Archive for November 12, 2011

Israel is tight-lipped with US over Iran intentions – Telegraph

November 12, 2011

Israel is tight-lipped with US over Iran intentions – Telegraph.

Israel has refused to reassure President Barack Obama that it would warn him in advance of any pre-emptive strike on Iran’s nuclear capabilities, raising fears that it may be planning a go-it-alone attack as early as next summer.

Israel is tight-lipped with US over Iran intentions

Israeli jets could target sites such as the nuclear power plant at Bushehr, right  Photo: GARY DAWSON/AP

The US leader was rebuffed last month when he demanded private guarantees that no strike would go ahead without White House notification, suggesting Israel no longer plans to “seek Washington’s permission”, sources said. The disclosure, made by insiders briefed on a top-secret meeting between America’s most senior defence chief and Benjamin Netanyahu, Israel’s hawkish prime minister, comes amid concerns that Iran’s continuing progress towards nuclear weapons capability means the Jewish state has all but lost hope for a diplomatic solution.

On Tuesday, UN weapons inspectors released their most damning report to date into Iran’s nuclear activities, saying for the first time that the Islamic republic appeared to be building a nuclear weapon. It was with that grave possiblity in mind that Leon Panetta, the US defence secretary, flew into Israel last month on what was ostensibly a routine trip.

Officially, his brief was restricted to the Middle East peace process, but the most important part of his mission was a private meeting with Mr Netanyahu and the defence minister, Ehud Barak. Once all but a handful of trusted staff had left the room, Mr Panetta conveyed an urgent message from Barack Obama. The president, Mr Panetta said, wanted an unshakable guarantee that Israel would not carry out a unilateral military strike against Iran’s nuclear installations without first seeking Washington’s clearance.

The two Israelis were notably evasive in their response, according to sources both in Israel and the United States.

“They did not suggest that military action was being planned or was imminent, but neither did they give any assurances that Israel would first seek Washington’s permission, or even inform the White House in advance that a mission was underway,” one said.

Alarmed by Mr Netanyahu’s noncommittal response, Mr Obama reportedly ordered the US intelligence services to step up monitoring of Israel to glean clues of its intentions.

What those intentions might be remains distinctly murky. Over the past fortnight, Israel’s press has given every impression that the country is on a war footing, with numerous claims that Mr Netanyahu and Mr Barak are lobbying the cabinet to support the military option.

Two weeks ago Israel tested a long-range ballistic missile capable of reaching Iran, its first since 2008. Shortly before, the Israeli airforce took part in Nato exercises in Sardinia that involved air-to-air refuelling, a key component of an aerial strike on Iran. A separate exercise in and around Tel Aviv tested civilian readiness in the event of a missile strike against the city. In a sign of the febrility of the public mood, many beach-goers apparently mistook the air raid sirens for a genuine Iranian attack and fled in panic for their cars. There were similar jitters in Iran yesterday, when a huge but apparently accidental explosion at arms dump outside Tehran killed at least 27 soldiers and shook the city.

Speculation about an imminent Israeli military action has been a regular occurrence over the years, but rarely as fevered as now. Last week, a British official even suggested that an attack could come before Christmas.

Few in Israel believe that is likely and the difficulty of mounting an operation over winter, when cloud cover hampers aircraft targeting systems, means that if military action is being considered it will not come before the spring or summer of next year.

Many observers also believe that the bellicose rhetoric voiced by a number of senior Israeli figures in recent days is largely bluff, designed to goad the international community into imposing sanctions of such severity that Iran would be forced into economic ruin if it persisted with its nuclear ambitions. Israel says that if Iran’s central bank were sanctioned and a ban on Iranian oil exports enforced by an international naval blockade, military action would not be necessary.

Mr Barak has already publicly stated that he does not believe the West can overcome Russian and Chinese opposition to the sanctions Israel wants, leaving military action increasingly as the only alternative.

Mr Netanyahu may have another reason to bluff. In recent months, Meir Dagan, who retired as director of Mossad at the beginning of the year, has made a series of unprecedented speeches countenancing against Israeli military action – describing it as “the stupidest idea I’ve ever heard”.

His comments have infuriated the Israeli establishment – senior officials have said they would like to see him behind bars – because they fear it could convince Iran’s Mullahs that Israel’s sporadic talk of war is a fiction.

Hints by Mr Netanyahu that he is considering the military option may be designed to resurrect Iran’s paranoia of Israel, something seen in the Jewish state as a powerful deterrent, says Yossi Melman, a leading intelligence analyst and journalist.

