There is no evidence that President Bush has already made the decision
to attack Iran if Tehran proceeds with uranium-enrichment activities
viewed in Washington as precursors to the manufacture of nuclear
munitions. Top Administration officials are known to have argued in
favor of military action if Tehran goes ahead with these plans--a step
considered more likely with the recent election of arch-conservative
Mahmoud Ahmadinejad as Iran's president--but Bush, so far as is known,
has not yet made up his mind in the matter. One thing does appear
certain, however: Bush has given the Defense Department approval to
develop scenarios for such an attack and to undertake various
preliminary actions. As was the case in 2002 regarding Iraq, the
building blocks for an attack in Iran are beginning to be put into
place.
We may never know exactly when President Bush made up his mind to invade
Iraq--some analysts say the die was cast as early as November 2001;
others claim it was not until October 2002--but whatever the case, it is
beyond dispute that planning for the invasion was well advanced in July
2002, when British intelligence officials visited Washington and issued
what has come to be known as the Downing Street memo, informing Prime
Minister Tony Blair that war was nearly inevitable.
What these officials undoubtedly discovered--as was being reported in
certain newspapers at the time--was that senior officers of the US
Central Command (CENTCOM) in Tampa, Florida, had already been developing
detailed scenarios for an invasion of Iraq and that Defense Secretary
Donald Rumsfeld had been deeply involved in these preparations. On July
5, 2002, for example, the New York Times revealed that "an
American military planning document calls for air, land, and sea-based
forces to attack Iraq from three directions--the north, south, and
west." Further details of this document and other blueprints for war
appeared in the Washington Post and the Wall Street
Journal. At the same time, moreover, the Pentagon reportedly stepped
up its aerial and electronic surveillance of military forces in Iraq.
This record is worth revisiting because of the many parallels to the
current situation. Just as Bush gave ambiguous signals about his
intentions regarding Iraq in 2002--denying that a decision had been made
to invade but never ruling it out--so, today, he is giving similar
signals with respect to Iran. "This notion that the United States is
getting ready to attack Iran is simply ridiculous," Bush declared in
Belgium on February 22. He then added: "Having said that, all options
are on the table." And, just as Bush's 2002 denials of an intent to
invade Iraq were accompanied by intense preparations for just such an
outcome, so, today, one can detect similar preparations for an attack on
Iran.
Just what form such an attack might take has probably not yet been
decided. Just as he considered several plans for an invasion of Iraq
before settling on the plan described in the Times, Rumsfeld is
no doubt considering a variety of options for action against Iran. These
could range from a burst of air and missile attacks to a proxy war
involving Iranian opposition militias or a full-scale US invasion. All
have obvious advantages and disadvantages. An air and missile attack
would undoubtedly destroy some key nuclear centers but could leave some
hidden facilities intact; it would also leave the hated clerical regime
in place. The use of proxy forces could also fail in this regard. An
invasion might solve these problems but would place almost intolerable
demands on the deeply over-stretched US Army.
It is these considerations, no doubt, that are preoccupying US military
planners today. But while a final decision on these options may be put
off for a time, the Defense Department cannot wait to make preparations
for an assault if it expects to move swiftly once the President gives
the go-ahead. Hence, it is taking steps now to prepare for the
implementation of any conceivable plan.
The first step in such a process is to verify the location of possible
targets in Iran and to assess the effectiveness of Iranian defenses. The
identification of likely targets apparently began late last year, when
the Central Intelligence Agency and US Special Operations Forces (SOF)
began flying unmanned "Predator" spy planes over Iran and sending small
reconnaissance teams directly into Iranian territory. These actions,
first revealed by Seymour Hersh in The New Yorker in January, are
supposedly intended to pinpoint the location of hidden Iranian weapons
facilities for possible attack by US air and ground forces. "The goal,"
Hersh explained, "is to identify and isolate three dozen, and perhaps
more, such targets that could be destroyed by precision [air] strikes
and short-term commando raids."
It is also probable, says military analyst William Arkin, that CENTCOM
is probing Iran's air and shore defenses by sending electronic
surveillance planes and submarines into--or just to the edge of--Iranian
coastal areas. "I would be greatly surprised if they're not doing this,"
he said in an interview. "The intent would be to 'light up' Iranian
radars and command/control facilities, so as to pinpoint their location
and gauge their effectiveness." It was precisely this sort of aggressive
probing that led to the collision between a US EP-3E electronic spy
plane and a Chinese fighter over the South China Sea in April 2001.
As this information becomes available, it is no doubt being fed into the
various "strategic concepts" and "strike packages" being developed by US
strategists for possible action against Iran. That such efforts are
indeed under way is confirmed by reports in the international press that
Pentagon officials have met with their Israeli counterparts to discuss
the possible participation of Israeli aircraft in some of these
scenarios. Although no public acknowledgment of such talks has been
made, Vice President Dick Cheney declared in January that "the Israelis
might well decide to act first" if Iran proceeded with the development
of nuclear weapons--obviously hinting that Washington would look with
favor upon such a move.
There are also indications that the CIA and SOF officials have met with
Iranian opposition forces--in particular, the Mujaheddin-e Khalq
(MEK)--to discuss their possible involvement in commando raids inside
Iran or a full-scale proxy war. In one such report, Newsweek
disclosed in February that the Bush Administration "is seeking to cull
useful MEK members as operatives for use against Tehran." (Although the
MEK is listed on the State Department's roster of terrorist groups, its
forces are "gently treated" by the American troops guarding their
compound in eastern Iraq, Newsweek revealed.)
Given the immense stress now being placed on US ground forces in Iraq,
it is likely that the Pentagon's favored plan for military action in
Iran involves some combination of airstrikes and the use of proxy forces
like the MEK. But even a small-scale assault of this sort is likely to
provoke retaliatory action by Iran--possibly entailing missile strikes
on oil tankers in the Persian Gulf or covert aid to the insurgency in
Iraq. This being the case, CENTCOM would also have to develop plans for
a wide range of escalatory moves.
Repeating what was said at the outset, there is no evidence that
President Bush has already made the decision to attack Iran. But there
are many indications that planning for such a move is well under
way--and if the record of Iraq (and other wars) teaches us anything, it
is that such planning, once commenced, is very hard to turn around.
Hence, we should not wait until after relations with Iran have reached
the crisis point to advise against US military action. We should begin
acting now, before the march to war becomes irreversible.
Michael T. Klare is the defense correspondent of The Nation and a professor of peace and world security studies at Hampshire College. His latest book is 'Blood and Oil: The Dangers and Consequences of Americas Growing Dependence on Imported Petroleum'.
© 2005 The Nation
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