Column One: Bringing happiness to Iran

Column One: Bringing happiness to Iran.

We may never know what exactly happened Sunday night at Parchin, but we certainly know that it will take hundreds more mysterious explosions to prevent Iran from getting the bomb.

 

It is still unclear what happened on Sunday night at Iran’s illicit nuclear installation at Parchin. According to Iranian sources, there was a large explosion that rocked the area within a 15-km. radius of the facility. Two people were reportedly injured.

According to the UN’s International Atomic Energy Agency and Israel, the Parchin facility is a key component of Iran’s suspected military nuclear program. It is at Parchin that Iran is allegedly building a nuclear explosive device – that is, a nuclear warhead.

The timing of the blast is notable. On Monday night, a delegation from the IAEA landed in Tehran for a new round of talks scheduled for that Tuesday. The UN’s demand to inspect Parchin was set to be one of the top agenda items at the talks.

Given the timing, it is certainly possible that the Iranians carried out the explosion themselves as a means of preventing the IAEA from demanding access.

But let us assume that the widely held automatic assumption – that Israel was behind the blast at Parchin – is accurate. The fact is that in order to destroy Iran’s nuclear weapons program, or seriously setback its completion, dozens, if not hundreds of additional targets need to be hit and destroyed.

Iran has secured its illicit nuclear program by dispersing and replicating its nuclear installations throughout the country. If the Parchin bombing was carried out by Israel, it must be seen as but another strike in Israel’s purported – and if it exists, meandering – campaign to destroy Iran’s capacity to develop nuclear weapons.

At the desultory rate Israel’s assumed campaign is progressing, we can have little confidence that through bombing alone, Israel will be able to prevent Iran from acquiring nuclear weapons in the near future.

One of the main reasons that Israel’s purported strikes in Iran have been so lethargic is because the US opposes them. As we have seen in recent years, the Obama administration has been a sieve of information to the media about Israel’s alleged covert strikes in Iran. To successfully neutralize Iran’s nuclear facilities through acts of sabotage, Israel needs to hide its effort from the US as well as Iran.

In light of these constraints, Israel should consider expanding the goal of its policy towards Iran from merely debilitating Iran’s nuclear project to ending it entirely by overthrowing the regime.

There are many reasons to believe that overthrowing the regime is a realistic option.

First and foremost, to the shock and amazement of the entire world, following the stolen 2009 Iranian presidential elections, the Green Movement arose spontaneously and nearly overthrew the regime. Millions of Iranians from across ethnic lines and throughout the country rose up against the regime. They rallied around presidential candidates Seyyed Mir-Hossein Mousavi and Mehdi Karroubi and demanded that the mullocracy be replaced with a democracy.

Had the Obama administration backed the Iranian people rather than the regime, it is likely that the Iranian Revolutionary Guards Corps (IRGC) and supreme dictator Ali Khamenei would have been finished six years ago along with their nuclear program and worldwide terrorist network.

Dr. Michael Ledeen, Freedom Scholar at the Washington-based Foundation for Defense of Democracies has been closely following the Iranian regime since he served in the Reagan administration in the 1980s. In 2009, he argued that even without US assistance, if Israel had been willing to help the Green Movement, with little effort, it could have empowered the opposition sufficiently to overthrow the regime.

In a conversation this week, Ledeen said Israel still has the capacity to provide opposition forces the tools they require to overthrow the regime.

Today, with Khamenei reportedly seriously ill, the widespread assessment is that Iran is already in the throes of a succession crisis. As Ledeen sees it, radical ayatollahs are vying with the IRGC and Khamenei’s family to succeed him. President Hassan Rouhani is also seeking to ascend to Khamenei’s all powerful throne.

At the same, time, as Iran enters into this period of political uncertainty, the regime itself is less popular than ever.

Rouhani was elected last year on the strength of his promise to expand freedoms in Iran. Since he took office, repression, not freedom has expanded.

Over the past year, the number of regime executions and mass arrests has skyrocketed. So too, the number of Iranian political prisoners subjected to torture has risen. Despite Rouhani’s promise to free them, Mousavi and Karroubi, who were placed under house arrest in 2011, have not been freed.

Last week, the family of Ayatollah Hossein Kazemeyni Boroujerdi announced that the religious leader has been informed that he is about to be executed by the regime. Boroujerdi is serving his eighth year of an 11-year prison sentence for rejecting the religious legitimacy of the regime and demanding, in keeping with Shi’ite jurisprudence, its overthrow and replacement with a democracy in which mosque is separated from state.

