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  • Three Reasons Not To Bomb Iran-Yet

    THREE REASONS NOT TO BOMB IRAN-YET
    Edward N. Luttwak

    Commentary, NY
    April 18 2006

    I know of no reputable expert in the United States or in Europe
    who trusts the constantly repeated promise of Iran's rulers that
    their nuclear program will be entirely peaceful and is meant only to
    produce electricity. The question is what to do about this. Faced
    with the alarming prospect of an Iran armed with nuclear weapons,
    some policy experts favor immediate preventive action, while others,
    of equal standing, invite us to accept what they consider to be
    inevitable in any case. The former call for the bombing of Iran's
    nuclear installations before they can produce actual weapons. The
    latter, to the contrary, urge a diplomatic understanding with Iran's
    rulers in order to attain a stable relationship of mutual deterrence.

    Neither position seems adequately to recognize essential Iranian
    realities or American strategic priorities. To treat Iran as nothing
    more than a set of possible bombing targets cannot possibly be the
    right approach. Still more questionable is the illogical belief that
    a regime that feels free to attack American interests in spite of its
    present military inferiority would somehow become more restrained if
    it could rely on the protective shield of nuclear weapons.

    In contemplating preventive action, the technical issue may be quickly
    disposed of. Some observers, noting that Iran's nuclear installations
    consist of hundreds of buildings at several different sites, including
    a number that are recessed in the ground with fortified roofs, have
    contended that even a prolonged air campaign might not succeed in
    destroying all of them. Others, drawing a simplistic analogy with
    Israel's aerial destruction of Iraq's Osiraq nuclear reactor in June
    1981, speak as if it would be enough to drop sixteen unguided bombs
    on a single building to do the job. The fact is that the targets
    would not be buildings as such but rather processes, and, given the
    aiming information now available, they could indeed be interrupted
    in lasting ways by a single night of bombing. An air attack is
    not a demolition contract, and in this case it could succeed while
    inflicting relatively little physical damage and no offsite casualties,
    barring gross mechanical errors that occur only rarely in these days
    of routine precision.

    The greater question, however, is neither military nor diplomatic but
    rather political and strategic: what, in the end, do we wish to see
    emerge in Iran? It is in light of that long-term consideration that
    we need to weigh both our actions and their timing, lest we hinder
    rather than accelerate the emergence of the future we hope for. We
    must start by considering the special character of American relations
    with the country and people of Iran.

    II

    The last time the United States seriously considered the use of force
    in Iran, much larger operations were envisaged than the bombing of
    a few uranium-enrichment installations. The year was 1978, and the
    mission was so demanding that a complete light-infantry division would
    have been needed just as an advance guard to screen the build-up of
    the main forces. The projected total number of troops in action-most
    of them from Iran's U.S.-equipped and U.S.-trained army-would easily
    have exceeded the maximum total fielded by the United States and its
    allies in Iraq since 2003. Their mission: to defend the country from a
    Soviet thrust to the Persian Gulf, in which motor-rifle divisions would
    descend from the Armenian and Azerbaijan Soviet Socialist Republics
    to link up with airborne divisions sent ahead to seize the oil ports.

    That long-ago bit of contingency planning reflected sound intelligence
    on the contemporary transformation of the Soviet army from a ponderous
    battering ram to a fast-paced maneuver force. In the end, to be sure,
    it turned out that not Iran but neighboring Afghanistan was the Soviet
    target. But there is no question that, in facing the adventurism of an
    exceedingly well-armed Soviet Union in its final stage of militarist
    decline, the government of Iran could rely on the protection of
    its American alliance, an alliance in place ever since the Truman
    administration blocked Stalin's attempt to partition the country in
    1946. From then on, and even in the perilous circumstances envisaged
    in 1978, the United States stood ready to risk the lives of American
    troops to defend Iran-it was that important in American strategy.

