Archive for February 19, 2012

IDF to deploy Iron Dome in Central Israel

February 19, 2012

IDF to deploy Iron Dome in Central Israel – Israel News, Ynetnews.

(A drill?  Really?  Yikes…! – JW)

Anti-missile system battery to be deployed in Tel Aviv Metropolitan Area for several days to simulate rocket attack

Yoav Zitun

The IDF is planning to deploy an Iron Domebattery in the Tel Aviv Metropolitan Area for the first time as part of a drill simulating a missile attack, Ynet learned Sunday.

The Iron Dome system aims to provide protection from medium-range rockets used by Hamas and Hezbollah and is part of Israel’s multi-layered defense layout which also includes the Arrow 2 and Magic Wand systems.

Residents of Central Israel will be able to get a closer look at the Iron Dome battery which has been found to be effective in intercepting rockets fired at southern communities. The aim is to calibrate the system in the Tel Aviv Metropolitan Area after previous deployments in Haifa and southern cities. The battery will be stationed in Central Israel for several days subject to permits currently being acquired by the Air Force.
מערכת כיפת ברזל ליד אשקלון (צילום: AP)

Iron Dome battery in Ashkelon (Photo: AP)

Military sources stressed that the deployment is part of a pre-scheduled training program. The IDF Spokesperson’s Unit said: “The Iron Dome is in the process of being made operational as part of which the battery is being placed in various locations from time to time.”

While Gaza and Lebanese terrorist organizations have yet to fire rockets at Central Israel, it is a well known fact that they own rockets able to reach this area.

Hezbollah owns rockets able to hit any point in Israel and it is estimated that Hamas also boasts an ever-growing arsenal of rockets able to target Tel Aviv. In the past, security officials estimated that the city will be the main target in the next major round of conflict.

As early as 2009, then Military Intelligence chief Amos Yadlin revealed that Hamas successfully tested a 60 km range rocket from the Gaza Strip. Yadlin said the rocket was likely manufactured in Iran and that its operator was trained in Syria or Iran. Such a rocket can easily hit Tel Aviv or the Ben Gurion Airport.

Iran names Istanbul for nuclear talks, buttresses Assad with Russia

February 19, 2012

DEBKAfile, Political Analysis, Espionage, Terrorism, Security.

Iran continues to behave as though it is calling the shots. The first formal announcement of the resumption of Iran-world powers nuclear talks (confirming debkafile’s exclusive) came from its Foreign Minister Ali Akbar Selahi who Sunday, Feb. 19, named the venue as Istanbul, Turkey. Saturday, two Iranian warships got away with delivering arms for Bashar Assad’s crackdown on protest without US or Israeli interference.

They docked at Tartus port Saturday alongside a Russian naval flotilla, symbolizing their joint effort to preserve Assad.
US and Israeli naval craft were entitled by UN sanctions to intercept and search the Kharq supply ship carrying illegal arms and military equipment for Bashar Assad’s army as it sailed past Israel’s Mediterranean coast with the Sahid Qandi destroyer. But they abstained from doing so for fear of a firefight at sea with the Iranian destroyer.

The Egyptian Suez authorities were equally wary of trouble and so did not exercise their authority to search the arms vessel.

The US and Israel therefore let Iran get away with establishing three disagreeable facts:

1.  A precedent for bringing arms to the Assad regime and the Lebanese Hizballah group without being challenged;
2.  Iran flaunted its comradeship with Russia for buttressing the Assad regime and warding off Western-Arab military intervention by their military strength. Its warship entered Tartus and docked alongisde the Russian aircraft carrier Admiral Kuznetsov and its strike group.

3.  Tehran felt it could safely ignore the warning that “Israel is watching Iran’s military movements in the Mediterranean” which came from “military sources” tardily after the two warships were berthed at Tartus ready to unload their cargo.
Israel did not interfere either when exactly a year ago, the Kharq passed through the Suez Canal on its way past the Israeli coast to deliver missiles for Hizballah, even though Defense Minister Ehud Barak said at the time that the Israel Navy would halt the ship if it was laden with arms.

A whole year has gone by and Israel is still not geared for stemming the flow of Iranian weapons to its enemies.  Inaction this time is bound to detract from Israel’s military credibility at the very moment that

another round of intense US-Israeli talks on Iran is taking place.
Top-flight White House advisers, National Security Adviser Tom Donilon,  Weapons of Mass Destruction Coordinator Gary Seymour and head of the NSC’s Middle East Desk Steve Simon, arrived in Israel Saturday, Feb. 18, for three days of critical talks with Prime Minister  Binyamin Netanyahu and his senior security team headed by Maj. Gen. (Res.) Yaakov Amidror.

debkafile’s sources note that military and intelligence officials conversant with Iran’s nuclear projects are not part of this delegation. This US-Israeli round is therefore designed hammer out political and diplomatic coordination between the two governments, not the military aspects of a strike against Iran.
The Obama administration is walking on eggs so not to jeopardize the new chances opening up for resumed international negotiations with Iran. Following debkafile disclosed exclusively at week’s end, Sunday, Feb. 19, Iranian Foreign Minister Ali Akbar Salehi confirmed that the next round of talks between Iran and six world powers on the country’s nuclear program will be held in Istanbul, Turkey. He did not mention a date.

