Tom Cotton: Military Action Against Iran Would Only Take ‘Several Days’
Wednesday, April 8, 2015Domenico Montanaro / NPR
Sen.
Tom Cotton accused President Obama of holding up a “false choice”
between his framework deal on Iran’s nuclear program and war. He also
seemed to diminish what military action against Iran would entail.
“Even if military action were required,”
the freshman Arkansas Republican senator said on a radio show Tuesday
hosted by the Family Research Council’s Tony Perkins. In the comments
first picked up by BuzzFeed, Cotton also said: “the president is trying to make you think it would be 150,000 heavy mechanized troops on the ground in the Middle East again as we saw in Iraq. That’s simply not the case.”
“It
would be something more along the lines of what President Clinton did
in December 1998 during Operation Desert Fox. Several days of air and
naval bombing against Iraq’s weapons of mass destruction facilities for
exactly the same kind of behavior. For interfering with weapons
inspectors and for disobeying Security Council resolutions. All we’re
asking is that the president simply be as tough in the protection of
America’s national security interest as Bill Clinton was.”
That
bombing operation lasted four days and hit nearly 100 Iraqi targets
after U.N. inspectors said Iraq had not fully cooperated with
inspections.
Of course, military analysts point out that Iran is a larger country than Iraq with a more sophisticated military.
“The
only thing worse than an Iran with nuclear weapons would be an Iran
with nuclear weapons that one or more countries attempted to prevent
them from obtaining by military strikes — and failed,” said Ryan Crocker, the former U.S. ambassador to Iraq and Afghanistan, in 2013.
Added Jim
Walsh, a researcher at MIT, who has studied Iran’s nuclear program, “I
fear that a military strike will produce the very thing you are trying
to avoid, which is the Iranian government would meet the day after the
attack and say: ‘Oh yeah, we’ll show you — we are going to build a
nuclear weapon.’ I think we will get a weapon’s decision following an
attack, which is the last thing we want to produce right now.”
Cotton
— who orchestrated a letter to Iran’s leaders, which 46 other GOP
senators signed onto disapproving of any potential deal with Iran — also
called the president’s underlying assumptions in making a deal “wishful
thinking.”
“It’s thinking that’s characterized by a child’s wish for a pony,” he said.
It’s not the first time bombing Iran has come up around political campaigns.
It was almost exactly five years when John McCain joked in New
Hampshire about bombing Iran, singing “that old Beach Boys song, ‘Bomb
Iran.'”
“Bomb, bomb, bomb, bomb, anyway, ah….,” he sang to the tune of “Barbara Ann.”
McCain, though, has also long noted that military action should be a last resort.
Hillary
Clinton even said during that election cycle that if Iran attacked
Israel with a nuclear weapon, “We would be able to totally obliterate
them.”
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