Archive for May 2010

Israel fears energy targets will be hit – UPI.com

May 7, 2010

Israel fears energy targets will be hit – UPI.com.

TEL AVIV, Israel, May 6 (UPI) — Israel’s mounting alarm at Hezbollah’s reported acquisition of increasing numbers of long-range missiles stems in part from concern for the security of the country’s emerging infrastructure.

Jane’s Intelligence Review reported the Israelis are concerned that their drive to develop an energy infrastructure built around the natural gas fields recently discovered in the Mediterranean off the northern port of Haifa would be put at risk by Hezbollah’s swelling arsenal.

The magazine, published in Britain, said the “relatively unsophisticated nature of Hezbollah’s arsenal means that the militants’ ability to successfully target individual critical energy sites in and around Haifa would be limited.

“However, the risk remains that the use of a combination of mass indirect fire and more sophisticated guided systems would place such infrastructure at risk.”

During the 34-day war between Hezbollah and Israel in the summer of 2006, the Iranian-backed Shiite movement pounded northern Israel with nearly 4,000 rockets, the overwhelming majority of which were relatively short-range, unguided weapons.

Several hit Haifa, which is also a major naval base, and caused some industrial damage.

Otherwise they did relatively little critical damage beyond the profound psychological impact the unprecedented bombardment — and the Israeli forces’ failure to stop it — had on Israel’s civilian population.

But now, the Israeli military claims Hezbollah has an arsenal of around 45,000 rockets and missiles, some of them with the range to hit pretty much anywhere in the Jewish state all the way to the southern Negev Desert.

Israel claims that Syria, Iran’s Arab ally, provided Hezbollah with an unspecified number of road-mobile M600 short-range ballistic missiles in 2009. The M600 is a Syrian-engineered version of Iran’s Fateh surface-to-surface missile. It has a range of at least 160 miles and carries a 1,100-pound warhead.

Most importantly, it also has an inertial guidance system that means it impacts within 500 yards of its target and blowing up gas installations can trigger immense fireballs that can cause widespread destruction.

In April, the Israelis claimed Syria had also supplied Hezbollah with an unspecified number of Soviet-designed Scud ballistic missiles which have a range of up to 430 miles.

But there has been no evidence of this and even the Americans are skeptical that Hezbollah would resort to using these cumbersome systems that take up to 45 minutes to prepare for launch and are far more detectable than the more nimble M600s.

Israel has to import almost all its energy requirements, so developing a domestic energy infrastructure has a strategic dimension.

The gas strike of up to 200 billion cubic meters of gas at the Tamar and Dalat fields makes Haifa even more of an import target for Israel’s enemies. The Israelis plan to build a liquefied gas plant there with an annual capacity of 4 billion cubic meters.

Jane’s said that it is likely that the plant will be located offshore, mostly probably in Haifa Bay.

“It may be 2015 before the plant comes online, making its significance and the threat it faces a long-term one,” the report said.

The M600s would be able to reach as far south as the port of Ashdod, which also has an oil refinery, if they were fired just south of Beirut.

That would make them more vulnerable to Israeli attack. But even M600s fired from further north in the Bekaa Valley, Hezbollah’s heartland, could hit Tel Aviv and Israel’s industrial center.

If a missile bombardment of Haifa and its environs was successful “the impact for Israel could be significant,” Jane’s reported.

“The new plant is designed to receive liquefied natural gas from a variety of international sources to diversify the country’s energy supplies.

“At full operating capacity, the 4 billion cubic meters of natural gas this would be able to receive would more than cover Israel’s current domestic consumption.”

That is estimated to be around 2.5 billion cubic meters a year.

“Although the liquefied natural gas plant is designed to supplement other sources of Israeli gas … the loss of the plant for a prolonged period of time would mark a major blow to Israel’s efforts to diversify its energy supplies.” Jane’s concluded.

“It would also place greater importance on existing gas supplies, the supply infrastructure for which could also come under threat, certainly around Haifa and potentially further afield.”

Wash. Post – Has Brazil’s Lula become Iran’s useful idiot?

May 7, 2010

PostPartisan – Has Brazil’s Lula become Iran’s useful idiot?.

Has Brazilian President Luiz Ignacio “Lula” da Silva become Iran’s useful idiot?

Mahmoud Ahmadinejad clearly thinks so. On Wednesday his website posted a statement saying he had accepted “in principle” a supposed Brazilian proposal to defuse Iran’s standoff with the U.N. Security Council — and prevent the adoption of new sanctions pressed by the United States, Britain and France.

The Brazilian foreign ministry hastily denied that there was a concrete proposal. But that’s irrelevant: Lula, who is planning a trip to Tehran next week, is obviously seeking to position himself as the mediator who can broker a deal between Iran and the West.

His gesture would be as irrelevant as his recent attempt to settle the Israeli-Palestinian conflict — except for the fact that Brazil currently holds one of the rotating seats on the Security Council. Like Turkey, another temporary member, Brazil is stoutly resisting the new sanctions initiative, which is one reason why the measure was not adopted last month, as the Obama administration had hoped.

In other words, Lula is providing Iran with valuable time to delay sanctions, even as it presses ahead with enrichment and prepares a new generation of centrifuges to do it more efficiently.

