by William S. Lind
March 26, 2008
from
LewRockwell Website
William Lind is an analyst
based in Washington, DC. |
Admiral Fallon's
(forced?) resignation was the last warning we are likely to get
of an attack on Iran. It does not mean an attack is certain, but the U.S.
could not attack Iran so long as he was the CENTCOM commander.
That obstacle is now gone.
Vice President Cheney's Middle East tour is another indicator.
According to a report in The American Conservative, on his previous
trip Cheney told our allies, including the Saudis, that Bush would attack
Iran before the end of his term. If that report was correct, then his
current tour might have the purpose of telling them when it is
coming.
Why not just do that through the State Department?
State may not be in the loop, nor all of DOD for
that matter. The State Department, OSD, the intelligence
agencies, the Army and the Marine Corps are all opposed
to war with Iran.
Of the armed services, only the Air Force
reportedly is in favor, seeking an opportunity to show what air power can
do. As always, it neglects to inform the decision-makers what it cannot do.
The purpose of this column is not to warn of an imminent assault on Iran,
though personally I think it is coming, and soon. Rather, it is to warn of a
possible consequence of such an attack. Let me state it here, again, as
plainly as I can: an American attack on Iran could cost us the whole army we
now have in Iraq.
Lots of people in Washington are pondering possible consequences of an air
and missile assault on Iran, but few if any have thought about this one. The
American military's endless "we’re the greatest" propaganda has convinced
most people that the U.S. armed forces cannot be beaten in the field. They
are the last in a long line of armies that could not be beaten, until they
were.
Here's roughly how it might play out. In response to American air and
missile strikes on military targets inside Iran, Iran moves to cut the
supply lines coming up from the south through the Persian Gulf (can anyone
in the Pentagon guess why it's called that?) and Kuwait on which most U.S.
Army units in Iraq depend (the Marines get most of their stuff through
Jordan).
It does so by hitting shipping in the Gulf,
mining key choke points, and destroying the port facilities we depend on,
mostly through sabotage. It also hits oil production and export facilities
in the Gulf region, as a decoy: we focus most of our response on protecting
the oil, not guarding our army’s supply lines.
Simultaneously, Iran activates the Shiite militias to cut the roads that
lead from Kuwait to Baghdad. Both the Mahdi Army and the Badr Brigades – the
latter now supposedly our allies – enter the war against us with their full
strength. Ayatollah Sistani, an Iranian, calls on all Iraqi Shiites
to fight the Americans wherever they find them. Instead of fighting the 20%
of Iraq's population that is Sunni, we find ourselves battling the 60% that
is Shiite. Worse, the Shiites logistics lie directly across those logistics
lines coming up from Kuwait.
U.S. Army forces in Iraq begin to run out of supplies, especially POL, of
which they consume a vast amount. Once they are largely immobilized by lack
of fuel, and the region gets some bad weather that keeps our aircraft
grounded or at least blind, Iran sends two to four regular army armor and
mech divisions across the border. Their objective is to pocket American
forces in and around Baghdad.
The U.S. military in Iraq is all spread out in penny packets fighting
insurgents. We have no field army there anymore. We cannot reconcentrate
because we're out of gas and Shiite guerrillas control the roads. What units
don't get overrun by Iranian armor or Shiite militia end up in the Baghdad
Kessel.
General Petraeus calls President Bush
and repeals the famous words of Marshal I MacMahon at Sedan:
"Nous sommes dans un pot de chambre, et
nous y serons emmerdés."
Bush thinks he's overheard Petraeus ordering
dinner – as, for Bush, he has.
U.S. Marines in Iraq, who are mostly in Anbar province, are the only force
we have left. Their lines of supply and retreat through Jordan are intact.
The local Sunnis want to join them in fighting the hated Persians.
What do they do at that point?
Good question.
How probable is all this?
I can't answer that. Unfortunately, the people
in Washington who should be able to answer it are not asking it. They need
to start doing so, now.
It is imperative that we have an up-to-date plan for dealing with this
contingency. That plan must not depend on air power to rescue our army. Air
power always promises more than it can deliver.
As I have warned before, every American ground unit in Iraq needs its own
plan to get itself out of the country using only its own resources and
whatever it can scrounge locally. Retreat to the north, through Kurdistan
into Turkey, will be the only alternative open to most U.S. Army units,
other than ending up in an Iranian POW camp.
Even if the probability of the above scenario is low, we still need to take
it with the utmost seriousness because the consequences would be so vast. If
the United States lost the army it has in Iraq, we would never recover from
the defeat. It would be another Adrianople, another Manzikert, another
Rocroi. Given the many other ways we now resemble Imperial Spain, the last
analogy may be the most telling.
I have said all this before, in previous columns and elsewhere.
If I sound like Cassandra on this point,
remember that events ended up proving her right.