The Scum at the Top
Commentary on the Rats in Washington
Time to Face Reality on Iran
By Fareed Zakaria
Newsweek
© January 30, 2006
Page 31
At best, a military strike would set back Iran's
program a few years, inflame public opinion there
and unify the nation in its bid to go nuclear.
The huffing and puffing in Washington is so strong these
days, it could start a gale. High officials warn Iran not
to continue work on its nuclear program. Politicians on
both sides of the aisle firmly concur. Pundits bellow
louder still. Everyone agrees that Iran must be stopped.
But how? That's when the silence sets in. No one has
a serious plan that has much chance of success.
There are those who claim to have a solution—American
military strikes against Iran's nuclear facilities.
For some this is a stand, taken in the full expectation
that the policy will never be adopted. In the 1950s some
Republicans wanted to outflank the Truman administration,
and argued for a military rollback of the Soviet Union.
Others genuinely believe it to be possible. But bombing
is not a serious option.
At best a strike would set back Iran's program by a
few years. But it would inflame public opinion there
and unify the nation in its determination to go nuclear.
It is a substantial country—with three times the
population of Iraq, for example—that has a powerful
sense of national pride. And Iran would have many ways
of retaliating, especially with 140,000 American troops
next door in Iraq.
Sanctions will not work. Iran is the world's second
largest oil exporter, with tens of billions of dollars
in surplus cash these days. If we have few sticks, we
also have few carrots. It's probably worth offering a
package of real benefits—mostly as a signal to the
Iranian people that we want good relations with them
in return for cooperation on nukes—but I have no
illusions that it would be accepted. The current regime
does not want good relations with the West. It knows
that more trade, contact and collaboration only undermine
its grip on its society.
American policy toward Iran needs a fundamental rethink.
We have a worthy goal: trying to stop Tehran from building
nuclear weapons. We have gone about this in a sensible
way, using allies, multilateral organizations and
international agreements to pressure Tehran. But the
policy simply isn't going to work.
Washington and its allies need to come to grips with
reality and switch course, coming up with a new set of
goals and a path to attain them. Otherwise we risk not
just failure, but a very public humiliation and the further
erosion of our limited credibility—in Washington, the
"West" and the "international community."
The United States should begin the construction of an
alliance to contain Iran. Our goals should be to prevent
or massively slow down the weaponization of Iran's nuclear
program, and to frustrate its meddling in the region,
support for terrorism and opposition to a peaceful
settlement of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict.
This is not a best-case outcome, but it has its virtues.
The existence of a clear and present danger in Iran will
keep the international community galvanized. Already, the
Western alliance has been strengthened in response to
Iran's belligerence, and cooperation with India, Russia
and China seems a stronger possibility than ever before.
Threats usually have the effect of sobering up the
neighborhood. If Saudi Arabia, Egypt and other countries
see that they face a serious problem in Iran, they might
recognize that they could use outside allies. American
influence in the region could become stronger and be used
to push for cooperation on other foreign-policy issues,
as well as economic and political reform. Notice how the
rise of China has Japan and India moving closer to the
United States. The Soviet threat brought Western Europe
closer to the United States. It's not inconceivable that
a similar dynamic could work in the Middle East.
Properly handled, Iran's threat might even improve the
situation in Iraq. One of the grave problems facing Iraq
is the rampant and destabilizing Iranian influence in its
politics and government. If Iran continues down a nuclear
path, politicians in Iraq—of all stripes—will begin to
view this as a threat to their national security. It's
tough to say that Iran is just a friendly neighbor helping
out if it is actively pursuing the military capacity to
obliterate you.
This does not mean accepting a nuclear-armed Iran. Tehran
is many years away from nuclear weapons. Its program is
not that sophisticated, and moving to a serious weapons
capability isn't that easy, particularly if there is a
concerted global effort to slow it down. The regime in
Iran is not stable and the fissures in Iran will only
grow. Regime change, however, is not going to take place
at our will and on our timetable. Outside forces can
help. But we will slow change in Iran if we feed the
feeling that America is humiliating it. Let us not believe
one more time that people in a foreign country will welcome
American bombs with sweets and flowers.
Write the author at comments@fareedzakaria.com.
© 2006 Newsweek, Inc.
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January 15, 2007