Archive for May 2010

Peres: North Korea ‘duty free’ arms shop for Iran

May 2, 2010

The Associated Press: Peres: North Korea ‘duty free’ arms shop for Iran.

JERUSALEM — Israeli President Shimon Peres accused North Korea on Sunday of acting as a “duty free shop” for weapons that reach Iran and militants in Lebanon and Syria.

Peres provided no proof to back up his claims, but his comments echoed similar allegations last month in which he accused Syria of providing Scud missiles to Hezbollah guerrillas in Lebanon.

Israel considers Iran its greatest threat because of suspicions that its nuclear program is ultimately aimed at producing weapons as well as its repeated threats to destroy Israel.

Peres said the reclusive North Korean regime has become a “duty free shop for long-range missiles and nuclear weapons.” Israel was observing the smuggling trend with “open eyes,” Peres said.

“These weapons flow straight to Iran, who arms and strengthens the world’s global terror network, including Hezbollah in Lebanon and other groups in Syria,” Peres said Sunday, before meeting with visiting Danish Foreign Minister Lene Espersen.

Israel, the United States and many European nations believe Iran is pursuing nuclear weapons under the cover of a civilian nuclear energy program. Iran’s leaders deny that and say they are only after atomic energy and other peaceful uses of nuclear technology.

Espersen said the international community must present a united front against Tehran’s nuclear work. She said Denmark is working with members of the European Union and the U.N. Security Council to impose tougher economic sanctions against Iran.

Israel has welcomed the international diplomacy, but refused to rule out military action if sanctions do not persuade Iran to fully cooperate with the efforts to ensure it doesn’t direct its nuclear work toward weapons production.

Israeli defense officials have long believed North Korea is working with Iran to arm Israel’s enemies. They say, for instance, that katyusha rockets fired into Israel by Lebanese Hezbollah guerrillas during a monthlong war in 2006 originated in North Korea.

In 2007, Israeli warplanes carried out an attack on Syria, targeting an installation that U.S. intelligence officials said was an unfinished nuclear reactor being built by North Korea.

Israeli military officials maintain that North Korea has supplied Iran with missiles as well as with the technological know-how to build their own weapons. Some of these weapons have reached Hezbollah, they say.

The U.S. and other nations accuse Iran of seeking to develop long-range intercontinental ballistic missiles and say North Korea has provided assistance or sold Tehran missile technology. Iran has always maintained its missile program is entirely domestic.

The most advanced missile known to be in Iran’s arsenal is the medium-range Sajjil 2. It has a potential range of 1,200 miles — 2,000 kilometers — putting Israel, parts of southeastern Europe and U.S. bases in the Middle East within striking distance.

Peres stirred controversy recently by accusing Syria of smuggling Scud ballistic missiles to Lebanon, giving Hezbollah a new weapon that could strike deeper and harder at Israel than other weapons in its arsenal.

As a result of the allegations, the U.S. summoned the senior Syrian diplomat in Washington and charged Syria with “provocative behavior” that could spark a new conflict in the Middle East.

Syria denies any smuggling of weaponry to Hezbollah and its foreign minister compared the U.S. accusations to Washington’s prewar claims against Iraq.

Peres repeated his warning Sunday.

“Syria must stop acting one way and speaking another way,” he said. “Their support for terror can no longer be hidden.”

Iran says develops short-range missile defense

May 2, 2010

Iran says develops short-range missile defense.

Reuters
Sunday, May 2, 2010; 6:22 AM

TEHRAN (Reuters) – Iran, whose nuclear dispute with the West has raised the possibility of new regional conflict, has developed a short-range defense system to combat Cruise missiles, its defense minister was quoted as saying on Sunday.

“A new short range anti-Cruise defense system with the capability to fire 4,000 rounds of bullets per minute has been produced at the defense ministry and soon will be inaugurated,” Ahmad Vahidi said on semi-official Fars news agency.

