Archive for October 12, 2010

The Gravest Threat

October 12, 2010

The Gravest Threat.

A Washington conference reflects profound US and Russian concern over the prospect of a nuclear-armed Iran, but strong reticence about using force to stop it.

IN LATE SEPTEMBER, WITH AN estimated 3,800 centrifuges spinning round the clock at the uranium enrichment facility in Natanz, Mahmoud Ahmadinejad again denied that Iran had any intention of developing nuclear weapons. Already the Iranians have stockpiled around 2,800 kilograms of low-enriched uranium (LEU), which if further enriched to weapons’ grade, would be enough for two nuclear bombs.

In New York for the annual opening of the UN General Assembly, the Iranian president produced a torrent of sometimes preposterous mixed messages. He accused the US of staging the 9/11 attack on America to save the “Zionist regime,” and, smiling his supercilious trademark smile, denied that US-led international sanctions were having any effect. But at the same time, he told reporters that Iran might very soon be ready to discuss limiting its uranium enrichment to just 3.5 percent (far less than the 90 percent needed for a bomb), in return for a supply of nuclear fuel for peaceful purposes.

As Ahmadinejad was being feted in the UN and by the media in New York, American, Russian and other experts in nearby Washington were debating how to save the world from nuclear disaster. The International Luxembourg Forum on Preventing Nuclear Catastrophe (which takes its name from the founding conference in Luxembourg in May 2007) is the brainchild of Russian-Jewish businessman Viatcheslav (Moshe) Kantor, who is also president of the European Jewish Congress.

Although it is made up of about 50 leading experts from 14 countries, the Luxembourg Forum is largely a platform for unofficial exchanges at the highest level between the Americans and the Russians and a model for future cooperation between the two powers on nuclear affairs. The underlying assumption is that the proliferation of nuclear weapons constitutes the gravest threat to global security in the 21st century and that the only way it can be contained is through close cooperation between the two major nuclear nations. They need to put their cold war hang-ups aside in reducing their own nuclear stockpiles and in pooling resources to prevent more countries or terrorists getting their hands on nuclear devices.

“We are in a race between cooperation and catastrophe,” warns former Georgia Senator Sam Nunn, a prominent member of the forum’s supervisory council and the co-chairman and Chief Executive Officer of the Nuclear Threat Initiative, a charitable organization working to reduce the global threats from nuclear, biological and chemical weapons.

A news conference on the opening day of the Washington conference reveals the extent and the limits of current US-Russian cooperation. Kantor expresses confidence that the START III Treaty, further reducing American and Russian strategic nuclear stockpiles, will be ratified within the next few months. But he also urges the two governments not to rest on their laurels and to go on talking after START III about tactical nuclear weapons and anti-ballistic missile defense systems (ABMs) used jointly by the US, EU and Russia.

Vladimir Dvorkin, a basso-voiced former Russian general who headed the Russian Ministry of Defense’s research division until 2001, complains about a lingering cold-war mentality that has prevented the US and Russia from behaving like true allies. Had they done so, combining intelligence and combat assets, they could have done a better job of containing Iran and North Korea, he asserts. And he, too, calls for closer cooperation on the ABM front. “We have had joint exercises with the US and the EU using [Russian] S-300s and [American] Patriots. Now we could have joint exercises with the next generation of ABMs,” he declares.

As for rogue countries like Iran and North Korea today, Kantor has a far-reaching proposal: That the international community define the limits of nuclear tolerance and that the US and Russia set up a joint rapid-response team to deal with violators. Few of the other heavyweight conference attendees, however, believe that anything as dramatic as that is about to happen. “This is a preliminary, personal idea of Kantor’s,” former Russian foreign minister Igor Ivanov tells The Report.

NEVERTHELESS, IT IS CLEAR that the outcome of the campaign to keep Ahmadinejad’s Iran from going nuclear will depend to a large extent on the degree of US-Russian cooperation and that this, in turn, will be a function of newly evolving US and Russian nuclear polices. At bottom, the key is in the hands of US President Barack Obama. Will he have the political smarts to unite Russia and the rest of the international community around America’s lead? And if he fails, what will Israel, which would be directly threatened by an Iranian bomb, choose to do?

An insight into the president’s latest thinking on Iran came in early August when the White House invited a small group of journalists to a briefing by a “senior official,” who turned out to be Obama himself. Some, pointing to the president’s claim that his initial engagement policy had merely been a tactic to pave the way for strong internationally approved sanctions, came away with the sense that Obama, under no illusions about Iranian duplicity, was toughening his stance and ready to ratchet up the pressure.

But the president also reportedly said: “It is very important to put before the Iranians a clear set of steps that we would consider sufficient to show that they are not pursuing nuclear weapons… They should know what they can say ‘yes’ to.” Others in the briefing interpreted this as pointing to a softening of the American stance and a readiness for new negotiations.

The apparent contradiction in the journalists’ assessments stems from the fact that there are indeed two sides to the new Obama approach. White House officials have since defined it as a “two-track policy” – increasing the pressure on Iran, while at the same time offering an honorable way out. In other words, the pressure on the Iranians will continue to intensify until they agree to cut a deal that guarantees their civilian nuclear programs, while ensuring that they have no possible military applications.

The same kind of carrot-and-stick approach was evident in the administration’s Nuclear Posture Review (NPR) issued in early April. In it, the US made a commitment not to launch nuclear attacks against non-nuclear states, clearly providing an incentive for countries thinking about going nuclear to refrain from doing so. But US Secretary of Defense Robert Gates made it plain that, at least for now, this does not apply to North Korea or Iran. “Because North Korea and Iran are not in compliance with the Nuclear Nonproliferation Treaty, for them all bets are off. All options are on the table,” he declared.

THE DILEMMAS FACING THE decision-makers on Iran come to the fore during a lively, wide-ranging expert debate at the Luxembourg Forum’s Washington conference. In outlining his own thinking, Joseph Cirincione, a man who speaks to the US president’s team on Iran, provides a profound insight into the way the Administration’s policy has evolved.

According to Cirincione, president of the Ploughshares Fund, a public grant-making foundation that supports initiatives to prevent the spread and use of weapons of mass destruction (WMD), the Administration has just five theoretical options for dealing with Iran, only one of which makes sense: It could “muddle along” as the US did for much of the last decade, a policy which enabled Iran’s nuclear program to take off in 2004 and which is clearly no longer viable; it could promote peaceful regime change, a gambit that risks getting the reformists discredited as tools of US policy and setting back any hope of reform; it could launch a military strike on Iran’s nuclear facilities, a ploy which might have only limited success and which, therefore, risks legitimizing and accelerating the Iranian nuclear weapons’ program as well as sparking wide-scale Iranian retaliation that could draw the US into an unwanted third Middle Eastern war; it could go for a “grand bargain” in which the US, Iran and other nations resolve a cluster of issues including Israel-Palestine and the Iranian nuclear threat, a tack, which although eminently desirable, is hopelessly unrealistic.

