The Guardian wrote:If Obama were to conclude that there is no choice but to attack Iran, he is unlikely to order it before the presidential election in November unless there is an urgent reason to do so. The question is whether the Israelis will hold back that long.
The only way I can see Obama attacking Iran before the election is if actually shooting/bombing broke out between Iran and Israel. While the Republicans typically view the Democrats as vulnerable on military issues, portraying them basically as wussies, Obama having gotten bin Laden and the Predator drone assassinations makes it much more difficult to assert he's some sort of coward afraid to use force. Yes, I know about the moral and legal issues surrounding the drone assassinations, let's not do that debate all over again, I'm just pointing out that for the warhawks in the US they do color the view of Obama. Obama has successfully used military force to achieve goals without direct confrontation, which gives him a leg to stand on if he tries to take the stance that the US can oppose Iran without an invasion, that there are alternatives to direct confrontation. Would that be enough? I don't know, I can't recall a Democratic (or even a Republican) PotUS with those particular credentials, effective use of covert military force and remote drones to achieve ends.The Guardian wrote:There is a school of thought – a suspicion, even – within the administration that Netanyahu might consider the height of the US election campaign the ideal time to attack Iran. With a hawkish Republican candidate ever ready to accuse him of weakness, Obama's room to pressure or oppose Netanyahu would be more limited than after the election.
"One theory is that Netanyahu and Barak may calculate that if Obama doesn't support an Israeli strike, he's unlikely to punish Israel for taking unilateral action in a contested election year," said Kahl. "Doing something before the US gives the Israelis a bit more freedom of manoeuvre.
The Guardian wrote:However, the Americans are uncertain as to whether Israel is serious about using force if sanctions fail or has ratcheted up threats primarily in order to pressure the US and Europeans in to stronger action.
In 1981 Israel bombed and destroyed an Iraqi nuclear reactor. Given that history I see no reason to doubt that the Israelis are serious.madd0ct0r wrote:Brinkmanship:
the USA saying 'Iran,if you don't shape up, we might not be able to restrain Israel for much longer'. Indirect threat via slowly letting the situation slip out of control.
I know that many in the world think that Israel is a puppet of the US (or vice versa) but in fact the Israelis do retain their independence of action. They can and have acted contrary to US desires. If the Israelis are really determined to attack Iran there isn't really any way the US can stop them, short of bombing Israel which, for obvious reasons like they're an ally of ours (supposedly), us unlikely to happen.
Of course the two nations, even if agreeing in broad terms, are going to view the situation differently. It is highly unlikely an Iranian nuke is going to blow up on US soil (though god help the Iranians if one does) but Israel is a likely target for such an Iranian nuke. Note that I don't think Iranian would immediately drop an a-bomb on Israel if they had one, I do believe they would prefer to use it as a deterrent, particularly if they only had one or two.
I see no reason why both parts of that sentence can't be true.The Guardian wrote:Kahl said part of Washington's calculation is to judge whether Israel is seriously contemplating attacking Iran, or is using the threat to pressure the US and Europe into confronting Tehran.
And... I don't have a problem with using sanctions in this manner, and the latter half of that quote is probably true. The problem is that sanctions seldom seem to work as intended, and may destabilize or push the Iranian government to an extreme it might not have had otherwise. Which is more likely to progress to war, an unsanctioned Iran with a healthy economy or a sanctioned Iran with a crashed economy and a pissed off populace?The Guardian wrote:Israeli pressure for tougher measures against Tehran played a leading role in the US Congresss passing sanctions legislation targeting Iran's financial system and oil sales. Some US and European officials say those same sanctions have also become a means for Washington to pressure Israel not to act precipitously in attacking Iran.
