What's new

Commander: IRGC Will Destroy 35 US Bases in Region if Attacked

The ballistic missile arsenals of Iran directly threaten U.S. bases in Iraq, Kuwait, Bahrain, Qatar, and United Arab Emirates (UAE). The Iranian ballistic missile arsenal is upwards of 600 missiles and growing.

Defensive Systems To Counter Iranian Threat

There are seven major Army Air Defense Artillery (ADA) systems and one Space and Missile Defense Command /Army Strategic Command (SMDC/ARSTRAT) system. Five are deployed today in EUCOM, PACOM, CENTCOM and NORCOM, and two other systems will soon be deployed to those regions. Three systems are still in development and testing stages, including the Ground-Based Midcourse Defense system (GMD).

Deployed:

• Counter-Rocket, Artillery, and Mortar (C-RAM): Defensive system with sensors, warning towers, and rapid-fire weapons.
• Avenger: Short-range air defense system to counter aircrafts, cruise missiles, UAVs, and helicopters made up of rapid-firing launch pods and infrared-guided missiles.
• Patriot Advanced Capability (PAC-3 and PAC-2): Anti-aircraft, anti-cruise, anti- ballistic missiles of short- and medium-range for terminal-phase intercepts that use tracking and fire control radars. PAC-3 uses hit-to-kill kinetic energy intercept technology while PAC-2 uses blast fragmentation technology.


Soon to be deployed and transitioned over to the U.S. Army:

• Terminal High Altitude Area Defense (THAAD): Counters high volume short- and medium-range ballistic missiles and operates with X-Band radar tracking and fire control to destroy targets in the terminal and late-midcourse phase using kinetic energy technology interceptors.
• Joint Land Attack Cruise Missile Defense Elevated Sensor System (JLENS): Tethered aerostat radars for surveillance, tracking, and targeting of lower altitude (10,000 ft and below) air-breathing targets.

However, it should be remembered that these are weapons of area defense. Preemptive strike options will be put into effect with cruise missiles from US CSGs in the Gulf as well as air power to neutralize Iranian potential for a first strike.

Cheers!
 
.

thx , I read your analysis and I found it informative , American gotta be moron to attack Iran base on allegation of nuke they do know that this story was fabricated by them otherwise i'm reminded of one of the "mulla nasrudin" stories .Obviously it's a pretext for putting pressure on Iran either to compel it to reconsider its policies or at least neutralize it . Iran does know what's going on behind the curtain( their plot ) , these days it's nuclear issue tomorrow it'll be sthelse , that's why we will ever never give up our nuclear peaceful activities .
On the other hand they talk about war to convince the other countries that if they don't welcome sanctions & embargo against Iran probably there will be a devastating and destructive war in the ME which will cause a huge damage to international markets putting them in dilemma to choose btw bad and worse.
Selling billions of dollars of their toys to Arab states in the region could be considered as next reason .

The point is they see "military threat" as a tool to achieve their goals but war it itself doesn't work for them at all .
they invaded Iraq by bypassing the UNSC but after years they asked NATO to involve( by virtue of number of casualties and costs ) but in Libya they didn't do anything without their alliance and it shows how economic crises have effected them, in fact they wanted to share costs .
It's clear that they do know the cost of wagging war against Iran could NOT be estimated and also their will be dire consequences for them if they start a war against Iran ,it can explain whys and wherefores of their hesitation. if you look at their history u will find it full of wars against week states like Iraq , Afghanistan and Somalia and so forth and in none of them their were successful .
china is in the row to becime the first economic power on this planet hence the only tool which will remain in their hands is military power and they don't want to miss it so they keep this invincible gesture as last resort to impose their interest on the other nations . war with Iran could destroy this image .
 
.

Hezbollah got their @sses handed to them, but you're right. The U.S. would face CERTAIN DEFEAT against Iran.
:rofl:

Every single your post I've read shows complete ignorance of the subject, as well as arrogance. Either you are very young and uneducated, or simply a troll account. Either way, welcome to the ignore list :wave:
 
.
I wouldn't see Russia and China on your side. They didn't veto sanctions on you, and even supported them. Russia even refused to sell the S-300 system to you guys.
About the US bases, if you attack those bases these countries will join the war on US side. Besides, you guys seem to forget nukes option. USA can nuke Iran back to stone age.

