WASHINGTON, Jan. 14 For more than two years after Saddam Husseins fall, the war in Iraq was about chasing down insurgents and Al Qaeda in Iraq. Last year it expanded to tamping down sectarian warfare.
Over the past three weeks, in two sets of raids and newly revealed orders issued by President Bush, a third front has opened against Iran....
You heard this argument in meetings all the time, a senior official on the National Security Council, who has since left the administration, recalled recently. Iraq would make the harder problems of Iran and North Korea easier.
But the opposite happened. North Korea tested a nuclear device in October. And Iran has sped ahead with a uranium enrichment program.
Now, despite the urging of the bipartisan Iraq Study Group to engage with Iran, Washington is moving in a more confrontational direction. It is stationing more naval, air and antimissile batteries off Irans coast; has persuaded many international businesses to cut off dealings with Iran; and it has interfered with Iranians inside Iraqi territory.
The administration does have Iran on the brain, and I think they are exaggerating the amount of Iranian activities in Iraq, Kenneth M. Pollack, the director of research at the Saban Center at the Brookings Institution, said Sunday. Theres a good chance that this is going to be counterproductive that this is a way to get into a spiral with Iran that leads you into conflict. The likely response from the Iranians is that they are going to want to demonstrate to us that they are not going to be pushed around.