    At stake in those decades was not just Iran's oil, although that
    counted for much more in 1946 than it does now: there was as yet no
    oil production to speak of in Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, or the United Arab
    Emirates, and Iraq was the only other oil exporter in the region. More
    significant than Iran's geology was, and is, its geography. During the
    cold war, its northern border on either side and across the waters of
    the Caspian Sea formed an essential segment of the Western perimeter
    of containment. Today, it is Iran's very long southern coastline
    that is of equal strategic importance, dominating as it does the
    entire Persian Gulf from its narrow southern entrance at the straits
    of Hormuz to the thin wedge of Iraqi territory at its head. All of
    the offshore oil- and gas-production platforms in the gulf, all the
    traffic of oil and gas tankers originating from the jetties of the
    Arabian peninsula and Iraq, are within easy reach of the Iranian coast.

    Unchanging geographic realities thus favor a strategic alliance between
    the United States and Iran, with large benefits for each side. Only
    the strategic reach of the distant United States can secure Iran from
    the power of the Russians nearby-a power not in abeyance even now,
    as the recent nuclear diplomacy shows, and much more likely to revive
    in the future than to decline. Likewise, a friendly Iran can best
    keep troublemakers away from the oil installations on the Arab side
    of the gulf, where there are only weak and corrupt desert dynasties
    to protect them.

    III

    The vehement rejection of the American alliance by the religious
    extremists in power ever since the fall of the Shah in 1979 therefore
    violates the natural order of things-damaging both sides, but
    Iran far more grievously. The cost to the people of Iran has been
    huge, starting with the 600,000 dead and the uncounted number of
    invalids from the 1980-88 war with Iraq, which American protection
    would certainly have averted, and continuing till now with the lost
    opportunities, disruptions, and inconveniences caused by the lack of
    normal diplomatic and commercial relations.

    These impediments are so costly precisely because there is still
    so much interchange between the two sides, with Iranian-Americans
    traveling back and forth and not a few operating businesses in Iran
    while residing in the U.S., and vice-versa. Beyond that, millions
    of ordinary Iranians are keenly interested in all that is American,
    from youth fashions to democratic politics, and nothing can stop them
    from watching the Farsi-language television stations of Los Angeles;
    all attempts by Iran's rulers to prohibit the country's ubiquitous
    satellite antennas have failed.

    That is part of a much wider loss of authority over Iranian society.

    The regime started off in 1979 with the immense prestige of Ayatollah
    Ruhollah Khomeini, initially the consensual leader of just about
    everyone in Iran: Westernizing liberals and traditionalist bazaar
    merchants, the modernizing middle classes and the urban poor,
    rural landlords angry at the Shah's land reforms and the peasant
    beneficiaries of those measures, old-line Tudeh Communists and
    anti-Communist radicals, and of course believing Muslims of every sort,
    from the moderately devout and quietist to the fanatical clerics of
    the more extreme theological schools.

    Except for the last-named, all the members of this broad coalition of
    the deluded were one by one excluded from any share of power, and then
    variously outlawed, imprisoned, executed, oppressed, marginalized, or
    simply ignored, leaving extremist clerics in full control. Initially,
    these still had Khomeini's authority to justify their power, and
    still enjoyed the traditional respect that many Iran-ians used to
    feel for the clerics of Shiite Islam. But that is entirely gone now,
    replaced by resentment and contempt.

    Too many clerics have used their official government positions,
    or their control of confiscated property placed in Islamic trusts,
    to enrich themselves and their families. Too many have operated scams
    of all kinds, diverting oil revenues or overcharging the government
    not only to fund the hugely swollen theological schools whose hordes
    of pious idlers must be fed and clothed but also for their personal
    benefit. The most notorious of them all, Ali Akbar Hashemi Rafsanjani,
    a low-ranking cleric by trade, twice president of the Islamic republic
    from 1989 to 1997, perennial candidate for another term, chairman
    of the unelected but powerful "Expediency Discernment Council," and
    a top adviser to the Supreme Leader Ayatollah Seyyed Ali Khamenei,
    is widely believed to have become Iran's richest man.

    Under the Shah, corruption in government contracting notoriously
    added some 15 percent to the cost of everything that was bought, from
    fertilizers for the ministry of agriculture to helicopters. Now the
    graft is more like 30 percent; the family and cronies of the Shah,
    it turns out, were paragons of self-restraint as compared with the
    clerics. They now form an entire class of exploiters, with the result
    that a bitter anti-clericalism has become widespread in Iran as it
    never was before.

