Tuesday, February 21, 2012

Bomb Iran? Fareed Zakaria's take on it

On Sunday, 19 Feb 02, Fareed Zakaria  commented on Israel's threat to Bomb Iran.  I'm quoting it  (without authorization) because I want it to have the widest circulation possible:


By Fareed Zakaria, CNN

We are hearing a new concept these days in discussions about Iran — the zone of immunity. The idea, often explained by Ehud Barak, Israel’s defense minister, is that soon Iran will have enough nuclear capability that Israel would not be able to inflict a crippling blow to its program.

Israeli officials explain that we Americans cannot understand their fears, that Iran is an existential threat to them. But in fact we can understand because we have gone through a very similar experience ourselves. After World War II, as the Soviet Union approached a nuclear capability, the United States was seized by a panic that lasted for years.Everything that Israel says about Iran now, we said about the Soviet Union.

We saw it as a radical, revolutionary regime, opposed to every value we held dear, determined to overthrow the governments of the Western world in order to establish global communism. We saw Moscow as irrational, aggressive and utterly unconcerned with human life. After all, Joseph Stalin had just sacrificed a mind-boggling 26 million Soviet lives in his country’s struggle against Nazi Germany.

Just as Israel is openly considering preemptive strikes against Iran, many in the West urged such strikes against Moscow in the late 1940s. The calls came not just from hawks but even from lifelong pacifists such as the public intellectual Bertrand Russell.


To get a sense of the mood of the times, consider this entry from the Nov. 29, 1948, diary of Harold Nicolson, one of the coolest and most sober British diplomats of his generation: “[I]t is probably true that Russia is preparing for the final battle for world mastery and that once she has enough bombs she will destroy Western Europe, occupy Asia, and have a final death struggle with America. If that happens and we are wiped out over here, the survivors in New Zealand may say that we were mad not to have prevented this. . . . There is a chance that the danger may pass and peace can be secured with peace. I admit it is a frail chance, not one in ninety.”

In a speech at the Boston Navy Yard in August 1950, Navy Secretary Francis Matthews argued that, in being “an initiator of a war of aggression,” the United States “would become the first aggressors for peace.”

In the end, however, the global revolutionaries in Moscow, the mad autocrats in Pyongyang and the terrorist-supporting military in Pakistan have all been deterred by mutual fears of destruction. While the Iranian regime is often called crazy, it has done much less to merit the term than did a regime such as Mao’s China. Over the past decade, there have been thousands of suicide bombings by Saudis, Egyptians, Lebanese, Palestinians and Pakistanis, but not been a single suicide attack by an Iranian. Is the Iranian regime — even if it got one crude device in a few years — likely to launch the first?


The efforts to delay and disrupt Iran's nuclear program are working. But even if one day Tehran manages to build a few crude bombs, a policy of robust containment and deterrence is better to contemplate than a preemptive war.


These sentences seem to me to meritspecial consideration:  "




Over the past decade, there have been thousands of suicide bombings by Saudis, Egyptians, Lebanese, Palestinians and Pakistanis, but not been a single suicide attack by an Iranian.  
  
  



If you would see some pics of Iran -- a sexist, homophobic regime, but less so than our good friends the Saudis -- . . .

Sunday, February 5, 2012

Bomb, bomb, bomb . . .East-Azerbaijan? What to expect from War with Iran. Part 1

Acheson, that brilliant strategist and close friend of Archi­bald MacLeish, criticized advocates of “massive retaliation” in the 1950s. It would be mad, he said, to “embrace disaster in order to escape anxiety.”
• • •
Deployment of military force can bring the immediate illusion of “success” but always results in unforeseen consequences and collateral damage that complicate further the achievement of America’s main objectives. 
     Ambassadors Thomas Pickering and Luers, cited in the excellent J Street, an organization of reasonable American Jews who support  a just and lasting Israeli State.



East-Azerbaijan is an important province in north-west Iran.  When Republicans talk about War with Iran, as they do every dat on the primary campaign stump, presumably they are aware of the 4,00,000 armed patriots in  East-Azerbaijan.

The Republicans talk about War with Iran as if it would be like the War we were lead to believe Iraq War would be.  This series of blog posts explores how realistic that hope would be.

CAN WE BOMB IRAN, SMASH IT TO SMITHEREENS?

You betcha.

We can bomb anybody, anywhere in the world, and do it thoroughly.




We did this to Bagdad, . . .  


with MOAB, what we call the Mother of All Bombs, without breaking into a sweat . . .





An Atomic Bomb blast is bigger and prettier,



but chemical bombs do well enough; so who needs Atomics now-a-days? 

No Americans were injured in the fire bombing of Bagdad . . .




. . . and this young man was fortunate
to be  liberated from the Tyrant,
 Saddam Hussein.





