The war with Iran is in its seventh week of military operations. There was a promise of peace, but peace has not happened yet. President Donald Trump set a firm deadline for Iran, and that time is here. Historian Victor Davis Hanson said that Iran is in “a very strange situation” and then discussed how it got there.
The
strange situation is there because Iran lost its command and control to
decapitation. Their air force and navy have been destroyed, and their army is
useless in an air war. “Its nuclear, military, industrial complex has been bombed
to smithereens. Its population is restless even as it “lost half a trillion
dollars in a half-century long investment in military hardware and military
industries” while neglecting its population.
Hanson
questioned how Iran got into this situation and decided that it “had an
expansive view of itself – an inflated view. Why?”
During
the Obama administration, the Obama State Department and President Barack Obama
himself sent messages to Iran that maybe a Shiite crescent – Tehran, Damascus,
Beirut, Gaza, people in Yemen – might balance the Sunni Arabs of the Gulf with
their money and the military power of the Jewish state of Israel. And Obama
might step in from time to time to adjudicate this – I guess they called it
creative tension.
In
other words, we said there was no moral difference between the Iranian bloc and
its opponents, when there was, of course.
Well,
that gave the impression to Iran that we were afraid of them, or that we would
always be willing to make concessions. When Joe Biden came in, the first thing
he did was beg them to get back into the Iran deal. That inflated their egos
even further. Then he lifted sanctions and gave them $100 billion of new
revenue.
Meanwhile,
the Iranians were looking at Russia going into Ukraine, and the United States
had done nothing other than say our reaction would hinge on whether it was a
minor or major invasion. Then came Oct. 7. The Iranians had subsidized
Hezbollah, Hamas, and the Houthis, and their proxies and clients in Syria and
Iraq, with the idea that they had created a ring of fire around the Jewish
state.
After
the Oct. 7 massacres – which they denied having knowledge of, but which they
obviously strategically planned with their clients – they thought the United
States wouldn’t do anything. And they were pretty much right about that during
the Biden administration, if not worse.
We
kind of distanced ourselves from Israel, and Iran knew that. They felt that
after Oct. 7 it would be such a traumatic experience for the Israeli government
that it wouldn’t do much. A lot of this was hinged on the pseudo-reputation
they had of being militarily invincible, but there was never any proof that was
true.
They
ran the Iraq War of 1980, and they didn’t do very well. Khomeini had to sue for
peace, even though they had almost one and a half times the population of Iraq.
But they were the terror of the Middle East. People said, “Whatever you do – go
into Afghanistan, go into Iraq, bomb – don’t get near Iran.”
They’re
crazy people. They have 93 million people. They’re the second-largest country
in the Middle East by population. They’re the second-largest by area. They’re
dangerous people.
They’re
fanatic Shiites, and they’re willing to die for their cause. But if you actually
looked at what they had done, they had achieved that reputation through
surrogate use of terrorism – blowing up embassies, blowing up Marine barracks,
assassinating individuals, sending weaponry to kill Americans in Afghanistan
and Iraq –but they’d never really shown any impressive performance on the
battlefield, either at sea, on the ground, or in the air.
And
so, they thought they could get away with Oct. 7. That gave them an even
greater inflated sense of self, because they kept telling us that between all
of their proxies and their own arsenals they might have 300,000 short- and
long-range missiles, rockets, and drones, and they would collapse Israel under
a sea of explosives.
They
thought that even after Oct. 7, Israel wouldn’t dare do anything to them
because they had sophisticated Chinese and Russian air defenses. That they didn’t
count on were two things.
Oct.
7 changed the entire mentality of Israel. It was the greatest loss of Jewish
life since the Holocaust. Israelis said you cannot live like this. You cannot
sustain a country like this. You can’t have a sword of Damocles descending on
you periodically.
So
we’re going to have to go to the head of the snake. Hezbollah … Hamas … the Houthis
… the people in Syria we’ll deal with. But in one way or another, they get
money and weapons from Tehran.
And
we don’t believe they’re indomitable – not now, not after Oct. 7. In that
12-day war last year, they [Israel] destroyed the entire air-defense system of
Iran, and then they began taking out its military capability and its nuclear
industry and infrastructure.
They
called us in and asked us, and we were more than ready to comply because it was
in our national interest. In about 25 to 30 hours, we blew up their nuclear
facilities. We thought that might be the end. We thought they got the message –
but, of course, they didn’t.
Their
proxies began to shoot missiles again. They began, according to our
intelligence, to resume work on their nuclear facilities and nuclear proliferation
trajectory. And so, the United States entered negotiations with them again.
Like all negotiations with the Iranians, they were drawn out. They were meant
to delay while they rearm, enrich more uranium, or sic their terrorist proxies
on Israel or individuals in the West through terrorist attacks.
But
again, they didn’t count on two things: Donald Trump doesn’t care, and Benjamin
Netanyahu doesn’t care. So, they resumed the war. Now, as we go into the
seventh week, all of Iran’s assets are destroyed. It’s losing more than $400
million a day in lost revenue because of the U.S. blockade. It has no cards to play.
All
it can hope is that someone will call off the United States…. Because it will
not be able to save itself if the United States decides to take out its
bridges, take out its electrical generation capability, and force it back to
the negotiating table – not to negotiate, but to submit to terms.
No comments:
Post a Comment