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Let's Give Iran Some Of Its Own Medicine (Mark Steyn)
The Telegraph (UK) ^ | 1-17-2006 | Mark Steyn

Posted on 01/16/2006 5:58:29 PM PST by blam

Let's give Iran some of its own medicine

By Mark Steyn
(Filed: 17/01/2006)

So let me see. On the one hand, we have a regime that is pressing full steam ahead with its nuclear programme and whose president has threatened to wipe another sovereign state off the map.

And, on the other side of the negotiations, we have Her Britannic Majesty's Principal Secretary of State for Foreign and Commonwealth Affairs.

Jack Straw has been at pains to emphasise that no military action against Iran is being contemplated by him or anybody else, but in a sign that he's losing patience with the mullahs Mr Straw's officials have indicated that they're prepared to consider the possibility of possibly considering the preparation of a possible motion on sanctions for the UN Security Council to consider the possibility of considering.

But don't worry, we're not escalating this thing any more than necessary. Initially, the FCO is considering "narrowly targeted sanctions such as a travel ban on Iranian leaders".

That'll show 'em: Iranian missiles may be able to leave Iranian airspace, but the deputy trade minister won't. No more trips to Paris for the spring collections or skiing in Gstaad for the A-list ayatollahs.

Needless to say, the German deputy foreign minister, Gernot Erler, has already cautioned that this may be going too far, and that sanctions could well hurt us more than it hurts the Iranians. Perhaps this is what passes is for a good cop/bad cop routine, with Herr Erler affably suggesting to the punks that they might want to cooperate or he'll have to send his pal Jack in to tear up their tickets for the Michael Moore première at the Cannes Film Festival.

But, if I were President Ahmadinejad or the wackier ayatollahs, I'd be mulling over the kid glove treatment from Jack Straw and Co and figuring: wow, if this is the respect we get before the nukes are fully operational, imagine how they'll be treating us this time next year. Incidentally, the assumption in the European press that the nuclear payload won't be ready to fly for three or four years is laughably optimistic.

So any Western strategy that takes time is in the regime's favour. After all, President Ahmaggedonouttahere's formative experience was his participation in the seizure of the US embassy in Teheran in 1979. I believe it was Andrei Gromyko who remarked that, if the students had pulled the same stunt at the Soviet embassy, Teheran would have been a crater by lunchtime.

So what can be done? Right now, Iran can count on at least two Security Council vetoes against any meaningful action by the "international community". As for the unilaterally inclined, the difficulty for the US and Israel is that there's really no Osirak-type resolution of the problem - a quick surgical strike, in and out. By most counts, there are upwards of a couple of hundred potential sites spread across a wide range of diverse terrain, from remote mountain fastnesses to residential suburbs.

To neutralise them all would require a sustained bombing campaign lasting several weeks, and with the usual collateral damage at schools, hospitals, etc, plastered all over CNN and the BBC. Meanwhile, Iraq's Shia south would turn into another Sunni Triangle for coalition forces. Every challenge to the West begins as a contest of wills - and for the Iranians recent history, from the Shah and the embassy siege to the Iraqi "insurgency" and Mr Straw's soundbites, tells them the West can't muster the strength of will needed to force them to back down.

But, granted the Iranian destabilisation of Iraq and their sponsorship of terror groups in Lebanon and the Palestinian Authority, surely it shouldn't be difficult to give them a taste of their own medicine. Who, after all, likes the Teheran regime? The Russian and Chinese and North Korean governments and the fulsome Mr Straw appear to, but there's less evidence that the Iranian people do.

The majority of Iran's population is younger than the revolution: whether or not they're as "pro-American" as is sometimes claimed, they have no memory of the Shah; all they've ever known is their ramshackle Islamic republic where the unemployment rate is currently 25 per cent. If war breaks out, those surplus young men will be in uniform and defending their homeland.

Why not tap into their excess energy right now? As the foreign terrorists have demonstrated in Iraq, you don't need a lot of local support to give the impression (at least to Tariq Ali and John Pilger) of a popular insurgency. Would it not be feasible to turn the tables and upgrade Iran's somewhat lethargic dissidents into something a little livelier? A Teheran preoccupied by internal suppression will find it harder to pull off its pretensions to regional superpower status.

Who else could we stir up? Well, did you see that story in the Sunday Telegraph? Eight of the regime's border guards have been kidnapped and threatened with decapitation by a fanatical Sunni group in Iranian Baluchistan. I'm of the view that the Shia are a much better long-term bet as reformable Muslims, but given that there are six million Sunni in Iran and that they're a majority in some provinces, would it not be possible to give the regime its own Sunni Triangle?

No option is without risks, though some are overstated, including regional anger at any Western action: I doubt whether many Arab Sunni regimes really wish to live under the nuclear umbrella of a Persian Shia superpower. And, indeed, one further reason (as if you need one) to put the skids under Boy Assad in Damascus is to underline that there's a price to be paid for getting too cosy with Teheran.

But every risk has to be weighed against the certainty that Iran would use its nuclear capacity in the same way it uses its other assets - by supporting terror groups that operate against its enemies.

And Jack Straw's mullah-coddling is particularly unworthy in that, insofar as Iran has a strategy, the president's chief adviser, Hassan Abbassi, has based it on the premise that "Britain is the mother of all evils" - the evils being America, Australia, Israel, the Gulf states and even Canada and New Zealand, all of which are the malign progeny of the British Empire.