    Having lost all its moral authority, the regime must survive on the
    power of coercion alone, derived from the brutish part-time Basij
    militia of poor illiterates and the full-time Pasdaran Inqilab,
    or "Revolutionary Guards," whose forces are structured in ground,
    air, and naval combat units but whose men can still be sent into
    action as enforcers against protesting civilians. With the rise of
    Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, the first non-cleric to win Iran's presidency and
    himself a former engineering officer in their ranks, the Pasdaran have
    become an important political faction as well as a military force,
    a political gendarmerie, and a business conglomerate.

    It is one more symptom of the regime's degeneration that, although
    the Pasdaran are well paid by local standards, they complement
    their salaries by engaging in both legal and illegal business, from
    manufacturing to contraband across the Persian Gulf. The Pasdaran's
    naval arm operates fast patrol boats from seven Iranian ports and
    the Halul oil platform. They are used to smuggle in products from
    foreign hulls or from the port of Dubai, not only embargoed items
    for national purposes but also perfumes and other luxury products
    for private money-making.

    IV

    Nor is that all. Because of its ideology, as well as the imperatives
    of retaining power against the popular will, the regime is in permanent
    collision with the culture, or rather the cultures, of Iran.

    Almost half of the country's population is not Persian. Yet, under
    an official Persian nationalism that dates back to the 1920's-it
    is the only aspect of the Shah's imperial regime that Ayatollah
    Khomeini and his successors have left entirely untouched-all other
    national cultures are suppressed and reduced to mere folklore. Only
    Persian-language teaching is allowed (except for Armenian-Christian
    and Jewish religious instruction), condemning all non-Persians to
    illiteracy in their own languages.

    Of these non-Persians, the Kurds alone account for some 9 percent of
    Iran's population, and their national sentiments have certainly been
    strengthened by the example of virtual Kurdish independence in Iraq
    next door. As their demands for cultural autonomy become more forceful,
    something of an insurgency seems to have started in Kurdish-inhabited
    parts of northwestern Iran. Smaller nationalities, too, have recently
    engaged in acts of violent resistance, including the Arabs at 3 percent
    of Iran's population and the Baluch of the southeast at 2 percent.

    Taken together, the Kurds, the Arabs, the Baluch, plus several other
    ethnicities (Turkmen, Lurs, Gilaki, and Mazandarani), whether in any
    way dissident or not, amount to a quarter of Iran's population. But
    another quarter at least is added by the Turkish-speaking Azeris.

    Although many Azeris, especially in Tehran, are thoroughly assimilated,
    many others increasingly affirm their Turkic national identity,
    and groups calling for cultural autonomy or even separation have
    become increasingly active among them. Ever since Azerbaijan, just
    across the border, gained its independence from the Soviet Union,
    the Azeris have had a national home of their own, and it is not Iran.

    Further fracturing the country's unity is the clerics' religious
    extremism. Their discriminatory practices arouse the resentment not
    only of such minor non-Islamic communities as the Bahais, Christians,
    Jews, and Zoroastrians, who conjointly amount to less than 1 percent
    of the population, but also of the Sunni Muslims who account for some
    10 percent. In Tehran, home to more than a million of them, Sunnis
    are not allowed to have their own mosque, as they have in Rome, Tel
    Aviv, and Washington, D.C. The last sustained attempt to build a Sunni
    mosque was blocked by Mahmoud Ahmadinejad when he was mayor of Tehran.

    Ahmadinejad's advent as president marks, indeed, a definite shift-from
    the institutionalized religious extremism in place since the fall of
    the Shah in 1979 to a more strident ultra-extremism.

    True, under Iran's theocratic constitution the elected president must
    obey the "Supreme Leader," a cleric of at least ayatollah rank, just as
    the elected Majlis parliament is subordinated to the unelected "Council
    of Guardians." Hence the views of the previous president, the elegant,
    learned, and mostly moderate Seyyed Muhammad Khatami, mattered not at
    all, as was soon discovered by the Western officials who wasted their
    time in negotiating with him. But Khatami was powerless because he was
    out of step with a regime that was responding to its ever increasing
    unpopularity by becoming ever more extreme. Ahmadinejad, by contrast,
    exemplifies that very trend.

