By Patrick J. Buchanan
In diplomacy, always leave your adversary an honorable
avenue of retreat.
Fifty years ago this October, to resolve a Cuban
missile crisis that had brought us to the brink of nuclear war, JFK did that.
He conveyed to Nikita Khrushchev, secretly, that if
the Soviet Union pulled its nuclear missiles out of Cuba, the United States
would soon after pull its Jupiter missiles out of Italy and Turkey.
Is the United States willing to allow Iran an
honorable avenue of retreat, if it halts enrichment of uranium to 20% and
permits intrusive inspections of all its nuclear facilities? Or are U.S.
sanctions designed to bring about not a negotiated settlement of the nuclear
issue, but regime change, the fall of the Islamic Republic, and its replacement
by a more pliable regime?
If the latter is the case, we are likely headed for
war with Iran, even as our refusal to negotiate with Tokyo, whose oil we cut
off in the summer of 1941, led to Pearl Harbor.