'The
Most Dangerous Man in the World'?
by
Patrick
J. Buchanan
Recently
by Patrick J. Buchanan: The
Natural Map of the Middle East
U.S. newspapers
this fall will devote countless column inches and network TV will
set aside endless hours to revisiting the most perilous month in
the history of the republic, if not of the world.
Nikita Khrushchev's
decision to secretly install nuclear-armed intermediate-range ballistic
missiles in Cuba began to form in his mind sometime earlier, perhaps
in April of 1961.
Then it was
that the new young U.S. President John F. Kennedy put a brigade
of Cubans ashore to become the vanguard of a guerrilla army to overthrow
Fidel Castro's regime.
The Bay of
Pigs became a metaphor for feckless folly and failure.
Khrushchev
had ordered an army of tanks into Budapest to crush the Hungarian
Revolution in 1956 and watched, astonished, as a U.S. president
recoiled at using his power to expunge a Soviet base camp 90 miles
from America's shores.
In June, Kennedy
met Khrushchev in Vienna and was orally mauled. In August, Khrushchev
tested Kennedy again, building a wall to sever East Berlin and seal
off the Soviet sector. Berliners seeking to escape were shot.
Kennedy ordered
a one-year call-up of the reserves.
Moscow then
broke a moratorium on atmospheric testing of nuclear weapons, exploding
a 57-megaton monster bomb in the Arctic.
By mid-October
1962, Soviet missiles were in Cuba. Their 1,500-mile target radius
put Washington, D.C., in range.
The Air Force
chief of staff was Gen. Curtis LeMay, former head of Strategic Air
Command, who boasted of his B-29 fleet in the Pacific war, "We torched
and boiled and baked to death more people in Tokyo that night of
March 9-10 than went up in vapor in Hiroshima and Nagasaki combined."
LeMay wanted
to bomb and invade Cuba, even after Khrushchev pulled his rockets
out. When Mao Zedong denounced Khrushchev's climb-down, calling
America "a paper tiger," Khrushchev is said to have reminded Mao,
"This paper tiger has nuclear teeth."
Mao reportedly
indicated a willingness to lose 300 million Chinese in a nuclear
war if that war would finish off the United States.
These were
grave times and dangerous men. What prompts this recitation of what
our world was like 50 years ago is the latest cover story in The
Weekly Standard, "The Most Dangerous Man in the World."
The cover photo
is of Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, Iran's "man with a mission," who is
said to be seeking an atom bomb and who "loathes the United States
more than Stalin, Mao, Tojo and Hitler combined." If this "supreme
leader gets nuclear weapons, it will be a miracle if he does not
stupidly lead his country into war."
Thrust of the
5,000-word article: Be afraid. Be very afraid of this man.
But what exactly
are we to fear? And what is the imperative for war now on Iran,
for which this piece beats the drum?
Khamenei has
declared that nuclear weapons are immoral and Iran will never acquire
them. Is Islamic Iran's supreme religious leader lying through his
teeth? Where is the proof? Where is the hard evidence?
Sixteen U.S.
intelligence agencies stated unanimously in 2007 and reaffirmed
in 2011 their conviction that Iran does not have an active nuclear
weapons program. In the Standard piece, John Sawyer, head
of the British Intelligence Service MI-6, "flatly stated in July
that we have two years left before the Iranians can build a weapon."
And if we should
fear this most dangerous man in the world, why do not the Iraqis,
Turks, Azerbaijanis and Pakistanis, his neighbors, seem to fear
him? The Paks, with scores of nukes, seem less nervous about Iran
than democratic India, with whom they have fought several wars.
Before now
it has been Iran's President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad who was the incarnation
of Hitler. But Ahmadinejad's eight years in office are up next summer,
and he is reportedly going back to teaching.
For all his
bellicosity, how many wars did Ahmadinejad fight?
When was the
last time Iran started any war?
On Al-Quds
Day, Wednesday, an annual event since the 1979 revolution, Khamenei
reportedly said he was confidant "the fake Zionist (regime) will
disappear from the landscape of geography."
Yes, and Nikita
Khrushchev said, "We will bury you," and, "Your grandchildren will
live under communism." And we buried him, and his grandchildren
saw the end to communism.
The
author of the "Most Dangerous Man," Reuel Marc Gerecht, says that
should Israel attack Iran, Iranians "will probably take their revenge
through terrorism" or opt for "playing dead and railing against
Israel in the court of world opinion."
Would Adolf
Hitler or Hideki Tojo, pre-emptively attacked, respond with acts
of reprisal untraceable to them, or denunciations of their attacker
in the "court of world opinion," or by playing possum?
Our fathers
crushed fascism in four years and outlasted for half a century the
evil empires of Stalin and Mao that had murdered millions. And we
should be fearful of an ayatollah?
What happened
to the America we grew up in, the America of Truman, Ike, JFK and
Reagan?
August
17, 2012
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
© 2012 Creators Syndicate
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