A little insight for you in geopolitical games:

For Russia and China its convenient to have weaker Iran, as well as they use it as a bargaining chip to get concessions from the West, and especially US.

That said, Russia and China absolutely wouldnt want fall down of Iran. After Iran, they are next in the list for the West. Therefore they will do everything they can and more to prevent that, Iran is like buffer zone for them. While you are quoting S-300 cancellation, have you noticed extremely fast Bavar-373 progress? Who can deny Iran may have received help under the table, in the form of blueprints, experts, etc.

Also dont forget the level of leverage US would have if all major oil rich countries would be its proxies. US could choke China anytime they want, do you think China will allow that to happen?
 
.
Actually I don't see how Russia and China are with you when they're neutral as you just stated. If Russia is really determined to face the USA, then why don't they help their buddy Iran? Why don't they veto the sanctions, and give you guys advanced weaponry?

Well, first let's assume they're neutral. Isn't it better than being fully against us like in 1980's? That's one point, which is still valid.
I guess you didn't read my previous post attentively. The Chinese are helping Iran right now. They are helping Iran to evade sanctions and are probably active in space technology proliferation as well.
I hate to repeat myself, but things have changed very quickly since last year. First of all, Medmedev in the Kremlin had a different idea than Putin about cooperation with west. Medmedev believed that cooperation with west would solve the expansion of NATO which is engulfing Russia and would also help Russia to boos her economy. Putin, on the other hand, had a different mind-set in his previous term. So that's the first change made in the Kremlin.
But as I told you, it's not only about supporting Iran. It's about a much wider game and geopolitics. You could clearly see that Russia and China have stood firm against military intervention in Syria so far. That's probably not going to change as Syria is the only Russian military base in the Mediterranean. As long as Russia wants Syria, it must want Iran as well, because without Iran's support the regime of Syria would be a lot weaker. That's one way of seeing it.
The other way of seeing it is very easy once you know the Middle East well. Iran, without doubt, is one of the most important countries of the Middle East and the world when it comes to geopolitics. It's a country with close to 80 million people, with one of the world's largest university population and one of the world's largest scientific output that has thousands of kilometers of direct and coastal borders with more than 10 states that all of them are of strategic importance for Russia, China and world economy. That means if you maintain good ties with Iran, you could access more than 10 important countries. Some of these countries like Afghanistan, Turkmenistan, Armenia and Azerbaijan, are land-locked countries and that even strengthens Iran's geographic location significance. I wouldn't even go to details that how much the Caucasus and Central Asia is important for Russia and how much Iran's role is important to help Russia have influence over there.
Regarding energy sources, Iran could significantly change energy equations against the Russian federation if it becomes allied with the west. Iran has the world's 3rd largest oil reserves, the world's 2 largest natural gas reserves after Russia (Russia and Iran together hold almost one-half of the world's natural gas reserves) and Iran is also one of the richest countries in minerals and ores. To be more precise, Iran has vast amounts of copper, iron, zirconium, zinc(the world's largest), helium gas (the world's largest), lead, uranium(the world's 10th largest), etc...
The fact that today's Iran has been isolated by the world is to the benefit of Russia. Because for that reason, Russia has succeeded to impose her interests on the European countries who desperately need Russia's gas for cold winters in North Europe. If Iran comes out of this situation, and it will come out of this situation if the USA changes the regime of Iran with military force, Russia will lose a big market in North and Central Europe to Iran and there's no doubt about it. On the other hand, a post-war Iran, allied with the west, could totally change the equations in the Caucasus which could be a big blow to the Russians in there. And we're not even talking about how neighboring a US-allied country like Iran through the Caspian sea, which would enjoy the NATO very soon if it becomes a US ally, would directly threaten Russia's national security and interests.
Russia has to stick to Iran, not because she loves Iran, but because it has to. Iran allied with the USA/NATO would be a nightmare for the Kremlin for sure.
About China, you should see what China lacks! China lacks oil and energy sources. It lacks almost nothing else. And for that purpose, China will always eye Iran's energy sources. Today the USA is present in Afghanistan, but do you think it's always going to be that way? The USA, sooner or later, will have to reduce its military presence in Afghanistan, and once that is done, Afghanistan will be a corridor between Iran and China. We'll build huge pipelines to send our oil and gas to China through the little border it shares with Afghanistan. You should also know that Iran's position is important for China because if Iran falls to the hands of the USA, then Pakistan will be engulfed by pro-USA states and then either Pakistan will change her mind and turns to the west which means China will lose an ally or India will gain more power and will exert tremendous pressure on Pakistan.

