It happens that expert commentators on television news channels sometimes are taken as advocating a position when they are actually analyzing it. It's understandable when it happens with ordinary viewers with no particular background in complicated subjects. But when it happened with the Senior Associate and Director for Non-Proliferation of the
Carnegie Endowment for Peace this morning on C-Span's
Washington Journal, referring to something Clark said on Fox News last week, it left a lot of gaping mouths.
As we say online, WTF??, Mr. Cirincione?
General Clark
was asked on Fox News, where he is a military and foreign affairs analyst,
if it came to military action against Iran, which of two military strategies would he favor. Clearly reluctant, his position urging
diplomatic resolution of the current crisis being well-known and long-held, so reluctant, the Fox anchor had to repeat
if it came to that twice, Clark said, "
If it comes to this, then I would favor a broader military option. I think the broader military option is the one that forestalls the Iranian options coming back at you."
The statement followed this exchange:
Bridgette Quinn: And I guess that would let them produce enough bomb-grade uranium for a single atomic weapon if it's operating at full capacity. Anyhow, would that be the number one target for military action, if it were to come to that?
GENERAL WESLEY CLARK: Well, it would be one target for military action, but there are two different ways that the military option could unfold. On the one hand, there could be an effort to interdict the nuclear program at a sensitive node or two. Or on the other hand, there could be a broad-scale take-down of the Iranian nuclear capability and their defense capability so as to forestall an Iranian response against the United States and our friends in the Persian Gulf.
Citing two ways a military option
could unfold and deciding between two possible military strategies, in a theoretical sense, as a military analyst, surely, is not "advocating" for a massive military strike against Iran, as Cirincione erroneously claimed on C-Span. Maybe he should watch more Sunday morning news shows.
General Wesley Clark on ABC's "This Week with George Stephanopoulos" 3/5/06George Stephanopoulos: Let me turn to Iran. You told the Council on Foreign Relations earlier this month, that before we take Iran to the UN Security Council over their proposed nuclear weapons program, we should try talking to them directly and doing business with Iranian businesses. That's a very different approach from what other Democrats, like Senator Evan Bayh and Senator Clinton, are calling for. They say we need tough sanctions now. Why are you convinced that your approach is better?
GENERAL WESLEY CLARK: Well, maybe we will need tough sanctions later on. But before any of that happens…years ago we should have talked to Iran, and it's not too late right now.
George Stephanopoulos: Directly.
GENERAL WESLEY CLARK: Directly to Iran. The Iranian state is not unified. There are differences of opinion in Iran, but rather that passing a $75 million Iranian Liberation Act funding proposal, why don't we just talk to the Iranian leadership and see if there's not a way <crosstalk>
George Stephanopoulos: But don't you believe that if they're this intent on developing a nuclear weapon…
GENERAL WESLEY CLARK: I think they are intent and the more we press against them, the more difficult it would be for them to change their direction. Iran represents an historic opportunity for the Shias to have leadership in the Islamic world and this nuclear issue is being crystallized in such a way that it's going to make it extremely difficult for them to back off.
George Stephanopoulos: But don't they know that the message is 'if you don't give up your nuclear program then you're not going to be able to join this modern world'? Isn't that what the United States is saying; isn't that what the European community is saying?
GENERAL WESLEY CLARK: Well, it's a very mixed message going to the Iranians, frankly. We're not saying we're not going to buy their oil. China's not telling the Iranians 'we won't help you build subways'. The Russians aren't telling the Iranians 'you're not going to get our billion dollars worth of weapons that you've ordered'. It's a very mixed message and really it's the United States which hasn't taken its leadership responsibilities seriously enough to go and talk to the Iranians first before this crisis comes to a head.
Does this sound like a man who wants to nuke Iran?