Archive for August 2010

Israel prepping for war with Iran?

August 29, 2010

Israel prepping for war with Iran?.


NUCLEAR WAR-FEAR

Jewish state orders military fuel from U.S. Defense Department


Posted: August 28, 2010
1:00 am Eastern

By Jerome R. Corsi
© 2010 WorldNetDaily

HATZERIM, ISRAEL, MARCH 30:  (ISRAEL OUT)  An Israeli air force F-15 fighter jet lands at the Hatzerim air base, on March 30, 2009 in Hatzerim southern Israel. (Photo by Uriel Sinai/Getty Images)

Increasing speculation it may be preparing for a military assault on Iran or a regional war involving Hezbollah in Lebanon and Hamas in Gaza, Israel has placed its largest order of military fuel with the United States on record.

The Jewish state, earlier this month, ordered 284,000 gallons of JP-8 aviation jet fuel, 100,000 gallons of diesel fuel and 100,000 gallons of unleaded gasoline – all suitable for military uses – at an estimated cost of $2 billion.

“It would be inappropriate for us to comment about what actions Israel may take or how they will use their fuel,” Marine Corps Major Chris Perrine, a public affairs officer at the Department of Defense, told WND. “I would note, however, that it would take a lot more than fuel to attack a country or wage a regional war.”

Read about the developing drumbeats, in “The Late Great State of Israel”

The sale was detailed in an Aug. 5 notification the Defense Security Cooperation Agency of the U.S. Department of Defense posted on its website, in compliance with the requirement to give Congress advance notice of foreign military sales.

“The proposed sale of the JP-8 aviation fuel will enable Israel to maintain the operational capability of its aircraft inventory,” the notification to Congress said. “The unleaded gasoline and diesel fuel will be used for ground forces’ vehicles and other equipment used in keeping peace and security in the region. Israel will have no difficulty absorbing this additional fuel into its armed forces.”

By comparison, the last fuel order Israel placed with the U.S. was July 15, 2008, when Israel ordered 186,000 gallons of JP-8 aviation jet fuel, 54,000 gallons of diesel fuel and 28,000 gallons of unleaded gasolineat an estimated cost of $1.3 billion.

Prior to that, Israel ordered 90,000 gallons of JP-8 aviation jet fuel and 42,000 gallons of diesel fuel Aug. 24, 2007, for an estimated cost of $308 million; and an unspecified amount of JP-8 aviation jet fuel July 14, 2006, for an estimated cost of $210 million.

Israel’s last two military operations were the summer 2006 Lebanon War that last a little over one month and the Operation Cast Lead in the Gaza from Dec. 27, 2008, to Jan. 21, 2009.

Atomic Iran

Tensions in the Middle East have escalated since Iran made its nuclear power plant at Bushehr operational with the assistance of Russia earlier this month.

John Bolton, a former U.S. ambassador to the U.N., has warned repeatedly that Bushehr would be much more difficult for Israel to attack after it went operational, largely because any military strike would release radioactivity that could be harmful to the civilian population.

Israel’s unwillingness to attack the Iranian nuclear power plant at Bushehr before it went operational has caused considerable controversy within Israel.

Writing in the Jerusalem Post, columnist Caroline Glick observed that from a military perspective, the longer Israel waits to attack, the harder it will be for Israel “to accomplish the mission.”

Focusing much of the blame on Israel’s Defense Minister Ehud Barack, Glick commented, “Barak’s strategic ineptitude is legendary.”

Still, many signs point to continuing tensions in the Middle East that could easily escalate into war.

Olli Heinonen, the former head of U.N. nuclear inspections worldwide, claimed this week that Iran has stockpiled enough low-enriched uranium to make one to two nuclear bombs.

A The Jerusalem Post reported Aug. 20 reports are circulating in the region that Frederick Hoff, assistant to U.S. Middle East peace envoy George Mitchell, told Lebanese Army chief of staff Jean Kahwaji that Israel was ready to implement a plan to destroy within four hours all Lebanese military infrastructure, including army bases and offices, should another border-fire incident occur between Lebanese military and the Israel Defense Forces.

Meanwhile, Iran has maintained an aggressive posture after activating Bushehr, successfully test-firing a third-generation surface-to-surface solid-fuel Fateh 110 missile with a 150-mile range and unveiling an Iran-manufactured drone bomber with a flight range of 620 miles.

Nevertheless, the White House cautions that Iran is not on the verge of developing a nuclear weapon.

Last week, Gary Samone, President Obama’s top adviser on nuclear issues, was quoted as saying it would take one year for Iran to make “a dash” to convert existing low-enriched uranium to weapons-grade and to develop the nuclear warhead required for a working weapon.

Moreover, tensions between Israel and the Palestinians appear to be easing on the eve of resumed peace negotiations.