I could write a full several page article about how a regime change Iran could piss on all Russian and Chinese dreams. There's no doubt that Russia and China will support Iran in case of a direct military conflict with the USA because if they don't do so they'll lose much.

About nukes option, how isn't really an option any longer? It isn't an option when you have ICBM's with nuclear warheads capable of targeting the US. And you have no nukes, neither short nor long ranges.
You're not better than the Japanese, a couple of atomic bombs aren't out of the option. And more can follow.
OK. So let me explain to you what the difference is.
First of all, when the USA dropped little boy and fat man on Hiroshima and Nagasaki respectively, the Nazi Germany had already collapsed. The USA had very good information that the Nazi Germany was close to the Atomic bomb and actually the Nazis had a better understanding of nuclear physics at that time. The USA knew that the Japanese (or the Japs as they called them) couldn't do a jack at that time and the risk of retaliation of the kind was zero. Moreover, the Americans probably had done calculations and thought that no other country would obtain nuclear weapons in at least a decade or so and that's why they refused to share their secrets even with the ally Britain.
The situation of that time was really different. The Nazi Germany, as one of the most formidable and hated war machines of the world, had been stopped by the Japanese were insisting on the war. Many people around the globe were tired of killings, losing family members and their houses in war, etc... Everyone, in any corner of the world, wanted the war done and with the fall of Germany the supporters of the Nazi Germany had no hope to win the war any longer. In such a situation, ending the war at such a heavy price wouldn't instigate world emotions against the USA and could be simply justified. Just like how the USA has been telling for decades that the bombings were necessary to end the war especially after the Japanese refused Potsdam ultimatum.
Now, how the situation is different now? Well, first of all, there isn't any world war going now. If the USA starts a war, she has started it and after two invasions, that are widely viewed globally as an act of US unilateralism and greediness, the world opinion is very much the opposite way of what it was backing in 1945. Second of all, There are 8 nuclear states as far as I could remember now except the USA. 4 of them could be willing to proliferate nuclear weapons to finish off the USA (only one nuclear bomb dropped on New York could set the Americans back to 100 years ago economically), so there's a high risk of proliferation. Iran already has done experiments on plutonium reprocessing in laboratory size in 2003 during the Khatami era which caused the USA and the world to focus on Iran's nuclear program and finally the then-Iranian government decided to stop uranium enrichment and seal all Iranian nuclear related material under supervision of the IAEA. Iran has access to nuclear warhead carrying missiles that it has obtained from Russia and North Korea. The Russian Kh-55 missile is a cruise missile with a range of 3,000 kms capable of carrying a 200kT nuclear warhead and Iran is in possession of at least 12 of them. The Shahab-3 is speculated to be capable of carrying nuclear warheads and the IAEA in his last year's report expressed his concern regarding Iran's missile activities (which is none of their business and out of its framework though).
These are all possibilities of proliferation, but what is very likely, is that Iran would resort to dirty bombs, biological and chemical warfare if it's attacked with nukes which Iran is certainly capable of. Iran has an advanced pharmaceutical industry that produces world class vaccines and radio-pharmaceuticals. And also Iran has already mastered solid-fueled technology and multi-stage technology and has produced her own SLVs that has successfully put 3 satellites into orbit in the last 2 years. That means, to reach the US coast, Iran has the technology and it only needs to turn this technological potential into practice which is not very hard. You don't need to fully destroy the USA. Just hitting New York City would be a major blow for the USA. Even a EMP bomb detonated in GEO could cripple the US satellites and be a real pain in the a$$ for the USA. And don't forget that Israel is only 1,300 kms away from us and our medium-range missiles are capable of hitting close to 2,000 kms (Sajjil-2, Shahab-3, Sajjil-1, all have Israel under their range).

