Posted on 01/03/2020 12:46:52 PM PST by Kaslin
Iran Is Weak Suleimani's killing was long overdue. The last time Iran was chastened on the world stage was when the U.S. sank half of the Iranian navy in 1988. The first thing to say about the U.S. airstrike on Thursday night that killed Qassem Suleimani, the longtime leader of the Iranian Revolutionary Guards Corps Quds Force, is that President Trump made the right decision. Taking out Suleimani, who was killed as he traveled in a convoy near the Baghdad airport, was long overdue. In a statement, the Pentagon said Suleimani was actively developing plans to attack American diplomats and service members in Iraq and throughout the region, and blamed him for orchestrating recent attacks against U.S. forces in Iraq, including a December 27 attack that killed a U.S. government contractor and the attacks on the U.S. embassy in Baghdad this week. In addition, he was responsible for attacks that have killed hundreds of U.S. soldiers in Iraq and elsewhere, and his Quds Force directed terror campaigns and operations throughout the region. The importance of this strike cant be overstated. In the hierarchy of the Iranian regime, Suleimani is more powerful than Irans president when it comes to foreign policy. He and the Quds Force, which conducts terror operations, assassinations, and bombings outside Iran, report directly to Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei. Suleimani controlled billions of dollars in terror financing across the globe. His killing marks a major escalation with Tehran thats been a long time coming, and likely marks a new era in U.S.-Iranian relations. The conventional wisdom seems to be that we should expect Iran to retaliate. Khamenei has already promised revenge, which will probably take the form of covert actions or terror operations rather than, say, missile launches. But its also possible that Irans retaliation wont amount to much. For all its bluster and pernicious meddling in the region, Tehran is weak, and being weak, it is vulnerable to the use of force. Theres strong historical precedent for using force to pacify Iran. The only thing that has really chastened Iran since the 1979 Islamic Revolution was Operation Praying Mantis in April 1998, in which U.S. forces sunk or severely damaged about half of Irans navy. Iran had been at war with Iraq for eight years, and in 1987 began attacking oil tankers and mining the Persian Gulf. When the guided missile frigate USS Samuel B. Roberts struck a mine while on a convoy mission to protect reflagged Kuwaiti oil tankers from Iranian attacks, it blew an immense hole in the ships hull and nearly sank it. In response, the U.S. Navy launched Operation Praying Mantis, the largest U.S. surface engagement since the Second World War and the first and only time the time the U.S. Navy has exchanged surface-to-surface missile fire with an enemy. The U.S. struck Iranian warships and oil platforms with coordinated assaults from groups of warships and aircraft from the carrier USS Enterprise, destroying two oil platforms and sinking at least three Iranian speedboats, one Iranian frigate, and one fast attack gunboat, as well as severely damaging one other Iranian frigate. The U.S. lost a single helicopter gunship that crashed attempting to evade enemy fire. The whole thing was over in a day. The success of Operation Praying Mantis, as well as a crushing defeat that same day against Iraqi forces on the al-Faw peninsula, pushed Iranian leadership toward a ceasefire with Iraq later that summer, ending the eight-year conflict. It wasnt sanctions or the promise of restored diplomatic relations with the U.S. that persuaded Iran to back down, it was the sinking of Iranian ships by U.S. forces in what amounted to an overwhelming battlefield domination on the world stage. Contrary to the hand-wringing of some liberal media outlets in the wake of the Suleimani strike, President Trump hasnt started a war with Iran. Rather, it means the United States has recognized and responded to a conflict thats been going on for some time now, and that Iran has fueled. If anything, the Suleimani strike might well prevent the outbreak of a new Mideast war that was looking increasingly inevitable after eight years of the Obama administrations feckless foreign policy. The airstrike itself should be uncontroversial, despite the craven protests of some Democrats now defending Iran. As David French explained on Twitter, the strike was duly authorized, justified, and needed no separate congressional authorization. American troops are lawfully in Iraqthere by congressional authorization and with the permission of the Iraqi government. Moreover, they have a right of self-defense. In any case, the parallel between the killing of Suleimani and Operation Praying Mantis in 1988 is straightforward. If you mine the Persian Gulf and nearly sink a U.S. warship, the United States will destroy your navy. Likewise, if you plan and execute attacks against U.S. troops and outposts, the United States will take out the man behind those attacks with an airstrike. In 1988, that was the takeaway for Tehran, whose burning ships and oil platforms testified above all to Americas military might and resolve. Faced with more of the same, Iran backed down. Today, faced with the prospect that its top terrorists and military commanders could at any time be taken out by U.S. forces, perhaps Tehran will reconsider its current course and back down once again. If thats Irans takeaway from the Suleimani strike, then it will have been well worth it.
What Operation Praying Mantis Can Teach Us Today
Killing Suleimani Is More Likely To Prevent A War Than Start One
“Goats if he’s lucky. I’m betting he gets 72 Helen Thomas”
Ack!
5.56mm
Two things struck me as incredible about this matter. First, that Suleimani thought he could travel in Iraq with total immunity and impunity. Second, the Iranians have to be shaken to their core concerning the ability of the U. S. intelligence service. They knew exactly where he was even though he was on the move, and they knew what his future plans were.
Not only are the Iranians militarily weak, but their intelligence apparatus is almost nil. They never knew what hit them.
My guess is that we had some help from Israel. Their very survival depends on their intelligence.
These terrorists were in the fast lane, which means telecommunication and not paper messages by courier. We can listen in to anyone anywhere antime.
My guess is that we had some help from Israel. Their very survival depends on their intelligence.
My guess is the same.
CIWS (if nothing else) would see to that...
Only partially true.
Obungler helped to arm and finance him
Armed him : Benghazi
Finance him : $130 Billion on pallets
sorry, disagree. different terrain: Iraq is Tank-friendly country in the southern half, pretty good road network, plentiful bases for support nearby, etc.
Iran is mountainous, poor roads, bad infrastructure, represents a more significant threat to an overwhelming % of world's oil tanker traffic which we guarantee the safety of (Bretton-Woods), far from support bases, etc.
that being said, yes we can put a world of hurt on them, but oil prices worldwide would skyrocket, bringing chaos, unintended consequences, foremost among them the guaranteed attacks against our Prez from the Quisling dhimmicrats and their Pravda MSM.
Better to keep the pressure/sanctions on, be ready to strike back surgically as we did here - and let the mullahs die from within... They're slowly dying, it's not hurting us to see them die a slow death, and their lashing out as they are looks so much like a punk being put in a chokehold, gasping as his arms flail about, that I enjoy getting another bowl of popcorn to watch! :-)
v/r
the JG
Blame Hillary Clinton and John Kerry.
We wouldn't even need ground troops. It wouldn't have to be nation building, just army and navy destroying, along with all nuclear testing facilities and their Parliament building, hopefully while it's in session. Oil prices might spike but it wouldn't be anything like in the past because we are now energy independent and can pick up the slack. If you want to send troops it would be to occupy their oil fields until they pump enough to pay us for the inconvenience of destroying them.
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