Archive for January 13, 2013

Isolationism will backfire

January 13, 2013

Isolationism will backfire – Israel Opinion, Ynetnews.

Op-ed: In second term, Obama allowing himself to implement policies that are dangerous to America and the entire world

Hagai Segal

Published: 01.13.13, 19:51 / Israel Opinion

The dissolution of the Soviet Union left the world with one superpower, the United States. President Barack Obama’s second term may leave the world with no superpower at all. Ahead of his inauguration on January 21, Obama is undermining the very foundation of his country’s favored status in the international arena. He knows there won’t be a third term, so he is allowing himself to realize all of the basic ideas that drive him; ideas that are dangerous to America and the entire world.

The nomination of Chuck Hagel as defense secretary despite the wall-to-wall criticism should prove to people who are usually calm that there is a major problem at hand. Obama’s decision to nominate Hagel does not stem from a desire to take revenge on Netanyahu, but from something much deeper.

Obama wants an isolated, just America – a pseudo-just America. To his second cabinet he is appointing people with post-traumatic stress disorder from the Vietnam War to make certain that no American soldier will be sent to fight in wars overseas. The next defense secretary, CIA director and secretary of state are all staunch supporters of American forgiveness toward the violent provocations in the Middle East.

If it were up to them, Tehran would be able to continue advancing its nuclear program without any interruption; and until recently they sought Bashar Assad’s friendship.

Obama believes that Hagel, John Brennan and John Kerry will also save the economy. A week ago he thwarted the Republican plan to cut his irresponsible welfare budget, but now he is willing to cut the defense budget with the help of Hagel and Co. Obama is under the impression that if he leaves Afghanistan and ignores Iran he will be able to make do with a cheap army.

On paper its sounds reasonable, but the president is not taking into account that such an isolationist policy would be very tempting to the crazy division of the Muslim world, which is constantly expanding and will try to seep into every corner America vacates. It already attacked the World Trade Center and the Pentagon in the past, and it will have no qualms about attacking much larger targets in the future. An America that is weaker economically and militarily will have a hard time fighting it.

Iran tests battle tactics in strategic Strait of Hormuz

January 13, 2013

Iran tests battle tactics in str… JPost – Iranian Threat – News.

By REUTERS
01/13/2013 15:46
The naval force of the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps holds drills to test new equipment, navy’s combat-readiness, speed in responding to natural disasters and familiarity with new weapons, Iranian media reports.

Iranian officer looks at Strait of Hormuz

Iranian officer looks at Strait of Hormuz Photo: REUTERS/Raheb Homavandi

DUBAI – The naval force of Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) has held exercises to test new equipment and battle tactics in the strategic Strait of Hormuz, Iranian media reported on Sunday.

The drills tested the IRGC naval force’s combat-readiness, speed in responding to natural disasters and familiarity with new weapons, the Fars news agency reported.

They were the fifth such tactical exercises held by the force and took place near Bandar Abbas, a Gulf port on Iran’s southern coast, Fars said. It did not say when they took place.

Iran’s regular navy, separate from the IRGC’s naval branch, held drills in the Gulf in late December and early January meant to showcase the country’s military capabilities in the Strait of Hormuz, through which 40 percent of the world’s seaborne oil exports passes.

Iranian officials have often said Iran could block the strait if it came under military attack over its disputed nuclear program, and a heavy Western naval presence in the Gulf is meant to deter any such move.

Hagel Could Change the Strategic Calculus for Israel and Iran

January 13, 2013

Hagel Could Change the Strategic Calculus for Israel and Iran « Commentary Magazine.

In Chuck Hagel, President Obama is appointing a vociferous and public opponent of any military strike to stop the Iranian nuclear program–whether by the U.S. or Israel. For instance in 2006 he said, “I would say that a military strike against Iran, a military option, is not a viable, feasible, responsible option. I believe a political settlement will be the answer. Not a military settlement.” Just last year he said: “There will be a lot of killing. These things start and you can’t control. They escalate. They always do and they always will.”

Contrary to what he said, a strike on Iran is indeed a “feasible” option (it could be carried out successfully either by the U.S. Air Force and Navy or by the Israeli Air Force), but in one sense he is right–both the U.S. and Israel need to think carefully about all the ramifications of a military strike on Iran are and act only if there is no chance of stopping the Iranian nuclear program by peaceful means. But here’s the problem: The only way to stop the Iranian program by peaceful means is to act as if you’re ready to go to war. Only then is there any chance of the mullahs giving up their nuclear-bomb project. This is in many ways similar to the paradoxical logic of deterrence during the Cold War–only by showing an absolute willingness and ability to wage nuclear wage could the U.S. prevent a nuclear war from breaking out.

But if Hagel is confirmed as secretary of defense, this will be a signal to the entire region that the U.S. is not serious about doing whatever it takes to stop an Iranian nuke, thereby making war more likely by forcing Israel into a unilateral strike.

That signal is already being sent. Witness, for example, this Al Arabiya article: “Hagel to rein in Israel on Iran strike: commentators.” That very perception will not only embolden the mullahs to avoid serious negotiations; it could also force Israel to act on its own.

Both Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and Defense Minister Ehud Barak are known to view Iran as an existential threat to the Jewish state and they have made clear many times their willingness to attack the Iranian program to prevent its completion. This is not a bluff on their part. They have not acted, however, in part because they could not convince the rest of the security cabinet and Israel’s security chiefs–the heads of the armed forces and the intelligence agencies–that there was no option but to launch a unilateral strike. Skeptics of an attack on Iran within the Israeli security establishment have argued that Israel should exhaust every remedy and act only in concert with the U.S. They have buttressed their position by pointing to all of the tough sanctions the U.S. and its allies were imposing on Iran and by citing the tough statements President Obama has made. For instance, in the third presidential debate last fall, Obama said: “As long as I’m president of the United States Iran will not get a nuclear weapon.”

But, whatever Obama’s publicly stated views, Hagel has made clear that he views bombing Iran as a bigger threat than Iran getting the bomb. If he takes office, that will send a very dangerous signal that the U.S. is not serious about doing whatever it takes to stop the Iranian nuclear program. At that point the balance of opinion within the Israeli security establishment could very well shift in favor of a unilateral strike. And if a strike were to occur, Iran could very well retaliate not only against Israel but also against U.S. forces in the region and our Arab allies. In other words, if the Senate confirms Hagel, absent a convincing transformation in his views, it would be making more likely precisely the war that he (and everyone else) would like to avoid.