The Brazilian “proposal” seems to amount to another version of the deal Iran has already rejected repeatedly: an exchange of most of the nuclear material it has already enriched for fuel rods it could use to resupply a medical research reactor. Tehran initially appeared to accept a Western offer along these lines last fall, then retreated. Since then it has played at discussing various variations on the deal — most of which would neuter the point of the transaction from the West’s point of view, which was to remove nuclear material from Iran.

Ahmadinejad’s obvious intention is to discuss this proposal with Lula as long as possible — without, of course, ever agreeing. “The proposal has many details,” Ahmadinejad’s chief of cabinet said on Wednesday.

Turkey has already been playing this same game with Iran for months, with no results. So why would Lula jump in? For the same reason as Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan: to prove that his country is an emerging world power that is capable of acting independently — and defying the United States. It doesn’t matter to Lula that his diplomacy has no chance of succeeding. What matters are the wire service stories describing Brazil as “an emerging world player” and Lula himself as one of the globe’s most influential leaders.

The price for this vanity diplomacy is the continued delay of sanctions that could be the last chance of stopping Iran’s drive for a nuclear weapon peacefully. The United States looks impotent; Ahmadinejad and his Revolutionary Guard cronies are confirmed in the belief that they have nothing to fear from the West. President Obama’s attempt to restore multilateralism to the center of U.S. diplomacy falls flat.

But will there be any consequences for Lula? The Brazilian president probably doesn’t mind much whether or not Iran acquires nuclear weapons — after all, he is in his last year in office, and Iran poses no threat to Brazil. Nor does the Obama administration appear inclined to punish the Brazilian leader, whom Obama recently called “my man.” The State Department said this week that the administration is “increasingly skeptical” that Iran was going to change course, and that “there may still be a difference of opinion” with Brazil “as to where we are in this process.”

Nevertheless, “we do recognize the value and importance of a variety of countries engaging Iran,” spokesman Philip Crowley said.

In other words: Lula, go ahead and grandstand.

FOXNews.com – Iran’s President Is Defiant and Our Diplomacy Looks Foolish

May 7, 2010

FOXNews.com – Iran’s President Is Defiant and Our Diplomacy Looks Foolish.

Washington’s delayed, watered down, and ineffective sanctions program and President Obama’s “soft diplomacy,” is simply emboldening Iran.

Since they took over 30 years ago….when the regime acquired rocks, they stoned our women; when they acquired rope they hung our men; when they acquired guns they used them on our streets; when they acquired technology they spied on our children. Does anyone doubt what this illegitimate regime would do if it acquired nuclear weapons?”

Those are the words of Roozbeh Farahanipour, a former law student in Tehran, who graduated with honors from Iranian prisons where he was tortured for his student activism. They were delivered on Monday at press conference at the Simon Wiesenthal Center following President Ahmadenijad’s speech at the opening of the U.N. Nuclear Non-Proliferation Conference. Now based in Los Angeles, democracy advocate Farahanipour is pleading with President Obama to finally deploy sanctions that still might prevent the Mullahs from going nuclear.

Meanwhile in New York, Iran’s Mahmoud Ahmadinejad proved once again that no one does “chutzpah” better than he, and nowhere does he do it better than at the United Nations.

Last year, serial human rights abuser, Mahmoud “Wipe Israel from the Map” Ahmadinejad keynoted the U.N. Human Rights Council’s Durban II Conference in Geneva. At another appearance at the General Assembly in New York, he flirted with Holocaust denial and boasted about Tehran’s 9,000 nuclear centrifuges making fissionable material in contravention of International Atomic Energy Commission (IAEC) rules and U.N. Security Council resolutions.
Now, basking the spotlight as the only head of state to attend the opening session of the U.N.’s Nuclear Nonproliferation Conference, the irrepressible Iranian president castigates the “Zionist regime” for engaging in “acts of terror” and claims that the U.S. and Israel have created “major terrorist networks” that threaten the world with nuclear blackmail.

Indeed, even before the conference’s opening gavel, came word of a significant victory for Iran. Egypt, Tehran’s historic Mideast archrival, a country which fears a nuclear Iran, telegraphed that it would seek to spin the nuclear forum’s focus onto Israel. Ambassador Maged Abdel Aziz told reporters last week that “Success in dealing with Iran will depend to a large extent on how successfully we deal with the establishment of a nuclear-free zone.” Egypt’s working paper will urge NPT members to “renew their resolve to undertake, individually and collectively, all necessary measures aimed at…the accession by Israel to the Treaty as soon as possible as a non-nuclear weapon state.”

Worse still, there are hints that the U.S. may follow up on Assistant Secretary of State Rose Gottemoeller’s demand last year that Israel go public about its defensive nuclear arsenal and sign the Non-Proliferation Treaty. This would break forty years of U.S. policy not to paint Israel as the Mideast’s atomic bad guy at the very moment Tehran is planning its nuclear breakout.
Behind their public anti-Israel bluster, Arab leaders privately tell us they’re not losing sleep over the Jewish state but because of the real-time nuclear threat unfolding next door in Iran. It’s a threat that they fear America lacks the resolve to stop. In his new book, “The Strong Horse: Power, Politics, and the Clash of Arab Civilizations,” author Lee Roberts argues that the key to understanding the Mideast mindset is captured by this statement from Usama Bin Laden: “When people see a strong horse and a weak horse, by nature, they will like the strong horse.” As we witness North Korea’s and Iran’s defiance of the U.S. — as well as the Obama’s administration’s hint that it may join demands that Israel unilaterally surrender its nuclear deterrent — Egyptians, Saudis, Kuwaitis and other regional players may use anti-Israel rhetoric to hide their real purpose of distancing themselves from a weakened “American horse” and prepare to develop their own nuclear arsenals.

