The US is executing a well-planned regional and global strategy in our
war against Islamo-fascism, as indicated in recent reports. The
geo-political thrusts and counter-thrusts in this conflict are being
deftly managed by Secretary of State Condoleeza Rice and the other
members of GW’s national security team. The SecState’s visit to Asia
and the
announcement
that the US will sell F-16s to Pakistan and other military gear to
India reveal a maneuver to counter Iran’s latest gambit to maintain its
status as the region’s terror-master.
Looking at a map of the entire region, stretching from Israel on the
Eastern Mediterranean to the Indian sub-continent, prior to 9-11, we
would see a massive land area anchored on the flanks by two relatively
prosperous democracies: Israel and India. The nations between these two
countries were essentially a vast land barrier comprised of radical
Islamo-fascist states. From this perspective, Operations Enduring
Freedom and Iraqi Freedom take on even more significance beyond the
obvious benefit of getting rid of two bloodthirsty dictatorships. By
invading Afghanistan and Iraq, the US and the Coalition struck at the
dual keystones of this massive barrier, and have started the process of
tearing down the wall between the two democracies on the flanks of this
volatile region.
Iran was not about to take the invasion of Iraq, a country on their
Western Front, lying down. The Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC)
immediately went on the offensive and began infiltrating agents of
influence into the newly liberated Iraq. Iranian-trained and -supported
mercenaries twice took on the Coalition with operations centered in
Najaf and Baghdad’s Sadr City. Iran also embarked on a campaign of
sabotage against Iraq’s oil terminals south of the Al-Faw Peninsula in
the Persian Gulf using the same tactics they used in the Tanker Wars of
the 1980s. Ultimately, the so-called “Shia” uprisings were defeated in
September of 2004, and the oil terminals were secured with additional
US and UK naval forces.
The US has also taken a more
aggressive
posture in the Persian Gulf, perhaps signaling future military
action if the mullahs insist on continuing their nuclear weapons
program. As if to emphasize our intentions, it was
reported last
month that the US is sending even more naval forces into the Gulf and
the Eastern Mediterranean Sea.
It should be clear to the mullahs that the initiative on their Western
Front has decisively shifted in favor of the Coalition. Iraq is
steadily increasing the capabilities of its security forces, thereby
enhancing its ability to protect its border with Iran. Also, the
heavily reinforced Naval and Marine forces in the Gulf not only ensure
a swift and deadly response to any Iranian attack on Gulf shipping, but
provide the ability to initiate offensive action to seize key terrain
in and around the Straits of Hormuz if necessary.
Faced with the failure of their not-so-covert operations in Iraq, and
their inability to shut down Iraq’s oil trade without suffering severe
consequences, Iran’s leaders are now implementing a course of action
similar to one that Hitler adopted after the failure to win the Battle
of Britain over 60 years ago: turn east and establish a Second Front.
Contrary to popular belief, Iran is not surrounded. They have one
remaining open avenue to influence the outcome of our campaign in the
Central Region. By turning east through Baluchistan and dangling the
economic and energy carrots to the eastern democratic anchor in the
region, India, and our nominal ally in the War of Terror, Pakistan, the
mullahs hope to keep their regime intact, while suppressing the nascent
democratic movement within their borders.
Rather than massed conventional armies, Iran’s Second Front involves
the revival of an expanded energy trade scheme coupled with
politico-military pressure using the old stand-by of terror attacks.
Simply put, India and Pakistan are energy consumers, and Iran will use
its vast energy reserves to its geo-political advantage. Iran has the
world's second largest natural gas reserves at an estimated 812
trillion cubic feet (Tcf), while India’s and Pakistan’s reserves amount
to only 23 Tcf and 22 Tcf respectively. (A detailed discussion of South
Asia’s energy needs and the Iran-India Pipeline can be found here :
http://www.american.edu/TED/iranpipeline.htm)
The strategic import of all of these facts and figures is simple:
India’s growing economy has a daily natural gas requirement shortfall
of almost 30 million cubic meters per day (mcmd). Pakistan is no better
off, with its demand for natural gas increasing by about 50 percent in
a few short years. Iran is also a consumer of natural gas, but its huge
reserves puts it in a position to economically squeeze its neighbors to
the east, and to potentially split off our two important allies in the
War on Terror.