Israel Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has expressed an interest in meeting with Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas every two weeks as the two enter into direct peace talks next week in Washington.

Ahmadinejad’s miscalculation

August 29, 2010

Ahmadinejad’s miscalculation.

Mahmoud Ahmadinejad.

Mahmoud Ahmadinejad purports to know: Israel, he reiterated for the umpteenth time last week, is “too weak” to strike militarily at Iran, and “lacks the courage” to intervene decisively to thwart Teheran’s steady progress toward the nuclear bomb.

The Iranian president is mistaken. Neither weak nor lacking in courage, Israel is, rather, temperate, humane and pragmatic. It is also, above all, resolute on the matter of its survival.

In 1981 it struck, reluctantly, at Iraq’s reactor at Osirak because it determined that Saddam Hussein, if allowed to achieve the means, was capable of getting out of bed one morning and deciding, in defiance of any rational analysis of costs and benefits, to launch a nuclear attack on Israel. In 2007, it hit Syria’s nascent reactor, again without hubris, clinically preempting a dire threat from a ruthless enemy.

Israel has thus far chosen not to militarily challenge the mullahs’ march to the bomb – chosen, that is, not to follow its proven doctrine of preventing enemies from attaining the means to achieve its demise – because, quite simply, it has not felt the imperative to do so.

Leaders and the public alike here have been horrified by years of apparent international indifference to the escalating threat posed to the free world by the Iranian program.

Iran, after all, has made no secret of its determination to remake the world order in its fundamentalist, religiously skewed, brutal, misogynistic image. A nuclear weapons capability would help nicely. Ahmadinejad himself will soon be setting off on his scandalously permitted annual journey to the UN General Assembly, there to advise the great powers, led by the United States, to repent or be damned.

Of late, the US and Europe have led a slightly more robust campaign of economic sanction, and Israel, with one eye on the Iranian nuclear clock, has quietly seethed at the wastage of time while publicly applauding efforts at pressure that it fears may be too little, too late, But, to date, Israel has not felt that the moment of truth had arrived.

THE LAST few days, however, have seen a flurry of reports suggesting that Israel has either now made up its mind that it will have to strike at Iran, or that it is on the point of reaching such a decision. Jeffrey Goldberg, writing in The Atlantic recently and basing himself on what he said were interviews with some 40 current and past Israeli decision-makers, asserted “a better than 50 percent chance that Israel will launch a strike by next July.”

Goldberg went so far as to claim that the Pentagon has already ordered US commanders in this region not to shoot down Iran-bound Israeli aircraft they may encounter in their airspace.

The selection of Yoav Galant to succeed Gabi Ashkenazi as chief of the General Staff has also been widely ascribed, at least in part, to the relevance of Galant’s ostensibly bold and confident persona in the Iranian context. “Considering that the coming year is expected to be a year of decisions,” our own military correspondent Yaakov Katz wrote on Tuesday, “Defense Minister Ehud Barak felt that he needed someone who would be able to make the decision to use the IDF if the government were to decide to give the green light for such an operation.”

Iran is not an easy read for intelligence analysts. Would it strike at Israel if it got the bomb? Would it seek to avoid an Israeli response by supplying the capacity to a nonstate actor, that would strike in its stead? Or would it “merely” use a nuclear capability to remake the regional balance of power to Israel’s drastic detriment? There are no simple answers to these questions. And at the same time, the consequences of Israeli military intervention in Iran are close to unthinkable. For a start, in contrast to Saddam, Iran could both rebuild and retaliate.

Nevertheless, Ahmadinejad is showing an acutely dangerous potential for miscalculation. And since this newspaper’s coverage (which featured at Sheikh Hassan Nasrallah’s rambling Beirut press conference earlier this month) is doubtless brought to his attention, let us make this clear: If Israel were to determine that sanctions had failed, that Iran was about to acquire the capacity to carry out its declared goal of Israel’s demise, and that only Israeli military intervention could prevent a second Holocaust, our leaders would have no choice, however reluctantly, but to act.

We did not gather the majority of the Jewish nation here, in a sovereign entity that was revived tragically too late to save our millions from the Nazis, in order to sit helplessly by as a new genocidal enemy closed in on our destruction.

US to sell Israel massive military fuel stocks worth $2 bn

August 28, 2010

DEBKAfile, Political Analysis, Espionage, Terrorism, Security.

