The buzz to use military power to stop Iran from becoming a
nuclear state is in full swing. The 13, March opinion piece by Joshua Muravchik
advocates total war with Iran and believes that a use of force will undermine
the regime. Studying the 1980-1988 Iran-Iraq war should leave some doubt in
one’s mind about the wisdom of attacking Iran. Compound this with the American
reasoning and experience in Iraq and it’s difficult to see why anybody would
support the notion to wage total war on Iran over their nuclear program.
Muravchik believes that an attack will divide and inspire an
already present Iranian opposition. Saddam Hussein believed the exact same
thing in 1980. The Iraqi invasion of Iran actually united a people that were on
the verge of a second revolution to replace the theocracy that took the place
of the Shah. While Muravhick cites some vague examples of people turning their
back on regimes the evidence suggests that the opposite is true: that invasions
by outsiders unite a fractured society. Iranian propaganda is quite anti-US and
while there is a significant portion of people who do not support the theocracy
counting on them to support a US invasion is a fool’s errand that is asking for
trouble.
Iran is also very good at producing weapons for propaganda
purposes. Their domestic arms industry is fairly robust when it comes to basic
military equipment but the production of more advanced technology is almost
certainly smoke and mirrors. The F-313 stealth fighter Iran debuted had an
instrument panel seemingly built with a quick shopping trip to the Garmin
website. Their newest fighter, the Saeghe-2, looks suspiciously like the US
produced F-5 Tiger II that was exported from the US to Iran in the days of the
Shah. To believe that they have the capability to build a nuclear weapon in six
months almost seems like buying into propaganda, a dangerous precedent for
anybody.
The mismanagement of
the occupation by elements within the Bush administration and the military’s
inability to formulate a cohesive strategy in Iraq make me wonder if they could
manage anything in Iran, presuming that the US does not get bogged down in a
destructive war against a determined conventional force. The same people who mismanaged
the initial occupation are still in policy circles and still have powerful
voices. The calls for war are ridiculous in the face of an Iran that is
changing, albeit slowly, and seeking to reenter the international community on
a greater scale. War would only reaffirm the anti-US and anti-western
propaganda doled out by the regime. Diplomacy is, in the case, the best hope
for a non-nuclear Iran. Don’t let people with PhDs argue for total war unless
they volunteer to go first.
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