National Post

McCain’s ‘bomb, bomb Iran’ resurfaces

- James stavRiDis Bloomberg View

On the campaign trail in 2007, Sen. John McCain sang a parody to the tune of the Beach Boys’ Barbara Ann: “Bomb, bomb, bomb ... bomb, bomb Iran.” That sentiment resonates in the Donald Trump administra­tion, and it’s understand­able. The Iranians continue to push their influence throughout the Middle East: using proxies to threaten U.S. allies; supporting Bashar Assad in Syria; fuelling the war in Yemen through support for Houthi rebels; and seeking to destabiliz­e Iraq and gain further influence in Lebanon.

Now we face a new twist to Iranian expansioni­sm that demonstrat­es both Tehran’s ambition and its growing ties to Russia. The Iranian navy has announced it will undertake a five-month deployment to the western Atlantic. While it’s unclear how many ships will be involved, Tehran says the flotilla will include a newly built destroyer, the Sahand. Some vessels are expected dock in Venezuela, one of the few countries in the Western Hemisphere that would welcome them.

A handful of Iranian combatants in waters close to the U.S. will not send our navy to general quarters, nor should it. Iran’s ships are a couple of generation­s behind similarly sized U.S. destroyers, and they have nothing remotely like the powerful strike capability of America’s carriers, nuclear submarines and amphibious warships. Nor do they have sophistica­ted landattack cruise missiles comparable to U.S. Tomahawks.

But two aspects of the deployment should strike an ominous chord. First, it will undoubtedl­y be conducted in co-operation with the Russian navy, which has been increasing its patrols in the approaches to the continenta­l U.S. Second, it is an indication of how Iranians truly believe themselves to be a global power.

One problem in forging an Iran strategy is that we do not understand their history, culture and self-image. We see Iran as a moderatesi­zed regional power with significan­t natural resources and a fairly large, growing population. But Iranians see themselves as the inheritors of the Persian Empire, which at its peak ruled nearly half of the world’s population. In a slightly different twist of history’s DNA, the Persians would have conquered the Greek city-states 2,500 years ago and potentiall­y stymied the birth and growth of the Roman Empire.

So, is John McCain’s prescripti­on the right one? Not at the moment, and let us hope we do not need to turn to military action. Instead, we should create a coherent strategy for dealing with Iran that rests on three pillars.

First, we need to increase intelligen­ce collection focused on Iran’s internal debates over global strategy. For example, how do the revolution­ary guards and the regular military interact? While a great deal can be collected by overhead surveillan­ce and cyber activity, it makes sense to work more closely with our allies’ intelligen­ce services, especially Israel and Jordan. And as we collect data in more depth, we should apply a historical and cultural filter to extract a more sophistica­ted and nuanced understand­ing of Iranian goals.

Working militarily with our allies, partners and friends — both in the region and globally — is a second key. Since the Carter administra­tion, this confrontat­ion has largely been the U.S. vs. Iran, instead of a global community vs. Iran. Much of Tehran’s relentless interferen­ce and provocatio­n across the larger Middle East and southcentr­al Asia violates internatio­nal law, to say nothing of its nuclear program. In the region, Israel and Saudi Arabia are pillars of a coalition that could include many of the other Arab states to face Shiite expansioni­sm. It may be the moment to reopen discussion­s of an “Arab NATO.”

Third, we must continue to use targeted sanctions. Some big nations — including Russia and China — will probably not co-operate. But the U.S. and Europe collective­ly represent over 50 per cent of global GDP. While it remains unclear how the Europeans will ultimately react to the U.S. withdrawal from the Iran nuclear deal, we can bring them back onside by refocusing the internatio­nal effort on the proxy wars and ballisticm­issile threat.

As for Iran’s navy, it has strong capabiliti­es to create mischief in the Arabian Gulf and the northern Indian Ocean. Iran has stealthy diesel submarines, it employs swarming flotillas of small armed boats to threaten larger warships, and it is very good at employing mines. But deployment to the distant waters off America is a concerning display of advanced capability and ambition. We need to pay attention.

Bombing Iran now would be a grave mistake. Building a more coherent approach that flows from a deeper analysis and understand­ing of Iranian goals and plans is a better bet. The bombs will be available if that time ever comes.

 ?? VAHID SALEMI / THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? A protester clenches his fist behind a burnt representa­tion of the U.S. flag in Tehran, Iran in May. The Iranians continue to push their influence to threaten U.S. allies.
VAHID SALEMI / THE ASSOCIATED PRESS A protester clenches his fist behind a burnt representa­tion of the U.S. flag in Tehran, Iran in May. The Iranians continue to push their influence to threaten U.S. allies.

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