Archive for March 10, 2010

Jerusalem expansion spurred by Biden’s clampdown on Israeli action on Iran

March 10, 2010

DEBKAfile, Political Analysis, Espionage, Terrorism, Security.

DEBKAfile Special Report March 10, 2010, 9:16 AM (GMT+02:00)

US Vice President Joe Biden in Jerusalem

Tuesday night, March 9, Israeli prime minister Binyamin Netanyahu told visiting US Vice President Joe Biden that the Interior Ministry district building commission’s announcement clearing the addition of 1,600 homes to the existing East Jerusalem neighborhood of Ramat Shlomo had been made without his knowledge. It would take another two years of paperwork for building to begin.

The announcement drew sharp condemnation from the White House in Washington and from Biden, who arrived late for dinner with the prime minister, after condemning  the “substance and timing” of the announcement with the launching of proximity talks. This, he said “undermined the trust we need right now and runs counter to the constructive discussions I’ve had here in Israel.” The announcement was roundly condemned by the UN Secretary, Egypt and Jordan, as well as Israeli opposition leaders.
Israeli officials later assured Washington there had been no intention to undermine the Biden visit, but Netanyahu took no steps to reverse the decision made by ultra-Orthodox, hard-line Shas interior minister Ellie Yishai.
According to debkafile‘s sources, the sweetness and light conveyed by public statements was hardly present in the US vice president’s private talks with Israeli leaders. Netanyahu may well have approved the Jerusalem announcement as an indirect comeback for the way the American visitor laid down the law on a number of issues of Israeli concern, chiefly the matter of Iran’s rapid progress toward a nuclear weapon.
The peremptory note was first noted when Biden called on president Shimon Peres, his first meeting with an Israel leader. He then explicitly warned Israel against venturing to attack Iran without prior American permission.

Even the oft-repeated American commitment to Israel’s security was delivered with a notable reservation: I can promise the people of Israel that we will confront every security challenge that we will face, said Biden. This statement ruled out unilateral Israel operations in its defense. Forget unilateral, he was saying: From now “we” make the decisions about the levels of “security challenge” facing Israel and how to “confront it.” And there was no false modestly about who the senior decision-maker was to be in this “alliance.”

Jerusalem was also taken aback by the US vice president’s assertion that Iran was isolated as never before. A distorting prism appeared to be held up by the Obama administration to justify its backtracking on painful sanctions for Iran. These sanctions were explicitly promised by the White House to Netanyahu and defense minister Ehud Barak in return for Israel’s consent to hold back from striking Iran’s nuclear facilities.

The Biden visit to Israel, therefore, far from meeting its avowed goal of smoothing over the differences between the Obama administration and Israel, has left Jerusalem more distrustful than ever.
The climate was not improved Monday, March 8, by Yukiya Amano, director of the International Atomic Energy Agency in Vienna, announcing that the IAEA board would get back to discussing Iran’s nuclear program and making decisions only in five months’ time. In other words, the UN Security Council would not have the nuclear watchdog’s recommendations for supporting a sanctions resolution before July.

Israel attributed this delay to Washington’s intervention as another gambit for shunting Israel and its demands for harsh sanctions aside, while also holding its hand against exercising any military options.
Approval for the expansion of Ramat Shlomo came on the heels of a tough new statement by defense minister Barak Tuesday. In a talk to students, he warned that when it came to Iran, Israel must keep its finger on the trigger at all times. And upon arrival in the United States this week, chief of staff Lt. Gen. Gaby Ashkenazi was instructed from Jerusalem to talk tough on the Iranian question when he meets Pentagon officials in the coming days.

‘US playing game in Afghanistan’

March 10, 2010

‘US playing game in Afghanistan’.

KABUL — Taking aim at the US, Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad said Wednesday that it’s the United States that is playing a “double game” in Afghanistan, fighting terrorists it once supported.

At a news conference in the Afghan capital, Ahmadinejad was asked to respond to US Defense Secretary Robert Gates, who earlier in the week accused Teheran of “playing a double game” by trying to have a good relationship with the Afghan government while undermining US and NATO efforts by providing some support to the Taliban.

Teheran has said it supports the Afghan government and denies allegations that it helps the Taliban. Iran calls the accusation part of a broad anti-Iranian campaign and says it makes no sense that its Shi’ite-led government would help the fundamentalist Sunni movement of the Taliban.