“We are at the design and production phase of various defense systems in the short, medium and long-range categories,” he added, citing the Mersad air defense and Shahin missile defense systems.

Cruise missiles are guided missiles that operate at low level to evade radar detection. They can fly up to supersonic speeds carrying either conventional or nuclear warheads.

The U.S. administration said last month that Iran and North Korea were excluded from new limits on the use of U.S. atomic weapons — something Tehran interpreted as a threat from a long-standing adversary to attack it with nuclear bombs.

Though the Islamic Republic seeks self-sufficiency in missile defense, it is urging Russia to resist Western pressure not to deliver the S-300 missile defense system it has ordered.

Washington is pressing other global powers to agree to a fourth round of U.N. sanctions against Iran over its refusal to halt nuclear work that the West suspects is aimed at making bombs, a charge Iran denies.

Iran held military exercises in the Gulf waterway and Strait of Hormuz last month in an apparent bid to show its readiness for any attack by Israel or the United States.

Analysts said it was also a message to U.S.-allied Gulf Arab states, which offer military facilities to U.S. forces.

Iran has said it would respond to any attack by targeting U.S. interests in the region and Israel, as well as closing the Strait of Hormuz. About 40 percent of the world’s traded oil leaves the Gulf region through the strategic narrows.

(Reporting by Ramin Mostafavi; Writing by Andrew Hammond; Editing by Matthew Jones)

Al-Siyassa: The Iranian Spy Cell Planned Terror Attacks in Gulf in Event of Strike against Iran

May 2, 2010

The MEMRI Blog – Full Blog Entry.

According to the Kuwaiti daily Al-Siyassa, the seven members of the Iranian spy cell arrested in Kuwait have admitted that they planned to attack Kuwaiti and American military facilities in Kuwait and other Gulf countries, in the event of a military attack on Iran. It was also reported that the cell was financed by pro-Iranian Kuwaiti businessmen.

Speaking on Al-Alam TV, Iranian Foreign Ministry Spokesman Ramin Mehmanparast denied the reports on the discovery of a spy cell, and IRGC public relations chief Ramazan Sharif said that the reports were a conspiracy by the Zionist media and its proxies in the region, and were a follow-up to the false reports about the Iranian money laundering network ostensibly exposed in Bahrain. These reports, he added, were meant to smear the Islamic Revolution, which is supported by the Sunni Arab peoples in the region.

Sources: Al-Siyassa (Kuwait), Fars (Iran), May 2, 2010; Al-Alam (Iran), May 1, 2010

The crux of Islam’s hatred against the Jews

May 2, 2010

American Thinker Blog: The crux of Islam’s hatred against the Jews.

Jerry Philipson

The Wall Street Journal is reporting that the United States and Egypt are discussing an agreement which would see the Middle East, including Israel and Iran, become a nuclear free zone. The Daily Telegraph newspaper in England reports that President Obama is threatening to turn the peace process over to the international community if it remains deadlocked until the fall. In the meantime there may or may not be a resumption of talks on Monday, depending on who you’re listening to.

All of this ignores the most salient factor of all.

Peace between Israel and the Palestinians is not possible because Islam won’t permit it and militates against it.

Islam is a religion of intolerance toward unbelievers, with perhaps the most hatred reserved for Jews because of their ancient refusal to recognize Muhammad as the last and greatest prophet and Allah as the supreme being.

This hatred of Jews translates into a hatred of Israel, which in turn translates into an obligation to obliterate it and remove it from the face of the earth. When Palestinians and other Muslims demonize, vilify, attack and kill Israelis, Jews, they are really doing so in the name of Islam and because Islam commands them to. Israelis, Jews, are infidels and are seen as occupiers and interlopers at best with no right to the land they live on, historical or otherwise. Their presence is viewed as an affront and an insult.