He also reiterated Tehran’s standard refrain that neither sanctions nor any other penalties would make Iran give up its nuclear aspirations.

In this sense, the dispute between Washington and Israel over whether or not sanctions are effective is academic. Still, as an added incentive for the Netanyahu government to hold its fire against Iran, Washington persuaded the Brussels-based Swift financial clearinghouse used by 210 countries to agree to shut Iran out of its network, thereby choking off much of its international trade.

However, as debkafile reveals here for the first time, Tehran had already taken the precaution of opening alternative lines to KTT, a company which provides certain financial and trading services to some European, Far Eastern and Muslim governments. It is registered with the Government of Pakistan Department of Export & Import and Ministry of Defense.

Shortly after the Donilon team landed in Israel, Army Gen. Martin Dempsey, Chairman of the US Chiefs of Staff made these comments to a CNN TV interviewer for broadcast Sunday, Feb. 19:  “It’s not prudent at this point for Israel to decide to attack Iran. It would be destabilizing and wouldn’t achieve their long-term objectives.”

He went on to say that the U.S. government is confident the Israelis “understand our concerns.” But then added: “I wouldn’t suggest, sitting here today, that we’ve persuaded them that our view is the correct view and that they are acting in an ill-advised fashion.”

debkafile’s military and intelligence sources note that Israeli is paying a heavy strategic price for the interminable wrangling over an attack on Iran going back and forth between Washington and Jerusalem for months. It is forcing the Netanyahu government to sit on its hands in circumstances where inaction is dangerous and watch its deterrent strength drain away. Therefore, not a finger was lifted to break up Iran’s latest breakthrough to a seaborne route for replenishing Assad’s depleted arsenals.

Iran wants talks, under spectre of possible war

February 19, 2012

THE DAILY STAR :: News :: Middle East :: Iran wants talks, under spectre of possible war.

https://i0.wp.com/www.dailystar.com.lb/dailystar/Pictures/2012/02/19/50263_mainimg.jpg

Iran has put finishing touches for the installation of thousands of new-generation machines at a cavernous underground bunker that would allow it speed up production of material that can be used to arm nuclear warheads, diplomats tell The Associated Press, Saturday, Feb. 18, 2012. (AP Photo/Hasan Sarbakhshian,

(The Daily Star :: Lebanon News :: http://www.dailystar.com.lb)

TEHRAN: Iran is to host a high-level team from the UN nuclear watchdog on Monday as part of efforts to defuse dire international tensions over its atomic activities through dialogue.

But other words being spoken in Israel, the United States and Britain — and Iran’s defiant moves to boost its nuclear activities — underlined the prospect of possible Israeli military action against the Islamic republic.

Iran also signalled on Sunday that it is ready to hit back hard at sanctions threatening its economy, by announcing it has halted its limited oil sales to France and Britain.

Iranian Foreign Minister Ali Akbar Salehi on Sunday said his country was keen to quickly resume mooted talks with world powers, once a place and date were agreed.

The last talks collapsed in Istanbul in January 2011, but Iran has responded positively to an EU offer to look at reviving them.

“We are looking for a mechanism for a solution for the nuclear issue in a way that it is win-win for both sides,” Salehi said.

But he added that Iran remained prepared for a “worst-case scenario.”

Such a scenario — war — remained very much the subtext of a visit to Israel on Sunday by US National Security Advisor Tom Donilon.

Israel has been gripped by speculation in recent weeks that it is closer to mounting a pre-emptive strike on Iran’s nuclear programme, though Tel Aviv has denied reaching such a decision.

The United States, while not ruling out its own possible military option against Iran, was publicly being seen holding back its main Middle East ally from taking such drastic action.

“I think it would be premature to exclusively decide that the time for a military option was upon us,” the chairman of the US Joint Chiefs of Staff, General Martin Dempsey, told CNN.

“The US government is confident that the Israelis understand our concerns,” The Jerusalem Post newspaper quoted Dempsey as saying in the CNN interview.

British Foreign Secretary William Hague warned on the BBC on Sunday: “I don’t think the wise thing at this moment is for Israel to launch a military attack on Iran.

Israel’s calculations will take into account an announcement by Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad last Tuesday that his scientists are boosting uranium enrichment by adding 3,000 more centrifuges to a facility at Natanz.

Iran also appeared to be about to install thousands of new centrifuges in another, heavily fortified enrichment facility near the city of Qom, a diplomat accredited to the UN nuclear watchdog told the BBC.

Iran says the enrichment is part of a purely peaceful civilian nuclear programme.

Western nations and Israel, though, fear it is part of a drive to develop the ability to make atomic weapons.

A November report by the UN nuclear watchdog, the International Atomic Energy Agency, strongly suggested Iran’s programme included nuclear weapons research.

The IAEA delegation due in Tehran on Monday is to hold two days of talks with Iranian officials on those suspicions.

A previous visit on the same issue at the end of January, though, yielded no breakthrough.

“I’m not optimistic that Iran will provide much more information because I think any honest answers to the IAEA’s questions would confirm that Iran had been involved in weapons-related development work and Iran wouldn’t want to admit that for fear of being penalised,” Mark Fitzpatrick of the London-based International Institute for Strategic Studies told AFP.

The West has ramped up its economic sanctions on the Islamic republic in an effort to force it to halt the enrichment.

“But so far they haven’t worked and we’ve been seeing a regime that breaks all the rules,” Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said last Thursday.

Iran on Sunday added to its defiance in the face of the sanctions by declaring no more crude was being exported to France and Britain, in retaliation for an EU-wide ban on its oil that will come into full effect from July 1.

Meanwhile, Iran and Israel have shown a willingness to tangle, at least covertly.

Bomb plots to kill Israeli diplomats in India, Georgia and Thailand emerged February 13 and 14, using similar methods to those in the murder of Iranian nuclear scientists in the past two years attributed to Israeli agents.

Iran denied any involvement in the plots against the Israeli diplomats — one of whom was gravely wounded when her car was targeted in New Delhi. Israel has neither confirmed nor denied being behind the Tehran hits.

Israel and Iran have also made preparations for open conflict.

The Jewish state in 2009 reportedly purchased 55 bunker-busting bombs made by the United States, and this year called off its biggest-ever joint military manoeuvres with the United States that were meant to have taken place around now.

The Islamic state has been conducting several war games — the most recent, land-based ones announced on Sunday in central Iran — and flaunted its ballistic and cruise missiles.

And two Iranian warships sailed through the Suez Canal on the weekend and were in the Mediterranean, within striking distance of Israel.

Jordan, fearing wave of refugees from Syrian crisis, sets up camp along border – The Washington Post

February 19, 2012

Jordan, fearing wave of refugees from Syrian crisis, sets up camp along border – The Washington Post.

By Associated Press, Updated: Sunday, February 19, 5:11 PM

RIBAA SARHAN, Jordan — Jordan says it has set up a refugee camp near its northern border with Syria, in preparation for what many fear may be a mass exodus of Syrians fleeing violence in their homeland.

Sami Halaseh of the public works ministry says the 323 square-foot (300 square-meter) area, located about 12 miles (20 kilometers) south of the border, is expected to be ready in two weeks.

The camp will be monitored by a round-the-clock police guard. It’s the first camp to be set up for Syrians in Jordan since the uprising against the President Bashar Assad’s regime began eleven months ago.

Aid officials estimate upwards of 10,000 Syrian refugees already live in Jordan, mostly in private apartments. But they said the numbers are growing as the Syrian military escalates attacks on restive cities.

Copyright 2012 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

Is Obama Wagging the Dog?

February 19, 2012

Is Obama Wagging the Dog? – Op-Eds – Israel National News.

The threat of Iran is as grave to the United States as it is to Israel, despite the geopolitical disparity. Too much saber-rattling and no action could lead to a tragic result.

Despite the reckoning of Meir Dagan, something must be done about Iran acquiring nuclear weapons or firing long-range missiles, which indeed it possesses, at Israel.

This is a sentiment shared across the West and some of the Arabian Peninsula; by Israel and the United States, across the aisle in the latter country.

Tougher and tougher economic sanctions from the United Nations are just not going to do it. The regime in the Islamic Republic will continue to inch closer and closer to acquiring nuclear warheads, while Ayatollah Ali Khamenei continues his assaults of rhetoric and threats against Israel on state-run Iranian radio and television. He recently said: “From now on, in any place, if any nation or any group confronts the Zionist regime, we will endorse and we will help. We have no fear expressing this…”

Iranian General Hossein Salami, the deputy commander of the Revolutionary Guard, has warned Iran’s neighbors that “Any place where enemy offensive operations against the Islamic Republic of Iran originate will be the target of a reciprocal attack by the Guard’s fighting units…”

Something must be done to defeat this dangerous foe, but who will launch the strike? After all, the threat is as grave to the United States as it is to Israel, despite the geopolitical disparity. Too much saber-rattling and no action could lead to a tragic result.

