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Saturday, April 15, 2006
Nuke Iran
We are now rapidly approaching the moment that many of us have long feared. Either we accept the acquisition of nuclear weapons by a maniac state which will almost certainly use them against Israel (and probably the United States as well), setting off a nuclear exchange which will kill millions of people or we launch a pre-emptive strike of our own – for which we will face certain retaliation and probable economic losses – and do so using all the means at our disposal, including nuclear arms. Before us – the people of the free world – is a choice. Do we choose to live the rest of our lives in fear? Do we even, as some are sure to propose, commit an act of evil so great as to demand that six million Jews – and millions of free Arabs – either die, abandon their homes, or live under the rule of theocratic madmen? Do we want to live in a world where a nuclear Iran, shielded by its missiles and its nuclear bombs, routinely commits and supports Islamic atrocities? Further, I put it to you that we cannot even, were we to abandon those who surely lie under the shadow of the Iranian bomb, rely upon deterrence to prevent attacks upon our own homes. In this era of weakness, do you believe that most Western leaders would have the will to properly retaliate for a nuclear attack which, say, killed half a million New Yorkers? I’m not saying that we wouldn’t use nuclear weapons in response to a nuclear attack – we surely would. But would we use them against targets sufficient to deter such an attack? It would be one thing for Iran to launch a nuclear attack in the certainty that, in response, the United States would wipe Tehran and a hundred other Iranian cities off the face of the Earth. But I – and I suspect the Iranian leadership as well – tend to believe that our people and our politicians are too weak to inflict such deserved punishment upon our enemies. Instead, I tend to think that they’d dither and then finally launch a nuclear response against the military of the enemy. What we face here is the real possibility of asymmetrical nuclear warfare, with our enemies perfectly willing to kill millions of civilians and our leaders unwilling to respond in kind. Perhaps the above isn’t true of President Bush – I don’t believe that it is – but it certainly will be true of future leaders. It would even be true of many possible ostensibly ‘conservative’ American leaders. The primal call for an eye for an eye seems to have slipped from the minds of the Western elite. And, I would note, the above assumes some degree of rationality on the part of the leaders of our enemies. Iran’s President Ahmadinejad, on the other hand, appears, like most Islamist leaders, to be a wild-eyed, raving, lunatic who believes that he’s some kind of Islamic spiritual figure – the Persian edition of Martin Sheen’s character in The Dead Zone, who launches a sudden and senseless nuclear attack simply to “fulfill his destiny.” The idea of a man who sees visions of divine lights and is actively and openly preparing for the arrival of the “12th Mahdi” with control of nuclear weapons and a global terror network is the stuff of nightmares. More to the point: no Islamist leader can be trusted with the bomb. Frankly, I’d be more comfortable if no Islamic nation (including Pakistan – and hopefully someday India will do something about that) had nuclear weapons. Perhaps there are trustworthy Moslem leaders in the world but, at this point in time, allowing them to possess nuclear arms is something akin to handing out Assault Rifles to escaped mental patients. Some will say that there’s nothing to be done about Iran’s acquisition of nuclear arms – that the military options are all unworkable. I don’t believe that to be even remotely true. Certainly, the conventional military options are limited and it is equally true that a strike is likely to miss some facilities. As well, Iran is sure to retaliate by launching terrorist attacks against the Israel and the West and to stir up trouble in Iraq. We know all of that to be true. However, we still possess the capability to strike. Indeed, in contemplating action against Iran we ought to recall an old phrase – “Shock and Awe.” What we saw over Baghdad in 2003 was far from what the inventors of that phrase envisioned. What happened in 2003 was a limited air campaign designed to minimize casualties in the part of the enemy. What is needed in 2006 is an all-out air campaign designed to utterly devastate Iranian military and industrial capacity. As well, I think that we need to strongly consider the use of nuclear arms against Iranian targets. A lot of these facilities are certain to be deeply buried and heavily defended. They