The Accidental War
by Brian Beutler, The Media Consortium: Fri., Nov 16, 2007
It’s become fashionable in conservative Washington circles—among commentators with extraordinary access to the Bush administration—to suggest that people concerned about the threat of war with Iran are howling at phantoms. As the New York Times’ David Brooks wrote in a Nov. 6 column, “The Bush administration is not about to bomb Iran (trust me). It’s using diplomacy to build a coalition to balance it, and reverse an ugly tide.”
Washington Post columnist George Will struck a slightly less friendly tone with those who would actually support strikes, but drew the same conclusion, writing on Nov. 11 that “some Washington voices, many of them familiar, are reprising a familiar theme – Iran’s nuclear program is near a fruition that justifies preventive military action. Whether or not these voices should be heeded … they will not be.”
It’s certainly clear that the White House has far less latitude to launch a unilateral, pre-emptive strike than it did in 2003. To put it mildly, few here or abroad are still willing to give President Bush the benefit of the doubt. But even if Brooks and Will are correct about the administration’s strategy, they’re ignoring, purposefully or otherwise, a much larger risk than a planed U.S. attack. There remains the very real threat of a war that erupts even when neither side wants it.
The relevant term of art here is “proximity of forces”—an inflamed constellation of hostile actors that includes the regionally loathed United States military, the Iranian Revolutionary Guard Corps and its elite Quds force, Shiite and Sunni militias in Iraq, al-Qaeda, the PKK in Kurdistan and the Israeli Defense Forces. With such a volatile maelstrom, there are countless opportunities for something to go amiss.
Steve Clemons, who directs the American Strategies program at the nonpartisan New America Foundation, recently wrote an article fleshing out the point. We should worry less about a preplanned attack, he argues, and more about “the kind of scenario David Wurmser [who sits on the vice president’s national security staff] floated, meaning an engineered provocation. An ‘accidental war’ would escalate quickly and ‘end run,’ as Wurmser put it, the president’s diplomatic, intelligence and military decision-making apparatus. It would most likely be triggered by one or both of the two people who would see their political fortunes rise through a new conflict—Cheney and Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad.”
Sabotage, for instance, is a real concern, Clemons argues. “Al-Qaeda-like interests could stage an attack made to look as if Israel was involved, or as if the Iranians did something to U.S. forces. … People talk about Gulf of Tonkin, but it doesn’t actually have to be that dramatic.”
Other possibilities? Renegade elements of the Quds force could kidnap U.S. soldiers. When Iranian forces kidnapped more than a dozen British sailors this spring, the two nations resolved the matter diplomatically. But by way of contrast, Hezbollah’s cross-border seizure of several IDF soldiers triggered a massive, deadly Israeli bombing campaign—one that turned Hezbollah leader Sheik Hassan Nasrallah into a folk hero in the Arab and Muslim worlds.
Paul Pillar, a CIA veteran who retired from a 28-year career in 2005 with the title of national intelligence officer for the Near East and South Asia, adds that such machinations aren’t even needed to spark a broad conflict. He recalled the accidental downing in 1988 of Iran Air commercial flight 655, which resulted in the deaths of all 290 passengers and crew. If something like that happened now, or if cross-border hostilities between the Revolutionary Guard and the Kurdish PKK resulted in the collateral deaths of U.S. soldiers, the fuse might burn too quickly to be stomped out. “With all the saber rattling and rhetoric we’ve had lately,” Pillar frets, “the risk is considerable.”
Iraq, of course, is the likeliest trigger. But even if the precipitating skirmish occurs unintentionally and outside Iran, the fight will no doubt be expanded to Iran’s nuclear facilities. James Dobbins, a RAND Corporation scholar who has been a diplomatic envoy to Afghanistan for Bush and to several military hot spots for the Clinton administration, wrote in an e-mail exchange last week that “if we are going to attack Iran, I expect we would not neglect to go after the nuclear facilities, so even if there was a different flashpoint, that conflict would likely escalate to that level.”
After all, with a Congress that’s been unable to restrain the Bush administration’s use of the military, and the administration’s own stubborn refusal to engage the Iranian regime directly, there are currently no political circuit breakers.
On Wednesday, Rep. John Tierney, D-Mass., convened the third in a series of Iran hearings aimed at rebuilding those missing fail-safes. Tierney’s hearing gamed out the costs and consequences of an Iran conflict, accidental or otherwise, and retired U.S. Air Force Colonel Sam Gardiner offered a grim tally.
