Defense Secretary Robert Gates has been wrong about a number of key issues
lately.
Perhaps this is a sign of political immaturity but how can this be? Secretary
Gates has a solid political career in addition to a long history in
intelligence working for the CIA and the NSA. So how could he be wrong on issues
in which he should be an authority? How indeed.
Gates admitted being wrong about al Qaida being in its ‘last gasp’ in Iraq. His
thoughtless blabbing last Tuesday on PBS was followed by some of the worst
violence of the year in Iraq, which had a cost measured in lives. American
lives.
Five American soldiers were killed in a suicide attack in the northern city of
Mosul. 60 plus Iraqis were killed and another 200 injured in that and other
attacks. Gates’ irresponsible comments were an echo of Cheney’s 2005 statement
in which he predicted that al Qaida was finished; words which lit up Iraq in a
prolonged period of violence.
Yesterday Defense Secretary Gates put it out there that it would not be a good
idea for Israel to attack Iran’s nuclear facilities.
Specifically he said that an attack on Iran would “cement their (Iran’s)
determination to have a nuclear program, and also build into the whole country
an undying hatred of whoever hits them.” (To borrow a response from a world
famous actor from Springfield, “Duh!”) I don’t think Iran is too fond of Israel
at the moment anyway.
Why do Gate’s comments make it sound as if Israel is the instigator? If he had
read his own intelligence briefings or even the news, he would have noticed that
Iran has promised the complete annihilation of the Jewish State. A promise
repeated over and over during Iran’s race to achieve a working nuclear program.
He would also have noticed the acidic sarcasm with which Iran flipped him the
bird as they filed a complaint of harassment against Israel with the UN. This in
a response, they say, to Israel’s threat of attacking Iran’s nuclear
installations as a self-defense precaution.
There’s no room for misunderstanding Iran’s short term intentions.
President Mahmūd Ahmadinejād has made his goals amply clear to anyone who will
listen. His tactics have been to avoid, delay, and threaten as he has put his
nuclear program in place. Even though the Russians have offered to provide
nuclear fuel and remove the resulting waste, Iran insists on processing its own
fuel which implies that it does indeed have a need for nuclear material aside
from domestic power usage.
Ahmadinejād, in a clear characteristic smirk at the U.S., upped the ante
recently by holding a female American hostage in the form of reporter Roxana
Saberi. She is imprisoned awaiting the outcome of her ‘secret’ trial. The veiled
threat is that her outcome will be directly linked to America’s interaction with
Iran in the coming weeks. Iran, we all know, has had some success with hostages
before under a previous Democratic president.
Not too subtle those Iranians. Nor is subtlety their intention. Their outward
contempt for the West is matched only by that of their hatred of all things
Israeli.
Israel for its part is caught in the unenviable position of having to act - it
has no choice in the matter. The U.S. and the world should acknowledge this.
Iran has publicly demonstrated its ability to lob increasingly large payloads
atop their rockets just about anywhere they please. The very real implication is
that they can act on their threats against Israel whenever they have the desire
to do so.
Does Secretary Gates think that it’s a better idea for Israel to make their
decision to act in the 15 minutes it takes for those rockets to arrive from
Iran? Reaction for Israel is too late – all that would assure is mutual
destruction in which case Iran wins because their aim of destroying Israel comes
without a price tag.
Gates comments to and about Israel are foolhardy. They exude weakness and a lack
of cohesion on Gates and our government’s part at a time when we, and our ally
Israel, can least
afford it. Regan would have advised Secretary Gates to ‘grow some balls.” Good
advice.
It is time for the administration to take the focus off Israel and address
concerns directly to the source of the problem, Iran. Policies of appeasement
have never achieved anything good. Ever. It merely emboldens the appeased -
look at North Korea for example. It stomps its feet like a child and the west
gives it whatever it wants.
Iran does not want diplomacy; it needs what it as been getting, time. It sees
itself as the regional power with 70.5 million people; a powerful Islamic nation
albeit a broke one. As a country in economic turmoil it has created an ongoing
diversion for its people by focusing their and the world’s gaze on Israel. With
ever decreasing oil revenues and having to import its own refined gasoline at
market prices it is ripe for action.
For Iran, the destruction of Israel would be the supreme act as a king maker –
no matter what the cost in human terms for Iran. An onslaught on Israel would
catapult Iran into a position of world power backed by over one billion Muslims that have
taken up residency in our communities’ world wide.
When all is said and done Iran’s attacking of Israel could change the political
and economic dynamics of the whole Western world. That is the goal of President Ahmadinejād.
Wake up Mr. Secretary. The enemy is at the gates (sic).
Back to the
ButlerReport
Has Defense Secretary Gates lost it?
Evin Daly is the publisher of and a journalist
for the ButlerReport.com. Contact:
edaly@goldcoastmedia.net.
Editors:
Leah Tobin.
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