need to be totally destroyed as quickly as possible. In order to make that happen, there’s only one option: ground-penetrating free fall nuclear bombs. Of course, once the decision to use nuclear weapons in any capacity has been taken, there’s no real reason to limit their use. One nuclear attack and fifty are going to have pretty much the same effect in American and global public opinion (so long, of course, as we don’t blow up Tehran or a major city). If we’re going to use nuclear weapons to destroy Iranian underground nuclear research and development sites, they might as well be used to destroy Iranian missile bases, airfields, and other vulnerable installations set out in the open. It would probably also be safer to use them against chemical and biological research facilities. Depending upon the shape of the events that followed, it might also be worth using them against Iranians ground forces in the field, assuming that they’re clear of densely populated areas. Such an attack would have to be larger in scale that the 1981 operation by Israel against Iraq not only on account of the size and sophistication of Iran’s program, but also because of the obvious need to neutralize the major economic threat posed by Iran – their ability to disrupt shipping in the Persian Gulf. It would make sense if, at the same time as the air attack is launched, the US Navy destroyed every single ship in Iran’s Navy along with Iran’s coastal missile batteries and paramilitary forces capable of operating on the water. The ability is there – hard though it might be. What seems to be lacking is the will. For some reason I recall the words a great man who once said that the supreme function of statesmanship is to provide against preventable evils. There is no question that an Iranian nuclear bomb would be a wicked thing – the only question is the scale of the evil that would be wrought by it. If Iran gets a nuclear bomb, millions of people will die: our people. Innocent Israelis, Americans, or Europeans will die under a nuclear bomb if we let Iran have one. Perhaps this day will condemn President Bush if he strikes – especially with atomic arms. But history is not made by the weak-hearted. The future is secured by the action of the bold. I do not wish for history to record that we are the generation who stood by as the Iran acquired nuclear weapons and made its President’s wish for a second Holocaust a reality.
Comments:
Going from the gap between posts, the style and the content, I'm guessing this was written at the rate of roughly a paragraph a week, followed by several days of frenzied masturbation.
I honestly didn't think it was possible for a living organism to function with solid bone in place of a brain. You, sir, are a medical miracle, and I suggest donating your body to science as soon as possible.
Adam, have you ever devised a solution to a problem that didn't involve the wholesale slaughter of as many people as possible?
We? What is this we stuff? Last time I checked Canada doesn't have any nukes.
Geez Adam we wait how long for you to crawl out of your parent's basement to post this tired "Nuke 'em high!" tripe? Be more original in your wingnutty! We can get this crap from LGF or FR. C'mon tell us another Moon President story!
It's probably silly of me to take any of this at all seriously. However, it might be worth noting that Adam, apparently, does not have the first idea about nuclear weapons work.
To illustrate: after the Chernobyl disaster, in Ukraine, people were told to avoid going outside if possible. In Sweden. Get a clue.
Adam, great to have you back posting - and with comments restored, no less!
I am, however, surprised that you caution against nuking heavily populated areas in Iran. I can only hope that you are not proposing a Space Race, Cultural or Diplomatic Victory in our global game of Civ IV! The Persian envoy has consistently lowballed us on our offer to trade Furs for Oil and Gold ... and he has been "Wary" of us since Turn 173! Plus one our Explorer Units has discovered a remnant Babylonian city of 12 population ... despite our having destroyed Hammurabi's hordes back in 634AD! An alliance between the Babylonians and Persians is, quite simply, a risk we cannot afford to take. I am somewhat stunned that you are not onboard with current plans to Nuke-and-Raze every one of their cities to the ground!
Did you say "we"?
Here's a newsflash for you. You are NOT an American. But if you join our military, you can become one if you live. Would you like the number of a recruiter? No? I thought not.
Did you say "we"?
Here's a newsflash for you. You are NOT an American. But if you join our military, you can become one if you live. Would you like the number of a recruiter? No? I thought not.