Boroujerdi enjoys massive support in Iran. His bravery in the face of regime repression is breathtaking.

Since his arrest, Boroujerdi has been subjected to barbaric torture. And yet, rather than repent his ways, as the regime demands, he has smuggled letters to the world outside his prison exposing the dismal state of human rights in the Iran, and the heresy at the heart of the regime.

Ledeen claims that an Israeli campaign to highlight the suffering of Iranian political prisoners and dissidents that would include constant public condemnations of the regime, calls for the release of political prisoners, and support for greater freedom, particularly for women would have a major impact both globally and in Iran.

If such a campaign is coupled with the provision of communication equipment for the opposition to let its leaders and followers bypass the regime’s firewalls and communicate freely with one another, its chances of success would grow. So too, the provision of financial and other support for Iranian workers’ unions, including building international support for their rejection of the regime, and broadcast of accurate news, by among other things expanding the broadcast time allotted to Voice of Israel Persian service, could empower the regime’s opponents.

Ledeen scoffs at the concern that Israeli support for regime opponents will boomerang against them and strengthen public support for the regime. As he put it, “Opponents of the regime are always accused of being in cahoots with Israel and the US, so getting support doesn’t change their risk, and in fact will strengthen them… The opposition is probably amazed they are not getting help from Israel.”

Ledeen’s policy involves a program of nonviolent, open Israeli political and financial support for regime opponents.

A different policy of regime overthrow was put forward by Nicholas Saidel in an article published last month by Mida online magazine. Saidel recommended that Israel adopt a more involved policy of directly supporting minority liberation movements operating inside Iran. Saidel noted that oppressed, irredentist minorities – including the Azeris, Kurds, Ahwazi Arabs and Baluchis together comprise more than a third of Iran’s population. He suggests that the regime should be overthrown and Iran should be carved up into a number of smaller states that will be too weak to threaten Israel.

Saidel notes that all four minorities have in the past cooperated with Israel. Some have spoken openly in favor of Israel. Israel, he argues, has the wherewithal to help them today in significant ways that will, at a minimum, significantly weaken the regime and so limit its ability to harm Israel.

Of the two options, the potential downside of Saidel’s is far higher. The specter of small, powerful jihadist forces along the lines of Islamic State and the Taliban being installed in power in Iran is distressing. But even in this case, the payoff of destroying the regime, and so ending Iran’s nuclear program and its sponsorship with Hezbollah, Hamas and other jihadist terror groups would be enormous.

Regardless of how one assesses the risk of either policy of supporting regime opponents, given the risk a nuclear armed Iran will constitute for Israel; the Obama administration’s obvious preference for a nuclear armed Iran over an Israeli strike against Iran’s nuclear installations; and the ever growing threat posed by Iran’s terrorist proxies, it would appear that the risks attached to adopting either Ledeen’s approach, or Saidel’s approach, or both, are far smaller than the risk of letting Iran take out membership in the nuclear club.

Distressingly, Israel’s security brass seems utterly bereft of creative or even three dimensional thought in regards to Iran. In an interview with Ma’ariv published last Friday, IDF Chief of General Staff Lt.-Gen. Benny Gantz claimed that international sanctions convinced Iran that its nuclear project was harming its regime.

What the sanctions actually convinced them was that it was worth their while to pretend to be interested in a nuclear deal in order to loosen or end the sanctions. Acting this way would not prevent them from acquiring nuclear weapons but would restore Iran’s economic viability.

Over the past decade, attempts to get Israeli military leaders to even consider a program of assisting the regime’s opponents have come up empty.

The time has come to reconsider this refusal. In his recent public remarks on Iran, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu argued repeatedly and rightly that the Iranian regime is more dangerous to global security than Islamic State. But he has abstained from mentioning that the Iranian regime is as dangerous to those living under its jackboot as Islamic State is to those who come under its power.

Had Netanyahu raised Boroujerdi’s plight in his speech at the UN, it would have weakened Rouhani.

And for his part, Boroujerdi would not have been any more imperiled than he already is.

So too, the seven young Iranians who were sentenced last month to suspended jail sentences and 91 lashes for daring to post an Internet video of themselves singing Pharrell Williams’s song “Happy” will not be any more unhappy and oppressed if Israeli leaders stood up for their right to be happy.

