After all the blue-smoke-and-mirrors "intelligence" that justified the U.S. invasion of Iraq 15 months ago, CIA evidence of an Iranian nuclear bomb would have to be incontrovertible. This sets the bar impossibly high. Hence Israel's conclusion it is on its own. Bombs away? Not yet, but they've rehearsed it.
It was Israel who contributed handsomely to the blue-smoke-and mirrors ‘intelligence’ that justified the U.S. invasion of Iraq.
Parliamentary investigators have determined that Israel's intelligence services delivered an erroneous assessment of pre-war Iraq's weapons of mass destruction, an Israeli newspaper reported Thursday.
Prior to the American-led invasion of Iraq in March 2003, the Israeli services reported Iraq had large amounts of weapons of mass destruction, including chemical and biological agents.
The Haaretz daily said the 80-page report--set to be released next week--had criticized all Israeli intelligence branches for providing erroneous assessments of Iraq's non-conventional weapons. #msg-2682946
Israel has admitted they provided erroneous assessments of Iraq’s non-convention weapons which surely they knew would lead the United States into a war with Iraq.
And now because of Israel the United States would face an increasingly lethal Chinese army modernized by Washington's friends and allies if it had to defend Taiwan in a war with Beijing, said a U.S. study.
Russia's arms exports to China are more sophisticated than ever, and Israel -- recipient of some of America's most advanced technology -- has an increasingly worrisome defense relationship with Beijing, the report said. #msg-3334197
Israel given some of their recent behavior should be on its own.
One scenario now bruited would involve a joint U.S.-Israel precision-guided strike against the Bushehr, Natanz and Arak nuclear projects in Iran. But the Bush administration has concluded a U.S. air attack against Iran would trigger a major Iranian campaign to destabilize Iraq. The two countries share a 1,458-kilometer (906-mile) border stretching from Turkey to the Shatt al Arab terminal on the Gulf. Iran also enjoys wide grass-roots support among Iraq's dominant Shi'ite population. #msg-3495537
By William S. Lind A UPI Outside View Commentary
Washington, DC, Jul. 15 (UPI) -- My informal intelligence network has given me an interesting report: Iran has begun to mass troops on the Iran-Iraq border. Does this portend overt Iranian intervention in Iraq?
I do not think so. Events in Iraq are not unfavorable to Iran, and the risks of direct intervention would be great. However, there is a potential situation that could lead to Iranian intervention: If it were in response to an American-Israeli attack on Iran's nuclear facilities. Such an attack may very well be on the agenda as the "October Surprise," the distraction President George W. Bush desperately needs if the debacle in Iraq is not to lead to his defeat in November.
There is little doubt that Iran has a nuclear weapons program, one that is operating under forced draft to produce a nuclear deterrent as quickly as possible. Iran, along with everyone else in the world, knows that the best way to be safe from an American attack is to have nukes. Even the most howling neo-conservatives show little appetite for a war with North Korea.
The problem is that, while an Iranian nuclear capability may be directed at deterring the United States, it also poses a mortal threat to Israel.
Israel is not known for sitting quietly while such threats develop. It is a safe bet that Israel is planning a strike on known Iranian nuclear facilities, and that such a strike will take place. The question is when.
If Israel plans to act this year, the Bush administration may see a political opportunity it cannot pass up. At the very least it is likely to endorse the Israeli action, and it may well participate. And in the Islamic world at least, an American disassociation from any action by Israel would not be believed. Israel and America are now perceived as one country.
The question becomes, how would Iran respond? It might shoot some missiles at Tel Aviv, but absent at least a "dirty bomb" or bio-engineered warheads, that is not likely to accomplish much. A far better response lies right next-door: Attack the Americans in Iraq.
The United States has about 130,000 troops in Iraq, a formidable army by local standards. But their disposition makes them vulnerable. Confronted by a guerilla war, they are spread out in penny packets all over the country. If Iran could mass quickly and use effective camouflage and deception to conceal at least the scope of its concentration, then suddenly attack into Iraq with two or three corps, we could face a perilous situation.
Iranian success would depend heavily on how Iraqis reacted, but if Iran called its action "Operation Iraqi Freedom," promised immediate withdrawal once the hated Americans were beaten and waved the Koran at Iraqi Shiites, it might win the cooperation of Iraq's resistance movement. That would make U.S. efforts to concentrate all the more difficult, as convoys would come under constant attack. Logistics would quickly become a nightmare.
Such an action would be perilous for Iran as well. The danger with threatening a nuclear power with conventional defeat is that it may go nuclear. The United States might choose to do that through its Israeli surrogate or, on the theory that the bigger the crisis the stronger the "rally around the president" syndrome, directly. Either way, Iran would have no effective response.
But the mullahs now running Iran are, like Bush, in a steadily weakening political position. If they did not respond powerfully to an attack on Iran's nuclear facilities, they might well lose legitimacy with the hard-line base they now depend on. It is risky to count on them doing nothing, and they have few opportunities to do anything that would be effective. Unfortunately for us, their best chance lies right next-door, and the party favor has our name on it.
This October could be full of surprises.
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(William S. Lind is Director for the Center for Cultural Conservatism for the Free Congress Foundation.)
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(United Press International's "Outside View" commentaries are written by outside contributors who specialize in a variety of important issues. The views expressed do not necessarily reflect those of United Press International. In the interests of creating an open forum, original submissions are invited.)