A Defensive Buildup in the Gulf
STRATFOR
February 1, 2010
By George Friedman
This weekend’s newspapers were filled with stories about how the United States
is providing ballistic missile defense (BMD) to four countries on the Arabian
Peninsula. The New York Times carried a front-page story on the United States
providing anti-missile defenses to Kuwait, the United Arab Emirates, Qatar and
Oman, as well as stationing BMD-capable, Aegis-equipped warships in the Persian
Gulf. Meanwhile, the front page of The Washington Post carried a story saying
that “the Obama administration is quietly working with Saudi Arabia and other
Persian Gulf allies to speed up arms sales and rapidly upgrade defenses for oil
terminals and other key infrastructure in a bid to thwart future attacks by
Iran, according to former and current U.S. and Middle Eastern government
officials.”
Obviously, the work is no longer “quiet.” In fact, Washington has been publicly
engaged in upgrading defensive systems in the area for some time. Central
Command head Gen. David Petraeus recently said the four countries named by the
Times were receiving BMD-capable Patriot Advanced Capability-3 (PAC-3)
batteries, and at the end of October the United States carried out its
largest-ever military exercises with Israel, known as Juniper Cobra.
More interesting than the stories themselves was the Obama administration’s
decision to launch a major public relations campaign this weekend regarding
these moves. And the most intriguing question out of all this is why the
administration decided to call everyone’s attention to these defensive measures
while not mentioning any offensive options.
The Iranian Nuclear Question
U.S. President Barack Obama spent little time on foreign policy in his Jan. 27
State of the Union message, though he did make a short, sharp reference to Iran.
He promised a strong response to Tehran if it continued its present course;
though this could have been pro forma, it seemed quite pointed. Early in his
administration, Obama had said he would give the Iranians until the end of 2009
to change their policy on nuclear weapons development. But the end of 2009 came,
and the Iranians continued their policy.
All along, Obama has focused on diplomacy on the Iran question. To be more
precise, he has focused on bringing together a coalition prepared to impose
“crippling sanctions” on the Iranians. The most crippling sanction would be
stopping Iran’s gasoline imports, as Tehran imports about 35 percent of its
gasoline. Such sanctions are now unlikely, as China has made clear that it is
not prepared to participate — and that was before the most recent round of U.S.
weapon sales to Taiwan. Similarly, while the Russians have indicated that their
participation in sanctions is not completely out of the question, they also have
made clear that time for sanctions is not near. We suspect that the Russian time
frame for sanctions will keep getting pushed back.
Therefore, the diplomatic option appears to have dissolved. The Israelis have
said they regard February as the decisive month for sanctions, which they have
indicated is based on an agreement with the United States. While previous
deadlines of various sorts regarding Iran have come and gone, there is really no
room after February. If no progress is made on sanctions and no action follows,
then the decision has been made by default that a nuclear-armed Iran is
acceptable.
The Americans and the Israelis have somewhat different views of this based on
different geopolitical realities. The Americans have seen a number of apparently
extreme and dangerous countries develop nuclear weapons. The most important
example was Maoist China. Mao Zedong had argued that a nuclear war was not
particularly dangerous to China, as it could lose several hundred million people
and still win the war. But once China developed nuclear weapons, the wild talk
subsided and China behaved quite cautiously. From this experience, the United
States developed a two-stage strategy.
First, the United States believed that while the spread of nuclear weapons is a
danger, countries tend to be circumspect after acquiring nuclear weapons.
Therefore, overreaction by United States to the acquisition of nuclear weapons
by other countries is unnecessary and unwise.
Second, since the United States is a big country with widely dispersed
population and a massive nuclear arsenal, a reckless country that launched some
weapons at the United States would do minimal harm to the United States while
the other country would face annihilation. And the United States has emphasized
BMD to further mitigate — if not eliminate — the threat of such a limited strike
to the United States.
Israel’s geography forces it to see things differently. Iranian President
Mahmoud Ahmadinejad has said Israel should be wiped off the face of the Earth
while simultaneously working to attain nuclear weapons. While the Americans take
comfort in the view that the acquisition of nuclear weapons has a sobering
effect on a new nuclear power, the Israelis don’t think the Chinese case
necessarily can be generalized. Moreover, the United States is outside the range
of the Iranians’ current ballistic missile arsenal while Israel is not. And a
nuclear strike would have a particularly devastating effect on Israel. Unlike
the United States, Israel is small country with a highly concentrated
population. A strike with just one or two weapons could destroy Israel.