DEBKAfile Exclusive Report August 28, 2010, 12:53 PM (GMT+02:00)

Japanese tanker sabotaged in Hormuz in July

On Aug. 6, the US Defense Security Cooperation Agency, DSCA, informed Congress of the sale to Israel of 60 million gallons of unleaded gasoline, 284 million gallons of JP-8 aviation jet fuel and 100 million gallons of diesel fuel at an estimated cost of two billion dollars. The date is significant, debkafile‘s intelligence sources find.  Ten days earlier, the Japanese tanker M.Star was attacked in Omani waters of the Strait of Hormuz with 200,000 tons of oil.
Although American experts who examined the vessel, they never attributed the damage to sabotage by Iran or al Qaeda, despite the latter’s claim of responsibility on Aug. 4 While Washington did its best to sweep the incident under the rug, Saudi intelligence were worried enough about the threat inching dangerously close to the Gulf’s oil exporting lifeline to launch an independent investigation of the incident.
Their investigators discovered it was staged by a Saudi terrorist who operates out of Iran under the orders of the Revolutionary Guards. To Riyadh, the episode looked like a blunt warning from Tehran to Washington and its allies about the consequences – not just of a direct strike against Iran’s nuclear facilities, but the possibility of sanctions upsetting the equilibrium of the Islamic regime.

Blockage of the Strait of Hormuz would cut off Israel’s primary source of fuel. Therefore, our sources report, a series of accords, some of them secret, have been transacted to back up America’s standing commitment to keep Israel supplied with its energy needs in the event of armed conflict or crisis on world fuel markets.
In its request to Congress to approve the sale, the DSCA noted:
“The proposed sale of the JP-B aviation fuel will enable Israel to maintain the operational capability of its aircraft inventory. The unleaded gasoline and diesel fuel will be used for ground forces’ vehicles and other equipment used in keeping peace and security in the region. Israel will have no difficulty absorbing this additional fuel into its armed forces.”

debkafile adds: Israel is therefore ready and able to absorb this huge injection of military-purpose fuels.
Tehran published its response through an item on the Tabanak Website on Saturday, Aug. 28. It was headlined in large capitals: ISRAEL ORDERS MASSIVE MLITARY FUEL STOCKS FAR IN EXCESS OF THAT REQUIRED FOR NORMAL OPERATIONS. Our Iranian sources report that this site belongs to Mohsen Rezaei, ex-commander of the Revolutionary Guards and much respected in the highest Iranian military and intelligence circles.
The Iranian site goes on to cite bloggers’ comments, the most quoted of which comes from an anonymous ex-US Air Force officer, who wrote on Aug. 27:
“I explained, as I have in the past, how it would be necessary for the US to supply the massive amounts of fuel need for such a [-n Israeli] strike. If Israel were to strike Iran, Israel would only require the massive amounts of jet fuel and over a billion litres of jet fuel would be more that enough to do the job in practical terms.”

According to debkafile‘s military experts, the shelf life of JP-8 jet fuel is not long – no more than six to eight months.
Also Saturday, the Kuwait Al-Rai claimed that Israel is making its last preparations for an attack on the Hizballah missile stores located in Syria close to the Lebanese border, for which an IDF armored division has been called up.

Israel working to thwart Russia arms deal with Syria

August 28, 2010

Israel working to thwart Russia arms deal with Syria – Haaretz Daily Newspaper | Israel News.

Netanyahu asks Putin to stop deal involving sale of advanced P-800 Yakhont supersonic cruise missiles; Israel considers this weaponry dangerous to its navy vessels in Mediterranean Sea.

Israel is trying to prevent an arms deal between Russia and Syria, and Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has asked his Russian counterpart, Vladimir Putin, to stop the arms sale involving advanced anti-shipping missiles.

The deal involves the sale of advanced P-800 Yakhont supersonic cruise missiles to the Syrian military. Israel considers this weaponry capable of posing significant danger to its navy vessels in the Mediterranean Sea.

The P-800 Yakhont supersonic cruise missile. The P-800 Yakhont supersonic cruise missile.

In a conversation with Putin, Netanyahu told the Russian leader that missiles his country had delivered to Syria were then transferred to Hezbollah and used against IDF troops during the Second Lebanon War.

Meanwhile, Ehud Barak is scheduled to travel to Moscow for what will be the first-ever visit by an Israeli Defense Minister to the Russian capital, where he plans to discuss the matter with his host, Anatoly Serdyukov.

A senior Israeli official who asked to remain anonymous due to the sensitive nature of the issue, said Israel and Russia have been engaged in discreet dialogue over arms deals to the region.

But as these talks have not yielded any results, the decision was made to upgrade the level of discussions with a senior political figure.

“We have been working on such a visit for more than a year and it is very important to us,” the official said.

As the Russian Defense Ministry is considered to be overwhelmingly pro-Arab, the opportunity for an Israeli Defense Minister to make an official visit is considered a historic development.

Netanyahu called Putin on Friday, after a long period of time in which the two had not communicated. The prime minister updated his Russian counterpart on the direct talks with the Palestinians that are expected to begin next week, and some of the conversation centered on the arms deal with Syria.

In addition to Syria’s transfer of advanced Russian anti-tank missiles to Hezbollah, Netanyahu also mentioned the incident in which Syrian-acquired Chinese-made C-802 anti-shipping missiles were used by Hezbollah to target an Israeli destroyer. He expressed Israel’s concern that the new missiles from Russia will also make their way to Hezbollah.

