beastie wrote:I just have to make another comment. Several of you are gung-ho on McCain, including his hawkish intents towards Iran. I asked Dart a question he never responded to, but Droppy stepped up to the bat. I am extremely curious as to whether the rest of you McCain supporters agree with him:
My original question:
But even if they were, we simply do not have the military or economic might anymore to invade Iran. This is reality, as much as you might like to imagine the Superman America being able fly into and beat anyone to a pulp. Look at the difficulties we’ve had with Iraq. We now have concluded that we need at least 100,000 boots on the ground to even partially control the situation in Iraq. Iraq had a population of 24 million. Iran has 70 million. Iraq had manpower fit for military service of 4 million. Iran has 12 million. Iraq had a military budge of 1.3 billion. Iran has a military budget of 9.7 billion. In addition, Iran’s terrain is more problematic. facts obtained here
You're comparing apples to rutabagas. I don't favor military action agains Iran, even if they do develop a nuke, unless they commit some act of aggression. My name's scipio, and I'm an evil McCain supporter.
An invasion of Iran would look more like Afghanistan than Iraq: small spec ops units working with locals, along with coordinated airstrikes. You miss the point on the Iranian military. Its abysmal. An air force slightly better than Iraqs, true, but still in 3rd world status.
beastie wrote:Now you tell me with a straight face that we have the military and economic might to conduct a successful war in Iran, PLUS still deal with Iraq and Afghanistan. I actually supported the invasion of Afghanistan, because they were hosting and enabling the people who actually did attack us. What would Afghanistan look like today had we focused our attention there, instead of diverting forces and money from Afghanistan to Iraq???
Pipe dream. I've served tours in both. Different approach, different environment, different military footprint. Afghanistan could use 5-6k more troops, but nothing like the amount of boots on the ground in Iraq. That being said, could you point out which divisions were originally earmarked for Afghanistan, and switched to Iraq?
beastie wrote:Afghanistan has been neglected and is now screaming for attention. The hard fact is that, aside from the incompetency of the Bush administration, we simply don’t have the means to deal with BOTH arenas simultaneously with a high degree of success. And you think we can add Iran on to that mess????
Another pipe dream. I've been to both, and the amount of success is measurable, particularly in Iraq.
Please, don't let some type of Bush derangement syndrome obscure those facts. It smacks of partisan hackery.
beastie wrote:This is a lovely libertarian fantasy, but it ain’t gonna happen. The vast majority of US citizens want the federal government to provide social services and safety nets. Now, you may ideologically disapprove of that fact, but a fact it is. McCain isn’t going to change that fact, and even if he could somehow change that fact, it would take decades to fully implement such a tremendous change, so the potential financial benefits would arrive far too late to deal with Iran. But reality is that it’s not going to happen. You can fantasize and rant and rave about the stupidity of the American people (and some definitely are stupid, no doubt) all you want, but effective governing deals with the world as it is and not as how we would like it to be.
Your source of this "vast majority"?
beastie wrote:So, given reality as it is, just how do the rest of you McCain supporters suggest that we deal with Iran when we are barely – barely – barely – dealing with Afghanistan and Iraq already????
Raise the sanction stakes until they cry uncle. Their nuclear program is a subject of national pride, wheres the mullahs, and the accompanying economic policy are definately not. Iranian unemployment continues somewhere around the 10% mark. Of course, the "carrot or carrot" foriegn policy fails to work, but the UN Security Council and IAEA need to be on board, which means bringing Russia back into a US-friendly standing.
beastie wrote:What will happen isn’t a miraculous, sudden, complete change of the entire federal government a la Droopy’s fantasies, but instead, the same thing that happened with Iraq- which is that the plan wasn’t ever fully fleshed out and completely ignored the hard reality of that part of the world, and turned out to be nothing like what its supporters imagined. It’s been a drain on our economy, a drain on our military, it has handicapped our ability to respond to possible situations that actually do threaten our country, and the end result is uncertain and very likely unfavorable to us in the end (given how our invading Iraq has strengthened Iran……)
All your socialistic wet-dreams aside, you're simply batty if you think there will be any major military action against Iran in the near future.
The problem needs an injection of realpolitik that babe in the woods Obama can't provide. Unless, of course, you would consider "unconditional" direct talk (he was against unconditional direct talks, before he was before them, or is it vice versa) to be successful. It wasn't how four once-soon to be nuclear powers (Kazakhstan, Belarus, South Africa and Libya) reversed course.
Quite simply, clarify to Iran that the price for nuclear armament is greater than its potential use, and that the world, through IAEA, the UN and countries willing to impose sanctions, will not leave Iran alone until it gives up its quest for weapons-grade uranium.