Therefore, Israel has a very different threshold for risk as far as Iran is
concerned. For Israel, a nuclear strike from Iran is improbable, but would be
catastrophic if it happened. For the United States, the risk of an Iranian
strike is far more remote, and would be painful but not catastrophic if it
happened. The two countries thus approach the situation very differently.
How close the Iranians are to having a deliverable nuclear weapon is, of course,
a significant consideration in all this. Iran has not yet achieved a testable
nuclear device. Logic tells us they are quite far from a deliverable nuclear
weapon. But the ability to trust logic varies as the risk grows. The United
States (and this is true for both the Bush and Obama administrations) has been
much more willing to play for time than Israel can afford to be. For Israel, all
intelligence must be read in the context of worst-case scenarios.
Diverging Interests and Grand Strategy
It is also important to remember that Israel is much less dependent on the
United States than it was in 1973. Though U.S. aid to Israel continues, it is
now a much smaller percentage of Israeli gross domestic product. Moreover, the
threat of sudden conventional attack by Israel’s immediate neighbors has
disappeared. Egypt is at peace with Israel, and in any case, its military is too
weak to mount an attack. Jordan is effectively an Israeli ally. Only Syria is
hostile, but it presents no conventional military threat. Israel previously has
relied on guarantees that the United States would rush aid to Israel in the
event of war. But it has been a generation since this has been a major
consideration for Israel. In the minds of many, the Israeli-U.S. relationship is
stuck in the past. Israel is not critical to American interests the way it was
during the Cold War. And Israel does not need the United States the way it did
during the Cold War. While there is intelligence cooperation in the struggle
against jihadists, even here American and Israeli interests diverge.
And this means that the United States no longer has Israeli national security as
an overriding consideration — and that the United States cannot compel Israel to
pursue policies Israel regards as dangerous.
Given all of this, the Obama administration’s decision to launch a public
relations campaign on defensive measures just before February makes perfect
sense. If Iran develops a nuclear capability, a defensive capability might shift
Iran’s calculus of the risks and rewards of the military option.
Assume, for example, that the Iranians decided to launch a nuclear missile at
Israel or Iran’s Arab neighbors with which its relations are not the best. Iran
would have only a handful of missiles, and perhaps just one. Launching that one
missile only to have it shot down would represent the worst-case scenario for
Iran. Tehran would have lost a valuable military asset, it would not have
achieved its goal and it would have invited a devastating counterstrike.
Anything the United States can do to increase the likelihood of an Iranian
failure therefore decreases the likelihood that Iran would strike until they
have more delivery systems and more fissile material for manufacturing more
weapons.
The U.S. announcement of the defensive measures therefore has three audiences:
Iran, Israel and the American public. Israel and Iran obviously know all about
American efforts, meaning the key audience is the American public. The
administration is trying to deflect American concerns about Iran generated both
by reality and Israel by showing that effective steps are being taken.
There are two key weapon systems being deployed, the PAC-3 and the
Aegis/Standard Missile-3 (SM-3). The original Patriot, primarily an
anti-aircraft system, had a poor record — especially as a BMD system — during
the first Gulf War. But that was almost 20 years ago. The new system is regarded
as much more effective as a terminal-phase BMD system, such as the medium-range
ballistic missiles (MRBMs) developed by Iran, and performed much more
impressively in this role during the opening of Operation Iraqi Freedom in March
2003. In addition, Juniper Cobra served to further integrate a series of
American and Israeli BMD interceptors and sensors, building a more redundant and
layered system. This operation also included the SM-3, which is deployed aboard
specially modified Aegis-equipped guided missile cruisers and destroyers. The
SM-3 is one of the most successful BMD technologies currently in the field and
successfully brought down a wayward U.S. spy satellite in 2008.
Nevertheless, a series of Iranian Shahab-3s is a different threat than a few
Iraqi Scuds, and the PAC-3 and SM-3 have yet to be proven in combat against such
MRBMs — something the Israelis are no doubt aware of. War planners must
calculate the incalculable; that is what makes good generals pessimists.
