Archive for December 18, 2010

U.S. military chief: We are ‘very ready’ to counter Iran

December 18, 2010

U.S. military chief: We are ‘very ready’ to counter Iran – Haaretz Daily Newspaper | Israel News.

During visit to Bahrain, Admiral Mike Mullen says that Iran is still trying to build a nuclear bomb.

By The Associated Press

Iran is trying to build a nuclear bomb, posing a threat to its neighbors, and the United States is “very ready” to counter Iran should it make a move, the top U.S. military officer said Saturday.

Adm. Mike Mullen, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, reassured Persian Gulf nations nervous that an increasingly militarized government in Iran might try to start a war.

U.S. army Persian Gulf A U.S. fighter jet taking off from the USS Dwight D. Eisenhower aircraft carrier in the Persian Gulf, Sunday, June 6, 2010.
Photo by: AP

“The United States takes very seriously our security commitments in the Gulf region,” Mullen said following a meeting with Bahrain’s king. Bahrain, directly across the Gulf from Iran, is home to a large U.S. Navy base that would be on the front lines of any war with Iran.

“We’re very ready,” Mullen said, an unusually direct acknowledgment that the United States has contingency plans to counter Iran should it make a move. “There are real threats to peace and stability here, and we’ve made no secrets of our concerns about Iran.”

Iran denies it is seeking a nuclear weapon, and denies U.S. claims that it sponsors terrorists. Iran has wary relations with many of its neighbors, who are trading partners with the oil giant but distrust the theocratic government.

“Concerns about Iran’s nuclear program are very real and inform a lot of the decision making” among Gulf nations, said Adam Ereli, the U.S. ambassador in Bahrain.

The U.S. fears that if Iran masters the technical challenge of building a bomb it could set off a nuclear arms race around the Gulf.

“From my perspective I see Iran continuing on this path to develop nuclear weapons, and I believe that that development and achieving that goal would be very destabilizing to the region,” Mullen said.

He gave no specifics about U.S. plans or defenses, but the Navy base is headquarters for ships and aircraft that monitor Iran and could be used to deter or defend against what military officials fear would be an attack that would come without warning. The base also houses Patriot missiles.

The U.S. keeps tabs on Iran through extensive air surveillance in the Gulf and from naval patrols that regularly engage in formal communication with Iranian ships.

“I would like someday to think that they would be responsible regional and international players as opposed to what they are right now,” Mullen added. “I just haven’t seen any steps taken in that regard.”

Mullen said he supports the current strategy of applying economic and political sanctions on Iran to try to dissuade it from building a bomb, while engaging Iran in international negotiations over the scope of its nuclear program. Iran claims it is seeking nuclear energy.

Mullen repeated his view that a pre-emptive military strike on Iran’s known nuclear facilities is a bad option that would set off “unintended consequences,” but one the United States reserves the right to use. The Obama administration has said it will not allow Iran to become a nuclear weapons state but has never said exactly what steps it would take to prevent that.

“I’ve said all options have been on the table and remain on the table,” Mullen said.

Iran is currently under four sets of UN Security Council sanctions and subject to additional penalties imposed separately by the United States, European countries and others. The most recent round of Security Council sanctions were adopted in June.

The Obama administration and its European allies are prepared to impose additional sanctions if Iran fails to meet international demands to prove that its nuclear program is peaceful, a senior U.S. official said Friday.

Gary Samore, the White House coordinator for arms control, told a Washington think tank that the U.S. and its partners will keep up pressure on Iran to come clean about its nuclear ambitions.

Leaders of six U.S.-allied Gulf Arab nations said this month they are watching Iran’s nuclear ambitions with “utmost concern,” and appealed to the West for a greater voice in the renewed talks with Tehran.

The statement from the Gulf Cooperation Council — powerful Saudi Arabia and its fast-growing neighbors — appeared to cast off a bit of the group’s traditional caution and adopt a harder tone. The group warned Iran not to interfere in Gulf Arab affairs and called on it to reject “force or the threat to use it.”

Iran holds frequent military drills along the Persian Gulf — primarily to assert an ability to defend against any U.S. or Israeli attack on its nuclear sites, but also to send a message to Arab neighbors on its southern border.

Salehi: Top priority is boosting ties in Islamic world

December 18, 2010

Salehi: Top priority is boosting ties in Islamic world

Head of the Iran's Atomic Energy Organization, Al

Iranian atomic agency chief Ali Akbar Salehi, who officially took over the position of the Islamic republic’s new foreign minister on Saturday, said Teheran’s top priority will be to increase ties with Saudi Arabia and Turkey, reported AFP.

Salehi was appointed interim foreign minister after his predecessor, Manouchehr Mottaki, was fired by President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad.

Iran‘s first priority in diplomacy should be neighbours and the Islamic world. In this regard, Saudi Arabia and Turkey have a special position,” Salehi was quoted as saying by Mehr news agency after he was sworn in as foreign minister, AFP reported.”Saudi Arabia deserves to have special political ties with Iran. Iran and Saudi Arabia, as two effective countries in the Islamic world, can resolve many problems together,” he said.

The new foreign minister’s comments on Saudi Arabia come after US diplomatic cables published by WikiLeaks showed Riyadh was highly concerned by a threat from Iran. According to a report that appeared late last month on The Guardian’s website, Saudi Arabia’s King Abdullah asked the US repeatedly to attack Iran and destroy its nuclear program, and in 2008 the monarchy’s envoy to Washington told US Gen. David Petraeus to “cut off the head of the snake.”

On Europe, Salehi said Iran and the European Union too would “benefit” if the EU changed its position towards Teheran from “confrontation to engagement as soon as possible.”

“Despite some unfair moves by the European Union, this union wants respectful ties with Iran for a number of reasons, including energy,” the foreign minister was quoted as saying by AFP.

Salehi also stressed the importance of boosting ties with Syria, Iraq, Azerbaijan, Afghanistan and Pakistan, and Russia and China, reported AFP.
Salehi, 61, was officially sworn in as foreign minister at a ceremony which was also the farewell event for Mottaki who was not in attendance, media reports said according to AFP.

Mottaki, 57, was fired last week by the Iranian president during an official visit to Senegal.

Ahmadinejad dismissed Mottaki after he praised as a “step forward” comments made by US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton that Iran is entitled to a peaceful nuclear program.

Mottaki’s comments apparently undermined the Islamic republic’s official stance that its enrichment of uranium is non-negotiable.

Mottaki’s dismissal also came just days after nuclear talks between Iran and the P5+1 ended earlier this month without any signs of progress other than a commitment to meet once again in early 2011 in Turkey.

However, on Thursday The Telegraph reported that Iran is in negotiations with France, Russia, Turkey and the United States on a nuclear fuel swap deal that Teheran hopes will curb sanctions levied against it.

According to the report, Iran would send 1,000 kilograms of low-enriched uranium and all of its 30 kilograms stockpile of 20-percent enriched uranium “to a safe location.” France and Russia would supply Teheran with fuel rods for the medical isotope reactor Teheran claims it is enriching uranium to power.

An official involved in the talks told The Telegraph, “We think the deal is doable,” but cautioned that “there’s still a lot of detail to be worked through.

– Herb Keinon and Yaakov Katz contributed to this report.