Ruling out the above four as stand-alone options brings Cirincione to what he sees as the one viable strategy, which he calls “Contain and Engage” and which he claims is exactly what Obama is doing today. The goal, he says, is “to put pressure on Iran, to back the Iranian regime into a corner and then open the door and help them find a way out.”

Cirincione is upbeat about the policy’s chances of success. He says the sanctions regime imposed by the UN and to which the EU, Japan, South Korea, Australia and the US itself have added sanctions of their own is hurting and things will only get worse for Iran as more and more businesses pull out. There are also signs that the Iranian nuclear program is slowing down because of technical hitches, with significantly fewer centrifuges running than last year. In addition, the regime is under domestic pressure from the reformist Green Movement. Cirincione speaks of two clocks now in Iran: a nuclear clock, which is slowing down, and a countdown for the regime clock, which is speeding up. “So the pressures are growing on Ahmadinejad to make some sort of a deal,” he concludes.

What kind of deal does Cirincione envisage? “What we are looking at now is some sort of deal which allows Iran, at least in the short run, to continue a limited operation of centrifuges under an expanded and much more intrusive international inspection regime,” he explains.

But what about military action to stop Iran going nuclear, if “contain and engage” fails? This is the huge dilemma decision-makers around the world are likely to face in the not too distant future. In Cirincione’s view, if it emerges that Iran has no intention of making a deal and is simply playing for time, the US should in certain circumstances be ready to take limited military action. Cirincione is extremely ambivalent about this, unsure about how effective it might be and even ready to entertain the notion that the Iranian Revolutionary Guard may actually want to see an American strike, which would enable that elite military force to unify the country around the regime. He also maintains that the US could contain a nuclear-armed Iran, although the spread of nuclear weapons it would almost certainly trigger would be a major problem.

So in what circumstances should the US consider military action in his view? If the Iranians make blatant moves to go nuclear that the US could use force to subvert. “If, say, Iran were right now to kick out the inspectors from Natanz and move to highly enrich uranium, I would argue that the military option to take out the Natanz facility starts to look very attractive,” Cirincione declares.

THE RUSSIAN EXPERTS’ ANALYSIS is far more down to earth. Russian interlocutors in the debate argue that there are only two ways of preventing Iran from going nuclear: imposing much tougher sanctions, including the possibility of a blockade, or launching a full-scale strike against Iran and its military infrastructure, taking out the Revolutionary Guard and preventing significant retaliation. A strike restricted to Iran’s nuclear facilities would be self-defeating primarily because of the terror Iran would be able to unleash in response.

Therefore, the only serious military scenario is a broad, sustained attack on the entire Iranian military, along the lines of the 1999 NATO campaign in former Yugoslavia. In the Russian experts’ view, a long, unrelenting campaign could topple the regime and destroy the Iranian nuclear program, but it would create chaos in the region, with huge humanitarian and refugee problems. Iran would not get nuclear weapons and would not even think of trying again for decades. But the cost in humanitarian terms would be intolerable. On the other hand, the Russians hold that if Iran were to get nuclear weapons they could be transferred to Hizbullah cells and used in terror attacks anywhere in the world. All of which creates a huge dilemma over the use of force against Iran. “On Tuesday’s, Thursdays and Saturdays, experts say we should strike. And on Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays, the same experts say we shouldn’t. And on Sundays they pray to God to tell them what to do,” one of the leading Russian participants comments wryly.

The prevailing Russian view, though, seems to be that the unintended consequences of an attack would be worse than coming to terms with a nuclear-armed Iran, which could be contained through nuclear deterrence. The Russian approach, as reflected at the conference, seems to be to have much stronger sanctions imposed uniformly by a united international community to force Iran to give up its nuclear ambitions or face political isolation and economic collapse. But for the Russians this is the last resort; should it fail, there would be no recourse to military force.

In an interview with The Report and other Israeli journalists, Ivanov, the former foreign minister, spells out this strand of Russian thinking: “If peaceful methods fail, there is only one option [to stop Iran going nuclear], and that option [military force] could be a disaster for international and regional stability,” he maintains. Throughout the conference, Ivanov repeatedly complains of insufficient unity in the international community to put real pressure on Iran. He points to the recent separate initiatives by Brazil and Turkey, which he says “eat away” at international unity, and he adds that there is also insufficient unity of purpose in the P5 plus 1 group (the five permanent members of the Security Council and Germany), which represents the international community in talks with Iran.

Asked how, if the international community is not united and there is no military option on the table, can Iran be prevented from getting a bomb, he points to the collapse of white-ruled apartheid South Africa. “With international solidarity we achieved results. So with greater unity we could achieve results with Iran too,” he insists. He says this means not only stronger sanctions, but strong political commitment on the Iranian issue, with all countries sending Iran the same messages, and not allowing the Iranians to play a game of divide and rule. But, again, if there is no real military threat behind the messages, why should the Iranians take them seriously? “Because in today’s global village no country can live in isolation. They all need political contacts and development of economic relations,” Ivanov avers.

The Luxembourg Forum’s Washington conference reflects profound US and Russian concern over the prospect of a nuclear-armed Iran, but strong reticence about using force to stop it. Ahmadinejad’s offer to discuss limiting uranium enrichment notwithstanding, the Iranian president is seen by the experts as continuing to play a dangerous, duplicitous game. The question is will increasingly tougher sanctions, not backed by force, prove effective as in the South Africa case?

If not, as the US and Russian dilemmas show, Israel could be faced with some very hard choices. And it is partly with this in mind that senior Israeli officials have recently taken to referring to 2011 as “the year of decision.”

What really bugs Iran

October 12, 2010

Asia Times Online :: Middle East News, Iraq, Iran current affairs.

By Spengler

Amid the mass of published analysis of the Stuxnet virus, Iran’s most obvious vulnerability to cyber-war has drawn little comment: much of the Islamic Republic runs on pirated software. The programmers who apparently cracked Siemens’ industrial control code to plant malware in Iran’s nuclear facilities needed a high degree of sophistication. Most Iranian computers, though, run on stolen software obtained from public servers sponsored by the Iranian government. It would require far less effort to bring about a virtual shutdown of computation in Iran, and the collapse of the Iranian economy. The information technology apocalypse that the West feared on Y2K (the year 2000) is a real possibility.

