Caroline Glick explains why regardless of the results of the US elections,
Israel remains the only country that can stop Iran.
[I]f Romney defeats Obama on November 6, it is likely that on January 21, 2013, the US will adopt a different policy towards Iran.
The
question for Israel now is whether any of this matters. If Romney is
elected and adopts a new policy towards Iran, what if any operational
significance will this policy shift have for Israel?
The short answer is very little.
To
understand why this is the case we need to consider two issues: The
time it would take for a new US policy to be implemented; and the time
Iran requires to become a nuclear power.
In the
aftermath of the September 11, 2001, jihadist attacks on the US,
then-president George W. Bush faced no internal opposition to
overthrowing the Taliban regime in Afghanistan. The US military and
intelligence arms all supported the operation. Congress supported the
operation. The American public supported the operation. The UN supported
the mission.
And still, it took the US four
weeks to plan and launch Operation Enduring Freedom in Afghanistan on
October 7, 2001. That is, under optimal conditions, the US needed nearly
a month to respond to the largest foreign attack on the US mainland
since the War of 1812.
Then of course there was
Operation Iraqi Freedom which officially began on March 20, 2003, with
the US-British ground invasion of Iraq from Kuwait.
Bush
and his advisers began seriously considering overthrowing Saddam
Hussein's regime in the spring of 2002. They met with resistance from
the US military. They met with a modicum of political opposition in
Congress, and more serious opposition in the media. Moreover, they met
with harsh opposition from France and Russia and other key players at
the UN and in the international community. So, too, they met with harsh
opposition from senior UN officials.
It took
the administration until November 2002 to get the UN Security Council to
pass Resolution 1441 which found Iraq in material breach of the
cease-fire that ended the 1991 Gulf War. The US and Britain began
prepositioning ground forces and war materiel in Kuwait ahead of a
ground invasion that month. It took more than four months for the
Americans and the British to complete the forward deployment of their
forces in Kuwait.
During those long months,
other parties, unsympathetic to the US, Britain and their aims had ample
opportunity to make their own preparations to deny the US and Britain
the ability to win the war quickly and easily and so avoid the
insurgency that ensued in the absence of a clear victory. So, too, the
four months the US required to ready for war enabled Iran to plan and
begin executing its plan to suck the US into a prolonged proxy war with
its surrogates from al-Qaida and Hezbollah protégés.
...
In the event that Romney is elected to the presidency, upon
entering office he would face a military leadership led by Gen. Martin
Dempsey that has for four years sought to minimize the danger that
Iran's nuclear weapons program poses to the US. Dempsey has personally
employed language to indicate that he believes an Israeli preemptive
strike against Iran's nuclear weapons sites would be an illegal act of
aggression.
Romney would face intelligence,
diplomatic and military establishments that at a minimum have been
complicit in massive leaks of Israeli strike options against Iran and
that have so far failed to present credible military options for a US
strike against Iran's uranium enrichment sites and other nuclear
installations.
He would face a hostile media
establishment that firmly and enthusiastically supports Obama's policy
of relentless appeasement and has sought to discredit as a warmonger and
a racist every politician who has tried to make the case that Iran's
nuclear weapons program constitutes an unacceptable threat to US
national security.
Then, too, Romney would face
a wounded Democratic base, controlled by politicians who have refused
to cooperate with Republicans since 2004.
And
he would face an electorate that has never heard a cogent case for
military action against Iran. (Although, with the goodwill with which
the American public usually greets its new presidents, this last
difficulty would likely be the least of his worries.)
At
the UN, Romney would face the same gridlock faced by his two
predecessors on Iran. Russia and China would block UN Security Council
action against the mullocarcy.
AS FOR the Arab
world, whereas when Obama came into office in 2009, the Sunni Arab world
was united in its opposition to a nuclear-armed Iran, today Muslim
Brotherhood-ruled Egypt favors Iran more than it favors the US. Arguably
only Saudi Arabia would actively support an assault on Iran's nuclear
weapons sites. All the other US allies have either switched sides, or
like Jordan, Kuwait and Bahrain are too weak to offer any open
assistance or political support. For its part, Iraq is already acting as
Iran's satrapy, allowing Iran to transfer weapons to Bashar Assad's
henchmen through its territory.
All of this
means that as was the case in Iraq, it would likely take until at least
the summer of 2013, if not the fall, before a Romney administration
would be in a position to take any military action against Iran's
nuclear installations.
Read the whole thing. The new moon in January is the night of January 11 (the darkest night of the month). Hmmm.
Hey, but if you're lucky, Romney will tell them not to shoot down your planes!
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