I'm not sure the US has a "conventional option" if the Bush Administration is seriously contemplating an Iranian invasion. And what are we doing thinking about invading Iran anyway? Is this our Administration's American oil bourse
"Neue Welt Lebensraum Strategy?"Invading Iran is, as understatement, a military mistake. However, the morality of invading a sovereign nation is no longer even a speed-bump in the vestigial conscience of the Bush Administration, leaving the only stopping point the devil of the DoD details.
Is all of this "sturm und drang/shock and awe" simply because of a Iranian uranium enrichment program? Or is there something else going on in New World Order-land? If so, it's a tragi-comic production at best.
This administration's only role on the world stage of late is comprised of suddenly flanking in and entering stage right, rattling sabers, upstaging the world cast via brinkmanship, and then tragically overstepping the floorboards to plummet with great clatter and horns deep into the orchestra pit.
This is the matinee farce that is our present military policy.
Concerning Iran, the current run-up to war administration play-acting begs the question: To what end and expectation?
That is, unless "unleashing Hell" in the Middle East is considered victory in the Pentagon these days.
Let's look at the options in a US invasion of Iran.
1. We don't/can't/won't have the overpowering boots on the sand required to invade Iran.According to
GlobalSecurity.org, in 2004 the Iranian Army had some 350,000 men (200,000 conscripts). They may have about 1,000 tanks to meet ground forces with (British-made Chieftains and American-made M-60s, with a few captured Russian tanks rounding up the number.)
Iran would hit us with everything they have if we breach their borders via land by divisions of soldiers, as one would expect when a sovereign country is invaded. With Iran that could include throwing their fledgling biological and/or robust chemical weapons stockpiles at US ground forces. Most likely, if using WMD, the Iranians would employ (as they have against Iraq in their border wars) the highly persistent
nerve agent VX.
2. We can't take control of the Strait of Hormuz. Iran could be counted on to unleash on the US fleet the
Soviet-made "battleship killer" Sunburn missiles that the US fleet (presently) has no (that's zero) defense against.
In all likelihood, the US would lose many ships trying to surge into the Strait of Hormuz. And lose the battle of Hormuz as well as a critical shipping route for Middle East oil.
3. The "air war" is the only likely option.The US could try an air war. But the SecDef is more insane that already thought if he thinks (in any conventional sense) an Iranian invasion is "winnable." We can bomb the underground nuclear reactor installations such as Bushier, et. al., but...as in our drive for Baghdad in Iraq...what then? How would an aerial war lead to any kind of victory for any rational end?
The Iranian missile arsenal is hefty. They have a
rather full-spectrum panoply of missiles from which to choose: Air-to-Surface, Air-to-Air, Surface-to-Surface, and Surface-to-Air.
This puts Israel in the very jeopardy they currently raise concerns about.
If the Iranians actually have, can launch, and successfully control the North Korean Taepo Dong 2 missile, they conceptually have missile reach to Europe and the UK.
Also expect that a US/UK Iranian invasion will most likely open the door for Iran to conduct suicide bomber operations in the US and in England. If we invade their home "over there" they can and most probably will bring the war home to us "over here."
Shall we ask a more primary question at this point: Just how did the US become a juggernaut of blitzkrieg diplomacy? Just how did we come to the this
"Neue Welt Lebensraum Strategy", a foreign expansion, oil acquisition, and invasion-as-security philosophy? I'll have to supose that Donald Rumsfeld hasn't read
"The Rise and Fall of the Third Reich."Lebensraum expansionism didn't work for Germany in 1939 to revive their economic malaise and satisfy their hunger for empire, and it's not going to work for America at the dawn of the 21st century.
I can see why the US generals are clearing their throats a little loudly these days. I support them for the extraordinary measures involved in ranking former military officers stepping forward, and this includes the recent statements from Gen. Wesley Clark.
This is real courage in action. To not do so is becoming a clear
"dereliction of duty." We need to hook these administration clowns off the world stage.