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Iran Super Thread- Merged

Time and time again, war after war, decade after decade the LOAC are not applied evenly, and seldom applied at all relative to the rate of incidence. They certainly won’t be applied against any of the principal belligerents in this conflict.
This conflict has the potential to move the gist of Carney’s Davos pitch more than any other events that have occurred since then and most likely into the future.

It also lays bare for all to see what an utter waste of hundreds of billions in military spending the Gulf States have done over the decades. All the high end equipment they have is either tied up on the docks, under canvas in storage facilities or spending tens of millions of dollars in attempting to shoot down drone worth a few thousand each - with little success.
Kuwait, Bahrain, Qatar, Saudi Arabia and UAE are unable or unwilling to gather their considerable naval resources to defend their own backyard.
 
Time and time again, war after war, decade after decade the LOAC are not applied evenly, and seldom applied at all relative to the rate of incidence. They certainly won’t be applied against any of the principal belligerents in this conflict.
Absolutely. However, I will apply them as a framework for what my government should or shouldn’t be doing.

I think my government should be participating in the reopening of the Straights of Hormuz. Not because the US asked (demanded?) that we do, but because that is what is ethical and in the best interests of the world.

Of course, in the medium to long term, the world should become less reliant on middle eastern energy.

However, it should not be a NATO led operation.

I wonder how the belligerents (Iran, Israel, and the US) would react if a coalition of the willing put a force in there with the sole purpose of protecting non-participating nation’s ships from all three of them?
 
The aforementioned Gulf states still remain far more likely to fight a war against Israel than with it. Especially against IRGC who haVE shown they can and will cause them serious harm.
Still, it seems clear that the IRGC must now be destroyed - as the saying goes “ that which doesn’t kill me makes me stronger”, or a grave tactical mistake. In this case both will be true without complete destruction.
 
Absolutely. However, I will apply them as a framework for what my government should or shouldn’t be doing.

I think my government should be participating in the reopening of the Straights of Hormuz. Not because the US asked (demanded?) that we do, but because that is what is ethical and in the best interests of the world.

Of course, in the medium to long term, the world should become less reliant on middle eastern energy.

However, it should not be a NATO led operation.

I wonder how the belligerents (Iran, Israel, and the US) would react if a coalition of the willing put a force in there with the sole purpose of protecting non-participating nation’s ships from all three of them?
We don’t owe the world over there anything and quite frankly getting involved with the world outside of our hemisphere has been a 30 year disaster. We need to sit all of this BS out, close the doors, rapidly re-arm and build a bigger, better military. And ramp up production of petroleum, gas, fertilizer, aluminum smelting.
China could take on the role you describe because neither Iran, Israel or the US will attack them. You can bet the gulf states are already working on that.
 
We don’t owe the world over there anything and quite frankly getting involved with the world outside of our hemisphere has been a 30 year disaster. We need to sit all of this BS out, close the doors, rapidly re-arm and build a bigger, better military. And ramp up production of petroleum, gas, fertilizer, aluminum smelting.
China could take on the role you describe because neither Iran, Israel or the US will attack them. You can bet the gulf states are already working on that.
No country ever does anything internationally because they owe anybody anything. Nor do they do it because it’s ethically right. The do it because it’s in their best interest.

I think it’s in our best interest as a middle power with aspirations to have worldwide, but moderate, influence, to be part of an international coalition, which doesn’t include any of the three belligerents, to stabilize and protect non-belligerents, including the Straights off Hormuz.

This does not include any nation that is party to the conflict, including countries that are hosting foreign forces.

I’m not opposed to the idea that Iran could not be allowed to continue operating outside the “rules” with impunity, but I’m not convinced that two states taking matters into their own hands was the answer, even given the lack of international agreement on what the answer was.

Feel free to disagree, from both sides, as I’m sure many do.
 
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Time and time again, war after war, decade after decade the LOAC are not applied evenly, and seldom applied at all relative to the rate of incidence. They certainly won’t be applied against any of the principal belligerents in this conflict.

I bought up the point a war crime as a technicality. Honestly, I'm less concerned about that than the escalation dynamics.

Also, starving the people (in this case of power) who you want to revolt against the IRGC doesn't seem like the way to win them over. At this point, it honestly seems punitive. Like he wants to punish the Iranian people for but giving him his grand victory.

It also lays bare for all to see what an utter waste of hundreds of billions in military spending the Gulf States have done over the decades. All the high end equipment they have is either tied up on the docks, under canvas in storage facilities or spending tens of millions of dollars in attempting to shoot down drone worth a few thousand each - with little success.
Kuwait, Bahrain, Qatar, Saudi Arabia and UAE are unable or unwilling to gather their considerable naval resources to defend their own backyard.

I think this is a bit unfair. The US Navy itself is scared to enter the Strait. The US has been unable to successfully protect its own assets. And the Gulf countries have shot down something like 90% of everything fired their way. I don't think most NATO countries, including Canada, would have similar performance to be honest. And indeed, most countries, including Canada, have refused to really take seriously the lessons from Ukraine on drones and cost asymmetry.

If you're expecting them to start a naval fight with Iran. Why should they? They don't see it as their war. And escalating with direct involvement is a sure way to piss off their own populations. They may not have elections. But they generally try not to piss off their populations either.

I wonder how the belligerents (Iran, Israel, and the US) would react if a coalition of the willing put a force in there with the sole purpose of protecting non-participating nation’s ships from all three of them?

Think of how this would work in practice. Would we be willing to target launchers on shore? How would we do that if they are beyond line of sight of the ships? We can't be independent here. We have to essentially sign up with the Americans.

Also, we're back to the original problem. It's not just the Strait. It's infrastructure in the region too. If they knock off 10 mbpd worth of production with multiple years worth of damage, opening the Strait may be a moot point.
 
Think of how this would work in practice. Would we be willing to target launchers on shore? How would we do that if they are beyond line of sight of the ships? We can't be independent here. We have to essentially sign up with the Americans.

Also, we're back to the original problem. It's not just the Strait. It's infrastructure in the region too. If they knock off 10 mbpd worth of production with multiple years worth of damage, opening the Strait may be a moot point.
I was thinking more that having adults in the room might make the children take their toys and go into their corners. Plus it would give everybody a chance to take a breath and go “we’ve did our part, now let’s lick our wounds.”

Ie soft power
 
You are making the assumption that no Iranians went to Russia and learned first hand how to use these drones over the last 2+ yrs.

Correct. We know for a fact Iranians have been in both Russia and occupied territories exchanging knowledge with the Russians.

From 2022.



And don't forget, North Korea is also in there too.
 
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