Iran: Tel Aviv to be targeted if Islamic Republic attacke
iran: Tel Aviv to be targeted if Islamic Republic attacked.

An aide to Iranian Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei has said that the Islamic republic will strike Tel Aviv with its missiles if it comes under attack, Fars news agency reported last Tuesday.
“If the enemy takes its chance and fires a missile towards Iran, the dust from an Iranian missile strike will rise in the heart of Tel Aviv even before the dust from the enemy attack settles” in Iran, said cleric Mojtaba Zolnoor, who is Khamenei’s representative in the elite Revolutionary Guards.
Fars reported that Zolnoor made the comments at a mosque on Monday, where he also said Iran’s foes were aware that Teheran “has become a ballistic power”.
Iran has regularly boasted of its missile capability, saying it has an arsenal which can strike its regional arch-foe Israel.
Israel and the US meanwhile have never ruled out a military strike against Iran to stop its galloping nuclear program.
Iran has reiterated that any new sanctions against Teheran by world powers will not halt the pursuit by the country’s of its nuclear program.
“Sanctions won’t have any impact on our activities”, said Foreign Ministry spokesman Ramin Mehmanparast at his weekly press conference when asked about the potential impact of possible new sanctions on Teheran.
“We do not find them a deterrent. The more the sanctions, the more determined we will be to pursue our rights”, he said in Persian, which was translated by the state-owned English language Press Television channel.
Iran has steadfastly maintained that it has the right to pursue nuclear technology as it has agreed to the Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT).
Washington is ratcheting up pressure to impose new sanctions against Teheran for aggressively pursuing nuclear technology, which they suspect is aimed at making an atom bomb.
Iran denies these allegations, saying its program is purely for generating electricity.
Can the CIA sabotage Iran’s nuclear project?
The reported defection of an Iranian scientist to the United States has renewed speculation about a CIA plot to sabotage Iran’s nuclear program through covert action.
But it remains unclear whether Shahram Amiri, the young physics researcher who reportedly joined forces with the US spy agency, represents an intelligence coup for Washington or a minor setback for Teheran, former CIA officers explained.
ABC Television in New York reported that Amiri, who went missing without explanation in Saudi Arabia last year, had defected and resettled in the United States in cooperation with the Central Intelligence Agency.
Amiri, in his thirties, worked at Teheran’s Malek-Ashtar University of Technology, part of a network of research centers with close ties to Iran’s powerful Revolutionary Guards and the country’s weapon industry.
The scientist did not appear to play a senior role in the country’s nuclear project, and his knowledge may have been confined to a single aspect of the program.
“It’s really impossible to say how much of a window this kind of a defector could provide without knowing how much he was reading into aspects of the entire program, as opposed to chipping away at one part of the program”, said CIA veteran Paul Pillar.
“One ought to be very cautious about how much a difference any one individual might make”, said Pillar, now at Georgetown University.
Some media reports suggested the scientist may have helped inform the Americans about a secret enrichment site near Qom, which caused international outrage when it was revealed in September.
Amiri’s disappearance appeared to confirm reports in recent years that US intelligence agencies have tried to lure away key civilian and military figures to undercut Iran’s nuclear drive in an operation dubbed “Brain Drain”.
The fate of a former Iranian deputy defense minister who disappeared in Istanbul in 2007, General Ali Reza Asgari, remains unresolved, amid speculation he defected as well and offered his knowledge of the Revolutionary Guard Corps.
The suspected defections offer a glimpse into a secret struggle between Western intelligence agencies and Iran, with the United States and its allies working to delay Teheran’s nuclear project by clandestine means even as they seek international support for tougher sanctions.
“The one thing that we have done, and this has come out in the open press… is to feed faulty components into the supply chain for Iran’s nuclear weapons program,” said Clare Lopez, who worked for the CIA during and after the Cold War.
Working through a family of Swiss engineers, the CIA reportedly managed to provide Libya and Iran with flawed parts for several years, according to The New York Times and other media.
In 2006, a sabotaged power supply failed at the uranium enrichment plant in Natanz, reportedly causing 50 centrifuges to explode and setting back Teheran’s nuclear fuel work.
Former intelligence officers said defections are a delicate, risky business, and it remained uncertain whether Amiri had cooperated with the Americans over a long time.
“By and large defections like this are what you call walk-ins, that is they come to you”, said Bruce Riedel, a retired CIA officer and fellow at the Brookings Institution research group in Washington.
“Typically, a response for a walk-in is, ‘Hey wait, we’d rather you stay in place and provide an ongoing stream of intelligence’”.
Iran remains a difficult target for American spies, as Washington has not had an embassy in Teheran for 30 years, cutting off opportunities to develop intelligence sources and contacts.
Moreover, Iran has honed an effective counterintelligence service with “a good track record” of exposing foreign espionage, Riedel said.
Amiri could be a gold mine, offering a trove of information about the nuclear program, which US and European governments insist is a cover for a clandestine nuclear weapons project.
“The other alternative is we’re so desperate to gain information on the Iranian nuclear program that we’ll take anything we can get”, Riedel said.
“I wouldn’t be surprised if that was the case”.
July 17, 2010 at 5:59 AM
We should be very quietly putting, as many Short Range Nuclear Tipped Munitions and Anti-Nuclear Missile Batteries into the surrounding areas of Iran as well Hidden well into the Iranian Borders too. Even a V.I.N.W.= Vehicle Improvised Nuclear Weapon to be transported into the Country right under the Ayatollahs Nose. Especially when they are getting ready to do more than rattle sabers. Just sneak in the warhead and let the Iranian C.I.A. Operators do their Job. Make them small enough to take out Nuclear and Electronic weapons systems, as well as Communications and they would be paralyzed immediately. Send them a Calling card as the Air Forces, would penetrate them with enough Conventional Weapons, to Finish the Job. This would save many lives too. Especially the Iranian Public. As well as Our Fighting Forces.