The Obama administration does not want to mount an offensive action against
Iran. Such an operation would not be a single strike like the 1981 Osirak attack
in Iraq. Iran has multiple nuclear sites buried deep and surrounded by air
defenses. And assessing the effectiveness of airstrikes would be a nightmare.
Many days of combat at a minimum probably would be required, and like the
effectiveness of defensive weapons systems, the quality of intelligence about
which locations to hit cannot be known until after the battle.
A defensive posture therefore makes perfect sense for the United States.
Washington can simply defend its allies, letting them absorb the risk and then
the first strike before the United States counterstrikes rather than rely on its
intelligence and offensive forces in a pre-emptive strike. This defensive
posture on Iran fits American grand strategy, which is always to shift such risk
to partners in exchange for technology and long-term guarantees.
The Arabian states can live with this, albeit nervously, since they are not the
likely targets. But Israel finds its assigned role in U.S. grand strategy far
more difficult to stomach. In the unlikely event that Iran actually does develop
a weapon and does strike, Israel is the likely target. If the defensive measures
do not convince Iran to abandon its program and if the Patriots allow a missile
to leak through, Israel has a national catastrophe. It faces an unlikely event
with unacceptable consequences.
Israel’s Options
It has options, although a long-range conventional airstrike against Iran is
really not one of them. Carrying out a multiday or even multiweek air campaign
with Israel’s available force is too likely to be insufficient and too likely to
fail. Israel’s most effective option for taking out Iran’s nuclear activities is
itself nuclear. Israel could strike Iran from submarines if it genuinely
intended to stop Iran’s program.
The problem with this is that much of the Iranian nuclear program is sited near
large cities, including Tehran. Depending on the nuclear weapons used and their
precision, any Israeli strikes could thus turn into city-killers. Israel is not
able to live in a region where nuclear weapons are used in counterpopulation
strikes (regardless of the actual intent behind launching). Mounting such a
strike could unravel the careful balance of power Israel has created and
threaten relationships it needs. And while Israel may not be as dependent on the
United States as it once was, it does not want the United States completely
distancing itself from Israel, as Washington doubtless would after an Israeli
nuclear strike.
The Israelis want Iran’s nuclear program destroyed, but they do not want to be
the ones to try to do it. Only the United States has the force needed to carry
out the strike conventionally. But like the Bush administration, the Obama
administration is not confident in its ability to remove the Iranian program
surgically. Washington is concerned that any air campaign would have an
indeterminate outcome and would require extremely difficult ground operations to
determine the strikes’ success or failure. Perhaps even more complicated is the
U.S. ability to manage the consequences, such as a potential attempt by Iran to
close the Strait of Hormuz and Iranian meddling in already extremely delicate
situations in Iraq and Afghanistan. As Iran does not threaten the United States,
the United States therefore is in no hurry to initiate combat. And so the United
States has launched a public relations campaign about defensive measures, hoping
to affect Iranian calculations while remaining content to let the game play
itself out.
Israel’s option is to respond to the United States with its intent to go
nuclear, something Washington does not want in a region where U.S. troops are
fighting in countries on either side of Iran. Israel might calculate that its
announcement would force the United States to pre-empt an Israeli nuclear strike
with conventional strikes. But the American response to Israel cannot be
predicted. It is therefore dangerous for a small regional power to try to corner
a global power.
With the adoption of a defensive posture, we have now seen the U.S. response to
the February deadline. This response closes off no U.S. options (the United
States can always shift its strategy when intelligence indicates), it increases
the Arabian Peninsula’s dependence on the United States, and it possibly causes
Iran to recalculate its position. Israel, meanwhile, finds itself in a box,
because the United States calculates that Israel will not chance a conventional
strike and fears a nuclear strike on Iran as much as the United States does.
In the end, Obama has followed the Bush strategy on Iran — make vague threats,
try to build a coalition, hold Israel off with vague promises, protect the
Arabian Peninsula, and wait — to the letter. But along with this announcement,
we would expect to begin to see a series of articles on the offensive deployment
of U.S. forces, as good defensive posture requires a strong offensive option.