Ledeen remarked, “I’ve rarely seen a policy that was both strategically and morally imperative, but [supporting the Iranian regime’s domestic opponents] is certainly one of them.”

We may never know what exactly happened Sunday night at Parchin. But we certainly know that it will take hundreds more mysterious explosions to prevent Iran from getting the bomb. And even if such explosions take place, so long as the regime remains in power, there is every reason to believe that such achievements will lack significance in the long term.

Iran is Israel’s greatest foe. Between its support for Hezbollah and Hamas and its nuclear program, it threatens Israel more gravely than any other state today. The best way to end these threats is not to fight another round against its proxies. It is to go to the source of the problem.

Caroline Glick is the author of The Israeli Solution: A One-State Plan for Peace in the Middle East.

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14 Comments on “Column One: Bringing happiness to Iran”


  1. Matthew Kroenig: There are no black swans that are likely to save us from the Iranian nuclear threat. We cannot sabotage, assassinate, regime-change, or cyberattack our way out of this problem. We also saw that allowing Iran to obtain a latent nuclear capability, aka the Japan Model, is unacceptable and would be tantamount to giving up and acquiescing to nuclear weapons in Iran.

    We might be left then with only one option; the military option, the subject of chapter 6. This chapter made clear that a US strike on Iran’s nuclear facilities is not an attractive option either. Such a conflict would result in Iranian military retaliation, spikes of oil prices, and anti-American sentiment. Yet a military strike would also have benefits. It could destroy Iran’s nuclear facilities, set back Iran’s nuclear program and create a significant possibility that Iran would never acquire nuclear weapons. If diplomacy fails, this is our only hope for keeping Tehran from the bomb

    http://www.madisdead.blogspot.co.il/2014/10/satellite-imagery-shows-parchin.html

  2. John Prophet's avatar John Prophet Says:

    Iran will never give up on its atomic lust. The Mad Mullahs see this attainment as Allahs wish for global ISLAM. The words and peaceful attempts of man to dissuade them only reinforces Iran’s belief of Western weakness and Allahs plan for Islamic global dominance. The only action that can stop them now is forceful action.

    However, the West has no stomach for such action and Israel is now incapable of such action. Iran has the will and now the means to push this over the finish line.

    “Want of foresight, unwillingness to act when action would be simple and effective, lack of clear thinking, confusion of counsel until the emergency comes, until self-preservation strikes its jarring gong – these are the features which constitute the endless repetition of history.”

    ― Winston Churchill


    • Are you saying Israel is just going to wait till the mushroom clouds appears over its cities? I do not think so.

      By the way, here is the full Churchill quote:

      “When the situation was manageable it was neglected, and now that it is thoroughly out of hand, we apply the remedies which then might have effected a cure. There is nothing new in the story. It is as old as the Sibylline books. It falls into that long dismal catalogue of the fruitlessness of experience and the confirmed unteachability of mankind. Want of foresight, unwillingness to act when action would be simple and effective, lack of clear thinking, confusion of counsel until the emergency comes, until self-preservation strikes its jarring gong – these are the features which constitute the endless repetition of history.”

      http://madisdead.blogspot.co.il/2014/05/the-confirmed-unteachability-of-israeli.html

      • John Prophet's avatar John Prophet Says:

        What I’m saying is, Israel has allow the beast to grow to a point where there is no easy fix. This situation in nothing like the one offs of Iraq and Syria, where, all Israel had to do is bomb one site, an evenings work. Iran has its program scatter across the country and buried deep underground. As my buddy Winston said, when the Atomic situation in Iran was manageable and success was attainable Israel did next to nothing. So, now that Mordor is fully formed and lethal, Israel attacks? I don’t think so.

        All Israel can reasonable to now is evoke MAD, that is why Netanyahu is loading up on submarines with atomic warheads.

        He’s saying to the MAD MULLAHS, if you attempt to wipe us out we WILL wipe you out. That’s the only card at this late date that Neville Netanyahu has left to play. So my friend MAD is not dead, in fact, it’s alive and well and living in the Middle East.


        • Netanyahu was prevented in attacking Iran both by Bush’s and Obama’s opposition on the one hand, and through the domestic opposition, as Caroline Glick wrote, of Ashkenaz, Dagan, Dichter and Peres, on the other.

