- Reaction score
- 35
- Points
- 560
With the highly expanded modalities of warfare, Israel's air force and strategic missiles are only one part of the equation (and even if they are highly visible and everyone fixates on them, they are not the only ones).
What is needed is a means to collapse the ability of Iran to threaten or project power without uniting the Iranian people behind the current regime. Direct attack is therefore the final option, and only to be used if there are no other options left (or to respond to an attack by Iranian missiles or proxy forces).
The current campaign against Iranian nuclear scientists and the cyberwar effort against the nuclear program show some of the other potential steps that can be taken. To topple the regime, you would need to rapidly escalate the economic misery of the people without overt outside influence, and at the same time degrade the command and control architecture to the point the Revolutionary Guards and Basji are paralyzed and out of contact with the regime. Shutting down the power and transport grids would also be positives in this sort of scenario.
Selective sabotage by SOF operators, arming and training elements of the Green Revolution, assasinating high ranking members of the Revolutionary Guards and Basji and introducing multiple computer virus into the banking, transportation, communications and industrial systems would all serve to disrupt the ability of Iran to carry out its hostile intentions, and disruption of banking and communication in particular would also serve to cut off Hezbollah and Hamas from their main source of supply and finance. Collapsing the internal banking system would bring people out into the streets, and disrupting the regime's communications while leaving open channels for the population could cause enough chaos to bring an end to the regime (although the question always remains what will take its place?)
As an aside, Iran does have some conventional force projection capabilites, but seems to have been deterred by unknown forces:
http://pjmedia.com/claudiarosett/the-mystery-of-irans-wandering-war-ships/
What is needed is a means to collapse the ability of Iran to threaten or project power without uniting the Iranian people behind the current regime. Direct attack is therefore the final option, and only to be used if there are no other options left (or to respond to an attack by Iranian missiles or proxy forces).
The current campaign against Iranian nuclear scientists and the cyberwar effort against the nuclear program show some of the other potential steps that can be taken. To topple the regime, you would need to rapidly escalate the economic misery of the people without overt outside influence, and at the same time degrade the command and control architecture to the point the Revolutionary Guards and Basji are paralyzed and out of contact with the regime. Shutting down the power and transport grids would also be positives in this sort of scenario.
Selective sabotage by SOF operators, arming and training elements of the Green Revolution, assasinating high ranking members of the Revolutionary Guards and Basji and introducing multiple computer virus into the banking, transportation, communications and industrial systems would all serve to disrupt the ability of Iran to carry out its hostile intentions, and disruption of banking and communication in particular would also serve to cut off Hezbollah and Hamas from their main source of supply and finance. Collapsing the internal banking system would bring people out into the streets, and disrupting the regime's communications while leaving open channels for the population could cause enough chaos to bring an end to the regime (although the question always remains what will take its place?)
As an aside, Iran does have some conventional force projection capabilites, but seems to have been deterred by unknown forces:
http://pjmedia.com/claudiarosett/the-mystery-of-irans-wandering-war-ships/
The Mystery of Iran’s Wandering War Ships
Posted By Claudia Rosett On February 21, 2012 @ 11:55 pm In Uncategorized | 39 Comments
Did they dock in Syria, or didn’t they? Last week, two Iranian war ships, a destroyer and a supply ship, passed through the Suez Canal into the Mediterranean. According to Iran’s government, they docked in the Syrian port of Tartus. According to the U.S. government, they did no such thing.
More specifically, on Saturday Iran’s state-owned PressTV reported that the two Iranian vessels had docked in the Syrian port of Tartus [1]. On Tuesday, a Pentagon spokesman [2], George Little, told the press, “We have absolutely no indication whatsoever the Iranian ships ever docked in Syrian ports.”
What’s going on here? One day there are two Iranian ships docking in Syria. Three days later, it seems that, like the Flying Dutchman, they never made port. Whatever they did during their swing through the eastern Mediterranean, they are now reported as having left the area, heading back through the Suez Canal.
These are not phantoms, or flyspecks invisible to the hi-tech eye. These are ships, substantial objects, which the U.S. certainly has the ability to track. I can’t claim to know what actually happened, and, alas, I have no inside sources here. So this is pure speculation. But it sounds as if the Iranian ships were indeed heading for Tartus, and then ran into some reason to back off — leaving the Iranian government to bluster that the ships had docked, rather than admit they’d chickened out.
If so, what might have blocked those ships? We know this much: There was no “Freedom Flotilla” launched from, say, Turkey, to try to deflect the arrival of Iranian war ships potentially stuffed with supplies for the terror-sponsoring regime of Syria’s dictator, Bashar al-Assad, now using heavy weapons against his own people. There was no naval blockade mandated by, say, the United Nations, where China and Russia are now blocking any Security Council resolution on Syria. There was no grand effort put forth by the combined naval forces of the Arab League.
Assuming that something, or someone, intervened in some way to persuade those ships to wave off, that was good work. I’d like to think that the deciding factor was a sharp warning from the U.S. — though if that was the case, it would have been far better had America found a way to deter Iran before those ships ever entered the Suez Canal. Or, as with too many showdowns on the front lines of Tehran’s aggression, was the job, and the risk, left to the Israelis?
And if the Tartus docking was an Iranian lie, it does not obviate the fact that Iran’s regime felt free to send war ships through the Suez Canal for the second time in a year, and this time felt free to boast they’d docked in Syria. Within the propaganda fog are real ships, real guns, real threats. What next?
Article printed from The Rosett Report: http://pjmedia.com/claudiarosett
URL to article: http://pjmedia.com/claudiarosett/the-mystery-of-irans-wandering-war-ships/
URLs in this post:
[1] docked in the Syrian port of Tartus: http://presstv.com/detail/227298.html
[2] Pentagon spokesman: http://af.reuters.com/article/energyOilNews/idAFL2E8DL7ZB20120221