The latest arms deal was first reported in the foreign press in late 2009, and is said to include P-800 missiles which now come in models that can be launched from land.

The highly accurate missiles have a maximum range of 300 kilometers and carry a 200-kilogram warhead. The weapon’s unique feature is its ability to cruise several meters above the surface, making it difficult to identify on radar and therefore intercept.

The C-802 missiles currently in the Syrian arsenal have a range of 120 kilometers, carry a smaller warhead and lack the accuracy of the more advanced missiles.

Israel’s defense analysts are concerned that these missiles in the hands of Hezbollah would pose a serious threat to Israel Navy ships operating out of the Haifa port, and possibly also out of Ashdod.

Iran goes nuclear – Washington Times

August 28, 2010

KAHLILI: Iran goes nuclear – Washington Times.

The West vacillates while Armageddon approaches

Russia turned on the switch to Iran‘s first nuclear power plant on Aug. 21 after repeated delays and more than 15 years of construction. The hard-liners in Iran celebrated it as a victory over “the Great Satan,” repeating the famous phrase by Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini, father of the Islamic revolution. Their message: America can’t do a damned thing.

The Iranians have managed to open a second front for their nuclear bomb project. The Bushehr nuclear power plant is now untouchable because any military action against its reactor containing plutonium would lead to widespread deadly contamination throughout the region.

The reactor, once fully operational, can produce more than 661 pounds of near-weapons-grade plutonium, enough to make 60 nuclear bombs within the first year or two. The International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) will be monitoring the operation of the Bushehr nuclear power plant; however, because the IAEA does not have real-time cameras monitoring the plant, the inspectors will review camera tapes at the site every 90 days. This gives the fanatics ruling Iran sufficient time to divert the fuel into making nuclear bombs, using a “quick and dirty” reprocessing approach made public by Oak Ridge National Laboratory researchers in the 1970s. Experts say the process of separating plutonium from spent fuel employs a simple technology – one that is just a bit more advanced than that of producing dairy products or pouring concrete.

The mullahs ruling Iran can effectively decide to go nuclear and arm the Revolutionary Guards with nuclear bombs before the world has a chance to stop them. Once they announce such an achievement, the choices for the world leaders to respond will be much more limited than before. The result of any military confrontation will be much more horrific – both for the millions of Iranians who have been paying dearly for three decades trying to free themselves from this evil regime and for millions in Israel and the rest of the world who will become hostage to the criminals ruling Iran.

Iran also has achieved another goal in this chess game of pursuing its nuclear-bomb project. It can make it clear to the United States and Israel that should they attack any of its other nuclear facilities, such as the Natanz uranium enrichment plant or Isfahan’s nuclear fuel facility, Iran will remove the spent fuel from the Bushehr power plant and proceed with making the nuclear bomb. Iran continues to enrich uranium to the 20 percent level with faster centrifuges at Natanz, and once fully operational, Isfahan’s facility could produce sufficient plutonium for two nuclear weapons a year. In either case, the clerical establishment is now one step closer to checkmating the West and reaching its ultimate goal of becoming a nuclear-armed state.

All this while the Revolutionary Guards continue to make significant progress with the country’s missile delivery system. At present, Iran is assessed to have the largest deployed ballistic missiles in the Middle East, with approximately 1,000 missiles covering ranges from 90 to 1,200 miles and capable of reaching all of the Middle East, Israel and parts of Europe. Also, the Guards, with the help of North Korea, are working on intercontinental ballistic missiles to cover the world. They are using their space project to disguise their real intention.

At the same time, the Guards have successfully expanded their terror network by rearming Hezbollah with tens of thousands of rockets, training Hamas fighters in making rockets, and setting up shop in Venezuela. Many of Iran‘s Quds forces, consisting of highly experienced assassins and bomb-making squads, are now in Venezuela. They intend to spread all over Latin America and ultimately enter America. It is only a matter of time before their terror networks are armed with dirty bombs capable of reaching their ultimate goal of bringing about the demise of the West.

The West in return has been vacillating for years, trying its hardest to appease the mullahs. It has turned its back on the Iranian people, who have been subjected to crimes by their rulers, and going against every principle the West claims to stand for. This is while the West’s efforts have resulted in nothing but failure, mainly because it refuses to understand the mullahs’ philosophy, which is deeply rooted in their belief in Allah and literally taken from the Koran: jihad on infidels, killing them until there are no more sinners on Earth and all are believers of Allah: “I will cast terror into the hearts of those who disbelieve. Therefore, strike off their heads and strike off every fingertip of them. … This is the punishment for nonbelievers.” Koran (8:12-13).