The major source of Iran’s natural gas reserves is the South Pars
gas field in
the Persian Gulf. The South Pars is the world's largest gas field
with an estimated capacity of 436 Tcf. Control of the South Pars area
is a shared arrangement between Iran and Qatar (Iran seems to be a fan
of these joint control agreements, since it also had a similar joint
occupation arrangement of the oil-rich island of Abu Musa with UAE,
until Iran took complete control in 1992). Iran has wanted to build an
Iran-India pipeline since 1993, and in 1995, Pakistan and Iran signed
an initial agreement to build a pipeline from the on-shore South Pars
terminal to Karachi, Pakistan. The extension of the pipeline from
Pakistan to India was a logical next step given India’s large energy
requirements and Iran’s need to expand its export markets.
But all of the assumed mutual economic and cultural benefits to be
gained from this “Peace Pipeline” project were based on a pre-911
construct. Referring to the map in the
detailed pipeline
report, it shows how the route of the pipeline and current world
events place the entire project in jeopardy. The pipeline starts in
Asaluyeh, Iran (only 150 miles southeast of the Bushehr nuclear power
reactor) on the coast of the Persian Gulf close to South Pars gas
fields. From there it goes to the Iranian port of Bandar Abbas to
Khuzdar, Pakistan, to Multan, Pakistan, and from Multan, the pipeline
travels to Delhi, India.
Unfortunately for Iran, the pipeline must pass through Baluchistan, one
of the most rugged and fearsome areas in the Central Region. Neither
Iran nor Pakistan has any control over this area. Fiercely independent,
some Baluchs have been in the
employ
of Saddam Hussein since the Iran-Iraq war. And, the recent spate of
terrorist attacks in Khost and Kandahar in Afghanistan seem to indicate
that terrorist forces are using Baluch territory for their base camps.
Pakistan has also had their problems with this “Wild West” province.
The BBC
reported
that Pakistani forces had clashed with Baluch tribesmen who are
demanding greater political autonomy and are demanding a greater share
of revenue from the province's natural gas reserves. Not only that,
since Baluchistan spans the entire Iran-Pakistan border area, pipeline
construction workers and equipment must be secured from tribal warlords
and terrorists in an area that can be arguably called “Terrorist
Central.”
In one the most delicious ironies in the War on Terror, Iran, one of
the Axis of Evil nations and the world’s premier sponsor of terrorism,
may be done in by an entity of Saddam’s own creation.Since the fall of
Iraq and Afghanistan, and because Pakistan is cooperating with the
Coalition, the terrorists have been forced to fall back on this area to
establish their version of a “national redoubt.” Unfortunately for
Iran, the pipeline that they so dearly want to build in order to bribe
our democratic friends in India will have very long odds of succeeding
going through Baluchistan.
Nevertheless, the US has mounted an effective counter to Iran’s move to
the east. During her visit to India, Secretary Rice referred to the
pipeline deal when she stated,
"'Our views concerning Iran are very well known and we have
communicated to the Indian government our concerns about gas pipeline
cooperation between Iran and India,' Rice told a news conference in New
Delhi. 'We need to look at the broader question of how India meets its
energy needs in the next decade.' "
The sale of the F-16s to Pakistan is said to have angered some Indian
leaders. But this sale must not be viewed in isolation, since this is
only the beginning of a comprehensive strategy to defend against Iran’s
Second Front. The Australian
reports
that the US is embarking upon a wide-ranging plan to help India
become a major power in the 21st century. The US will boost
India’s military capabilities with sales of fighter aircraft,
anti-missile defense systems, and the latest digitized command and
control gear. And most notably, the US and India will cooperate on
economic and energy initiatives.