Gardiner said that if the objectives of military action were in fact to “punish Iran for its support of terrorism and attacks on U.S. troops in Iraq” and to “set back the Iranian nuclear program three to five years,” any U.S. strike would require an intricate and multi-pronged bombing campaign that, ultimately, wouldn’t be terribly effective anyway. We’d have little success inflicting real damage on the well-shielded Revolutionary Guard, Gardiner argued. And while the campaign could destroy three-to-five years worth of nuclear edifices and badly damage Iran’s conventional counter-strike capacity, the net effect could actually be to push Iran to an accelerate its nuclear program.
It would also set up a wide-range of more immediate threats, Gardiner argued. Depending upon how fiercely Tehran chose to retaliate, the U.S. could face any or all of the following: mob attacks against U.S. embassies and business interests across the world; sabotage of oil pipelines in Iraq; Iranian force escalation in Iraq; boat attacks against American naval vessels; and increasing instability and violence in and around Israel.
Worse still, Gardiner suggested, a commander in chief like George Bush would see few responses short of launching a still broader conflict aimed at Iranian regime change. Gardiner did not estimate the number—surely extraordinary—of lives that would be lost in the various phases of such a nightmare, but suffice it to say, he didn’t think it was worth the price.
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sigh...
keep on signing the same tired old song...
Accidental War or Accidental Impeachment?
Ken Driessen
at_lib@hotmail.com
Hi Fortunate Son, One? Just wondering if the sigh...ing is about "the accidental war" or "follow the money"? Is your handle to do with the CCR song? Anyway,
Gooday Eh...
K
For both,
The sigh is for both really... I am tired of reading the same old stuff being repeated so many times by the members of this community. The "handle" is nothing to do with CCR, I have heard the song, and I am not a fortunate one in that sense, or any other, as far as I can see.
same impeachment different day
Ken Driessen
at_lib@hotmail.com
Ya' fortune I am repeating a message and I have added to it See:...USC 435, 605...
Also Kucinich has introduced a bill to impeach Cheney. It sounds like you have lived in an intentional community. How was or is that? I've read quite a few of your posts. Some I agree with, others I don't probably the same as you would judge mine. I define myself as a liberal or a progressive. Some of my friends call me a communist but I am more of a socialist. I'm also what some call a free thinker whrn it comes to religious persuasions. More specifically I'm what I call a spiritual evolutionist and what some call a scientific naturalist. Yes...I doubt these definitions of myself will change very much as long as I'm sucking air on this planet. How 'bout you? What would you say if I guessed you are a liberatarian?
PL&H
K
§225 continuing a financial crimes enterprise: count one: Allowing and being part of a war profiteering scheme. The congress put limits on CEO and defense contractor pay and benefits to keep individuals from profiting from war, because the money used to protect our nation comes from every individual tax payer. See: § 2324. Allowable costs under defense contracts, FY 2001 -- $374,228, This determination is required to be made pursuant to Section 808 of Pub. L. 105-85. The average pay for defense CEOs was $11.6 million in 2004. See: 10 USC Sec. 2324, 41 U.S.C. 435, 41 U.S.C. 605
well,
I am not a libertarian because I'm too realistic to believe in free will or liberty. I do not understand words like liberal, progressive, communist, socialist or terms like spiritual evolutionist or scientific naturalist; I have figured out the reason that defines these words and provides opportunity for their usage, and it is all in the head.
follow, lead or?
Ken Driessen
at_lib@hotmail.com
Common Fortune 500...
I'm boring, ignorant and I repeat myself. We need a leader around here with wisdom strength and a new direction. Please step up and tell us what we aught to say and do. "It is all just in the head" anyway...
PL&H
K
Follow, lead or...
go your own way; You may find the way without effort to be the way allowing tomorrow to be today. Without reason for being, just be: without reason for freedom, be free. Allowing your mind to define who and how you are will limit your existence to a perception of conflict and harmony with this mindful notion. However simple this notion appears, it is born of imagination after realization and is therefore not real. Seeing the world as the reflection of creative potential, and not the creation itself will allow the mind to constantly follow without acknowledgment of presence or consequence because it is convinced there is something "other" or "else" to watch for, listen for, say or do, or somebody to follow, and must make the allowance that life is not wasted in this way of waiting in vain.