"We have established a department that will take care of England," said Mr Abbassi last May. "England's demise is on our agenda." Apropos the ayatollahs, England could at least return the compliment.


TOPICS: Israel; News/Current Events; United Kingdom
KEYWORDS: give; iran; israel; lets; mark; marksteyn; medicine; own; some; steyn; uk
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To: oldenuff2no

Qom. One of their many, many, many holy sites, and Khomeni's home town and burial place.


101 posted on 01/17/2006 7:33:13 AM PST by PzLdr ("The Emperor is not as forgiving as I am" - Darth Vader)
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To: Pokey78

Thanks for the ping.


102 posted on 01/17/2006 9:44:21 AM PST by GOPJ (A) Cub reporters acting as stenographers for a manipulative top FBI agent? Q) What is Watergate?)
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To: oldenuff2no

I'm with you there. I think a neutron device would be an outstanding demonstration of what a true nuclear threat is all about.

You hit the mullahs, apologize for the collateral and underline the fact that a few had to die to save the millions these idiots were PROMISING to slaughter, and that we are only ensuring that the history of the middle 20th century are not repeated.


103 posted on 01/17/2006 9:55:32 AM PST by RinaseaofDs (If stupidity were painful, liberals would be extinct)
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To: Gerfang
It would be a lot easier to put pressure on Iran if not for the current situation in Iraq.

If we do Iraq right - pull off a democratic country - not just hand it over to a new group of power bullies, it'll push Iran over the edge. Student revolutions will work and the Mullahs will be out. On the other hand, if Iraq goes the civil war route - with various strong men running factions, it'll hand the region to the Mullahs on a platter.

104 posted on 01/17/2006 9:56:24 AM PST by GOPJ (A) Cub reporters acting as stenographers for a manipulative top FBI agent? Q) What is Watergate?)
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To: voletti
Word around is that Iran's nuke program is dangerously amateurish and unsafe... you never know when a nuke might accidentally go off, eh?.....

According to some reports, the Iranians had Osama the last years of his life - wonder if he gave them any weapons? Something in the Iranian stance has changed - they're taunting Israel - trying to get them to fight. It sounds to me like they've already acquired WMDs. Then there was the talk about wanting to destroy Israel... That puts the world on notice. What would happen if Israel attacked Iran, and Iran countered with nukes? Oil in pipelines under Iran's boundaries stop and gasoline goes to $100 a gallon... Our job? Plan out our responses ahead of time. Now. Get the other nations of the world with us. Now. Something's going down. We need to be on top of it.

105 posted on 01/17/2006 10:13:48 AM PST by GOPJ (A) Cub reporters acting as stenographers for a manipulative top FBI agent? Q) What is Watergate?)
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bookmark


106 posted on 01/17/2006 12:52:35 PM PST by Aggie Mama
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To: Pokey78

Good article, thanks.


107 posted on 01/17/2006 7:32:27 PM PST by Victoria Delsoul
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To: blam
Madmen.

But, madmen with a plan.

108 posted on 01/17/2006 7:36:33 PM PST by Gritty ("Islam us a universal ideology that leads the world to justice"-Ahmadinejad)
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To: voletti


Announce that since we have so abused them by treating them by our standards, we have decided to handle this disagreement by their standards.

As Iran has announced that when they get nuclear weapons they will wipe their enemies off the map and nobody can stop them, we are announcing that we launched a full scale nuclear strike on Iran two minutes ago, and unless Iran developes an anti-balistic missile system in the next 13 minutes, they will be wiped from the map and nobody can stop it.

From this point forth, for the sake of clear communications and to avoid all cultural misunderstandings we will treat all nations as they treat others.

As for the Mad Mullah of Iran, the good news is that he was the last Maudi, as the end of the world for Iran has arrived.


109 posted on 01/17/2006 10:26:02 PM PST by American in Israel (A wise man's heart directs him to the right, but the foolish mans heart directs him toward the left.)
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To: lemura
What 20-something Iranian wouldn't want a part of that in their own country vs. being drafted to fight for some loonies that are cutting them off from an exciting future?

. 20-smthg Iranian isn't like 20-smthg Californian (or Canadian, or...). He doesn't ask questions and has no either means or tradition to resist the authority. Loonies or no loonies, when drafted, he'll put on the uniform and will fight, even if halfheartedly.

110 posted on 01/20/2006 8:22:43 PM PST by Neophyte (Nazists, Communists, Islamists... what the heck is the difference?)
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To: Oatka
The mullahs would be so busy trying to suppress the dissidents they wouldn't have time for nukes.

Cannot agree on this neither with Steyn (for the first time!), nor with you.

Russia was busy to supress its dissidents through all of her history, as it is currently - and did it stop her from also putting in every possible effort to obtain this or that kind of weapon? Same examples are abundant in the history of every dictatorship. Why Iran would be different?

111 posted on 01/20/2006 8:42:27 PM PST by Neophyte (Nazists, Communists, Islamists... what the heck is the difference?)
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To: NZerFromHK
There was once a gentleman called Vidkun Abraham Lauritz Jonssøn Quisling. He was the Nazi Minister President of Norway from February 1942 to the end of World War II, was executed by a firing squad and his name became the eponym for a traitor.

Well, his almost perfect namesake John Brady Kiesling is a traitor too. What a telling coincidence...
112 posted on 01/20/2006 9:01:35 PM PST by Neophyte (Nazists, Communists, Islamists... what the heck is the difference?)
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