While Mideast proliferation is surely not the purpose of Obama’s new “soft diplomacy,” Washington’s delayed, watered down, and ineffective sanctions program, coupled with diplomatic signals designed more to put pressure on Israel than Iran, serve only to embolden, not rein in, Tehran.

Israel’s commitment not to threaten the region with nuclear attack or to engage in blackmail has been unwavering for over last forty years. In the 1960s, Egypt’s Gamel Abdel Nasser pledged to secure “atomic weapons at any costs” and threatened to “drive Israel into the sea.” The 1967 Arab-Israeli War was the result. Rather than wait around to see if Nasser was serious about getting atomic weapons, Israel developed its own deterrent nuclear capacity, pledging never to be the first to introduce nukes in the region. It held fast to its “no first use” policy, even in 1973 when a combined Egyptian-Syrian surprise attack on Yom Kippur threatened its very survival.
Israel’s president, Shimon Peres, the “father” of Israel’s secret nuclear efforts told President Kennedy in 1963 that “Israel would not be the first to introduce nuclear weapons to the Middle East.” Long before the election of Barack Obama, Peres personally told Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak that Israel would be willing to sign the Nuclear Nonproliferation Treaty within two years after the establishment of “regional peace.” Peres believes that it was Israel’s unstated but obvious nuclear capabilities that helped set the stage for the Jewish state’s historic peace with Egypt.

President Obama claims to be a “realist” about the Mideast, but his ambiguous policy about Israel and regional deterrence is anything but that. In pursuit of a “new day”, he should stop wasting precious political time and capital debasing the deterrence of democratic Israel. Instead, to stop the volatile region from becoming an armed nuclear camp, President Obama must demonstrate to nervous Arab leaders and the rest of the world that Washington is still “the strong horse” with the will to thwart any form of nuclear blackmail from the tyrants in Tehran.

Abraham Cooper is Associate Dean and Harold Brackman is Senior Researcher at the Simon Wiesenthal Center.

Israel official defends nuclear ambiguity as ‘strategic advantage’

May 6, 2010

Israel official defends nuclear ambiguity as ‘strategic advantage’ – Haaretz Daily Newspaper | Israel News.

    UN nuclear chief has asked international community to help with resolution demanding Israel accede to NPT.

    Dimona nuclear reactor An aerial view of Israel’s nuclear reactor in Dimona.
    Photo by: (Archive)

    An Israeli official on Thursday defended the country’s “opaque” policy regarding its nuclear program a “strategic advantage”, responding to mounting international pressure calling for it to join the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty.

    The official noted that the treaty obligating nations to stop the spread of nuclear weapons was unable to stop countries like Saddam Hussein’s Iraq and Iran from pursuing nuclear weapons programs.

    Israel has said it would not sign the NPT until a comprehensive Arab-Israel peace deal is in place. But U.S. Undersecretary of State Ellen Tauscher said that the U.S. has been working for months with Egypt on the issue.

    Another Western diplomatic source, speaking on condition of anonymity about other nations’ contacts, said the Americans also have been in discussion with Israel. Israel refused to comment on these remarks.

    Efforts to make the Middle East a nuclear-free zone have received new attention at the recent United Nations conference in New York, where the 189 signatories to the NPT are reviewing the treaty.

    The head of the United Nations atomic watchdog has asked for international input on how to persuade Israel to join the NPT, in a move that is sure to add to pressure on Israel to disclose its unacknowledged nuclear arsenal.

    In a letter made available Wednesday, Yukiya Amano asked foreign ministers of the International Atomic Energy Agency’s 151 member states to share views on how to implement a resolution demanding that Israel accede to the NPT and throw its nuclear facilities open to IAEA oversight.

    Islamic nations used the second day of the nonproliferation meeting Tuesday to call for a nuclear-free Middle East, while criticizing Israel for not divulging its nuclear capabilities and refusing to sign the nonproliferation treaty.

