US Commander: Strike on Iran Not to End its N-Program
Local Editor
A former US military commander warned Wednesday that a potential US strike against Iran would take weeks and probably only set back the country's nuclear program by several years.
Admiral William Fallon, the former head of US Central Command which covers the Middle East, said that Iran posed concerns for both the United States and "Israel" but voiced hope for a diplomatic solution to the nuclear row.
"If the US were to put a full-fledged strike campaign in there, that would probably take several weeks, it could put this program back for several years," Fallon was quoted as having said at the American Security Project, a research group.
He further stated that ""Israel", which has not ruled out military action, has less capability than the United States and would face a more difficult task than in 1981 and 2007 when it secretly bombed nuclear sites in Iraq and Syria."
"Iran's suspected nuclear facilities are not a pinpoint target but are instead dispersed and largely underground," Fallon said.
In parallel, the US military commander warned that "the bottom line is, it's not going to be a one-time shot. It's not going to be like '81 or even 2007."
Fallon resigned as Central Command chief in 2008 and ended a four-decade military career after an article in Esquire magazine portrayed him as critical of then president George W. Bush's stance on Iran.
Source: News Agencies, Edited by moqawama.org
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