U.S. ambassador to Israel: We’re “ready” to attack Iran if necessary

posted at 7:01 pm on May 17, 2012 by J.E. Dyer

Why in the world were these things said?

“It would have been better to solve it (the Iranian nuclear crisis) in a diplomatic way, by using pressure and without applying military force,” the ambassador clarified at the closed meeting, “But that does not mean that this [attack] option is not possible. Not only is it possible, it is ready. The necessary planning is in place to make sure it’s ready.”

Well, OK.  The question is not whether we are ready or should be ready for this option – um, of course we are; would we tell anyone if we weren’t? – the question is why our ambassador in Israel would say this.  (Read the full comments for the unnecessarily explicit flavor.)

First of all, an ambassador – or at least his top advisors – knows that bellicose comments of this kind do not accord with the conventions of diplomacy.  You don’t go around assuring other nations that you’ve been practicing to attack a third party.  Besides being operationally stupid, it’s potentially both destabilizing and destructive to your credibility.

Instead, you state what your national interests are, you clarify the outcome you’re looking for, and you assure the relevant audience that you will do what it takes to protect your interests and secure your outcomes.  The point is not whether the audience knows that you have actually tested a military OPLAN (who cares? We test them regularly), the point is for them to understand exactly what you want and the seriousness of your determination.

A warning (or, in this case, an assurance) that the US is ready to attack Iran was almost certainly given on orders from the White House, since it’s not something a diplomat would naturally be moved to say, or say without permission.  It’s a combination of operational TMI and inflammatory rhetoric: a sort of anti-diplomacy.

Second, this is a threat that can’t be convincingly conveyed in a fey, indirect manner.  If we mean this threat and we want it to affect Iran’s decisions, then say it to Iran.  (I would advise putting it in different terms.)  Putting the threat out there in the guise of an assurance to Israel just looks manipulative.

It also looks spurious and irresponsible, if we’re going to sit down with the Iranians in Baghdad later this month and “negotiate.”  What, exactly, are the Iranians supposed to assume about this threat?  What action of theirs could trigger it?  Does it clarify the US position, or obfuscate it?  With the threat of war, it is not actually a good idea to be overly clever and create doubt about triggers and your intentions. If you’re going to deploy the war card, certainty is the mindset you want your intended audience to have.

In any case, if the US and the Western powers make the offer of a sweet deal for Iran, in the hope of getting some kind of agreement – a prospect endorsed by the analysis of long-time observer Gerald Seib in this video – that signal will be at odds with the over-explicit threat of attack.  It would be hard to be convincing about a coherent position in that case.

Regarding the point on military preparations, I know many readers try to stay abreast of where the aircraft carriers are, and that’s not necessarily a fool’s errand.  It’s important not to go all “Pat Buchanan” about it – there are two carriers in the Persian Gulf region at least twice a year because they are turning over their patrol duties; it’s not a sign of the Apocalypse – but it can be a useful indicator.  That said, I advise you not to try this at home if you aren’t familiar with US Navy operations.  The presence of two or more carriers in the Central Command “AOR” (area of responsibility) is almost always an indicator of strike group turnover – or simply a coincidence due to a rare circumstance like USS Abraham Lincoln’s (CVN-72) recent change of homeport from Everett, Washington to Norfolk, Virginia, which involved an extra transit through (and deployment in) the Middle East.

The US administration announced earlier this year that it would be keeping two carriers on station in the Gulf region for the time being.  That gives the president a ready option in case he wants to ramp up pressure on Iran.  I would not obsess over the carriers, however.  They will undoubtedly participate if there is a strike on Iran – they will be indispensable for keeping the Strait of Hormuz open, and their F/A-18 strike-fighters will no doubt be used for the precision targeting of hardened sites, among other tasks for the airwings – but they may well not be the centerpiece of the operation.

If President Obama were to scope a strike on Iran as I believe he would – narrowly, striking only a limited set of nuclear-related targets – the strike may well be conducted as a “prompt global strike,” according to the doctrine and capability of the same name, which has been in development since the last year of the Bush administration.  It could involve mostly cruise missiles and “global airpower”:  B-2 and B-52 bombers launching their missions at a distance from Iran, including launches from US territory; i.e., Whiteman and Barksdale.  (I doubt that it would involve long-range ballistic missiles, which are not accurate enough for most applications in this kind of strike.)  The strike would certainly be conventional, not nuclear.

All that said, if an agreement is reached with Iran in the next couple of months, it will be because the agreement is advantageous to Iran, delaying the EU sanctions which are to kick in this summer, and requiring nothing of Iran that the mullahs were not willing to concede.  Any agreement that does not entail full, unannounced inspection of all Iran’s suspect facilities and nuclear-related programs, as well as Iran’s adherence to the “Additional Protocol” of the Non-Proliferation Treaty, is an agreement that will not stop the nuclear weapons program.  That kind of agreement, however, is what we are virtually guaranteed to get.

