Report: US strikes on Iran would risk major war

WASHINGTON (AP) — U.S. military strikes on Iran would shake the regime's political control and damage its ability to launch counterstrikes, but the Iranians probably would manage to retaliate, directly and through surrogates, in ways that risked igniting all-out war in the Middle East, according to an assessment of an attack's costs and benefits.
The assessment said extended U.S. strikes could destroy Iran's most important nuclear facilities and damage its military forces but would only delay — not stop — the Islamic republic's pursuit of a nuclear bomb.
"You can't kill intellectual power," said retired Army Lt. Gen. Frank Kearney, who endorsed the report. He is a former deputy director at the National Counterterrorism Center and former deputy commander of U.S. Special Operations Command.
The report compiled by former government officials, national security experts and retired military officers is to be publicly released Thursday. It says achieving more than a temporary setback in Iran's nuclear program would require a military operation — including a land occupation — more taxing than the Iraq and Afghanistan wars combined.
An advance copy of the report was provided to The Associated Press.
The assessment emerges against the backdrop of escalating tensions between Israel and the U.S. over when a military strike on Iran might be required. The Israelis worry that Iran is moving more quickly toward a nuclear capability than the United States believes. The U.S. has not ruled out attacking but has sought to persuade Israel to give diplomacy more time.
Israel views a nuclear-armed Iran as a mortal threat, citing Iran's persistent calls for the destruction of the Jewish state, its development of missiles capable of striking Israel and Iranian support for Arab militant groups.
Tehran insists its nuclear program is for peaceful purposes only.
An oft-stated argument against striking Iran is that it would add to a perception of the U.S. as anti-Muslim — a perception linked to the U.S.-led invasions of Iraq and Afghanistan and hardened by Internet-based video excerpts of an anti-Muslim film that may have fueled Tuesday's deadly attack on a U.S. diplomatic office in Libya.
"Planners and pundits ought to consider that the riots and unrest following a Web entry about an obscure film are probably a fraction of what could happen following a strike — by the Israelis or U.S. — on Iran," retired Lt. Gen. Gregory Newbold, an endorser of the Iran report and a former operations chief for the Joint Chiefs of Staff, said in an interview.
The report was compiled and endorsed by more than 30 former diplomats, retired admirals and generals and others who said their main purpose was to provide clarity about the potential use of military force against Iran. They reached no overall conclusion and offered no recommendations.
"The report is intended to have what we call an informing influence and hopefully something of a calming influence, but that's something readers will have to answer for themselves," said Thomas Pickering, a former U.S. ambassador to the United Nations who has held informal contacts with Iranian officials as recently as the past few months.
Kearney said the assessment was meant to stimulate thinking in the U.S. about the objectives of a military attack on Iran beyond the obvious goal of hitting key components of Iran's nuclear program. "Clearly there is some (U.S.) ability to do destruction, which will cause some delay, but what occurs after that?" he said in an interview.
Other endorsers of the report include Brent Scowcroft, who was President George H.W. Bush's national security adviser; former deputy secretary of state Richard Armitage, former Sens. Sam Nunn and Chuck Hagel and two retired chiefs of U.S. Central Command, Marine Gen. Anthony Zinni and navy Adm. William J. Fallon.
The analysis includes stark assertions about one of the most volatile and complex issues facing the U.S. in a presidential election year. President Barack Obama's failure to get Iran to negotiate acceptable limits on its nuclear program is cited by his opponents as emblematic of a misguided and weak foreign policy.
The report said the Obama administration's stated objective — shared by Republican presidential nominee Mitt Romney — of preventing Iran from obtaining a nuclear bomb is unlikely to be achieved through military force if action is limited to a combination of airstrikes, cyberattacks, covert operations and special operations strikes.
It says an extensive U.S. military assault could delay for up to four years Iran's ability to build a nuclear weapon. It also could disrupt Iranian government control, deplete its treasury and raise internal tensions.
"We do not believe it would lead to regime change, regime collapse or capitulation," it said, adding that such an attack would increase Iran's motivation to build a bomb, in part because the Iranian leadership would see building a bomb as a way to inhibit future U.S. attacks "and redress the humiliation of being attacked."
A more ambitious military campaign designed to oust the Iranian regime of hardline clerics or force an undermining of Iran's influence in the Mideast would require the U.S. to occupy part or all of the country, the report said.
"Given Iran's large size and population, and the strength of Iranian nationalism, we estimate that the occupation of Iran would require a commitment of resources and personnel greater than what the U.S. has expended over the past 10 years in the Iraq and Afghanistan wars combined," the report said.
The U.S. had as many as 170,000 troops in Iraq at the height of the 2003-10 war, and U.S. troop levels in Afghanistan peaked last year at 100,000. Eleven years into the Afghan war the U.S. still has about 74,000 troops there.