Nothing will change until these misguided beliefs do. Since they go back 1400 years, are rooted in the Koran and are basic to Islamic thought and action peace is not going to come soon, if it ever does. The best we can hope for is some sort of grudging ceasefire, enforced by a third party that isn’t the United Nations. Islam itself is the cause of the conflict in the Middle East and there is no possibility of peace until Islamic countries recognize and accept Israel’s legitimate right to exist and stop trying to annihilate it. That is a contradiction of terms so don’t hold your breath.

Israel ignores or glosses over this at her peril and so does the U.S. Israel is the Little Satan but America is the Great Satan and also in the line of fire.

Peace? Forget it in this day and age. Maybe in another 1400 years though…

Security and Defense: First come sanctions. And then…?

May 2, 2010

Security and Defense: First come sanctions. And then…?.

What would Israel do should sanctions fail to stop Iran’s nuclear program?

Washington went out of its way this week for Defense Minister Ehud Barak. In the US for routine high-level talks, Barak was met with open arms wherever he went.


At the White House on Monday, during a meeting with National Security Adviser James Jones, President Barack Obama popped his head in to say hello, stayed a few minutes and declared his administration’s commitment to Israeli security. At the State Department the next day, Secretary of State Hillary Clinton called Barak her friend, saying: “I have known the defense minister for more years than I care to remember. We were both very young, Ehud.” In response, Barak said: “[Since] immediately after your bat mitzva,” to the laughter from the crowd.

Later Tuesday, Barak made his way to the Pentagon for a meeting with Secretary of Defense Robert Gates, an old friend whom he has known since Gates was director of the CIA in the early 1990s, and he himself was chief of General Staff.

In an unusual and rare move for the Pentagon, Gates and Barak held a joint press conference following their meeting, which focused on a wide range of issues, including Iran, Syria, Hizbullah, the peace process and IDF procurement plans.

The increase in pleasantries had a twofold purpose. Firstly, Barak is perceived in Washington as the member of Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu’s coalition who is most in line with the Obama administration’s current thinking, both on the Palestinian and Iranian issues.

In addition, the administration seemed to feel that it had to make up for the way the media portrayed Obama’s treatment of Netanyahu during his visit in March. This time around, the top Israeli official in town was showered with love.

AT THE same time, however, there are vast differences between Jerusalem and Washington on Iran and the Palestinian issue. While there seems to be some progress in getting the Palestinian Authority to return to the negotiating table, on Iran Israel is growing increasingly frustrated with the continuous delay in getting the next round of sanctions imposed.

Behind the scenes is a fundamental disagreement between the two governments not only regarding the nature of the sanctions that need to be imposed – Israel wants sanctions on the energy sector, while the US is concerned that will hurt the average Iranian – but also about what the next step will be if the sanctions fail. The new target date for sanctions appears to be in June, after Lebanon finishes as the rotating president of the UN Security Council.

The status of Iran’s nuclear program, once a source of disagreement, is similarly understood today by both countries’ intelligence services, as demonstrated by the CIA report released in late March which stated that Iran could, if it wants, begin developing nuclear weapons.

This is very similar to Military Intelligence’s assessment of Iran’s current nuclear standing. When Maj.-Gen. Amos Yadlin took command of Military Intelligence in 2005, the assessment was that the moment Iran obtained enough low-enriched uranium to extract the required amount of high-enriched uranium to make a bomb it would do so.

About two years ago the assessment changed and, like the US, Israel now believes that what is delaying an Iranian nuclear weapon is a political decision that needs to be made by the Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei. Iran already has two tons, which is more than enough for one nuclear bomb.

The current assessment is that the Iranians are waiting to increase their stockpile by several more tons so they will have enough for several bombs. Once that happens, they will likely then wait for a window of opportunity when the international community is too weak to do anything to stop them.

The difference between Israel and the US mainly comes down to what needs to be done after the next round of sanctions. While Israeli military and government officials are skeptical about the effectiveness of the planned sanctions, the government is backing them for the moment.

Barak emphasized this during his joint press conference with Gates, when he said: “The time is clearly, at this stage, time for sanctions and diplomacy.”

