Archive for April 7, 2010

Israel PM doubts sanctions have ‘teeth’ to dissuade Iran

April 7, 2010

IC Publications.

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said on Wednesday that he doubts the sanctions being mulled against Iran would be tough enough to rein in the Islamic republic’s nuclear ambitions.

“I doubt that such a programme will have teeth,” he said at a news conference in Jerusalem, referring to US-led efforts to slap new UN sanctions on Iran over its nuclear defiance.

Israel shares the US conviction that Iran, its arch-foe, is seeking to obtain nuclear weapons, a claim Tehran denies.

The sole, if undeclared nuclear-armed state in the Middle East, the Jewish state has repeatedly said it would not rule out a military option in dealing with Iran.

Netanyahu made the comments ahead of next week’s international summit on nuclear security summit in Washington, which he will attend.

The US administration said in a policy document presented on Tuesday that it would only use atomic arms in “extreme circumstances” and would not attack non-nuclear states, although Iran and North Korea were exceptions.

The Nuclear Posture Review described “nuclear terrorism” as an immediate and extreme threat, with efforts to prevent the spread of atomic weapons given top priority.

“This is a very, very serious issue that nuclear weapons, even crude nuclear weapons would find their way into the hands of terrorists and the consequences could be very very dire for all of humanity,” Netanyahu said.

Responding to a question, he deflected concerns the spotlight could be turned onto Israel’s nuclear arsenal.

“I’m not concerned that anyone will think that Israel is a terrorist regime. Everybody knows a terrorist and rogue regime when they see one, and believe me they see quite a few around Israel.”

Israel has never publicly acknowledged it has nuclear weapons and has maintained a policy of deliberate ambiguity since it inaugurated its Dimona nuclear reactor in the Negev desert in 1965.

“This policy of ambiguity constitutes one of the pillars of Israeli national security and the Americans consider it very important,” Deputy Foreign Minister Danny Ayalon told army radio.

“There is no reason for the Americans to change their approach or for Israel to change its position,” he said.

For the past four decades, Israeli governments have insisted the Jewish state will not be the first to introduce nuclear weapons in the Middle East.

“This policy will continue and no pressure from any country will make it change,” Ayalon said.

In a slight departure from the usual wording, Israel’s ambassador to Washington, Michael Oren, said in an interview with CNN last year that “to introduce” meant “to deploy.”

Foreign military experts believe Israel has an arsenal of several hundred nuclear weapons.

In 1969, Israeli leaders undertook not to make any statement on their country’s nuclear potential or carry out any nuclear test, while Washington agreed to refrain from exerting pressure on the issue.

The Israeli programme is under military censorship.

Like nuclear-armed countries India, Pakistan and North Korea, Israel has not signed the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty in order to avoid inspections by the Vienna-based International Atomic Energy Agency.

Obama is right to keep America’s nuclear weapons trained on Iran – Telegraph

April 7, 2010

Obama is right to keep America’s nuclear weapons trained on Iran – Telegraph Blogs.

Ahmadinejad greets his supporters in the city of Oroumieh today  (Photo: EPA)

Ahmadinejad greets his supporters in the city of Oroumieh today (Photo: EPA)

The hardline regime of Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad would do well to take note of U.S. President Barack Obama’s carefully-worded caveat about the conditions under which America might use its devastating stockpile of nuclear weapons.

In his Nuclear Posture Review, Mr Obama stresses that the role of America’s nuclear arsenal is to deter nuclear attacks on the U.S. and its allies, and rules out the use of nuclear weapons against non-nuclear countries, even if they were to attack the U.S. with non-conventional weapons, such as chemical or biological devices.

But he makes an important exception with regard to both Iran and North Korea. While stating that he would refrain from launching nuclear attacks against countries that have signed the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty, this constraint only applies to those countries that are in compliance with the NPT, which both North Korea and Iran are most certainly not.

Mahmoud Ahmadinejad might think he can drum up domestic support by denouncing Mr Obama’s policy as that of a “cowboy”, but he would do well to give its implications serious consideration. The West is heading for a fresh confrontation with Iran over its refusal to freeze its uranium enrichment programme, with a new round of sanctions likely to be implemented in the next few weeks.

But if Iran continues to defy world opinion and presses ahead with its attempts to build an atom bomb, it could easily find itself in the target sights of America’s nuclear technicians.

Now Netanyahu gets it – Israel Opinion, Ynetnews

April 7, 2010

Now Netanyahu gets it – Israel Opinion, Ynetnews.

Sever Plocker offers breakdown of Netanyahu-Obama dialogue over past year

Published: 04.07.10, 18:06 / Israel Opinion
After patiently listening to his guest’s scholarly lecture, Obama said the following words to Netanyahu: I feel for you, the Israelis, and therefore I recommend that we set a binding timetable for resolving the conflict between you and the Palestinians. I’m determined to end it no later than a year before my first term in office ends. More than 40 years have passed since you occupied the territories and there is no reason to delay or waste more time: Everyone knows what the final-status agreement will look like. You do too. Bill Clinton outlined it in detail. George W. Bush endorsed it. As a black president with Muslims roots, I can get more benefits for you out of the Arabs than my two predecessors.

I therefore expect you, Mr. Prime Minister of Israel, to show guts, draw courage, and lead your state to peace in 2011. The settlement construction freeze is needed only as a start. Meanwhile, I will make the following pledge to you: As long as I am America’s president, Iran will not possess military nuclear capabilities. This I swear. God bless you, Mr. Netanyahu; God bless the people of Israel.

Netanyahu heard this and was stunned. A week before the meeting, he rejected Finance Minister Dr. Yuval Steintiz’s advice not to travel to America, and instead was tempted by Defense Minister Ehud Barak, who as always promised a pleasant and friendly conversation with Obama. The aides and advisors prepared Netanyahu for a clash over the issue of Jerusalem construction: He arrived at the White House equipped with good explanations. Yet he was not prepared to hear, from the president, a firm, unequivocal and blatant demand to complete the negotiations (which had not yet started) within a year and a half. He felt the ground is shifting below his feet; his predications and assessments crumbled.

People who spoke with Netanyahu before the elections can attest to his position at the time. Netanyahu viewed himself as a person chosen by history for one mission only: Freeing Israel from the horror of an Iranian nuclear bomb. He did not link the enlistment of US support against Iran to an agreement with the Palestinians. With complete conviction, he argued that the conflict had been resolved in fact, and that the reality which had emerged in the territories is the solution. This is what we have: A Palestinian parliament already exists, as well as Palestinian elections, a Palestinian prime minister, a Palestinian flag, a Palestinian area code, and Palestinian police. They have full autonomy; almost a state.

A focused president

Netanyahu pinned great hopes on advancing the Palestinian economy and reinforcing its institutions; through actions, rather than slogans. The diplomatic process – that is, the shining path that his predecessors took to nowhere – appeared to him as a needless diversion. A sort of ritual. Netanyahu was not excited over its existence, but was willing to take part in it in order to pay lip service. In his view, which was shared by many others, the demographic and political developments – half a million Israelis living beyond the 1967 borders, as well as the Hamas state in Gaza – pre-empted and annulled any thought of a final-status agreement.

The sense of disgust with the “diplomatic process” prompted author and journalist Tom Friedman to urge President Obama to refrain from US involvement in Israeli-Palestinian talks, at least until the sides are prepared for mutual concessions. Up until a month or two ago, it appeared that the Administration in Washington took Friedman’s advice and that Netanyahu’s approach proved itself. Obama conveyed a sense of voluntarily helplessness.

Yet then came the shock, the consternation, and the pressure. Suddenly, the prime minister of Israel found himself facing an American president who is focused on his objective. A president who shakes his finger at the PM and says: Mr. Netanyahu, in order to hit Iran I need an agreement in Palestine. The time for evasive maneuvers has run out. It’s either peace now, sir, or you will pay now.

When Salam Fayyad, the most moderate and pro-American prime minister the Palestinians ever had, and will ever have, declared in Passover that soon his people will celebrate the establishment of their new state, which will be recognized by the world and by Israel with Jerusalem as its capital, it was Barack Obama who spoke from Fayyad’s mouth. Both of them share the same vision.

Now Netanyahu understands. Now he needs to either make a decision, or go home.

