Archive for October 5, 2011

Saudi reinforcements rushed to oil regions to quell machine-gun toting Shiites

October 5, 2011

DEBKAfile, Political Analysis, Espionage, Terrorism, Security.

DEBKAfile  Exclusive Report  October 5, 2011, 5:07 PM (GMT+02:00)

Saudi Special Forces in action

Has the 11-month Arab revolt reached Saudi Arabia? Or been imported? This week saw weeks of simmering unrest in the Shiite-populated eastern oil regions boiling over. Wednesday, Oct. 5, the Saudi Ministry of Interior warned it would “strike with an iron fist” against any breaches of the country’s stability and security after security officers came under automatic fire and Molotov bombs fired from motorbikes in Saudi Arabia’s richest oil center in the eastern region of Qatif.

Saudi officials blamed “a foreign country” and “mercenaries” after demonstrators fought the police with classical Iranian Revolutionary Guards tactics in the Shiite town of al Awamiya near the kingdom’s largest oil terminal at Ras Tanura:  In one incident, the security police were allowed to break up demonstrations. But when they chased the ringleaders into the alleys, they were ambushed with machine gun and automatic fire. Eleven officers were injured but as they retired with their wounded, they were hit a second time by Molotov-wielding motorcyclists with two riders – one driving and the other shooting.
It was the Saudi security police’s first experience of this level of violence after more or less escaping the spillover of Arab revolts in other countries.
On Wednesday too, oil prices jumped $2.79 to $78.46 – both because of the unrest in Saudi Arabia, the sharp dip in US crude stocks and the steps President Barack Obama is due to unveil for stimulating the US economy.
To put down the riots before they spilled over into other parts of the oil kingdom, the Saudis Wednesday pumped large special forces into restive Qatif whose half a million Shiite inhabitants are employed in the Saudi oil industry, mostly in maintenance at the oil installations of Dhahran and Jubail. Spreading riots and work stoppages there would seriously impact Saudi oil exports.
Although Iran is not named in official Saudi communiqués – only “a foreign country seeking to undermine the security and stability of the homeland in blatant interference in national sovereignty,” no one in Riyadh doubts Tehran’s hand in the unrest, using its own and Hizballah undercover agents to smuggle the guns through neighboring Bahrain to Shiite activists in Al-Awamiya and teaching them assault tactics.
Last week, Riyadh sent military reinforcements to Bahrain to help suppress a new wave of disturbances after discovering that the Shiite activists in Bahrain and Qatif had linked up for action.
Echoing the slogans of the uprisings in other Arab lands, Mohamed al-Saeed, a Qatif resident, accused the Saudi state of ruthlessly suppressing the protest. “For the third day our families in Awwamiya town and Qatif live under brutal crackdown by Saudi forces, just because they went out and [asked] for our human rights and freedom.”

Syria’s Assad intent on dragging Israel into his mess

October 5, 2011

israel today | Syria’s Assad intent on dragging Israel into his mess – israel today.

Syria's Assad intent on dragging Israel into his mess

Syrian President Bashar Assad on Tuesday reportedly threatened to bombard Tel Aviv with ballistic missiles if NATO or other Western powers dare to interfere with his violent crackdown on Syrian pro-democracy demonstrations.

Iran’s Fars news agency reported that Assad made the threat during a meeting with Turkish Foreign Minister Ahmad Davutoglu. According to Assad, he would “not need more than 6 hours to transfer hundreds of rockets and missiles to the Golan Heights to fire them at Tel Aviv.”

Assad reportedly said the Syrian missile barrage would also be complimented by an intense Hizballah missile assualt from Lebanon on northern Israel.

Were that scenario to play out, Assad is said to be confident that Iran would launch an attack on US warships in the Persian Gulf.

While the situation is wholly out of Israel’s hands, there is concern in the Jewish state over what Assad may interpret as Western interference.

Israeli commentators have already stressed that if Assad feels he is going to be toppled, he will have nothing to lose by launching a last minute attack on Israel. In fact, by doing so he has much to gain, as a missile assault on Tel Aviv would solidify Assad’s legacy as a dedicated enemy of the hated “Zionist entity.”