His next statement, however, illustrated the difference between Israel and the US: “We expect the sanctions to be effective and to be limited in time, so we will be able to judge to whether – what kind of results stem from the sanctions regime.”

So what will happen next? According to a recent article in The New York Times, Gates wrote a secret three-page memorandum to Jones in which he lamented the lack of a detailed US long-range strategy for dealing with Iran’s nuclear program.

Following the disturbing report were a number of comments by top American officials which seemed to indicate that a military strike was not in the cards.

First there was Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff Adm. Mike Mullen, who said: “I worry, on the other hand, about striking Iran… I’ve been very public about that because of the unintended consequences of that.”

Next was Undersecretary of Defense for Policy Michele Flournoy, the number two official at the Pentagon, who said in Singapore that a military strike against Iran is currently not on the table. “Military force is an option of last resort,” Flournoy said. “It’s off the table in the near term.”

The main US opponent of a military strike is perceived by some insiders here to be Gates himself, who has succeeded in getting Obama on board. The problem, from an Israeli perspective, is that if the Iranians believe a military strike is not a realistic option, there is really not much of a chance that sanctions will work.

On the other hand, even if Israel decides to attack, there are still many considerations beyond just the feasibility and effectiveness of a potential strike. There are questions of how Israel would fly to Iran and whether it will have approval from the US to fly over Iraq. There are also questions of how far back the IDF is capable of pushing the Iranian nuclear program.

But what about the day after the strike? Will Israel have American support or find itself isolated as it was following the bombing of the Osirak reactor in 1981?

The main difference is that today, there is no doubt that following a strike on Iran, Israel will be attacked by Hizbullah, Hamas, Iran and possibly even Syria. Israel will likely then need assistance, such as arms shipments, like it received from the US during the Second Lebanon War. The question is whether there will be someone in Washington willing to send them.

Israel: We need more Iron Dome systems

May 2, 2010

Israel: We need more Iron Dome systems.

Israel: We need more Iron Dome systems

US: Progress on Iran sanctions

May 2, 2010

US: Progress on Iran sanctions.

US: Progress on Iran sanctions

NEW YORK – Ahead of a major conference on nuclear non-proliferation at the UN this week, top US officials say they are making progress on sanctions against Iran and will work “as long as it takes” to pass a strong resolution.

Briefing reporters in Washington and New York on Friday, US Ambassador to the UN Susan Rice said talks among Security Council members were taking place with “significant pace and intensity,” but declined to elaborate on a timeline.

“We’re going to continue our efforts in New York and in capitals, as long as it takes to get a strong and sound resolution passed,” she said.

Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad is expected to appear on Monday at the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty Review Conference, a gathering held every five years to assess compliance and chart new actions to strengthen the 1970 arms control treaty.

The conference this year will take place from May 3 to 28, with 189 signatories to the NPT participating.

US officials, who have pursued a dual-track strategy of engagement and pressure with Iran, said they do not plan to meet with Ahmadinejad while he is in New York.

“If Iran has something new to say, it knows where to find us,” Rice said on Friday.

Israel, which has not confirmed or denied the existence of a nuclear arsenal, has not signed the NPT and will not be participating in the conference.

Cairo has said a key to stopping Iranian nuclear ambitions is to establish a nuclear-free Middle East. With the backing of non-aligned members, Egypt plans to present a working paper at the NPT conference, calling for the implementation of a 1995 resolution establishing the Middle East as a nuclear-free zone, “including the accession by Israel to the treaty as soon as possible.”

Egypt has also called for an international conference – which Israel would participate in – to jump-start the process toward a treaty to establish a nuclear-free Middle East.

“Success in dealing with Iran will depend to a large extent on how successfully we deal with the establishment of a nuclear-free zone” in the region, Egyptian Ambassador to the UN Maged Abdel Aziz told reporters last week. “We refuse the existence of any nuclear weapons, whether it is in Iran or whether it is in Israel.”

The proposed conference does not appear to have the full backing of US officials, who said they are working with their partners in Cairo on implementing the 1995 resolution.