WAS THE IRAQ WAAR A WALK IN THE PARK?

The Iraq War was billed as being "a walk in the park," "where we would be greeted with flowers as liberators", in DefenseSecretary Donald Rumsfeld's phrases.

I wouldn't describe it that way:

About 4,000 American soldiers killed . . .








about 34,000 wounded . . .







Olson Brandon, from an impressive collection of  
Iraq war images entitled






more than 1,000,000 Iraqis killed . . .

This estimate of Iraqi dead
is conservative.








A U. S. Marine is next to the dead body 
of a suspected insurgent during the battle for 
Fallujah, 2004. Salon.com,
  Photo byMARCO DI LAURO

1,556,156 Iraqis were wounded,  . . .



Photojournalist Ghaith Abdul-Ahad
The Guardian 14 March 20008, Baghdad;
 September 12 2004:
 Dead and critically injured Iraqi civilians
 lie in Haifa Street after US helicopters 
opened fire on targets in the area 




 3,216,107 displaced to Syria and Jordan as of 28 February 2010. . .


From a current story in the Daily Koss



From the Christian Science Monitor, displaced Iraqi school children 
attend summer school to try to catch up





. . . and 1,900,000 still living in Iraq but without a permanent home









Grin and bear it, these guys seem to say



Some or our soldiers were welcomed . . .

Change.org, urging improved help for displaced Iraqis.



and even seen as heroic






We were not hospitable to everyone, an expected consequence of the stresses of War and a reason to avoid War if it can be avoided:







(I see these guys as heros)
GI's resting during the assault on Najaf.




Some did not like our troops very much


Najaf; August 20 2004: An Iraqi Shiite man
 loyal to the radical cleric Moqtada al-Sadr
 prays in front of the door of a tomb, 
The Guardian photojournalist Ghaith Abdul-Ahad





Our opponents in Najaf.  
Resembles a friend of mine. 
 Making enemies isn't good.



Not to forget the Kurds, our staunches friends:


The Peshmerga, perhaps the finest fighting force 
outside Pastunistan.  National Geographic photo.



Kurdish girl.



Many on all sides just mourn their losses:














Vice President Dick Cheney, a vocal proponent of the Iraq War,  said


"every analysis said this war itself would cost about $80 billion, recovery of Baghdad, perhaps of Iraq, about $10 billion per year. We should expect as American citizens that this would cost at least $100 billion for a two-year involvement."

In fact, there were two Wars.  Afghanistan is not finished and the Iraq War  lasted six years.  The total cost to the American citizen ,in a Brown University estimate, is 3.3 Trillion Dollars.

The difference between a billion and a trillion, illustrated:


Ten thousand dollars:





One million dollars:





One hundred million dollars:





One billion dollars:





One trillion dollars:








Bushco  (my term for President George W. Bush and his Republican friends who began two wars) borrowed much of the 3.3 trillion dollars from Communist China, our former bitter enemy



while Bushco was cutting taxes on the richest of us, at a cost of 2.27 Trillion Dollars by 2010, and rising. . .

. . . resulting in the national debt that Republicans now decry.

Republicans who urge War with Iran, now demand tax cuts and reduction in the national debt.  Thomas Friedman, not noted for liberal ideology, in a  February 11, 2012, New York Times OpEd piece, urged a crushing defeat of the RepublicanParty in the November  elections, for its idiocy, in the hope that a truly Conservative Party will take its place.  Urging War with Iran with no mention of its financial and human cost nor of its unexplained and perhaps unintended consequences, is idiotic, as we shall see in future posts on this blog.


THE IRAQ WAR  WAS NOT A WALK IN THE PARK, AND NEITHER WILL BE A WAR WITH IRAN.



Neocon Paul Wolfowitz recently said that our killing Saddam Hussein caused the Arab Spring, and so was a good thing.  That retro-thinking  is a  slim reed to cling to, if there is life after death and a vengeful god.  In Greek theology, the Eumenides are the personification of vengeance.
William-Adolphe Bouguereau


         It is not known if Bushco sleep comfortably an night, or if  the Furies haunt its members. Can't imagine what goes on in the heads of million-killers.  Probably not much, I fear.



THE IRAQ WAR WAS A GREAT GIFT TO IRAN, BUT WHO KNOWS IF INTENDED?


Who ever knows what those in power intend?  Surely not I.  But Iran is a Shiite Muslim State, surrounded by a great sea of Sunni Muslims, who regard the Shia as apostate, unclean, and to be destroyed.  Bushco gave Iran a Shiite government in Iraq, replacing its bitter enemy, Saddam Hussein, a Sunni Muslim.  Iran should give daily prayers of thanks to Bushco, but doesn't, because Iranians hate Americans so much.  Still.  Thank you very much, Dwight David Eisenhower.  See the forthcoming blog post.