Make
Congress Vote on War on Iran
by
Patrick
J. Buchanan
Recently
by Patrick J. Buchanan: And
Was the Mission Accomplished?
Returning from
Afghanistan, Iraq and Libya, Defense Secretary Leon Panetta dropped
some jolting news.
Asked by CBS's
Scott Pelley if Iran could have a nuclear weapon in 2012, Panetta
replied: "It would probably be about a year before they could do
it. Perhaps a little less. But one proviso, Scott, is that if they
have a hidden facility somewhere in Iran that may be enriching fuel."
Panetta was
saying the mullahs are a year or less away from an atom bomb, and
if they have a hidden site for enriching uranium to weapons grade,
they may be even closer.
"That is a
red line for us," Panetta added. "If we get intelligence they are
proceeding with developing a nuclear weapon, then we will take whatever
steps necessary to deal with it."
Panetta is
raising the specter of pre-emptive war.
When Pelley's
report hit, however, the Pentagon immediately began to walk the
cat back.
"The secretary
was clear that we have no indication that the Iranians have made
a decision to develop a nuclear weapon," said Pentagon press secretary
George Little. "He (Panetta) didn't say that Iran would, in fact,
have a nuclear weapon in 2012."
Little added
that U.N. inspectors remain in Iran and have access to its uranium
stockpile, and should Iran attempt a "breakout" by diverting low-enriched
uranium to a hidden facility to convert it to weapons grade, U.N.
inspectors would instantly detect the diversion.
"We would retain
sufficient time under any such scenario to take appropriate action,"
said Little.
In short, the
Pentagon does not believe Iran has made a decision to build atomic
weapons, and the department is confident that, should it do so,
the United States would have ample warning.
Little's definitive
statement, "We have no indication that the Iranians have made a
decision to develop a nuclear weapon," coincides with the consensus
of all 16 U.S. intelligence agencies, including the CIA and Defense
Intelligence Agency, in December 2007.
In that report,
the entire U.S. intelligence community stated unanimously, with
"high confidence," that Iran had given up its drive for an atom
bomb back in 2003.
Yet the Pentagon's
categorical statement this week, and the 2007 declaration by the
entire U.S. intelligence community that Iran abandoned its bomb
program in 2003, raises a question.
How could the
International Atomic Energy Agency conclude, as it did last month,
that Iran "has carried out activities relevant to the development
of a nuclear device"? Did the IAEA discover clandestine bomb-building
that our own intelligence community failed to detect?
If Iran is
doing experiments consistent with building an atomic bomb, as the
IAEA reports, why does the U.S. intelligence community not revise
and update its 2007 report? Why are CIA and DIA silent?
This is no
minor matter. For not only have Panetta and Barack Obama talked
about "all options on the table" regarding Iran – i.e., we do not
rule out military strikes – so, too, have the GOP presidential candidates,
save Rep. Ron Paul.
Sen. Rick Santorum
says we are already at war:
"Iran is a
country that has been at war with us since 1979. ... The Iranians
are the existential threat to Israel."
In fierce rebuttal
to Paul's suggestion that the real threat to America is being stampeded
into a new war, Rep. Michele Bachmann retorted:
"We know beyond
the shadow of a doubt that Iran will take a nuclear weapon, they
will use it to wipe our ally Israel off the face of the map. ...
The Iran Constitution ... states unequivocally that their mission
is to extend jihad across the world and eventually to set up a worldwide
caliphate."
But is all
this consistent or credible?
If Iran is
an "existential threat" to Israel and intends to use a bomb it is
now building on Israel, why have the Israelis, with 200 to 300 nuclear
weapons, who have bombed both Iraqi and Syrian nuclear sites, not
removed that "existential threat" themselves?
Second, assume
the Bachmann horror scenario that we know "beyond the shadow of
a doubt" that Iran, as soon as it gets the bomb it is building,
will use it on Israel. If that is so, who does Bachmann think will
then be establishing that caliphate in an Iran that an Israeli retaliatory
strike will have reduced to atomic ash?
Lest
we forget, the Israelis are a "Never Again!" nation.
And there is
another serious matter here. While Obamaites, neocons and Republicans
are talking about "all options on the table," the war option, if
we still have a Constitution, cannot be used against a nation that
has not attacked us, unless Congress, which alone has the power
to declare war, has authorized military action.
When did Congress
tell Obama or any president he can bomb Iran as soon as he concludes
Iran is building a nuclear weapon? If, after leaving Iraq, we are
going into yet another war of choice, let the Congress debate and
vote on this new war with Iran.
December
24, 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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