    A string of Israeli officials, including a spokesman for Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, the minister of atomic energy, the deputy minister of foreign affairs, the minister of strategic threats and the minister of communication, all refused to comment on the recent developments.
    Egypt has proposed that this 2010 Nonproliferation Treaty conference back a plan calling for the start of negotiations next year on a Mideast free of nuclear arms. The proposal may become a major debating point in the month-long session.
    The U.S. has cautiously supported the idea while saying that implementing it must wait for progress in the Middle East peace process. Israel also says a comprehensive Middle East peace settlement must come first.
    Amano’s April 7 letter comes seven months after IAEA member states at their annual conference narrowly passed a resolution directly criticizing Israel and its atomic program, with 49 of the 110 nations present backing the document, 45 against and 16 abstaining.
    The result was a setback not only for Israel but also for Washington and other backers of the Jewish state, which had lobbied for 18 years of past practice – debate on the issue without a vote. It also reflected building tensions between Israel and its backers and Islamic nations, supported by developing countries.
    The resolution expresses concern about the Israeli nuclear capabilities, and links it to concern about the threat posed by the proliferation of nuclear weapons for the security and stability of the Middle East.
    The U.S. and its allies consider Iran the region’s greatest proliferation threat, fearing that Tehran is trying to achieve the capacity to make nuclear weapons despite its assertion that it is only building a civilian program to generate power.
    But Islamic nations insist that Israel is the true danger in the Middle East, saying they fear its nuclear weapons capacity. Israel has never said it has such arms, but is universally believed to possess them.
    The Muslim countries enjoy support from developing nations. These are critical of the U.S. and other nuclear weapons nations for refusing to disarm, and suspects that developed nations are trying to corner the market on peaceful nuclear technology to their disadvantage – themes likely to surface not only at the now ongoing Nonproliferation Treaty conference, but at the next IAEA general conference in September.
    With divisions deep on Israel, Amano’s letter asking IAEA member states for input on the issue foreshadowed intense feuding at that September conference.
    “It would be helpful to me if Your Excellency could inform me of any views that your government might have with respect to meeting the objectives of the resolution,” according to his half-page letter.

    A senior diplomat from one of the IAEA member countries confirmed that his government had received the letter. He and an official from another IAEA delegation said that to their knowledge the agency was still awaiting responses. Both asked for anonymity because their information was confidential.

    Biden: Iran could provoke ‘nuclear arms race in Middle East’

    May 6, 2010

    Biden: Iran could provoke ‘nuclear arms race in Middle East’ – Haaretz Daily Newspaper | Israel News.

    U.S. Vice President: Iran has scorned our collective good faith efforts and continues to take actions threatening regional stability.

    Iran’s unwillingness to negotiate with the international community could give rise to a “nuclear arms race in the Middle East,” the United States Vice President Joe Biden said on Thursday.

    Tehran’s hard-line Islamic regime has so far shunned all offers to subject its nuclear program to international scrutiny, leading many to question whether it is really intended only for peaceful purposes, as Iran’s leaders profess.

    “Iran’s nuclear program violates its obligations under the Non Proliferation Treaty (NPT) and risks sparking a nuclear arms race in the Middle East,” Biden warned during a keynote speech at the European Parliament in Brussels.

    Israel, which is widely thought to have already developed its own nuclear weapons, has repeatedly hinted that it would be ready to strike first to prevent Iran from acquiring a nuclear bomb.

    Biden said he and U.S. President Barack Obama had “embarked on an unprecedented path of engagement with Iranian leaders,” but added that they “scorned our collective good faith efforts and continue to take actions which threaten regional stability.”

    The US vice president said it would be “ironic” if, while the fall of the Iron Curtain had diminished the threat of “mutually assured destruction among the superpowers … a new arms race would emerge in some of the most unstable parts of the world.”

    “Our children and grandchildren would not forgive us for allowing it to pass,” he stressed.

    The United Nation’s Security Council has been talking for months about increased sanctions against Iran as a result of its defiance on the nuclear issue.

    Biden said the country’s rulers face “a stark choice: abide by international rules and rejoin the community of responsible nations, which we hope for, or face further consequences and increasing isolation.”

    He also said the U.S. was “committed to the security of [its] allies,” including through the controversial missile defense system planned in Eastern Europe, and would work within NATO “to prepare for a range of future security threats.”

    Obama reaffirms US support for Israel’s nuclear ambiguity

    May 6, 2010

    DEBKAfile, Political Analysis, Espionage, Terrorism, Security.

    Israel’s nuclear center at Dimona

    US president Barack Obama reaffirmed his administration’s commitment to supporting Israel’s policy of
    nuclear ambiguity, whereby its possession of nuclear weapons is neither confirmed nor denied. debkafile‘s Washington sources report that President Obama repeated this pledge in a 20-minute telephone call to Israeli Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu Monday, May 3, almost a year after he gave it the first time during Netanyahu’s visit to the White House on May 18, 2009.

    High-ranking American sources told debkafile that Obama needed to reassure Israel his commitment on this score was solid and unchanged for four reasons:
    1.  Because of administration steps on the Middle East taken this week prior to and during the UN conference on the Non-Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons. Wednesday, May 5, the five Security Council permanent members vowed to work together towards a nuclear-free Middle East. Two days earlier, US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton told the conference that the United States “is prepared to support practical measures towards the objective of a Middle East free of weapons of mass destruction.”
    2.  There was talk in the corridors of the conference, some published by Egyptian sources, that the US and Egypt were formulating a joint Middle East nuclear policy for bringing about the dismantling of Israel’s nuclear stockpiles.
    3.  It became clear to the White House that if Netanyahu got the notion that President Obama was retreating from his nuclear commitment to Israel, he could forget about progress in the Middle East proximity talks which his special envoy George Mitchell is working hard to jump-start this week.
    4.  And if that commitment were to be withdrawn, the entire Middle East would conclude that the Obama administration had also retreated from its “unshakable” pledge to support Israel’s security.