American Jewry’s deafening silence

April 7, 2010

American Jewry’s deafening silence

Al Arabiya | Obama an “inexperienced amateur”: Iran leader

April 7, 2010

Middle East News | Obama an “inexperienced amateur”: Iran leader.

Ahmadinejad (C) llashed out after the US unveiled new limits on use  of its nuclear arsenal (File)
Iran’s president made a scathing and personal attack on U.S. President Barack Obama on Wednesday as an “inexperienced amateur” who was too quick to threaten to use nuclear weapons against enemies of the United States.

Ahmadinejad lashed out after the United States unveiled new limits on use of the nation’s nuclear arsenal, but suggested that exceptions could be made for “outliers” such as Iran and North Korea, both accused by the West of flouting U.N. resolutions concerning their nuclear programs.

“Obama made these latest remarks because he is inexperienced and an amateur politician,” Ahmadinejad said on Iranian television. “American politicians are like cowboys. Whenever they have legal shortcomings, their hands go to their guns.”

Obama had made a diplomatic overture to Tehran soon after he took power in 2009, urging it to “unclench its fist”.

But since then a confrontation has intensified over Iran’s nuclear activities which the West suspects aims to develop an atomic bomb and which Tehran says is for civilian use.

Obama has recently urged U.N. Security Council members to back new sanctions against Iran.

His changes to U.S. weapons policy were announced before a nuclear summit in Washington next week. He renounced the development of new atomic weapons and ruled out the use of nuclear arms against non-nuclear armed states.

But this came with a condition. Countries would be spared a U.S. nuclear response only if they are in compliance with the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty. Iran and North Korea would thus not be protected and be potential targets.

“Yesterday some news was published saying that he (Obama) has threatened to use nuclear and biochemical weapons against countries that don’t comply with America and which do not yield to America’s pressure,” Ahmadinejad said. “We hope these reports are false.”

“Be careful. If you set step in Mr. (George W.) Bush’s path, the nations’ response would be the same tooth-breaking one as they gave Bush,” he added as crowds in the northwestern city of Orumieh cheered “Death to America.”

Iran will host its own Nuclear Disarmament Conference on April 17-18 which China, courted by Obama to support sanctions against Iran, has said it might attend.

Iran, which says its nuclear program is for entirely peaceful ends, also repeated warnings to Israel not to attack.

“If they (Israel) attack Iran, possibly no trace will be left from the Zionist regime (Israel),” Defence Minister Ahmad Vahidi was quoted as saying by semi-official Mehr news agency.

Israel has hinted it could strike Iran in an effort to halt the nuclear activities. Iran has threatened to retaliate for any attack by firing missiles at Israel, which is believed to have the Middle East’s only atomic arsenal.

A deputy of Iran’s Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei in the elite revolutionary Guards made similar threats on Tuesday.

The United States and its allies hope to get new sanctions imposed in the coming weeks over Iran’s nuclear enrichment work, after failing to reach a fuel-swap agreement with Tehran.

Iran, which says it needs nuclear technology to generate power and for medical reasons, says it would hand over its low-grade enriched uranium in return for higher-grade uranium, but the swap must be carried out inside the country under the supervision of the International Atomic Energy agency.

“We have a positive attitude towards the fuel swapping idea … provided it is done within Iran,” Foreign Minister Manouchehr Mottaki told a news conference on Wednesday.

Russia, which, like China, is under intense Western pressure to support tougher U.N. sanctions has so far failed to deliver a S-300 anti-aircraft system Iran has ordered, a move which has irritated Iranian officials.

But Defence Minister Vahidi said Russia had no intention of breaking the agreement to sell the missile system. “Russia is committed to our agreements over the S-300 system. They have told us that the system will be delivered to Iran on time.”

The truck-mounted S-300PMU1, known in the West as the SA-20, can shoot down cruise missiles and aircraft. It has a range of 150 km (90 miles) and travels at more than 2 km per second.

Al Jazeera English – Focus – Talking to the enemy

April 7, 2010

Al Jazeera English – Focus – Talking to the enemy.

By Robert Grenier

Has the US changed its tone towards Ismail Haniyeh’s Hamas? [GALLO/GETTY]

A number of commentators, including Al Jazeera’s Clayton Swisher, have remarked of late on the apparent willingness of the Obama administration to permit a level of unofficial contact with senior Hamas officials.