Gus Adam said he was going to join the U.S. army as soon as he lost some weight.
But his Jos Louis and Dr. Pepper diet didn't work out so good.
I think you need to take a deep breath, take your medication and then have a nice long nap. You're clearly overwrought!
Let me get this strait. Iran is so evil that it will, someday, get nukes and use them in an unprovoked first strike. So we must launch an unprovoked first strike. What does that make us? Keep in mind that Iran doesn’t have nukes and hasn’t attacked us. You just had a bad dream about them doing so. That’s not enough reason to kill millions of people.
Brad R. over at Sadly,No! really takes you to pieces over this pile of shortsighted genocidal lunacy.
Just sayin'.
I almost long for the days when Adam had a couple of supporters to defend him against us... us... well, I suppose we're trolls here. Pissing on his semimonthly lunatic parade is getting too goddamn easy. Call in the cavalry, boyo! Urban Cowboy, where (in New Jersey) are you?!?!
A nuclear Iran is a bloody scary thought. One to which we MUST consider a military response.
The Iranians have been playing the international community for over a decade, secretly attempting to enrich Uranium. They know the UN is a worthless talking show that never has the balls to do anything until its too late to do anything. The Iranians are stringing along the Europeans. This has bought them time. Time in which they have succeeded at enriching Uranium. Diplomacy was merely their tactic to buy time. Only Military action, and the credible threat of Military action can make the Iranian Theocratic Dictatorship back down. Let's be clear. Iran has a history of supporting terrorism. Right now people trained by the Iranians are killing British service-men, people taught how to penetrate the armour-plating of British Tanks. A nuclear Iran will result in a nucleur arms race in the middle east. Many governments that have trained and supported terrorists will get access to Nuclear technology. I work in London, five minutes walkaway from where Islamists set off one of the conventional bombs on 7/7. Across the road from where the bodies, and body pieces were taken. Thankfully the Nuclear technology wasn't available to those suicidal bombers. In years to come, Iran may have put a Nuclear bomb in their successors' hands. So how are we to deal with Iran. If not a military option, what? Holding hands and singing peace songs around the UN building? That'll sway the Iranians! Perhaps the diplomats could try asking really, really, really nicely. That's sure to work, even though it hasn't over the past few years. Or perhaps we could just cross our fingers. And move out of the large cities.
Oh look, Iran's about to ramp up nuclear proliferation to 'Islamic' countries:
From Sky News: http://www.sky.com/skynews/article/0,,30200-13520667,00.html?f=rss Iran is ready to share its nuclear know-how with other countries, its supreme leader has said. Ayatollah Ali Khamenei made the announcement after talks with the visiting Sudanese president, Omar Hassan al-Bashir. Iran is currently in a nuclear standoff with the West, which fears Tehran is secretly developing atomic weapons that could be used by terrorists. Iran insists it only wants nuclear technology for peaceful purposes. "The nuclear strength of the Iranian scientists is an example of several scientific currents in Iran that are going ahead, and the Islamic Republic of Iran is ready to transfer the experience, science and technology of its scientists," state television quoted Mr Khamenei as saying. Iranian lawmaker Kamal Daneshyar, head of parliament's energy committee, said the country may offer training to other like-minded nations. "Iranian nuclear scientists can easily train other Islamic countries in uranium enrichment and nuclear fuel production," he said. The United Nations has demanded that the Tehran halt uranium enrichment, but Iran says it will continue the work. The International Atomic Energy Agency is due to report to the UN Security Council by Friday on whether Iran is complying with UN demands.
"I am, however, surprised that you caution against nuking heavily populated areas in Iran. I can only hope that you are not proposing a Space Race, Cultural or Diplomatic Victory in our global game of Civ IV!"
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No! You do not understand! First Adam must conclude mutual protection pacts with China, India, Turkistan, Greece and Abyssinia, before he can nuke the Persians. Didn't you know that nuclear first use triggers an automatic declaration of war by all neutral parties?! |