There are no words to say exactly what i mean (the way is only a simple pneumonic), though some have used words like flow or freedom, the experience of life is not by virtue of these observations, it is the other way around, and all of this so-called boredom, ignorance, repetition, strength, wisdom, direction, etc., etc., begins with a feeling.
You feel it my brother. Everything we do has never been done before; Why wait for a script when you have voice? Why wait for a guide when you have sense? Why wait for direction when this way has never been traveled before?
follow, lead or join?
Ken Driessen
at_lib@hotmail.com
Okay funt1:
I gave your last post a point. It is true that feeling does more often result in action then pure rationale alone. I like the thought that we have never been here before. Although I tried to analyze your writing and compare it to some religio-philosophical school, the writing does seem to be quite original. I do often feel that as a vessel of perception is the experience as a mirror?
Do you think it is noble or rediculous to try and join as a group; to abore the actions the Bush regime has power brokered into a mean greedy violent war profit making reality and bring them to impeachement hearings...or not?
Are you with him on torture of prisoners, indiscriminate carpet bombings of civilians, arming factions of the people of Iraq against one another, giving a president general (dictator by coup)in Pakistan 11 billion dollars worth of money and weapons to fight Terra, let Bin Laden go, pet goat reading while US people die, criminal as president; or are you against him?
Just asking....
PL&H
k
PS: too lazy to spell check
okay,
well, I see that society allowed for Bush to come into his position, and I see how society will have to work together in order to remove him (and his partners) from power and rectify the inequities they have caused.
I am ready as a citizen to do what ever I am called on to do by the collective will of all citizens, as a means to an end in the interest of the greater good.
$ Follow the MONEY $
Ken Driessen
at_lib@hotmail.com
In my opinion it is not rational nor productive to entertain the thought that the Iraq war was an accident or even a mistake. Bush Cheney Rummy and their blood money croud knew exactly what they were doing. They are guilty of war profiteering and profiting off crimes against humanity. To not cite facts and communicate the rationale that Bush, Cheney and many other war monger chicken hawk bad spawn are running our county down the road to hell can only be accomplices to their dasterdly executed crimes.
§225 continuing a financial crimes enterprise: count one: Allowing and being part of a war profiteering scheme. The congress put limits on CEO and defense contractor pay and benefits to keep individuals from profiting from war, because the money used to protect our nation comes from every individual tax payer. See: § 2324. Allowable costs under defense contracts, FY 2001 -- $374,228, This determination is required to be made pursuant to Section 808 of Pub. L. 105-85. The average pay for defense CEOs was $11.6 million in 2004. See: 10 USC Sec. 2324, 41 U.S.C. 435, 41 U.S.C. 605
http://community.freespeech.org/daddy_war_bucks
Daddy Warbucks
How much money are you making on this war daddy?
How much money are you making on this Iraq war?
I read the pet goat on 9/11 like you told me to,
I let your CIA Carlyle buddy Bin Landens go
I okayed extraordinary rendition and Guantanamo Bay,
‘Cause I thought you might like me to do that for the CIA
I robbed 400 billion from the US treasury,
to subsidize your buddies in the oil and weapons industry
We sold the US people the cluster bombs and depleted uranium
that the good old boys made
To send Saddam and 600 thousand Iraqis to an early grave…Harmonica…
They say Vance Coffman of Lockheed martin made 150 million, John Walsh of GE made 122million, L.B. Raymond of Exon made 114 million, Michel Dell made 500 million, Davis Cote of TRW made 44 million, George David of United Technologies made 280 million, DHB David Brooks made 250 million in one year including wages, bonuses, benefits and stock options…Now that is more than a billion dollars between seven people…by the way, all these chicken hawks donated to my election campaigns…ha ha ha…harp…
How much money are you making on this war daddy?
How much money are you making on this Iraq war?
Well after we couldn’t find any of those weapons of mass destruction your good old boys sold to Rumsfeld’s buddy Saddam before your Iraq war, I had to tell the American people we were in Iraq to give Iraqis freedom and democracy. All of the sudden they all turned out to be terrorists and there is a civil war going on over there now.
3154 proud US soldiers are dead so let’s cut back on veteran’s benefits, none of our sons and daughter’s are gona receive any veteran’s benefits. Don’t worry daddy, I’ll keep this war going for ya. We’ll get Syria and Iran involved too. Gotta keep that blood money coming in now, us merchants of death and war profiteers are here to stay, we’ll make those working class Americans pay and pay and pay and pay…harp…
How much money are you making on this war daddy?
How much money are you making on this Iraq war?