Meanwhile, the Obama Administration was outraged on Tuesday when Russia and China vetoed a UN Security Council resolution condemning the Assad regime’s brutal suppression of pro-democracy protestors in Syria.

Russia and China “would rather sell arms to the Syrian regime than stand with the Syrian people,” said US Ambassador to the UN Susan Rice after storming out of the Security Council. “Today the courageous people of Syria can now see who on this council supports their yearning for liberty and universal human rights and who does not.”

Conservative estimates are that 2,700 civilians have been killed by force loyal to Assad over the past six months.

Saudi Arabia says a ‘foreign country’ is fomenting unrest in Eastern Province

October 5, 2011

Saudi Arabia says a ‘foreign country’ is fomenting unrest in Eastern Province.

Al Arabiya

 

Masked men clash with police forces in Saudi Arabia’s Eastern Province. (Still image taken from a video posted on YouTube)

Masked men clash with police forces in Saudi Arabia’s Eastern Province. (Still image taken from a video posted on YouTube)

Saudi Arabia on Tuesday held an unnamed foreign country as responsible for the unrest in its Eastern Province, home to a large Shiite population, after armed men opened fire on police during a protest on Monday.

The interior ministry said in a statement that 14 people had been injured and called on protesters to “clearly identify their loyalty to Allah and to their nation or their loyalty to that country.”

“A foreign country is trying to undermine national security by inciting strife in (the city of) al-Qatif,” the interior ministry statement added.

The reference to a foreign country meddling in a Shiite area in Saudi Arabia and Bahrain is usually a coded reference to Iran, the Saudi rival across Gulf waters.

The ministry said that after Monday’s protest was dispersed by police, armed individuals opened fire on security forces, wounding 11.

The ministry vowed to use “an iron fist” against anyone who compromises the security of the nation and of citizens.

Saudi columnist Ali Khsheiban described the protests as “a blatant interference by Iran in the internal affairs of Saudi Arabia.”

“This shows that Iran’s pledges for calm in the Gulf are false. Gulf States have never been the source of domestic problems in Iran, but Tehran has continuously sought to destabilize the region.”

 

Erdogan says Israel’ s nuclear arsenal makes it a regional threat

October 5, 2011

Erdogan says Israel’ s nuclear arsenal makes it a regional threat.

Al Arabiya

Turkey’s Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan accused Israel of committing “state terrorism.” (Photo by Reuters)

Turkey’s Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan accused Israel of committing “state terrorism.” (Photo by Reuters)

Israel is a “threat” to its region because it owns nuclear weapons, Turkey’s Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan said Wednesday.

“I right now see Israel as a threat for its region, because it has the atomic bomb,” Erdogan was quoted as saying by the Anatolia news agency, during an official visit to South Africa.

He also accused Israel of committing “state terrorism.”

Erdogan in the past has accused the West of “double standards” in the way that it has tried to ban Iran from building nuclear weapons without taking similar measures against Israel.

Israel has never officially admitting to possessing nuclear weapons.

Turkey downgraded relations with one time ally Israel after the latter refused to apologize for its raid on a Gaza-bound Turkish aid flotilla, in which its nine Turkish activists died on May 31, 2010.

Last month, Turkey expelled the Israeli ambassador and froze military ties and defense trade deals. Ankara has also threatened to send warships to escort any Turkish vessels trying to reach Hamas-ruled Gaza.

 

Ahmadinejad: Missile shields won’t prevent collapse of Zionist regime

October 5, 2011

Ahmadinejad: Missile shields won’t prevent collapse of Zionist regime – Haaretz Daily Newspaper | Israel News.

Iranian leader criticizes Turkey for agreeing to allow NATO to station an early warning radar station in southeastern part of country; says system meant to defend Israel.

By The Associated Press

Iran criticized Turkey on Tuesday for agreeing to allow NATO to station an early warning radar in the southeast of the country that will serve as part of the alliance’s missile defense system.

President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad claimed the defense system was meant to protect Israel against Iranian missile attacks in the event a war breaks out with Israel.

Ahmadinejad, Iran - AP archive - 18.5.10 Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad
Photo by: AP

“The missile defense shield is aimed at defending the Zionist regime. They don’t want to let our missiles land in the occupied territories (Israel) if one day they take action against us. That’s why they put it there,” Ahmadinejad said in an address to the nation on state TV late Tuesday.