“I believe that they themselves,” who are now fighting militants in Afghanistan, “are playing a double game,” he said. “They themselves created terrorists and now they’re saying that they are fighting terrorists.”

During the 10 years the that the Soviet Union fought in Afghanistan, the US supplied rebels with supplies ranging from mules to advanced weaponry, including Stinger anti-aircraft missiles that played a crucial role in neutralizing Soviet air power. The US money spigot, however, was later turned off and the world watched Afghanistan plunge into chaos and eventually harbor al-Qaida terrorists.

Gates, who left Afghanistan shortly before Ahmadinejad spoke, called Ahmadinejad’s visit to Kabul “certainly fodder for all the conspiratorialists.”

“We think Afghanistan should have good relations with all its neighbors, but we want all of Afghanistan’s neighbors” to deal fairly with President Hamid Karzai’s government,” Gates said.

Karzai said Iran was assisting Afghanistan with reconstruction projects, improving education and helping provide electricity.

“We are very hopeful that our brother nation of Iran will work with us in bringing peace and security to Afghanistan so that both our countries will be secure,” Karzai said, adding that Afghanistan has a very good relationship with Tehran.

“We have mentioned several times to our brother nation, Iran, that we don’t want any one to use our soil against any of our neighbors,” he said.

Ahmadinejad and Karzai both spoke at the presidential palace, but it was the Iranian leader who did nearly all of the talking.

He said the best way to fight terrorists was not on the battlefield, but through the use of intelligence, which does not result in the death of troops or civilians.

He repeatedly he raised the Iranian capture of Abdulmalik Rigi, former leader of an insurgent group known as Jundallah. Iran has accused the US and Britain of supporting Jundallah in an effort to weaken the Iranian government — a charge that both nations deny.

He said the US and other nations would be better off using intelligence, not military force, to fight militants in Afghanistan.

“Iran didn’t kill any innocent civilians,” in the arrest of Rigi, he said, adding later that the US was trying to bring civilization to Afghanistan “by gun and bomb.”

Al Aribiya | US defense chief in Saudi for talks on Iran

March 10, 2010

Discussion to focus on nuke program, US push for sanctions

Gates was  due to meet King Abdullah in Riyadh (File)
Gates was due to meet King Abdullah in Riyadh (File)

RIYADH (Agencies)

U.S. Defense Secretary Robert Gates flew into Riyadh on Wednesday for talks expected to focus on Iran’s nuclear program and Washington’s push for tough sanctions against Tehran.

Gates was due to meet King Abdullah as the Obama administration kept up a concerted effort to rally international support for punitive sanctions against Iran, despite misgivings by China and other countries.

Saudi Arabia and other Gulf states are “incredibly concerned about Iran’s nuclear program,” as well as its growing missile arsenal and “destabilizing” role in the region, a U.S. defense official told reporters earlier.

“The secretary will provide an update about where we are on our policy on Iran as we pivot from the engagement track to the pressure track,” said the official, speaking on condition of anonymity.

Frustrated with Iran’s response to U.S. overtures for dialogue, the Obama administration has shifted its emphasis, vowing to pile pressure on Tehran to persuade it to abandon its uranium enrichment work.

A new climate

The diplomatic climate has shifted since Gates last visited Riyadh in May last year, when he had to reassure an anxious Saudi leadership that President Barack Obama’s offer of dialogue with Tehran would not jeopardize Washington’s close ties with the kingdom.

Any prospect for a warming of ties between Iran and the United States has since faded, amid rising tension over Tehran’s nuclear ambitions.

Although Saudi leaders view Iran as a regional threat, they have yet to openly embrace Washington’s campaign for more sanctions.

The U.N. Security Council has already slapped three rounds of sanctions on Iran over its refusal to halt uranium enrichment which Israel and the West view as a cover to build nuclear weapons.

Tehran denies the charge, saying the program is for peaceful nuclear energy.

Gates also planned to discuss bolstering Saudi “air and missile defense capabilities” as part of a broader U.S. effort to boost security in the Gulf in the face of Iran’s expanding arsenal of ballistic missiles, the defense official said.

The United States has promised to speed up weapons sales to Saudi Arabia and other Gulf allies, which have bought billions of dollars worth of American weapons — including missile defense hardware — in recent years.