    A few hours after the Obama-Netanyahu conversation, former US ambassador to the UN, John Bolton said Tuesday that American-Egyptian cooperation on the Middle East nuclear issue was aimed squarely at Israel. His exact words were:  “There is only one country that resolution is targeted at and that is Israel.”

    Therefore, the Israeli prime minister had needed to hear from the president in person that his year-old pledge was still valid and that the joint American-Egyptian effort for nuclear-free Middle East had a single target, Iran and its nuclear program.

    According to debkafile‘s sources, that effort is led by Gary Seymour, WMD coordinator at the National Security Council, and Nabil Fahmy, for many years the Egyptian Ambassador to the United States. He is currently the dean of public administration at the American University in Cairo and head of the Center for Studies on Nonproliferation in the Middle East.

    Our Middle East sources confirmed that Fahmy is the live wire of Egyptian policy in these areas.

    Obama further promised Netanyahu that any US deal with Egypt or any other country on the nuclear issue would stipulate that Israel would not be called on to alter its nuclear stance until such time as a comprehensive Middle East peace is attained between Israel and its neighbors and all countries of the region dispose of their conventional and WMD arsenals.
    Our sources in Jerusalem say that, even though Prime Minister Netanyahu welcomed President Obama’s assurances and thanked him, there is still great unease in Israel’s ruling circles over the very fact that the administration is actually discussing Israel’s nuclear issues with Egypt.

    Uncomfortable Truths and the Times Square Attack

    May 6, 2010

    Uncomfortable Truths and the Times Square Attack | STRATFOR.


    Counterterrorism:  Shifting from 'Who' to 'How'

    By Ben West and Scott Stewart

    Faisal Shahzad, the first suspect arrested for involvement in the failed May 1 Times Square bombing attempt, was detained just before midnight on May 3 as he was attempting to depart on a flight from Kennedy International Airport in New York. Authorities removed Shahzad, a naturalized U.S. citizen of Pakistani descent, from an Emirates Airlines flight destined for Dubai. On May 4, Shahzad appeared at the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of New York in Manhattan for his arraignment.

    Authorities say that Shahzad is cooperating and that he insists he acted alone. However, this is contradicted by reports that the attack could have international links. On Feb. 3, Shahzad returned from a trip to Pakistan, where, according to the criminal complaint, he said he received militant training in Waziristan, a key hub of the main Pakistani Taliban rebel coalition, the Tehrik-i-Taliban Pakistan (TTP). Authorities are reportedly seeking three other individuals in the United States in connection with the May 1 Times Square bombing attempt.

    Investigative efforts at this point are focusing on identifying others possibly connected to the plot and determining whether they directed Shahzad in the bombing attempt or merely enabled him. From all indications, authorities are quickly collecting information on additional suspects from their homes and telephone-call records, and this is leading to more investigations and more suspects. While the May 1 attempt was unsuccessful, it came much closer to killing civilians in New York than other recent attempts, such as the Najibullah Zazi case in September 2009 and the Newburgh plot in May 2009. Understanding how Shahzad and his possible associates almost pulled it off is key to preventing future threats.

    Shahzad’s Mistakes


    While the device left in the Nissan Pathfinder parked on 45th Street, just off Times Square, ultimately failed to cause any damage, the materials present could have caused a substantial explosion had they been prepared and assembled properly. The bomb’s components were common, everyday products that would not raise undue suspicion when purchased — especially if they were bought separately. They included the following:

    • Some 113 kilograms (250 pounds) of urea-based fertilizer. A diagram released by the U.S. Department of Justice indicates that the fertilizer was found in a metal gun locker in the back of the Pathfinder. The mere presence of urea-based fertilizer does not necessarily indicate that the materials in the gun locker composed a viable improvised explosive mixture, but urea-based fertilizer can be mixed with nitric acid to create urea nitrate, the main explosive charge used in the 1993 World Trade Center bombing. (It is not known if the fertilizer in the Pathfinder had been used to create urea nitrate.) Urea nitrate is a popular improvised mixture that can be detonated by a blasting cap and does not require a high-explosive booster charge like ammonium nitrate does; 250 pounds of urea nitrate would be enough to destroy the Pathfinder completely and create a substantial blast effect. If detonated near a large crowd of people, such an explosion could produce serious carnage.
    • Two 19-liter (5-gallon) containers of gasoline. If ignited, this fuel would have added an impressive fireball to the explosion but, in practical terms, would not have added much to the explosive effect of the device. Most of the damage would have been done by the urea nitrate. Reports indicate that consumer-grade fireworks (M-88 firecrackers) had been placed between the two containers of gasoline and were detonated, but they do not appear to have ruptured the containers and did not ignite the gasoline inside them. It appears that the firecrackers were intended to be the initiator for the device and were apparently the source of a small fire in the carpet upholstery of the Pathfinder. This created smoke that alerted a street vendor that something was wrong. The firecrackers likely would not have had sufficient detonation velocity to initiate urea nitrate.
    • Three 75-liter (20-gallon) propane tanks. Police have reported that the tank valves were left unopened, which has led others to conclude that this was yet another mistake on the part of Shahzad. Certainly, opening the tanks’ valves, filling the vehicle with propane gas and then igniting a spark would have been one way to cause a large explosion. Another way would have been to use explosives (such as the adjacent fertilizer mixture or gasoline) to rupture the tanks, which would have created a large amount of force and fire since the propane inside the tanks was under considerable pressure. Shahzad may have actually been attempting to blast open the propane tanks, which would explain why the valves were closed. Propane tanks are commonly used in improvised explosive devices (IEDs) in many parts of the world. Even without detonating, the propane tanks would have become very large and dangerous projectiles if the fertilizer had detonated.