US Under Secretary for Arms Control Ellen Tauscher said the state of the peace process did not lend itself to the sort of conference envisioned by Egypt. “We are concerned that the conditions are not right,” she said. “This is something the region has to embrace, and they have to embrace it at the right time, when all parties can participate.”

Asked if the US would call on Israel to sign the treaty, Tauscher said: “The United States has always stood for universality of the NPT.”

During a briefing with reporters ahead of the conference, Rice and Ambassador Susan Burk, special representative of the president for nuclear nonproliferation, said the US seeks to strengthen the treaty across three “pillars” of disarmament, nonproliferation and peaceful uses of nuclear energy.

“We will focus on ways to improve compliance with the nonproliferation requirements of the treaty and to strengthen support for the IAEA,” Rice said. “The noncompliance of any state with its NPT obligations undermines the nonproliferation regime as a whole.”

The US supports a fully-funded IAEA that has adequate authority. “At the same time, we will work with others on preventing parties to the NPT from misusing the treaty by seeking key nuclear assistance under it and then withdrawing from it when they wish to violate its terms,” Rice said.

Without mentioning Iran by name, she said NPT violations are “corrosive.”

US Jewish groups, gearing up for the Iranian leader’s visit to New York, voiced loud opposition to Ahmadinejad’s participation in the NPT conference. The Conference of Presidents of Major American Jewish Organizations contacted ambassadors of UN member states, and placed newspaper ads to appear on Monday, urging diplomats to walk out with he speaks on Monday morning.

“How ironic that the leading violator of the NPT and several Security Council resolutions would be allowed to speak and no doubt resort to the same vile accusations as in the past,” Chairman Alan Solow and Executive Vice Chairman Malcolm Hoenlein said in a statement. “The leaders of Iran who participate in the NPT Review Conference must understand the determination of countries that value democracy and freedom and oppose Iran’s hegemonic goals and aspirations toward a nuclear weapons capability.”

The Jewish Community Relations Council of New York issued an action alert urging readers to e-mail UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon at sg@un.org to protest Ahmadinejad’s inclusion in the conference.

The World Jewish Congress asked its member communities to contact their government representatives to persuade them to participate in the protest walkout, saying in a statement, “It is dismaying that, once again, the UN is allowing the head of a regime foremost in the sponsorship of terrorism and the abuse of human rights, who defies UN resolutions regarding its nuclear ambitions, to appear before the international body.”

Iran Set to Out-Maneuver Obama in A-Bomb Parley at United Nations

May 2, 2010

Iran Set to Out-Maneuver Obama in A-Bomb Parley at United Nations – May 1, 2010 – The New York Sun.

UNITED NATIONS — President Ahmadinejad, in a political masterstroke, appears set to throw  President Obama’s disarmament strategy into turmoil – and all the Iranian flame thrower has to do is show up.

The Iranian is set to do this Monday, when he will seek to sway world opinion and turn the attention from his world-threatening nuclear program to Israel. In past administrations, such bait and switch tricks would have been laughed at, but the current administration’s Turtle Bay-based foreign policy favors Mr. Ahmadinejad.

Jewish organizations are calling on United Nations delegates to walk out when Mr. Ahmadinejad takes the podium midday Monday. Some may do just that, but the Iranian president is a big U.N. draw: even those who disagree with him know he is a headline-grabber and therefore they are transfixed by his star power.

Among the 188 Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty signatories, only Iran sent a head of state to the treaty’s 5-year review conference, scheduled to open at the United Nations Monday. As the most senior official in the room, Mr. Ahmadinejad is slated to open the session, hoping to set the tone and agenda of the month-long conference.

Mr. Ahmadinejad is expected to plead with his audience to ignore Iran’s many violations of the NPT and concentrate instead on Israel’s nuclear program. Israel has pointedly declined to sign the NPT, while maintaining a policy of ambiguity about its possession of an arsenal that is widely believed to include nuclear weapons. India and Pakistan have not signed the treaty either, and North Korea withdrew from it to pursue a nuclear weapon.

