SalarHaqq
SENIOR MEMBER
- Joined
- Dec 29, 2019
- Messages
- 4,569
- Reaction score
- 2
- Country
- Location
They can cross into Iraq and reach Iranian border in 2 hours. The chance is very low, but technically possible.
The statement I was responding was factually incorrect. USA troop concentrations would get hit before they could move in any direction. In Iraq, the PMU will intercept them.
Some of you guys here have a bit of a delusion when it comes to US military. They have alot of capability and full control of the escalation ladder.
We know what Iran's limits are, and destroying bases in the initial phase does not mean the end of US military power. They still have alot of strategic bombers. Once these bases are leveled, their are no more targets, i.e. they will just continue using strategic bombers from long ranges without any recourse directly on Iranian mainland. Can Iran respond to the US mainland? (no). This by default means, Iran will lose decades worth of infrastructure that will take billions to rebuild, while the US only takes military and equipment casualties. This is what the end of the escalation ladder leads towards.
If the USA regime resorts to continuous strikes with strategic bombers from outside the range of Iranian missiles, Iran will have the possibility to exit the NPT and manufacture nuclear weapons in a matter of days. Outright defeating the purpose of such a campaign of aggression.
Also the quoted comment is not properly reflecting the ratio of valuable infrastructure in Iran to the kind of long range air-to-ground munitions USA bombers would have to fire. Given the limited number of such aircraft and the limited number of relevant munitions at the disposal of the USA military, it would take them decades to incapacitate the innumerable infrastructures of Iran.
Last but not least and as user mohsen pointed out, as long as the USA has a presence and concrete interests in regions surrounding Iran, Iran and her allies will have targets to strike at. This includes the zionist entity, which will come under fire.
Therefore Iran will have viable escalation options under any scenario.
limit needs to be removed, and has dire consequences and hopefully they've already removed it secretly years ago.
Been lifted openly already with the Khorramshahr BM.
Longer range missiles would add another retaliatory option, but Iran's security does not hinge upon them. Current capabilities are deterrent enough.
They will fire 10,000 missiles at Iran. Iran will fire 10,000 missiles back. The difference is that infrastructure inside Iran will be destroy, and bases 8000km from their borders will be destroyed. This is completely unfavorable.
Imagine the impact it would have on the USA's status as gobal hegemon if they were to lose all their regional bases in a war with Iran.
The cost of such a confrontation onto itself itself is beyond their threshold of tolerance, so the equation definitely favors Iran not the Americans. Which in essence is the reason why no military aggression has taken place to this day.
Also 10,000 missiles won't destroy Iran's infrastructure, the number needed would be in the hundreds of thousands because their target list would be at least five to six times, probably tens of times greater than it was against Iraq in so-called Operation Desert Storm, during which they dropped no less than 29,199 bombs as well as launching hundreds of cruise missiles. That's without counting the destruction they caused in 1991 and in-between the two wars, which Iraq never got the chance to repair.
In the Gulf War, the U.S. military dropped 88,000 tons of bombs on Iraq in just 42 days, destroying the entire country.
Complete destruction of all electrical infrastructure, vital factories, oil-related facilities, oil tankers, and military centers.
Iraq has literally fallen back to medieval levels as civilization has collapsed.
This is the equivalent of 170,000 Russian Kalibr cruise missiles!!.
That is more than 300 times the bombing Russia has done over the course of a year, or 4,000 times the pace per month.
This is the destructive power of the U.S. military, and we must face reality.
In the 2003 invasion of Iraq, 3,000 missiles and guided bombs were dropped on Baghdad on the first day alone.
This is not ten times more than the attack that took the Russians a year to carry out.
The Iraqis instantly lost the will to fight and became irresistible.
Moreover, today, there are many fighter aircraft with powerful ground attack capabilities, such as the F-15E and F-35.
The order of magnitude of attack capability is different from those days when we had to rely on old and poor attack aircraft.
It is no exaggeration to say that the U.S. military claimed it could completely destroy Iran in three months.
To reiterate: they will have no bases, no runways to conduct those strikes from. Iran unlike the Iraq of 2003, has what it takes to make sure of that.
You keep repeating the same line while presenting such a hypothetical conflict as a one-sided affair, as if the defender wasn't capable of retaliating. Any analogy with the so-called "Gulf Wars" would be perfectly detached from reality.
Last edited: