Archive for February 3, 2012

Panetta report fuels concerns that Israel will attack Iran

February 3, 2012

Open Channel – Panetta report fuels concerns that Israel will attack Iran.

Jacquelyn Martin / Pool via Getty Images

U.S. Defense Secretary Leon Panetta speaks with reporters Thursday in Brussels, Belgium, after the conclusion of a day of meetings with fellow NATO defense officials.

Concerns that Israel will attack Iran in an attempt to prevent Tehran from developing nuclear weapons escalated Thursday when the Washington Post reported that Defense Secretary Leon Panetta believes there is a “strong likelihood” that Tel Aviv will launch such an offensive in April, May or June. 
Panetta, who is attending a NATO meeting in Brussels, did not dispute the report by Post Op/Ed columnist David Ignatius.
“No, I’m just not commenting,” he said when asked about the report, adding, “What I think and what I view, I consider that to be an area that belongs to me and nobody else.”
Panetta’s reported view has been echoed in recent interviews by NBC News with current and former U.S. and Israeli officials who have access to their countries’ intelligence. Those officials, all of whom spoke to NBC News on background, estimated the odds of an Israeli attack on Iran as better than 50-50.

Most of the officials said it is highly unlikely that the war-weary U.S. would mount a military attack on Iran, instead relying on financial sanctions and diplomatic pressure to squeeze Tehran.

But Israel, which has an openly hostile relationship with Iran and much more at stake if its neighbor becomes a nuclear power, is more of a wild card, say the officials, who come from a variety of intelligence and national security backgrounds. But the officials warn that, if intelligence indicated that Iran was on the verge of building a nuclear weapon, the government of Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu would almost certainly consider a military strike. And if it decided to launch one, the U.S. would likely receive very little advance notice, they say.
Here, in question-and-answer format, is a summary of how the officials see such an attack unfolding:
Q: What are the chances Israel attacks Iran?
A: Officials agree the chances for an Israeli attack on Iran are at least 50-50, maybe higher. More than one former official has suggested the possibility is as high as 70 percent, but events can move that higher or lower. One said he is “worried sick” about it.
Q: When might Israel attack?
A: Most of those questioned said the prospects of an Israeli attack will increase as the calendar moves into spring and summer.
Q: What assets would Israel use?
A: Many of those interviewed claim Israel would launch a multi-pronged attack, using its fighter bombers as well as its Jericho missile force.
Israel has both medium and intermediate range Jerichos. The medium-range Jericho I would not have the range to reach many Iranian targets  but the intermediate-range Jericho II’s, capable of hitting targets 1,500 miles away, would have no problem.  The Jerichos would be equipped with high explosives, not nuclear warheads. Asked if the Jericho would have the accuracy and the explosive power to take out a hardened bunker of the sort believed to be protecting Iran’s most-sensitive underground nuclear facilities, one official replied, “You would be surprised at their accuracy” and that the high explosives involved is a special mix of chemical explosives that could conceivably penetrate the Iranian fortifications.
Missile attacks would be coordinated with fighter-bomber attacks (presumably  the Israelis’ extended-range F-15I Strike Eaglet) as well as drone strikes. The fighter bombers would use what one official described as  “high-low, low-high” flight paths — high first to increase fuel efficiency, then low for most of the trip to evade radar, then climbing high again as the weapons are released in what is known as a “flip toss” on the target.  The Israelis would be prepared to lose aircraft if necessary, the officials said.
The Israelis are not planning to use submarine-launched cruise missile force — “not enough of them,” one official said of the subs. (The Israelis have long had nuclear tipped sub-launched cruise missiles as part of their deterrent force.)
Q: How would other Middle Eastern states react? 
A: U.S. officials believe that Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates would support the attacks because of the threat Iran poses to them.
The Saudis and Emiratis, both of which have Sunni controlled governments, have repeatedly lobbied the U.S. to bomb the Iranian nuclear facilities, preferring a U.S. attack to an Israeli one. But because both are desperate to have someone take out the Iranian program, they also have shared information with the Israelis. If Israel did decide to attack, it’s likely Israeli jets would overfly Saudi territory and would even be allowed to perform aerial refueling. An attack would take at least two midair refuelings.
As for Turkey, it may not participate at the same level as the Sunni Arab Gulf states, but it is watching Iran closely. The U.S. fears Turkey would consider a nuclear weapons program if Iran obtained them and could develop nuclear weapons much more quickly than either Saudi Arabia or the UAE.
Q: Would there be a ground component?
A: Not in a traditional way. Some officials have suggested that Israeli commandos, either from the Israel Defense Forces or Mossad (or both), would be inserted on the ground near targets to illuminate them, gather post-strike forensics and perhaps grab some materials for later analysis.
Q: What would Israel’s goal be?
A: Israel would not try to take out every Iranian nuclear facility but instead would target certain facilities it considers critical, hoping to set the program back. U.S. officials believe an attack could put the program back two to four years, Israelis estimate more like three to five. One official said the Israelis are prepared to “do the same in two to four years” if the Iranian program recovers.
 
Q: How successful might the attack be?
 
A: Iran has fortified its critical underground nuclear facilities with as much as 30 meters (nearly 100 feet) of reinforced concrete, including the centrifuge cascades at Natanz and Fordow outside Qom.  Israel however has dramatically improved its bunker-busting capability over the past three years.
Israel is unlikely to bomb “soft targets” within the Iranian nuclear program, including labs inside universities or near civilian centers, say U.S. officials. That’s because they are hoping that a clean strike would show that Israel only wants to take out nuclear facilities dear to the mullahs and Revolutionary Guards, both of whom who they believe to be wildly unpopular with the Iranian people.
Q: How might Iran respond?
 
A: As the New York Times reported Friday, the Israeli military intelligence assessment is that Iran’s military response to such an attack would be muted, in part because of its limited capability and in part because of it understands a massive attack would be met with massive response. Not everyone agrees with that assessment, noting that Iran has had years to plan out their response. The biggest fear is that Iran would unleash Hezbollah, which has between 42,000 and 48,000 missiles and rockets in southern Lebanon aimed at Israel. Even before any attack, officials in both Thailand and Azerbaijan say they have recently thwarted Hezbollah plots against Israeli facilities.
Israel understands that Hezbollah may respond on behalf of Iran following an attack and is prepared to go after Hezbollah “and not stop at the Litani River (the northern limit of most previous Israeli attacks) this time nor limit its force to a brigade or two” as one U.S. official put it.  Another added that Israeli officials understand that “Israeli blood, Jewish blood will certainly be spilled” in attacks around the world in the event of an attack.  And the response might not be immediate. One official noted that the Saudi Hezbollah attacks on Khobar Towers in 1996 took place months after the U.S. passed tighter sanctions against Iran.
But another notes that the level of Hezbollah support for Iran in such a scenario is an enormously important – and difficult — question for both Israel and the U.S.  Hezbollah’s  position is precarious, as Syria — its main conduit for Iranian supplies – is wracked by violence and its main focus has shifted to governance in Lebanon. Most officials think Hezbollah won’t be able to sit this one out, but few expect a massive response against Israel, which would engender a counterattack by Israeli forces.
There are other possibilities.  One Iranian says to watch Dubai where 400,000 Iranian expatriates work.  Iranians could “shut it down,” the official said.  All the officials note that Iran has had a long time to plan its response.
One huge question is what the Iranians would do if they believed that the Saudis or Emiratis were helping Israel.  In that case, say U.S. officials, expect Iran to respond against the southern Gulf States and, if the attack is serious enough, expect the United States to move to protect the Saudi Kingdom in particular, expanding the theater of combat.
 
