Ziggy's Zags:
"Can't we all just get along?"
First of all, welcome to the Gadfly, Mr. Zbigniew Brzezinski, national security adviser to President Jimmy Carter.
Ziggy has oft borne the sting of my rebuttals elsewhere, but he has now reached critical mass, and I will obligingly oblige him.
Ziggy is at it again. In a HeraldTribune Opinion today (at least he is honoring my request to not come home ... ), Ziggy makes a profound declarative statement, "Do not attack Iran" and offers "four compelling reasons against a preventive air attack on Iranian nuclear facilities".
But his logic just washes out in the rain.
Deconstruction time:
Look. The long and the short of it is when the mad dog starts foaming at the mouth, you don't start hand-feeding it platitudes.
Ziggy has oft borne the sting of my rebuttals elsewhere, but he has now reached critical mass, and I will obligingly oblige him.
Ziggy is at it again. In a HeraldTribune Opinion today (at least he is honoring my request to not come home ... ), Ziggy makes a profound declarative statement, "Do not attack Iran" and offers "four compelling reasons against a preventive air attack on Iranian nuclear facilities".
But his logic just washes out in the rain.
Deconstruction time:
Iran's announcement that it has enriched a minute amount of uranium [as if size matters!] has unleashed urgent calls for a preventive U.S. air strike by the same sources that earlier urged war on Iraq. [no! really? I'd have thought Howard Dean would have been the first on the block!]
If there is another terrorist attack in the United States, you can bet your bottom dollar that there will be also immediate charges that Iran was responsible in order to generate public hysteria in favor of military action. [hyperbole aside, I'd take that bet; and I'd take the bet that Iran would actually be complicitous in it]
But there are four compelling reasons against a preventive air attack on Iranian nuclear facilities:
1. In the absence of an imminent threat (with the Iranians at least several years away from having a nuclear arsenal), the attack would be a unilateral act of war [so threatening to wipe Israel off the face of the earth with a nuke does not get classified as presenting oneself as an imminent threat?].
If undertaken without formal Congressional declaration, it would be unconstitutional and merit the impeachment of the President. Similarly, if undertaken without the sanction of the UN Security Council either alone by the United States or in complicity with Israel, it would stamp the perpetrator(s) as an international outlaw(s). [so, only the good guys are bad?? and defending one's sovereignty and one's allies means nothing??]
2. Likely Iranian reactions would significantly compound ongoing U.S. difficulties in Iraq and in Afghanistan, perhaps precipitate new violence by Hezbollah in Lebanon, and in all probability cause the United States to become bogged down in regional violence for a decade or more to come. Iran is a country of some 70 million people and a conflict with it would make the misadventure in Iraq look trivial. [Iran is already working on that. Our reluctance to take action only encourages their bad behavior]
3. Oil prices would climb steeply, especially if the Iranians cut their production and seek to disrupt the flow of oil from the nearby Saudi oil fields. The world economy would be severely impacted, with America blamed for it. Note that oil prices have already shot above $70 per barrel, in part because of fears of a U.S./Iran clash. [Note that oil prices have already shot above $70 per barrel, and the world economy is still abooming. Shame on Ziggy for abandoning principle and exercising, instead, fearmongering]
4. America would become an even more likely target of terrorism, with much of the world concluding that America's support for Israel is itself a major cause of the rise in terrorism. America would become more isolated and thus more vulnerable while prospects for an eventual regional accommodation between Israel and its neighbors would be ever more remote. [Let me restate Ziggy's words and see if you can hear my sarcasm, "an even more likely target?" ... "become more isolated?"]
It follows that an attack on Iran would be an act of political folly, setting in motion a progressive upheaval in world affairs. With America increasingly the object of widespread hostility, the era of American preponderance could come to a premature end. [Note that I forgo the obvious sarcasm redux and merely point out that there already is a progressive upheaval in world affairs. Fighting for pole position as alignments change are part of it. They are already doing it, we need to start shoving back]
While America is clearly preponderant in the world, it does not have the power - nor the domestic inclination - to both impose and then to sustain its will in the face of protracted and costly resistance. That certainly is the lesson taught both by its Vietnamese and Iraqi experiences. [True, perhaps. But Ziggy is arguing "against a (one-time) preventive air attack on Iranian nuclear facilities", not an all out invasion with troops on the ground. Or is he?]
Moreover, persistent hints by official spokesmen that "the military option is on the table" impedes the kind of negotiations that could make that option redundant. [huh?] Such threats unite Iranian nationalism with Shiite fundamentalism. They also reinforce growing international suspicions that the United States is even deliberately encouraging greater Iranian intransigence. [Oh, I get it. Appeasement and free rides should be given a fair chance.]
