Back before the Iraq Attaq, I was deeply skeptical of the wisdom of an invasion,  but, unfortunately, I didn't fully buy into physicist Gregory  Cochran's now-confirmed logic on why Saddam couldn't possibly be building  nuclear weapons.
I did ask, however, why, rather than invade, we couldn't just blow up any  Iranian nuclear laboratories with cruise missiles or JDAM bombs. Back then, the  neocons scoffed that airstrikes were impractical since the wily Saddam had a  country the size of California in which to use his countless billions in oil  smuggling profits to hide his vast underground Dr. Evil-like laboratories. And  what about the deadly radiation fallout from blowing up his vast plutonium  stockpiles? The only feasible American response, they said, was invasion.
Well, that all turned out to be hooey -- Saddam barely had any money and had no  high tech WMD laboratories, underground, above-ground, driving around in mobile  homes, floating in Zeppelins, or wherever.
But now that the American public has gown wary of invading countries that begin  with I-r-a, the neocons are telling us that no invasion of Iran would be  necessary to root out Iran's entire nuclear infrastructure. We could just do it  all push-button style from the air.
Perhaps, but considering that Iran is not the size of California, but is instead  more than twice the size of Texas, and has a GDP (in purchasing power terms)  about six times that of Iraq, why have the neocons suddenly become so confident  in the power of airstrikes alone? Or is promoting airstrikes just a way to get  us into a war with Iran that will eventually require a ground war too?
By the way, is there much evidence that Iran is gearing up for nonstop  aggressive war? According to the CIA  World Factbook, Iran's military spending in 2003 was $4.3 billion  dollars (compared to America's planned expenditure of 370.7 billion, which I  imagine came in higher due to to the expenses of the Iraq occupation). That was  all of 3.3% of Iran's GDP, which doesn't suggest fanatical militarism to me.
In case you are wondering, Israel's military spending was $9.1 billion, which  was 8.7% of GDP. Iran's main (perhaps only) military advantage over Israel is in  potential quantity of cannon fodder (as it showed in the 1980-88 Iran-Iraq war),  but that's no threat to Israel because Iran doesn't share any borders with  Israel. (Iranian cannon fodder would be more of a problem for the U.S., since we  have 150,000 troops in neighboring Iraq, who, in case the U.S. attacks Iran,  might come under either guerilla attack from Shi'ite sympathizers in Iraq or by  conventional attack by the main Iranian army.) The current claim that Iran  threatens to overtake Israel in a high tech arms race seems laughable.
The simplest explanation for why Iran would want a nuclear bomb is the most  plausible: it wants a deterrent against American and/or Israeli aggression.  Considering that we launched a war of aggression against Iraq just three years  ago, it's hard to conceive why any Iranian patriot wouldn't, all else being  equal, want a deterrent.
By the way, if the crazy Shi'ite fundamentalists in Iran are such a threat, why  did we start a war to put the crazy Shi'ite fundamentalists in Iraq into power?  Just asking ...
My published articles are archived at iSteve.com -- Steve Sailer
 
 
 
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