End Times Watch 58
Time For An Israeli Strike?
New Page 1
End times watch 58 - Time for an Israeli Strike? -
By John R. Bolton -
www.washingtonpost.com
With
Iran's hard-line mullahs and the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps unmistakably
back in control, Israel's decision of whether to use military force against
Tehran's nuclear weapons program is more urgent than ever.
Iran's
nuclear threat was never in doubt during its presidential campaign, but the
post-election resistance raised the possibility of some sort of regime change.
That prospect seems lost for the near future or for at least as long as it will
take Iran to finalize a deliverable nuclear weapons capability. End times watch.
Accordingly, with no other timely option, the already compelling logic for an
Israeli strike is nearly inexorable. Israel is undoubtedly ratcheting forward
its decision-making process. President Obama is almost certainly not.
He still
wants "engagement" (a particularly evocative term now) with Iran's current
regime. Last Thursday, the State Department confirmed that Secretary Hillary
Clinton spoke to her Russian and Chinese counterparts about "getting Iran back
to negotiating on some of these concerns that the international community has."
This is precisely the view of Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov, reflected
in the Group of Eight communique the next day. Sen. John Kerry thinks the recent
election unpleasantness in Tehran will delay negotiations for only a few weeks.
Obama
administration sources have opined (anonymously) that Iran will be more eager to
negotiate than it was before its election in order to find "acceptance" by the
"international community." Some leaks indicated that negotiations had to produce
results by the U.N. General Assembly's opening in late September, while others
projected that they had until the end of 2009 to show progress. These gauzy
scenarios assume that the Tehran regime cares about "acceptance" or is somehow
embarrassed by eliminating its enemies. Both propositions are dubious.
Obama will
nonetheless attempt to jump-start bilateral negotiations with Iran, though time
is running out even under the timetables leaked to the media. There are two
problems with this approach. First, Tehran isn't going to negotiate in good
faith. It hasn't for the past six years with the European Union as our
surrogates, and it won't start now. As Clinton said on Tuesday, Iran has "a huge
credibility gap" because of its electoral fraud. Second, given Iran's nuclear
progress, even if the stronger sanctions Obama has threatened could be agreed
upon, they would not prevent Iran from fabricating weapons and delivery systems
when it chooses, as it has been striving to do for the past 20 years. Time is
too short, and sanctions failed long ago. End times watch.
Only those
most theologically committed to negotiation still believe Iran will fully
renounce its nuclear program. Unfortunately, the Obama administration has a
"Plan B," which would allow Iran to have a "peaceful" civil nuclear power
program while publicly "renouncing" the objective of nuclear weapons. Obama
would define such an outcome as "success," even though in reality it would
hardly be different from what Iran is doing and saying now. A "peaceful" uranium
enrichment program, "peaceful" reactors such as Bushehr and "peaceful"
heavy-water projects like that under construction at Arak leave Iran with an
enormous breakout capability to produce nuclear weapons in very short order. And
anyone who believes the Revolutionary Guard Corps will abandon its weaponization
and ballistic missile programs probably believes that there was no fraud in
Iran's June 12 election. See "huge credibility gap," supra.
In short,
the stolen election and its tumultuous aftermath have dramatically highlighted
the strategic and tactical flaws in Obama's game plan. With regime change off
the table for the coming critical period in Iran's nuclear program, Israel's
decision on using force is both easier and more urgent. Since there is no
likelihood that diplomacy will start or finish in time, or even progress far
enough to make any real difference, there is no point waiting for negotiations
to play out. In fact, given the near certainty of Obama changing his definition
of "success," negotiations represent an even more dangerous trap for Israel. End
times watch.
Those who
oppose Iran acquiring nuclear weapons are left in the near term with only the
option of targeted military force against its weapons facilities. Significantly,
the uprising in Iran also makes it more likely that an effective public
diplomacy campaign could be waged in the country to explain to Iranians that
such an attack is directed against the regime, not against the Iranian people.
This was always true, but it has become even more important to make this case
emphatically, when the gulf between the Islamic revolution of 1979 and the
citizens of Iran has never been clearer or wider. Military action against Iran's
nuclear program and the ultimate goal of regime change can be worked together
consistently. End times watch.
Otherwise, be prepared for
an Iran with nuclear weapons, which some, including Obama advisers, believe
could be contained and deterred. That is not a hypothesis we should seek to test
in the real world. The cost of error could be fatal. End times watch.
Return FROM End Times Watch 58 TO Remnant Archive
Return FROM End Times Watch 58 TO Home