Common
sense would say that this is the case, but common sense doesn't seem
to be playing a role in strategical decisions: we seem to be moving
to oblivion, bar miracle.
US
Escalation Against Iran Would Carry High Cost for Global Economy
by
Jasmin Ramsey, November 18, 2012
18
November, 2012
The
world economy would bear substantial costs if the United States took
steps to significantly escalate the conflict with Iran over its
controversial nuclear programme, according to the findings of a
Federation of American Scientists’ (FAS) special report released
here Friday.
Based
on consulations with a group of nine bipartisan economic and national
security experts, the
findings showed
the effects of U.S. escalatory action against Iran could range from
64 billion to 1.7 trillion dollars in losses for the world economy
over the initial three-month term.
The
least likely scenario of de-escalation, which would require U.S.
unilateral steps showing it was willing to make concessions to
resolve the standoff, would result in an estimated global economic
benefit of 60 billion dollars.
“The
study’s findings suggest that there are potential costs to any
number of U.S.-led actions and, in general, the more severe the
action, the greater the possible costs,” Mark Jansson, FAS’s
special projects director, told IPS.
“That
being said, even among experts, there is tremendous uncertainty about
what might happen at the higher end of the escalation ladder,”
added Jansson, the second author of the report after Charles P.
Blair, an FAS senior fellow on state and non-state threats.
The
six plausible scenarios of U.S.-led actions against Iran included
isolation and a Gulf blockade, which would include U.S. moves to
“curtail any exports of refined oil products, natural gas, energy
equipment and services”, the banning of the Iranian energy sector
worldwide (incurring an estimated global economic cost of 325 billion
dollars), and a comprehensive bombing campaign that would also target
Iran’s ability to retaliate (incurring an estimated global economic
cost of 1.082 trillion dollars).
The
report is explicit in not endorsing any particular policy
recommendation, although others are not so reticent.
United
Against a Nuclear Iran (UANI) and the neoconservative Foundation for
Defense of Democracies (FDD) are leading hardline Washington-based
advocacy groups arguing for sweeping economic measures against Iran.
“The
White House must build on this momentum, intensifying economic
warfare in an effort to shake the Islamic Republic to its
core,” wrote FDD
executive director Mark Dubowitz in June.
Paul
Sullivan, an economics professor specialising in Middle East security
at Georgetown University, told IPS that, “The fact that the hardest
core of the neoconservative ‘strategists’ have not thought
through the costs of escalating conflict with Iran is proof of their
group intellectual inadequacy.
“The
main effects to the U.S. if there is escalation is through the price
of oil and increased military and other national security costs,”
said Sullivan, who evaluated the scenarios as an expert but could not
comment on the specific figures due to Chatham House Rules.
“If
there is an attack on Iran, with the expected counterattacks the
price of oil could quite easily go to 250 dollars or higher. This
could push the U.S. right back into a recession,” he said.
As
tensions rise over the decades-long dispute over Iran’s
controversial nuclear programme, analysts are increasingly examining
a range of costs associated with escalating the so-far cold conflict
between the U.S. and Iran.
The Iran
Project Report released
in September showed that the cost of Iranian retaliation would be
“felt over the longer term” by the U.S. and could result in a
regional war.
“In
addition to the financial costs of conducting military attacks
against Iran, which would be significant…there would likely be
near-term costs associated with Iranian retaliation, through both
direct and surrogate asymmetrical attacks,” according to the
report, which was endorsed by a long list of high-level, bipartisan
national security advisers.
The
Iran Project report’s findings support the notion that greater
escalatory action will result in greater costs – shown in financial
terms by the FAS findings: “A dynamic of escalation, action, and
counteraction could produce serious unintended consequences that
would significantly increase all of these costs and lead,
potentially, to all-out regional war,” notes the report.
An
Oct. 19 event on the economic and military considerations of war with
Iran at the Center for the National Interest (CNI) offered similar
assessments.
“You
could lose eight million barrels a day of production, and it would
not come back quickly,” said J. Robinson West, who has also held
senior positions in the White House, the Energy Department, and the
Pentagon under various Republican administrations. “We believe the
price of oil will go above 200 dollars a barrel.”
On
Oct. 20, the New York Times reported that the U.S. and Iran had
“agreed in principle for the first time” to direct negotiations.
But
Tehran and Washington did have “limited bilateral talks” in 2009
“when the Iranian leadership saw a potential in the newly elected
Obama administration to address some of Iran’s bottom lines
regarding the country’s right to enrichment,” Farideh Farhi, an
independent scholar and affiliate graduate faculty at the University
of Hawai’i, told IPS.
On
Wednesday, President Obama denied the Times report but did not
dismiss the notion of one-on-one talks. In fact, he strongly
suggested that the U.S. would seriously engage if the Iranians proved
their sincerity.
“If
Iran is serious about wanting to resolve this, they’ll be in a
position to resolve it,” he said during his first press conference
following his successful presidential re-election campaign.
“The
situation is different now insofar as the Iranian leadership is much
more sceptical of Obama’s words regarding his desire to resolve the
nuclear issue instead of going for the Islamic regime’s jugular
after a show of desire for talks,” said Farhi.
“To
be sure, there will always be hardline naysayers in Tehran no matter
what. A similar situation exists in the U.S.. But if the past is any
guide, Tehran will come around and abandon its current resistance to
bilateral talks if it sees a potential for breakthrough,” she said.

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