On August 25, before the Stuxnet story broke, Brandon Boyce

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reported on the website Neowin.net:

The Iranian Research Organization for Science and Technology (IROST), an organization directly connected to the Iranian government, is charged with evaluating and advising policymakers on science and technology issues. They are also host to a large FTP server full of pirated software. Searching the FTP you will be able to find a wide range of applications all legal to download and use if you are an Iranian citizen. The FTP server, which was discovered by TorrentFreak, was open to anyone around the world, but shortly after being discovered access was cut off. Initially, they password-protected the FTP and then they cut off access completely to anyone outside of Iran. The server was host to multiple versions of software applications, including Microsoft Office 97 to 2010 or Photoshop 5.5 through CS3, along with appropriate serial numbers, cracks and keygens.

Even the software that the Iranian authorities use to block Internet access is apparently stolen. Wikipedia reports, “The primary engine of Iran’s censorship is the content-control software SmartFilter, developed by San Jose firm Secure Computing. However, Secure denies ever having sold the software to Iran, and alleges that Iran is illegally using the software without a license.”

For all the Iranians know, every word-processing document and Power Point presentation in the country is loaded with malware created by hostile intelligence services. Sabotage of industrial controls using Siemens’ specialized software is only one possible target of cyber-war. Israel reportedly hacked Syrian air defenses in the course of the September 2007 attack on a nuclear reactor site. The spook site Debka.com, not always a reliable source, reports that malware already may have been planted in Iranian, Syrian and Hezbollah missiles. But the most devastating effects of cyber-war may be felt in ordinary life.

Iranians, to be sure, can learn to program as well as anyone else. But a software industry depends on such preconditions as enforceable patents. The only success story for Iranian software to reach the Western media recently involves the California-trained programmers in Tehran who built the “Garshasp” video game.

As the Washington Post reported on May 21, though, the “Garshasp” project is an exception that proves the rule. “For Iranians, who live with double-digit inflation, unemployment and constant political and judicial uncertainty, enterprises that do not yield almost instant results are typically regarded as lost undertakings. There are no copyright laws, and music, movies and computer games can be freely copied, distributed and sold.”

A country that steals its software cannot build its own, even if the sort of individual who excels at software development wanted to live in Iran. Most of those who can, leave. A 2002 study reported that four out of five Iranians who received rewards in international science competitions subsequently left Iran; too few Iranians have won international awards since then to gather comparable data. In 2006, the International Monetary Fund noted that Iran had the worst brain drain of 90 countries surveyed.

Iran has so few skilled programmers that it could be that the security services do not have the capacity to distinguish sabotage from incompetence. That may explain why Tehran blames foreign intelligence services for a recent succession of economic reverses, including the near-collapse of the local markets for gold and foreign exchange.

Iran’s economy has teetered towards disaster since early 2008, as I reported at the time (Worst of times for Iran Asia Times Online, June 24, 2008). Official data at the time reported that Iranian households spent 10% more per month than they earned, a rough gauge of the size of the underground economy (smuggled consumer goods, alcohol, opium, prostitution and so forth).

Iranians coped with inflation in the 20% range by fiddling. Tehran’s decision to lift fuel subsidies last month will put poorer households under water, and Iranian authorities have warned of possible riots. A run by foreign-exchange dealers on the Iranian rial reportedly led to street fighting between currency traders and police last week. After refusing to sell dollars to the market, Iranian banks on October 10 flooded the market with foreign currency to break the run.

How much of the country’s economic and financial chaos is due to incompetence and theft, and how much reflects economic sabotage, may never be known, if the Cold War is any guide.

A number of commentators have mentioned the precedent of the “Farewell Dossier”, an American intelligence operation that in 1982 lead to catastrophic damage to the Soviet Union’s Siberian gas pipeline.

My old boss, Norman A Bailey, was then head of plans at the Reagan National Security Council, and deeply involved in the operation. Russia did not have the software engineers to design the required control software, and sent spies to steal it from a Canadian firm. The Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) learned of Russia’s efforts and arranged for the Russians to steal doctored software. A pumping station exploded with a force equivalent to three kilotons of TNT.

I am personally aware of other instances of successful economic sabotage. Russia managed to “steal” American spy cameras that had been doctored by the CIA. They were turned over to engineers at Zeiss, East Germany’s great optics firm, but they never quite worked properly.

After the Berlin Wall came down in 1989, the Zeiss team met with the American intelligence officer who designed the scam. “We thought that if only we could get copies of the original manuals, or talk to the American engineers, we could fix the problem” on the sensitive equipment. To my knowledge, the spy-camera story has never surfaced. Neither have numerous other instances of sabotage that American intelligence has no interest in revealing, and which the Russians are too embarrassed to talk about.

Russia at the height of the Cold War could not handle sophisticated programming and chip-making problems, despite its vast pool of skilled engineers and scientists. It is doubtful that the Iranians have the capacity to program a money-transfer system for a retail bank, or the traffic lights in Tehran, or an electricity distribution grid, or other commonplaces of modern life.

The rancor and disaffection of Iran’s diminishing educated class is so great that the government will find very few local technicians whom it can trust, and even fewer capable of diagnosing a bug buried in thousands of lines of code, most of it written years ago by programmers who long since emigrated. Anyone who has managed large-scale information technology projects for corporations knows that the fog of war is nothing compared to the cloud of computation. And that is true under the most benign circumstances.

Tehran cannot be sure how any of its foreign-purchased weapons systems will perform, much less the nuclear reactor it sourced from Russia. Recently, I remonstrated with a Russian friend about his country’s sale of nuclear technology to Iran. He said, “You know, sometimes Russian technology isn’t so good. There are little problems with quality control, and accidents happen. Remember Chernobyl,” he said, referring to the nuclear disaster on April 26, 1986, at the Chernobyl nuclear power plant in Ukraine (then part of the Soviet Union).

The only weapons on which Iran can rely are unguided missiles that require no electronic controls and simply shoot in the general direction of a target. At relatively short range and in very large number, these are very effective weapons against Israeli cities, for example.

After the Stuxnet humiliation, and with great uncertainty about the usability of more sophisticated weapons, Iran is likely to risk a demonstration of its power through Hezbollah. The more successful the cyber-war attack on Iran’s nuclear capacities, therefore, the more dangerous becomes southern Lebanon.

Spengler is channeled by David P Goldman.

Ahmadinejad steps into a cauldron

October 12, 2010

Asia Times Online :: Middle East News, Iraq, Iran current affairs.

By Victor Kotsev

Many observers have little respect for Israeli website Debka File, known for publishing intelligence leaks as well as occasional wild rumors. When I mentioned it to an Israeli analyst recently, he sneered at me. “This is where you go if you want to get your yellow pages,” he said. Thus, when Debka cautioned a week ago that Iran was planning a military response to a recent cyber-attack [1] and that Hezbollah was setting to overthrow the Beirut government by force following the visit of Iranian President Mahmud Ahmadinejad to the country [2], the reports did not immediately attract attention.