Q: What is the worst-case scenario for the U.S.?
 
A: The worst case in case the Israelis attacked Iran would be if the Iranians judged the U.S. had been implicated or involved in the attack. Senior Iranian officials have in the past told NBC News that they would make no distinction between an Israeli attack and a U.S. attack. They see the two working hand-in-hand.
If that happened, presumably the scope of Iran’s retaliation would encompass the U.S. At the far end of the spectrum, they might go an “embassy-a-day program, start blowing up U.S. missions in various cities,” said one former U.S. official. But another intelligence official said such a response would be highly unlikely, noting that even a single embassy attack would mean massive U.S. retaliation. The Iranians also could  attack ships of the U.S. Fifth Fleet in the Gulf or U.S. allies on the Arab side of the Gulf, but either of these responses would likely prompt a U.S. military response aimed at toppling the regime in Tehran, the official said.
 
Q: What about oil?
 
A: The price would spike immediately, going from around $100 a barrel now to “between $200 and pick-a-number,” said one oil trader.  How quickly it would revert to lower levels would depend on how quickly the situation stabilized and how and where Iran would respond.  An attack on Saudi Arabia, for instance, would place the price target at close to that “pick-a-number” scenario, the trader said.
Even a $25 a barrel increase would have serious consequences for the recoveries in U.S., European and East Asian economies, particularly Japan.  “It would be a game changer,” for the U.S. economy and the political season, said a U.S. official.
 
Q: Why would Israel launch such an attack? 
 
A: Putting aside Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad’s inflammatory comments that Israel should be “wiped off the face of the Earth” (which some Iranians claim privately was a mistranslation), some Israeli officials believe the continuous threat of an Iranian nuclear weapon would lead as many as 200,000 of their best and brightest citizens to leave for the United States and other Western nations. That is the “existential threat” Israeli officials worry about, not that Iran could destroy Israel.
An Iranian nuclear weapon would give Israel a lot less latitude to respond to Iranian threats, the Israelis believe.
 
Q: Beyond military considerations, what else might the Israelis take into account when timing of an attack? 
A: It may seem cynical, but some in the Middle East think an attack could be timed to the U.S. presidential election. Some in Middle East believe that Israel might carry out an attack at the peak of the U.S. campaign in the belief that candidates and other elected officials in both parties would compete to show their support for Israel.
Robert Windrem is a senior investigative correspondent for NBC News; NBC News Pentagon correspondent Jim Miklaszewski and Pentagon producer Courtney Kube also contributed to this report.

US Promises Israel Warning of Iranian Missiles from Its Turkey-Based Radar Station

February 3, 2012

DEBKA.

DEBKA-Net-Weekly #527 February 3, 2012

The US tried to clear away a major Israeli security concern this week by sending a senior American official over with assurances that the advanced X-band AN/TPY-2 radar station US military and civilian teams began operating this month at the EastTurkish Kurecik air base would relay to Israel data picked up on threatening Iranian missile and troop movements.
The Turkey-based station would, furthermore, work in harness with its twin, the US X-band station on Mount Keren in the Israeli Negev opposite the Egyptian border.
Those assurances came in response to Israel’s second expression of concern in recent weeks, DEBKA-Net-Weekly’s military and Washington sources report. In January, Israel complained discreetly to the Obama administration that the Saudi Air Force would outnumber and outclass the Israeli Air Force after it received the 84 American F-15 SA fighter planes sold the oil kingdom under a big new arms deal. (See debkafile Jan. 25)
That concern is still unaddressed and likely to stay that way, given the paramount US regional and economic interest in seeing the transaction through.
The Turkish issue was a different matter.
It arose when Israel quietly asked for the Obama administration to clarify a guarantee Turkish Foreign Minister Ahmet Davutoglu gave Iranian leaders on January 5 during a visit to Tehran that the American X-band station in Turkey, 400 kilometers from their border, was not directed against their nuclear facilities or ballistic missiles. In any case, said the minister, Ankara had received its own guarantees from Washington that the data gathered by the Turkish-based radar station would be withheld from Israel and therefore unavailable for use in potential Israeli aerial or missile attacks on Iran.
Davutoglu went on to inform his Iranian hosts that Washington had agreed to a Turkish general supervising intelligence-gathering at the radar station and he would have the final say on who gets the data.
After the visit, a senior Turkish source said: “We made clear that this is a purely defensive [system] against any ballistic threat.”
Tehran is not placated by Turkish guarantees
The message the Turkish minister carried to Tehran, therefore, was that the US X-band radar station at Kurecik air base would be restricted to guarding against Iranian missile attacks on NATO members – not Israel and, furthermore, it would not be permitted to collect intelligence from inside Iran.
Even so, Tehran was not placated. On January 12, Iranian Majlis Speaker Ali Larijani paid a visit to Ankara. He was not pleased with his talks there, judging from his remark: “The US radar stationed in Turkey is no good for any Muslim country” – i.e. neither Iran nor Turkey. He even hinted that the American facility was placed to gather data not just there but also for surveillance in Syria, Lebanon and Iraq.
Our sources report that following these Turkish-Iranian exchanges, Israel asked Washington to clarify three points:
1. Is it true that a Turkish general will be in charge of the American radar station and empowered to veto the transfer of incoming data to Israel?
2. If that is the case, will that Turkish general have access to the intelligence gathered by the US radar station on Mount Keren in the southern Israeli Negev, with the risk of it leaking to Tehran?
Turkey must not have access to Israel’s military movements
DEBKA-Net-Weekly‘s military sources say that Israel fears sensitive intelligence reaching Turkish hands on two grounds:
– The US-operated radar station in the Negev is an open window to the slightest movement in Israeli air space. It would pick up any prospective Israeli air force or missile deployment for an attack on Iran’s nuclear facilities. Not only would Washington receive advance warning in real time of an impending strike, so too would Ankara. This Israel is determined to prevent.
– It is also essential to keep Turkey from tapping into Israeli army, air force and navy’s movements aside from any Iran-related operations.
3. Israel also asked if the American radar station in Turkey is operating under the same conditions as its Israel-based counterpart.
When the US X-band station was installed in southern Israel in 2008, Jerusalem agreed to it being exclusively operated by American military and civilian personnel. The site was declared an exterritorial US enclave out of bounds to Israeli officers without American permission.
If the US allowed the Turkey-based facility to be accessible to Turkish military personnel, then Israel wanted the rules for the Negev station changed accordingly.
Our sources report that Israel raised all these concerns during the visit of Gen. Martin Dempsey, Chairman of the Joint US Chiefs of staff on Jan. 19-20.
Failing satisfactory answers, Israel would consider closing down the US Negev radar
Without saying so explicitly, Israeli leaders made it clear that if Washington failed to supply satisfactory answers to the three questions, they would consider closing down the US X-band radar station on Mount Keren. The resulting hole would be large enough to sink the entire missile shield system the United States is building for the Persian Gulf and Europe.
A high-ranking US security official was therefore sent to Israel this week with assurances. Although Monday, Jan. 30, he agreed to talk to journalists, he decided later to stay anonymous. His principle mission was to allay Israel’s concerns by refuting the Turkish foreign minister’s account in Tehran about the way the X-band radar station is managed at the Kurecik air base.
“That radar is exclusively operated by US personnel, exactly as it is here,” said the American official. “We will control the data and fuse it with data from other radars in the region to generate the most comprehensive and effective missile defense picture,” he said. He went on to vigorously deny Turkish reports that Ankara had imposed as a precondition restrictions on data-sharing with non-NATO nations, particularly Israel.
Responding to the possibility of US radar facilities being used to support an Israel strike on Iran, raised in the Turkish-Iranian dialogue, the US official remarked: “The Turkish-deployed radar is facing the wrong direction to be of much help to Israel. In fact, the opposite is really true. Our radar here in Israel helps Turkey… Bottom line, it’s in all of our interests to have an American radar 400 kilometers from the Iranian border.”
The official was clearly trying to reassure Israel – and at the same time Turkey and Iran. It is far from certain he succeeded.