** Sorry for the long post, I'm sure you aren't going to read all of it LOL, but just for the record **
 
.
.... welcome to the ignore list :wave:


OUCH !!! That REALLY HURTS !! PLEASE, PLEASE, DON'T IGNORE ME.................................NUMBNUTZ !!!
:bunny:

So what's happening in Syria ? :azn: ... Russian weapons arriving in Damascus , Ships docking at Tartus , The rigid stance by the Kremlin ... When are you planning an invasion by the way ?


Is the U.S. attacking Syria ? Not quite, chief. Syria is small potatos'.
 
. .
By your moronic logic, the Americans lost their wars against the Brits because you didn't really take any land from the Brits.

HUH ?! I guess that little sliver of land called the colonies doesn't count. What a douchebag !!!

Hezbollah is fighting for the independence of Lebanon. They have managed to kick out the zionists twice by my count and that's considered victory.

Lebanon WAS (and is ) an independent country, genius. Hezbollah attacked Israelis IN ISRAEL.

There should be quota on how many moronic things you say in one day. You must be a republican.

You don't know your @ss from your elbow when it comes to history.
 
. .
To be honest NATO is in no position to attack anyother country directly as of now, they are already stuck in Afghanistan and before that Iraq too, They have started to evacuate Iraq due to the fact they were not able to sustain there due to economic down-turn... They have same plans for afghanistan but it is much harder to evacuate afghanistan , They have lost billions in the war and are suffering from crisis .

The general public already has started to question the attack on afghanistan specially in the ally countries specially with increasing un-employment and debt .. Waging another war will further ruin the situation and may result into the begining of another world war
Correction: US is not stuck in Iraq. US did not leave Iraq due to economic reasons. It left Iraq after its objectives in Iraq were met and withdrawal terms were decided with the Iraqi administration.

And their is still work to be done in Afghanistan. This is why US will not be leaving Afghanistan soon. Withdrawal is not an issue. US can withdraw from Afghanistan tomorrow, if it wants to. However, it is about 'taking responsibility' for your work.

And sorry! Iranian conflict will not result in World War scenario.

Not really, for the very simple reason - you think in terms army vs army in direct battlefield, but thats not how it will go with Iran.

I did analysis of potential war against Iran, and while US with NATO can breakthrough initial Iran defenses, they wont be able to win the war itself.

http://www.defence.pk/forums/military-forum/139008-analysis-war-against-iran.html
Your analysis. Yeah right! :rolleyes:

---------------------------

And for those Iranians who come up with excuses regarding poor performance of Iran against Iraq, here;

Neither the Iraqis nor the Iranians prepared their forces for the war their political masters were spoiling for. At the beginning of the conflict, the leaders of the opposing sides had no clear understanding of the requirements for military effectiveness, or the difficulties their states would confront. Their feeling was that any sufficiently loyal politician or religious leader was capable of exercising effective military command—a belief for which their armies would pay a heavy price in lives and treasure. As the war continued, the armed forces of Iraq and Iran found themselves involved in desperate efforts to learn and adapt under pressures that threatened, at times, to overwhelm them. Tragically, it seems that in both nations, the obdurate ignorance of the political leadership would substantially retard the effort of military professionals to learn and adapt to the realities of the battlefield.

Both national leaders (Saddam Hussein and Ayatollah Khomeini) significantly underestimated their opponent for similar reasons: both had little understanding of the limitations of their military institutions and even less understanding of their opponent.