They refer to discussions which reportedly took place last summer in Zurich, when Tom Pickering, a former undersecretary of state, and Rob Malley, a former advisor to the Clinton administration on Arab-Israeli affairs, met for informal talks with Mahmud Zahar, the Hamas foreign minister.

Neither of the Americans involved has any official status in the current administration, but it was apparently understood by their Hamas interlocutor that they would brief officials in Washington on the substance of their discussions.

And in February, a career US diplomat, Rachel Schneller, who is currently out-of-status and on loan to the council on foreign relations, was permitted by the state department to participate in a panel discussion in Doha which included Hamas spokesman Osama Hamdan.

Schneller’s brief apparently extended so far as to permit her to share a cup of tea with Hamdan afterwards.

Language of ultimatums

These are welcome developments and are indicative, I believe, of a very different attitude and tone in the Obama administration concerning how best to deal with adversaries.

It puts me in mind of the controversy which flared between Obama and then-senator Clinton when the two were candidates vying for the Democratic presidential nomination.

Obama had had the temerity to suggest that he would be willing to hold talks with Iran without preconditions. Clinton, trying to run to Obama’s right on foreign policy and to present herself as representing the “moderate, experienced mainstream” of Washington thinking, strongly criticised the Illinois senator for being willing to “reward” the Iranians in uncompensated fashion, and suggested in the process that he was, at best, dangerously naïve.

Obama’s spokesmen and handlers, sensing vulnerability, promptly began to suggest all manner of caveats which would have had the effect of making any such talks with Iran highly conditional – until, that is, they were pulled up short by Obama himself, who indicated that he had no desire to apologise for his stance, but wished instead to make this a point of clear differentiation between himself and those like Clinton who (at least at the time) were aligning themselves with precisely the sort of arrogant orthodoxy espoused by the Bush administration.

Having held a number of bureaucratic positions during the Bush years, and having seen close-up the effects of the Bush administration’s general unwillingness to communicate with adversaries in anything other than the language of ultimatums – ‘Do what we want, or suffer the consequences’ – it was clear to me at the time how self-defeating these attitudes were.

A missed opportunity

Nowhere was this more apparent to me than with Iran during the early months after the US invasion of Iraq.

The Iranians, had they desired to do so, could have caused the US no end of problems in those early days. The fact was, however, that they and the US shared certain broad, common interests in Iraq during that period, upon which the two sides might have built.

Had the US been willing to share its perspectives with Iran in those early days and to solicit Iranian views in a similar manner, there might at least have been an effective mechanism in place to moderate the worst effects of the tension between them when US and Iranian interests in Iraq began to sharply diverge later on.

Indeed, there had been very effective cooperation between the US and Iranian delegations to the Bonn Conference on Afghanistan in November-December 2001, thanks in large part to the wisdom of James Dobbins, the US envoy, who understood the common interests at work and who had the sense and flexibility to exploit them to mutual benefit.

Changing tone

For now Obama’s approach has been limited to a change in tone, not policy [GALLO/GETTY]

Indeed, that is all we are really talking about here: Common sense and flexibility. One would not suggest for a moment that the Obama administration has cast off the shackles of domestic political orthodoxy in the US, particularly where “rogue regimes” and officially-branded terrorist groups are concerned.

No one has hinted that the current administration will substantially alter the conditions previously laid down before engaging officially with Hamas.

Let us not forget that Rob Malley, one of the US interlocutors at the Zurich encounter with Hamas last summer, was forced to resign as an advisor to the Obama campaign when his past contacts with Hamas as a senior director of the International Crisis Group became widely known.

The change in the attitude and tone of the current administration from the one which immediately preceded it is largely that: A change in tone, and not a clear change in policy.

One looks to see the common-sense pragmatism of the current administration, in contrast to the narrow ideological doctrines of the Bush administration, somehow translated into a more permanent change – if not in actual policy, at least in terms of substantive practice.

Institutionalising dialogue

The point, it seems to me, is to find a means of institutionalising the dialogue with adversaries – whether we are speaking of Hamas, Iran, Hezbollah, or others – in a way which permits greater understanding of the two sides’ respective positions, establishes trusted means of contact, and helps to mitigate both misunderstanding of intentions and miscalculation of likely reactions.

The point of such dialogue is not necessarily to bring about change and reconciliation – though that would always be welcome – but at least to better manage conflict in the meantime.

I have long been an advocate of the enhanced use of my old organisation, the CIA, to manage just those sorts of discreet, unofficial contacts.

Obviously, the CIA has been used in this fashion in the past. However, it has not traditionally played such a role so widely or commonly as many tend to assume. In fact, the CIA has traditionally avoided such roles, preferring to stay away from politics and to stick to intelligence-gathering.

In order to communicate with adversaries effectively, and to build up the necessary institutional relationships and capabilities to do so, simply using one-time panel discussions and occasional contacts with former government officials is unlikely to meet the need. In this, as in other areas, the US needs a sustained and systematic approach.

Robert Grenier was the CIA’s chief of station in Islamabad, Pakistan, from 1999 to 2002. He was also the director of CIA’s counter-terrorism centre.

The views expressed in this article are the author’s own and do not necessarily reflect Al Jazeera’s editorial policy.

Ahmadinejad: Obama is a cowboy who follows will of Israel

April 7, 2010

Ahmadinejad: Obama is a cowboy who follows will of Israel – Haaretz – Israel News.

Iran on Wednesday lamented U.S. President Barack Obama’s statements on the new U.S. nuclear strategy, calling him an inexperienced newcomer who follows the will of Israel.

“Such remarks were not even made by his predecessor George W. Bush,” President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad said, addressing thousands in a speech in north-western Iran.

T

he United States pledged never to use nuclear weapons against states that comply with non-proliferation treaties as part of a much-anticipated review of nuclear arms strategy released Tuesday.

But the new pledge – a first for the U.S. – leaves open a nuclear strike against countries that have signed on to a global non-proliferation treaty but stand accused of violating its terms.

Obama, in an interview with The New York Times, said outright that the loophole would apply to “outliers like Iran and North Korea” that the U.S. believes are developing nuclear weapons.

“The American leaders still act like cowboys and like heroes in Western movies,” Ahmadinejad said in his remarks carried by the news network Khabar. “Whenever there is a problem, they use their guns.”

The Iranian president said the U.S. seemed to continue the same policies as Bush and “Obama seems to be just a new face but with the same intentions, which is deceiving world nations.”

“We advise Mr. Obama to be careful and not follow the path of his predecessor as he would have the same fate as Bush, and we are not interested in this to happen,” Ahmadinejad said.

Foreign Minister Manouchehr Mottaki said the new U.S. policy was just propaganda and called on Washington to cooperate with the world on global nuclear disarmament instead.

The Nuclear Posture Review was issued just before Obama heads to Prague to sign a new nuclear-arms-reduction treaty with Russia. The treaty calls on both sides to reduce their nuclear warheads to 1,550, or about one-third below current levels.

Ahmadinejad warns of ‘tooth-breaking response’ to Obama

April 7, 2010

Ahmadinejad warns of ‘tooth-breaking response’ to Obama | ABS-CBN News Online Beta.

TEHRAN, Iran – Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad on Wednesday warned his US counterpart Barack Obama of a “tooth-breaking” response, as he condemned Washington’s new nuclear policy.

Ahmadinejad lashed out after the United States unveiled new limits on use of the nation’s nuclear arsenal, but suggested that exceptions could be made for “outliers” such as Iran and North Korea, both accused by the West of flouting UN resolutions concerning their nuclear programmes.

“I hope these published comments are not true… he (Obama) has threatened with nuclear and chemical weapons those nations which do not submit to the greed of the United States,” Ahmadinejad said in speech broadcast live on state television.

“Be careful. If you set step in Mr. (George W.) Bush’s path, the nations’ response would be the same tooth-breaking one as they gave Bush,” he said as crowds in the northwestern city of Orumieh cheered “Death to America!”

In a policy shift, Washington said on Tuesday it would only use atomic weapons in “extreme circumstances” and would not attack non-nuclear states — but singled out Iran and North Korea as exceptions.

After a year of attempting diplomatic initiatives, Obama in recent weeks has ratcheted up pressure for fresh UN sanctions against Iran over its nuclear programme, which Washington suspects is masking a weapons drive.

UN veto-wielding power China, which has emerged as Iran’s main economic trading partner in recent years, continues to seek a diplomatic solution to the controversy.

But French Foreign Minister Bernard Kouchner said that Beijing had agreed to participate in talks on Thursday in New York with other world powers concerning sanctions against Tehran.

Kouchner, speaking in Paris on Wednesday, described the Chinese stance as “a positive factor” and “good news” but did not say at what level the talks would be held.

Ahmadinejad said Obama’s handling of Washington’s nuclear policy showed “his inexperience.”

“What Mr. Obama has said even Mr. Bush whose hands were smeared with blood of nations did not,” said the hardliner who has refused to budge under Western pressure to abandon Tehran’s atomic drive.

“We advise Mr. Obama to be careful in not signing anything they put in front. Wait and weigh things a bit. Beware that those who were bigger and stronger than you could not do a damn thing, let alone you,” he said.

Two other top Iranian officials also denounced Washington’s nuclear policy.

“We regard the recent position and comments of the United States as propaganda,” foreign minister Manouchehr Mottaki told reporters.

Defence Minister Ahmad Vahidi said the new US policy supported Israel.

“They use new designs for new bombs, support Israel which has many nuclear warheads, but on the other hand pressure Iran. This is exactly a domineering order and oppressive dealing which Iran does not accept,” he was quoted as saying by the ILNA news agency.

Israel is Middle East’s sole but undeclared nuclear power and it has not ruled out a military strike against Iran to stop its atomic programme.

Mottaki meanwhile said Iran was still hopeful that a UN-drafted nuclear fuel deal could be finalised if the United States, France and Russia showed “political will.”

The International Atomic Energy Agency brokered a deal in Vienna last October which envisages Iran sending its low-enriched uranium (LEU) to France and Russia for conversion into fuel for a small Tehran research reactor.

But Iranian officials have refused to hand over Tehran’s stockpiles of LEU, insisting on a simultaneous swap for higher-enriched uranium inside Iran.

US, Russia, and France who were party to the Vienna talks have opposed this condition.

Following the deadlock over the deal, Washington has been spearheading global efforts to impose new sanctions on Tehran.

Iran is already under three sets of UN sanctions for pursuing the uranium enrichment work, the most controversial part of its atomic drive.

Iran Ridicules Obama’s Nuclear Strategy – TIME

April 7, 2010

Iran Ridicules Obama’s Nuclear Strategy – TIME.

President Barack Obama speaks on the telephone with Russian President Dmitry Medvedev about the Strategic Arms Reduction Treaty.

Pete Souza / White House / AP

(TEHRAN, Iran and WASHINGTON) — Iran’s hard-line president has ridiculed President Barack Obama’s new strategy aimed at reducing the likelihood of nuclear conflict.

Obama on Tuesday announced new rules constraining the use of America’s nuclear arsenal, vowing not use nuclear weapons against countries that do not have them. However, Iran and North Korea were not included in that pledge because they do not cooperate with other countries on nonproliferation standards. (See “Judging Obama’s First Year, Issue by Issue.”)

Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, addressing thousands in northwestern Iran on Wednesday, likened Obama to a “cowboy” and called him an inexperienced newcomer who follows the will of Israel. Ahmadinejad said the U.S. president “can’t do a damn thing.”

The Obama administration is suddenly moving on multiple fronts with a goal of limiting the threat of a catastrophic international conflict, although it’s not yet clear how far and how fast the rest of the world is ready to follow.

In releasing the results of an in-depth nuclear strategy review, President Barack Obama said his administration would narrow the circumstances in which the U.S. might launch a nuclear strike, that it would forgo the development of new nuclear warheads and would seek even deeper reductions in American and Russian arsenals.

His defense secretary, Robert Gates, said the focus would now be on terror groups such as al-Qaeda as well as North Korea’s nuclear buildup and Iran’s nuclear ambitions. (See a graphic of the nuclear armed world.)