The U.S. military is also helping the Saudis train a new interior ministry security force created to protect vital oil and gas production infrastructure.

U.S. officials believe the arms build-up in the Gulf sends a clear signal to Iran that its nuclear and missile programs are counter-productive.

“It’s not lost on the Iranians all the security cooperation that’s been going on for years now,” Pentagon press secretary Geoff Morrell told reporters.

The warplanes and missile defense systems bought by the Saudis, the United Arab Emirates and other states were “all designed to counter-weight and protect against the growing threat posed by Iran,” Morrell said.

Talks also were expected to include instability in Yemen, which U.S. and Saudi officials fear al-Qaeda is exploiting in order to use the country as a base to prepare attacks in the region and beyond.

The Yemen-based regional arm of al-Qaeda claimed responsibility for a failed attempt to bomb a U.S.-bound passenger plane in December and the U.S. has stepped up counter-terrorism assistance to the country.

Gates clarifies US Iran policy in Riyadh after Biden fails in Israel

March 10, 2010

DEBKAfile, Political Analysis, Espionage, Terrorism, Security.

US defense secretary Gates in Kabul

US Secretary of Defense Robert Gates arrived in Riyadh Wednesday, March 10, flying in unexpectedly from Kabul in Afghanistan, after the Saudis demanded urgent clarifications of the Obama administration’s Iran policy. debkafile‘s military sources report that the demand followed the failure of US Vice President Joe Biden’s talks with Israeli leaders to resolve their differences on Iran.


As a result, two senior US officials are visiting to Middle East capitals at the same to under pressure to deal with the Iranian nuclear question.


Gates was closeted with Saudi rulers although it was as recently as Feb. 15 that Secretary of State Hillary Clinton visited Riyadh and explained Washington’s strategy on Iran to King Abdullah and several senior Saudi princes. But she failed to allay her hosts’ intense concerns that the US was doing enough to abort Iran’s nuclear weapons program..


Then on Sunday, March 7, US Centcom Commander Gen. David Petraeus, asked by a CNN interviewer, whether countries in the Persian Gulf wish to see a US military attack on Iran, said: “…there are countries that would like to see a strike, us or perhaps Israel, even…”


In Israel, where the media are obsessed with the slightest Arab or Palestinian utterance, none cited the US general’s comments.


debkafile‘s military sources report that Petraeus’ comments referred mainly to the two main Persian Gulf state, Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates. In fact, the UAE foreign minister, referring to the assassination of Hamas member al-Mabhouh, noted this week that his country and Israel see eye to eye on the Iranian issue.


Reports of the Biden conversations in Jerusalem Tuesday have reached Riyadh. They reveal that not only is the Obama administration leaning hard on Israel to abstain from attacking Iran, but is even retreating from harsh sanctions. Such penalties have now been put on hold for five months.


The Saudis are as deeply alarmed by the latest American stance on Iran is as the Israelis.
US sources reported that no sooner did the US defense secretary land in Riyadh from Kabul when he was summoned to dinner with King Abdullah and the Saudi defense minister, Crown Prince Sultan. They admitted that he would be required “to present an update to Saudi officials who are intensely concerned about Iran’s nuclear program and the fate of the American-led effort to impose new sanctions on Tehran.”

OpEdNews – Article: Iran: Will She or Won’t She?

March 10, 2010

OpEdNews – Article: Iran: Will She or Won’t She?.

By Sandy Shanks

Will Iran build a nuclear device or won’t she? The truthful answer is: No one knows. This is likely true of President Obama and Iran’s president, Mahmoud Ahmadinejad. The signals from the Islamic republic are conflicting and change weekly, or even daily at times. This, however, does not preclude an examination of the issue.

Perhaps, a more accurate question is: Does Iran have the capability to build a nuclear device? Still another crucial question remains, a question that is vital to every person living on the planet. What are Israel’s contingency plans? To put it more plainly, will Israel attack Iran?

A little known factor in all of this, particularly in the West due to lack of media coverage, is that on August 9, 2005, Iran’s Supreme Leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, issued a fatwa that the production, stockpiling and use of nuclear weapons are forbidden under Islam and that Iran shall never acquire these weapons. The text of the fatwa has not been released although it was referenced in an official statement at a meeting of the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) in Vienna. I am one of but a handful of American writers who has mentioned this in past articles. Apparently, notwithstanding religious factors, the Supreme Leader is well aware that the construction and possible completion of a nuclear weapon will make Iran a target, a bull’s-eye for the Israeli Air Force, possibly even the American Air Force. However, the latter is extremely unlikely under current conditions.