Without the co-operation of both India and Pakistan, the pipeline
project would obviously go nowhere, and the delicate nuclear balance
between Pakistan and India would have to be constantly monitored by the
US. In a sense, the role of peacemaker would have fallen to Iran,
since the pipeline would cross both Indian and Pakistani territory. No
Iranian pipeline would mean no regional investments, which in turn
would stifle mutual economic benefits that would likely lead to further
instability in the area. GW is not about to accede the role of
“peacemaker” to an Axis of Evil nation.
Of course, Russia lurks in the background, since it is rebuilding the
German-made nuclear reactor at Bushehr in Iran. Putin is now confronted
with a cruel dilemma. If he supports the US in pressuring the mullahs
to give up their nuclear quest, he and his cronies are not only likely
to lose juicy contracts, but also yield to China a considerable lever
of influence in the region. In the final years of the Clinton
presidency, the "Iranian question" became one of our most important
foreign policy challenges. Of course, his national security team
adopted the standard approach of the time - punt. Russia’s Iranian
problem is that they don’t have Bill Clinton to kick around anymore,
whereas GW did not hesitate in placing Iran on the Axis of Evil list,
which effectively painted a big bulls-eye on Tehran, and labeled any
support of the regime as deserving of diplomatic, economic, or military
action.
Iran is in a pickle. Its Western Front effort has gone nowhere
and is under increasing pressure from the military forces of the US and
the Coalition in the Persian Gulf and Iraq. The mullahs' attempt to
bribe India and Pakistan with the promise of cheap energy and a “jobs
program” to construct the pipeline will come to naught. Also, the
largest terrorist stronghold in the Central Region will see to it that
maximum pain will be inflicted on any attempt to run the pipeline
through Baluchistan.
There are very few options left to the Islamic Republic, none of which
are very satisfactory from the mullah’s point of view. First, it can do
a complete about face, and establish a formal relationship again with
the United States. This would entail giving up its nuclear projects,
completely halting its intervention in Shia areas of Iraq, and its
stopping its political and economic support of terror groups in the
Middle East, such as Hezbollah. This option seems implausible,
considering the decades of enormous investment by the mullahs in their
theocratic political and economic power structure.
A second possibility is that Iran continues to play the current cat and
the mouse game, by employing the tried and true tactics of delay and
deception in order to save time and to avoid the risk of American overt
and covert intervention. This option also involves continuing to play
the "European-3" (Great Britain, France and Germany) against the US
while
simultaneously
threatening attacks against shipping in the Persian Gulf (), or
hinting at accelerated production of nuclear weapons material and
delivery systems. The mullahs realize, however, that this second
option can only last so long with GW in command of beefed up military
forces in the Central Region.
Sources indicate that a third option is frequently discussed in the
inner circles of Iranian leadership: that of secret negotiations with
the United States, including agreements on oil. The losers in
this deal would certainly be the Iranian people. Not only would
the rich natural resources of the country be plundered for the likely
benefit of the insiders and cronies ruling Iran, but the mullahs would
have even a freer hand to continue their political repression. Despite
the desire of Western energy companies to exploit the huge oil and
natural gas reserves in Iran, the administration will not embark on a
course of action that would fall short of establishing a democracy in
Iran. President Bush understands that any short-term gain would surely
come back and haunt us in the future with a revitalized terror campaign
built with Western capital.
The ideological nature of the Islamic Republic prevents Iran from
adopting a realistic national policy to avoid its coming economic
decline, or a possible military operation by the world’s only remaining
super-power. And, if the mullahs attempt to play the E-3 card to
counter the US, it will hurt more than help their situation.
The people of Iran are watching, and are
increasingly restive and belligerent towards the terrorist regime.
The mullahs need to realize that their demise will, in fact, be sooner
rather than later.
Douglas Hanson is the American Thinker’s military affairs correspondent.
Dr. Mohamed Ibn Guadi is an Islamologist at Strasbourg University and a
researcher in Semitic Philology, and is the Director of the Islamology
Program at the French Center of Middle East Studies (AFEMO) in
Toulouse. He was a policy analyst for the Iran Free Press, and is
currently preparing a book on Islam and the West.