What Would War Against Iran Look Like
Time Magazine
A flurry of military maneuvers in the Middle East increases speculation that conflict with
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The
first message was routine enough: a "Prepare to Deploy" order sent
through naval communications channels to a submarine, an Aegis-class
cruiser, two minesweepers and two mine hunters. The orders didn't
actually command the ships out of port; they just said to be ready to
move by Oct. 1. But inside the Navy those messages generated more buzz
than usual last week when a second request, from the Chief of Naval
Operations (CNO), asked for fresh eyes on long-standing
The CNO had asked for a rundown on how a blockade of those strategic
targets might work. When he didn't like the analysis he received, he
ordered his troops to work the lash up once again.
What's going
on? The two orders offered tantalizing clues. There are only a few
places in the world where minesweepers top the list of
naval requirements. And every sailor, petroleum engineer and hedge-fund
manager knows the name of the most important: the Strait of Hormuz, the
20-mile-wide bottleneck in the
through which roughly 40% of the world's oil needs to pass each day.
Coupled with the CNO's request for a blockade review, a deployment of
minesweepers to the west coast of
No one knows whether--let alone when--a military confrontation with
military routinely makes plans for scores of scenarios, the vast
majority of which will never be put into practice. "Planners always
plan," says a Pentagon official. Asked about the orders, a second
official said only that the Navy is stepping up its "listening and
learning" in the Persian Gulf but nothing more--a prudent step, he
added, after Iran tested surface-to-ship missiles there in August
during a two-week military exercise. And yet from the State Department
to the White House to the highest reaches of the military command,
there is a growing sense that a showdown with
and its bid for dominance of the world's richest oil region--may be
impossible to avoid. The chief of the U.S. Central Command (Centcom),
General John Abizaid, has called a commanders conference for later this
month in the Persian Gulf--sessions he holds at least quarterly--and
On its face, of course, the notion of a war with
allies in those adventures have made it clear they will not join
another gamble overseas. What's more, the Bush team, led by Secretary
of State Condoleezza Rice, has done more diplomatic spadework on
than on any other project in its 51/2 years in office. For more than 18
months, Rice has kept the Administration's hard-line faction at bay
while leading a coalition that includes four other members of the U.N.
Security Council and is trying to force
But
superpowers don't always get to choose their enemies or the timing of
their confrontations. The fact that all sides would risk losing so much
in armed conflict doesn't mean they won't stumble into one anyway. And
for all the good arguments against any war now, much less this one,
there are just as many indications that a genuine, eyeball-to-eyeball
crisis between the
So what would it look like? Interviews with dozens of experts and government officials in
nuclear facilities would have a decent chance of succeeding, but at a
staggering cost. And therein lies the excruciating calculus facing the
ROAD TO WAR
The crisis with
ambitions are limited to nuclear energy, the regime has asserted its
right to develop nuclear power and enrich uranium that could be used in
bombs as an end in itself--a symbol of sovereign pride, not to mention
a useful prop for politicking.
right to a nuclear program a national cause and trying to solidify his
base of hard-line support in the Revolutionary Guards. The nuclear
program is popular with average Iranians and the élites as well.
"Iranian leaders have this sense of past glory, this belief that
But the nuclear program isn't
has dramatically consolidated its reach in the region. Since the 1979
Islamic revolution, Iran has sponsored terrorist groups in a handful of
countries, but its backing of Hizballah, the militant group that took
Lebanon to war with Israel this summer, seems to be changing the Middle
East balance of power. There is circumstantial evidence that
And yet the West has been unable to compel
to comply with its demands. Despite all the work Rice has put into her
coalition, diplomatic efforts are moving too slowly, some believe, to
stop the Iranians before they acquire the makings of a nuclear device.
And
took weeks to reply to a formal proposal from the U.N. Security Council
calling on a halt to uranium enrichment. When it did, its official
response was a mosaic of half-steps, conditions and boilerplate that
suggested
That doesn't make war inevitable. But at some point the
is able to enrich enough uranium to fuel a bomb--a point that comes
well before engineers actually assemble a nuclear device. Many believe
that is when a country becomes a nuclear power. That red line, experts
say, could be just a year away.
WOULD AN ATTACK WORK?
The answer is yes and no.
No one is talking about a ground invasion of
has between 18 and 30 nuclear-related facilities. The sites are
dispersed around the country--some in the open, some cloaked in the
guise of conventional factories, some buried deep underground.
A
Pentagon official says that among the known sites there are 1,500
different "aim points," which means the campaign could well require the
involvement of almost every type of aircraft in the
arsenal: Stealth bombers and fighters, B-1s and B-2s, as well as F-15s
and F-16s operating from land and F-18s from aircraft carriers.