          In contrast to the above six, however, Netanyahu knows quite well that if Iran gets the bomb then we are all done for. He knows that because he was briefed by Bernard Lewis and therefore Netanyahu will not let Iran have the bomb.

          Netanyahu understands that the Iranan mullahs are not dettered by the fact that they would be wiped out. On the contrary, they would be looking forward to being wiped out as Bernard Lewis put it “For people with this mindset, M.A.D. is not a constraint; it is an INDUCEMENT… ”

          http://madisdead.blogspot.co.il/2012/05/why-are-bernard-lewiss-views-on-mad.html

          • John Prophet's avatar John Prophet Says:

            “Netanyahu was prevented in attacking Iran both by Bush’s and Obama’s opposition on the one hand, and through the domestic opposition, as Caroline Glick wrote, of Ashkenaz, Dagan, Dichter and Peres, on the other.”

            So, let me get this straight, NN did nothing that could save his people when it would be simpler to do so because his hands where tied? But now, when an attack by Israel on Iran would create a global shitstorm his hands are no longer tied. Sorry doesn’t add up.

          • Peter Hofman's avatar joopklepzeiker Says:

            Yep, but what if the islamic state becomes bigger and bigger and more powerful, they do not accept the borderlines drawn in the past by the west but aiming for a caliphate , there is no place for Israel in that caliphate, so what than, Israel has to do the unthinkable and will, and the rest of the world will blame the Jews as usual.

            Is this the game in play ?

            This is what i,am saying from day one at this blog.

            It is amazing that nobody talks about this , only the islamic state tells it loud and clear, time to start listening .

          • John Prophet's avatar John Prophet Says:

            “Yep, but what if the islamic state becomes bigger and bigger and more powerful, they do not accept the borderlines drawn in the past by the west but aiming for a caliphate , there is no place for Israel in that caliph”. Yup, any student of the ME knows the Caliphate, regional then global has always been in the Islamic playbook, no one, Israel included should be suprised by this. More the reason NN should have acted years ago. Allowing the beast to metastasize has always been suicide for Israel.


          • The decision to attack Iran is a serious step which should be avoided as long as there are alternatives. When all the alternatives are exhausted then what remains is either to attack the nuclear sites or be annihilated. This deadline starts on Nov 24. There will either be a “deal” with Iran or not.  It looks bad ether way since the US will probably go for a bad deal, and if it does not  Obama  will do nothing anyway.  That means Netanyahu will have to act, else he knows that it will be the end of Israel. You still believe that with all he is aware of he will do nothing? In other words you are saying he is suicidal

          • John Prophet's avatar John Prophet Says:

            Nope, not suicidal just reticent. An attack on Iran now guarantees a massive response by Iran on Israel. Much death and a wider war would ensue. Loading up on nuclear submarines and falling back on MAD alleviates NN from making that decision.


          • Reticent? In his book , A Time to Attack, Matthew Kroenig writes, p 196: “By my estimate, therefore, Iran’s most likely retaliatory response might look something like this: four to five salvos ( forty or fifty missiles) of conventionally armed ballistic missiles over the course o several days against military and civilian targets in the Middle East; several days o rocket attacks from Hamas and Hezbollah into Israel. Sporadic Quds Force plots against American and Israeli soft targets around the world for months or even years after the attack; and the harassment and attacks against navy and commercial vessels in the Persian Gulf., combined with empty threats to close the strait.

            Israel is the country that would bear the brunt of Iranian retaliation, and their defense experts estimate that Iranian military retaliation following an attack on its nuclear facilities would result n about 300 Israel deaths. Given the limits of Iran’s capabilities and its interest in restraining the conflict, the global ramifications would not be much more devastating. In sum, the consequences of Iranian military retaliation would be serious, but far from catastrophic”

          • John Prophet's avatar John Prophet Says:

            My friend, the fog of war is NEVER that clearly defined. I stand by my call, NN never overtly attacks Iran!!!!


          • Well, since we cannot sabotage, assassinate, regime-change, or cyberattack our way out of this problem, and Netanyahu is aware that Iran must not get the bomb, there is obviously only one way out. So let’s wait and see.

  3. Mark's avatar Mark Says:

    I think that the strike at Parchin was designed as a final warning from Israel to Iran.

    Bibi won’t last in office much longer if he allows for yet another bad deal that extends past 11/24. If and when such a bad deal is agreed to, decisive action will have to be taken immediately.


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