Sadly, one has to wonder whether in fact such suspicions may not be partially justified. How else to explain the current U.S. "negotiating" stance: the United States is refusing to participate in the on-going negotiations with Iran but insists on dealing only through proxies. That stands in sharp contrast with the simultaneous negotiations with North Korea, in which the United States is actively engaged. [not sure where Ziggy's been, but encouraging the Iranian people to fight against these crazy mullahs IS part of the policy]
At the same time, the United States is allocating funds for the destabilization of the Iranian regime and is reportedly injecting Special Forces teams into Iran to stir up non-Iranian ethnic minorities in order to fragment the Iranian state (in the name of democratization!). [Oh My God, No! Stir up the Iranian people to put those democratic-loving mullahs out on the street? In the name of democratization? Oh, the irony of it all ... ] And there are people in the Bush administration who do not wish any negotiated solution, abetted by outside drum-beaters for military action and egged on by full-page ads hyping the Iranian threat. [and let us not forget abetted by an Iranian Prime Minister and Chief Nuclear Negotiator who are deliberately going out of their way to provoke the Beast]
There is unintended but potentially tragic irony in a situation in which the obscene language of President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad (whose powers are actually much more limited than his title implies - [True, they are indeed about as limited as Chancellor Hitler's was, before he trashed German democracy]) helps to justify threats by administration figures who like to hint of mushroom clouds, which in turn help Ahmadinejad to exploit his intransigence to gain more fervent domestic support for himself as well as for the Iranian nuclear program. [Now where did I hear that argument recently about ignoring a problem and hoping it just goes away? Oh, yeah. Judgment of Nuremburg - Burt Lancaster's speech where he lamented that the Good Germans initially thought Hitler and the Nazi party were just a political fad]
It is therefore time for the administration to sober up, to think strategically, with a historic perspective and with America's national interest primarily in mind. Deterrence has worked in U.S.-Soviet relations, in U.S.-Chinese relations, and in Indo-Pakistani relations. [The realist is not reading the history books. We beat the Soviets by bankrupting them; deterrence with the Chinese only works when they get their way; and last I heard, Indo-Pakistani relations were not all that friendly. Ultimately, Ziggy doesn't want to solve problems, just put them on the back burner and let the next generation solve them - or maybe they'll just go away ... ]
The notion that Iran would someday just hand over the bomb to some terrorist conveniently ignores the fact that doing so would tantamount to suicide for all of Iran since Iran would be a prime suspect and nuclear forensics would make it difficult to disguise the point of origin. [Ziggy hasn't read today's papers - Iran is already claiming it is ready and willing to share their new-found nuclear technology with everyone, like the Sudanese]
It is true, however, that an eventual Iranian acquisition of nuclear weapons would heighten tensions in the region. [Oh, we are so close! There is a glimmer of light!] Israel, despite its large nuclear arsenal, would feel less secure. [ya think? "Eliminate Israel off the face of the earth" insecurity?] Preventing Iranian acquisition of nuclear weapons is, therefore, justified, but in seeking that goal the United States must bear in mind longer-run prospects for Iran's political and social development.
Iran has the objective preconditions in terms of education, place of women in social affairs and in social aspirations (especially of the youth) to emulate in the foreseeable future the evolution of Turkey. The mullahs are Iran's past, not its future; it is not in our interest to engage in acts that help to reverse that sequence. [Again with the "ignore them and they'll go away mentality]
Serious negotiations require not only a patient engagement but also a constructive atmosphere. [Let me know when the Iranians demonstrate a sincere desire for constructive dialog] Artificial deadlines, [Remember Ziggy's Four Point Program for withdrawal from Iraq? Artificial?] propounded most often by those who do not wish the United States to negotiate in earnest, are counterproductive. Name-calling and saber-rattling, as well as refusal to even consider the other side's security concerns, can be useful tactics only if the goal is actually to derail the negotiating process. [Exactly! Oops. Caught those wily Iranians on that one, didn't we, Ziggy?]
Several conclusions relevant to current U.S. policy stem from the foregoing:
The United States should become a direct participant in the negotiations, joining the three European negotiating states, as well as perhaps Russia and China (both veto-casting UN Security Council members), in direct negotiations with Iran, on the model of the concurrent multilateral talks with North Korea;
As in the case of North Korea, the United States should also simultaneously engage in bilateral talks with Iran regarding mutually contentious security and financial issues;
The United States should be a signatory party to any quid-pro-quo arrangements in the event of a satisfactory resolution of the Iranian nuclear program and of regional security issues.
At some point in the future, the above could perhaps lead to a regional agreement for a nuclear weapons-free zone in the Middle East, especially after the conclusion of an Israeli-Palestinian peace agreement, endorsed also by all the Arab states of the region. At this stage, however, it would be premature to inject that complicated issue into the negotiating process with Iran. [Honest. I read and reread these last few paragraphs looking for what Ziggy thinks the Iranians should do to work toward peace - Oops, caught those wily Iranians again. Maybe Ziggy thinks the Iranians' objective here is sincere and bilateral peace?]
The choice is either to be stampeded into a reckless adventure profoundly damaging to long-term U.S. national interests or to become serious about giving negotiations with Iran a genuine chance to be productive. The mullahs were on the skids several years ago but were given a new burst of life by the intensifying confrontation with the United States. [Being wildly successive in rigged elections had nothing to do with it, of course]
The U.S. strategic goal, pursued by real negotiations and not by posturing, should be to separate Iranian nationalism from religious fundamentalism. Treating Iran with respect and within a historical perspective would help to advance that objective.
American policy should not be swayed by a contrived atmosphere of urgency ominously reminiscent of what preceded the intervention in Iraq. [A truer statement Ziggy has never uttered - yet, who is contriving upon whom?]
Look. The long and the short of it is when the mad dog starts foaming at the mouth, you don't start hand-feeding it platitudes.
1 Comments:
Guillaume Parmentier, director of the French Centre on the United States (CFE) at the Institut Français des Relations Internationales, has stepped up to stand beside Ziggy and their defeatist (aka realist) attitude toward the Iranians.
I will let Mssr. Parmentier's last paragraph sink or swim on its own merit, repeating what I previously said,
"Better to hold our nose and maintain contact with the country while using information, visits, economic relations and the like in the hope that it will weaken the leadership in the long haul. After all, it worked with the Soviets."
Gadfly: "The realist is not reading the history books. We beat the Soviets by bankrupting them."
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