However, it is now clear that something serious is afoot in Lebanon. There are rumors that Hezbollah will respond violently – even preemptively – to a widely expected indictment of some of its members by the United Nations-backed tribunal into the 2005

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murder of ex-premier Rafik Hariri. These have become so widespread that even Hezbollah leader Hassan Nasrallah felt the need to address them on Saturday. He did this in a way that caused further alarm as it could be interpreted as a veiled threat. “If we wanted to [stage a coup], we would’ve done that in 2005,” he said, adding: “We would’ve taken over the country on August 15, 2006 [after the Israel-Hezbollah summer war that year] if we wanted to, so these claims are unfounded.”

Amid reports that Lebanese civilians are arming themselves (according to an interview with a Lebanese arms dealer published on the website Now Lebanon, sales of light arms have gone up 60% in recent months) or leaving the country, news outlets have picked up the scent. “Ahmadinejad’s plan to visit Lebanon in the coming weeks should be seen in the context of Hezbollah’s plot to take over the country”, writes Arab-Israeli journalist Khaled Abu Toameh for the Jerusalem Post [3]. Another Ha’aretz report describes the mood in the country as “gloomy”.

“Iran, through its association with groups like Hezbollah, is actively undermining Lebanon’s sovereignty,” Reuters quotes US State Department Philip Crowley as commenting on the Iranian president’s trip.

While it is not clear that a Hezbollah coup d’etat is imminent, the Debka report is partially corroborated by a consensus among most analysts that a Sunni-Shi’ite confrontation is shaping up. The political realities in Lebanon bode poorly as well. In the last year, two of the country’s most powerful anti-Syrian leaders, Druze leader Walid Jumblatt and Sunni Prime Minister Saad Hariri, felt forced to reconcile with Syrian President Bashar al-Assad and to offer elaborate apologies for blaming Syria for their fathers’ murders. In the Middle East, such humiliation is usually a sign of a grave predicament.

It is hard to overlook that preparations for the Ahmadinejad visit have taken on mythical proportions. “We call on [the masses] to welcome President Mahmud Ahmadinejad on Wednesday all along the airport road,” said Nasrallah in a televised address. Not only the road to the airport, but also much of Beirut and Lebanon is reportedly decorated with Iranian flags. This is particularly visible in the south near the border with Israel, where a specially built replica of the Al-Aqsa mosque in Jerusalem will be inaugurated by Iran’s president. According to reports, he also plans to throw a “symbolic stone” at Israel while touring the border, and thus to assume his much-more-than-symbolic place at the helm of Hezbollah (“the resistance”).

It is important to watch the behavior of Syria, which has a decisive influence in Lebanon. On the one hand, Assad has tried to put on a moderate appearance: a few weeks ago, he publicly asked the Iranian president to cancel his visit to South Lebanon. He also offered to enter peace talks with Israel and reshuffled his security agencies, a sign that he does not expect a war to be imminent. When, in August, he visited Lebanon with Saudi King Abdullah bin Abdulaziz, there were indications that he was trying to curb Hezbollah, perhaps per a secret understanding with the Saudis.

On the other hand, however, the Assad administration has repeatedly voiced support for Hezbollah. Recently, it issued arrest warrants for a number of Lebanese public figures implicated with the Hariri investigation – a bold move and a blow against the Western- and Saudi-supported Lebanese government. Regarding the security services reform, in some ways Syria gravitated closer to Iran. Stratfor notes: “The most intriguing reshuffle concerns replacing [Major General] Mamluk with Major General Hamad to become the head of state security. Hamad, Stratfor has been told, is close to the Iranians, and Tehran had made clear it wanted Hamad to replace Mamluk upon the latter’s retirement.”

According to Debka, the senior US diplomat, Frederic Hof, on Friday delivered an ultimatum to Syria not to allow Hezbollah to use any violence in Lebanon [4]. Such a move makes a lot of sense, and it even falls short of what some analysts feel US President Barack Obama needs to do. “Obama must, at a minimum, publicly state that he will hold Syria accountable for any bid to topple the Lebanese government, whether by the Syrians or their proxies in Hezbollah,” stated James Traub in Foreign Policy.

It is unclear how successful the Americans will be in averting a showdown in Lebanon. One circumstance will likely play in their favor: it is not in Syria’s interest to see any single internal power consolidate control over the country. This is because Syria wants to maintain its own grip on Lebanon, and it includes even Hezbollah. Thus, at the minimum we could expect Syria to seek to preserve the status quo in some form, whether by preventing Hezbollah from using violence or through subsequent moves.

Moreover, according to some reports, Assad is growing wary of the Iranian attempts to subject him to a bear hug. In these circumstances, and should a good opportunity emerge, he might be tempted to jump ship completely. Such an opportunity, for example, could present itself if Iran is weakened additionally – either by internal strife [5] or by a successful foreign intervention – or else if Assad perceives that he can get a particularly good bargain.

Obama is hard-pressed for some foreign-policy achievements, and according to Stratfor this will likely be even more true after the November congressional elections in the United States. Given the gloomy news coming from Afghanistan, Pakistan and Iraq, and the poor progress of the Israeli-Palestinian negotiations – going by Monday’s developments [6] – the US administration might be prepared to reward Syria generously for a peace agreement with Israel. Such a move would have a precedent in president Jimmy Carter’s decision, over three decades ago, to give up on a comprehensive settlement of the Arab-Israeli conflict and to push for a separate treaty between Egypt and Israel.

For now, nevertheless, a Syrian defection from Iran is still in the realm of speculation, and Assad appears set on vacillating. What that means for Lebanon remains to be seen – perhaps very shortly.

Arabian Aerospace – Crossbows and Bolts: A Dangerous Nexus Between the Iranian Missile and WMD Programs

October 12, 2010

Arabian Aerospace – Crossbows and Bolts: A Dangerous Nexus Between the Iranian Missile and WMD Programs.

Posted on 12 October 2010 in Defence

By Jahangir Arasli, Non-Resident Scholar, INEGMA A firing test of a new Sijjil-2 missile on May 20, 2009, that featured an increased 2,400 km range and solid propellant engine, has marked the next dangerous stage of the ambitious ballistic missile (BM) program of the Islamic Republic of Iran (IRI). The purpose of this short report is to provide a brief analysis of different aspects of the program, establish a potential logical link between it and the nuclear program, developed by the IRI, and to offer possible explanations of the motivations behind the Iranian quest for what one may call a hybrid BM – WMD capabilities, with some potential scenarios of its application and implications. This essay represents the personal views of the author and not of INEGMA or other institutions.

