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Expect a US-Iran showdown in 2012

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Expect a US-Iran showdown in 2012
7 January 2012
jonathan eyal
The new year could not have started on a more ominous note in West Asia. Iran concluded its naval war games in the Gulf on last week with blood-curdling threats against its foes. Meanwhile, Western nations led by the United States are planning to apply even tougher oil and financial sanctions against Teheran.
What’s most worrying is that this latest test of wills is no longer just about Iran’s suspected nuclear weapons programme, but about who will be the predominant regional power. And it is a confrontation which could easily translate into blows.
Iran’s military leaders are clearly in a cocky mood. Admiral Habibollah Sayyari, the commander of the Iranian navy, has spent the week boasting about his country’s prowess, claiming that soon his ships will be trawling the Atlantic Ocean, right under the nose of the US. “We are determined to make our presence felt internationally,” he vowed.
In practice, much of this is just noise.
The Qader missile which the Iranian navy test-fired last week is neither new, nor “long-range” as Teheran claims; it first appeared two years ago, and has a range of only 200km. Many of the ships paraded by Iran were also old. The Jamaran warship which recently went through the Suez Canal is little more than a floating tin can, incorporating 1970s technology. “Sending it to the bottom of the sea will be an act of kindness,” joked one US military planner.
Nor should one take too seriously Iran’s threats to close the Hormuz Strait. As most military experts know, sealing the waterway through which up to a third of the world’s oil passes is easier said than done.
Iran’s shore-based missile and artillery batteries can be used for this purpose, but they are likely to be taken out by the US air force within minutes. Any Iranian vessel which tries to interdict shipping in the strait is unlikely to survive for long either. And placing mines in the strait, a deep stretch of water with strong currents, is tricky.
Furthermore, even if Iran succeeds in blocking the Hormuz passage, the main victim would not be the US but China, which buys the bulk of Iran’s oil exports, and on whom Teheran relies for diplomatic protection. So, although Iran’s General Hossein Salami claims that closing the strait would be “as simple as drinking a glass of water”, the real analogy is more with a glass of poison: The act will harm Iran itself.
Still, developments over the past week have set off alarm bells in Washington. For the first time, Iran has indicated that it would seek to block not only the Gulf waters, but also the Sea of Oman, facing the Indian Ocean, which is the only other sea-based route for Saudi Arabia’s oil exports.
To make matters worse, Iran is also planning to pass a law declaring the Strait of Hormuz part of its territorial waters, in violation of international law.
Iranian Oil Minister Rostam Qasemi has also just announced plans to expand the country’s oil drilling deep into the Gulf, raising the prospect of new territorial disputes with neighbouring Arab states.
The US simply cannot ignore these challenges. Nor can it ignore the broader battle for influence in West Asia, which is currently evenly poised. On the one hand, the possible overthrow of Syrian President Bashar al-Assad, who is facing a growing popular revolt, could be a major blow to Iran; the two countries are close allies.
Yet at the same time, the withdrawal of US troops from Iraq offers Iran an opportunity to expand its influence. If the Iranians manage to prop up the current Syrian government, they may still be able to create an arc of Shi’ite-dominated regimes which extends from the Gulf and right up to Lebanon. The strategic stakes have never been higher, for both the West and Iran.
The same high-stakes considerations apply to Iran’s quest to become a nuclear power. Until recently, US intelligence agencies believed that its strategy was to acquire all the know-how but not actually deploy nuclear weapons until Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, its spiritual leader, decides that the time is right. This so-called “breakout” scenario allowed the USA to argue that there was no urgent need to contemplate military strikes against Iran’s nuclear installations, since diplomatic pressure may slow and even reverse the process.
Now, however, US spooks are beginning to contemplate a different outcome, a “sneak-out” scenario in which Iran produces both the nuclear charges and their delivery systems surreptitiously, precisely what Israeli analysts have argued all along. Unsurprisingly, US and Israeli strategists are beginning to converge in their assessments, a fact underlined by General Benny Gantz, the Israeli army’s chief of staff, who claimed last week with satisfaction that ‘international preparations’ for dealing with Iran are “proper”.
With elections looming later this year, US President Barack Obama is anxious to avoid a showdown with Iran. But he may not be able to. For one thing, the new sanctions which Mr Obama approved last Saturday will hit Iran’s central bank, the core of the country’s financial structure.
Although Iran’s oil exports, worth around US$70 billion a year, are not directly endangered, Teheran will find it increasingly difficult to collect its revenues; that’s why the rial, the country’s currency, has plunged to as low as 16,800 to the dollar, down from 10,500 just a year ago
. The Iranians will continue to claim that they are unaffected by the sanctions. But, with Iran’s parliamentary elections due in March, its rapidly deteriorating financial position will be difficult to ignore.
Either way, it is clear that both the US and Iran are now entrenched in positions which preclude compromises. The Iranians believe that they are presented with a unique strategic opportunity to become the predominant power in the Middle East. And the US is now convinced that the Iranian regime would be persuaded to give up its nuclear dreams only if its very survival is threatened.
The danger is no longer one of a catastrophic miscalculation by either side but of a full and premeditated military showdown. And it is almost certain to come before the end of this year.