GPS-guided
munitions and laser-targeted bombs--sighted by satellite, spotter
aircraft and unmanned vehicles--would do most of the bunker busting.
But because many of the targets are hardened under several feet of
reinforced concrete, most would have to be hit over and over to ensure
that they were destroyed or sufficiently damaged. The
would have to mount the usual aerial ballet, refueling tankers as well
as search-and-rescue helicopters in case pilots were shot down by
submarines and ships could launch cruise missiles as well, but their
warheads are generally too small to do much damage to reinforced
concrete--and might be used for secondary targets. An operation of that
size would hardly be surgical. Many sites are in highly populated
areas, so civilian casualties would be a certainty.
Whatever the order of battle, a
nuclear program by two to three years. Hit hard enough, some believe,
Iranians might develop second thoughts about their government's designs
as a regional nuclear power. Some
attack could trigger their downfall, although others are convinced it
would unite the population with the government in anti-American rage.
But it is also likely that the
nuclear wizards, operating at other, undiscovered sites even deeper
underground, continued their work. "We don't know where it all is,"
said a White House official, "so we can't get it all."
WHAT WOULD COME NEXT?
No one who has spent any time thinking about an attack on
operation would reap a whirlwind. The only mystery is what kind. "It's
not a question of whether we can do a strike or not and whether the
strike could be effective," says retired Marine General Anthony Zinni.
"It certainly would be, to some degree. But are you prepared for all
that follows?"
Retired Air Force Colonel Sam Gardiner, who taught strategy at the
has been conducting a mock U.S.-Iran war game for American policymakers
for the past five years. Virtually every time he runs the game,
Gardiner says, a similar nightmare scenario unfolds: the
Next,
military authority has never been strong; it would be a small step to
lend aid to Taliban forces gaining strength in the south. Meanwhile,
which would welcome a boost in money and weapons, if just to strengthen
their hand against rivals. Analysts generally believe that
Next, there is oil. The
A more intense operation would probably send oil prices soaring above
$100 per bbl.--which may explain why the Navy wants to be sure its
small fleet of minesweepers is ready to go into action at a moment's
notice. It is unlikely that
That kind of retaliation could quickly transform a relatively limited
into a much more complicated one involving regime change. An Iran
determined to use all its available weapons to counterattack the U.S.
and its allies would present a challenge to American prestige that no
Commander in Chief would be likely to tolerate for long. Zinni, for
one, believes an attack on
the assumption was that it would be a liberation, not an occupation.
You've got to be prepared for the worst case, and the worst case
involving
a "dumb idea." Abizaid, the current Centcom boss, chose his words
carefully last May. "Look, any war with a country that is as big as
that has a terrorist capability along its borders, that has a missile
capability that is external to its own borders and that has the ability
to affect the world's oil markets is something that everyone needs to
contemplate with a great degree of clarity."
CAN IT BE STOPPED?
Given the chaos that a war might unleash, what options does the world have to avoid it? One approach would be for the
as a nuclear power and learn to live with an Iranian bomb, focusing its
efforts on deterrence rather than pre-emption. The risk is that a
nuclear-armed
Those
equally unappetizing prospects--war or a new arms race in the Middle
East--explain why the White House is kicking up its efforts to resolve
the
that confrontationalists like Vice President Dick Cheney and Defense
Secretary Donald Rumsfeld have lately not wandered off the rhetorical
reservation. Everyone has been careful--for now--to stick to Rice's
diplomatic emphasis. "Nobody is considering a military option at this
point," says an Administration official. "We're trying to prevent a
situation in which the President finds himself having to decide between
a nuclear-armed
Rice continues to try for that. This week in
she will push her partners to get behind a new sanctions resolution
that would ban Iranian imports of dual-use technologies, like parts for
its centrifuge cascades for uranium enrichment, and bar travel overseas
by certain government officials. The next step would be restrictions on
government purchases of computer software and hardware, office
supplies, tires and auto parts--steps
At
the moment, that sounds as much like a prayer as a strategy. A former
CIA director, asked not long ago whether a moderate faction will ever
emerge in
quipped, "I don't think I've ever met an Iranian moderate--not at the
top of the government, anyway." But if sanctions don't work, what
might? Outside the Administration, a growing group of foreign-policy
hands from both parties have called on the
into direct negotiations in the hope of striking a grand bargain. Under
that formula, the U.S. might offer Iran some security guarantees-- such
as forswearing efforts to topple Iran's theocratic regime--in exchange
for Iran's agreeing to open its facilities to international inspectors
and abandon weapons-related projects. It would be painful for any U.S.
Administration to recognize the legitimacy of a regime that sponsors
terrorism and calls for
Such distrust runs both ways and is getting deeper. Unless the