“Meir Dagan made a laughing stock of military action,” Mr Melman said. “Netanyahu believes he damaged the deterrent and he wants to repair it.”

Yet the fact that Mr Dagan chose to speak out – extraordinary in itself for a just-retired Mossad chief – suggests that he believes Mr Netanyahu is intent on attacking Iran.

Tellingly, until last year, Israel’s four most powerful military and security chiefs, including Mr Dagan, were all strongly opposed to military action. All four have now been replaced by younger men who may be less able to stand up to Mr Netanyahu, not that Israeli prime ministers are necessarily bound to heed objections from their top military advisers anyway. In 1981, Menachem Begin did just that when he bombed Iraq’s nuclear reactor at Osirak.

If Israel is to attack Iran, many in the country believe time is running out. Last week’s report by the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) highlighted Iran’s apparent determination to build a nuclear warhead, but did not indicate how long it might take.

Some in Israel, however, believe it is very close.

“It is my personal opinion that, if the Iranian regime decides to do so, it can produce a nuclear explosive device within a year, plus or minus a few months,” said Ephraim Asculai, a former IAEA official and leading Israeli expert on Iran’s nuclear programme.

Not everyone agrees. Some argue that a covert espionage operation has caused such delays that Iran still needs another three years to build a bomb. Sabotage efforts by Israeli, American and British intelligence have successfully slowed Iranian progress, most notably via the Stuxnet computer virus that caused the centrifuges at Iran’s Natanz uranium enrichment plant to explode. Mossad agents on motorbikes are also believed to have planted magnetic explosives on the cars of at least two key Iranian nuclear scientists as they weaved through Tehran’s traffic jams. Mohsen Fakhrizadeh, the scientist and Revolutionary Guards officer who is thought to be the ultimate mastermind of the nuclear programme, is now believed to be under round-the-clock protection as a result. But, whatever the time frame, some in Israel believe there is additional cause for urgency that could prompt military action sooner rather than later.

According to western intelligence assessments, Tehran is preparing to move the bulk of its nuclear production to a plant beneath a mountain near the holy city of Qom that would be far harder to hit from the air.

According to Ronen Bergman, senior military analyst for Israel’s Yediot Ahronot newspaper and the author of a forthcoming book on Mossad, that makes a strike necessary well before Iran actually perfects its programme.

“Today Israeli intelligence talks of what is known as the ‘framework of immunity’,” he said. “In other words, it is not the point at which Iran acquires a nuclear device, but the point at which the project has reached such an advanced stage that a strike any time after would be ineffective.”

An Israeli attack could probably manage at most a dozen targets, using more than 100 F-15 and F-16 aircraft.

Three German-designed Dolphin submarines equipped with conventional cruise missiles could also be ordered into the Persian Gulf to take part, although it is thought that Israel’s Jericho-3 ballistic missiles are to inaccurate to play a role.

But how effective the mission would be is another matter. At best, Israel can hope to delay Iran from building a bomb by two to four years, experts assess. Optimists hope that within such a period, Iran’s Islamist regime could collapse and give may to a more moderate government. But it could equally redouble its nuclear efforts, this time arguing that it now had every right to produce a weapon.

As Mr Panetta warned during a Pentagon briefing last Thursday, such a strike would also have a “serious impact” on the region. Iran could blockade the Straits of Hormuz, through which 25 per cent of the world’s oil exports are shipped, sending energy prices soaring. US military assets in the Gulf could come also come under attack from Iranian Scud missiles.

Iran would almost certainly fire its Shahab ballistic missiles at Israeli cities and press Hizbollah and Hamas, the militant Islamist groups it funds and equips, to unleash their huge rocket arsenals from their bases in Lebanon and Gaza.

Despite this, last week Mr Barak – making a rare venture in such sensitive territory – predicted that fewer than 500 fatalities would arise “if people stayed at home”.

Such are both the political and military risks involved that many Israelis say it is inconceivable that Mr Netanyahu would go to war without the United States alongside him.

“I think personally that if such action is taken, there will be come kind of consultation with the United States,” said Ilan Mizrahi, Mossad’s former deputy director and Israel’s national security adviser until 2007.

“If Iran breaks all the rules, then military action will be needed, but definitely not alone by a tiny country like Israel,” added Uzi Eilam, a retired general who held senior positions at the Israeli defence ministry.

But not everyone is so sure. Mr Obama’s willingness to take on Iran militarily is openly questioned in Israel. And while many Israelis do not believe Iran has any intention of actually firing a nuclear missile at them, the the key question is whether their prime minister is one of them.