    That none of these three forms of explosive and incendiary materials detonated indicates that the bombmaker was likely a novice and had problems with the design of his firing chain. While a detailed schematic of the firing chain has not been released, the bombmaker did not seem to have a sophisticated understanding of explosive materials and the techniques required to properly detonate them. This person may have had some rudimentary training in explosives but was clearly not a trained bombmaker. It is one thing to attend a class at a militant camp where you are taught how to use military explosives and quite another to create a viable IED from scratch in hostile territory.

    However, the fact that Shahzad was apparently able to collect all of the materials, construct an IED (even a poorly designed one) and maneuver it to the intended target without being detected exhibits considerable progress along the attack cycle. Had the bombmaker properly constructed a viable device with these components and if the materials had detonated, the explosion and resulting fire likely would have caused a significant number of casualties given the high density and proximity of people in the area.

    It appears that Shahzad made a classic “Kramer jihadist” mistake: trying to make his attack overly spectacular and dramatic. This mistake was criticized by al Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula (AQAP) leader Nasir al-Wahayshi last year when he called for grassroots operatives to conduct simple attacks instead of complex ones that are more prone to failure. In the end, Shahzad (who was probably making his first attempt to build an IED by himself) tried to pull off an attack so elaborate that it failed to do any damage at all.

    As STRATFOR has discussed for many years now, the devolution of the jihadist threat from one based primarily on al Qaeda the group to one emanating from a wider jihadist movement means that we will see jihadist attacks being carried out more frequently by grassroots or lone wolf actors. These actors will possess a lesser degree of terrorist tradecraft than the professional terrorists associated with the core al Qaeda group, or even regional jihadist franchises like the TTP. This lack of tradecraft means that these operatives are more likely to make mistakes and attempt attacks against relatively soft targets, both characteristics seen in the failed May 1 attack.

    Jihadist Attack Models

    Under heavy pressure since the 9/11 attacks, jihadist planners wanting to strike the U.S. mainland face many challenges. For one thing, it is difficult for them to find operatives capable of traveling to and from the United States. This means that, in many cases, instead of using the best and brightest operatives that jihadist groups have, they are forced to send whoever can get into the country. In September 2009, U.S. authorities arrested Najibullah Zazi, a U.S. citizen who received training at an al Qaeda camp in Pakistan in 2008 before returning to the United States to begin an operation that would involve detonating explosive devices on New York City subways.

    Zazi’s journey likely raised red flags with authorities, who subsequently learned through communication intercepts of his intent to construct explosive devices. Zazi had no explosives training or experience other than what he had picked during his brief stint at the training camp in Pakistan, and he attempted to construct the devices only with the notes he had taken during the training. Zazi had difficulty producing viable acetone peroxide explosives, similar to what appears to have happened with Shahzad in his Times Square attempt. Zazi also showed poor tradecraft by purchasing large amounts of hydrogen peroxide and acetone in an attempt to make triacetone triperoxide, a very difficult explosive material to use because of its volatility. His unusual shopping habits raised suspicion and, along with other incriminating evidence, eventually led to his arrest before he could initiate his planned attack.

    Other plots in recent years such as the Newburgh case as well as plots in Dallas and Springfield, Ill., all three in 2009, failed because the suspects behind the attacks reached out to others to acquire explosive material instead of making it themselves. (In the latter two cases, Hosam Smadi in Dallas and Michael Finton in Springfield unwittingly worked with FBI agents to obtain fake explosive material that they thought they could use to attack prominent buildings in their respective cities and were subsequently arrested.) In seeking help, they made themselves vulnerable to interception, and local and federal authorities were able to infiltrate the cell planning the attack and ensure that the operatives never posed a serious threat. Unlike these failed plotters, Shahzad traveled to Pakistan to receive training and used everyday materials to construct his explosive devices, thus mitigating the risk of being discovered.

    A much more successful model of waging a jihadist attack on U.S. soil is the case of U.S. Army Maj. Nidal Hasan, who shot and killed 13 people at Fort Hood in Texas in November 2009. Instead of traveling to Yemen or Pakistan for training, which would have aroused suspicion, Maj. Hasan used skills he already possessed and simple means to conduct his attack, something that kept his profile low (although he was under investigation for posting comments online seemingly justifying suicide attacks). Ultimately, Hasan killed more people with a handgun than the recently botched or thwarted attacks involving relatively complicated IEDs.

    With AQAP leader al-Wahayshi advocating smaller and easier attacks against softer targets in the fall of 2009 (shortly before Maj. Hasan’s attack at Fort Hood), it appears that the tactic is making its way through jihadist circles. This highlights the risk that ideologically radicalized individuals (as Shahzad certainly appears to be) can still pose to the public, despite their seeming inability to successfully construct and deploy relatively complex IEDs.

    Slipping Through the Cracks?