“For the first time, preventing nuclear proliferation and nuclear terrorism is now at the top of America’s nuclear agenda,” Obama said, distancing his administration from the decades-long U.S. focus on arms competition with Russia and on the threat posed by nuclear missiles on hair-trigger alert.

“The greatest threat to U.S. and global security is no longer a nuclear exchange between nations, but nuclear terrorism by violent extremists and nuclear proliferation to an increasing number of states,” he said, spelling out the core theme of the new strategy.

Obama’s announcement set the stage for his trip to Prague Thursday to sign a new arms reduction agreement with Russia. And it precedes a gathering in Washington next Monday of government leaders from more than 40 countries to discuss improving safeguards against terrorists acquiring nuclear bombs.

In May, the White House will once again help lead the call for disarmament at the United Nations in New York during an international conference on strengthening the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty.

Congressional Democrats hailed Tuesday’s announcement, but some Republicans said it could weaken the nation’s defense.

Rep. Buck McKeon of California, the top Republican on the House Armed Services Committee, said the policy change could carry “clear consequences” for security and he was troubled by “some of the language and perceived signals imbedded” in the policy.

Two leading Senate voices on nuclear strategy, Arizona Republicans John McCain and Jon Kyl, criticized the Obama policy’s restrictions on using nuclear arms to retaliate against a chemical or biological attack.

“The Obama Administration must clarify that we will take no option off the table to deter attacks against the American people and our allies,” the senators said in a joint statement.

From the start of his term in office, Obama has put halting the spread of atomic arms near the top of his defense priorities. But during his first year he failed to achieve a significant breakthrough on arguably the two biggest threats: Iran and North Korea.

Obama’s current push for arms control initiatives is designed to strengthen international support for strengthened nonproliferation efforts.

“Given al-Qaeda’s continued quest for nuclear weapons, Iran’s ongoing nuclear efforts and North Korea’s proliferation, this focus is appropriate and, indeed, an essential change from previous” policy, Gates said.

In presenting the results of the administration’s policy review, Gates said a central aim was to reduce the role of nuclear weapons in U.S. defense strategy.

That will include removing some of the intentional ambiguity about the circumstances under which the U.S. would launch a nuclear strike, Gates told reporters at the Pentagon.

“If a non-nuclear weapons state is in compliance with the Non-Proliferation Treaty and its obligations, the U.S. pledges not to use or threaten to use nuclear weapons against it,” Gates said. If, however, such a state were to use chemical or biological weapons against the U.S. or its allies, “it would face the prospect of a devastating conventional,” or non-nuclear, military response.

That is not a major departure from the policy of past administrations, but it is slightly more forthright about which potential aggressors might fear a nuclear strike, and which might not.

“This is not a breakthrough; it’s a common-sense refinement” of U.S. policy, said Daryl Kimball, president of the Arms Control Association.

Gates said Iran and North Korea in particular should view the new U.S. policy as a strong message about their behavior.

“If you’re not going to play by the rules, if you’re going to be a proliferator, then all options are on the table in terms of how we deal with you,” he said.

The major review of nuclear policy was the first since 2001 and only the third since the end of the Cold War. The version produced in December 2001 came just three months after the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks.

With the threat of terrorism in mind, Gates said the U.S. is not closing the door to the nuclear option.

“Given the catastrophic potential of biological weapons and the rapid pace of biotechnology development, the United States reserves the right to make any adjustment to this policy that may be warranted by the evolution and proliferation of biological weapons,” the defense chief said.

Some private nuclear weapons experts said Obama should have gone further to reduce reliance on U.S. nuclear weapons as a deterrent.

“There’s no real indication of the deep shifts in thinking necessary to begin giving up the nuclear fix,” said Paul Ingram, executive director of the British American Security Information Council.

U.S. allies, however, welcomed the outcome.

“The right signal at the right time,” said Italian Foreign Minister Franco Frattini.

Sharon Squassoni, a nonproliferation expert at the Center for Strategic and International Studies, said the administration’s overall approach to nuclear policy, as spelled out by Obama and Gates, is clearer than those of previous administrations.

The reworked policy, she said, is a “significant but not radical departure.”

Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton, appearing at the Pentagon news conference with Gates, said Obama has instructed his national security team to pursue another round of arms reduction talks with Russia, to follow up on the recently concluded replacement for the 1991 Strategic Arms Reduction Treaty, or START agreement.