As a non-signatory, Israel will not attend the U.N. conference. But its name is expected to be raised as often as that of Iran, as the many detractors of the Jewish state attempt to equate the two countries. Mr. Ahmadinejad will try to maximize a feeling among many U.N. members that there is a “double standard” where Israel’s weapons are left alone, while America and its allies continually punish Iran for pursuing a bomb.

The internationalists who surround Mr. Obama extol formal treaties and value declarations of peaceful intent. While saying America will not allow Iran to acquire nuclear weapons, some in Washington, though not all, seem to take seriously the accusation that Iran is being treated unfairly.

Secretary of State Clinton said last week that Mr. Ahmadinejad “can somehow divert attention from this very important global effort or cause confusion,” but, she added, “I don’t believe he’ll have a particularly receptive audience.”

Others in the administration are reportedly weighing an idea, pushed by Egypt and others, to convene a Middle East conference to promote a nuclear-free zone in the region. Israel will be hard pressed to join such a conference, which would force it to change a nuclear policy it believes has worked for decades to deter regional regimes that have threatened it with annihilation.

“The issue of the Middle East is a complicated and difficult one,” the American ambassador here, Susan Rice told this reporter last week. “It’s one that we’re working with Egypt and others on.” Yes, she added, Iran will be on the agenda of this week’s conference, but “we think that this is much bigger than any one country, and our aims are universal, and we will approach it in that vein.”

American administrations have long supported “the goal” of a Middle Eastern nuclear-free zone. Israel, too, supports the idea of a region without any weapons of mass destruction. But, like past American administrations, Israel believes such disarmament agreements could be signed only after all countries have signed peace treaties with it. Since the days of John F. Kennedy, no American administration has contemplated leaning on Israel to sign the NPT and end the ambiguity on its program.

The Obama administration, since its own declared December 2008 “deadline” for launching negotiations with the Islamic Republic, has attempted to end Iran’s nuclear threat at Turtle Bay, where the fastest way to unite everyone is to gang up on Israel.

“These are just distractions,” said John Bolton, the former permanent representative here. “The whole concept is a mistake,” he said of the Obama administration’s nuclear policy via formal treaties and international conferences. “It gives people the illusion that it’s safe.”

Lately, administration officials have publicly made favorable gestures toward Israel, fearing that if it feels isolated, the Jewish state might act unilaterally to attack Iran’s nuclear facilities. But with no other Iran strategy, Mr. Obama plays by U.N. rules, where the likes of Mr. Ahmadinejad are much more skilled players.

As for the recent rhetorical gestures toward Israel – “I wouldn’t take any comfort in that, given the way they have thrown Israel under the bus,” Mr. Bolton said.

Non-negotiable !

May 2, 2010

Bill Maher on radical Islam.

Ahmadinejad: The roots of terrorism are in the USA

May 1, 2010

Ahmadinejad: The roots of terrorism are in the USA.

Teheran – Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, in a speech on the occasion of International Worker’s Day, said that he has documentary evidence that proves that the US “supports terrorist movements” and “the worst dictators” in the world.

Ahmadinejad’s most recent attack against the U.S. administration comes just two days before his trip to New York to attend a United Nation’s meeting to review the Nuclear Non-proliferation Treaty. “We have documents to prove that the roots of global terrorism are in Washington. They have been supporting and encouraging militant groups for years,” said Ahmadinejad. He extended his rhetoric accusing Israel of similar charges: “You are also a major cause of terrorism. You also organize and support it”. Referring to the development and use of nuclear weapons, Ahmadinejad censured the U.S. for being “the only country in the world to use nuclear weapons and to continue bullying the world with its nuclear arsenal”, reported ISNA (Iranian Students News Agency). Washington and much of the international community accuse the Iranian regime to conceal under its civil nuclear program another hidden program aimed at acquiring an atomic arsenal. Iran emphatically denies those allegations