Originally posted by wsushox1
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Case in point - right now Israel is looking at this and are just watching. They have actually wanted to move unilaterally and take out Syria chemical weapons (they have a great fear they are going to fall in the wrong hands) but the U.S. has restrained them to only some minor strikes. Also Obama has promised that Iran won't be allowed to cross the "red line" in getting the bomb. They are watching this to see if they really can rely on the U.S. promises and whether they just need to take unilateral action on their own.
There are also the moderate Gulf States that are opposing the Syria/Iran block who are not to happy at this moment - once they decide they can't depend on the U.S. they are likely to choose their own way which might mean a nuclear arm race in the Middle-East. The U.S. doesn't want this to happen as this will likely destabilize the mid-east and will put stress on economic recover due to higher fuel prices. Then their is the risk of weapons (or nuclear material for a dirty bomb) falling into the wrong hands.
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