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On Feb. 18, the IAEA reported concerns over Iran’s intentions. Warren Strobel of McClatchy Newspapers reports, “The United Nations’ nuclear watchdog said Thursday that there are signs Iran is trying to develop a nuclear warhead that would fit atop a missile, its bluntest assertion to date questioning Tehran’s claims to have an exclusively peaceful nuclear program.”

Strobel continues, “In a report on Iran’s nuclear activities, the International Atomic Energy Agency said it has collected ‘broadly consistent and credible information’ about Iran’s suspected military nuclear research. ‘Altogether, this raises concerns about the possible existence in Iran of past or current undisclosed activities related to the development of a nuclear payload for a missile,’ it said.”

Then comes a revealing statement. “The information in question comes from European, U.S. and Israeli intelligence agencies …” These are not exactly disinterested parties, nor are they unbiased on the issue, particularly Israel. Actually, the IAEA’s report contained nothing new, only concern. Put a different way, the IAEA doesn’t know either.

Why is one reminded of another time and place? During the latter half of 2002 and the early part of 2003, the President of the United States, his National Security Advisor, the Vice-President, the Secretary of State, the Secretary of Defense, the CIA Director, members of Congress, and others, including the press, were hammering home to the American public that another nation in the Middle East had Weapons of Mass Destruction. It was a blitzkrieg campaign and it was successful. When the U.S. and Bush’s coalition aggressively attacked Iraq, the majority of American public opinion was soundly behind the aggression. No WMD’s were ever found. The war started by the Bush administration will soon experience its seventh anniversary. The war still has no end game. The public has since learned that the term, pre-emptive war, so favored by Bush and his advisors, is not only an oxymoron but a very tragic event. America, heretofore a glimmering example of democracy and freedom, became a pariah. Hopefully, our current and future leaders will never allow this to happen again.

I bring all this up because if Israel attacks Iran, the U.S. will be drawn in. Due to the close relationship between the U.S. and Israel, if Israel attacks Iran, it will be assumed by Iran and nearly every nation on Earth, including our traditional allies, that the U.S. gave at least tacit approval to the attack. In other words, some may assume the U.S., forgetting or ignoring the lessons of wars past and present, launched an aggressive action upon another country by proxy. It is within the realm of possibility they may be right if such an attack occurs.

The issue of Israeli intentions will be covered in a moment, but first the question — does Iran have the capability to build a nuclear weapon? Once again, the answer to this question is mixed. Israeli intelligence is convinced that Iran is doing so. Iranian leaders, including Ahmadinejad, say they are not. They say their development of uranium is for peaceful purposes only. Despite all the conflicting reports, perhaps, some answers are out there.

Recently, Ahmadinejad announced that Iran, unable to get fuel rods from the West for its U.S.-built reactor, which makes medical isotopes, had begun to enrich its own uranium to 20%. White House press secretary Robert Gibbs had a rather interesting reply to that bold statement. “He [Ahmadinejad] says many things, and many of them turn out to be untrue. We do not believe they have the capability to enrich to the degree to which they now say they are enriching.”

Noting that the official U.S. position is that Iran is building a nuclear bomb, resulting in U.N. sanctions and urging more stringent sanctions, Gibbs’ comment begs a question. If Iran is incapable of enriching uranium to 20% commercial use, how can it possibly enrich uranium to 90%, or weapons grade?

More to the point, the Institute for Science and International Security (ISIS) supports Gibbs’ viewpoint. According to a report recently issued by David Albright and Christina Walrond of the ISIS, “Iran’s problems in its centrifuge programme are greater than expected. … Iran is unlikely to deploy enough gas centrifuges to make enriched uranium for commercial nuclear power reactors (Iran’s stated nuclear goal) for a long time, if ever, particularly if (U.N.) sanctions remain in force.”

So,the White House press secretary and the ISIS seem to agree. Iran’s enrichment capabilities are not nearly as daunting as many are led to believe. Was Gibbs speaking on his own, giving his private opinions? That’s not the way it works. White House press secretaries are told what to present to the press and their personal opinions are immaterial and unknown to the press and the public.