In Mr Netanyahu’s eyes, Iran’s president, Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, is another “Hitler” whose aim is to complete what the Holocaust failed to do by wiping out the Jewish race.

“People outside Israel don’t understand how profound memories of the Holocaust are, and how they affect future policy making,” said Mr Bergman, the military analyst. “At the end of the day, this policy of ‘never again’ would dictate Israel’s behaviour when intelligence comes through that Iran has come close to a bomb.”

Explosion at IRGC base is not connected with nuclear test, commander

November 12, 2011

Explosion at IRGC base is not connected with nuclear test, commander.

(The hat burns on the head of the thief.  – JW)

Nov 12 – The head of the public relation office of the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps, General Reza Sharif says that the massive explosion at the Guards’ base in Southwest of the capital was not in connection with any nuclear test or due to transport of missile war heads.

He rejected some reports by foreign media claiming the blast was due a nuke test but did not name the source.

Sharif said the IRGC personnel were transporting ammunitions when the explosion happened. This is the second major blast at IRGC bases in Iran within about one year.

In October 2010 a similar explosion happened at Imam-Ali base near Khorram-Abad in Western Iran which killed 18 IRGC members injuring 14.

The official explanation said making fire close to an ammunition depot has ignited the blast. Mehr news agency reporting from the blast site near Tehran says that fire was still not under control hours after the incident and that smoke has covered several kilometers around the base./-

Iran exile group claims blast hits missile base

November 12, 2011

Iran exile group claims blast hits missile base.

An Iranian exile group claims that a blast at a military installation near Tehran has resulted from the explosion of rockets at a base for the missile forces of Iran’s Revolutionary Guard Corps.

A former spokesman for the Mujahedin-e Khalq or MEK in Washington, citing reliable sources inside Iran, said Saturday that the explosion hit the Modarres Garrison of the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps west of Tehran. Alireza Jafarzadeh said the garrison belongs to the IGRC’s missile unit and the blasts “resulted from the explosion of IRGC missiles.”

Iranian officials said the blast was the result of an accidental explosion at an ammunition depot. They said it killed at least 27 soldiers.

Iran has been hit by several mysterious explosions in recent years but an Iranian lawmaker ruled out sabotage.

Iranian base explosions sparked by failed bid to fit nuclear warhead on Shahab-3

November 12, 2011

DEBKAfile, Political Analysis, Espionage, Terrorism, Security.

(Before panicking, remember this is debka.  Wrong half the time.  – JW)

DEBKAfile Special Report November 12, 2011, 7:53 PM (GMT+02:00)


No ordinary blast at Shahryar IRGC base

Fourteen hours after consecutive explosions hit two Revolutionary Guards (IRGC) bases 46 kilometers west of Tehran Saturday, Nov. 12, the blasts continued and fires raged, debkafile‘s exclusive sources report.  The bases are located in Malard, a town in the Shahryar district. The Moadarres facility was the first to be hit, while the second and bigger blast occurred at Amir-al-Mo’menin.

Their force was such that the Iranian Red Crescent rushed 45 ambulances to the two facilities plus 23 buses converted to first-aid vehicles and a helicopter to evacuate the critically injured.

However, only six rescue workers were given access to the Moadarres base and none were permitted to enter to enter Amir-al-Mo’menin because of the facility’s sensitivity.

Fires continued to rage for hours. Surrounding streets were closed and reporters kept away from the scene.

The provisional death toll from both blasts was 32.

Our sources report increasing evidence that the first explosion was caused by a failed effort to mount a nuclear warhead on a Shahab-3 intermediate-range missile.

It was powerful enough to shatter windows and damage shops in Tehran. People gathering on street corners wondered if Israel had attacked Iran’s nuclear sites or destroyed Revolutionary Guards missile bases.  They recalled Supreme Ruler Ayatollah Ali Khamenei’s threat Thursday, Nov. 10 to take the war to the streets of Tel Aviv if Tehran was attacked.

IRGC spokesman, Brig. Ramedan Sharif, sharply denied what he said was speculation that the military base was linked to Iran’s nuclear program. “This blast is not related to any nuclear tests,” he said in response to widespread rumors. He insisted the explosion had occurred at an ammo store which was part of the Guards’ “self-sufficiency” system, a term they apply to their munitions plants and the factories manufacturing missile components.

