Subscribe to ePluribus Media



ePluribus Media Store


Want Headlines via Email?
Enter your email address:


Help Save 1.800.SUICIDE


Iran and Irrational Security Strategy

by rcs1

[editor's note, by Cho] promoted... this piece by Cmdr Huber should not be overlooked.

Mister Bush's new National Security Strategy says America "may face no greater challenge from a single country" than one that has an economy the size of Holland's, no nuclear weapons at present, no navy or air force to speak of, a ground force that couldn't beat Saddam Hussein's army, and is halfway around the world from the continental United States.  The Security Strategy echoes remarks made last week by Secretary of State and former National Security Adviser Condoleezza Rice before the Senate Appropriations committee.

Below the fold: the "monster" that has the sole superpower quaking...


commentary :: :: :: buzz-it!
According to the CIA World Factbook, Iran's economy ranks 20th in the world, just ahead of Turkey's and right behind Taiwan's.  Its total estimated 2005 Gross Domestic Product was $551.6 billion, roughly the amount that the United States will spend in 2006 on its Department of Defense alone, which in itself is a fiscal expenditure that matches the military spending of the rest of the world combined.

Iran's economy isn't showing signs of an imminent explosion.  Again, from the World Factbook:

Iran's economy is marked by a bloated, inefficient state sector, over reliance on the oil sector, and statist policies that create major distortions throughout. Most economic activity is controlled by the state. Private sector activity is typically small-scale - workshops, farming, and services...  Relatively high oil prices in recent years have enabled Iran to amass some $40 billion in foreign exchange reserves, but have not eased economic hardships such as high unemployment and inflation. The proportion of the economy devoted to the development of weapons of mass destruction remains a contentious issue with leading Western nations.

Airplanes, Ships, and Soldiers

As pathetic as Iran's economy is, the state of its conventional armed force is even worse.  Its estimated 2003 military budget was $4.3 billion, which ranks well below such war mongering powerhouses as Canada ($9.8 billion), Mexico ($6 billion), and Sweden ($5.7 billion).

The Imperial Iranian Air Force combat aircraft are fighter jets we sold to the country when Shah Mohammed Reza Pahlevi
was still in power: Korea era F-84s and F-86s and Cold War vintage F-4s, F-5s, F-14s, and F-16s.  We haven't given Iran parts and maintenance support for these aircraft in over two decades, and except for the F-16--of which Iran only had 300 in 1976--all the jets we sold Iran have been retired from service in the U.S. military, and nobody else makes them.

In 1988, U.S. naval air and surface forces sank most of Iran's navy during Operation Praying Mantis in the course of a clear spring day.  Iran has somewhat reconstituted its maritime force since that time, but it is still a coastal navy, designed to control the territorial waters off the country's shores on the Indian Ocean, Caspian Sea, the Arabian Gulf, and the Strait of Hormuz.

The Iraq-Iran war lasted from 1980 to 1988.  It was almost exclusively a land war fought along the border of the two countries and ended when the two exhausted countries agreed to a cease-fire brokered by the United Nations.

With so much of the world's oil supply in question, many nations participated in the war through economic and other indirect means.  The two superpowers, the U.S. and the U.S.S.R., backed Iraq.  Interestingly, Israel supported Iran.  

Sticks and Stones

The new National Security Strategy says that Iran "threatens" Israel, but doesn't specifically address what the "threat" consists of other than bellicose rhetoric.  

The crow flying distance between Tehran and Tel Aviv is roughly a thousand miles.  Iraq and Syria sit between the two countries, but even if they didn't, there's no way on God's brown earth Iran could project conventional air or land power that far.  To bring firepower to bear on Israeli territory, Iran's Navy would have to sail more than 3,000 miles, something it is not designed or trained to do.  Even if Iran's war ships made it all the way up the Red Sea, Israel's navy would sink them as they came out of the Suez Canal and entered the Mediterranean Sea.  