Early drafts of the report were coordinated by the nonpartisan Iran Project, a private group funded in part by the Rockefeller Brothers Fund, a philanthropy that promotes peace and democracy. The final version includes contributions from others with national security expertise. It is based on publicly available documents, including unclassified intelligence reports.
The assessment said extended U.S. strikes could destroy Iran's most important nuclear facilities and damage its military forces but would only delay — not stop — the Islamic republic's pursuit of a nuclear bomb.
"You can't kill intellectual power," said retired Army Lt. Gen. Frank Kearney, who endorsed the report. He is a former deputy director at the National Counterterrorism Center and former deputy commander of U.S. Special Operations Command.
The report compiled by former government officials, national security experts and retired military officers is to be publicly released Thursday. It says achieving more than a temporary setback in Iran's nuclear program would require a military operation — including a land occupation — more taxing than the Iraq and Afghanistan wars combined.
An advance copy of the report was provided to The Associated Press.
The assessment emerges against the backdrop of escalating tensions between Israel and the U.S. over when a military strike on Iran might be required. The Israelis worry that Iran is moving more quickly toward a nuclear capability than the United States believes. The U.S. has not ruled out attacking but has sought to persuade Israel to give diplomacy more time.
Israel views a nuclear-armed Iran as a mortal threat, citing Iran's persistent calls for the destruction of the Jewish state, its development of missiles capable of striking Israel and Iranian support for Arab militant groups.
Tehran insists its nuclear program is for peaceful purposes only.
An oft-stated argument against striking Iran is that it would add to a perception of the U.S. as anti-Muslim — a perception linked to the U.S.-led invasions of Iraq and Afghanistan and hardened by Internet-based video excerpts of an anti-Muslim film that may have fueled Tuesday's deadly attack on a U.S. diplomatic office in Libya.
"Planners and pundits ought to consider that the riots and unrest following a Web entry about an obscure film are probably a fraction of what could happen following a strike — by the Israelis or U.S. — on Iran," retired Lt. Gen. Gregory Newbold, an endorser of the Iran report and a former operations chief for the Joint Chiefs of Staff, said in an interview.
The report was compiled and endorsed by more than 30 former diplomats, retired admirals and generals and others who said their main purpose was to provide clarity about the potential use of military force against Iran. They reached no overall conclusion and offered no recommendations.
"The report is intended to have what we call an informing influence and hopefully something of a calming influence, but that's something readers will have to answer for themselves," said Thomas Pickering, a former U.S. ambassador to the United Nations who has held informal contacts with Iranian officials as recently as the past few months.
Kearney said the assessment was meant to stimulate thinking in the U.S. about the objectives of a military attack on Iran beyond the obvious goal of hitting key components of Iran's nuclear program. "Clearly there is some (U.S.) ability to do destruction, which will cause some delay, but what occurs after that?" he said in an interview.
Other endorsers of the report include Brent Scowcroft, who was President George H.W. Bush's national security adviser; former deputy secretary of state Richard Armitage, former Sens. Sam Nunn and Chuck Hagel and two retired chiefs of U.S. Central Command, Marine Gen. Anthony Zinni and navy Adm. William J. Fallon.
The analysis includes stark assertions about one of the most volatile and complex issues facing the U.S. in a presidential election year. President Barack Obama's failure to get Iran to negotiate acceptable limits on its nuclear program is cited by his opponents as emblematic of a misguided and weak foreign policy.
The report said the Obama administration's stated objective — shared by Republican presidential nominee Mitt Romney — of preventing Iran from obtaining a nuclear bomb is unlikely to be achieved through military force if action is limited to a combination of airstrikes, cyberattacks, covert operations and special operations strikes.
It says an extensive U.S. military assault could delay for up to four years Iran's ability to build a nuclear weapon. It also could disrupt Iranian government control, deplete its treasury and raise internal tensions.
"We do not believe it would lead to regime change, regime collapse or capitulation," it said, adding that such an attack would increase Iran's motivation to build a bomb, in part because the Iranian leadership would see building a bomb as a way to inhibit future U.S. attacks "and redress the humiliation of being attacked."
A more ambitious military campaign designed to oust the Iranian regime of hardline clerics or force an undermining of Iran's influence in the Mideast would require the U.S. to occupy part or all of the country, the report said.
"Given Iran's large size and population, and the strength of Iranian nationalism, we estimate that the occupation of Iran would require a commitment of resources and personnel greater than what the U.S. has expended over the past 10 years in the Iraq and Afghanistan wars combined," the report said.
The U.S. had as many as 170,000 troops in Iraq at the height of the 2003-10 war, and U.S. troop levels in Afghanistan peaked last year at 100,000. Eleven years into the Afghan war the U.S. still has about 74,000 troops there.
Early drafts of the report were coordinated by the nonpartisan Iran Project, a private group funded in part by the Rockefeller Brothers Fund, a philanthropy that promotes peace and democracy. The final version includes contributions from others with national security expertise. It is based on publicly available documents, including unclassified intelligence reports.