Iran Didn’t Bring Down the RQ-170. A Chinese Cyber Whiz Team Did

February 3, 2012

DEBKA.

DEBKA-Net-Weekly #527 February 3, 2012

After establishing the cause of the crash of the unmanned American spy drone, the stealth RQ-170, over Iran on Dec. 4, 2011, the US is continuing to use that type of UAV, Air Force Chief of Staff Gen. Norton Schwartz said on Jan. 13. Without disclosing the results of the investigation, he said, ”The key thing is that it’s an ISR system that we use to provide capabilities to the combatant commanders and we’ll continue to do so.”
US officials reject Iran’s claim that it brought down the Lockheed Martin RQ-170 Sentinel but remain tight-lipped about what caused the crash.
Both American sources, while insisting that the RQ-170 was still in commission, never said it was again flying over Iran.
DEBKA-Net-Weekly’s military and intelligence sources offer three disclosures to explain the publicity strategy pursued by US officials:
1. The Americans know Iran did not bring the RQ-170 down because their intelligence agencies discovered the culprits were a Chinese cyber warfare team which seized control of the drone; Iran was given the passive role of being told where and when to hold out their arms to catch it.
The Obama administration is keeping this information to itself so as not to compromise US economic relations with China, especially in a presidential election year.
– Republican contenders would seize on this information as valuable campaign ammunition against President Barack Obama. They already accuse him of being soft on North Korea and he cannot afford to have US inaction against China added to their campaign fodder.
American needs to keep China on its side
– The US is casting about for levers to bring Beijing aboard the oil embargo on Iran. Wednesday, Feb. 1, German Chancellor Angela Merkel traveled to China at Obama’s request to try her hand at persuading Beijing to at least reduce its crude purchases from Tehran, if not join the embargo. Getting into a row with China over the stealth drone would not help persuade its leaders to cooperate in sanctions against Iran but might risk bringing US-Chinese relations to an unprecedented low.
– Washington needs Beijing’s cooperation in the global financial crisis and even more, to shore up the dollar’s value as an international currency. China holds a large part of its reserves in US government bonds and dollars. A diplomatic falling-out between Washington and Beijing might well spur the Chinese to turn away from the dollar, as Moscow, Tehran and New Delhi are in the process of doing. They have indicated their willingness to take this course on past occasions.
2. US intelligence has not discovered whether the Chinese cyber warfare team is still in Iran or has gone, leaving behind instructors and high-tech equipment for Tehran to counter US drones and planes on its own. Another RQ-170 flight over Iran might provide some answers, but President Obama is flatly against this. If Iran – and China – were to get hold of a second advanced American UAV, he would have no option but to hit back at the Islamic Republic – or even at Chinese targets in Iran.
US aerial reconnaissance over Iran abandoned
3. The result of this standoff and its complications is that the United States has no aerial vehicles on surveillance missions over the Iranian interior, excepting only spy satellites.
The US Navy’s customized RQ-4 Global Hawk UAVs (BRAMS-Broad Area Maritime Surveillance), after two years of tests, now monitors sea traffic off the Iranian coast and the Strait of Hormuz, circling at 22,500 meters (70,000 feet) over a Persian Gulf carrier task force.
Anything suspicious is checked out by the carrier, land-based aircraft, or warships in the vicinity. The BAMS craft fly 24-hour sorties every three days, but do not venture deep into Iranian airspace.
DEBKA-Net-Weekly’s military sources report that Israel, which received sensitive intelligence input on Iran from US drones, is now stuck for a comparable source, just when it is gearing up for a possible strike against Iran’s nuclear facilities.
Soon after RQ-170 flights were stopped over Iran, Israel began adapting the Heron TP, its largest drone which was designated for strike sorties against Iran, for surveillance missions over that country. On Dec. 29, the Heron crashed near the Tel Nof Air Force base south of Tel Aviv on a test flight conducted jointly by Israel Aerospace Industries and the Israeli Air Force. IAF commander Maj. Gen. Ido Nechushtan said the Heron had been testing new technology. He didn’t elaborate.
But our military sources disclose that it was experimenting with a new gadget installed in its left wing for evading Chinese or Iranian cyber attacks like the one that downed the American RQ-170.
For now, Israel has halted those tests.

Israel’s Military Girds up to Strike Iran This Spring

February 3, 2012

DEBKA.