The Iranian ballistic missiles program emerged amid the Iran – Iraq war in the 80s as an initial attempt to gain a deep strike capability, replacing the own degrading air force and mitigating Iraqi air superiority. However, the end of war did not lead to cessation of the program; moreover, it was steadily accelerated throughout the 90s. Starting with the supplies of ready weapons from foreign sources, within a decade and a half Iran had established and gradually enhanced the research and development branch, industrial-technological cycle, training base, and finally, an operational component of its own missile forces. The IRI missile effort has finally moved from the shadow into the spotlight in mid-00s, when the U.S. invasion in Iraq dramatically changed both the Iranian strategic environment and posture.

As of mid-2010, the IRI BM potential remains largely obscure. The bulk of the program constituted from the short-range ballistic missiles are mostly different derivatives of the ‘Scud family’. However, the primary weapon of concern in relation to the presumable WMD program are the medium-range ballistic missiles (MRBM), primarily the Shahab-3, which already are both in operational status and online production, the Sijjil-2 (formerly Ashoura) and the Shahab-4 and some other unidentified projects at the R&D stage. Based on open sources, the estimate number of deployed Shahab-3 launchers is between 6 and 12. This asset, essentially based on the North Korean No-Dong design, has a liquid fuel engine and a range near 2,000 km with Israel, Turkey, South-East Europe and the Arabian Peninsula in range. This is not a full-fledged missile force yet, but not a rudimentary either.

In addition, the May 2009 test of Sijjil-2 indicated a next qualitative stage of the Iranian BM program. The significance of a solid propellant engine goes far beyond purely technical domain and has also at least operational, and perhaps, even strategic implications. It dramatically reduces reaction time (i.e. provides a “launch-on-warning” capability given no need to fuel missiles prior to launch), complicates detection by space, aerial and other ISR assets and poses a more complex targeting challenge for the opposing military forces. Apparently, mobility, survivability, precision and range of fire of the IRI missile units would continue to advance. The intermediate-range ballistic missiles, based on the North Korean Taepodond design, and even intercontinental ballistic missiles (ICBM) which development is disguised under space launch vehicle project are looming on the horizon: According to an open source estimate, the ICBM might be operational as early as in 2015; this timeline coincides with most estimates of when Iran will have enough weapon-grade highly-enriched uranium (HEU). Presumably, these projects would be associated with development of multiple independently targeted / manoeuvrable re-entry vehicles and sophisticated guidance systems.

An indicator that requires a special attention is the place of the BM units in the Iranian military forces order of battle. It is integrated into the Air Force branch of the IRGC and should be considered as an essentially a missile force since it barely has any aircraft. More broadly, the IRGC is characterized by a unique role in the IRI politico-military hierarchy and the entire national security system, being subordinated directly to the top leadership. In particular, the IRGC is in charge of the national nuclear program, presented as “peaceful.” In case the last statement is false, that implies that the Corps would combine control over both WMD capability and delivery means. The potential application of the IRI missile capabilities should be analyzed from two perspectives – conventional and unconventional, and viewed through the lenses of doctrine of asymmetric response, which is deeply enrooted into the Iranian strategic thinking.

 

Conventional Application

On one hand, Iran intensively used BM during its war with Iraq; by fact, in the last period of war it became an only asset to outreach the adversary’s strategic rear. Later, in 1994 and 2000, Tehran was not hesitating to use ballistic missiles to strike the Iranian armed opposition camps in Iraqi territory in a rare application of essentially strategic weapons for counterinsurgency ends. At a glance, it justifies a suggestion that Iran needs its BM force to apply missiles per se precisely for such or similar purposes. Other suggestions would state that Iran might target Israel in case of war with its conventional missiles to influence its morale, similarly to what was attempted by Iraq in 1991. The BM also would give the Iranians a capability to project firepower to the southern shore of the Gulf (i.e. influence the global energy factor and threaten the U.S. military bases). That would become even more feasible, if the Iranian defense industry is able to develop cluster sub-munitions and fuel-air explosive warheads to supplement currently available high explosive (HE) warheads. Thus, the argumentation stressing conventional reasons behind the IRI missile capabilities – such as asymmetric military assets against a superior adversary(s), tool of economic warfare and strategic influence – has a right to exist.

However, certain observations allow challenging previous arguments. Iran continues to expand the range of missiles. Increase of the missile’s range unavoidably leads to decrease of a payload. To deliver 100 kg of HE to a distance of 2,500 km does not make sense. An increased range also results in increase of the circular error probable (CEP) of the missile. In simple terms, that means that chances to defeat a distant target with the HE warhead especially having a relatively small physical signature, are modest at least. Such low accuracy leaves an only feasible conventionally-oriented goal – to strike spatial targets such as big cities, using BM as a tool of psychological terror, and providing an adversary a just cause and a legal case to respond overwhelmingly with full force. Subsequently, the real applicability of the BM in its conventional mode remains rather limited, and this brings the issue to an unconventional option.

Unconventional Application Track 1: Nuclear Option

The analysis of the details of the IRI nuclear program is not a purpose of this short report; however, it is based on the increasingly shared worldwide assumption that the end-state of the Iranian venture is a nuclear weapon. Iran rapidly boasts tempo of its enrichment effort at the specialized facility in Natanz and, probably, some other facilities dispersed throughout the country and hardened to avoid an Osirak-type air raid. An industrial quantity of the enriched uranium at the Iranian disposal is already a matter of fact; the anticipated next stage might become its weaponization. According some estimates, as for mid-2009 Iran was within one to three years from crude nuclear weapons, with a deliverable one looming on the horizon: The joint U.S.–Russian technical experts’ threat assessment team reported at the same time, Iran would be able to successfully marry a 2,500 km range missile with a nuclear warhead in 6–8 years.

All said the above assertion makes treating the ballistic missiles from opposite to a conventional option – in a potential capacity as a nuclear weapons, the delivery means. Indeed, the tactical and technical features of the Iranian BM make them not just a more preferable delivery means than aircraft (that is important in the light of poor state of the IRI Air Force and overwhelming air superiority/air defense capabilities of the potential adversaries), but, by definition, the only weapon of choice in the Iran’s inventory. The nuclear explanation removes a controversy over above mentioned range / payload ratio and CEP problems: Weight and impact effects of a nuclear warhead are totally different from a conventional one. Thus, the utility of the BM coupled with a nuclear weapon appears high. Below is a fictional geopolitical scenario that involves both components.