    It is likely that U.S. authorities were aware of Shahzad due to his recent five-monthlong trip to Pakistan. Authorities may also have intercepted the telephone conversations that Shahzad had with people in Pakistan using a pre-paid cell phone (which are more anonymous but still traceable). Such activities usually are noticed by authorities, and we anticipate that there will be a storm in the media in the coming days and weeks about how the U.S. government missed signs pointing to Shahzad’s radicalization and operational activity. The witch hunt would be far more intense if the attack had actually succeeded — as it could well have. However, as we’ve noted in past attacks such as the July 7, 2005, London bombings, the universe of potential jihadists is so wide that the number of suspects simply overwhelms the government’s ability to process them all. The tactical reality is that the government simply cannot identify all potential attackers in advance and thwart every attack. Some suspects will inevitably fly under the radar.

    This reality flies in the face of the expectation that governments somehow must prevent all terrorist attacks. But the uncomfortable truth in the war against jihadist militants is that there is no such thing as complete security. Given the diffuse nature of the threat and of the enemy, and the wide availability of soft targets in open societies, there is simply no intelligence or security service in the world capable of identifying every aspiring militant who lives in or enters a country and of pre-empting their intended acts of violence.

    Syria gave advanced M-600 missiles to Hezbollah, defense officials claim

    May 5, 2010

    Syria gave advanced M-600 missiles to Hezbollah, defense officials claim – Haaretz Daily Newspaper | Israel News.

    Army intelligence worried by Lebanese militants’ growing rocket arsenal – but says Syria has a genuine desire to strike a peace deal with Israel.

    By Jonathan Lis and Amos Harel

    A UN patrol in southern Lebanon, where Hezbollah clashed with  Israel in 2006 A UN patrol in southern Lebanon, where Hezbollah clashed with Israel in 2006
    Photo by: (Archive)

    Syria has delivered advanced M600 rockets to Hezbollah militants in Lebanon within the past year, Israeli defense officials said on Wednesday.

    The M600, a Syrian copy of the Iranian Fateh-110, has a range of 300km and carries a half-ton warhead. If fired from southern Lebanon it would be capable of hitting Tel Aviv.
    Latest claims of arms transfers to Lebanon follow recent accusations by President Shimon Peres that Syria Hezbollah gave long-range Scud missiles, capable of inflicting heavy damage on Israel’s cities.
    Other government figures, including Defense Minister Ehud Barak, have since avoided repeating the claims and it is unclear whether Damascus could have delivered the 44-foot liquid-fueled missiles, handling which requires complex logistics, undetected.
    Yet doubts over the Scuds have not masked growing fear in the Israeli defense establishment over Hezbollah’s rapidly expanding arsenal. On Tuesday the army’s head of intelligence research, Brigadier General Yossi Baidatz, told the Knesset that the Scud transfer was the “tip of the iceberg”.
    “Even today Hezbollah has missiles of all ranges types, including solid-fueled rockets that have a longer range are extremely accurate,” Baidatz told the Knesset’s foreign affairs and security committee.
    Baidatz warned that arms transfers were not sporadic but reflected long-term policy in Tehran and Damascus
    “Syria and Iran carry out weapons transfers on a constant and structured basis in way that can’t be described as simple smuggling – the transfers are official and well-organized,” he said.
    He added: “Hezbollah’s long-range rockets allow them to position launchers deep within Lebanese territory and cover ranges far greater than we aware of in the past.
    The militant group was far stronger today than in 2006, when it fought a war with Israel, Baidatz said.
    “Hezbollah in 2010 is very different to Hezbollah in 2006 in terms of military capability, which has advanced a great deal,” he said. “Hezbollah is now regarded by the Syrians as a component of their defense establishment.”
    But despite strong backing for Hezbollah, Syria remained keen to strike a peace deal with Israel, Baidatz said.
    “A political settlement with Israel is high on Syria’s list of priorities and intelligence shows a will to reach an agreement – but on their terms, meaning a return of the Golan Heights and American involvement” he said.
    Baidatz said that Syria’s President Assad was willing to embrace sweeping changes – but did not trust the administration of Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu.
    “Military intelligence believes Syria could radically alter its role – but Assad feels that political progress with the current Israel government is impossible and has therefore avoided confidence-building measures.”

    Ahmadinejad: Israeli threats won’t stop Iran’s nuclear program

    May 5, 2010

    Ahmadinejad: Israeli threats won’t stop Iran’s nuclear program – Haaretz Daily Newspaper | Israel News.

    Iranian President Ahmadinejad speaks at a UN nuclear conference in  News York, May 4, 2010 Iranian President Ahmadinejad speaks at a UN nuclear conference in News York, May 4, 2010
    Photo by: AP

    Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad said on Wednesday that his country would “definitely continue” its nuclear program despite Israeli hints at military action.

    “Iran will definitely continue its path. You should not even doubt that we willcontinue our path. We’ll definitely continue our path,” Ahmadinejad said in an interview with ABC’s “Good Morning America” program.

    Asking if that meant Iran was playing with fire in light of Israel’s threat of a possible military strike, Ahmadinejad said it was not. “They’re not a factor, in our defense doctrine, we don’t even count them.”

