He noted that invasion of Iran would most likely galvanize the republic’s entire population into putting aside their grievances with the Iranian government in favor or focusing all of their ire on the invading U.S. forces.
“The moment you put an American troop in Iran, 80 million Iranians will forget their problems with their government and become a solid entity,” he said. “That’s not something you want to wade into.”
Despite sharing a border with Iraq, whose population in 2003 numbered about 25 million, war with a much larger Iran would require exponentially greater U.S. troop levels and financial commitment significantly larger than the Iraq campaign.
At the height of the Iraq war, U.S. forces had in excess of 150,000 troops on the ground.
“Well, I think what would happen would be Iraq times 10,” he said.
Wilkerson speculated that in order to subdue such a large population that is motivated and much better trained and equipped than the al Qaeda and ISIS fighters in Iraq would require one million service men and women – necessitating the reinstitution of the draft – at least a decade of fighting, and $2.5 trillion.
“You also need allies to go in with you,” he said, a prospect unlikely to happen. “Basically everybody (already) said ‘no.’”
Meanwhile Shia fighters from other parts of the region — Hezbollah, Shia militias in Iraq and others – would surely answer the call to the fight.
Not only would the United States likely go it alone in a war with Iran, but Postindustrial America would be disproportionately burdened with supplying the young men and women need to wage war in Iran.
Hundreds of thousands from this region have already served in Afghanistan and Iraq wars. Pennsylvania alone has the fourth-largest veteran population in the country at just under a million, only behind California, Texas, and Florida. Ohio is sixth, with some 860,000 veterans.
Sending countless more servicemembers to Iran to fight an unnecessary and ill-conceived war is not only ill advised but should be considered a nonstarter to all Americans no matter where they live, Wilkerson said.