Last Stand
By Seymour M. Hersh
The New Yorker
10 July 2006 Issue
http://www.truthout.org/docs_2006/070506Z.shtml
The military's problem with the President's Iran policy.
On May 31st, Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice announced what appeared to
be a major change in U.S. foreign policy. The Bush Administration, she said,
would be willing to join Russia, China, and its European allies in direct
talks with Iran about its nuclear program. There was a condition, however:
the negotiations would not begin until, as the President put it in a June
19th speech at the U.S. Merchant Marine Academy, "the Iranian regime fully
and verifiably suspends its uranium enrichment and reprocessing activities."
Iran, which has insisted on its right to enrich uranium, was being asked to
concede the main point of the negotiations before they started. The question
was whether the Administration expected the Iranians to agree, or was laying
the diplomatic groundwork for future military action. In his speech, Bush
also talked about "freedom for the Iranian people," and he added, "Iran's
leaders have a clear choice." There was an unspoken threat: the U.S.
Strategic Command, supported by the Air Force, has been drawing up plans, at
the President's direction, for a major bombing campaign in Iran.
Inside the Pentagon, senior commanders have increasingly challenged the
President's plans, according to active-duty and retired officers and
officials. The generals and admirals have told the Administration that the
bombing campaign will probably not succeed in destroying Iran's nuclear
program. They have also warned that an attack could lead to serious
economic, political, and military consequences for the United States.
A crucial issue in the military's dissent, the officers said, is the fact
that American and European intelligence agencies have not found specific
evidence of clandestine activities or hidden facilities; the war planners
are not sure what to hit. "The target array in Iran is huge, but it's
amorphous," a high-ranking general told me. "The question we face is, When
does innocent infrastructure evolve into something nefarious?" The
high-ranking general added that the military's experience in Iraq, where
intelligence on weapons of mass destruction was deeply flawed, has affected
its approach to Iran. "We built this big monster with Iraq, and there was
nothing there. This is son of Iraq," he said.
"There is a war about the war going on inside the building," a Pentagon
consultant said. "If we go, we have to find something."
In President Bush's June speech, he accused Iran of pursuing a secret
weapons program along with its civilian nuclear-research program (which it
is allowed, with limits, under the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty). The
senior officers in the Pentagon do not dispute the President's contention
that Iran intends to eventually build a bomb, but they are frustrated by the
intelligence gaps. A former senior intelligence official told me that people
in the Pentagon were asking, "What's the evidence? We've got a million
tentacles out there, overt and covert, and these guys" - the Iranians -
"have been working on this for eighteen years, and we have nothing? We're
coming up with jack shit."
A senior military official told me, "Even if we knew where the Iranian
enriched uranium was - and we don't - we don't know where world opinion
would stand. The issue is whether it's a clear and present danger. If you're
a military planner, you try to weigh options. What is the capability of the
Iranian response, and the likelihood of a punitive response - like cutting
off oil shipments? What would that cost us?" Secretary of Defense Donald
Rumsfeld and his senior aides "really think they can do this on the cheap,
and they underestimate the capability of the adversary," he said.
In 1986, Congress authorized the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff to
act as the "principal military adviser" to the President. In this case, I
was told, the current chairman, Marine General Peter Pace, has gone further
in his advice to the White House by addressing the consequences of an attack
on Iran. "Here's the military telling the President what he can't do
politically" - raising concerns about rising oil prices, for example - the
former senior intelligence official said. "The J.C.S. chairman going to the
President with an economic argument - what's going on here?" (General Pace
and the White House declined to comment. The Defense Department responded to
a detailed request for comment by saying that the Administration was
"working diligently" on a diplomatic solution and that it could not comment
on classified matters.)
A retired four-star general, who ran a major command, said, "The system is
starting to sense the end of the road, and they don't want to be condemned
by history. They want to be able to say, 'We stood up.' "
The military leadership is also raising tactical arguments against the
proposal for bombing Iran, many of which are related to the consequences for
Iraq. According to retired Army Major General William Nash, who was
commanding general of the First Armored Division, served in Iraq and Bosnia,
and worked for the United Nations in Kosovo, attacking Iran would heighten
the risks to American and coalition forces inside Iraq. "What if one hundred
thousand Iranian volunteers came across the border?" Nash asked. "If we bomb
Iran, they cannot retaliate militarily by air - only on the ground or by
sea, and only in Iraq or the Gulf. A military planner cannot discount that
possibility, and he cannot make an ideological assumption that the Iranians
wouldn't do it. We're not talking about victory or defeat - only about what
damage Iran could do to our interests." Nash, now a senior fellow at the
Council on Foreign Relations, said, "Their first possible response would be
to send forces into Iraq. And, since the Iraqi Army has limited capacity, it
means that the coalition forces would have to engage them."