Turkey agreed to host the radar in September as part of NATO’s missile defense system aimed at countering ballistic missile threats from neighboring Iran. Ankara claims the shield doesn’t target a specific country and had threatened to block the deal if Iran was explicitly named as a threat.

A military installation in Kurecik has been designated as the radar site, according to Turkish government officials. Kurecik in Malatya province lies some 700 kilometers (435 miles) west of the Iranian border.

In September, Pentagon spokesman Col. Dave Lapan said the United States hopes to have the radar deployed there by the end of the year.

Ahmadinejad said his government has conveyed Iran’s displeasure to Turkish officials.

“We told our Turkish friends that it was not a correct job (decision) they did and that it’s to their detriment,” he said. “Such shields can’t prevent the collapse of the Zionist regime.”

The deployment in Turkey, the biggest Muslim voice in NATO, signals improving ties with Washington since the 2003 Iraq invasion. Turkey also works closely with U.S.forces in NATO operations in Afghanistan and Libya, though it is not directly involved in combat.

Last month, Turkey confirmed talks with the U.S.for possible deployment of Predator drones on its soil after the U.S.leaves Iraq. The U.S.currently shares drone surveillance data with Turkey to aid its fight against Kurdish rebels who have bases in Iraq. Turkish authorities did not specify if they want armed drones or just surveillance ones.

Turkey has built close economic ties with Iran and has been at odds with the United States on its stance toward Iran’s nuclear program, arguing for a diplomatic solution to the standoff instead of sanctions.

But the agreement over the radar facility comes at a time when Turkey and Iran appear to be differing on their approach toward Syria, with Turkey becoming increasingly critical of Iranian ally Syria’s brutal suppression of anti-regime protests.

Is Israel Again Weighing an Attack on Iran’s Nuclear Facilities? – TIME.com

October 5, 2011

Is Israel Again Weighing an Attack on Iran’s Nuclear Facilities? – Global Spin – TIME.com.

“I think the most effective way to deal with Iran is not on a unilateral basis,” Defense Secretary Leon Panetta told reporters in Israel on Tuesday, stressing that the Israeli government needed to act in concert and consensus with the international community. Israeli reporters noted his repeated use of the word together when it came to dealing with Iran. Panetta’s comments, coming barely a month after the U.S. reportedly agreed to deliver 55 bunker-busting GBU-28 bombs to Israel, were widely viewed as an “down, boy” message to any adventurist bomb-Iran impulses on the part of Israel’s Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and Defense Minister Ehud Barak.

Curiously enough, the very same day, recently retired Mossad chief Meir Dagan also saw fit to publicly tamp down hysteria over Iran’s nuclear progress, and to pour cold water over any “military option” for dealing with it. Dagan, who has previously publicly decried the idea of bombing Iran as “the stupidest thing I’ve ever heard” and warned that it could plunge Israel into a conflict it couldn’t win, again publicly pooh-poohed the military option, saying there were more effective ways of dealing with Iran’s nuclear program. And he stressed that Iran was nowhere close to being able to build a bomb.   Dagan and the official U.S. intelligence assessment concur that while using its nuclear program to acquire the technological means to build a bomb, the Iranian leadership has not yet taken a strategic decision to actually build such a weapon.

Indeed, an unnamed senior Israeli official fretted in the Jerusalem Post on Sunday  that “Iran very well could continue on its current course for a while, during which it continues to enrich uranium like it is today but without going to the breakout stage and publicly making a nuclear weapon.” Maintaining the ambiguity of having — but not exercising the option to break out of the Non-Proliferation Treaty, expel IAEA inspectors and build a weapon, the paper wrote, “avoid(s) providing the world with the justification to either increase sanctions or to use military action to stop it.”

Indeed, right now there’s precious little support anywhere in the international community for starting a war with Iran on the grounds that it has acquired the technology to build nuclear weapons. Netanyahu has always preferred discussing the existential threat he insists Israel faces from Iran — although even Barak has publicly challenged the idea that Iran would risk obliteration by launching a nuclear attack on Israel — to dealing with the Palestinian question, but the “Arab Spring” has drained the life out of his claim that action against Iran carries the support of moderate Arab regimes. President Hosni Mubarak, often rolled out as Exhibit A in that argument, is gone, and the generals that replaced him moved immediately to normalize relations with Iran. And much of the Arab world has responded to the turmoil of the past year by moving increasingly out of the U.S. orbit.