    Although the world now knows him for his persistent denial of
    the Holocaust and his rants against Israel and Zionism, at home
    Ahmadinejad's hostility is directed not against Iran's dwindling Jewish
    community but against the Sunnis. Lately, moreover, his ultra-extremism
    has antagonized even many of his fellow Shiites: he is an enthusiastic
    follower of both Ayatollah Muhammad Taqi Misbah Yazdi, for whom all
    current prohibitions are insufficient and who would impose an even
    stricter Islamic puritanism, and of a messianic, end-of-days cult
    centered on the Jamkaran mosque outside the theological capital
    of Qum. More traditional believers are alarmed by the hysterical
    supplications of the Jamkaran pilgrims for the return of Abul-Qassem
    Muhammad, the twelfth imam who occulted himself in the year 941 and
    is to return as the mahdi, or Shiite messiah. More urgently they fear
    that in trying to "force" the return of the mahdi, Ahmadinejad may
    deliberately try to provoke a catastrophic external attack on Iran
    that the mahdi himself would have to avert.

    The shift from everyday extremism to a more active ultra-extremism
    is also manifest in the persecution of heterodox Shiites, both the
    Ahl-e-Haqq of western Iran and the far more numerous Sufi brotherhoods,
    who were previously left alone even by the rigorously fanatical
    Ayatollah Khomeini. Now, by contrast, Sufi gathering places are
    forcibly closed or attacked, and a major center in Qum was recently
    demolished, with hundreds of protesting Sufi dervishes arrested in
    the process.

    Far more important than any of this is the antipathy of the regime
    for the Persian majority culture itself. Relentlessly favoring an
    essentially Arab Islamic culture instead, it condemns-though it
    has not been able to suppress-such cherished pre-Islamic customs as
    the fire-jumping ceremony that precedes the Nowruz celebrations of
    the Zoroastrian new year each spring. More generally, it elevates
    its narrow Islamism above the achievements and legacy of one of the
    world's major civilizations, whose millennial influence in everything
    from poetry and music to monumental architecture, from the higher
    crafts of carpets and miniatures to cuisine, continues to be felt in
    a vast area from the Balkans to Bengal right across central Asia.

    The cultural dimension of their identity is especially significant
    for the Persians of the Iranian diaspora. This vast and growing group
    comprises a handful of political exiles and millions of ordinary
    people who could have prospered in Iran, and made Iran prosperous,
    but for their refusal to live under the rule of religious fanatics.

    Their cultural identity is what gives them a strong sense of cohesion
    quite independently of the Islam they were born into. While only a
    few have converted to Christianity, or are seriously engaged in the
    Zoroastrian revival that is promoted by some exiles, the majority
    have reacted to the extremism of Iran's present rulers by becoming,
    in effect, post-Islamic-that is, essentially secular but for a
    sentimental attachment to certain prayers and rituals.

    In this, the exiles are presaging the future of Iran itself.

    V

    In contemplating American military action against Iran, it is important
    to recall these fundamental realities-now submerged but bound to
    reassert themselves as fundamentals always do. For the inhabitants of
    Iran are human beings like the rest of us, and extremist norms can
    be imposed on them only by brute force. A valid analogy is with the
    collapse of Communism in Eastern Europe and Russia and, in China,
    the retreat of Communism from the economic to the political realm
    alone. In each of these cases, even after all the depredations,
    massacres, destructions, and claimed transformations of decades of
    Communist rule, local cultures and historic identities reemerged
    largely intact and essentially unchanged-except for the principled
    rejection of Communist ideology.

    It will be just the same in Iran when the fanatics who now oppress
    the non-fanatical majority lose power, as they inevitably will
    in time. Along with the reemergence of the country's suppressed
    Westernization that dates back to the 1920's, along with the
    restoration of its own beloved secular Persian culture, one can
    reasonably expect the United States to return to the scene as Iran's
    natural ally. But not everything will be as it was before, for the
    long and bitter years of religious oppression will have engendered
    widespread disaffiliation from politicized Islam, with some interest in
    its apolitical variants and perhaps some conversions to milder faiths,
    and certainly with an irresistible demand to strip the clerics of
    all political or judicial power.

