geofflambert -> RE: Iran assessment (no politics please) (9/12/2012 5:43:06 AM)
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quote:
ORIGINAL: Lcp Purcell quote:
ORIGINAL: Chickenboy impossibility of running a modern country with a 100.0% reduction in one's main / exclusive (?) cash export a person would expect Saudi Arabia to have a far more sophisticated manufacturing center and military industrial complex than Iran, they are richer, they are better educated, they have unfettered access to import advanced technology but they don't have a better industrial complex. Because they have no need to. In 1979 we started an ongoing embargo against Iran, they could not get spare parts for their military equipment, so they figured out how to make those spare parts themselves, 30 some years of sanctions has left them fairly self reliant, while Saudi Arabia buys all their spare parts from us. Iran does not have a modern economy, they have a 19th century economy the kind we had when import tariffs ran 25%-50% I resisted looking at this thread because I knew it was going to be a nightmare. I failed, and I found so much to disagree with. I'm going to pretend my opinion is valuable and outline some of my disagreements. I will begin with the well-meaning post above. If any nation is in a dark age, it is Saudi Arabia. The Iranians are a proud and resourceful people, and their education system is certainly not second to SA or any other Arab state, for that matter. Money is not speech, worthfulness, indicitave of intellectual accomplishment or any of the other stuff implied here (see virtuosity). What I said about the Iranis, does it remind anyone of something Admiral Yamamoto said? The US will strenuosly (under OBama) evade an armed conflict with Iran. Without regard to Mr. Netanyahu's insistance on a commitment from the US to attack, the methods of response fall into two categories. Either we have a weapon system that involves a chain of small atomic bombs that will burrow through miles of rock to destroy what we want destroyed, or we put boots on the ground. Many may consider that Iraq was a cake walk, but Iran will be no such thing. Furthermore, if we press too severely, even before attempting such an attack, we may provoke attacks on our carrier fleets trying to pass into the Gulf, or if we decline to continue operating in that way, the attacks will sink every tanker attempting the transit. The Revolutionary Guard has planned, trained and is equipped to carry out these attacks, reminiscent of the attack on the Cole, but much more sophisticated and numerous in units attacking. This tactic will be sustained indefinitely. With all our technology, our carrier battle groups have little effective defenses against these small, fast craft suicide bombings and the Revolutionary Guard knows this. We will be forced to abandon the Gulf even after we've destroyed (and we will) every significant ship in the Irani Navy and their ports to boot. Asymetric warfare is an abstract concept that can be applied in many ways, in many different sets of circumstances.
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