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Pat Buchanan
25 May 2012
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Ten Days That Shook Tehran

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Given its monopoly of guns, bet on the Iranian regime. But, in the long run, the ayatollahs have to see the handwriting on the wall.

Let us assume what they insist upon — that Mahmoud Ahmadinejad won the June 12 election; that, even if fraud occurred, it did not decide the outcome. As Ayatollah Khamenei said to loud laughter in his Friday sermon declaring the election valid, "Perhaps 100,000, or 500,000, but how can anyone tamper with 11 million votes?"

Still, the ayatollah and Ahmadinejad must hear the roar of the rapids ahead. Millions of Iranians, perhaps a majority of the professional class and educated young, who shouted, "Death to the Dictatorship," oppose or detest them. How can the regime maintain its present domestic course or foreign policy with its people so visibly divided?

Where do the ayatollah and Ahmadinejad go from here?

If they adopt a harder line, defy Barack Obama and refuse to negotiate their nuclear program, they can continue to enrich uranium, as harsher sanctions are imposed. But to what end adding 1,000 more kilograms?

If they do not intend to build a bomb, why enrich more? And if they do intend to build a bomb, what exactly would that achieve?

For an Iranian bomb would trigger a regional arms race with Turkey, Egypt and Saudi Arabia seeking nuclear weapons. Israel would put its nuclear arsenal on a hair trigger. America would retarget missiles on Tehran. And if a terrorist anywhere detonated a nuclear bomb, Iran would risk annihilation, for everyone would assume Tehran was behind it.

Rather than make Iran more secure, an Iranian bomb would seem to permanently isolate her and possibly subject her to pre-emptive attack.

And how can the Iranians survive continued isolation?

According to U.S. sources, Iran produced 6 million barrels of crude a day in 1974 under the shah. She has not been able to match that since the revolution. War, limited investment, sanctions and a high rate of natural decline of mature oil fields, estimated at 8 percent onshore and 11 percent offshore, are the causes. A 2007 National Academy of Sciences study reported that if the decline rates continue, Iran's exports, which in 2007 averaged 2.4 million barrels per day, could decrease to zero by 2015.

You cannot make up for oil and gas exports with carpets and pistachio nuts.

If Tehran cannot effect a lifting of sanctions and new investments in oil and gas production, she is headed for an economic crisis that will cause an exodus of her brightest young and quadrennial reruns of the 2009 election.

And there are not only deep divisions in Iran between modernists and religious traditionalists, the affluent and the poor, but among ethnic groups.

Half of Iran's population is Arab, Kurd, Azeri or Baluchi. In the Kurdish northwest and Baluchi south, secessionists have launched attacks the ayatollah blames on the United States and Israel.

As they look about the region, how can the ayatollahs be optimistic?

Syria, their major ally, wants to deal with the Americans to retrieve the Golan. Saudi Arabia and Egypt are hostile, with the latter having uncovered a Hezbollah plot against President Hosni Mubarak.

Hamas is laser-focused on Gaza, the West Bank and a Palestinian state, and showing interest in working with the Obama administration.

Where is the Islamic revolution going? Where is the state in the Muslim world that has embraced Islamism and created a successful nation?

Sudan? Taliban Afghanistan? Somalia is now in final passage from warlordism to Islamism. Does anyone believe the Al-Shahab will create a successful nation?

As for the ayatollahs, after 30 years, they are deep in crisis — and what have they produced that the world admires?

Even if the "green revolution" in Iran triggers revolts in the Gulf states, Saudi Arabia or Egypt, can Iran believe Sunni revolutionary regimes will follow the lead of a Shia Islamic state? How long did it take Mao's China to renounce its elder brother in the faith, Khrushchev's Russia?

When one looks at the Asian tigers — South Korea, Hong Kong, Taiwan, Singapore, Malaysia — or at the China or India of recent decades, one sees nations that impress the world with their progress.

Iran under the mullahs has gone sideways or backward. Now, with this suspect election and millions having shown their revulsion of the regime, the legitimacy and integrity of the ayatollahs have been called into question.

Obama offers the regime a way out.

They may exercise their right to peaceful nuclear power, have sanctions lifted and receive security guarantees, if they can prove they have no nuclear weapons program and will cease subverting through their Hezbollah-Hamas proxies the peace process Obama is pursuing between Israel and Palestine.