    That, as it happens, is one excellent reason not to move forthwith
    to bomb Iran's nuclear installations. For the long-term consequences
    of any American military action cannot be disregarded. Iranians are
    our once and future allies. Except for a narrow segment of extremists,
    they do not view themselves as enemies of the United States, but rather
    as the exact opposite: at a time when Americans are unpopular in all
    other Muslim countries, most Iranians become distinctly more friendly
    when they learn that a visitor is American. They must not be made to
    feel that they were attacked by the very country they most admire,
    where so many of their own relatives and friends have so greatly
    prospered, and with which they wish to restore the best of relations.

    There is a second good reason not to act precipitously. In essence,
    we should not bomb Iran because the worst of its leaders positively
    want to be bombed-and are doing their level best to bring that about.

    When a once broadly popular regime is reduced to the final extremity
    of relying on repression alone, when its leadership degenerates
    all the way down from an iconic Khomeini to a scruffy Ahmadinejad,
    it can only benefit from being engaged or threatened by the great
    powers of the world. The clerics' frantic extremism reflects a sense
    of insecurity that is fully justified, given the bitter hostility
    with which they are viewed by most of the population at large. In a
    transparent political maneuver, Ahmadinejad tries to elicit nationalist
    support at home by provoking hostile reactions abroad, through his
    calls for the destruction of Israel, his clumsy version of Holocaust
    denial that is plainly an embarrassment even to other extremists, and,
    above all, his repeated declarations that Iran is about to repudiate
    the Non-Proliferation Treaty it ratified in 1970.

    There is a third reason, too. The effort to build nuclear weapons
    started more than three decades ago, yet the regime is still years
    away from producing a bomb.

    VI

    It was as far back as August 1974, when the overnight tripling of
    Iran's oil revenues seemed to offer boundless opportunities, that
    the Shah publicly announced his intention to fund the construction of
    23 nuclear reactors with an electricity-producing capacity of 1,000
    megawatts each-a huge total, enough to supply Iran's entire demand.

    His declared aim was to preserve the "noble" commodity of oil for
    the more valuable extraction of petrochemicals, instead of burning
    it as a furnace fuel.

    That almost made economic sense at the time. Although many
    suspected-rightly-that the Shah's real aim was to acquire nuclear
    weapons (we now know that he was seeking to buy ballistic missiles as
    well), he did at least have a passingly plausible explanation. But
    that was before the immensity of Iran's natural-gas reserves became
    known. No such cover story can deceive anyone in 2006: with 812
    trillion cubic feet of proven gas reserves (15 percent of the world's
    total), Iran can cheaply generate all the electricity it wants with
    gas turbines.

    In 1975, the Shah contracted with the French for enriched uranium
    and with Germany's Kraftwerk Union consortium of Siemens and A.E.G.

    Telefunken, as well as with ThyssenKrupp, to build the first two
    pressurized light-water reactors and their generating units near Iran's
    major port city of Bushehr. Work progressed rapidly until July 1979,
    when, after an expenditure of some $2.5 billion, the Germans abandoned
    Bushehr because Iran's new revolutionary rulers refused to make an
    overdue progress payment of $450 million. It seems that Ayatollah
    Khomeini opposed nuclear devilry-and besides, anything done by the
    Shah was viewed with great suspicion.

    At that point, one reactor (Bushehr I) was declared by the Germans
    to be 85-percent complete and the other (Bushehr II) 50-percent
    complete. Both were subsequently damaged during the war with Iraq
    that lasted until 1988, chiefly in air strikes flown by seconded
    French pilots. Siemens was asked to return to finish the work but,
    knowing that the German government would never allow the contract to
    proceed, refused.

    Negotiations with the Russians began soon thereafter. But because of
    quarreling by different factions within Iran and protracted haggling
    with Minatom, the Soviet atomic-energy ministry, no agreement was
    reached until 1995, when Boris Yeltsin, by now the president of Russia,
    ignored American objections and approved the delivery of a VVER-1000
    pressurized light-water reactor powered by slightly enriched uranium
    rods. Delivered as a single large module, the reactor was to be fitted
    into the Bushehr I building, which was to be quickly repaired, adapted,
    and completed by Iranian and Russian contractors.

