by Omer Dostri
The claims that Iraq is now more dangerous than before and that the Islamic State group developed as a direct result of the U.S. invasion of Iraq are simply wrong. Iraq currently has no desire or ability to produce weapons of mass destruction. Moreover, the country poses no threat to Israel. This crucial change allows Israel to invest its resources in more pertinent and volatile areas.
Efforts to portray the
Iranian threat as some kind of electioneering campaign are nothing new.
Former security officials desperate to remain in the limelight have
repeatedly claimed that the Iranian threat is being exaggerated and used
for personal political purposes. These days various media outlets are
trying to rewrite history and downplay the threat once posed to Israel
during the reign of Saddam Hussein in Iraq, and present the geopolitical
reality under Saddam's Baath party as having been better for Israel
than the current reality. By doing so they imply that to get involved in
Iran would be to repeat a past mistake that will likely negatively
impact Israel's security.
But this implication,
and those claims, crumble when held up to reality and history. The Baath
party tried to get its hands on weapons of mass destruction, especially
nuclear arms, since day one. In the 1970s, Saddam said that as long as
Israel has nuclear arms, Iraq would not be able to attack it freely, and
that he planned to use that kind of weaponry to "drown the enemy in
rivers of blood."
Saddam Hussein's first
attempt at acquiring nuclear arms failed in 1981, after Israel bombed
the nuclear reactor in Osirak and carried out numerous other operations
to hamper Iraq's progress toward an atomic bomb. Months after the Osirak
strike, Iraq appealed to France to purchase another reactor, but the
many sanctions imposed on Iraq during the Iraq-Iran war made it
difficult.
After running into
trouble trying to get Western assistance, Saddam decide to develop a
secret uranium enrichment program in Iraq. This new program, with its
many facilities, spread throughout Iraq in secret underground compounds,
requiring a budget 15 times that of the Osirak reactor.
Between 1981 and 1987,
Iraq's nuclear efforts revolved around research, and only between 1987
and 1990 did they advance to an operative phase of actually developing
weapons. The nuclear program was halted by the entry of coalition forces
into Iraq during the First Gulf War.
In 1998, then-U.S.
President Bill Clinton ordered the launch of Operation Desert Fox, a
four day bombing and missile strike campaign against Iraqi targets in
response to Iraq's refusal to comply with a U.N. Security Council
resolution calling for American inspectors to come make sure Iraq was
not developing weapons of mass destruction. The stated goal of that
operation was to diminish the Iraqi regime's capacity to produce, store
or use such weapons. Operation Desert Fox paved the way for the Second
Gulf War and the U.S. invasion of Iraq during George W. Bush's
presidency, which resulted in the fall of Saddam Hussein.
The claims that Iraq is
now more dangerous than before and that the Islamic State group
developed as a direct result of the U.S. invasion of Iraq are simply
wrong. Iraq currently has no desire or ability to produce weapons of
mass destruction. Moreover, the country poses no threat to Israel. This
crucial change allows Israel to invest its resources in more pertinent
and volatile areas.
Secondly, Islamic State
is the result of many factors, and not necessarily a direct response to
American involvement. It is possible that the group would have never
formed, even after the U.S. occupation ended, had the U.S. acted more
wisely. It is not unreasonable to think that had U.S. forces stayed in
Iraq longer and bolstered the central Iraqi government, instead
departing early and abandoning the land, they could have thwarted the
rise of Islamic State.
If the U.S. had imposed
a Western/American standard of civilian involvement in the central
Iraqi government, and allowed for better representation of the Iraqi
population, it could have prevented the sectarian tension that currently
exists between the government's Shiites, sponsored by Iran, and Sunnis
who were brutally oppressed after the fall of Saddam -- another factor
that contributed to the establishment of Islamic State.
In retrospect, Israel's call for
intervention in Iraq, and the subsequent intervention by the U.S.,
served to defuse a very serious threat facing Israel. When confronting
Iran, the same approach should be adopted. Iran must be forced to give
up its nuclear ambitions, at any cost.
Omer Dostri
Source: http://www.israelhayom.com/site/newsletter_opinion.php?id=11649
Copyright - Original materials copyright (c) by the authors.
1 comment:
According to GWB's memoirs Ariel Sharon advised against the US invasion of Iraq as he considered Iran to be the greater threat.
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