http://www.thestatesman.net/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=396106&catid=39
 
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US does not dare to attack Iran. After Iran threatened US, recently, US did not threaten Iran and instead went and saved Iranian fishermen to show its good will and peaceful attitude. As for sanctions, these have been there for the past 33 years. And the reason for the fall of Iranian Rial is more technical and is not bad in a way. Read this from a real economist teaching in United States: The fall of the Iranian rial: too much of a good thing? « Tyranny of numbers
 
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I love wars.

US-Iran dual will be better than anything that we have seen since the 90's.

Fingers crossed!
 
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We love wars too. Kashmir is ours. Anyways a war will unite Pakistan and give new vigor to Pakistan, much like WWII did to US in recession:

This thread is for US-Iran romance.

Can we pls keep it to dat?
 
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I love wars.

US-Iran dual will be better than anything that we have seen since the 90's.

Fingers crossed!
after libya,yugoslavia,iraq,afghanistan Iran will be the most heavy opponent the US will face. So lets see if they ACTUALLY DARE TO ACT or its just all bluffing
 
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after libya,yugoslavia,iraq,afghanistan Iran will be the most heavy opponent the US will face. So lets see if they ACTUALLY DARE TO ACT or its just all bluffing

I don't think they need to attack when they can destroy Iran's economy by sanctions.
 
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after libya,yugoslavia,iraq,afghanistan Iran will be the most heavy opponent the US will face. So lets see if they ACTUALLY DARE TO ACT or its just all bluffing

I personally think some sort of small duration confrontation between Iran-Israel or US-Iran is possible

---------- Post added at 08:36 PM ---------- Previous post was at 08:34 PM ----------

I don't think they need to attack when they can destroy Iran's economy by sanctions.

Iran has threatened to block Hormuz straits if the sanctions affect Iran exports.

And if Iran does close Hormuz, you know the US will be req. to free it using its CBG's and after that we all know where this situation will go.
 
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I don't think they need to attack when they can destroy Iran's economy by sanctions.
we are already for 3 decades under sanctions . only thing i can see is our dominant power in the middle east

---------- Post added at 08:09 PM ---------- Previous post was at 08:07 PM ----------

I personally think some sort of small duration confrontation between Iran-Israel or US-Iran is possible
you mean some sort of naval skirmishes between US-Iran ?
Israel is too far, they cant get dragged into the US-Iran conflict.
 
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I love wars.

US-Iran dual will be better than anything that we have seen since the 90's.

Fingers crossed!

Are you crazy? You think of wars as something exciting and enjoyable? People die in wars. Imagine if it was India in place of Iran and it was being attacked by US. How would you feel then?

Think thoroughly before posting such BS. :angry:
 
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Are you crazy? You think of wars as something exciting and enjoyable? People die in wars. Imagine if it was India in place of Iran and it was being attacked by US. How would you feel then?

Think thoroughly before posting such BS. :angry:

What I posted was my opinion...if you don't like it, keep your complaint to yourself.
 
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Completely $hit article.. is USA discovering all this about Iran on 9th January and waited years after years only because they didn't want to sink a floating tin??? I salute Iran and whole Iranian Nation for having balls of steel.. and its not just balls which are strong.. their fist will be more devestating than any country can imagine.

hint: 2 thousand Hizbullah fighters made Israelis pee in their pants.. and you are talking to take on Iran? Wishful day dreamers.
 
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