    But problems arose-more or less the same ones that might be
    encountered in remodeling a suburban kitchen, though on a somewhat
    larger scale. Today, some eleven years after the contract was signed,
    some 2,500 Russian technicians are still hard at work in famously
    hot Bushehr, and the reactor is still not quite ready. The United
    States, which originally opposed the Minatom contract, now accepts,
    presumably for good reason, that all is proceeding properly-the
    Russians alone are to process the uranium rods, and the level of
    Minatom's competence and efficiency has been adequately signaled by
    the pace of its performance so far.

    Rather less is known about Iran's secret program to produce
    weapon-grade uranium by the centrifuge process, but there is no
    reason to believe that things are otherwise. What is known is that
    in 1995, the Pakistani thief and smuggler Abdul Qadeer Khan, who
    is regularly described as a scientist but who has never invented
    or developed anything at all, agreed to sell to Iran the complete
    centrifuge-technology package he had stolen from the European URENCO
    consortium. The package also included samples of Pakistani-made
    centrifuges, full-scale plans for a heavy-water and plutonium
    reactor and separation plant, and the drawings and calculations for
    a cannon-type uranium bomb that Pakistan had originally received
    from China.

    Evidently not included in the package were the two first stages of
    the separation process-the straightforward crushing and leaching
    needed to extract concentrated natural uranium or "yellowcake"
    from uranium ore-and the less simple but not overly sophisticated
    chemical plant needed to convert yellowcake into the gas uranium
    hexafluoride, which is fed into centrifuges. But China made up for
    this lack in 1996, selling complete and detailed plans and blueprints
    to Iran after the United States successfully objected to the sale of
    the plant itself. It is now installed, big as life, near Isphahan,
    ready for use and evidently already tested. To judge by photographs,
    it could just as readily be incapacitated with fewer than twelve
    1,000-pound bombs, though the target would have to be revisited
    periodically because chemical plants are easily repaired even after
    their seemingly spectacular destruction.

    VII

    But the core technology in the Khan package was that of the centrifuges
    themselves. They were not the ultra-fast, carbon-fiber units that
    URENCO now uses but two early models: one built out of dense aluminum
    that is easier to manu- facture with the right machinery, and the
    other built out of a more efficient maraging steel but harder to
    manufacture. Both derive from a 1957 German design that was itself
    an improved version of the original aluminum centrifuges developed
    in the postwar Soviet Union by captured German scientists.

    The fissile U-235 isotope of uranium that is needed for bombs is only
    1.26-percent lighter than the mass of U-238 that comprises 99.3 percent
    of natural uranium. To extract it, only very fast centrifuges are of
    any use, turning at the rate of at least 1,500 revolutions per second,
    a hundred times as fast as a domestic washing machine. Things that
    turn that fast easily break apart, and the detailed design is also
    far from simple: to reduce friction that would otherwise generate
    enough heat to melt the whole thing, the electrically powered rotor
    must spin in a vacuum, with a magnetic bearing. The Japanese, who are
    generally believed to be somewhat more advanced than the Iranians
    in such matters, encountered considerable difficulties with their
    centrifuge plant.

    Nor could Khan possibly sell enough centrifuges to Iran: to separate
    U-235 for a bomb in any reasonable amount of time, many centrifuges
    must be set to work at once. With the design now in Iran's possession,
    it would take at least 1,000 centrifuges working around the clock
    for at least a year to produce enough U-235 for a single cannon-type
    uranium bomb. Those 1,000 centrifuges must first be manufactured and
    then connected by piping into so-called "cascades"-and they must not
    break down, as poorly made centrifuges certainly will. (Of the 164
    centrifuges that Iran already had in motion when the inspectors of
    the International Atomic Energy Agency [IAEA] shut down the cascade
    in November 2003, fully a third crashed when the electricity was
    turned off.) Nor is it easy to keep the cascade running correctly:
    because uranium hexafluoride becomes highly corrosive in contact with
    water vapor, it can easily perforate imperfect tubes-and any leaks
    will promptly damage more of the plant.

