ColinWright
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Joined: 10/13/2005 Status: offline
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quote:
ORIGINAL: Radu 1) The Iran invasion would have the purpose of regime change. You are right that it would not be anywhere near an Iraqi "cakewalk" because if its sheer size (something like France+Germany+Spain), population (70 mil as opposed to Iraq's 26) and political life,however... a) Because of the objective being regime change, the targets really are population centers (for occupation that is). In the case of Iran, the population is concentrated in the western half of the country. The easiest way to tell is to look at the provincial partition of Iran . http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Blank-Map-Iran-With-Water-Bodies.PNG You can easily see that provinces to the west are smaller which implies a higher population density. For the same reason,the provinces of east-central Iran are much larger in surface and proportionally smaller in population. Thus, the US's main (or initial) thrust would stop along the Tehran-Eshfahan-Shiraz line, roughly. Most of Iran's main population centers are no farther from the Iran-Iraq border than Baghdad was from the Kuwaiti border. You can GoogleEarth some measurements. b) Iran's population, though numbering some 70 million, is rather heterogenous to an extent that I confess surprised me. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Demographics_of_Iran Only slightly more than half of Iran's population are actually ethnic Persians (55% - wiki), with a mix of Azeris plus various Kurd,Arabic and Turkic ethnicities making up the rest. For example,it is no coincidence that the south-eastern border province of Khuzestan, the oil heartland of Iran, was also known as Arabsitan (no bullsh*t , http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Arabistan ) due to it being the main home for Iran's Arab minority.In fact there was an article called "The Khuzestan Gambit" that advocated stirring up trouble there then sending in coalition troops to 'liberate' with the added bonus of kicking Iran in the groin,economically speaking. One can reasonably assume that the Bush administration would seek to stoke any and all simmering tensions and try to create new ones in this diverse demographic terrain and there could be chances for success. I may be getting into what might turn out to be a ferocious argument, but I disagree -- and our lack of action suggests that perhaps the Bush administration did as well. Absent the willingness to send in an occupation force of circa 500,000 and -- more importantly -- a willingness to kill several hundred thousand people and rule by naked terror, I don't think there would be any prospect for success at all. Since we couldn't afford the political costs of such an action, 'regime change' in Iran -- at least via armed invasion -- was not an option.quote:
In conclusion, there are some elements that might make Iran look like Iraq if one really wanted to look at things this way (and I would accuse the higher-ups of the Bush admin of that), even though I completely agree with you that a US foray into Iran would not be anywhere near like the one in Iraq. 2) About the fictional crisis, it's an idea I flirted with before, namely a US regime-change visit in Romania. I thought it would be an interesting scenario because it would an antithesis of the Iraq war in some ways. Particularly, in the case of Iraq the population centers were concentrated in a narrow NW-SE direction on the banks of the Euphrates and Tigris, thus why the Coalition could afford to engage only two spearhead divisions, the US 3rd Inf and the UK 1st Armd. In the case of Romania, most of the main population centers are strewn along the breadth the Western and Southern Plain but with 6-7 of the top 10 largest Romanian cities being little more than 100 miles of either the Hungarian or Bulgarian borders. Thus, a US Barbarossa-style fan-out-dash-for-all-objectives and a Romanian Stalingrad-style counterattack on the flanks of one US axis of advance or another... We'll see,but there is potential for fun. Naturally,if Romania had the US's undivided attention, a game like Close Combat (perhaps a mod, the CCV Stalingrad mod was nice) rather than TOAW would offer any kind of entertainment from that experience. Thank God for Iran,eh? P.S. : Oh,and hello to you! Long time no speak. Is the TDG site down for good,btw? It lingers on. http://www.savemstateathletics.com/tdg/index.php Now that you remind me, this does sound familiar. But why are we invading Rumania? You just aren't offensive enough -- and in case you haven't noticed, our zeal to bring the blessings of 'secular democracy' to others via armed force is highly selective. Anyway, assuming Rumania somehow became outrageous enough in some way to merit our guidance and correction, the operation would almost certainly involve the participation of other European states. This would be all the truer if we had somehow blundered into what would be a rapidly deepening crisis in Iran. In those circumstances, Rumania would probably be able to get away with just about anything it could imagine. At any rate, it would have a hard time provoking us without also exciting its neighbors into action. Something involving Hungary? Anyway, if you want to restrict US forces somehow, why don't you posit something more limited? Like we've committed ourselves to 'peacekeeping' operations in Lebanon on behalf of Israel? Israel's operations there in 2006 have turned out differently than they did. This has the happy advantage that you can always posit an extension into Syria if you need to see more US troops tied up. Perhaps even Jordan.
< Message edited by ColinWright -- 1/17/2009 7:44:46 PM >
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