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Outside View: Deterring Tehran

Pandora's vat

Washington (UPI) July 22, 2005
Despite Tehran's vociferous claims to the contrary, evidence is mounting that Iran is seeking to acquire nuclear weapons. It may now even be too late to stop this process. The real question is: What should the United States do about it?

There are basically three options: 1) intervention; 2) preemption; and 3) deterrence. What are the pluses and minuses of each of these options?

An American military intervention in Iran would not only end Tehran's efforts to acquire nuclear weapons, but would bring about the end of the Islamic Republic itself. The American presence in two of Iran's neighbors --Iraq and Afghanistan -- would greatly facilitate such an intervention.

But in the wake of the United Nations Security Council's refusal to bless the American-led intervention in Iraq, this body simply will not approve a similar intervention against Iran. And while Britain made a major contribution to the intervention in Iraq, it is not likely to join the United States in a similar operation against Iran. Unlike the American public, the British public is outraged over the failure to discover the weapons of mass destruction in Iraq whose existence both Washington and London cited as the principal justification for toppling Saddam Hussein.

Even if a unilateral American intervention could quickly destroy the Islamic Republic, the inability so far of America and its allies to pacify both Afghanistan and Iraq suggests that re-establishing order in Iran could also be extremely difficult and expensive.

Finally, a unilateral American intervention in Iran, no matter how successful, would only further the unfortunate trend in many countries to view the United States as a threat. And, of course, there is no guarantee that we would not end up facing an insurgency there like we are in Iraq and Afghanistan. Intervention, then, is not a good option for dealing with a nuclear-armed Iran.

The second option is preemption. The United States could launch preemptive strikes that would destroy Iranian nuclear facilities. This would certainly be far less costly than invading and occupying Iran. Even if successful, however, such an attack would leave the Islamic Republic in power and undoubtedly more determined than ever to acquire nuclear weapons.

Further, those nations which previously sold nuclear technology to Iran -- Russia, Pakistan, and North Korea -- might continue to do so. Indeed, a successful American strike against Iran's nuclear facilities would simply provide them with an opportunity to re-sell to Tehran much of what they previously sold to it.

And just as with intervention, preemptive strikes by the United States against Iran would increase the perception that America is a threat to other countries. Preemption, then, is not a good option for dealing with a nuclear Iran either.

The best option is deterrence. At first glance, this might seem highly undesirable since it means acquiescence to Iran possessing nuclear weapons. The Islamic Republic, though, would not be the first hostile regime to acquire them: Stalin's Russia did so in 1949 as did Mao's China in 1964. While these regimes were more powerful as well as more hostile toward the United States than Tehran now is, nuclear war did not break out.

This was a result of deterrence: the knowledge that a nuclear attack by one nation would lead to devastating nuclear retaliation against it. And if this logic worked with Moscow and Beijing, it should also work with Tehran.

This is not to say that nuclear deterrence will always work. North Korea's Kim Jong Il has actually threatened to use nuclear weapons, though he has not yet done so. But the Iranian ayatollahs are neither as reckless nor as isolated from the real world as he is.

Since the death of Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini, Tehran has largely given up its effort to spread Islamic revolution abroad. What the ayatollahs mainly want is just to stay in power. Indeed, their desire to acquire nuclear weapons appears to be based on the assumption that America is less likely to attack if Iran possesses them than if it does not. In other words, they want nuclear weapons in order to deter us.

Yet while the ayatollahs may see their acquisition of nuclear weapons as a defensive move, not just the United States but many other nations will see this as offensive. And this is good for Washington. For while American intervention or preemption will lead others to see the United States as a threat, the acquisition of nuclear weapons by Tehran will lead them to see Iran as one instead. And those who see Iran as a threat are likely to see the United States as an indispensable ally.

Finally, as the Soviet Union demonstrated in 1991, the possession of nuclear weapons cannot protect a government from its internal opponents. The future strength or weakness of the democratic opposition in Iran appears unrelated to whether or not Tehran acquires nuclear weapons. Thus, while deterrence will not lead to the quick downfall of the Islamic Republic, neither does it preclude this from occurring eventually.

(Mark N. Katz is a professor of government and politics at George Mason University.)

(United Press International's "Outside View" commentaries are written by outside contributors who specialize in a variety of important issues. The views expressed do not necessarily reflect those of United Press International. In the interests of creating an open forum, original submissions are invited

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