The Iranian authorities, after raising the fatality figure to 32, withheld information on the injured, most of which where transferred to IRGC rather than civilian hospitals. Some may be foreign engineers or scientists whose presence Tehran is anxious to conceal.

The Emergency Council which deals with extraordinary happenings liable to affect the regime’s stability met in emergency sessions Saturday night.

Earlier Saturday, debkafile reported on the two huge explosionsat two separate military bases west of Tehran killing dozens of Iranian Revolutionary Guards (IRGC), wounding many more and trapping an unknown number under rubble.

In Tehran, 40 kilometers away, windows were shattered and damage caused vehicles and shops. The blasts were heard in Tehran’s center.

debkafile‘s military and Iranian sources report that the explosions may have been part of a series carried out by Iranian dissident groups last month.

The suspicion of sabotage was strengthened by the occurrence Friday of a big fire at a Tehran warehouse used according to our sources by the IRGC for crowd dispersal gear.
The ammo base blown up Saturday in the town of Malard in Shahryar district contained large quantities of rubber bullets, tear gas and other ordnance. A short time later, the second explosion hit a light arms depot at a military camp of Bidganeh several kilometers away. That both were accidents is hardly credible.
The two blasts were confirmed by the Iranian lawmaker Hossein Garussi without further details.

Tehran recently broke up an armed dissident group called Oghab. Three members were executed and the others were allowed to flee the country. An organization of that name operates in the United States, but its leader denied involvement in any sabotage operations inside Iran.

Time to consider less-bad alternatives to a nuclear Iran

November 12, 2011

Time to consider less-bad alternatives to a nuclear Iran – San Antonio Express-News.

(Wow!  The truth.  Straight from San Antonio. – JW)

The International Atomic Energy Agency declared last week that “Iran has carried out activities relevant to the development of a nuclear explosive device.” This falls under the same category of news as “The sky is blue” and “The sun rises in the east.”

The fact that Iran’s leaders are building a nuclear weapons capability will be an eye-opener for you only if you’re the kind of person who accepts Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad as an authority on Anne Frank. Or if you happened to accept the deeply flawed conclusions of a 2007 U.S. National Intelligence Estimate.

That report asserted Iran had halted its nuclear weapons program in 2003, a claim that British, French and German intelligence agencies strongly disputed at the time. The U.N. nuclear watchdog agency says Iranian officials did close down a nuclear weapons project after the U.S. invasion of Iraq. But they clandestinely shifted the effort to the civilian side where work continued after 2003 that would be “highly relevant to a nuclear weapon program.”

Who cares if Iran develops a nuclear bomb? The Sunni Arab sheikdoms neighboring Iran that account for close to a quarter of the world’s daily oil production and view revolutionary, Shiite Iran as the greatest threat to regional stability. A U.S. diplomatic cable released by WikiLeaks quotes Saudi King Abdullah admonishing the United States to “cut off the head of the snake” and launch military strikes to destroy Iran’s nuclear program.

But the greatest fear is in Israel, whose residents have listened warily as Ahmadinejad has denied the Holocaust while threatening to perfect it. Last week, the Iranian leader ominously warned Israel’s “end will be near.”

If Israel defends itself and acts pre-emptively to thwart Iran’s nuclear threat, its critics — many of whom privately want Iran defanged — will condemn it for aggression and unlawful conduct. But if Israel sits passively and suffers some catastrophic nuclear attack from Iran, then those same critics will say Israel got its due for aggression and unlawful conduct. Heads Iran wins, tails Israel loses.

One of the tragedies of the Palestinian people is that the Middle East’s worst extremists — Gadhafi, the Assads, Saddam Hussein, Saudi Wahhabists, Iranian mullahs — have cynically been willing to redirect domestic discontent by fighting Israel to the last Palestinian.

There’s a corollary to this moral depravity in the West. American and European leaders have always been willing to pursue some vague notion of peace in the Middle East to the detriment of Israel, despite the fact that the region’s greatest problems — poverty, political stagnation, intra-Arab and intra-Muslim slaughter — have nothing to do with Israel.

In its latest expression, President Barack Obama has sought warmer relations with Iran and extended an open hand to its leaders at the expense of Israel’s security. That change in policy might have been justifiable after the 2008 U.S. election. But after three years of increasing repression and now with the IAEA exposure of Iran’s deception, it’s time to consider the less-bad alternatives to an Iranian nuclear bomb.

Israelis have bitter memories of misguided attempts by well-intentioned, peace-loving people to, as Winston Churchill put it, feed the crocodile in the hope that it will eat them last. They can be forgiven for being unwilling to wage peace with a nuclear Iran to the last Jew in the Middle East.

jgurwitz@express-news.net

Blast hit Iran missile base?

