We got rid of Daffy and Mubarak largelybecause their own poeple rose up. This was also true, to very limitd sense in Iran.
If the Iranian people are not ready for a regime change, we would be steppping into the quagmire.
1. Who is this "we," Kimo Sabe?
2. In 2009, at least a portion of the Iranian people took to the streets and indicated a desire for regime change. Do you think they all just changed their minds?

I don't think the US of A is going to try an Operation Iranian Freedom deal any time soon. Whatever change is to take place in Iran will come via other means. Each situation has its own logic.
AntPogo said:
Were Iranians, back in (to pick entirely at random) 1984 saying "Why are we bothering with these Iraqis, when everyone knows that Israel is our #1 enemy?"
One wonders.
I suspect that the Ayatollahs were then, as now, far more focused on "the Great Satan" which is their pet name for the United States of America. (Affectionate little buggers, aren't they?)
I seem to recall that in about 1985 there was a covert arms deal to the benefit of Iran via an agent getting F-4 parts from Israel to Iran for their fight with Iraq. Similarly, Israel did Iran a great favor (though I doubt that was their intent) by taking out the Osirak reactor in Iraq ... AFTER the Iran-Iraq war was in progress.
Things are not as simple as they seem, but in the past ten years, it seems to me that Iranian official political rhetoric has certainly made Israel a centerpiece of its complaints.
And Hezbollah, in Lebanon, is directly traceable to Hezbollah, in Iran, in terms of its
lineage. Fourth Generation Warfare in Action. If you weren't sure, the recent news events citing the Iranians in Thailand undertaking attacks on Israelis for political purposes is a fine example of how 4GW works. Iran has been at it with Israel via less direct means since the early 1980s.
Hezbollah (literally "Party of God") is a Shi'a Muslim militant group and political party based in Lebanon.
Hezbollah first emerged in response to the 1982 Israeli invasion of Lebanon, during the Lebanese civil war. Its leaders were inspired by Ayatollah Khomeini, and its forces were trained and organized by a contingent of Iranian Revolutionary Guards.
Hezbollah's 1985 manifesto listed its four main goals as "Israel's final departure from Lebanon as a prelude to its final obliteration," ending "any imperialist power in Lebanon," submission of the Phalangists to "just rule" and bringing them to trial for their crimes, and giving the people the chance to choose "with full freedom the system of government they want," while not hiding its commitment to the rule of Islam.
Hezbollah leaders have also made numerous statements calling for the destruction of the state of Israel, which they refer to as the "Zionist entity."
Travis:
I'm thinking this is part of a bluff.*
Logistically how would Israel even pull this off? It's not like they have aircraft carriers in the Gulf.
It may be a bluff, but if you make a leap out of the box, and presume that the Saudis would not mind seeing Iran taken down a peg, it is in the realm of the possible, even though unlikely due to OPSEC considerations, that the Saudi Government would permit an inflight refueling track to be set up in their airspace to make the strike possible.
Granted, the Saudis and Israelis don't exactly swap spit on a recurring basis, but they are both very concerned about Iran's various regional moves, for different reasons. The King could also deny, blah blah blah.
In other news, depending upon how the US is or isn't running Iraqi airspace, there might be a few holes in coverage that the Israelis could slip an aerial refueling scheme into. Tougher nut to crack, as I am pretty sure the Iraqi Powers That Be want NOTHING to do with such an undertaking.
I had at one point considered Turkey to be a way to do that, but the past year's rhetoric from Ankara closes that loop. The Turks have enough of their own muscle to deal with Iran, no need to stir up trouble by helping the Israelis. Also, Turks have Article V NATO protection to fall back on.
Which leaves Syria. Is Syrian air defense and air surveillance cohesive, or is their internal trouble creating holes there? How does this open an opportunity for the IAF to exploit? I seem to recall a few years back a raid into Syria that blew up "something" that was explained as a WMD site in Syria.
Maybe the Israelis have the Syrian Air Defense Network so well mapped out that they know how to sneak through with comparative ease.
Food for thought.
Bikewer:
Thanks for the link, even though it makes me depressed.
When Iran and Israel Were Friendly
http://www.salon.com/2012/02/15/when_iran_and_israel_were_friendly/singleton
Nice link, thanks. Some points there that are worth bringing up here:
Phantom fighter planes and weapons for the Iranian army were sent by Israel. One estimate puts Israel’s arms sales to Iran at $500 million annually.
In the mid-1980s Israel was the conduit between Iran and the Reagan administration during the illicit Iran-Contra affair in which the Reagan administration sold weapons to the Iranians and used the proceeds to fund the anti-communist insurgency in Nicaragua. Even as it was relying more on Israel for arms in its war, the Iranian regime increased its poisonous rhetoric attacking the Jewish state, just as the Shah had done. According to the Iranian-born Parsi, such rhetoric was meant to maintain credibility in the wider Muslim world, but wasn’t matched by action. “Israel is Iran’s best friend and we do not intend to change our position,” Israeli Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin said in 1987.
Two events caused the gradual splitting between the erstwhile allies. First, the Soviet Union collapsed in 1991, removing the greatest threat outside of the region to both nations’ security. Second, the weakening of Iraq during the Persian Gulf War diluted its menace.
Interesting thought here: consider the law of unintended outcomes regarding the Operation Desert Storm/Gulf War of 1991.
This thread seems to be the child of some careless talk from Leon Panetta.
When all is said and done, Leon Panetta is the wrong man in that job.
He will do more harm than good before he's done.
My only piece of empathy for him is that NOBODY was going to be able to fill Gates' shoes. That gent was a one of a kind Sec Def.