The Americans serving as advisers to the Iraqi police and military may be at
special risk, Nash added, since an American bombing "would be seen not only
as an attack on Shiites but as an attack on all Muslims. Throughout the
Middle East, it would likely be seen as another example of American
imperialism. It would probably cause the war to spread."
In contrast, some conservatives are arguing that America's position in Iraq
would improve if Iran chose to retaliate there, according to a government
consultant with close ties to the Pentagon's civilian leaders, because
Iranian interference would divide the Shiites into pro- and anti-Iranian
camps, and unify the Kurds and the Sunnis. The Iran hawks in the White House
and the State Department, including Elliott Abrams and Michael Doran, both
of whom are National Security Council advisers on the Middle East, also have
an answer for those who believe that the bombing of Iran would put American
soldiers in Iraq at risk, the consultant said. He described the
counterargument this way: "Yes, there will be Americans under attack, but
they are under attack now."
Iran's geography would also complicate an air war. The senior military
official said that, when it came to air strikes, "this is not Iraq," which
is fairly flat, except in the northeast. "Much of Iran is akin to
Afghanistan in terms of topography and flight mapping - a pretty tough
target," the military official said. Over rugged terrain, planes have to
come in closer, and "Iran has a lot of mature air-defense systems and
networks," he said. "Global operations are always risky, and if we go down
that road we have to be prepared to follow up with ground troops."
The U.S. Navy has a separate set of concerns. Iran has more than seven
hundred undeclared dock and port facilities along its Persian Gulf coast.
The small ports, known as "invisible piers," were constructed two decades
ago by Iran's Revolutionary Guards to accommodate small private boats used
for smuggling. (The Guards relied on smuggling to finance their activities
and enrich themselves.) The ports, an Iran expert who advises the U.S.
government told me, provide "the infrastructure to enable the Guards to go
after American aircraft carriers with suicide water bombers" - small vessels
loaded with high explosives. He said that the Iranians have conducted
exercises in the Strait of Hormuz, the narrow channel linking the Persian
Gulf to the Arabian Sea and then on to the Indian Ocean. The strait is
regularly traversed by oil tankers, in which a thousand small Iranian boats
simulated attacks on American ships. "That would be the hardest problem we'd
face in the water: a thousand small targets weaving in and out among our
ships."
America's allies in the Gulf also believe that an attack on Iran would
endanger them, and many American military planners agree. "Iran can do a lot
of things - all asymmetrical," a Pentagon adviser on counter-insurgency told
me. "They have agents all over the Gulf, and the ability to strike at will."
In May, according to a well-informed oil-industry expert, the Emir of Qatar
made a private visit to Tehran to discuss security in the Gulf after the
Iraq war. He sought some words of non-aggression from the Iranian
leadership. Instead, the Iranians suggested that Qatar, which is the site of
the regional headquarters of the U.S. Central Command, would be its first
target in the event of an American attack. Qatar is a leading exporter of
gas and currently operates several major offshore oil platforms, all of
which would be extremely vulnerable. (Nasser bin Hamad M. al-Khalifa,
Qatar's ambassador to Washington, denied that any threats were issued during
the Emir's meetings in Tehran. He told me that it was "a very nice visit.")
A retired American diplomat, who has experience in the Gulf, confirmed that
the Qatari government is "very scared of what America will do" in Iran, and
"scared to death" about what Iran would do in response. Iran's message to
the oil-producing Gulf states, the retired diplomat said, has been that it
will respond, and "you are on the wrong side of history."
In late April, the military leadership, headed by General Pace, achieved a
major victory when the White House dropped its insistence that the plan for
a bombing campaign include the possible use of a nuclear device to destroy
Iran's uranium-enrichment plant at Natanz, nearly two hundred miles south of
Tehran. The huge complex includes large underground facilities built into
seventy-five-foot-deep holes in the ground and designed to hold as many as
fifty thousand centrifuges. "Bush and Cheney were dead serious about the
nuclear planning," the former senior intelligence official told me. "And
Pace stood up to them. Then the world came back: 'O.K., the nuclear option
is politically unacceptable.' " At the time, a number of retired officers,
including two Army major generals who served in Iraq, Paul Eaton and Charles
Swannack, Jr., had begun speaking out against the Administration's handling
of the Iraq war. This period is known to many in the Pentagon as "the April
Revolution."