If Israel is so worried about Iran, let them deal with it without sucking us into that mess. The President (be he Obama or Romney after November) should simply tell Iran and North Korea for that matter, that if you develop a nuclear or biological weapon and use it against us, give it someone who uses it against us, or sells it to someone who uses it against us (read that us, not anyone else) we will render turn their country into a smoking ruin within 24 hours. Otherwise we will leave them alone. We should not get into a huge war in the Middle East just because Israel wants to take out their nuclear capability. They have the power and enough weaponry to do so. It is bad enough we got involved in that %$ hole called Iraq. As for oil, we really have no worries, they will sell us the oil because if they don't get money from selling oil, they starve.
@Frank525 We actually get very little of our oil from the Middle East. http://www.eia.gov/dnav/pet/pet_move_impcus_a2_nus_ep00_im0_mbbl_a.htm
Most of it comes from our neighbors to the north.Â
Everyone with a half brain agrees that attacking and attempting to occupy Iran would be a huge mistake with irreversible repercussions. I say we arm anyone with less than half brain and want to start a skirmish with them and ask Israel to transport them in to Iran and do whatever they feel like. Godspeed morons!
Iran is like one of those itches you just can't quite reach. It would feel so good to finally scratch it but in order to do so you'd have to dislocate your shoulder.
"Report: US strikes on Iran would risk major war". "major war" is misspelled. It's supposed to say "election".
Maybe it's time to pull out of the Middle East, bring our diplomats home, stop giving everyone foreign aid and let them settle their differences. The only ally we have there is Israel and they don't really need our help. A mutual defense treaty would be adequate. Arabs slaughtering Arabs isn't really our problem, itâs cost us two wars and thousands of American lives, trillions of dollars and the Arabs are still killing each other over minor religious differences.
The radical Muslims will hate us no matter what we do just because weâre not Muslims, so doing nothing is the least costly route we have.
 @Mej47 So you would leave an open door for the Russians and Chinese to go in and make every ME nation a satellite base for their military?
You are thinking like a republican again...
@Mej47 You aer right. Muslims have been killing each other since Mohammed died and will continue to do so. Let they kill each other, why should our soldiers and diplomats die to stop that. It is like the police intervening in a domestic disturbance. Even if the man is beating the wife, (or vice versa in these days) and the police arrive, both will turn on the police. Let the Arabs kill each other until they get tired of it.
How about, instead of spending billions and trillions bombing Iran and then rebuilding their infrastructure, we just improve our own infrastructure?Â
How about we tell Israel, "you have nukes, you have a military, you can protect yourself.  You want to go armongering and get youself in trouble, you're on your own?"
How about instead of spending billions and trillions on war in themiddle east, we spend that money on deceloping non patroleum based energy sources?
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 @T H I S That was the most sensible thing posted in this thread yet....
@Audio Cat @T H I S
Oh my gosh, did you just feel that chill? Hell has frozen over because T H I S is something we actually agree on. We do spend WAY too much money in foreign aid in other countries, when we should be spending here at home. Â
Enough with the Iran thing. A strike would possibly ignite the whole region, the neocons need to shut the F up.Â
Given the past actions of Obuma we are probably going to just sit on our fat butts and whine to others about our diplomat being killed, while Iran continues developing atomic devices that will lead to a nuclear bomb in the near future. I do not like war, but that country does no think rationally and their world policy is to dominate the world. They care less about others or women. They want to exterminate the Jewish people and kill everyone that is not Muslim. You can not reason with them because you can only reason with a reasonable person. What are we going to have to do, I hate to say because it will ultimately mean more deaths, hurt people, and our economy messed up even more.
 @LongBeachBum If we, as a society and a nation, cannot come up with a creative solution to this problem and avoid war, then what have we learned in the last 200+ years? Where's the dynamic innovation, creativity and hard work that we Americans say we're famous for? People who say that war is any kind of answer need to put their lives where their mouth is and go out on the front lines with an M16 and sample war's sad horrors themselves.
Report: US strikes on Iran would risk major war
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Yep, thats what they always want, war. Because after you lose, McDonalds gets a new restraunt and BP gets free oil and moms get to bury their sons. Someday, 4 or 5 of those countries over there are going to get smart and get together and show us what war in our own country looks like. There really is no downside for them, were going to attack em all sooner or later so why not? I dont think there will be near as many americans cheering on our war monger leadership decade after decade after they see what war is.Might save some innocent lives in the long run, who knows.
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It is getting a little stale though with another WMD war. Couldn't they find something that wouldn't remind the sleeping US drones of the last WMD fiasco? or wait, were still knee deep in that fiasco and the drones didnt really notice anyway..... Can you tell me who won?
Perhaps the time has come to replace Barry Sotero as President and put an end to the entire middle eastern problem. Once and for all.
 @Rick4001CS Agree with the first part, but the second part isn't as simplistic as it seems.