The aim would be to conduct wider talks to include for the first time short-range U.S. and Russian nuclear weapons as well as weapons held in reserve or in storage.

Obama’s Incremental Surrender

April 7, 2010

Obama’s Incremental Surrender.

By Alan Caruba Wednesday, April 7, 2010

Since taking office on January 20, 2009, President Obama has engaged in one form of incremental surrender and betrayal after another, letting our allies know the United States is not to be trusted to protect them and our enemies know they need only wait for our troops to depart.

//

The latest tiny surrender was Obama’s pledge that the United States will not use nuclear weapons against none-nuclear countries no matter what weapons they choose to use against us. In plain terms, our nuclear weapons may well be the only thing restraining the bad intentions of any number of despots worldwide.

It should be noted that Obama’s new policy leaves our strategic nuclear weapons in place, but limits further development and testing. As The Washington Times noted, “American is taking a pledge to pursue nuclear obsolescence.”

Obama’s policy ignores the fact that our current enemies are not states, but stateless terrorist Islamist organizations with state sponsors. They have made it clear that they would love to get their hands on a small nuclear weapon or on biological/chemical weapons with which to inflict death on the scale of 9/11 or larger.

This kind of empty and stupid posturing may make Obama feel like a great global leader, but in practical terms it does nothing to assure our allies that he has the stomach to retaliate against their enemies and ours.

There’s a reason there has not been a World War Three. It begins with the U.S. arsenal of nuclear weapons. It kept the Soviets mindful of their own destruction until their system collapsed under the failure of communism.

To fail to understand that America has been the global policeman since the end of World War Two is to ignore the benefit this has brought to the world despite the difficulties encountered in Vietnam in the 1970s and Iraq in this decade.

The U.S. armed forces, its Army, Marine Corps, Air Force, Navy and Coast Guard, represent more than three million personnel on active duty, the vast bulk of whom are stationed within the U.S. with others in Hawaii, Alaska, Guam, and Puerto Rico. The rest are at sea protecting the vital lanes of commercial traffic around the world and showing the power of the U.S. to those who might think about challenging it.

Deployments include, of course, those in Iraq and in Afghanistan, but the U.S. also has more than 56,000 in Germany, 33,000 in Japan, and around 30,000 in South Korea. There are fairly sizeable units in England and Italy. There are units through East Asia, North Africa, the Near East and South Asia, as well as sub-Saharan Africa.

When Obama made his speech regarding the decision to increase our presence in Afghanistan he used West Point cadets as the photo backdrop. He used the return of a casualty of war as a photo opportunity showing him saluting military-style.

It is all symbolism without substance and it is obscene.

This president gives every indication of having no real heart for combat. He has demonstrated a knack for picking the wrong side in a fight whether it’s a Fidel Castro- wannabe legally exiled from Honduras or the decision to withdraw a nuclear umbrella from former Soviet satellite nations in Eastern Europe.

He is utterly clueless regarding the lessons previous U.S. presidents have discovered. The Middle East only responds to power and force.

Diplomacy produces nothing but stalemate in the Middle East and that is often the best outcome one can accept.

A case in point is our traditional and most reliable Middle East ally, Israel, whose prime minister was recently treated in an extraordinarily shabby fashion by Obama as if to deliberately signal the Palestinians, the Iranians, the Syrians and others whose “side” he’s on.

Since 1947 no amount of negotiations and diplomacy have moved Israel’s Palestinian and Syrian enemies any closer to peace though, after having been thoroughly defeated in war, both Egypt and Jordan did accept peace terms.

Apparently, only after Iran nukes Tel Aviv will the new Obama doctrine be debated for several weeks concerning an appropriate level of retaliation. This is a president who, even though a bi-partisan Congress has passed tough sanctions against Iran, hasn’t found time to sign off on them.

It you want World War Three, you need only wait for Obama to force Israel’s hand to attack Iran’s nuclear facilities for lack of any other option. They have previously done this in both Iraq and Syria.

Obama has proven to be a disaster for the nation on so many levels and in so many ways that observers can only watch and wonder what this demented socialist flower child and his cronies will do next.