Saddam believed that military effectiveness was a matter of the “warrior”—much as in medieval terms—and the spirit and morale of soldiers, not necessarily of training, organization, or discipline. To him bravery on the battlefield, exemplified by his personal vision of the Arab fighter, was the only reasonable measure of military effectiveness. As Hamdani mentioned in reference to Saddam’s later confrontations with the Americans, the dictator could not grasp the significance of the scale and technological superiority of the American military.

Khomeini, on the other hand, equated military effectiveness on the battlefield with religious fanaticism. One of the measures of effectiveness both the Ayatollah and Saddam used to judge the effectiveness of their battlefield commanders was the relative number of casualties their troops suffered in battle—very much a World War I approach. Early in the war, use of this metric was particularly true in the Iraqi case, as applied to division and corps commanders.

From Saddam’s point of view, the fall of Shah Mohammed Reza Pahlavi and the political chaos engendered by Khomeini’s religious revolution provided a perfect opportunity for him to act against Iran. Moreover, a number of Iraq’s senior officers (some, but not all, recently appointed to their senior positions by Saddam) believed that the apparent collapse of the Shah’s army meant there would be easy pickings to the east. What was not clear at the time, at least at Hamdani’s level, was what exactly Saddam hoped to gain from a war against Iran, except perhaps the prestige of a “victory against the Persians.”

In hindsight, there appear to have been two political motives for Saddam’s decision to go to war: first, to overturn the unfavorable 1975 treaty Iraq had signed with the Shah that dealt with the shared waterway to the Persian Gulf; second, and more important, to achieve victory over the Persians—at a cheap price—therefore legitimizing Iraq’s claim that it deserved to replace Egypt as the head of the pan-Arab movement. This second motivation followed the “traitorous act” of Anwar Sadat, who, in signing the Camp David accords with Israel, had taken Egypt out of the so called rejectionist camp. In other words, Saddam was aiming to assume Egyptian President Gamal Abdel-Nassir’s mantle from the disgraced Sadat.

According to Hamdani, the Iraqis had no real military campaign plan in terms of operational objectives, or even coordinated tactical ones. Saddam appears to have believed that the invasion would quickly lead to Khomeini’s fall and replacement by a regime that would surrender much of southwestern Iran to the Iraqis. Thus, the initial Iraqi operation was a thrust into southwestern Iran, which militarily achieved little except for the gaining of indefensible territory.

The major problem, however, lay in the fact that Saddam’s leadership style had so politicized the army’s senior levels that few, if any, generals were able, much less willing, to provide the dictator with honest assessments of the actual situation.

Early in the conflict, “yes men” so dominated the Ba’athist regime’s military decisionmaking processes at every level that only major defeats were going to alter the picture. Deployed into the territory seized from the Iranians, the Iraqi army was unprepared for the initial onslaught of the Iranians. Many of these attacks depended on religious fanaticism alone for success. Meanwhile, given the optimistic reports he was receiving from senior commanders, Saddam remained ignorant of the tactical vulnerabilities of his forces.

As Hamdani made clear, the only sensible operational approach that Saddam could have followed would have been to seize and then defend the passes leading out of Iran toward Iraq (predominantly in the central and northern sectors), as well as those in the Zagros Mountains through which Iranian forces would have had to deploy from the center of the country. This would have complicated Iranian efforts to launch and support their military forces against the Iraqis. But such a decision would have had to rest on Saddam’s recognizing that a conflict with Iran was likely to be a long one—something he never foresaw. Consequently, the geographic positioning of the Iraqi army on key and defensible terrain was never seriously considered. Such an approach was not in the cards for a regime that consistently based its decisions on the dictator’s ill-founded assumptions and hopes. Much as he would throughout his reign, Saddam tended to believe his own propaganda—war against Khomeini’s Islamic Republic would prove an easy matter and would result in a glorious and quick victory.

On the other side of the hill, the chaos of the revolution meant that there were no coherent decisionmaking processes at all. Khomeini seemed to regard the conflict with Iraq as a God-given opportunity to solidify the revolution and defeat his political opponents in Tehran. Moreover, it also represented an opportunity to gain revenge for what he regarded as the ill treatment he had received at the hands of Saddam’s government when, at the Shah’s behest, it forced him in the mid-1970s to flee Iraq for Paris. It appears that Khomeini and his inner circle had even less understanding of military realities than Saddam.

