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AIR STRIKES BY ISRAEL WOULD DRAW U.S. INTO ANOTHER WAR
A new study by an international terrorism expert warns that a military attack
launched by the Israelis on Iran’s nuclear facilities would certainly
escalate to involve the United States, Iraq and Lebanon, as well as Persian
Gulf states.
In its early stages, it would result in many thousands of civilian and military
casualties.
In an in-depth report for the Oxford Research Group, titled “Iran: Consequences
of a War,” Prof. Paul Rodgers writes that Israel has bought [or has been
given—Ed.] all the necessary weapons from the United States for such an
attack, including long-range fighters and a large supply of so-called “bunker-buster
bombs,” capable of penetrating hardened underground bunkers.
The targets of such an attack would initially be the Tehran nuclear reactor,
as well as a radioisotope facility and a range of laboratories and other facilities,
all of them in heavily populated areas.
If the newest reactor at Bushehr were to be targeted after it comes on line
later this year, such an attack could lead to a Chernobyl-type disaster with
radioactive clouds rising over most gulf countries.
According to Rodgers, if the United States is drawn into such an attack with
the aim of setting back Iran’s nuclear program, the British could also
find themselves dragged into the affair by being asked to provide bases for
the refueling of U.S. aircraft as happened when F-111s were used to bomb the
Libyan capital of Tripoli in 1986.
If bombings were launched this year against Iran they would, claims the Oxford
report, be launched simultaneously in order to kill as many of the technical
staff as possible at the various nuclear sites. Iran would be unable to prevent
such an air assault because of its lack of a functioning anti-missile and anti-aircraft
arsenal.
Some experts dispute this aspect of the report, however, due to recent high-tech
weapons purchases Iran has made from North Korea, China and Russia.
In the past decade, it is known that Iran has acquired hundreds of medium-range
missiles from China and North Korea and an unknown number of long-range Sunburst
cruise missiles from Ukraine, which, it is believed, could be used to sink U.S.
ships in the Persian Gulf.
Israeli hawks in Tel Aviv and their allies in Washington want Americans to
believe that Iran is a major threat to U.S. and Israeli interests in the Middle
East.
The Israelis and their neo-con backers had hoped a successful invasion of Iraq
and the overthrow of Saddam Hussein would undermine the clerical leadership
in Iran and lead to its overthrow by an emerging democratic movement led by
the youth of the country. To the dismay of Washington and Tel Aviv, however,
the war in Iraq has failed to achieve that goal, and the power of the religious
leadership in Iran has grown significantly.
The prospect of a nuclear-armed Iran stands in the way of Israeli hegemony
in the Middle East. Israeli hardliners have convinced many Americans that they
should be the only Middle East country with nuclear weapons. It is estimated
that the Israeli nuclear arsenal contains as many as 400 nukes.
In order to plan for an attack on Iran, recent reports indicate Israel has
been buying long-range versions of American-made F-15 and F-16 aircraft. Beginning
in 2003, the Israeli air force purchased 102 F-16s and 500 bunkerbuster bombs.
Efforts are also under way to equip Israeli submarines, including ones given
to Israel by Germany, and naval surface vessels with cruise missiles that could
reach Iran.
The Oxford Report points to an alarming trend: in the past two years, there
has been the appearance of a strengthening of the relationship between the Israeli
defense forces and the U.S. Army’s Training and Doctrine Command.
The report warns: “Although not commonly covered in the western media,
this relationship is well known in the Middle East and would contribute to an
assumption that any Israeli attack on Iran would be undertaken with the knowledge,
approval and assistance of the United States. It is certainly the case that
an Israeli air attack on Iran would involve flights through airspace currently
dominated by the United States.”
Rodgers also makes the point in his report that close links between Israel
and the United States are far more widely recognized in the Middle East than
in the United States and in Europe. Therefore, any Israeli action would be seen
as a joint operation with “Israel acting as surrogate and doing so with
direct U.S. support.”
He speculates that this would mean that Iranian retaliation would be directed
at U.S. interests in the gulf and at U.S. forces in Iraq. Hezbollah, regarded
as the most formidable terrorist organization on the planet, would be encouraged
by Tehran to launch attacks on Israel from Lebanon and to coordinate strikes
against U.S. targets across the Persian Gulf, in Iraq and in the continental
U.S. While Israel would enjoy a short-term advantage over Hezbollah forces in
Lebanon, there would be long-term consequences for both Israeli and U.S. interests.
It would be costly in terms of lives, money and influence. Perhaps the most
troubling outcome, says Rodgers, would be the likelihood of a prolonged military
confrontation, which would probably spread to other gulf nations.
Any attack on Iran by Israel, he says, no matter how small, would surely escalate
to involve the United States and its bogged-down forces in Iraq.