Sunday, February 11, 2007

Wars and Rumors of Wars

As He sat on The Mount Of Olives, the disciples came to Him privately, saying, "Tell us, when will this be, and what will be the sign of Your coming and of the close of the age?" And Jesus answered them, "Take heed that no one leads you astray. For many will come in My Name, saying, 'I am the Christ,' and they will lead many astray. And you will hear of wars and rumors of wars; see that you are not alarmed; for this must take place, but the end is not yet. For nation will rise against nation, and kingdom against kingdom, and there will be famines and earthquakes in various places: all this is but the beginning of the birth-pangs." (Matthew 24:3-8 RSV)

This is not a bible lesson. It is just a lesson in how some things never change.

The Guardian is alarmed right now. Their fear is that Bush and his cabal of neocons will drag a resistant American Pentagon, Congress, State Department and populace into war with Iran. Why?..... because he has never forgiven the mullahs for 1979. Really, these people can not be this stupid.

An excerpt from Big Lizards:

Where the Guardian article gets really peculiar is when the journalists try to psychoanalyze President Bush, presumably hoping to tap into the traditional leftist meme that Republican "warmongers" are mentally disturbed as well as stupid:

Mr Bush is part of the American generation that refuses to forgive Iran for the 1979-81 hostage crisis. He leaves office in January 2009 and has said repeatedly that he does not want a legacy in which Iran has achieved superpower status in the region and come close to acquiring a nuclear weapon capability. The logic of this is that if diplomatic efforts fail to persuade Iran to stop uranium enrichment then the only alternative left is to turn to the military.

In fact, President Bush is of the generation that recognizes that Iran declared war on us in 1979 -- and they have been fighting that war as strongly as they can for the last 28 years. They certainly struck a horrific blow against us in Beirut in 1983, when they killed 241 American Marines, 58 French paratroopers, a Lebanese custodian, and the wife and four children of a Lebanese janitor (the infamous Beirut barracks terrorist bombing).

Iran's current bloody-handed actions in Iraq are further proof that they consider themselves at war against us, even if we haven't yet accepted that we are at war against them:

* Sending arms and explosives to the anti-democratic forces, both Shia and Sunni;

* Giving advanced military training to Shiite terrorists, in order to attack Americans and Iraqi government forces;

* Supporting Muqtada Sadr during the period he was actually fighting against American troops in Najaf and in Sadr City;

* Sending actual members of Iran's Revolutionary Guards into Iraq (Qods Force) to launch direct attacks on American and coalition forces;

* And green-lighting Hezbollah to attack our ally Israel, unprovoked, to draw them into a war in Lebanon.

Iran has been threatening us with horrific retaliation if we do attack; but realistically, there is little they can do. Their most effective response would be to use mines to try to close the Strait of Hormuz, through which a huge percentage of the world's oil passes; but that is precisely what the "Herman Option" is designed to prevent. And in fact, t
wo British minesweeping ships have already been dispatched to the Gulf, along with American submarines.

The Guardian article concludes on what must, for them, be a very sober note:

If it does come to war, [Josh Muravchik, a Middle East specialist at the AEI] said Iran would retaliate, but that on balance it would be worth it to stop a country that he said had "Death to America" as its official slogan.

"We have to gird our loins and prepare to absorb the counter-shock," he said.

Unlike the guardians of the Left -- including the Guardian -- I don't believe that "counter-shock" is going to be anywhere near as bad as we have suffered in Iraq, for the simple reason that we will not invade Iran; that is, we will not send troops to occupy the country and force regime change, as we did in Iraq. That part would be up to the Iranian people themselves, who by all accounts detest the ruling mullahs and hate how they are trying to push modern Persia back into the 7th century.

There is a difference between striking Iran's nuclear sites and/or gas refineries vs. invading that country. I think Americans might well support the former, but I doubt very much if they want to do the latter.

3 comments:

MeaninglessHotAir said...

This weeks's Economist, which arrived yesterday, bears a cover with a picture of a menacing stealth bomber and a caption of "Next Stop Iran?". From which I conclude that it is not merely leftists in London who are projecting war-mongering onto Bush, but much of that capitol's intelligentisia, regardless of political persuasion. Places go through hysterical periods. This is particularly true when the dangers are great and the power is small. Such is the state of Europe today. It cannot control its own destiny. It is utterly dependent on the United States for its defense. Despite all protestations to the contrary, it is acutely aware, subconsciously, of the rising danger of the Islamic states, the Russian thugs, and the Chinese economic power. Yet it is essentially powerless to act. It's response is to bite the hand that both feeds it and protects it. Though this is not a particularly encouraging lesson in the nature of humanity, it is an educational one.

Unknown said...

MHA:

Liberal Democrats are doing the same thing. In fact it seems that if they have to shoose between George Bush and the millahs, they are going to side with the mullahs.

Syl said...

Yeah, it sounds nice and fair. ::rolling eyes:: Forget the consequences. To them it means all this Bush warmongering talk about Iran will go away.

No worry about tomorrow, just how they feel today.