According to Hamdani, undergirding Khomeini’s passion for the war was a belief that religious fanaticism, reinforced by Persian nationalism, could overwhelm everything in its path. As a result, and almost until the bitter end, Khomeini would prove unwilling to make peace with Iraq short of complete victory. Iran would not back down, no matter how costly the war might become, at least until the point where its forces suffered a catastrophic series of military defeats—an unlikely event for a considerable time, given the preparation of Iraq’s military for a major conflict. Thus, while Saddam was looking for a cheap, easy victory, the Persians were looking to accomplish the complete overthrow of Saddam’s regime and its replacement by a Shia puppet regime.

The Iranian military had a number of serious problems. Foremost was the fact that the revolution caused deep fractures within Iranian society—fractures that represented contending political and religious factions, as well as the divided nature of opposition to the Shah’s regime. Iran’s military already had been purged of those loyal to the Shah or those whom the new regime did not trust. Even after the purges, the Iranian military had little standing with those in the political realm. Military professionalism was simply not in the vocabulary of Khomeini’s regime. The alternative to the professional military in Iran was a number of revolutionary militias. None of these militias had any serious military training, nor, as Hamdani would describe, did they possess leaders with even the slightest understanding of tactics.

The militias—in some cases no more than small groups swearing fealty to a local imam or ayatollah with political ambitions—often acted independently, obeying no instructions and initiating combat actions without orders to do so. Local Iranian commanders appeared to have had almost complete freedom of action, whatever the strategic or operational consequences might be. This may well explain the fact that some Iranian units began shelling Iraqi towns and military positions in a rampageous fashion before the Iraqi invasion began and before the initiation of large-scale military operations. Thus, one can hardly speak of coherent Iranian military operations, much less a strategic conception, throughout the first 4 years of the conflict. While the militias were important in the dangerous game of politics swirling around Tehran, they had no military training and remained disjointed, answering to different clerics and factions among Khomeini’s supporters and exhibiting little interest in repairing their military deficiencies. Not surprisingly, their attitudes reflected those of their leaders, and they showed little or no willingness to learn from, much less cooperate in military operations with, the regular army. All of this derived from their belief that religious fervor was the key to victory on the battlefield. Thus, Iranian tactics remained unimaginative and militarily incompetent throughout the war. More often than not, human wave attacks were all the Iranian militias could launch. The result was a catastrophic casualty tally reminiscent of the fighting in World War I.

Unlike in Baghdad, where Saddam attempted to control everything, the exact opposite military command model was in effect in Tehran. Various factional leaders, imams, and others launched attacks or raids in an effort to curry favor with the religious and political leaders, who were in turn jockeying for position around Khomeini. Early in the war, few if any of Iran’s attacks appeared to have coherence or clear objectives, nor did they fit into a larger strategic conception of the war. Most battles thus contributed to the growing casualties while achieving little of tactical, much less operational, value. This situation reflected the general lack of military understanding among the religious and political leaders in Tehran, who were supposedly running the show.


Source: General Hamdani (famous Iraqi military general who is well-known internationally for his professionalism)

It is not like Saddam was a brilliant tactician. He was stupid and not being calculative. He realized his mistakes in 1986 when Iran captured Al-Faw Peninsula. He became open to professional advices then and Iraq finished the war in its own terms afterwards.
 
.
Exactly, Americans and their supporters can think only in "direct battle" terms where US would beat Iran, they cannot even comprehend there are also asymmetric and guerrilla warfare, despite of many examples from the history.

One of the best and most advanced militaries in the World from Israel couldnt beat a couple thousand of Iran trained and armed fighters. US is maybe 10x stronger than Israel, but Iran is thousands of times stronger than Hezbollah, and yet US fanboys thinks Iran wont be much of a struggle, even though whole NATO couldnt beat caveman's in Afghanistan, yet they think Iran will be easy? :disagree:
Losing to cave men? If Iran"s idea of victory would be for us to occupy their country for 20 years while they set of bombs and attack hotels dressed as women, they can go ahead and have it. Most humans like stuff called "infrastructure" and such.
 