For the United States, issuing attack threats in the manner of Hugo Chavez is not a convincing posture.  I don’t know if the Israelis will find it reassuring; I suspect the Europeans and Iranians will find it annoying, and decide to ignore it.

J.E. Dyer’s articles have appeared at The Green Room, Commentary’s “contentions,Patheos, The Weekly Standard online, and her own blog, The Optimistic Conservative.

This post was promoted from GreenRoom to HotAir.com.
To see the comments on the original post, look here.


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Comments

UN out of US, US out of UN.

Rebar on May 14, 2013 at 8:46 PM

“This is like putting Jack the Ripper in charge of a women’s shelter.”

Leave Kermit Gosnell out of this.

Happy Nomad on May 14, 2013 at 8:46 PM

It’s like having Gosnell babysitting your kids..
It’s like Al Qaeda running security for our Consultants..
It’s like have Barrack Obama Presiding over The United States..

Electrongod on May 14, 2013 at 8:47 PM

The three biggest jokes in the world are the Nobel committee,green energy and the U.N.

NeoKong on May 14, 2013 at 8:48 PM

I have an idea. Quit the U.N. Charge these flea bags an exhorbitant rent in order to continue to use the building.

justltl on May 14, 2013 at 8:48 PM

Stop.UN.Funding>now.

Evict.UN.From.USA.

ladyingray on May 14, 2013 at 8:49 PM

5 billion!

That is a lot of Whitehouse tours that wouldn’t get cancelled

Ditkaca on May 14, 2013 at 8:50 PM

Every year, the oh-so-august body of international leaders at the United Nations put on a Conference on Disarmament — “established in 1979 as the single multilateral disarmament negotiating forum of the international community” — which has in the past has produced international treaties on nuclear non-proliferation, chemical-weapons prohibitions, and etcetera.

Which means that every year since the waning days of the Carter administration a bunch of diplomats have gotten together and accomplished absolutely nothing of value to the world. Declarations that gather dust. Treaties never ratified by the nations of the international community that matter. Etc.

So for 34 years of wasting the world’s time. Congrats or something. That Iran is presiding says all that one needs to know about the UN as an international organization.

Happy Nomad on May 14, 2013 at 8:52 PM

The UN should move to Oslo.

Jocundus on May 14, 2013 at 8:55 PM

Aw, come on guys – fair suck o’ the sav! The UN is merely trying to drag the Iranians into the eighth century.

OldEnglish on May 14, 2013 at 8:57 PM

why is it that we are devoting more than five billions dollars of taxpayer money this year alone into this extended showcase of mediocrity?

Because when a certain rat-eared coward leaves DC he has higher aspirations. Secretary General of an organization already so corrupt he will be mocked as the Mother Teresa of Turtle Bay.

Happy Nomad on May 14, 2013 at 8:57 PM

The UN should never have existed. It cannot even stand theoretical scrutiny, let alone the twisted, unnatural entity it is in actuality. No one but the dimmest among us would even think that a peerless, competitionless, empowered entity should ever exist. It is an abomination – even in theory, as anyone with even a passing familiarity with evolutionary theory, capitalist theory, or just plain common sense knows.

The UN must be put to sleep. It’s well past time. It came to be in the wake of WWII as a reaction to the great trauma of the war – much like the idiotic name given to WWI in the same traumatic aftermath, as “THE War to End ALL Wars” … again, as if anyone with a brain thought that could possibly be true.

The UN was kept powerless and constrained during the Cold War, as reality kept it from having any real power, but the minute the USSR fell the UN started being truly empowered and took off on its grotesque and destructive growth – as any peerless, competitionless empowered entity is guaranteed to do.

End the UN and shun any idiot who supports it, since such a dolt is too stupid to be taken seriously in public and too dangerous to be allowed any power, at all.

ThePrimordialOrderedPair on May 14, 2013 at 8:58 PM

Who cares? The UN is about as important as a prom committee. So what if they let Iran hire the DJ?

EricW on May 14, 2013 at 8:59 PM

The UN should move to Oslo.

Jocundus on May 14, 2013 at 8:55 PM

I disagree. If not a rotational thing where the diplomats have to make new arrangements every few years, put the UN HQ in a place much closer to where the need is. Yemen or the Sudan comes to mind. They have become far too comfortable in Vienna, Geneva, and New York.

Happy Nomad on May 14, 2013 at 9:00 PM

Screw IRAN and all the other Muslim countries who refuse to condemn Islamic terrorism.

TX-96 on May 14, 2013 at 9:01 PM

What else would we expect from the UN? And why do we keep funding it, even when GOP is in the WH?

Give us a president and Congress with spine, let them cut off our UN funding for four years, and let’s see what happens.

petefrt on May 14, 2013 at 9:03 PM

Who cares? The UN is about as important as a prom committee. So what if they let Iran hire the DJ?