Turkey, whose regional influence is growing — at the expense of both Iran and the United States — may be a NATO member state, and as such agreed recently to install an anti-ballistic missile radar on its border with Iran, but it has challenged the U.S.-Israeli approach to dealing with the Iran nuclear issue. In a recent interview with TIME, Prime Minister Recep Tayipp Erdogan said Turkey opposes “the presence of nuclear weapons in our region,” but has seen no evidence to back the assumption that Iran seeks to weaponize nuclear material. “And let me ask you,” he continued, “who is under threat? Is it Israel or the countries in the vicinity of Israel that are under threat? Israel has nuclear weapons. How can you explain this to me? There are no sanctions on Israel, but all the other countries in the neighborhood are suffering from sanctions… It would be unacceptable for us to ratify this approach. There’s injustice there.”

And even Iran’s most intractable Arab foe, Saudi Arabia, is not on board for a military campaign against Iran despite its fervent opposition to any move by Iran to weaponize nuclear material. Unlike Turkey, Saudi Arabia supports sanctions to pressure Iran to refrain from pursuing nuclear weapons, but the influential former intelligence minister Prince Turki al-Faisal told a conference in Geneva last month that “military strikes would be entirely counter-productive”. And he made clear that Riyadh was not simply calling on Iran to renounce nuclear weapons, but instead, like Turkey and Egypt, is pressing to make the Middle East a nuclear weapons-free zone — in other words, to include Israel’s nuclear capacity in the equation, rather than protect its monopoly on strategic weapons. Needless to say, Israel has shown little interest in such proposals, but the idea of winning the support of other states in the region for an unprovoked attack on Iran’s nuclear facilities seems increasingly far-fetched.

Still, Israel’s strategy all along is to encourage the belief in the Iranians that Israel will launch air-strikes once Iran’s nuclear progress crosses some undefined red line — well, less undefined than flexible; Iran has crossed every previous red line set by the Israelis and the U.S. in respect of acquiring nuclear technologies. So the latest round of chatter could be nothing more than the by-now quotidian Israeli saber rattling designed to make Iran believe that it faces imminent military action. Israeli observers have argued that because winter weather makes such complex air strikes more difficult, Israel has a two-month window of opportunity to launch an assault on Iran’s nuclear facility. And some in Israel make the case that President Barack Obama’s political vulnerability, and his concern to avoid being seen to be clashing with the Israeli leadership, make this an optimal moment to present Washington with a fait accompli by bombing Iran, on the assumption that the U.S. would have no choice but to back Israel up in the aftermath.

But the pressures Obama might face in the political system would likely be counterbalanced by those from the U.S. military, whose leaders have long made clear their belief that an Israeli military strike on Iran would have disastrous consequences both for Israel and for U.S. forces throughout the Middle East. Also, Netanyahu is more cautious than many in Israel’s political establishment when it comes to starting wars. And he’ll also know that initiating hostilities with Iran could fatally weaken Washington’s ability to shield Israel from international isolation on a scale suffered by the South African government during the apartheid era — which, of course, is what the Palestinian leadership is pressing for, in order to create leverage to force Israeli to agree to withdraw from the territories it captured in 1967.

So we may as easily be looking at another round of posturing without serious intent, based on the idea that the Iranians need to believe that Israel is poised to start a war to stop Iran acquiring the capacity to build nuclear weapons, in order to deter its nuclear activities (although there’s no evidence that this approach has worked over the past five years). But Netanyahu’s claims of Iran representing an intolerable threat will have been helped by Supreme Leader Ayatullah Ali Khamenei’s comments last weekend rejecting the Palestinians bid for U.N. recognition of a state based on the 1967 lines, calling Israel a “cancerous tumor” that could not be allowed to survive in the Middle East. Indeed, as Iranian scholar Trita Parsi, who has studied the Iran-U.S.-Israel relationship over decaes, wrote last weekend, the dangerous escalation of rhetoric amid the absence of communication channels between the U.S. and an increasingly isolated, embattled and skittish Iran raise the danger of an unintended lurch into tragedy. He warns of declining American influence creating a vacuum that a number of competing forces are jockeying to fill, and that the decision-making of key players is increasingly shaped by domestic politics rather than strategic calculation. Parsi writes:

