From the Los Angeles Times
No proxy war with Iran
The United States must not signal that it
would be acceptable for Israel to bomb Iranian targets.
July 3, 2008
Israel and the United States are starting to look like two anxious
children trying to decide how to deal with a schoolyard bully, Iran.
Each appears to be whispering encouragement to the other to go kick the
bully in the shins, but each is so terrified of the consequences that
neither wants to go first.
President Bush telegraphed this dangerous diplomatic gambit to the
media Wednesday when he was asked about the recent spate of reports
that military action against Iran, by either Israel or the U.S. and
before the end of Bush's term, is under discussion. First he repeated
his long-standing position that while “all
options” are on the table,
his "first option" to solve the problem of Iran's nuclear programs
would be through diplomacy. But Bush then dodged the question "Would
you strongly discourage Israel from going after Iran militarily?" The
unmistakable signal is that Bush not only won't discourage Israel from
striking at Iranian nuclear targets but would support Israel should
Prime Minister Ehud Olmert decide to bomb.
The military
reality is that Israel cannot effectively attack Iran without Bush's
acquiescence because Israeli jets would need to cross Iraqi airspace
that is currently controlled by the U.S. And multiple bombing runs
would be required (though even strikes by the far superior U.S. Air
Force would probably do no more than delay Iran's development of a
nuclear weapon by a few months or years). That means Israel would not
be able to protect the United States with the political fiction that it
had conducted a surprise attack without informing the U.S. beforehand.
In any case, Tehran has already announced that it would make no
distinction between a U.S. or an Israeli attack. Nor would many other
nations.
There are a
dozen reasons why "If you want to whack them, we've got your
back" is the wrong message for the U.S. to send Israel, publicly or
privately.
One
is the increase in oil prices as a result of the war talk, which only
enriches Iran. But here are two better ones: The consequences of an
Israeli war with Iran are unpredictable, and it is nearly impossible to
assess Iran's ability to make good on its threats to retaliate against
the United States, presumably through its terrorist proxy, Hezbollah.
The last thing the U.S. needs now is more instability, as Chairman of
the Joint Chiefs of Staff Adm. Michael G. Mullen said Wednesday. And
while the odds may be low that diplomacy will solve the problem, we
can't know for sure because we haven't tried it. Only the Europeans
have. If bilateral talks with nuclear North Korea were acceptable to
Bush, then why is it still anathema to talk with Iran?
Copyright 2008 Los Angeles Times