We face some extremely serious problems today in the foreign
policy realm. But now we face a uniquely serious threat from
Islamic Iran. They are belligerent. They sponsor terrorism and
violent repression everywhere they can, currently on display in the
bloodbath in Syria. Far, far worse, they seem to be getting close
to having a nuclear bomb. They have promised to use that bomb on
Israel right away, and Israel cannot permit that. There can be no
second Holocaust. But Israel is restrained by the U.S.’s caution
and by the long distance to Iran from Israel.
I keep thinking in this context about my old boss and friend,
Richard M. Nixon. Obviously, he had serious problems on the
domestic side. But in foreign affairs, he was a wizard… got our
prisoners back from North Vietnam, ended the war there, opened
relations with China that basically encircled Russia and ended the
Cold War, signed the first strategic arms limitation treaty with
the Soviet Union.
As he said he would do, he left us with “a generation of
peace.”
What would RN do about Iran? Well, he’s been gone now for 18
years, so it’s just an educated guess, but here it is.
Richard Nixon above all did not like to see America pushed
around. He responded strongly when he felt we were being pushed
around — with bombing, especially. He also did not like to see our
allies being pushed around. That’s why he sent a lot of highly
advanced aid to Israel roughly 40 years ago during the Yom Kippur
War to save Israel when things were looking bad. Then peace came
between Israel and Egypt.
I think he would do the same now. He would say to Israel, “Look,
you have an existential threat. You are our closest ally on the
planet. We will let you use our refueling apparatus to get you to
the nuclear bomb making sites in Iran. We will let you use our
super satellite imaging to find the right spots to hit. We will
lend you our superb anti-ground to air missile defense systems. Not
only that, but we will let the world know we are doing this. The
Europeans will complain, but they always complain. We won’t be
pushed around by the Mullahs and we won’t let you be destroyed. If
show and tell doesn’t work, we’ll be behind you in the UN after you
do the bombing.
“Strength works. After strength, we’ll use diplomacy. That’s
when diplomacy works best.”
And that might just do it. Richard Nixon made many mistakes, but
he was a superstar in war and peace. What would Richard Nixon do?
What makes for peace in the long run, which is sometimes action in
the short run.
Or, I could be wrong.