The ISIS’ report continues in a rather interesting way. ISIS insists, however, that “Iran may still be able to build a bomb. Yet, to do that, Iran would have to divert nearly all of its low-enriched uranium at Natanz, now under U.N. watch, to a new cascade of centrifuges, enrich that to 90 percent, then explode a nuclear device. Should Iran do that, however, it would have burned up all its bomb-grade uranium, and would lack enough low-enriched uranium for a second test. And Tehran would be facing a stunned and shaken Israel with hundreds of nukes and an America with thousands, without a single nuke of its own.” There is little reason to elaborate on that analysis.

All this notwithstanding, the last I heard Israel is convinced that Iran is building a nuclear device to be mounted on one of her missiles capable of reaching every major city in Israel. The Jewish Republic is justified in its fear. Israel, the most powerful nation in the Middle East, is about the size of New Jersey, the U.S.’s fifth smallest state. The distance between Tel Aviv on the Mediterranean coast, one of the most vital of Israel’s cities, and Jerusalem on the West Bank is 63 kilometers, roughly 39 miles.

Tel Aviv is the main financial center of Israel. Its destruction via an Iranian nuclear device would dismantle Israeli society and economy. Picture a nuclear bomb descending upon New York, making 9/11 peanuts by comparison, and one can visualize the fears that Israelis have. On the other hand, due to the diminutive nature of Israel, she is quite vulnerable. The vast majority of her citizens live in her ten largest cities. In retaliation for Israel’s attack on nuclear sites, Iran may unleash her conventional missiles and ground attack aircraft on Israeli cities. Israel would be a target-rich environment, and cities can be devastated by conventional means; ask the elders of Berlin and Tokyo.

Will Israel launch on Iran? Again, no one can be certain, but the Council on Foreign Relations assessed this probability. There is little doubt that Israel views the stakes as very high. Israeli Prime Minister Netanyahu’s UN General Assembly speech emphasized the existential nature of the threat that he and others in the current government believe Iran represents. The CFR reported that “An Israeli attack would likely concentrate on three locations: Isfahan, where Iran produces uranium hexafluoride gas; Natanz, where the gas is enriched in approximately half of the 8,000 centrifuges located there; and Arak, where a heavy water research reactor, scheduled to come on line in 2012, would be ideal to produce weapons-grade plutonium. It is conceivable that Israel may attack other sites that it suspects to be part of a nuclear weapons program if targeting data were available, such as the recently disclosed Qom site, whose location is known, or centrifuge fabrication sites, the location(s) of which have not yet been identified. The latter would be compelling targets since their destruction would hobble Iran’s ability to reconstitute its program.”

After making it clear that Israel has the means for such an attack, CFR states, “The likelihood of this contingency depends on Israeli assessments of U.S. and international resolve to block Iran’s pursuit of a nuclear weapons capability; the state of the Iranian program; the amount of time a successful strike would buy to be worth the expected risks and costs, a point on which there is a spectrum of Israeli views, from six months to five years; whether Israel believes there is a clandestine Iranian program, which would lead some Israelis to conclude that an attack would not buy any time at all; and the effect of a strike on the U.S.-Israel relationship.

Because none of these factors is constant, estimates about the likelihood of an Israeli strike within the coming year will vary. For example, Israel is probably somewhat less likely to attack now than it was before the Qom installation was disclosed, the P-3 took a firmer stance, and Russia appeared to concede that stronger sanctions had to be considered. If Iran were to agree to ship the bulk of its uranium to France and Russia for enrichment — a deal that has been agreed upon in working level negotiations but may never be consummated — Israel’s incentive to accept the risks of an attack against Iran would probably diminish. Should diplomatic initiatives run aground, the likelihood of an Israeli attack could be expected to increase accordingly.”

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As some have pointed out, including CFR, there are problems with such an attack, problems that make the venture highly risky. The perils relate to the possible routes to the target. There are three plausible routes to Iran and they involve over-flight of third countries. The northern approach would likely follow the Syrian-Turkish border and risk violation of Turkey’s airspace. The central flight path would cross Jordan and Iraq. The southern route would transit the lower end of Jordan, Saudi Arabia and possibly Kuwait.