This illusion continues to this day, with the West still thinking it can change the behavior of the radicals ruling Iran with sanctions or by dialogue. Just a few days ago, it was reported in the New York Times that the Obama administration had assured Israel that the threat from Iran was not imminent and therefore there was no need for military action now. Gary Samore, President Obama’s top adviser on nuclear issues, thinks there is still time and, based on U.S. intelligence, it would take Iran roughly a year to make a nuclear bomb. This assessment is based on intelligence collected over the past year, as well as reports from international inspectors.

There are two problems with the above assessment: One is that we have so far managed to get it wrong most of the time. We did not know of the nuclear-enrichment facility in Natanz until it was revealed by the Iranian opposition in August of 2002, and most recently, we learned from the head of the CIA, Leon Panetta, that the 2007 National Intelligence Estimate report, claiming Iran abandoned its nuclear weapons program in 2003, was wrong. Iran never stopped that program and has continued with it ever since.

The other problem with the Obama administration’s assessment on Iran is this: What if there are other secret nuclear sites? After all, Iran has refused to let certain military sites belonging to the Revolutionary Guards be inspected by the IAEA and, at the same time, would not allow interviews with some of their nuclear scientists.

One thing is clear: America and the West have continually backpedaled from their red lines, which has only emboldened the fanatics in Iran to become more aggressive in their policies, both domestically and internationally. They have killed and continue to kill innocent civilians who want nothing more than freedom. They have killed our brave soldiers defending freedom in Iraq and Afghanistan. And while their enrichment program was limited to the 3.5 percent level, at least on the surface, they are openly enriching to the 20 percent level. Experts say the technical requirement to get to 90 percent enrichment from 20 percent is relatively straightforward because it becomes easier at higher levels. Enriching to 20 percent is the same as going to about 80 percent of the way toward military material.

Iran continues to rattle the saber in spite of the sanctions imposed by the United Nations. On Sunday, President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad inaugurated the country’s first domestically built long-range unmanned bomber aircraft. Calling it an “ambassador of death” to Iran‘s enemy and in an interview with the Qatari daily Al-Sharq, Mr. Ahmadinejad promised global response if his country is attacked. “Our options will have no limits. … They will touch the entire planet,” he said in reply to a question about Tehran’s reaction in the event of such an attack.

Trying to guesstimate the timeline for the mullahs going nuclear and waiting it out will be another failure for the West. But this time, the failure will be of gigantic proportions, with millions of lives lost. The world will see one of the greatest depressions and largest destructions in its history. The radicals in Iran believe that the end time is closer than ever. Mahdi – the Shiites’ 12th imam, the last messiah – will reappear to kill all infidels and conquer the world, thus creating an Islamic empire. They also believe Mr. Ahmadinejad is the leader named in century-old hadiths who confronts the world and relays the words of Allah exactly six years before Mahdi’s reappearance.

Mr. Ahmadinejad has been in office for more than five years. We have their timeline. What is ours?

Reza Kahlili is a pseudonym for an ex-CIA spy who requires anonymity for safety reasons. “A Time to Betray,” his book about his double life as a CIA agent in Iran‘s Revolutionary Guards, was published by Simon & Schuster April 6.

Our strategic failure on Iran requires action

August 28, 2010

Our strategic failure on Iran requires action – Bakersfield.com.

Iran celebrates as Russia loads nuclear fuel into the Bushehr reactor, Iran’s first atomic power station. Spent fuel from this reactor can be used for nuclear weapons.

Of course, Iran “agrees” to return all spent fuel back to Russia. Really? Will Iran’s Revolutionary Guard surrender their ballistic missile programs?

Going forward, Iran and Russia will use each other to serve their own strategic interests. With Russia’s newly secured foothold in the Middle East and increased weapons sales to Muslim countries, along with Europe’s dependency on Russian energy exports, Western influence in the region will diminish. A stronger Muslim-Russian balance of power will increase.

Unfortunately, the Obama administration remains either unconvinced that an Islamic Iran wants a nuclear weapon and will try to destroy Israel and other Western nations, or it lives under the false illusion that somehow sanctions will still work.

Sanctions against Iran were unsuccessful during the Bush administration just as sanctions and diplomacy have been an abysmal failure under Obama’s leadership.

Furthermore, Iran will not be coerced into a dialogue with the United States. So be it. Engaging an undefeated foe in negotiations is appeasement and it never works.

The United States cannot hope to redirect the policies and methods of those ideologically driven — to whom jihad is a religious obligation and an acceptable path toward political power and expansion.

Although Obama is viewed by the Islamic world as one of its own due to his own father and stepfather’s Muslim heritage, he also is perceived as weak and ineffective by his Islamic opponents and their allies.

As the Obama administration panders to the Islamic Republic of Iran, consider the escalation in Iranian intransigence:

* Iran launches the “Ambassador of Death” — a new unmanned jet bomber, August 2010.

