This shared commitment between the U.S. and Israel to a tough, permanent fight against terror is not limited to the shadows. It also involves the states that support terror, including Iran. In recent testimony on Capitol Hill, General David Petraeus said without equivocation that Iran is now the greatest obstacle to stability in Iraq through its Special Groups. Iran backs Hezbollah in Lebanon and Hamas in Gaza. Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad recently invited camera crews on a tour of his uranium enrichment facility in Natanz, openly flouting the U.N. Security Council.
Iran has violated no fewer than three binding Security Council resolutions, and, according to the IAEA, has likely drawn upon its military to support clandestine aspects of its nuclear program. This conclusion contrasts sharply with the most recent National Intelligence Estimate on Iran, which concluded that at a single point in time, Iran had put an end to its nuclear weapons program.
Some people like to think that Iran is not a serious threat. They wave away the very suggestion of it as a kind of hysteria. Yet when a country completely ignores the U.N. Security Council; funds, arms, and trains terrorists; claims to pursue nuclear technology for civilian use, despite the fact that it sits atop the third largest oil reserves on the planet; and openly says it wants one of its neighbors wiped off the map, it is nothing if not a serious threat. This isn’t saber-rattling. It’s common sense. And those who disagree with it, in my view, don’t have any. Read the rest of this entry »