President Obama Can Stop Iran
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It is now become clear that neither diplomacy
nor sanctions will halt the Iranian march toward nuclear weapons. Iran is today
stronger diplomatically than it has been in years, as evidenced by the meeting
of the nonaligned nations in Tehran. Iran is neither isolated nor alone in a
world in which nonaligned nations form a majority at the United Nations.
The sanctions, while hurting the Iranian economy and making life more
difficult for the average Iranian, are having zero impact on the Iranian
nuclear program, which according to objective intelligence reports, is
gathering steam and moving even more quickly toward its ultimate goal of a
nuclear weapon that will be a game changer. An Iranian nuclear weapon will end
any dream of nonproliferation. It will protect Iran's surrogate terrorists,
such as Hezbollah, under a formidable nuclear umbrella. And it will make an
eventual nuclear war more likely. That is why President Obama rightfully took
the containment option off the table and put the preventive military option
squarely on it.
Although I support President Obama's policy with regard to the Iranian
nuclear threat, I think he must take one further step if the combination of
diplomacy and sanctions are ever to work. That step is to communicate to
Iran—unequivocally and without any room for misunderstanding—that the Obama
Administration will never allow Iran to develop nuclear weapons.
President Obama has already made this point, but not in a way that the
Iranians understand and believe. Language matters, and President Obama must now
use language that commits him, in the eyes of the Iranians, to keep his promise
that he will, if necessary, use military force to prevent Iran from developing
nuclear weapons.
Only if the Iranians truly believe that they will never be allowed to
develop nuclear weapons will the combination of diplomacy and sanctions work.
The message has to be this: Look, sanctions hurt. Diplomatic isolation from
first world powers is costly. So why incur this pain and cost if you know you
will never be able to achieve your goal?
Not only must the Iranians believe that the United States will, as a last
resort, use its overwhelming air power to destroy Iran's nuclear weapons
program, but the Israeli leadership must also believe that the Iranians believe
it. Only then will Israel forbear from taking preventive self defense actions
on its own.
If the Iranians and the Israelis were to believe believe President Obama's
assurances that, as he put it, "I don't bluff," there would be a real
possibility that Iran would abandon its nuclear weapons program. But even if
the mullahs were foolishly to challenge the United States, and continue with
the weapons program, the Israelis would have an enhanced degree of confidence
that Obama would keep his word and stop Iran before it reached its deadly goal.
Right now, despite President Obama's best efforts, neither the Iranians nor
the Israelis are sufficiently confident that he would carry out his threat.
They know that there are those within the administration and among President
Obama's supporters who will discourage him from making an unequivocal statement
or carrying out a threat, because they believe that sanctions and diplomacy
alone will work, without the need for "saber rattling." There are
also those who prefer a policy of containment to the threat of military action.
The Iranians are aware of this faction and are counting on them to prevail, if
it comes down to a choice between allowing Iran to develop nuclear weapons and
stopping them by military action. President Obama must make it clear that he
has rejected this view and that he will employ military action if that is the
only option other than a nuclear Iran.
This is not a debate between peaceniks and warmongers. Every Israeli and
American that I know wants peace. Everyone would love to see Iran stop
developing nuclear weapons without a rocket being fired or a bomb being
dropped. The dispute is about tactics and strategy. President Obama believes
that the best way to avoid having to use the military option is to make Iran
understand that he will in fact use it as a last alternative to Iran developing
the bomb. Those on the other side of this debate believe that making such an
unequivocal threat would constitute saber rattling, and that such rattling
actually decreases the chance for a peaceful resolution of this difficult
issues.
President Obama is right and those who are opposed to his rattling some sabers
are wrong. So let President Obama look the mullahs in the eye and persuade them
that they simply do not have the option of developing nuclear weapons. The only
two options they have are to stop or be stopped. Only if they believe this, is
there any realistic likelihood that they will stop.
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