Are You Ready for War with Iran? Trumps Generals Are

signalmankenneth

Verified User
As America’s designs are frustrated in the Middle East, generals cast about for new countries to blame―and to attack.

General Joseph Votel, U.S. CENTCOM commander, testified [3] to the House Armed Services Committee this week that the greatest destabilizing force in the Middle East is Iran, and that the U.S. must be prepared to use “military means” to confront and defeat the Iranian threat to the region.

No doubt Iran is a pest to U.S. designs in the Middle East. No doubt Iran has its own agenda. No doubt Iran is no friend to Israel. But the greatest destabilizing force in the Greater Middle East? That’s the United States. We’re the ones who toppled Iraq in 2003, along with the legitimate government of Iran 50 years earlier [4].

Iran/Persia has lived in, and sometimes dominated, the Greater Middle East for 2500 years. By comparison, the U.S. is a newcomer on the block. Yet it’s the Iranians who are the destabilizers, the ones operating in a nefarious “grey zone” between peace and war, at least according to U.S. generals.

Besides the disastrous U.S. invasion of Iraq in 2003, which accidentally helped Iran, the U.S. continues to sell massive amounts of weaponry to Iran’s rivals, most especially Saudi Arabia. U.S. military operations in Yemen, Syria, Iraq, and elsewhere in the Middle East have both destabilized the region and created marketplaces for U.S. weaponry and opportunities for economic exploitation by multinational corporations.

I’m no fan of Iran and its leaders, but can one blame them for resisting U.S. military and economic incursions into their sphere of influence? Recall how we reacted when the Russians put missiles into Cuba. Look at all the hostile rhetoric directed today against Mexico and its allegedly unfair trade practices vis-a-vis the U.S.

Let’s not forget that for 25 years (1953-78), the Shah of Iran was an American ally. The U.S. military loved to sell him our most advanced weaponry, which at that time included F-14 Tomcat fighters and HAWK missile systems. That cozy relationship died with the Iranian Revolution [5] (1979); ally turned to enemy as the U.S. supported Saddam Hussein and Iraq during the bloody Iran-Iraq War of the 1980s.

Yet, despite all this history, despite all the U.S. meddling, all the weapons sales, all the invasions and sanctions, somehow it’s the Iranians who are the destabilizing force, the ones deserving of more “disruptive” U.S. military action.

As America’s designs are frustrated in the Middle East, American generals never look in the mirror to see their own faults and failings. Instead, they cast about for new countries to blame ― and to attack. Iran is seemingly next on the list, a country that General Mattis, America’s Secretary of Defense, said is [6] “the single most enduring threat to stability and peace in the Middle East.”

Anyone for war with Iran? U.S. generals are ready.

By
William J. Astore

Untitled-5-4.jpg


download-4-1.png
 
Shouldn't generals always be ready for war? Being ready doesn't mean going to war but seems to me as an amateur one always has to have a plan in place just in case.
 
the shortest war in history, should take about 5 minutes

Afghani's fought with sling shots and muskets = longest war in US history.

Iraq was supposed to be a cake walk = we've been fighting there for more than 13 years.

Maybe you should sign up to go fight in Iran for 5 minutes.
 
Afghani's fought with sling shots and muskets = longest war in US history.

Iraq was supposed to be a cake walk = we've been fighting there for more than 13 years.

Maybe you should sign up to go fight in Iran for 5 minutes.

This is not because of any skill on their part but an inability to do what it takes on our part to break their will. Too worried about "collateral damage". We should eliminate that term. If you decide to go to war then you should crush the entire country. All of it. Leave nothing.

If you aren't ready to do that then don't go to war
 
despite all this history, despite all the U.S. meddling, all the weapons sales, all the invasions and sanctions, somehow it’s the Iranians who are the destabilizing force, the ones deserving of more “disruptive” U.S. military action.
check on the meddling (Iraq and to a lessor extent Syria)

however Iranian expansionism IS the greatest threat to stability (Yemen/Syria/Damascus/Iraq) with their expeditionary Qods force

The IRGC Morphs Into an Expeditionary Force
http://www.washingtoninstitute.org/policy-analysis/view/the-irgc-morphs-into-an-expeditionary-force
 
Back
Top