Closer to Home

Israel has enemies a lot closer to home than Iran.  It is literally surrounded by nations historically hostile to it: Egypt to the west, Jordan to the east, and Lebanon and Syria to the north.  And, of course, it's snuggled up next to whatever constitutes Palestine at any given moment.  

Egypt, Jordan, Lebanon, and Syria have all attacked Israel.  Only Egypt and Jordan have signed peace treaties with the country.  Hezbollah, the Shia Islamist group formed in 1982 to fight the Israeli occupation and labeled as a terrorist organization by the United States and the European Union, holds 23 seats in the Lebanese Parliament subsequent to the 2005 elections. Hamas, the Palestinian Islamist organization that has conducted attacks on Israeli military and civilian targets since its creation in 1987, became the majority party of the Palestinian Authority Legislative Council in 2006.  

The specter of Iran possessing nuclear tipped, long-range ballistic missiles would change Israel's security equation to some extent, but the equation has a range of uncertain variables.  

Right now, Israel has nuclear weapons.  Iran does not. Mister Bush continues to claim that the Iranians seek to possess nuclear weapons.  The Iranians continue to claim that they don't.  

Even if the Iranians are lying, it's uncertain whether they can actually afford to build and maintain nukes.  If they can afford nukes, they certainly can't afford very many of them.

Ultimately, though, even if they go to the effort and expense to develop a handful of nukes, it is highly debatable whether they would every actually dare to use them.

Coming up in Part II: Nukes or no nukes?  And if so, so what?

Commander Jeff Huber, U.S. Navy (Retired) writes from Virginia Beach, Virginia.  Read his daily commentaries at Pen and Sword.

Display:
...this morning, talking about Bush, Cheney, Rumsfeld having been wrong about everything in Iraq so far, no reason to believe anything they say now.

"Thay haven't been right about anything, now they're asking us to have patience.  No one believes them.  No one.  No one."

Of course, Imus is appearing on Larry King tonight, so his credibility's not all that great either.

I'll have part II on Iran up later this morning or early afternoon.

Thanks to everyone from reading and commenting.

by Jeff Huber on Tue Mar 21, 2006 at 08:18:42 AM EST

feel so much like deja vue?

by Cho on Mon Mar 20, 2006 at 11:13:51 AM EST
The first time I hear "axis of evil" I thought, oh no, here we go.  

by Jeff Huber on Mon Mar 20, 2006 at 11:27:48 AM EST
we can't institute a three stikes law for failed wars.  Maybe such a policy could work as a deterrent.  

by standingup on Mon Mar 20, 2006 at 03:35:38 PM EST
I ask myself over and over....why no one stops this administration........!

http://www.counterpunch.com/roberts03202006.html
By PAUL CRAIG ROBERTS

When the Bush administration gets in trouble, it turns to war, which has worked for it in the past. Thus, this past week there was live coverage of "Operation Swarmer," which occupied a solid day on CNN and Fox "News."

- snip -
Creating your own reality means that when you cannot put down a resistance based in 5 million Iraqi Sunnis, you attack 70 million Iranians, who are allied with 15 million Iraqi Shia, Hizbollah in Lebanon, and Hamas in Palestine.

The Bush administration is sending every signal that it is determined to go to war with Iran. Will the rest of the world block the American aggression, or will the rest of the world decide that it is in the world's best interest for the hubris-driven hegemon to exhaust itself in conflict in the Middle East?



by avahome on Mon Mar 20, 2006 at 04:45:39 PM EST
Given the stats that your deft research revealed about this administration's characterization of Iran as a great threat to our security, I immediately fell into agreement. But, then I did a bit of research myself. Oh oh. I think I found out what it is about Iran that our government fears so much while reading through Iran's Wikipedia entry:

Iran is now the world's fourth largest country of bloggers.

Shudder. :o)
On PTSD Combat | Email list | Book
by ilona on Tue Mar 21, 2006 at 03:06:57 AM EST

Support ePluribus Media -- Support Citizen Powered Journalism!

ePluribus Media

↑ Grab this Headline Animator

members


community front page

make a new account


Username:
Password:

create account | faq | search | community front page |