"An event like this doesn't get papered over very quickly," the former
official added. "The bad feelings over the nuclear option are still felt.
The civilian hierarchy feels extraordinarily betrayed by the brass, and the
brass feel they were tricked into it" - the nuclear planning - "by being
asked to provide all options in the planning papers."
Sam Gardiner, a military analyst who taught at the National War College
before retiring from the Air Force as a colonel, said that Rumsfeld's
second-guessing and micromanagement were a fundamental problem. "Plans are
more and more being directed and run by civilians from the Office of the
Secretary of Defense," Gardiner said. "It causes a lot of tensions. I'm
hearing that the military is increasingly upset about not being taken
seriously by Rumsfeld and his staff."
Gardiner went on, "The consequence is that, for Iran and other missions,
Rumsfeld will be pushed more and more in the direction of special
operations, where he has direct authority and does not have to put up with
the objections of the Chiefs." Since taking office in 2001, Rumsfeld has
been engaged in a running dispute with many senior commanders over his plans
to transform the military, and his belief that future wars will be fought,
and won, with airpower and Special Forces. That combination worked, at
first, in Afghanistan, but the growing stalemate there, and in Iraq, has
created a rift, especially inside the Army. The senior military official
said, "The policymakers are in love with Special Ops - the guys on camels."
The discord over Iran can, in part, be ascribed to Rumsfeld's testy
relationship with the generals. They see him as high-handed and unwilling to
accept responsibility for what has gone wrong in Iraq. A former Bush
Administration official described a recent meeting between Rumsfeld and
four-star generals and admirals at a military commanders' conference, on a
base outside Washington, that, he was told, went badly. The commanders later
told General Pace that "they didn't come here to be lectured by the Defense
Secretary. They wanted to tell Rumsfeld what their concerns were." A few of
the officers attended a subsequent meeting between Pace and Rumsfeld, and
were unhappy, the former official said, when "Pace did not repeat any of
their complaints. There was disappointment about Pace." The retired
four-star general also described the commanders' conference as "very
fractious." He added, "We've got twenty-five hundred dead, people running
all over the world doing stupid things, and officers outside the Beltway
asking, 'What the hell is going on?' "
Pace's supporters say that he is in a difficult position, given Rumsfeld's
penchant for viewing generals who disagree with him as disloyal. "It's a
very narrow line between being responsive and effective and being outspoken
and ineffective," the former senior intelligence official said.
But Rumsfeld is not alone in the Administration where Iran is concerned; he
is closely allied with Dick Cheney, and, the Pentagon consultant said, "the
President generally defers to the Vice-President on all these issues," such
as dealing with the specifics of a bombing campaign if diplomacy fails. "He
feels that Cheney has an informational advantage. Cheney is not a renegade.
He represents the conventional wisdom in all of this. He appeals to the
strategic-bombing lobby in the Air Force - who think that carpet bombing is
the solution to all problems."
Bombing may not work against Natanz, let alone against the rest of Iran's
nuclear program. The possibility of using tactical nuclear weapons gained
support in the Administration because of the belief that it was the only way
to insure the destruction of Natanz's buried laboratories. When that option
proved to be politically untenable (a nuclear warhead would, among other
things, vent fatal radiation for miles), the Air Force came up with a new
bombing plan, using advanced guidance systems to deliver a series of large
bunker-busters - conventional bombs filled with high explosives - on the
same target, in swift succession. The Air Force argued that the impact would
generate sufficient concussive force to accomplish what a tactical nuclear
warhead would achieve, but without provoking an outcry over what would be
the first use of a nuclear weapon in a conflict since Nagasaki.
The new bombing concept has provoked controversy among Pentagon planners and
outside experts. Robert Pape, a professor at the University of Chicago who
has taught at the Air Force's School of Advanced Air and Space Studies, told
me, "We always have a few new toys, new gimmicks, and rarely do these new
tricks lead to a phenomenal breakthrough. The dilemma is that Natanz is a
very large underground area, and even if the roof came down we won't be able
to get a good estimate of the bomb damage without people on the ground. We
don't even know where it goes underground, and we won't have much confidence
in assessing w
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