DEBKA-Net-Weekly #527 February 3, 2012

Israel’s military (the IDF) is no longer hiding from view its preparations for an attack on Iran’s nuclear program – most probably in the spring – and its expectation of armed hostilities erupting consequently on at least three fronts, Syria, the Lebanese Hizballah and the Palestinian Hamas in Gaza.
Reservists of the IDF Home Front Command received letters this week urging them to collect their gas masks by the end of February.
“There is only a limited number of gas masks left and if you don’t collect yours now, you could be left without,” Col. Sagi Tirosh wrote in the letter.
On Tuesday, Jan. 31, a division exercise was held to ensure that the drafting of reservists would go forward under attack without disruptions. “The wars we fought in the past did not reach into the home front. We understand the next war will be different,” division commander Brig.-Gen. Agay Yehezkel explained. “Next time, reserve mobilization centers in the cities and induction centers can expect to function under fire.”
The drill simulated missile bombardments from three directions, the Gaza Strip, Lebanon and Syria.
Two weeks earlier, the IDF Paratrooper Brigade staged its biggest exercise in over 15 years: More than 1,000 paratroopers jumped from the sky over southern Israel together with their department and squadron commanders.
Paratrooper Brigade Commander Col. Amir Baram told the men: “At the door of the plane, the paratrooper is quite alone. But down on the ground, the entire brigade comes together and prepares for attack.”
The IDF Paratroopers Brigade last performed a massed operational drop 56 years ago over the Suez Canal.
Israel gathers in and overhauls its armed forces
The drop was widely reported and screened on television.
DEBKA-Net-Weekly‘s military sources report it was a signal to Iran, Syria and Hizballah that the Israeli military has ample commando troops highly-trained for operations deep inside their borders and well able to reach nuclear and missile targets.
It also demonstrated that Maj. Gen. Shai Avital, former chief of an elite reconnaissance squad, who was appointed commander of the newly-established IDF Depth Corps on Jan. 19, has enough manpower available for a free hand.
The new outfit has absorbed the covert operations units scattered among the various commands: Shaldag which was transferred from the Air Force; Sayeret Matkal (General Staff Reconnaissance Unit), which was moved out of Military Intelligence, and Shayetet 13 (the US Navy SEALs equivalent) which was detached from the Navy.
The Israel Navy has also been reinforced and submarines added to its Red Sea fleet.
In a pep talk Wednesday, Feb. 1, Chief of Staff Lt. Gen. Benny Gantz said the country must muster all its military resources for action in case economic sanctions fail to deter Iran from developing nuclear weapons. There is very little time to play with, he said, because Iran may be no more than a year away from a nuclear weapons capability.
Gantz was the first Israeli office-holder to state explicitly that Israel and its military were planning armed action against Iran.
He also leveled on another score: Iran and its allies have gained at least one major advantage over Israel, said the general. Their acquisition of long-range ballistic missiles means there is no point on the Israeli map which is not exposed to attack.

A Western-Arab Undercover Exercise Afoot to Oust Bashar Assad

February 3, 2012

DEBKA.

