Return
of the War Party?
by
Patrick
J. Buchanan
Recently
by Patrick J. Buchanan: The
Equality Racket
Is a vote for
the Republican Party in 2012 a vote for war?
Is a vote for
Mitt Romney or Newt Gingrich a vote for yet another unfunded war
of choice, this time with a nation, Iran, three times as large and
populous as Iraq?
Mitt says that
if elected he will move carriers into the Persian Gulf and "prepare
for war." Newt is even more hawkish. America should continue "taking
out" Iran's nuclear scientists – i.e., assassinating them – but
military action will probably be needed.
Newt is talking
up uber-hawk John Bolton for secretary of state.
Rick Santorum
has already called for U.S.-Israeli strikes: "Either we're going
to stop them ... or take the long term consequences of having a
nuclear Iran trying to wipe out the state of Israel."
But if Iran
represents, as Bibi Netanyahu is forever reminding us, an "existential
threat," why does not Israel itself, with hundreds of nuclear weapons,
deal with it?
Bibi's inaction
speaks louder than Bibi's words.
He wants the
Americans to do it.
For the retired
head of Mossad, Meir Dagan, calls attacking Iran "the stupidest
thing I have ever heard of." He means stupid for Israel.
Why? Because
an Israeli attack would be costly in planes and pilots, and only
set back Iran's nuclear program. And such a pre-emptive strike would
unify Iranians behind the regime.
Moreover, Israel
would be inviting Tehran's ally Hezbollah to rain down rockets on
Israel, igniting another of the bloody Lebanon wars that Israel
was desperate to end the last time.
As for the
United States, the only way we could eliminate Iran's nuclear program
would be days of air and missile strikes.
Iran could
retaliate by cutting off oil exports and mining the Strait of Hormuz,
tripling the world price of oil, and hurling the European Union
and United States into recession.
Iran could
also turn Hezbollah loose on Americans in Lebanon and urge Shias
to attack U.S. troops, diplomats and civilians in Bahrain, Iraq
and Afghanistan, and here in the United States.
No one knows
how this would end. A U.S.-Iran war could force us to march to Tehran
to remove the Islamic regime and scour that huge country to ensure
that it was shorn of weapons of mass destruction – for an Islamic
regime that survived a U.S. war would be hellbent on acquiring the
bomb to pay us back. Yet, we lack a large enough army to occupy
Iran.
And why should
thousands more Americans have to die or come home to be fitted for
metal limbs so Israel can remain sole proprietor of a nuclear weapon
from Morocco to Afghanistan?
And where is
the hard evidence Iran is acquiring nukes?
The U.S. intelligence
community declared in December 2007, with "high confidence," that
Iran was no longer seeking nuclear weapons. It has never rescinded
that declaration.
And there is
no conclusive evidence in that media-hyped report last week from
the International Atomic Energy Agency that Iran is for certain
building nuclear weapons. Indeed, that report was exposed as the
work of incompetents within hours.
Relying on
intelligence agencies, the IAEA said a top Russian nuclear weapons
scientist had been instructing Iranians for years. The scientist
turns out to be V.I. Danilenko, who has no expertise in nuclear
weapons, but is a specialist in using conventional explosives to
produce nanodiamonds for the manufacture of lubricants and rubber.
Are we being
lied and stampeded into yet another war by the same propagandists
who gave us the yellow-cake-from-Niger forgeries?
Bibi calls
Mahmoud Ahmadinejad another Hitler and says we are all in 1939 again.
But is this credible?
True, Ahmadinejad
hosted a Holocaust conference featuring David Duke and said Israel
should be wiped off the map, but he does not control Iran's military,
has lost favor with the ayatollah, and has been threatened with
impeachment. Ahmadinejad is a lame duck with less than two years
left in his term. Is mighty Israel afraid of this man?
Told that the
IAEA said Iran was actively pursuing nuclear weapons, Ahmadinejad
laughed: "The Iranian nation is wise. It won't build two bombs against
20,000 (nuclear) bombs you (Americans) have."
Does he not
have a point? How would an Iranian bomb secure Iran, when Israel's
nuclear arsenal would be put on a hair trigger, and Turkey, Saudi
Arabia and Egypt would then rush to get their own bombs?
In
that South Carolina debate, Ron Paul, the one person there proven
right on Iraq, was given less than 90 seconds to speak.
Under the Constitution,
said Paul, no president has the right to launch an unprovoked attack
on Iran without congressional authorization.
Before America
goes to war with Iran, let Congress, whose members are forever expressing
their love for the Constitution, follow it, and vote on war with
Iran. And before we go to the polls in 2012, let's find out if the
GOP is becoming again the same old War Party that bankrupted the
nation.
November
15, 2011
Patrick
J. Buchanan [send
him mail] is co-founder and editor of The
American Conservative. He is also the author of seven books,
including Where
the Right Went Wrong, and Churchill,
Hitler, and the Unnecessary War. His latest book is Suicide
of a Superpower: Will America Survive to 2025? See his
website.
Copyright
© 2011 Creators Syndicate
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