November 12, 2011

Blast hit Iran missile base? – Israel News, Ynetnews

According to earlier opposition report, explosion that killed 17 soldiers outside Tehran took place in Revolutionary Guards’ missile base

Dudi Cohen

A military base rocked by an explosion Saturday that killed 17 soldiers and wounded at least 16 others may have taken place at a Revolutionary Guards base used to store Iran‘s long-range missiles.

 

The assessment is based on an Iranian opposition report dating back to 2002 that revealed that the village where the blast took place, west of Tehran, is home to a Revolutionary Guards missile unit responsible for the Shihab-3 missiles with a ragne of some 1,300 kilometers (roughly 2,00 miles.)

 

Official Iranian spokesmen said the explosion occurred while munitions were being moved in the base.

 

“My dear colleagues in the Revolutionary Guards were moving munitions in one of the arsenals at that base when, due to an incident, an explosion happened,” Revolutionary Guards Spokesman Ramezan Sharif told news channel IRINN. “Some of the casualties are reported to be in a critical condition.”

 

Iran's Revolutionary Guards (Photo: Getty Images)
Iran’s Revolutionary Guards (Photo: Getty Images)

 

According to Iranian opposition report, yet another missile unit was stationed at the village and held huge quantities of weapons, including missiles handed over to Hezbollah.

 

While the report’s credibility had not been confirmed yet, Iran’s opposition has played a key role in uncovering secret military facilities across the country. In the past, opposition figures exposed the location of some of Iran’s main nuclear sites.

 

Earlier, the semi-official Fars news agency carried a statement by the Revolutionary Guards which said the blast happened in an arsenal at a base in Bidganeh, near the city of Karaj, 25 miles (40 km) outside the capital. The Mehr News Agency said the site was closed to reporters.

Arab League suspends Syria from meetings – Israel News, Ynetnews

November 12, 2011

Arab League suspends Syria from meetings – Israel News, Ynetnews.

Arab states vote to impose economic, political sanctions on Syrian regime in latest attempt to curb bloody massacre

News Agencies

The Arab League called on the Syrian army to stop the killing of civilians on Saturday and said it was suspending Syria from the regional body in a surprise move that turns up the heat on President Bashar Assad.

The League will impose economic and political sanctions on Assad’s government and has appealed to its member states to withdraw their ambassadors from Damascus, said Qatar’s Prime Minister Sheikh Hamad Bin Jassim.

He said the suspension would take effect on November 16. He said 18 countries agreed to Saturday’s decision, while Lebanon, Yemen and Syria voted against it and Iraq abstained.

“We were criticized for taking a long time but this was out of our concern for Syria,” he told reporters in Cairo. “We needed to have a majority to approve those decisions.”

“We are calling all Syrian opposition parties to a meeting at the Arab League headquarters to agree a unified vision for the transitional period,” Jassim said.

Last week the Arab League announced that an agreement has been reached with Syria, aiming to stop the violence against protesters, but the killings only intensified; more than 250 Syrian civilians have been killed in the past 11 days as the regime besieged the renegade city of Homs and the conflict took a dangerous turn, stoking fears of civil war.

The UN estimates some 3,500 people have been killed in the crackdown since mid-March, when the uprising began. The latest figures would push that number closer to 4,000.

AP and Reuters contributed to the report

Dozens of Iranian Guards killed in 2 big explosions near Tehran

November 12, 2011

DEBKAfile, Political Analysis, Espionage, Terrorism, Security.

DEBKAfile Special Report November 12, 2011, 2:06 PM (GMT+02:00)

Two huge explosions at two separate military bases west of Tehran killed dozens of Iranian Revolutionary Guards (IRGC) Saturday, Nov. 12. Windows in the capital 40 kilometers away were shattered and vehicles and shops damaged. The blasts were heard in Tehran center.
debkafile‘s military and Iranian sources are making inquiries to find out if the explosions were part of a series carried out by Iranian dissident groups last month or accidental.

On Oct. 12, an IRGC munitions depot was blown up killing at least 12 people.

The suspicion of sabotage is strengthened by the occurrence Friday of a big fire at a Tehran warehouse used according to our sources by the IRGC to store crowd dispersal gear.
The ammo base blown up Saturday in the town of Melard in Shahryar district contained large quantities of rubber bullets, tear gas and other ordnance. A short time later, the second explosion hit a light arms depot at a military camp at Bidganeh several kilometers away. That both were accidents is hardly credible.
The two blasts were confirmed by the Iranian lawmaker Hossein Garussi without further details.

