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Old 05-11-2006, 01:31 PM   #1
UtahDan
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Default Why there is nothing that can be done to stop Iran.

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn...051002072.html

Interesting editorial by the Washington Post this morning. You will have to read it or these comments will make no sense.

I just wanted to wonder outloud whether (and not rhetorically, I'm sincerely interested to know) progessives see any scenario where the projection of force would be appropriate.

Here we have the Washington Post editorial board correctly observing that Iran has issued an Al Queda like manifesto and that "the West" (whatever the hell that is) will have to use not just carrots but sticks and that Tehran must be disabused of the notion that there is no cost in defying the west. Though the Post doesn't say it, many believe that we need to get China and Russia on board with sanctions (which by the way is an UTTER impossibility) and that sanctions are the only way to stop the nuclear program. It is also rightly observed that the world will not support military intervention and that we are too thinly spread to go that alone.

So basically, at this point, there is absolutely nothing that can be done to stop a government who issues Al Queda like manifestos from acquiring nuclear arms. Does this trouble anyone else?

The way we got there is that (1) no one else in the world seems to believe in the use of force and (2) half of Americans and 99% of the press don't either.

So what do you do if you're the administration? I don't know that we can do anything. Here is what I do believe will occur: Iran will acquire nukes and will either use them or intimidate the region with them and someone down the road will accuse GWB of having allowed it to come to pass on his watch.

So I ask: is there ever at time when the projection of force is appropriate? Is it morally wrong? Is it just too difficult? Tehran counts on the answers being no, yes and yes. It knows that no one is left who has the will to stop them.

I really think the problem is that it has been so long since the world has faced an actual threat that no one really believes one is forming. Many people here wanted to know just what exactly our stake in WWII was. Even after we were attacked by Japan, many wondered why we deployed most of our armed forces to Europe. What would it have really mattered in the Nazi's controlled Europe? Or Japan the South Pacific? What imminent threat was there to the mainland? Its not like either of them could have ever invaded us. And why should we have cared is Russia and communism controlled Europe or Asia? That is a long ways from here. Who cares if Tehran gets nukes? We are half a world away. This thought process is bolstered by the fact that Iraq turned out not to have the WMD that everyone believed they did (or at least it has neve been found).

The isolationist impulse is strong and it dominates world politics outside the US (and will dominate soon here as well I believe). The only thing that tempers it, ultimately, are the acts of evil people who step into the void while we are all having an afternoon nap and feeling like these things aren't really our problem.

I don't know the solution. I don't think there is one at this point. I think that ultimately we are going to be withdrawing more and more because US and world sentiment will dictate it and eventually we will be startled from our slumber when one of these terrorist groups or rogue states does what they have been saying they will do and destroy a major western (or Israeli) city. Then we will have hearing and commissions to figure out how it occurred, to assign blame and to ask ourselves how GWB allowed it. This may be years down the road, but I think it is where we inevitably go. It is where we were in the 1930s and part of the 40s.

I just hope that when that day comes that we won't be so completely crippled by the collapse of world markets that we are unable to act.

Maybe I'm being dramatic. Maybe these are just my worst fears. I sure hope I am wrong.
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Last edited by UtahDan; 05-11-2006 at 01:44 PM. Reason: To clarify the jist of the post.
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