    It is true that one potential obstacle to Iran's quest for U-235 did
    prove to be entirely insignificant. European firms, mostly German
    and Swiss, not only eagerly sold the high-strength aluminum, special
    maraging steel, electron-beam welders, balancing machines, vacuum
    pumps, machine tools, and highly specialized flow-forming machines
    for both aluminum and maraging steel centrifuges, but also trained
    Iranians in the use of all this equipment. Remarkably, or perhaps not,
    they were also willing to train Iranians in the processes specifically
    needed to manufacture centrifuges whose only possible purpose is to
    enrich uranium U-235. When the IAEA inspectors came around, they were
    able to read and photograph the labels on all the equipment, which
    neither the European manufacturers nor the Iranians had bothered to
    remove. It remains to be seen if any consequences will ensue.

    Still, in spite of all the industrial assistance it received, it is not
    clear that the Iranian nuclear organization can manufacture centrifuge
    cascades of sufficient magnitude, efficiency, and reliability. There
    are many talented engineers among the Iranian exiles in the United
    States and elsewhere in the world, but perhaps not so many in Iran
    itself. Besides, demanding technological efforts require not just
    individual talents but well-organized laboratories and industrial
    facilities.

    Organization is indeed Iran's weakest point, with weighty consequences:
    after a century of oil drilling, for example, the state oil company
    still cannot drill exploratory wells without foreign assistance. In
    another example, even though the U.S. embargo was imposed almost
    25 years ago, local industry cannot reverse-engineer spare parts of
    adequate quality for U.S.-made aircraft, which must therefore remain
    grounded or fly at great peril-there have been many crashes. Similarly,
    after more than sixty years of experience with oil refining at Abadan,
    existing capacity still cannot be increased without the aid of foreign
    engineering contractors, while the building of new refineries with
    local talent alone is deemed quite impossible. Iran must import one
    third of the gasoline it consumes because it cannot be refined at home.

    VIII

    In sum, there is no need to bomb Iran's nuclear installations at this
    time. The regime certainly cannot produce nuclear weapons in less
    than three years, and may not be able to do so even then because of
    the many technical difficulties not yet overcome.

    To this it might be objected that the nuclear program clearly has
    priority over everything else, and receives funding in huge amounts.

    That is true enough. Although there are no reliable expenditure numbers
    for Iran's nuclear program, there is no need of numbers to establish
    its sheer magnitude. When the secret installations and activities
    revealed in

    August 2002 are added to those already publicly known, the total
    is impressive. It includes the Saghand ore-processing plant and
    uranium mine, the Tehran nuclear research center with its (very old)
    U.S.-supplied 5-megawatt research reactor, the nuclear technology
    center at Isphahan with four small Chinese-supplied research reactors,
    the Isphahan zirconium-production plant, the Bonab atomic-energy
    research center, the Anarak nuclear-waste storage site near Yazd,
    the Ardekan nuclear fuel plant, the shuttered Lashkar Ab'ad laser
    isotope separation plant, the Parchim, Lavizan II, and Chalous
    development facilities that eluded inspection, the Yazd radiation
    processing center, and finally the four largest and most important
    installations: the Bushehr reactor, the Isphahan uranium-hexafluoride
    conversion plant, the heavy-water and plutonium reactor and separation
    plant at Arak near the Kara-Chai River, some 150 miles south of Tehran,
    and the huge Natanz centrifuge complex between Isphahan and Kashan (at
    33°43'24.43" N, 51°43'37.55"E, in case any friendly pilot should ask).

    The last-named facility contains more than two dozen separate buildings
    within a perimeter of 4.7 miles, but of greatest interest are the two
    huge underground halls of 250,000 square feet each. Built with walls
    six feet thick and supposedly protected by two concrete roofs with
    sand and rocks in between-impressive to contemplate even if no dice
    against today's penetrating munitions-these halls are large enough to
    hold as many centrifuges as the Iranians could possibly want to make
    any number of uranium bombs or for that matter to fuel many reactors,
    always assuming of course that they can successfully manufacture,
    assemble, and operate centrifuge cascades.

    That they can indeed do so is what Iranian spokesmen themselves
    now claim, and none more emphatically than Ahmadinejad, who
    insists that his countrymen have already mastered all the required
    processes and techniques. But is he right? He does possess a Ph.D. in
    engineering-won, however, in a special program for Pasdaran veterans
    and in the field of urban traffic management rather than nuclear
    engineering. What undermines confidence in Ahmadinejad's opinion
    is his rather expansive way with the facts, including his repeated
    assertion that the centrifuge technology was developed by Iranians
    in Iran and is "the proud achievement of the Iranian nation"-somehow
    overlooking the 99.99 percent of it that was purchased from A.Q.

