Iran: Incredibly, the Bush national security team's sole
holdover has announced Peace in Our Time as the only hope against a nuclear
Tehran. There is no defense for Secretary Robert Gates.
Appearing in Paris
with the French defense minister on Monday, U.S. Defense Secretary Robert
Gates made an announcement to the world that will astonish our friends and
embolden our enemies.
"We must still try and find a peaceful way to resolve this issue," Gates
said of the never-ending defiance of the free world by Iran's Islamofascist
regime as it moves ever closer to becoming a nuclear weapons power.
"The only path that is left to us at this point, it seems to me, is that
pressure track," Gates added. "But it will require all of the international
community to work together."
Anyone care to hold your breath on that last hope?
After meeting for an hour with French President Nicolas Sarkozy on Monday,
Gates and he "agreed that the time has come for the adoption of strong
sanctions, in the hope that dialogue will be resumed," a Sarkozy aide said.
The time has come? That must be what passes for black humor in Paris these
days. The time for getting tough with the Iranians came years ago.
And anyway, what value does a joint statement from the U.S. and France
against Iran have? U.S. diplomats on Monday were putting on a good face about
France's decision to send 80 — count 'em — more personnel to help the U.S.
with what President Obama has called the central front in the war on al-Qaida
in Afghanistan.
Add to that France's plans to send amphibious assault ships to Russia
against our wishes, with the rationale that Russia, has "changed deeply" since
losing the Cold War, and so it's time to nurture a new relationship.
They might ask the family of the murdered dissident Alexander Litvinenko,
poisoned by a radioactive isotope in 2006, how nurturing Russian ruler
Vladimir Putin is. Or ask the former Soviet bloc nations seeking missile
defense from Russia.
At any rate, something seems to have happened that spoiled all the love and
respect our cool, new commander in chief was supposed to be getting from the
land of Robespierre, so unlike the treatment afforded that Europhobic Texan
predecessor of his.
Think what Tehran thinks when it hears the defense secretary of this and
the previous presidency say that the only path left to the world's lone
superpower — and, by extension, to the community of civilized nations — is
more sanctions.
"The key," Gates said in Paris, "is persuading the Iranian leaders that
their long-term best interests are best served by not having nuclear weapons,
as opposed to having them. And so I think that an approach along these lines,
as long as the international community is seen pressing vigorously to resolve
this problem, my hope is we will then be able to keep this in economic and
diplomatic channels."
That is a fundamental misunderstanding of what motivates those who rule
Iran. The mullahs, the ayatollahs and their henchman who returned to the
Iranian presidency in a rigged election last summer see "their long-term best
interests" in supernatural terms.
The return of the 12th Imam, the destruction of the Jewish state in an
apocalyptic holy war, an eternity spent in that giant brothel in the sky —
those things dominate their thoughts, not the effects of economic sanctions or
isolation from the international community.
It must be with that reality in mind that we consider what the Supreme
Leader Ayatollah Khamenei and President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad think when the
U.S. says, through Gates, that force is not an option.
We have a Western alliance, unallied even on fighting al-Qaida in
Afghanistan, which spends years watching a jihadist regime work toward atomic
weapons before it even seriously considers anything approaching real economic
warfare against it, and which tells its enemies that force is out as a
solution.
When a secretary of defense considers defense a nonoption, it's time to
think about (as the president would say) pressing the reset button.