DEBKA-Net-Weekly #527 February 3, 2012

The US, Britain, France, Saudi Arabia, Turkey and Qatar swung into action with Operation Rent-a-General when they saw Syrian President Bashar Assad, with the help of Moscow, Tehran and Hizballah, stabilizing his regime at the end of ten months of savagely cracking down on protest and insurrection.
(See our last issue of January 26: In Syria, Arab Spring Goes into Reverse: Regime Change in Damascus? Only if Tehran Wills it).
The operation, DEBKA-Net-Weekly’s intelligence sources report, had been ready to go last September, but the Western and Arab planners were not of one mind about the need to get rid of Bashar Assad; nor could they decide who would take his place.
It was generally agreed at the time, especially by those governments’ intelligence advisers, that international opinion and the Arab world would have a hard time swallowing their combined military intervention to unseat a second Arab ruler just a month after NATO-led Libyan rebels brought down the Qaddafi regime in August.
Western and Arab strategists decided it would be unwise to oust the Syrian ruler before the US, NATO, Saudi Arabia and Qatar had steadied post-Qaddafi Libya for fear of destabilizing the entire Middle East.
Looking back this week, those same circles rue that decision. Hindsight shows them that five months ago, they missed opportunities for regime change in Damascus, which were lost by early February 2012.
Then, the West, Turkey, Jordan and the Persian Gulf Arab states were at peak intelligence and military momentum and the Arab rulers targeted by popular Arab uprisings were still unprepared to take the buffeting.
Assad and backers devise methods to avert a second Libya
Syrian, Russian and Iranian strategists used those five months for a thorough study of the process leading to Qaddafi’s downfall and devised methods for preventing its repetition in Syria. Simulation exercises taught Assad how to crush and survive civilian protest movements. The beleaguered ruler was given layers of armor: an Iranian and Russian military umbrella, a ready supply of arms, ammo and replacement parts for his army and security forces, and all the intelligence he needed to forestall sudden lunges to unseat him.
He got extra insurance from the Admiral Kuznetsov Strike Group posted indefinitely at the base Syria granted Russia in the Mediterranean port of Tartus. The strike group led by Russia’s only aircraft carrier also includes a nuclear submarine and two missile destroyers.
Moscow’s aid came with a diplomatic pledge to veto any UN Security Council resolution opening the door to outside armed intervention, commanding the Syrian ruler to step down or even condemning his tactics. Moscow made good on its pledge by blocking any effective sanctions tabled at the Security Council this week.
In the last week of January 2012, DEBKA-Net-Weekly’s intelligence sources report, the authors of Operation Rent-a-General reconfigured and honed their plan with a view to piercing Assad’s ruthless strengths.
This time, Damascus would not be breached by NATO and Arab troops, as was Tripoli, but by his own military from the inside.
A vast clandestine network for soliciting Syrian officers
The rebel Free Syrian Army-FSA, contrary to the highly colored accounts of its feats, was clearly not up to the task. It was decided therefore to turn to the regular Syrian army for a force willing and able to overpower Damascus and take down the Assad regime. One general in command of an armored division and 300-400 tanks were all that was needed for starters. Once he was located, Operational Rent-a-General was in business.
But first, a media blitz was launched to prepare the way. The second week of January saw vivid accounts in all the popular Western and Arab media of brilliant rebel victories against Assad’s exhausted and dispirited army. The last DEBKA-Net-Weekly issue (526) questioned the credibility of those accounts, including the casualty figures. To boost the media campaign, Saudi intelligence launched a new television channel broadcasting to Syria from the Al-Arabiya television studios.
Then came the two principle moves – one diplomatic and one clandestine:
The first was the Arab League’s tabling of a Security Council resolution demanding that president Assad step down within two months and hand over power to his deputy for the establishment of a national emergency government with room for opposition parties. It was endorsed by the major Western powers, headed by the US.
Operation Rent-a-General configured to break into Assad’s top circle
While the delegations haggled over the framing of a draft that would escape a Russian veto, the undercover operation was launched – and is ongoing as we write these lines. It is arguably the most ambitious clandestine assault ever undertaken by foreign agencies to subvert the upper echelons of a regular army of the size of Syria’s 400,000-strong armed forces.
Intelligence agencies in the US, Britain, France, Turkey, Saudi Arabia, Jordan and Qatar have spread out a net over hundreds of high-ranking Syrian officers from the rank of major general through major, and are trawling for recruits to spearhead a military coup to oust Bashar Assad.
This stratagem is seen by our military and intelligence sources as more analogous to the American covert tactic for toppling Saddam Hussein in 2003 than the anti-Qaddafi operation five months ago. The CIA prepared the way for the US invasion of Iraq by subverting the Iraqi generals and colonels responsible for the defense of Baghdad to make sure they abstained from resisting the invasion. American agents worked through those officers’ expatriate relatives living in the US and Iraqi officers recruited before the war.
Generals grouped by tribe, religion, sectarian affiliation
The Syrian conspiracy is a lot more elaborate: A nerve center in Washington coordinates the work of British, French, Turkish, Saudi, Jordanian and Qatari operations offices, each focusing on a different group of Syrian generals, many of whom are reached through their ethnic, tribal, religious, clan or class affiliations.
The pitch is simple: It is past time to stop the cruel butchery devastating Syria before the country slides into civil war or breaks up into warring cantons. The only way to halt the bloodbath is for the army to march on Damascus, evict the Assad family regime and install a military government to hold the reins for the transition to civilian rule and national elections
They are reached through diverse channels: Targeted officers are surprised by calls to their unlisted private phone numbers or their command centers through military communications networks. Some are reached by email; others find undercover couriers turning up on their doorsteps at home.
DEBKA-Net-Weekly’s intelligence sources disclose that the highest-ranking Syrian general reached so far is Syrian Defense Minister Dawoud Rajha, an Orthodox Christian. He was approached through his church leaders in the Middle East and southeastern Europe.
Syrian, Iranian and Russian intelligence pick up on the conspiracy
The far-flung networks of contacts and negotiations thrown out by the Western and Arab allies were bound to attract the attention of Assad’s security aides and his Iranian and Russian intelligence backers.
In a typically oblique reference, Tehran indicated Wednesday, Feb. 1, it knew what was going on. Iran’s Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei‘s military adviser Maj. Gen. Yahya Rahim-Safavi told Iran’s Fars News Agency: “The US has given a role to Saudi Arabia, Qatar and Turkey to direct regional developments in a way that they move towards these countries’ interests in line with US policies and contrary to Iran’s policies,” he said.
And on Jan. 25, Russian intelligence officials tipped Assad off to a Syrian general (unnamed) recruited by the Americans to lead a coup against him. This information was confirmed by Iran four days later.
Monday, Jan. 30, debkafile’s military sources reported exclusively that Assad had transferred the Syrian Republican Guard and the 4th Armored Division under the command of his brother Gen. Ali Maher to battle positions in and around Damascus. He acted on information received that the West, via Turkey, had persuaded a commander of one of the Syrian armored divisions to roll his fleet of 300 tanks into Damascus, seize control of the city and overthrow the government.
Who will blink first?
The Syrian ruler is therefore fully aware of the Western conspiracy to turn his generals against him and is fully prepared to stand up and fight for Damascus.
Syria’s fate in the next few days will hinge on the answers to three critical questions:
1. Will the Western and Arab powers be able to pull off their plan to raise a Syrian force sizeable and competent enough to overwhelm the loyalist units Assad has posted in battle stations in and around Damascus?
2. Will Operation Rent-a-General manage to penetrate the top circle of commanders close to Assad, causing the regime to implode and avoid a battle for Damascus?
3. Who will blink first in this undercover contest? The Russians and the Iranians? The US and the Arabs? Or even perhaps Bashar Assad himself?

UK ‘is in range of Iran’s missiles’ as Clegg says he is ‘worried’ that war could break out | Mail Online

February 3, 2012

UK ‘is in range of Iran’s missiles’ as Clegg says he is ‘worried’ that war could break out | Mail Online.

  • Missile strike on Iranian regime could take place this summer, defense sources suggest
  • EU agreed tougher sanctions on Iran last week
  • Iran insists atomic energy is only used for civilian purposes
Fears: Nick Clegg said he worried the U.S. and Israel may 'take matters into their own hands' and launch a pre-emptive strike against Iran

Fears: Nick Clegg said he worried the U.S. and Israel may ‘take matters into their own hands’ and launch a pre-emptive strike against Iran

Iran is developing a missile with a 6,200-mile range capable of reaching Britain, it was revealed yesterday.

The rogue state’s new weapon could also deliver an attack as far away as America’s East Coast.

Israel’s deputy prime minister Moshe Ya’alon made the chilling claim as his country’s military chiefs revealed Tehran had stockpiled enough enriched uranium to produce four nuclear warheads.

Nick Clegg last night expressed concern that the U.S. and Israel would ‘take matters into their own hands’ and launch a military strike against Iran.

The West fears that Iran will equip its missiles with nuclear devices.

Defence sources in Tel Aviv predicted there could be a strike against the Iranian regime as early as this summer.

Yesterday Deputy Prime Minister Nick Clegg said: ‘I worry that certain countries might take matters into their own hands.’

Iran insists it is developing atomic technology for civilian purposes.

Military chiefs in Israel announced that Tehran had stockpiled enough enriched uranium to produce four nuclear bombs.

Mr Clegg spoke out as UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon warned Israel to resolve the standoff with Iran peacefully.

Threatening: Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad says they are only enriching uranium for civilian purposes - but the claims are disbelieved

Threatening: Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad says they are only enriching uranium for civilian purposes – but the claims are disbelieved

Asked if he was concerned that Israel would attack Iran, the LibDem leader said: ‘Of course I worry that there will be a military conflict and that certain countries might take matters into their own hands.’

He said Britain had been attempting to demonstrate that ‘there are very tough things we can do which are not military steps in order to place pressure on Iran.’

Last week the European Union agreed to tougher economic sanctions, including an embargo on Iranian oil exports, over its failure to abandon its nuclear programme.

Iran threatened to retaliate by closing the Strait of Hormuz, which channels one-fifth of the world’s crude oil, prompting Britain to warn it would send military reinforcements to the Gulf if the international waterway was blocked.

The Royal Navy already has five ships there with HMS Daring, one of its sophisticated new Type 45 destroyers, on its way.