If Iran refuses Obama's offer, she will start down a road at the end of which are severe sanctions, escalation and a war that Obama does not want and Iran cannot want — for the winner will not be Iran.

Patrick Buchanan is the author of the new book "Churchill, Hitler and 'The Unnecessary War." To find out more about Patrick Buchanan, and read features by other Creators Syndicate writers and cartoonists, visit the Creators Syndicate web page at www.creators.com.

COPYRIGHT 2009 CREATORS SYNDICATE INC.


Comments

3 Comments | Post Comment
Sir; ... As Saddam Hussein could testify if he were still alive; not having nuclear weapons does not make any of those countries more secure either... We are more secure telling them what to do, and in shaking the nuclear fist at them; but they are not more secure... Quite reasonably, the people are objecting to theocracy and theocratic control of society... We have not got much to brag about on that score...We let ideology do our thinking for us, and one of those ideologies is religion...It does not lead to intelligent government or to good government...In the instance of Iran; those people are giving a large part of their GNP to having a little bit of respect, and many working people who want to be part of the world as individuals have no use for national respect...I think those individuals are in the wrong... We have a bad habit of disrespecting every people until we have fought them...WE simple seem incapable of respecting people we have not joined with in mass blood letting... We feel like we have to fight every new kid in town to find out if they are okay... If we just whipped them, or made them Kow Tow, then we would crap on their plates with little regard to their sensibilities..That is what bullies do....We don't treat the Germans, or the Japanese, the Koreans, or the Vietnamese that way... So they are absolutely correct to pursue Nuclear arms... As big a drain as that is on their brain power, and their economy, and as bad as nukes are for offensive activity; still, those nukes are the best defense at the least cost since nothing so scorches the earth as Nuclear Weapons... We should realize that those people are more western than eastern... They have honor, and deserve respect... If having Nuclear arms as a goal shows they are as determined and intelligent as ourselves, then we should join with them, and admit them as equals which is a quality we give lip service to, and never mean...Those people are our equals, and I will say it, and we should mean it... There is the nub of our differences with them, that we do not say, or think that they deserve equality with us, and until we do, we will not have peace, or trust...Thanks...Sweeney
Comment: #1
Posted by: James A, Sweeney
Tue Jun 23, 2009 6:17 AM
Has Pat Buchanan had a stroke?
For a guy who previously wrote with such rational constructs, he seems to have been brainwashed (or is it waterboarded) by Dick Cheney.
Maybe it's just the topic of Iran that has him all squirrely, but he is off-the-rails on that one.
Can it be that his patrons have persuaded him that the neocon way is the correct way?
It is very disappointing for me, a long-time reader of his essays, to see this drivel appear under his name. I wonder if he isn't just signing-off on someone else's claptrap.
In any case, what Iran does or does not do is no business of the United States of America. If our "leaders" didn't insist on sticking their noses where they don't belong, there would not be a Middle East problem. The double standard, enforced by the Israeli Lobby in D.C., has destroyed any pretensions of credibility that the U.S. might ever have had in foreign capitols. If Israel's extensive nuclear arsenal is not a problem, why should an Islamic nuclear arsenal be a problem? The double standard won't fly. Since our government first took the baton from the British adventurers in the Levant, America has been viewed, accurately, as the enemy of self-determination; not only in the Middle East, but around the world.
Pat Buchanan ought to go back and read his own book about the "unnecessary war". His current attitude shows that his moral compass gone kaput.
Comment: #2
Posted by: CanisLatus
Tue Jun 23, 2009 7:05 AM
Re: CanisLatus;... Sir, there is simply nothing to be gained from a quarrel between the right and the right in Persia... It is quite possible that the winner won, and the only ones to lose face and credibility in this situation is us... What is the point??? If the Mullahs have the guns they have the power, and if they have the religion they have the authority; so they will win, and all we will do is make ourselves look powerless, since we have, in fact, pessed away all our power to do anything in Iraq and Afghanistan... Thems are the facts, and Mr. B. is too short to see over them...There is either going to be a hockey game there, or a fight, and given the advantages on the one side, it is likely to be short and not too sweet..And Pat's moral compass moves for money...Nothing else gets his pointer working....Thanks...Sweeney
Comment: #3
Posted by: James A, Sweeney
Tue Jun 23, 2009 4:10 PM
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