|
by Jerome Grossman
The
United States of America and the State of Israel are the closest of
allies, sharing intelligence, weapons, military research, among many
other joint ventures. They support each other's policies at the United
Nations and other international venues with only rare exceptions.
Policy
on Iran may be one of those rare exceptions. Responsible Israeli
officials have made their positions clear: Iran must not be allowed to
develop nuclear weapons and Iranian protestations that their
development of nuclear power is only for civilian electricity is not to
be believed. Furthermore, that Iranian President Ahmedinejad's threat
"to wipe Israel off the map" represents Iranian policy.
Some
Israeli leaders want to launch a preemptive attack. Israeli official
Shaul Mofaz said recently, "If Iran continues its program to develop
nuclear weapons, we will attack it."
In a New York Times op-ed,
July 18, 2008, Benny Morris, an influential moderate and former Israeli
official warned, "Israel will almost surely attack Iran's nuclear sites
in the next four to seven months."
Recently, the Israeli Air
Force conducted a massive war game over the Mediterranean that was
interpreted as a demonstration of Israeli ability to mount a serious
and effective attack on Iranian installations.
However, US
policy now seems to be headed in another direction. In the past,
American policy placed Iran in the Axis of Evil, condemned it as a
terrorist regime, passed a resolution in the U.S. Senate demanding
regime change, appropriated money for Iranian dissidents, and refused
to establish any diplomatic contact with the Iranian government.
Now,
US Defense Secretary Robert Gates says, “We are not planning for a war
with Iran,” Admiral Mike Mullen Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff
supports him. Accusations of Iranian interference in Iraq have
diminished. Most importantly, the Bush administration is planning to
establish an American diplomatic presence in Iran for the first time
since Iranian extremists seized American hostages and occupied the US
Embassy in Tehran in 1979.
Is the US sending a message to Israel
not to attack Iran? Is the US sending a message to Middle East nations
disassociating itself from an Israeli attack? Has US intelligence
decided that the Israelis are serious in their threats?
The
effects of an Israeli - Iran war would be world wide. The Muslim world
would explode and attack western interests everywhere they could.
Rulers of Muslim nations friendly to the west and clients of the US
might be overthrown. The price of oil would probably reach $400 per
barrel assuming that any oil at all would be shipped to the west.
Worldwide energy shortages and commercial disruption would likely cause
a financial collapse.
The stakes could not be higher,
considering that Barack Obama told the US Israeli lobby AIPAC on June
4, "My goal will be to eliminate the threat (to Israel) posed by Iran.
I will do everything in my power to prevent Iran from obtaining a
nuclear weapon. (Pause) Everything. The pause is scary.

Recommend this article... |