Mr Clegg refused to speculate if Britain would ‘participate’ in military action. But he said: ‘Of course, in a situation like this you don’t take any options off the table.

‘When you are involved in a major standoff with a country which appears to have a… hostile intent on these issues, of course you don’t do that.’

Escalating row: U.S. have sent the USS Abraham Lincoln to the Strait of Hormuz along with British warships after Iran threatened to close the strait

Escalating row: U.S. have sent the USS Abraham Lincoln to the Strait of Hormuz along with British warships after Iran threatened to close the strait

Meanwhile, Israel’s deputy prime minister Moshe Ya’alon told a security conference that Iran was successfully building long-distance ballistic missiles.

He said the weapons, with a range of 10,000km (6,200miles), were ‘aimed at America, not us’ although a missile that could be fired such a distance could also strike Britain.

Mr Ya’alon said: ‘Such a non-conventional regime should not have such non-conventional capabilities.’

He told the annual Herzliya national security conference in Israel that an Iranian military compound that mysteriously exploded on November 12 last year was developing long-range missiles.

At least 17 people, including a general, died in a blast on the base around 20miles west of Tehran. Iran said an ammunition dump had exploded but the destruction was widely blamed on foreign intelligence services.

Major-General Aviv Kochavi, Israel’s chief of military intelligence, said that Iran could make four atomic bombs by enriching uranium it had already stockpiled.

He said that from the moment Iran’s spiritual leaders ‘give an order… to speed up production of the first nuclear explosive device, we estimate it will take about a year to complete the task.’

Tough Iran Penalty Clears Senate Banking Panel – NYTimes.com

February 3, 2012

Tough Iran Penalty Clears Senate Banking Panel – NYTimes.com.

The Senate Banking Committee unanimously approved a new regimen of anti-Iran sanctions on Thursday that would for the first time threaten to punish the global financial telecommunications network that nearly all banks rely on to conduct their daily business.

 

The legislation’s banking provision, aimed at forcing the telecommunications network to expel Iranian banks that have already been blacklisted, would be financially catastrophic for Iran if carried out fully, according to proponents and sanctions experts. Expulsion from the network — the Society for Worldwide Interbank Financial Telecommunication, known as Swift — would deny to Iran many billions of dollars in revenue from abroad that is routinely routed into its domestic banking system.

 

Iran’s central bank is already subject to a particularly tough American measure, signed into law last month, that threatens to undermine the Iranian economy by penalizing foreign banks and other companies that transact business with the central bank. But the Swift provision in the new legislation, which some advocates of sanctions have described as a silver bullet, could be far more onerous.

 

“The Senate Banking Committee has sent a strong message,” said Mark D. Wallace, the president of United Against Nuclear Iran, an advocacy group based in New York that has been pushing for such a provision. He has argued that Swift, which based in Belgium, is already in violation of other sanctions against Iran as well as its own rules. “Swift must end its business in Iran,” he said.

 

The legislation does not specify what action would be taken against Swift if it did not comply.

 

There was no immediate comment by Swift on the legislation. But officials of the network, mindful of pressure from Mr. Wallace’s group and others that have increasingly advocated stricter sanctions against Iran, denied it was acting illegally, in a statement posted earlier Thursday on the network’s Web site.

 

“Swift complies fully with all applicable sanctions laws of the multiple jurisdictions in which we operate, and we will continue to do so,” the network said in its statement, noting that its activity is overseen by regulators of major powers, including the Federal Reserve in the United States. “We operate our network in a manner that is transparent to these regulators and maintain frequent consultations with them, as well as other governmental authorities in the E.U., U.S. and other jurisdictions.”

 

The Senate legislation, known as the Iran Sanctions, Accountability and Human Rights Act, would also eliminate other loopholes in earlier sanctions, force all companies with stock traded in the United States to publicly disclose any dealings with sanctioned Iranian businesses and individuals, and basically prohibit the granting of visas to Iranian students who wish to study energy-related fields in the United States.

 

The legislation now goes to the full Senate, where the likelihood of passage is considered strong. It reflects the rising tone of confrontation between the West and Iran over the country’s uranium enrichment program, as well as what vocal opponents of Iran have called its support for international terrorism and repressive tactics at home.

 

“With these new sanctions, we are giving Iran’s leaders a clear choice,” Senator Tim Johnson, Democrat of South Dakota, who is chairman of the Banking Committee, said in a statement. “Iran can end its suppression of its own people, come clean on its nuclear program, suspend enrichment and stop supporting terrorist activities around the globe. Or it can continue to face sustained, intensifying multilateral economic and diplomatic pressure deepening its international isolation.”

 

Iran has rejected Western accusations that it is seeking the capability to build nuclear weapons through its uranium enrichment program, insisting the program is peaceful. In what amounts to a mirror image of the Western indictment of its behavior, Iran has countered by accusing the United States and Israel, the main American ally in the Middle East, of warmongering and terrorism.

Iranian leaders have acknowledged that their economy is under strain because of the sanctions, and have recently expressed a new willingness to discuss their uranium enrichment with Western powers. But the Iranians have maintained a defiant position over the nuclear issue for years, a stance that has increased fears that Israel, which considers Iran a major threat to its existence, would pre-emptively attack suspected nuclear sites in Iran.

U.S. officials concerned by Israel statements on Iran threat, possible strike – The Washington Post

February 3, 2012

U.S. officials concerned by Israel statements on Iran threat, possible strike – The Washington Post.

Jack Guez/AFP/Getty Images – Israeli Defense Minister Ehud Barak, right, walks with U.S. Defense Secretary Leon Panetta. Barak said that time is running out for stopping Iran’s nuclear advance, as the country’s uranium facilities disappear into newly constructed mountain bunkers.

By and , Friday, February 3, 4:29 AM

JERUSALEM — Israeli leaders on Thursday delivered one of the bluntest warnings to date of possible airstrikes against Iranian nuclear sites, adding to the anxiety in Western capitals that a surprise attack by Israel could spark a broader military conflict in the Middle East.

Defense Minister Ehud Barak, speaking at a security forum attended by some of Israel’s top intelligence and military leaders, declared that time was running out for stopping Iran’s nuclear advance, as the country’s uranium facilities disappear into newly constructed mountain bunkers.

“Whoever says ‘later’ may find that later is too late,” Barak said. He switched from Hebrew to English for the last phrase: “later is too late.”

The language reflected a deepening rift between Israeli and U.S. officials over the urgency of stopping Iran’s nuclear program, which Western intelligence officials and nuclear experts say could soon put nuclear weapons within the reach of Iran’s rulers.

Although accepting the gravity of the Iranian threat, U.S. officials fear being blindsided by an Israeli strike that could have widespread economic and security implications and might only delay, not end, Iran’s nuclear pursuits.