    Khan.

    Ahmadinejad aside, even casual observers must wonder how the world
    knows so much, in such exceptional detail, about Iran's once secret
    nuclear program, certainly as compared with what it knows of North
    Korea's program or what it knew of Iraq's at any point in time.

    Moreover, only a fraction of what it knows about the installations
    and processes at Arak, Isphahan, Natanz, and all the other places was
    uncovered by the much-advertised inspections of the IAEA; the recent
    Nobel Peace Prize won by its director Mohamed ElBaradei must have been
    a reward for effort rather than achievement. Satellite photography,
    too, is only part of the explanation, because one needs to know
    exactly where to look before it can be useful.

    The conclusion is inescapable that among the scientists, engineers,
    and managers engaged in Iran's nuclear program-most of whom no doubt
    hold the same opinion of their rulers as do almost all educated
    Iranians-there are some who feel and act upon a higher loyalty to
    humanity than to the nationalism that the regime has discredited.

    Iran's regime, extremist but not totalitarian, does not and cannot
    control the movement of people and communications in and out of the
    country as North Korea does almost completely, and as Iraq did in
    lesser degree.

    IX

    Because of the continuing flow of detailed and timely information
    out of Iran, it is possible both to overcome the regime's attempts
    at dispersion, camouflage, and deception and-if that should become
    necessary-to target air strikes accurately enough to delay Iran's
    manufacture of nuclear weapons very considerably. At the same time,
    there is no reason to attack prematurely, because there will be ample
    time to do so before it is too late-that is, before enough fissile
    material has been produced for one bomb.

    And that brings us back to the beginning. What gives great
    significance to the factor of time is the advanced stage of the
    regime's degeneration. High oil prices and the handouts they fund now
    help to sustain the regime-but then it might last even without them,
    simply because of the power of any dictatorship undefeated in war.

    There is thus no indication that the regime will fall before it
    acquires nuclear weapons. Yet, because there is still time, it is
    not irresponsible to hope that it will.

    By the same token, however, it is irresponsible to argue for
    coexistence with a future nuclear-armed Iran on the basis of a shared
    faith in mutual deterrence. How indeed could deterrence work against
    those who believe in the return of the twelfth imam and the end of
    life on earth, and who additionally believe that this redeemer may
    be forced to reveal himself by provoking a nuclear catastrophe?

    But it is not necessary to raise such questions in order to reject
    coexistence with a nuclear Iran under its present leaders. As of
    now, in early 2006, with American and allied ground and air forces
    deployed on both sides of Iran in Afghanistan and Iraq, with powerful
    U.S. naval forces at sea to its south, with their own armed forces
    in shambles and no nuclear weapons, the rulers of Iran are openly
    financing, arming, training, and inciting anti-American terrorist
    organizations and militias at large. Under very thin cover, they
    are doing the same thing within neighboring Iraq, where they pursue
    a logic of their own by helping Sunni insurgents who kill Shiites,
    as well as rival Shiite militias that fight one another.

    If this is what Iran's extremist rulers are doing now even without
    the shield of nuclear weapons to protect them, what would they do
    if they had it? Even more aggression is the only reasonable answer,
    beginning with the subversion of the Arabian oil dynasties, where
    very conveniently there are Shiite minorities to be mobilized.

    These, then, are the clear boundaries of prudent action in response to
    Iran's vast, costly, and most dangerous nuclear program. No premature
    and therefore unnecessary attack is warranted while there is still time
    to wait in assured safety for a better solution. But also and equally,
    Iran under its present rulers cannot be allowed finally to acquire
    nuclear weapons-for these would not guarantee stability by mutual
    deterrence but would instead threaten us with uncontrollable perils.

    EDWARD N. LUTTWAK is senior adviser at the Center for Strategic and
    International Studies in Washington, D.C. and the author most recently
    of Strategy: The Logic of War and Peace (Harvard University Press).

    http://www.commentarymagazine.com/Product ion/files/luttwak0506.html

    --Boundary_(ID_X2VSObW +P/3+xOXBcP40rw)--
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