    Ahmadinejad has agreed “in principle” to Brazilian mediation to revive a UN-brokered nuclear fuel swap deal with world powers, the semi-official Fars news agency earlier Wednesday.
    The powers see the deal as a way to remove much of Iran’s low-enriched uranium stockpile to minimize the risk of this being used for atomic bombs, while Iran would get specially processed fuel to keep its nuclear medicine program running.
    But the proposal broke down over Iran’s insistence on doing the swap only on its territory, rather than shipping its LEUabroad in advance, and in smaller, phased amounts, meaning no meaningful cut in a stockpile which grows day by day.
    In a telephone conversation with his Venezuelan counterpart, Ahmadinejad agreed in principle to Brazil’smediation over the nuclear fuel deal,” Fars said, quoting astatement issued by Ahmadinejad’s office.
    The pact conceived in talks conducted by the U.N. nuclearwatchdog last October required Iran to ship 1,200 kg  of its LEU, enough for one atom bomb if enriched to high grade to Russia and France for conversion into fuel for the Tehran Research Reactor, which makes isotopes for cancer treatment.
    The three powers have ruled out rewriting the deal’sconditions as the Islamic Republic demands.
    The United States is lobbying UN Security Council members, to back a fourth round of international sanctions on Iran in the coming weeks, to press it into curbing uranium enrichment.
    Iran says its nuclear energy program is designed togenerate electricity only but its failure to declare sensitiveatomic activity to the UN watchdog and continued restrictions on U.N. inspections have undermined confidence abroad.
    Some nonpermanent UN Security Council members such as Brazil and Turkey are trying to revive the fuel deal with Iranin an attempt to stave off further sanctions against Tehran.
    Brazil says it favors reviving a mooted compromise in which Iran could export its uranium to another country in return for nuclear fuel Iran says it needs to keep the Tehran reactor running.
    It was not clear whether Ahmadinejad had agreed for the fuel swap to take place in a third country. If so, it will be a major shift in Iran’s stance against the idea.
    Ahmadinejad also said technical issues (over the deal) should be discussed in Tehran,” Fars reported.
    ‘Significant concessions’
    Gala Riani, analyst for IHS Global Insight Middle East, said Iran “wanted to be seen” as not having closed the door tonegotiations on the nuclear fuel swap.
    But she said it remained to be seen whether Wednesday’s announcement by Tehran was a real attempt to try and reach a solution on the issue.
    Unless Iran proposes some significant concessions the likelihood (of a deal) is low,” Riani said.
    Iran started enrichment to 20 percent fissile purity in February, up from 5 per cent, to create fuel for the research reactor itself, bring Iran closer to levels needed for producing weapons-grade material – uranium refined to 90 per cent purity.
    In a speech to a Nuclear Non-proliferation Treaty (NPT) review conference at the United Nations, U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton said on Monday that Iran’s nuclear ambitions put the world at risk and called on nations to rally around U.S.efforts to finally hold the Islamic Republic to account.
    The five permanent members of the Security Council – the United States, Britain, France, Russia and China – along with Germany are in talks over a broader sanctions resolution against Iran.

    Russia and China, veto-wielding members of the Security Council, have said they are willing to give Turkey and Brazil more time to resuscitate the nuclear fuel deal

    Iran has new anti-cruise missile weapon, Cobra-type helicopter

    May 5, 2010

    DEBKAfile, Political Analysis, Espionage, Terrorism, Security.

    DEBKAfile Special Report May 5, 2010, 1:46 PM (GMT+02:00)

    Iran claims new anti-cruise missile weapon

    The development of the “Mesbah 1” (Lantern), a new air defence system for countering aircraft, cruise missiles, choppers and other low-altitude threats, was announced by Iran’s defence minister Brig. Gen. Ahmad Vahidi Wednesday, May 5. It will go into operation in the near future. debkafile‘s military sources say that if Iran has indeed designed a weapon of this type and quality, it has come up with a powerful answer to US and Israeli cruise missiles, which pose the biggest threat to Iran’s nuclear facilities in a military strike.
    Vahidi boasted that the Mesbah can fire 4,000 shots a minute, is very precise and can be operated by a smaller crew than similar artillery systems. He claimed it was also effective in tracing and shooting down unmanned aerial vehicles – drones.

    The Iranian Air force is also reported to have received 10 new “Toofan” (Storm) attack helicopters based on the Bell AH-1K Sea Cobra design. After studying photographs, Western military sources reported the Iranian version has been heavily upgraded compared with the original. It has a narrower airframe for greater flexibility and is armed with M197 3-barrelled 20-mm “Gatling-type” cannon in the A/A49E turret. Its wing-stub stations carry a pair of 19-tube 70-mm rocket launchers. The rear section has a Vulcan-type 20-mm automatic cannon, and two clusters of 38 anti-tank 70-mm missiles.

    Bullet-proof glass protects the pilot’s cockpit and weapons officer station, internal avionics have been revamped with the addition of a GPS and receiver in the nose, and a warning radar attached to the rear, with four antennae providing 360 degrees coverage and all electronics systems integrated.
    debkafile‘s intelligence sources note that the Iranian Air Force’s Badr Base for light aircraft and helicopters in Esfahan, central Iran, accommodates 1,000 aerial military vehicles of different types, and is the biggest air base of its kind in the Middle East and Southwest Asia.