EricW on May 14, 2013 at 8:59 PM

I’ve related this story before so, for the regulars, I am not trying to be redundant. When I took a tour of the UN (largely for intrest in the architecture) the propaganda experience was excruciating. Long corridors of displays about mine warfare and hunger- and all the good things the UN does with other organization’s and nations’ money.

We got to a particular point in the tour and were told that we had to stay in the public spaces because the UN is a working organization. My snort was not totally supressed.

Happy Nomad on May 14, 2013 at 9:04 PM

Didn’t they also put Syria in charge of the human rights council several years ago?

/That or another totalitarian regime.

AZfederalist on May 14, 2013 at 9:08 PM

Oh, lovely: Iran to preside over United Nations arms-control forum later this month

..so that means JugEars will send flowers?

KOOLAID2 on May 14, 2013 at 9:09 PM

The UN should move to Oslo.

Jocundus on May 14, 2013 at 8:55 PM

I disagree. If not a rotational thing where the diplomats have to make new arrangements every few years, put the UN HQ in a place much closer to where the need is. Yemen or the Sudan comes to mind. They have become far too comfortable in Vienna, Geneva, and New York.

Happy Nomad on May 14, 2013 at 9:00 PM

…I think Somalia would be a better choice!

KOOLAID2 on May 14, 2013 at 9:11 PM

get that un out of the us…

ridiculous

cmsinaz on May 14, 2013 at 9:17 PM

They remind me of the cantina scene from Star Wars IV.
“You will never find a more wretched hive of scum and villainy”

kurtzz3 on May 14, 2013 at 9:19 PM

I’ve related this story before so, for the regulars, I am not trying to be redundant. When I took a tour of the UN (largely for intrest in the architecture) the propaganda experience was excruciating. Long corridors of displays about mine warfare and hunger- and all the good things the UN does with other organization’s and nations’ money…
 
Happy Nomad on May 14, 2013 at 9:04 PM

 
The comedy for me was listening to a missionary friend tell about a massive delivery of powdered milk from the UN to poor people in Africa, and how no one bothered to research that well over half (70% or more?) of the natives were lactose intolerant.
 
He said they used it as whitewash. Entire villages were suddenly white. All the nutrition and money wasted because the basics of the people they were “helping” were absolutely foreign to the people making the decisions.
 
You know, now that I think about it, it’s essentially the same mindset as most (D) one-size-fits-all arguments. Peas in a pod, I suppose.

rogerb on May 14, 2013 at 9:29 PM

You know, now that I think about it, it’s essentially the same mindset as most (D) one-size-fits-all arguments. Peas in a pod, I suppose.

rogerb on May 14, 2013 at 9:29 PM

On one level your story is funny. Lactose intolerant villagers making the best use of what they get from the United Nations.

But here’s the kicker to that. Whoever in the United Nations asked these people, or their governments, or the NGOs what they most needed. It is the kind of paternalism at the heart of any “humanitarian” efforts of the UN that makes me think the whole organization should be disbanded despite the sudden spike in unemployment among the idiot relatives of the world’s dictators.

Happy Nomad on May 14, 2013 at 9:39 PM

Move the UN to Zimbabwe.

Manhattan’s brothels and pretentious restaurants hardest hit.

viking01 on May 14, 2013 at 10:11 PM

Whoa…deja vu all over again.
Must be a glich in the matrix.

justltl on May 14, 2013 at 10:28 PM

The UN has delusions of grandeur.

The proper response to the UN acting in an absurd manner is to start working around or indifferent to it. Hold meetings and conferences outside the UN’s structure. Most diplomacy already happens outside the UN. Its not as if the state department files for a meeting at the UN every time they want to talk to certain allies or even rivals.

The UN has a place in that it allows many nations to interact with each other at once at the same time. But the vast majority of diplomacy doesn’t require that sort of action.

How we underscore the irrelevance of the UN is by simply not using it. Its not that hard. Pick up the phone and talk to country B. Arrange a conference of all the countries you’d care to collect. Do not run it through the UN at all.

Do that enough and UN will have no one listening to them but Wilson the Volleyball.

Karmashock on May 15, 2013 at 10:02 AM

Elsewhere in Dar al-Harb, emboldened Wahhabists were arrested last night probing Boston’s water supply.

CDC has a duty to quarantine and test these perps.

Saudi Arabia: New Virus Spreads

Saudi Arabia has confirmed six new cases of the SARS-like coronavirus in its Eastern Province in recent days, the state news media reported. That added to the previous tally of 24 confirmed cases since the disease was identified last year, in which 15 people died. Health officials said that it seemed likely the new virus could be passed between humans, but only after prolonged, close contact. A virus from the same family caused the outbreak of Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome, or SARS, that killed 775 people in 2003.

This is likely either a dry-run (or an actual) bio-terrorism attack.

Terp Mole on May 15, 2013 at 12:32 PM