This near-collapse of statecraft is clearly visible in Israel. The government of Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has chosen to limit its foreign policy maneuverability to whatever its fragile governing coalition can endure. Disproportionate foreign policy risks are accepted in order to prolong the life span of the coalition at the expense of Israel’s long-term interest…

“In Iran, political cannibalism within the Iranian elite has reached new heights. While this has not necessarily given birth to a new Iranian adventurism (beyond the harsh rhetoric), it has paralyzed the state and weakened its ability to maneuver in a changing strategic environment. This is particularly the case when it comes to crucial issues such as its relations with the United States…

“This paralysis is all the more dangerous in an environment in which the parties aren’t on talking terms. This has led to a collapse of statecraft and an increase in bluster that could prove quite dangerous. One small spark could cause a conflagration.”

Read more: http://globalspin.blogs.time.com/2011/10/04/is-israel-again-weighing-an-attack-on-irans-nuclear-facilities/#ixzz1ZskC9Rd8

Iran: NATO radar in Turkey serves to protect Israel

October 5, 2011

Iran: NATO radar in Turkey serves to protect Israel – Israel News, Ynetnews.

Mahmoud Ahmadinejad says NATO defense system deployed in southeast Turkey meant to protect Israel from Iranian missile attacks in case war breaks out; expresses dissatisfaction to Turkish officials. Ankara claims shield doesn’t target any specific country

Associated Press

Iran criticized Turkey on Tuesday for agreeing to allow NATO to station an early warning radar in the southeast of the country that will serve as part of the alliance’s missile defense system.

 

President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad claimed the defense system was meant to protect Israel against Iranian missile attacks in the event a war breaks out with the Jewish state.

 

 

“The missile defense shield is aimed at defending the Zionist regime. They don’t want to let our missiles land in the occupied territories (Israel) if one day they take action against us. That’s why they put it there,” Ahmadinejad said in an address to the nation on state TV late Tuesday.

 

Ahmadinejad and Erdogan (Photo: Reuters)
Ahmadinejad and Erdogan (Photo: Reuters)

 Turkey agreed to host the radar in September as part of NATO’s missile defense system aimed at countering ballistic missile threats from neighboring Iran. Ankara claims the shield doesn’t target a specific country and had threatened to block the deal if Iran was explicitly named as a threat.

 

A military installation in Kurecik has been designated as the radar site, according to Turkish government officials. Kurecik in Malatya province lies some 700 kilometers (435 miles) west of the Iranian border.

 

In September, Pentagon spokesman Col. Dave Lapan said the United States hopes to have the radar deployed there by the end of the year.

 

Ahmadinejad said his government has conveyed Iran’s displeasure to Turkish officials.

 

“We told our Turkish friends that it was not a correct job (decision) they did and that it’s to their detriment,” he said. “Such shields can’t prevent the collapse of the Zionist regime.”

 

Improving ties with US?

 

The deployment in Turkey, the biggest Muslim voice in NATO, signals improving ties with Washington since the 2003 Iraq invasion. Turkey also closely works with US forces in NATO operations in Afghanistan and Libya, though it is not directly involved in combat.

 

Last month, Turkey confirmed talks with the US for possible deployment of Predator drones on its soil after the US leaves Iraq. The US currently shares drone surveillance data with Turkey to aid its fight against Kurdish rebels who have bases in Iraq. Turkish authorities did not specify if they want armed drones or just surveillance ones.

 

Turkey has built close economic ties with Iran and has been at odds with the United States on its stance toward Iran’s nuclear program, arguing for a diplomatic solution to the standoff instead of sanctions.

 

But the agreement over the radar facility comes at a time when Turkey and Iran appear to be differing on their approach toward Syria, with Turkey becoming increasingly critical of Iranian ally Syria’s brutal suppression of anti-regime protests.

IDF boosts security around Eilat amid threats

October 5, 2011

IDF boosts security around Eilat amid threats – JPost – Defense.