The Shiite communities of Bahrain and the Eastern province of Saudi Arabia, led by radical pro-Iranian leaders start uprising against “oppressive regimes” and rapidly gain control over certain areas. The respective governments are caught off-guard and seek assistance from the Western allies. Tehran issues vocal warnings against an external interference reinforced by a nuclear test at the desert site in eastern Iran and multiple ballistic missile launches. The awareness of existence of a deliverable nuclear arsenal of Iran, coupled with the obvious display of its determinations, paralyzes the decision-making processes, sharply exacerbates trans-Atlantic rift, freezes any military response options and eventually leads to inaction. Iran gains control over the mentioned territories via its Islamist Shiite proxies; the region is in disarray, the global energy market destabilized, and the naval base of the U.S. 5th Fleet in Bahrain is ceased to exist.

Unconventional Application Track 2: Chemical Option

The IRI chemical warfare capability is opaque. Politically, Tehran exploits victimization track, referring to its suffering from the chemical weapon during war with Iraq as a moral obstacle to pursue such a capability. Moreover, Iran is a signatory of the Chemical Weapons Convention. Despite of the fact that some international reports indicated that Iran experiments with chemical agents and even develops initial production capabilities of the mustard gas, hydrogen cyanide, phosgene, sarin and tabun, there is a tacit agreement to consider Iran as a state free of chemical weapons. Yet, there is another side of the issue. First, the victimization argument does not seem convincing from the standpoint of realpolitik executed by Iran. That means it could reverse the course 180 degree if needed. Second, Iran has an extensive petrochemical industry infrastructure that gives plenty of opportunities to maintain covert dual-use track chemical programs able to “fast weaponized” in need. Of the five agents mentioned the first three are essentially battlefield agents and have no logical feasibility to be coupled with the long-range BM. However, the nerve agents such as sarin and tabun are worth to be considered in the next virtual strategic scenario below.

Iran and Syria enter a strategic alliance aimed at the ‘liberation’ the Golan Heights (a minimum objective) and the destruction of Israel (an ultimate objective). In a D-day Iran delivers from its territory a massive long-range missile strike with chemical nerve agents warheads on the Israeli Air Force (IAF) bases, the Jericho-2 missile units’ locations and reservists mobilization depots. The surprise missile attack is coordinated with the massive armor onslaught by the Syrian army on the Heights. The entire Israeli defense system is essentially based on the rapid mobilization of its reserve forces and air superiority; however, the unconventional missile strike creates havoc in the key points. The casualties, loss of control, need to decontaminate the exposed installations and hardware, and evacuate civilians, complicated by necessity to perform in the protective gear, heavily undermines mobilization deployment of the Israel Army and effectively pin down the IAF on its bases in the critical hours of Syrian offensive. Taking over the Heights, amid intensive international pressure on both sides to stop hostilities, Syria halts an advance and claims a unilateral cease-fire after achievement of its goals, thus diminishing justification reasons for a reprisal nuclear counter-attack by the survived Israeli assets. Whatever unrealistic a given scenario appears, especially keeping in mind the long shadow of the Israeli nuclear weapons, one should not disregard a mix of religious zeal, irrational motives or risk acceptance rationales from the Iranian side (mentioned in the next section) that may enable it to ignore the potential retaliation threat.

Drivers Behind the WMD-Missiles Nexus

The intention of to get the WMD capability is based on the Iranian perceptions of threats and sources of those threats. Since the Islamic revolution of 1979 and establishment of the current regime the IRI leadership clearly indicated the foes – the United States and Israel. An emerging WMD potential will be primarily oriented against both. There is a set of three possible explanations of the IRI quest for the nuclear weapons that is indivisible from its missile program.

Minimal Deterrence (‘Shield’). This explanation might be based on the obsession of the IRI politico-military elite about the U.S. effort to changed regime by force. This notion is deeply enrooted into contemporary Iran’s strategic culture. According to this hypothesis, the IRI seeks a minimal (defensive) nuclear deterrent potential vice the United States, and if not being attacked, will never use nukes first, being fully aware of the overwhelming response. By the same token, Iran would not strike Israel, since the nuclear explosions and radioactive fallout affect not only the Arab-Muslim population in Israel and Palestine, and perhaps, in the broader region.

 

Deterrence Plus (‘Sword’). This explanation suggests, that feeling itself protected and emboldened by newly acquired nuclear capability and being driven by a mix of geopolitical and mega-religious motivations, the IRI would transform towards more aggressive posture and militarized behavior, proactively exerting pressure, and imposing its own influence in the Gulf, Iraq, Levant, the Caucasus and the Central Asia, notwithstanding the United States, West, Russia and Arabs security interests. The lack of a unified stand and political will from the latter would result in a situation when counter-deterrence efforts will prove ineffective and futile.

Irrational Modus Operandi (‘Apocalypses Now’). This explanation is based on the assumption that at least part of the current IRI top leadership, influenced by the apocalyptic religious zeal of Shiite 12er Islam, does not answer characteristics of the rational actor’s model. This suggestion is either hard to justify or deny, so the hypothesis has a right to exist. Whatever true, such factors as a non-transparent nature of the regime, its perplexed national command authority and decision-making system, misperceptions, miscalculations, gambling, risk acceptance, domestic political determents and even mentioned above doomsday motivations, all combined make the incoming IRI nuclear potential extremely hazardous for the global security and stability.

Conclusion

The following considerations should be kept in mind in relation to the IRI BM program. This program is inherently linked to the nuclear program and should be treated indivisibly from it. The program in question has relatively low conventional application utility and extremely high unconventional one. The ultimate goal of Iran is to get an operational nuclear weapon. At the same time, the missile program per se has already taken shape as the IRI’s strategic asset and a political warfare force multiplier. By conducting repetitive missiles tests, supported by extensive media and propaganda coverage, Iran simultaneously tests the will and cohesion of the Western alliance, signaling its intentions to the world. The nature of reaction (or, perhaps, a lack of such) to its actions strengthens Tehran’s perception of the strategic paralysis of the U.S. and soft stand of the EU. Equally, the missile factor has seriously affected the American-Russian relations through the BMD controversy, as well as negatively influences the Middle East regional dynamic. The threatening verbal posture of Iran towards Israel already has been in some way practically applied through the projection of the missile threat during the 2006 Israeli-Hizbollah war. Finally, it increases a domestic political capital of a radical wing of the regime that manipulates with the citizens’ national pride sentiments.

Overall, the Iranian intentions–capabilities nuclear equilibrium steadily gains momentum – the former are stated and the latter are shaping. As for the ballistic missiles’ program, it is a missing link that brings them together. At the moment Tehran detonates the first nuclear device at a test site, Iran will get both its shield and sword. To continue this medieval warfare terms hyperbola, if one gets a crossbow, the next logical step is to have bolts for it; otherwise, it is completely nonsense to have a crossbow. This is an explicit parallel with the true nature and the real ends behind the advancing ballistic missiles programs of the Islamic Republic of Iran.

Chinese warplanes make Mid East debut in Turkey and Iran

October 12, 2010

DEBKAfile, Political Analysis, Espionage, Terrorism, Security.

