February 13, 2012
The prevailing wisdom among policymakers on Iran
bears an eerie resemblance to the Iraq consensus of 2002. We and
the Israelis allegedly faced an intolerable peril from a rogue
state with weapons of mass destruction and a lust for aggression.
Fortunately, we were told, it was nothing that a short, sudden
military attack wouldn't solve. But in Iraq, writes Steve Chapman,
it turned out the solution was anything but quick or easy—and the
danger was vastly exaggerated. And in Iran? Ditto.
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