Has Netanyahu seen the batshit crazies the Republicans are fielding this time around? Alright, I understand the Republicans do tend to favor Israel more than the Dems, and some of the right-wing religious nuts nearly worship it because its existence is a Sign of the End Times and they can't wait to get the Armageddon party underway. And there was every reason to believe a black Democrat with a bunch of Muslim relatives as well as Christian ones who spent a lot of his formative years outside the US might not be nearly as sympathetic to Israel as the average white Christian Democrat we've had in the past.The Guardian wrote:The presidential election is also a part of Israel's calculation, not least the fractious relationship between Obama and Netanyahu, who has little reason to do the US president any political favours and has good reason to prefer a Republican in the White House next year.
Netanyahu might well be right that a Republican in the US White House might be best for Israel.... but the problem is that it might be seen as a worse alternative for much of the rest of the world.
Agreed.RIPP_n_WIPE wrote:The Iranians have every right as a sovereign nation to build a nuclear power facility and if they fucking want to, nuclear weapons as a deterrent. As long as they aren't off shooting them at innocent civilians and countries that have made no overtures to attack them (I believe in first strike if the intel is strong enough) then voila. They can't hit the US and if they did launch something we would most likely intercept it.
One problem is that there are scary words coming out of Iran about how one of their neighbors has no right to exist and should be eliminated from the face of the Earth. This does tend to make the neighbors very, very nervous. Especially since so many of those same neighbors either remember the WWIII Holocaust when someone really did try to exterminate them en masse or are the direct descendants of such. It's sort of like smoking in a small room full of gunpowder and volatile chemicals, with the smoker adding more inflammables every hour or so. You can't help but wonder when, not if but when, the whole thing is going to blow up.
Now, I will be the first to admit I have no idea how likely it is that either Ahmadinejad or others in the Iranian government will act on their Scary Words. I do understand some of the stuff coming out of them is for domestic Iranian consumption. I understand politics requires bluster and hyperbole. I am also aware of recent attempted assassinations that have been laid at Iran's doorstep. I would be interested if someone with some actual knowledge of Iranian actions would chime in about this. If Iran had a viable nuke how likely would they be to use it?
Just because Israel has every reason to be alarmed at an Iranian nuclear program does not negate that, as a sovereign nation, Iran has just as much right to nukes as Israel does. Would you have used the same argument against Pakistan getting the bomb, that it would alarm nuclear-capable India? That was another powder-keg waiting to erupt and yet it did not. Both sides have gone back to glowering at each other and funding the Ministry of Silly Walks One can only hope that Iran and Israel maintain a similar level of nonviolent animosity. Given the recent “proxy war” alluded to by other posters, however, I am not hopeful.Sidewinder wrote:And Israel? Are you aware that Iran is engaged in a proxy war with Israel, via Hezbollah? That Israel has a valid reason to be wary of a nuclear-capable Iran?
On the one hand, Israel has nukes and has never used them, which is a positive. Clearly, they aren't hell-bent on a nuclear first strike.RIPP_n_WIPE wrote:Any since we're on the subject of someone being afraid of someone else with nuclear missiles if I'm not mistaken Israel already has nukes and has the capability of launching them from air, sea, or ground based silos. So why wouldn't Iran be equally nervous of an already nuclear capable Israel?
On the other hand, Israel has sent airstrikes against another soveriegn nation (Iraq, 1981) to prevent them from acquiring nukes. Equally clearly, Israel will conduct conventional first strikes if they so desire. Iran has every reason to fear at least conventional attack from Israel and see them as a belligerent adversary.
But this isn't just about Israel. Iran is also in conflict with the US, and has been since the Shah was deposed in 1979. They want nukes to deter the US from attacking/invading them. What possibly makes all this worse is that the US not only has nukes (and plenty of them) the US has also used them against people. Aside from that, the US has in recent decades invaded and more or less destroyed nations and there was pretty much fuck-all conventional forces could do to stop it. Granted that Iran and Iraq didn’t like each other and Iran probably wasn't at all sorry to see Saddam go, there was no way they could see that happen next door and not wonder if they would be next. “The enemy of my enemy is my friend” doesn't always play out in the real world, sometimes it's “The enemy of my enemy is going to eventually finish with my enemy, then he's going to come over here and kick MY ass!” It makes sense that Iran would have some real fear of the US.
One constant the past 70+ years, however, is that the US does not engage in direct military confrontation with other nuclear powers. Proxy wars, yes. Espionage, spying, covert shit, yes, but not invasion or direct battle. Iranians aren't stupid, they know damn well that the US conventional forces are just as capable of fucking up their country as they were of fucking up Iraq. I think they're banking on the fact that if have a nuke it takes such an invasion off the table. It's a matter of national survival – if they have nukes the US won't destroy them as a nation, therefore, nearly any sacrifice will be worth it. I doubt sanctions are going to stop them. It would not surprise me if the Iranians think a US invasion/take down of Iran is inevitable if they don't have nukes, and if that's so, I don't think they view it as a choice, it's a necessity.
Rather like North Korea poured a shitload of effort into a nuke program – the whole world knows they have one now, even if it's a crude piece of shit. It's still a crude piece of shit that goes >BOOM< and spits radioactive fallout. They're in the club. They've got their magic defense against US invasion, the a-bomb.
You mean like the Davy Crockett? That was actually the 1950's.Sea Skimmer wrote:Its totally absurd. France insisted on testing nukes into 1996 after the US-UK-China-Russia agreed a halt specifically because they didn't feel like they had enough data on modern designs yet. Israel has indeed been claimed to have some advanced small nuclear warheads, directional ones specifically for anti tank use, but this is nothing the US couldn't have built had it felt like back in the early 1960s.
Nonsense – the US certainly could invade Iran. It doesn't because the costs (in several areas) greatly outweigh the benefits. If we get a Republican elected in November, however, that option certainly could be back on the table whether it's a good idea or not. Mitt Romney – arguably one of the saner choices for Republican PotUS this time around – is anti-Iran and very pro-Israel. Gingrich is, if anything, more anti-Iran than Romney.ChaserGrey wrote:Nobody (okay, nobody serious) is talking about invading Iran. Israel can't, the U.S. probably can't and certainly won't.
For Iran, the best outcome of the US election would be Obama winning a second term.
True. As noted, the Israelis have, in the past, done solo airstrikes to shut down a nuke program.All the discussion on shutting down their nuclear program involves air strikes. Israel could probably do the deed solo (unless, of course, Mr. Murphy comes along for the ride), but it would be a lot easier with the U.S. riding shotgun.
Also true – the Iranians are pretty good observers. Apparently, there is doubt the US could bomb the Iranian facilities into uselessness. The Iranians are VERY determined. I do believe they will get their a-bomb shortly whether the rest of the world approves or not. It seems to me, then, that the logical thing to do, if an Iranian bomb is inevitable, is to not go around pissing off the Iranians and fucking up their economy because a pissed off Iran destabilized by a fucked up economy is more likely to start trouble than a not so pissed off Iran with a healthy economy, but politically that doesn't seem feasible at the moment.Lord of the Abyss wrote:Actually, I've pretty consistently heard that they couldn't shut it down solo. The Iranians built the program under the assumption that Israel would happily attack it, so it's hardened and dispersed enough that air strikes aren't effective.
Again, the capability is actually there – the US could kill every living thing in Iran via bombing. Of course, there would also be a massive cost to doing so. Thing is, no one really wants to do something like that. Which is good. You even point out a few of those immediate costs. Not that I think you, Stas, are doing this, but I get tired of people saying “Oh, X can't happen” when either it has happened, or the capability is actually there. There are very few circumstances that would lead to the US “bombing someone back to the stone age” but I can envision at least one event that could lead to such a thingStas Bush wrote:You realize of course that the Straits will be closed immediately and Iran will attack US forces in Iraq or Israel (depending on the party which attacked it in the first place), as bombings are an act of war? What then? Bomb them into the stone age without invading? Yeah.