DEBKAfile Exclusive Report October 12, 2010, 3:33 PM (GMT+02:00)

Chinese Su-27 over Iran and Turkey

The arrival of a new Middle East player startled Washington and Jerusalem: debkafile‘s military sources disclose that when Turkish Prime Minister Tayyep Erdogan met Syrian president Bashar Assad in Damascus Monday, Oct. 11, they talked less about the Kurdish question and more about the role China is willing to play in the military-intelligence alliance binding Syria, Iran and Turkey.

Erdogan took the credit for China’s unfolding involvement in the alliance in the role of big-power backer. Two recent events illustrate Beijing’s intent:

1.  From Sept. 20 to Oct. 6, the Turkish Air Force conducted its regular annual Anatolian Eagle exercise, this time without US and Israeli participation. Israel was not invited and America opted out. However, their place was taken by Chinese Sukhoi Su-27 and Mig-29 warplanes making their first appearance in Turkish skies.

Our military sources report that the Chinese warplanes began touching down at the big Konya air base in central Turkey in mid-September for their debut performance in the Middle East and Europe.
Konya has served NATO and the United States for decades as one of their most important air bases.

2. Our sources add that the Chinese planes refueled only once on their journey to Turkey in… Iran. When they touched down at the Gayem al-Mohammad air base in central Iran, their crews were made welcome by the Iranian air force commander Gen. Ahmad Migani.

It was the first time Chinese fighter-bombers are known to have visited the Islamic Republic.

The Gayem al-Mohammed facility, located near the town of Birjand in South Khorasan, is situated directly opposite the big American base of East Afghanistan near the Afghan-Iranian border town of Herat.

The Turkish prime minister painted the military alliance binding Tehran, Ankara and Damascus in rosy colors for Assad’s benefit as more central to the region and more powerful than Israel’s armed forces after overcoming the IDF’s military edge.

Lebanon, neighbors brace for Mahmoud Ahmadinejad’s visit – latimes.com

October 12, 2010

Lebanon, neighbors brace for Mahmoud Ahmadinejad’s visit – latimes.com.

Some in Lebanon, as well as Israel and the U.S., fear that the Iranian leader’s visit, which includes stops in Hezbollah’s stronghold in the south near Israel, will add to regional instability.

Ahmadinejad to visit Lebanon

A poster of Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad stands near the border between Lebanon and Israel. (Ali Hashisho / Reuters)

From dozens of giant billboards mounted on overpasses and hundreds of smaller placards along highways near the Israeli border, Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad‘s image peers out, half-smiling and one hand held in an informal salute.

“Welcome,” the signs say in Arabic and Persian. On Wednesday, the Iranian leader makes his first state visit to Lebanon — a visit that includes strongholds of the Shiite militia Hezbollah in the southern suburbs of Beirut and the mountainous south.

Iran’s close ties to Hezbollah and Ahmadinejad’s frequent provocative statements against Israel have set the stage for geopolitical theater with a bite. Hezbollah officials say Ahmadinejad plans to deliver a speech in this town, which was at the center of the monthlong 2006 war between Israel and Hezbollah.

“Ahmadinejad must come to Bint Jbeil,” said Ali Sagheer, a bookstore owner and Hezbollah supporter in the town, which was reduced to rubble in the war and has been rebuilt with money largely from Iran and Qatar. “It’s not a regular city anymore. It’s a symbolic place to the people here — the Stalingrad of the Middle East.”

On a nearby hilltop with a clear view of the lush green farms of northern Israel stands an Iranian-built park complete with a replica of the golden-domed Al Aqsa Mosque in Jerusalem, topped with an Iranian flag and surrounded by yet more portraits of Ahmadinejad.

In addition to the tensions with Israel, the visit comes amid continuing disputes between Sunni and Shiite Muslims in Lebanon and fears of military action over Iran’s nuclear program.

Tiny Lebanon often finds itself a battleground for regional disputes. Power is shared among shifting alliances of Shiite, Sunni, Christian and Druze political camps grouped roughly into a pro-Western, Saudi-backed faction led by Prime Minister Saad Hariri, and an Iranian-and-Syrian-allied camp led by Hezbollah. More than 400,000 Palestinians, many of them packed into squalid refugee camps, also live in Lebanon.

On Monday, a previously unknown militant Sunni group calling itself the Abdullah Azzam Brigades, after a veteran of the Afghan battle against the Soviets, warned that it would kill Ahmadinejad, a Shiite, should he step foot in Lebanon.

“We will do the impossible to thwart this conspiracy,” said a message posted to Arabic militant websites, local news media reported.

Most Lebanese officials have tried to play down Ahmadinejad’s visit. Both Hariri and President Michel Suleiman plan to meet with him, as they would any other visiting head of state. The emir of Qatar was also feted last summer when he visited southern Lebanon.

Some observers see Ahmadinejad’s visit as a victory lap and a slap to Israel, the United States and its Arab allies in the region, as well as Lebanon. Hariri’s supporters privately complain that Iran is trying to turn their country into an Iranian base on the eastern edge of the Mediterranean Sea.

“We have no objections to the official visit,” said pro-Hariri lawmaker Fares Soueid, according to Lebanon’s official news agency. “As for the popular visit and the tour of the south, the Lebanese government should be aware of the inherent dangers, specifically in the current circumstances.”

But Hezbollah officials counter that support for “resistance” to Israel is enshrined in the government mission statement that Hariri and his allies signed late last year. They insist that any support by Ahmadinejad or Iran for Hezbollah, which was formed to end Israel’s occupation of southern Lebanon and is still committed to Israel’s destruction, was legitimate.

“Ahmadinejad’s visit is a symbolic show of support given the vitriolic attacks on the resistance,” said Abdel Hakim Fadlallah, head of the Consultative Center for Studies and Documentation, Hezbollah’s think tank. “Israel does not need a provocation to launch an attack. When Israel sees conditions are right, it will launch its own provocative action or attack.”

Hezbollah boasts it is better armed than during the last conflict with Israel. With supplies and training from Iran and its strategic ally Syria, it says it is capable of wreaking havoc on Israel should another war break out.

Iran has tried hard to portray the event as a routine state visit. It has announced a $450-million loan to help Lebanon improve its ailing water and power infrastructure. Another aid offer is more controversial: It says it is willing to supply and train Lebanon’s military if the West cuts off aid to the country’s security forces following a border skirmish between the Lebanese and Israeli armies this summer.

Iran’s Foreign Ministry spokesman denied rumors in Arab and Israeli newspapers that Ahmadinejad planned to stand near the border to symbolically throw a stone toward the Jewish state.

But to the U.S. and Israel, which has long described southern Lebanon as a proxy state of Iran, Ahmadinejad’s visit is a provocation.