In a series of private meetings with Israeli counterparts in recent weeks, Western officials have counseled patience, saying recent economic sanctions and a new European oil embargo are pummeling Iran’s economy and could soon force the country’s leaders to abandon the nuclear program. Yet Israelis are increasingly signaling that they may act unilaterally if there is no breakthrough in the coming months, according to current and former administration and intelligence officials.

“The Obama administration is concerned that Israel could attack Iranian nuclear facilities this year, having given Washington little or no warning,” said Cliff Kupchan, a former State Department official who specialized in Iran policy during the Clinton administration and recently returned from meetings with Israeli officials. He said Israel “has refused to assure Washington that prior notice would be provided.”

Defense Secretary Leon E. Panetta is one of several administration officials to express concern publicly that Israel is positioning itself for a surprise attack. Last month, the administration dispatched the Joint Chiefs chairman, Gen. Martin E. Dempsey, to the Israeli capital for high-level discussions about the possibility of a unilateral Israeli strike.

“Israel has indicated they’re considering this, and we have indicated our concerns,” Panetta told reporters Thursday after a NATO meeting in Brussels. Panetta declined to comment on published reports that he thinks the Israelis could carry out a strike this spring, possibly as early as April.

Although the Obama administration has not ruled out U.S. military action against Iran, White House officials are worried that a unilateral strike could shatter the broad international coalition assembled in the past three years to confront Iran over its nuclear program, which Iranian leaders have consistently said is for peaceful purposes.

U.S. officials fear that an attack by Israel could trigger Iranian retaliation not only against the Jewish state but also against American interests around the world. A prolonged conflict could disrupt oil shipments, drive up energy prices and devastate fragile Western economies, U.S. officials say.

Administration officials have hinted that the United States might not intervene militarily in a hostile exchange between Israel and Iran unless the conflict began to threaten U.S. forces or Israeli population centers. In an interview last month on CBS’s “60 Minutes,” Panetta said that in the event of an Israeli strike, U.S. military officials’ primary concern would be “to protect our forces.”

British Deputy Prime Minister Nick Clegg also expressed concern Thursday that Israel was moving closer to a decision on a potentially destabilizing military strike.

“Of course I worry that there will be a military conflict and that certain countries might seek to take matters into their own hands,” Clegg told the House magazine, a weekly British political journal.

Clegg, whose government recently imposed new sanctions against Iran’s central bank, said Britain was convinced that “ there are very tough things we can do which are not military steps in order to place pressure on Iran.”

At Thursday’s Israeli security conference, in the resort city of Herzliya, Barak and other Israeli officials pointed to recent moves by Iran to begin enriching uranium at a second plant, located in a bunker built into a mountain near the city of Qom. Once that facility is complete, deterring Iran will be far more difficult, they say.

“The dividing line may pass where the Iranians decide to break out of the nonproliferation treaty and move toward a nuclear device or weapon, but at the place . . . that would make the physical strike impractical,” Barak said.

He rejected criticism that Israeli leaders had failed to consider the full implications of military action. “There is no basis for the claim that this subject. . . was not discussed with appropriate breadth and depth,” he said.

“The assessment of many experts around the world, not only here, is that the result of avoiding action will certainly be a nuclear Iran, and dealing with a nuclear Iran will be more complicated, more dangerous and more costly in lives and money than stopping it,” he said.

Speaking at the same conference, the chief of military intelligence, Gen. Aviv Kochavi, said Iran already has enough fissile material to build four nuclear weapons and could do so within a year if Iranian leaders give the order. U.S. intelligence officials have concluded that Iran’s supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, has adopted a course of gradually gathering the components necessary for nuclear weapons while deferring a decision on whether to build and test a bomb.

Although there have been no indications in Israel that a military strike is imminent, Israeli officials have conveyed a sense of urgency, suggesting that a window of opportunity for a military strike is closing.

Barak, in a meeting with German Foreign Minister Guido Westerwelle, urged that diplomatic efforts to halt the Iranian nuclear program “be conducted intensively and urgently” and that tougher sanctions target Iran’s financial system and central bank, as well as its oil exports.

Israeli officials warn that beyond posing an existential threat to Israel, Iran’s possession of a nuclear weapon could trigger a regional nuclear arms race in the volatile Middle East and alter Israel’s strategic position in the region.

 

 

 

Warrick reported from Washington. Staff writers Craig Whitlock and Karen DeYoung contributed to this report.

© The Washington Post Company

The latest Iran frenzy

February 3, 2012

The latest Iran frenzy | FP Passport.

Posted By Blake Hounshell

The news gods have apparently decided that it’s time for yet another round of Washington’s favorite parlor game: “Will Israel attack Iran?”

The latest round of speculation was kicked off by a mammoth New York Times magazine article by Israeli journalist Ronen Bergman, who concluded, “After speaking with many senior Israeli leaders and chiefs of the military and the intelligence, I have come to believe that Israel will indeed strike Iran in 2012.”

Veteran Iran hand Gary Sick ably dispensed with Bergman’s argument here, noting that Bergman’s reporting actually points toward the opposite conclusion:

Like virtually all other commentators on this issue, Bergman slides over the fact that the IAEA consistently reports that Iran has diverted none of its uranium to military purposes. Like others, he focuses on the recent IAEA report, which was the most detailed to date in discussing Iran’s suspected experiments with military implications; but like others, he fails to mention that almost all of the suspect activity took place seven or more years ago and there is no reliable evidence that it has resumed. A problem, yes; an imminent threat, no.

Bergman also overlooks the fact that Iran has almost certainly NOT made a decision to actually build a bomb and that we are very likely to know if they should make such a decision. How would we know? Simply because those pesky IAEA inspectors are there on site and Iran would have to kick them out and break the seals on their stored uranium in order to produce the high enriched uranium needed for a bomb.

Would Israel actually attack while these international inspectors are at work? No, they would need to give them warning, thereby giving Iran warning that something was coming. The IAEA presence is a trip wire that works both ways. It is an invaluable resource. Risking its loss would be not only foolhardy but self-destructive to Israel and everyone else.

But Bergman’s article isn’t the only recent bite at this apple. Foreign Affairs hosted a debate between former Defense Department officials Matthew Kroenig and Colin Kahl on whether the United States should bomb Iran itself; Foreign Policy‘s Steve Walt went several rounds with Kroenig; defense analysts Edridge Colby and Austin Long joined the discussion in the National Interest. Many others weighed in.

