November's elections
and the presidential election two years later.
Before the Middle East's unfriendly volcano erupts again, it would behoove the
national security team to advise the president that kicking butt in Iran, like
kicking Iraq's gluteal region, triggers the law of unintended consequences.
As for the absurd suggestion that nuclear bombs are in Mr. Bush's war plan
against Iran, Mr. Bush does not think of himself as Harry Truman II. Winston
Churchill II is the current model.
Arnaud de Borchgrave is editor at large of The Washington Times and of United
Press International.