* Iran test fires a new surface-to-surface guided missile, August 2010.

* Iran takes aggressive military action against American and allied soldiers in Iraq and Afghanistan.

* Iran builds and installs 7,200 centrifuges to enrich uranium, stockpiling nuclear fuel.

* Iran disallows international inspectors to verify all of its nuclear facilities.

* Iran supports terrorist organizations such as Hamas and Hezbollah.

* Iranian leader Mahmoud Ahmadinejad threatens to “wipe Israel off the face of the earth,” and destroy the United States.

A pre-emptive attack on Iran by the United States or Israel is the only option left for the security of the West.

Denice Gary-Pandol of Bakersfield is a freelance writer who specializes in Middle Eastern affairs. Her website is http://www.Strategic SolutionsForANewMiddleEast.com.

Al Arabiya | Washington offers Tehran the “Grand Bargain”… for a while

August 28, 2010

Middle East Views | Washington offers Tehran the “Grand Bargain”… for a while.

Raghida Dergham

New York- There is increasing talk among US circles of the need for political bargains which the US Administration would strike with what has come to be known as the extremist movement, a movement which cannot be dispensed with in making peace in the Middle East.

There has been an increase in articles and seminars that speak of “Remaking the Middle East” – as was the title on the cover of Foreign Affairs, a magazine concerned with foreign affairs and published by the Council on Foreign Relations (CFR) in New York. Most of such talk focuses on Hamas, Hezbollah, Syria and Iran. There are also those who are asking new and different questions – questions such as: is it time for a “US-Iranian-Turkish alliance”? Or: has the time come to grant “legitimacy” to Israel’s nuclear bombs? And then there are other kinds of novelties, such as openly speaking of the necessity for the US Administration to resort to the Security Council to prevent Israel from involving the region and the US in a regional war that would start from Lebanon, as well as the necessity for it to also resort to the Security Council to impose preemptive sanctions against Syria so that it may stop supplying Hezbollah and Palestinian factions with weapons.

All of this intersects with two important developments which have taken place over the past few days, and which will have a tremendous, and perhaps frightening, impact over the coming months, namely: the peace process between the Palestinians and the Israelis, and Iraq after the withdrawal of US combat troops from Iraqi cities, with more than 50 thousand US troops remaining in various military bases in numerous parts of Iraq. Indeed, both developments hold a dimension that falls under US relations with the forces of moderation and the forces of extremism. Iran plays a role in both developments, and in fact both have a direct impact on Iran and on its ambitions in Palestine, in Iraq and in the region as a whole. The Barack Obama Administration listens and sometimes understands, yet from the beginning this Administration set down a strategy that includes enticing the forces of extremism to cooperate and interact, with the aim of separating them from the forces of violent extremism, i.e. what the George W. Bush Administration called “terrorism”. Today, the leaders of the US Administration are undertaking a near systematic review of their accounts on the eve of President Barack Obama’s speech before the United Nations General Assembly in the second half of next month – which is a speech that can be described as “the state of affairs of the United State on the international scene”.

Such a “state of affairs” deserves a great deal of clarification, because Obama has never been “usual”, neither at the US nor at the global level. In fact, celebrating the fact that he was unusual yesterday has today turned into a feast of misunderstanding of his “strangeness” at the US level and of disappointment at his “big promises” at the global level. It is time for him to adopt a “non-arrogant” strategy to clarify what he has done, what he meant, what he has in mind and what his strategy is in case of the success or failure of the policy of embracing and enticing the forces of extremism, or in case of the outbreak of a civil war that would tear apart, fragment or divide Iraq.

As long as the prevailing American mentality is that of rejecting wars in Iraq, Afghanistan or Iran for any reason, it seems that Barack Obama is forced to oscillate between popular sympathy and military logic regarding what is in the higher national interest of the United States of America.

Thus the war in Afghanistan is a necessary war for the United States, because withdrawing from Afghanistan now would mean defeat and retreat before the forces of extremism and terrorism. Such retreat would come at a tremendous cost, not just in terms of the US’s geopolitical and material interests in Afghanistan, but also in terms of encouraging the forces of extremism and violence to violate the US homeland once again in the ecstasy of victory.

General David Petraeus, who led the war in Iraq to a new threshold, which contributed to enabling Barack Obama to fulfill his promise – and that of his predecessor – to withdraw combat troops from Iraqi cities, is the military commander in Afghanistan who understands the absolute necessity of not retreating or falling back.

Withdrawing combat troops from Iraq may have something to do with reshaping military capabilities in the war in Afghanistan. Yet even in this war, the US Administration, and with it the military institution, seeks to distinguish between political extremism and violent extremism, and in fact seeks if possible to strike bargains.

As for Iraq after the withdrawal of combat troops from its cities, it is perhaps in its most fragile phase, due to the reality of its sectarian divisions and to the absence of national leaderships able – or willing – to cling to its independence and to its higher national interest.

