Other Views

NATIONAL SECURITY

‘The most dangerous man in the world’?

 

www.creators.com

U.S. newspapers this fall will devote countless column inches and network TV will set aside endless hours to revisiting the most perilous month in the history of the republic, if not of the world.

Nikita Khrushchev’s decision to secretly install nuclear-armed intermediate-range ballistic missiles in Cuba began to form in his mind sometime earlier, perhaps in April 1961, when President John F. Kennedy put a brigade of Cubans ashore to become the vanguard of a guerrilla army to overthrow Fidel Castro’s regime.

It failed, and by mid-October 1962, Soviet missiles were in Cuba. Their 1,500-mile target radius put Washington, D.C., in range.

The Air Force chief of staff was Gen. Curtis LeMay, former head of Strategic Air Command, who boasted of his B-29 fleet in the Pacific war, “We torched and boiled and baked to death more people in Tokyo that night of March 9-10 than went up in vapor in Hiroshima and Nagasaki combined.”

LeMay wanted to bomb and invade Cuba, even after Khrushchev pulled his rockets out. When Mao Zedong denounced Khrushchev’s climb-down, calling America ”a paper tiger,” Khrushchev is said to have reminded Mao, “This paper tiger has nuclear teeth.”

Mao reportedly indicated a willingness to lose 300 million Chinese in a nuclear war if that war would finish off the United States.

These were grave times and dangerous men. What prompts this recitation of what our world was like 50 years ago is the latest cover story in The Weekly Standard, The Most Dangerous Man in the World.

The cover photo is of Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, Iran’s “man with a mission,” who is said to be seeking an atom bomb and who “loathes the United States more than Stalin, Mao, Tojo and Hitler combined.” If this “supreme leader gets nuclear weapons, it will be a miracle if he does not stupidly lead his country into war.”

Thrust of the 5,000-word article: Be afraid. Be very afraid of this man.

But what exactly are we to fear? And what is the imperative for war now on Iran, for which this piece beats the drum?

Khamenei has declared that nuclear weapons are immoral and Iran will never acquire them. Is Islamic Iran’s supreme religious leader lying through his teeth? Where is the proof? Where is the hard evidence?

Sixteen U.S. intelligence agencies stated unanimously in 2007 and reaffirmed in 2011 their conviction that Iran does not have an active nuclear weapons program. In the Standard piece, John Sawyer, head of the British Intelligence Service MI-6, “flatly stated in July that we have two years left before the Iranians can build a weapon.”

And if we should fear this most dangerous man in the world, why do not the Iraqis, Turks, Azerbaijanis and Pakistanis, his neighbors, seem to fear him? The Pakistanis, with scores of nukes, seem less nervous about Iran than democratic India, with whom they have fought several wars.

Before now it has been Iran’s President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad who was the incarnation of Hitler. But Ahmadinejad’s eight years in office are up next summer, and he is reportedly going back to teaching.

For all his bellicosity, how many wars did Ahmadinejad fight?

When was the last time Iran started any war?

On Al-Quds Day, Wednesday, an annual event since the 1979 revolution, Khamenei reportedly said he was confidant ”the fake Zionist (regime) will disappear from the landscape of geography.”

Yes, and Nikita Khrushchev said, “We will bury you,” and, “Your grandchildren will live under communism.” And we buried him, and his grandchildren saw the end to communism.

The author of the Standard article, Reuel Marc Gerecht, says that should Israel attack Iran, Iranians “will probably take their revenge through terrorism” or opt for “playing dead and railing against Israel in the court of world opinion.”

Would Adolf Hitler or Hideki Tojo, pre-emptively attacked, respond with acts of reprisal untraceable to them, or denunciations of their attacker in the “court of world opinion,” or by playing possum?

Our fathers crushed fascism in four years and outlasted for half a century the evil empires of Stalin and Mao that had murdered millions. And we should be fearful of an ayatollah?

©2012 Creators.Com

Read more Other Views stories from the Miami Herald

  •  

300 dpi Rick Nease illustration of a divided America being stitched together. (The Detroit Free Press/MCT)

    HIGHER EDUCATION

    Shalala, Padron: Humanities, social sciences for a vibrant, competitive, secure nation

    Our national dialogue on higher education places much emphasis, and rightly so, on college graduates’ “employability.” With the rising cost of attending a college causing families to take on greater financial debt, many weigh the merits of a college degree by its potential return on investment as measured in future wages.

  •  

300 dpi Noah Musser color illustration of the woman from Grant Woods' famous painting "American Gothic," sans her husband and wearing a pizza delivery outfit. The Kansas City Star 2008<p>

With WRK-PFP-WOMEN-RETIRE:KC, The Kansas City Star by Diane Stafford<p>

04000000; 09000000; 10000000; 14000000; FIN; krtbusiness business; krtfeatures features; krtlabor labor; krtlifestyle lifestyle; krtnational national; krtsocial social issue; LAB; leisure; LIF; SOI; krtedonly; mctillustration; 04006018; 04006019; 04008017; 04008020; debt; income; krtfinancialservice financial services; krtmacroecon macroeconomics macro economics; krtnamer north america; krtpersonalfinance personal finance; krtusbusiness; price; u.s. us united states; 04018000; 09006000; retirement; krtdiversity diversity; woman women; american gothic; grant wood; musser; painting; pizza delivery; retire; stafford; women; kc contributed; 2008; krt2008

    SNAP REFORM

    Work for food stamps a proven path to combat poverty

    Just months after launching America’s War on Poverty, President Lyndon Johnson made a brief visit to South Florida for the dedication of newly constructed Florida Atlantic University in October 1964.

  •  

Protester holds a banner during President Obama's speech in front of Berlin's landmark Brandenburg Gate this week.

    SYRIA

    Syria a complicated proxy war for U.S.

    In Syria, the Obama administration seems to be stumbling back to the future: An old-fashioned proxy war, complete with the usual shadowy CIA arms-running operation, the traditional plan to prop up ostensible “moderates” whose prospects are doubtful and, of course, the customary shaky grasp of what the fighting is really about.

Miami Herald

Join the
Discussion

The Miami Herald is pleased to provide this opportunity to share information, experiences and observations about what's in the news. Some of the comments may be reprinted elsewhere on the site or in the newspaper. We encourage lively, open debate on the issues of the day, and ask that you refrain from profanity, hate speech, personal comments and remarks that are off point. Thank you for taking the time to offer your thoughts.

The Miami Herald uses Facebook's commenting system. You need to log in with a Facebook account in order to comment. If you have questions about commenting with your Facebook account, click here.

Have a news tip? You can send it anonymously. Click here to send us your tip - or - consider joining the Public Insight Network and become a source for The Miami Herald and el Nuevo Herald.

Hide Comments

This affects comments on all stories.

Cancel OK

  • Videos

  • Quick Job Search

Enter Keyword(s) Enter City Select a State Select a Category