Today, Washington Post columnist David Ignatius threw another log on the fire when he reported that U.S. Defense Secretary Leon Panetta “believes there is a strong likelihood that Israel will strike Iran in April, May or June” and that the Obama administration is “conducting intense discussions about what an Israeli attack would mean for the United States.” He added: “U.S. officials don’t think that Netanyahu has made a final decision to attack, and they note that top Israeli intelligence officials remain skeptical of the project.” (Reuters notes archly that Ignatius was “writing from Brussels where Panetta was attending a NATO defense ministers’ meeting.”)

There have also been a number of items in recent days about Iran’s murky ties to al Qaeda, including this Foreign Affairs article by Rand analyst Seth Jones and what appeared to be a follow-up report in the Wall Street Journal (never mind that the information was nearly two years old), as well as a steady drumbeat of alarmist quotes from top Israeli officials — all reminiscent of the run up to the Iraq war. Add to this mix Iran’s threat to shut down the Strait of Hormuz, an ongoing congresssional push for tougher sanctions, and the heated rhetoric coming from Obama’s Republican challengers, and you have a recipe for a media feeding frenzy.

So, is Israel going to attack Iran, despite all of the doubts many have raised? There are only two people who know the answer to that question — Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and his Defense Minister Ehud Barak — and I don’t think they’ll announce their decision in the New York Times. The smart money’s still betting against an Israeli strike, but the odds do seem to be getting shorter.

Israeli leaders’ differing approaches on Iran

February 3, 2012

Israeli leaders’ differing approaches on Iran – Haaretz Daily Newspaper | Israel News.

The one and only Israel-related question on the international agenda these days has to do with Iran: Is Israel planning to attack Iran’s nuclear facilities in the coming year?

By Amos Harel

The frozen Israeli-Palestinian peace process was, for a change, apparently not the most important issue to the many foreign guests who visited Israel this week for the Herzliya Conference. The one and only Israel-related question on the international agenda these days has to do with Iran: Is Israel planning to attack Iran’s nuclear facilities in the coming year?

Not surprisingly, that was the issue on which quite a few speakers at the conference focused.

Iran nuclear facility in Bushehr - AP - 01012012 Iran’s nuclear facility in Bushehr.
Photo by: AP

Over the past 24 hours, the defense minister, the strategic affairs minister, the Israel Defense Forces chief of staff and the head of Military Intelligence have all discussed Iran’s nuclear progress at great length, and indirectly addressed Israel’s dilemma as to what should be done.

What could a foreign observer have learned? First, that at least officially, the Israeli line is harder than ever, with more implied threats of an attack. But if he listened closely to the nuances, he might be able to discern differences in approach among various senior officials.

Defense Minister Ehud Barak, who is believed to be the chief proponent of an attack, said Thursday, “Today, unlike in the past, the world has no doubt that [Iran’s] military nuclear capability is continuously approaching maturity and is about to enter the ‘immune zone,’ after which the Iranian regime can act to complete the program without effective interruption … Today, unlike in the past, the world agrees that if sanctions do not attain the desired results to stop [Iran’s] military nuclear capability, action will need to be considered.”

But to wave the Israeli pistol, Barak chose a somewhat strange ploy – reliance on the media. It turns out that even Barak needs foreign sources sometimes. “Many commentators,” he said, “believe that dealing with a nuclear Iran will be more complex, more dangerous, than stopping it today.”

Strategic Affairs Minister Moshe Ya’alon ostensibly echoed Barak’s aggressive line. An Iran with nuclear weapons, he said, would be “a nightmare for the free world, for Arab countries, and of course a threat to Israel. There would be nuclear chaos in the Middle East, because [other] countries would not sit on the sidelines.”

There would also be more terror – against Arab regimes, against Israel and against Western countries, especially the United States, he said.

Ya’alon said the explosion a few months ago at an Iranian missile base had destroyed systems intended for missiles with a range of 10,000 kilometers, which could threaten the United States.

Therefore, he concluded, “One way or another, the Iranian nuclear project has to be stopped, because a messianic-apocalyptic regime must not have capabilities of mass destruction.”

Nevertheless, he added, “Any facility that is protected by humans can be penetrated by humans. Every military facility in Iran can be hit, and I say this from my experience as chief of staff.”

This message was directed at Barak no less than at the Iranians. After all, the defense minister recently claimed that time was running out, that in less than a year, Iran’s centrifuges would be deep underground. Ya’alon, one could gather, thinks there is still time for other steps.

IDF Chief of Staff Benny Gantz is viewed as being in no hurry to launch an immediate attack. In his address Wednesday night, he spoke of “continuing to disrupt Iran’s attempts to attain nuclear weapons.” It is very important, he said, “to continue to build strong, reliable, impressive military capabilities, and to be prepared to use them if and when the need arises.”

But most interesting of all were the remarks by the Military Intelligence chief, Maj. Gen. Aviv Kochavi. Like Gantz, Kochavi chose not to use the term “immune zone,” which has appeared in every one of Barak’s recent speeches.

And like Ya’alon, Kochavi seemed to radiate slightly less urgency than Barak.

Kochavi said that to produce nuclear weapons, Iran has virtually no need of additional capabilities. Thus everything depends on the decision of the country’s spiritual leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei. If Khamenei gives the word to create a facility to manufacture the first nuclear warhead, “we believe it would take a year. If he gives a directive to translate that capability into a nuclear warhead, we believe it would take another two or three years,” Kochavi said.

According to Kochavi, Iran has “more than four tons of uranium enriched to three percent, and almost 100 kilos enriched to 20 percent.” If this uranium “is enriched to a higher level, more than 90 percent, that will be enough for four atom bombs,” he added, reiterating earlier assessments.

The MI chief described international sanctions as an “ever-tightening noose” around Iran and said they were showing results: “Iran now has an almost 16 percent unemployment rate and 24 percent annual inflation, with zero growth.”

So far, the pressure has not produced a strategic change in Tehran’s policies, but “the stronger the pressure grows, the greater the potential that the regime will worry first of all about its survival and reevaluate its positions,” he said.

Kochavi barely touched on the Palestinian conflict, citing lack of time. But with regard to Syria, he said, “We are seeing the first cracks” around President Bashar Assad. “The talk within his circle is that the heart of the problem may be Assad himself, so perhaps they should start discussing models for replacing him.”

In some areas of Lebanon, Kochavi continued, “every tenth home” is a storehouse for Hezbollah’s rockets or a launch site for these rockets. Barak subsequently hinted in his address to the conference that if Hezbollah launched rockets at Israel’s home front, Israel would attack Lebanon’s strategic civilian infrastructure.

Altogether, some 200,000 missiles and rockets are aimed at Israel from enemy countries, Kochavi said, but Israeli deterrence has worked. “We are facing a more hostile, more Islamic, more sensitive Middle East,” the MI chief concluded – one “less given to international influence” and facing “permanent instability.”