Perhaps everyone is waiting for Iraq to be ready at the oil level, around 2014 or 2015, and is making technical preparations on the basis that the matter will not be settled now. Perhaps this popularity Iraq enjoys for businessmen and investments is based on the conviction that Iraq’s wealth remains one that is likely to be made the utmost use of, regardless of whether Iraq is divided or united. Perhaps it would be best for those who are observing what is taking place in Iraq to remember the aspect of US troops remaining present in military bases for many years to come, and not just until 2011 or 2012 as some say, as well as the Iranian aspect.

Indeed, Iraq represents one of the most important locations for understanding or confrontation between the United States and the Islamic Republic of Iran. The fate of this relationship rests first on the extent to which Washington is willing to offer the regime in Tehran guarantees that it will support it and not support opposition or a coup against it; and second on how the two sides will participate in sharing influence in Iraq or on the perspectives of confrontation through it and in it. Indeed, in the “Grand Bargain”, Iraq holds a prominent position, as it does in the military confrontation, between the United States and Iran so far. And in spite of the pressure being exerted on Iran through the sanctions unanimously ratified by the major powers, including Russia and China, Washington is still offering Tehran the “Grand Bargain”, which includes guarantees for the Iranian regime and an understanding over Iraq – this alongside the nuclear element which is subject to different considerations, as well as the issue of Hezbollah in Lebanon, as it is out of the question for it to remain an Iranian military base at the border with Israel, neither in a bargain nor through a war.

Bringing forward the date of the withdrawal of US combat troops from Iraq may be part of reassuring Iran. However, it is also possible for this withdrawal to be part of reminding Tehran that an outbreak of chaos, civil war or fragmentation in Iraq would in fact pose a threat to Iran’s interest, because chaos at its border, while it is besieged by foreign sanctions and domestic opposition, would widen the circle of challenges for the regime in Tehran.

The US Administration has reached an understanding with Syria over Iraq, but it seems less comfortable about Syria’s relationship to Iran continuing to take the form of weapons supply – and storage, as is being said – for Hezbollah. Indeed, this, in Washington’s opinion, threatens to undermine a highly sensitive and delicate formula within the broader US strategy.

Thus, while old voices rise, calling for rapprochement with the forces of extremism, because the forces of moderation have so far not succeeded, the US Administration is moving forward in steps that have anticipated and gone beyond such calls. Indeed, this Administration has been a pioneer – rightly or wrongly – in dealing with the forces of extremism, enticing them to cooperate and bringing them out of their isolation, amid doubts over the soundness of its policies and warnings of the consequences of reinforcing extremism at the expense of moderation. Today, it is in a phase of systematically reviewing its accounts, to see whether the policy of enticement will succeed or whether there are other options in case of failure.

With Iran, it is still too early to settle the issue of whether Barack Obama’s policy will succeed or fail. What is clear so far is that the military option is not on the table at the moment, while awaiting what the policy of sanctions and of enticement towards a solution will lead to.

Yet the kind of enticement the Americans have in mind, and in their bargain, no longer hints to the possibility of coexisting with a nuclear Iran, as it had over the past few months. The obscurity surrounding this aspect has not yet completely been lifted, especially as the responses to Iran’s challenges are not characterized by panic and do not suggest military operations. Perhaps military preparedness is in a state of reorganization, knowing that members of the military are talking about a date for preparedness no earlier than the middle of next year, a date which coincides with expectations of Iran reaching advanced stages of nuclear weapons manufacture.

The Obama Administration seems as if having set a timeframe for itself to succeed in its efforts aimed at peace between the Palestinians and the Israelis, and perhaps between the Syrians and the Israelis as well, within a year – in other words, at a date coinciding with that of military preparedness for all players in the region.

So far, Washington and the other major powers have adopted the policy of restraining Israel militarily while trying to entice Iran to cooperate. Washington’s wager is on Tehran realizing that he bargain holds guarantees for the regime while confrontation holds threats to it.

Regarding Tehran’s allies in Hezbollah or Hamas, Washington’s concern today is not abiding by the calls of those who want it to engage in debates with extremists that only lead to further undermining moderation. Its primary concern is for Israel not to engage in preemptive military operations in Lebanon or in Palestine that would lead to ending the current state of “truce” with the alliance of extremism and set off a large-scale war in the region which Washington wants to avoid at the moment. Similarly regarding Hezbollah and Hamas, Washington fears that they may set off the spark of war, under suggestion from Iran, by getting implicated by Israel, or as a result of making the wrong decisions.

The logic of dialogue is no stranger to Barack Obama’s strategy, and yet the logic of causing the failure of dialogue and truce seems not unlikely for the forces of extremism, which include Israel and Iran.

*Published in the London-based AL-HAYAT on Aug. 27, 2010.