All but two of these countries are to a greater or lesser degree hostile to Israel. The exceptions, Jordan and Turkey, would not wish their airspace to be used for an Israeli attack against Iran. Turkey recently canceled an annual trilateral exercise involving Israel, in part to signal its opposition to an Israeli strike. In any case, over-flight would jeopardize Israeli diplomatic relations with both countries.

CFR states, “With respect to Syria and Saudi Arabia, operational concerns would trump diplomatic ones. If either country detects Israeli aircraft and chooses to challenge the over-flight using surface-to-air missiles or intercepting aircraft, Israel’s intricate attack plan, which would have a razor-thin margin for error to begin with, could well be derailed.”

The most advantageous route is the central route. It is the shortest route as opposed to the round-about nature of the northern and southern routes, saving valuable fuel. Also, the route takes it over friendly nations, Jordan and American-controlled skies over Iraq. It is also the most dangerous for the U.S., Israel, and possibly, the Israeli attack aircraft. Over-flight of Iraq, would be diplomatically awkward for Israel and would risk a deadly clash with American air defenses since the intruding aircraft would not have the appropriate Identification, Friend, or Foe (IFF) codes.

Israel would have to carefully weigh the operational risk and most of all the cost of a strike to its most vital bilateral relationship, especially since President Barack Obama has explicitly asked Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu not to order an attack. There are very serious doubts that American forces would engage an Israeli strike force bound for Iran’s nuclear facilities. Both countries share the same fear: Iran is building a nuclear bomb.

Therein lies the danger. If Iran were attacked via the skies over Iraq, would there be any doubt of American complicity? The reader is reminded that the U.S. has permanent military bases and airfields on Iran’s western border, Iraq, and eastern border, Afghanistan.

In addition, CFR points out that “The sheer distances involved pose a challenge, as well. The targets lie at the outermost 1,750- kilometer range limits of Israeli tactical aircraft. Diplomatic and military factors would confine Israeli refueling operations to international airspace where tankers could orbit safely for long periods. These locations, while usable, are suboptimal. They would yield the attackers little leeway to loiter in their target areas, or engage in the fuel-intensive maneuvering typical of dogfights and evasion of surface-to-air missiles.”

None of the above describes the economic impact of an Israeli attack on Iran. The impact can be illustrated by one of CFR’s recommendations for the U.S. — Ensure the U.S. Strategic Petroleum Reserve is sufficient to offset shortages if necessary. Unlike Israel’s attack on the Osirak facility in Iraq in 1981 and her attack on the al-Kibar facility in Syria in 2007, Israel was relatively certain that neither Iraq nor Syria would retaliate. Both were bloodied and weak at the time. Today, Iran is neither bloodied nor weak. It does not take a genius to figure out that, if attacked by the Jewish nation, Iran will retaliate.

Second only to Saudi Arabia, Iran is a huge source of the world’s oil. Due to a quirk in geography, she also sits astride an oil choke point, the 29-mile wide Strait of Hormuz, through which 20% of the world’s oil shipments pass. She also possesses some of the most sophisticated mine-layer technology in the world, and she does not possess these weapons by accident, but for a very distinct purpose — to close the strait when she wishes.

On June 29, 2008, the commander of

Iran’s Revolutionary Guard, Ali Mohammed Jafari, said that if Iran were attacked by Israel or the United States, it would seal off the Strait of Hormuz, to wreak havoc in oil markets. This statement followed other more ambiguous threats from Iran’s oil minister and other government officials that an attack on Iran would result in turmoil in oil supply.

For every action there is a reaction. If Israel attacks Iran, Iran will retaliate. That is known. What will be the nature of that retaliation? Will she attack American bases in Iraq and Afghanistan? Will she close the strait? Will Iran be satisfied by merely attacking Israel? Can Israel withstand the onslaught? What will be the nature of Israel’s and America’s reaction to Iran’s reaction? And, so, on it goes. No one, of course, knows.

I offer no conclusions to this report. The possibilities are endless, and I forgot to take my prophesy pill this morning. I can only hope the reader is more aware of the issues. Oh, and, by the way, we can all hope that cooler heads will prevail. If not, I can offer this conclusion. If Israel attacks Iran, 9/11, the endless wars in Iraq and Afghanistan will be child’s play in comparison.