“Throwing stones, whether they’re literal …or figurative, I would not consider constructive,” State Department spokesman P.J. Crowley told reporters last week in Washington when asked about the visit.

Two days later, United Nations Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon called on Ahmadinejad to contribute to “peace and security in Lebanon and the Middle East as a whole.”

The Israeli daily Haaretz reported that Israel has asked the United Nations, U.S. and France to pass on the message that it views Ahmadinejad’s visit to southern Lebanon as a provocation.

Israel’s National Security Council chief, Uzi Arad, told his French counterpart in Paris that Ahmadinejad’s visit close to the Israeli border should be canceled, and Foreign Minister Avigdor Lieberman told Ban that Israel was “extremely worried” about the visit, the paper reported.

Many Lebanese, especially those close to Hezbollah, say Iran plays a constructive role in the country, especially in helping to rebuild areas of southern Lebanon and southern Beirut damaged in the fighting with Israel.

“At the very least we have to thank the Iranians for the roads,” said Hussein Rumeiti, a local official in the southern Lebanese town of Burj Qalouway. “The people of southern Lebanon really appreciate Iran. It was the only country that really took care of them.”

The international focus does not obscure the troubles Hezbollah and Ahmadinejad face at home.

Ahmadinejad arrives in Lebanon at a time when domestic economic and political problems have weakened his support among onetime conservative allies. Though Iranians are unlikely to be impressed by the visit, a Western or Israeli backlash might serve to close ranks among squabbling factions in Tehran.

Hezbollah is rattled over the possibility of losing credibility if, as expected, some of its members are indicted in the U.N.-backed inquiry into the 2005 assassination of former Prime Minister Rafik Hariri, the current prime minister’s father. But the visit could serve as a warning to those in Lebanon and abroad who want to disarm it, as called for by the United Nations Security Council.

“Hezbollah will use this visit to show it has strong backing,” said Hilal Khashan, a professor of political science at the American University of Beirut. “The presence of Ahmadinejad will give Hezbollah a much- needed boost.”

daragahi@latimes.com

Israel silent ahead of Ahmadinejad visit to Lebanon: ‘He’s his own worst enemy’

October 12, 2010

Israel silent ahead of Ahmadinejad visit to Lebanon: ‘He’s his own worst ene… – Israel News, Ynetnews.

Foreign Ministry says PR campaign against Iranian leader not needed because his ‘negativity, aggression induce natural resentment wherever he goes’

Ynet reporters

Published: 10.12.10, 00:49 / Israel News
 

 

We don’t need a campaign, because Mahmoud Ahmadinejad is creating a negative PR campaign for himself,” Foreign Ministry sources said while explaining Israel’s silence ahead the Iranian president’s arrival in Lebanon on Wednesday, during which he will visit the border with Israel

“He will arrive in Lebanon, and everyone understands the significance of this,” Foreign Ministry spokesman Yigal Palmor told Ynet Monday night. “The Lebanese are this first to understand the severe ramifications this visit has for their country. We have no reason to intervene.

IDF Jeep to the right, pictures of Ahmadinejad to the left (Photo: AP)

“When Ahmadinejad is quoted as saying that Lebanon is Iran’s border with Israel, the Arab world recognizes the statement’s aggressive tone,” he said.

“Now he is directing his aggression towards Arab elements, and the negativity he exudes is so strong that it stirs natural resentment wherever he goes. With all the negative things he does and projects – he has become his own negative message.”

Final preparations (Photo: AP)

The Lebanese daily Addiyar reported that Hezbollah has almost completed its preparations for the mass rallies that will be held in Ahmadinejad’s honor. Giant posters bearing the Iranian leader’s image were placed along the road leading from Beirut International Airport to the capital itself, as well as in the Dahiya neighborhood – a Hezbollah stronghold – and in south Lebanon.

During his visit, Ahmadinejad is scheduled to lay a wreath on the grave of assassinated Hezbollah commander Imad Mughniyeh and attend a mass rally in his honor at a soccer stadium. Hezbollah leader Hassan Nasrallah is also expected to speak at the event.

Ronen Medzini and Roee Nahmias contributed to the report

Al Qaeda threatens Ahmadinejad’s Lebanon visit, US citizens urged to be vigilant

October 12, 2010

DEBKAfile, Political Analysis, Espionage, Terrorism, Security.

DEBKAfile Special Report October 11, 2010, 6:31 PM (GMT+02:00)

The Lebanon that does not want him

debkafile reports: More fuel was thrown on the bubbling brew surrounding Iranian president Mahmoud Ahmadinejad’s visit toLebanon – and the coming spectacle of his joint appearance in the south Thursday, Oct. 14 with Hizballah leader Hassan Nasrallah – by an armed Al Qaeda-linked group.

“The whole of Lebanon will tremble if Ahmadinejad sets foot in Lebanon,” said the Abdullah Azzam group, named for Osama bin Laden’s Palestinian mentor who was al Qaeda’s original founder. “We will do the impossible to thwart this conspiracy.”
The embassy in Beirut has warned Americans in Lebanon “to be vigilant, monitor news reports, avoid large gatherings of people, and carefully consider their safety and security before choosing to visit popular gathering spots or places where large numbers of people are commonly found.”
US citizens were reminded that “even peaceful gatherings can turn violent and spread over neighborhoods with little or no warning.”
According to debkafile‘s intelligence sources, this warning appeared to cover Beirut international airport, over which Hizballah’s militiamen have taken control, public transport and popular eating places.

As Lebanese citizens snapped up every weapon on sale, Lebanese Prime Minister Saad Hariri suddenly took off Monday for Cairo – ostensibly to consult with Arab League Secretary Amr Mussa on the crisis unfolding over the Iranian president’s visits. More discreetly, debkafile‘s Middle East sources disclose, he met with Egyptian intelligence minister Gen. Omar Suleiman.

In his absence, Nasrallah’s deputy Sheik Naim Qassem declared the Ahmadinejad visit was a success even before his arrival. That view is not shared by other Lebanese. A Sunni Islamist group in the northern Lebanese city of Tripoli posted large banners and pictures of the Iranian president with large crosses and the slogan: “You are not welcome in Lebanon.” Qassem did not forget to once again pin the blame for the 2005 Rafiq Hariri murder on Israel.

debkafile‘s counter-terror sources report that the Abdullah Azzam Brigades threat to the Iranian president is taken seriously because of its track record. Its Ziad al-Jarrah Battalions took credit for the Katyusha rocket attack on the Israeli town of Nahariya in September. This branch of “Al Qaeda in the Levant” is currently resurgent in Palestinian refugee camps in southern and northern Lebanon, Syria and in Iraq, with active offshoots in the Gaza Strip and the Sinai Peninsula.