Our World: Accepting the unacceptable

August 28, 2010

Our World: Accepting the unacceptable.

Report: Israel planning to attack Hezbollah arms depots in Syria

August 28, 2010

Report: Israel planning to attack Hezbollah arms depots in Syria – Haaretz Daily Newspaper | Israel News.

The Kuwaiti newspaper Al Rai reports that Israel is preparing to strike Hezbollah targets within Syria, including long-range rocket depots; Syrian military is reportedly on high alert.

By Jack Khoury and Haaretz Service

Israel is planning to attack Hezbollah arms depots and weapons manufacturing plants in Syria, the Kuwaiti newspaper Al Rai reported on Saturday.

The report is based on Western sources who asserted that Israel has increased its military force level along the northern border in the Golan Heights and Mount Dov areas.

The report cited European sources who claimed that recent Israeli unmanned aerial drone flights over Lebanon and Syria signal Israel’s intentions to carry out operations in the area.

IAF F-16 AP File Photo Israel Air Force F-16 taking off on a mission.
Photo by: AP

According to the report, Israel plans to attack Hezbollah weapons depots, including ones deep inside Syria that store long-range rockets.

The Al Rai report said that the situation on the Israel-Syria border is tense and that Syria could respond immediately to any Israeli attack and not demonstrate the restraint that it did after the Israeli Air Force bombed a nuclear reactor in Syria in the fall of 2007.

According to the report, Syria’s military is on high alert and is strengthening its anti-aircraft defenses along the border with Israel and at strategic sites within Syria.

Rival Iranian spy factions shoot it out on Tehran’s streets

August 28, 2010

DEBKAfile, Political Analysis, Espionage, Terrorism, Security.

(Is it even conceivable that nuclear weapons held in Iran can be “contained?” – JW)

Tehran’s Mini-City: Scene of spies shootout

On Aug. 23, just two days after Iran celebrated the inauguration of its first nuclear reactor at Bushehr, debkafile‘s exclusive Iranian sources report a battle in the streets of Tehran flared between rival intelligence factions of the Ministry of Intelligence (MOIS) and the Revolutionary Guards (IRGC) – as mutual suspicions boiled over.
The IRGC directors of Iran’s nuclear program have long suspected senior politicians of passing nuclear secrets to clandestine agencies in the West, especially American, British and Dutch – often to tip the scales in factional feuds within the regime.

The Ministry of Intelligence, for its part, is incensed over secret reports that members of President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad’s inner circle have been trading disloyal gossip about supreme ruler Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, some even sneering that his end was near. The MOIS is totally loyal to the supreme leader.
The shoot-out between them, revealed for the first time here, has completely blacked out by the regime.
debkafile‘s intelligence sources reveal that it erupted after an Intelligence Ministry team broke into a luxury apartment belonging to an IRGC officer in one of the high-rise buildings of northern Tehran’s exclusive Shaid Babaee – known as Mini-City – opposite IRGC staff offices. It is there that most of the Guards senior officers and officials live.

In the living room, the MOIS searchers discovered two bugs hooked up to eavesdropping devices in other apartments and a mini-camera for spying on the comings and goings to and from the IRGC offices.

They extended their search to other apartments in the building – only to find to their astonishment listening devices in living rooms, bedrooms, dining rooms and even bathrooms. More surveillance bugs were also found and video cameras broadcasting to a facility outside the building.
Their search complete, they prepared to depart with their findings. But on their way out, the Ministry agents were jumped on by men in civilian clothes who tried to grab the gadgets they had collected.
The MOIS searchers backed into the building, barricaded themselves there and called for back-up.
The reinforcements summoned were stopped at roadblocks manned by more men in civilian clothes who were armed. The two groups started shooting. The gunfire spread into the apartment building and around the surrounding streets, causing an unknown number of casualties.
When the ministry agents realized that the men in civilian clothes were in fact members of IRGC Special Intelligence units and they too had summoned reinforcements, they threw in the towel and handed over the surveillance equipment they had collected.
Only later, was it discovered that the network of bugs had been planted in the IRGC apartment building by a third undercover agency called Shahid Fahmideh, which is directly answerable to Khameini in person and the IRGC’s Nuclear Administration. It was installed under the supervision of Hossein Taeb, Director of the IRGC Intelligence Branch and a former commander of the Basijj militia, and Mojtaba Khamenei, the supreme leader’s son.
This incident, though kept under tight wraps, brought to the surface the extent to which Iran’s many-faceted clandestine services are riddled with mutual suspicion and how far distrust has burrowed under relations among Khamenei and his party, IRGC factions and the Ahmadinejad clique.
Each faction suspects the other of trafficking in Iran’s nuclear secrets to promote its interests – either selling them to Western intelligence agencies or trading them to buy influence within the regime’s political and military systems.