By
Bruce Riedel
In
the late 1980s, President Ronald Reagan intervened in the Iran-Iraq war on the
side of Saddam Hussein to tilt the conflict to an Iraqi victory. America
engaged in a bloody if undeclared naval and air war against Iran, while Iraq
fought a brutal land war. The lessons of our first war with Iran should be
carefully considered before we embark on a second.
The Iran-Iraq War was devastating — one of the largest
and longest conventional interstate wars since the Korean conflict ended in
1953. A half-million lives were lost, perhaps another million injured and the
economic cost was over $1 trillion. Yet the battle lines at the end were almost
exactly where they were at the beginning. It was also the only war in modern
times in which chemical weapons were used on a massive scale.









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