By Charles Krauthammer
Thursday, August 30, 2012
There are few foreign-policy positions more silly than
the assertion without context that “deterrence works.” It is like saying air
power works. Well, it worked for Kosovo; it didn’t work over North Vietnam.
It’s like saying city-bombing works. It worked in Japan
1945 (Tokyo through Nagasaki). It didn’t in the London blitz.
The idea that some military technique “works” is
meaningless. It depends on the time, the circumstances, the nature of the
adversaries. The longbow worked for Henry V. At El Alamein, however, Montgomery
chose tanks.
Yet a significant school of American “realists” remains
absolutist on deterrence and is increasingly annoyed with those troublesome
Israelis who are sowing fear, rattling world markets, and risking regional war
by threatening a preemptive strike to stop Iran from acquiring nuclear weapons.
Don’t they understand that their fears are grossly exaggerated? After all,
didn’t deterrence work during 40 years of the Cold War?
Indeed, a few months ago, columnist Fareed Zakaria made
that case by citing me writing in defense of deterrence in the early 1980s at
the time of the nuclear-freeze movement. And yet now, writes Zakaria,
Krauthammer (along with others on the right) “has decided that deterrence is a
lie.”
Nonsense. What I have decided is that deterring Iran is
fundamentally different from deterring the Soviet Union. You could rely on the
latter but not on the former.
The reasons are obvious and threefold:
1. The nature of the regime.
Did the Soviet Union in its 70 years ever deploy a
suicide bomber? For Iran, as for other jihadists, suicide bombing is routine.
Hence the trail of self-immolation from the 1983 Marine-barracks attack in
Beirut to the Bulgaria bombing of July 2012. Iran’s clerical regime rules in
the name of a fundamentalist religion for which the hereafter offers the
ultimate rewards. For Soviet Communists — thoroughly, militantly atheistic —
such thinking was an opiate-laced fairy tale.
For all its global aspirations, the Soviet Union was
intensely nationalist. The Islamic Republic sees itself as an instrument of its
own brand of Shiite millenarianism — the messianic return of the “hidden Imam.”
It’s one thing to live in a state of mutual assured
destruction with Stalin or Brezhnev, leaders of a philosophically materialist,
historically grounded, deeply here-and-now regime. It’s quite another to be in
a situation of mutual destruction with apocalyptic clerics who believe in the
imminent advent of the Mahdi, the supremacy of the afterlife, and holy war as
the ultimate avenue to achieving it.
The classic formulation comes from Tehran’s fellow (and
rival Sunni) jihadist al-Qaeda: “You love life and we love death.” Try
deterring that.
2. The nature of the grievance.
The Soviet quarrel with America was ideological. Iran’s
quarrel with Israel is existential. The Soviets never proclaimed a desire to
annihilate the American people. For Iran, the very existence of a Jewish state
on Muslim land is a crime, an abomination, a cancer with which no negotiation,
no coexistence, no accommodation is possible.
3. The nature of the target.
America is a nation of 300 million; Israel, 8 million.
America is a continental nation; Israel, a speck on the map, at one spot just
eight miles wide. Israel is a “one-bomb country.” Its territory is so tiny, its
population so concentrated, that, as Iran’s former president Akbar Hashemi
Rafsanjani has famously said, “application of an atomic bomb would not leave
anything in Israel, but the same thing would just produce damages in the Muslim
world.” A tiny nuclear arsenal would do the job.
In U.S.-Soviet deterrence, both sides knew that a nuclear
war would destroy them mutually. The mullahs have thought the unthinkable to a
different conclusion. They know about the Israeli arsenal. They also know, as
Rafsanjani said, that in any exchange Israel would be destroyed instantly and
forever, whereas the ummah — the Muslim world of 1.8 billion people whose
redemption is the ultimate purpose of the Iranian revolution — would survive
damaged but almost entirely intact.
This doesn’t mean that the mullahs will necessarily risk
terrible carnage to their country in order to destroy Israel irrevocably. But
it does mean that the blithe assurance to the contrary — because the Soviets
never struck first — is nonsense. The mullahs have a radically different
worldview, a radically different grievance, and a radically different
calculation of the consequences of nuclear war.
The confident belief that they are like the Soviets is a
fantasy. That’s why Israel is contemplating a preemptive strike. Israel refuses
to trust its very existence to the convenient theories of comfortable analysts
living 6,000 miles from its Ground Zero.
No comments:
Post a Comment