.
Source: General Hamdani (famous Iraqi military general who is well-known internationally for his professionalism)

Its funny you try to portrait an extremely biased book (made by US and Iraqi general) excerpts as professional . Why not quote some Israeli's books about Iran while you at it, of course - as the source of non-bias professionalism :azn:

Losing to cave men? If Iran"s idea of victory would be for us to occupy their country for 20 years while they set of bombs and attack hotels dressed as women, they can go ahead and have it. Most humans like stuff called "infrastructure" and such.

You missed the point entirely. If whole NATO cant beat caveman's, and Israel cant beat a couple of thousands Iran trained and armed Hezbollah, its asinine to assume US wont have problems beating millions of much better armed and prepared soldiers.

Of course you can hide behind your nationalism :usflag:, but truth is as I mentioned in analysis - US will bankrupt faster than win over Iran. And by winning I mean complete occupation and permanent puppet regime. Some are under illusion if US breaks through defenses they won, while not understanding it would just activate Phase2 for Iran.
 
.
Its funny you try to portrait an extremely biased book (made by US and Iraqi general) excerpts as professional . Why not quote some Israeli's books about Iran while you at it, of course - as the source of non-bias professionalism :azn:



You missed the point entirely. If whole NATO cant beat caveman's, and Israel cant beat a couple of thousands Iran trained and armed Hezbollah, its asinine to assume US wont have problems beating millions of much better armed and prepared soldiers.

Of course you can hide behind your nationalism :usflag:, but truth is as I mentioned in analysis - US will bankrupt faster than win over Iran. And by winning I mean complete occupation and permanent puppet regime. Some are under illusion if US breaks through defenses they won, while not understanding it would just activate Phase2 for Iran.
No, we are not. If you have to go to "phase two" (which I assume is resistance to occupation) you have already lost. The only time that resistance making occupation hard is a victory, is if the occuppying power wishes to annex the territory. Which we don't, we merely would wish to set you back and destabalise the regime...which the mere fact of occupation fulfills.
 
.
If Iran attacks nearby U.S bases, can Iran withstand the total fury of NATO forces .It will just be a suicidal move.

Only if you give them other bases in India and even than...
What fury from NATO? could they face the Iraqi army on their own?
In iran's case, not only the army, which is powerful enough will fight , it is a whole nation, like Germany in WW2, but with much stronger and potent allies.
NATO just won't dare in its wildest dreams to coin an Invasion of Iran.
Just Imagine If the Iraqi people would have fought the US led invasion from its beginning, what would have happened to the "coalition" forces(there would have been no coalition if the Iraqis had been united behind Saddam Hussein back than.) ; they would ave lasted a few months at best.

Mate don't mine: Many Pakistani's on the forum says w'll Nuke India, W'll Nuke this Country, If Iran decides to attack Nato Countries or US Bases in other Country!! Uncle Sam will Nuke Nuke Iran, No Nato Required...


And India will be nuked in the process as the primary target of China and Pakistan, NATO will suffer very unsustainable heavy damages and Ultimately be nuked as well as the US.
 
.
Only if you give them other bases in India and even than...
What fury from NATO? could they face the Iraqi army on their own?
In iran's case, not only the army, which is powerful enough will fight , it is a whole nation, like Germany in WW2, but with much stronger and potent allies.
NATO just won't dare in its wildest dreams to coin an Invasion of Iran.
Just Imagine If the Iraqi people would have fought the US led invasion from its beginning, what would have happened to the "coalition" forces(there would have been no coalition if the Iraqis had been united behind Saddam Hussein back than.) ; they would ave lasted a few months at best.

.

Please dont ruin Germany's name. Germany has always been at par or slightly more advanced than it's opponents in both world war's. Iran is nowhere near the sophistication of US technology let alone France, Germany and th UK.
 
.

Pakistan Defence Latest Posts

Back
Top Bottom