One of the armed dissident groups the Iranian authorities recently broke up was Oghab. Three members were executed and the others were allowed to flee the country. An organization of that name operates in the United States, but its leader denies involvement in any sabotage operations inside Iran.

Huge blast hits arms depot at Iran military base

November 12, 2011

Huge blast hits arms depot at Iran militar… JPost – Middle East.

Iranian Flag

    TEHRAN – A massive explosion at a weapons depot on a military base to the west of the Iranian capital Tehran on Saturday killed several people and was felt at least 45 km away, local media reported.

The semi-official Fars news agency carried a statement by the Revolutionary Guards which said the blast happened in an arsenal at a base in Bidganeh, near the city of Karaj. Some people were killed, Fars said, without giving further details.

An October 2010 explosion that killed 18 people at a weapons depot in western Iran near the city of Khoramabad was attributed to the Mossad by French newspaper Le Figaro.

Official Iranian reports stated that the 2010 explosion occurred after a fire broke out in a weapons depot.

Le Figaro also alleged that the explosion occurred at a secret missile site for the long-range Shahab-3, capable of being modified to carry a nuclear payload and striking Israel.

Time is short to stop nukes in Iran

November 12, 2011

Time is short to stop nukes in Iran – Chicago Sun-Times.

A major question looms over the report of U.N. weapons inspectors exposing the work Iran has done to develop a nuclear weapon: How long until Tehran has an atomic bomb?

The International Atomic Energy Commission didn’t offer an estimate. But its wealth of data on Iran’s uranium enrichment, missile warhead research and “nuclear explosive design information” indicates the day is drawing ominously close. Sen. Mark Kirk (R-Ill.), one of Capitol Hill’s foreign policy experts, thinks Iran could test a weapon as soon as “next year or at the latest by 2013.”

Just as chilling as a test explosion soon is Kirk’s observation that the Iranians “have transferred every weapon in their arsenal to Hezbollah, including cruise missiles.” That’s the terrorist organization that dominates Lebanon, has thousands of missiles aimed at Israel and has killed many Americans. Kirk thinks that once Iran achieves a stockpile of half a dozen weapons in 2014 or 2015, Tehran will “begin to debate about giving one to Hezbollah.”

A successful Iranian nuclear test would prompt Saudi Arabia to launch its own nuclear program. Kirk says the Saudis could have nuclear weapons quickly because Pakistan’s nuclear program is essentially “available for rent.”

A radical state armed with nuclear weapons, the possibility of transferring a bomb to terrorists, a nuclear arms race in the Middle East — the stakes are enormous.

And time is running out. Iran is moving its nuclear development project to deep, underground facilities difficult to attack with most conventional military weapons. It’s awaiting a shipment of anti-aircraft missiles from Russia.

Can Iran be stopped by tougher U.N. sanctions? Maybe. But Russia has ruled out new U.N. sanctions.

Kirk says Washington can institute strong diplomatic, economic action on its own. He notes 92 senators co-signed a letter urging the Obama administration “to collapse” the Central Bank of Iran, the funder of Iran’s nuclear program and the paymaster for global terrorism. Legislation in the Senate and House would write the letter’s intent into law.

The idea is to ban the bank and blacklist any financial or business entity doing business with it, in effect shutting down access for them to America and the world’s largest economy. That would be devastating to Iran’s economy.

It’s reported that some in the administration oppose the idea, fearing it could force up oil prices and do economic damage. Kirk argues the Saudis could step up production and, in six months, replace the Iranian oil that now goes to U.S. allies such as South Korea, Japan and Turkey. Kirk thinks the administration is still open to the idea and asserts that those who oppose “decisive diplomatic economic action make war the most possible.”

A covert war, including computer sabotage, continues against the Iranian program. But that and Kirk’s proposal may not be enough. A military strike may be necessary. That’s not just the view of neo-conservatives and national security hawks. Former Indiana Sen. Evan Bayh is the epitome of a moderate Democrat. Consider his remarks on Fox News last weekend: “We have to ask ourselves, is a nuclear Iran acceptable? If the answer is no, there’s really only one way to keep that from coming about and that’s the use of force.”

And consider this: Iran a few months ago hatched a brazen plot to assassinate a Saudi diplomat in Washington. Imagine how the fanatics of Tehran would be emboldened behind a nuclear shield.