Should the attack be made by Israel, the IAF would use its Jericho II – capable of striking targets 1,500 miles away. The strikes – which have erstwhile begun in an electronic warfare capacity – would not just focus on the nuclear reactors, as Israel has succeeded in taking down both Syria’s and Iraq’s nuclear programs in the past, but would also strike various military facilities in Iran.

Former chief of the CIA, and current US Defense Secretary, Leone Panetta is caught double-talking in statements to the press. He believes on the one hand that the Jewish State will strike Iran sometime before the commencement of summer 2012; while on the other hand, he encourages economic sanctions on Iran by the US, unless the Iranians draw yet closer to a nuclear acquisition or an attack.

Panetta was heard saying:

“My view is that right now the most important thing is to keep the international community unified…so we’re keeping that pressure on to convince Iran that they shouldn’t develop a nuclear weapon, that they should join the international family of nations…If they don’t, we have all options on the table and would be prepared to respond if we have to…”

Indeed, Western naval forces, led by the US aircraft carrier, the USS Abraham Lincoln, have increased their presence in the Gulf. On Saturday, Iran’s Revolutionary Guard began naval maneuvers near the Strait of Hormuz – a crux oil export route – practicing for the onslaught of war. Americans, Saudis, British, French and other nations would support the attack on Iran, however, unless a major naval maneuver is conducted, they would risk stoppage of the export, sending oil prices sky high.

The strategic placement of Western forces suggests that if someone should make a move, it could be the United States and not Israel, who would indeed be left vulnerable after the Iranian retaliation, unless Washington and Jerusalem are somehow aligned. With Iran’s far-reaching terrorist cells such as Islamic Jihad and Hizbullah, it is guaranteed that there will be strikes on civilians in both Israel and possibly the United States and Europe, should the Western alliance make the first move.

Meir Dagan insists that Iran will not have nuclear weapons until 2015. This is opposed to a recent report from the IAEA. Should Israel attack Iran, according to Dagan, Hizbullah and Hamas would respond with massive rocket attacks on Israel and according to Dagan, “In that scenario, Syria may join in the fray.”

Meanwhile, President Obama appears to be in favor of a diplomatic solution and recently, told a press conference:

“Any kind of additional military activity inside the Gulf is disruptive and has a big effect on us. It could have a big effect on oil prices. We’ve still got troops in Afghanistan, which borders Iran. And so our preferred solution here is diplomatic…”

Let’s analyze America’s recent foreign policy:

US President Barack Obama has pulled out all troops from Iraq after severely damaging the al Qaeda and capturing Osama bin Laden and Anwar al-Awlaki. He paid for the majority of NATO strikes on Libya that assisted the rag-tag rebels of a civil war in that country that defeated Gadaffi. Obama is very much a war president. (Actually the American military is at work creating special mortars that could strike underground cells in Iran.)

However, the latter war I mentioned, that is, in Libya, was an attempt for the American president to show his might, and divert attention from his failing economic policy.

Because all diplomatic attempts by the United Nations and President Obama to quell the stand-off between Iran and Israel have failed miserably, and considering that should Israel attack the Islamic Republic, the threat of terrorism on the United States would increase, as would oil prices.

However, recall that the world was mildly shocked at Obama’s no-fly zone in Libya. If President Obama wants to secure reelection, he can shock everyone once more, and pull a dangerous maneuver on Iran. He will, by doing so, acquire on-the-fence, moderate and Republican voters, taking them away from his still-to-be-determined right-wing presidential contender, next year.

/He will be wagging-the-dog, taking attention from his far-left leaning economic policy that has made him hugely unpopular.

Iran wants ‘win-win’ result from nuclear talks; Israel to make ‘own’ decision

February 19, 2012

Iran wants ‘win-win’ result from nuclear talks; Israel to make ‘own’ decision.

A group of scientists are seen near the control room area at the Tehran Research Reactor. Iran appears to be poised to install thousands of new centrifuges at an underground site in the northern city of Qom just days ahead of a visit by U.N. nuclear inspectors. (Reuters)

A group of scientists are seen near the control room area at the Tehran Research Reactor. Iran appears to be poised to install thousands of new centrifuges at an underground site in the northern city of Qom just days ahead of a visit by U.N. nuclear inspectors. (Reuters)

Iran wants a “win-win” solution to emerge from mooted talks with world powers on its disputed nuclear program that should begin as soon as possible, Foreign Minister Ali Akbar Salehi said on Sunday.

Salehi, speaking at a joint media conference with his visiting Nicaraguan counterpart, stressed that Tehran favored Istanbul as the venue for the talks, but was waiting for the European Union to present its proposal.

“We are looking for a mechanism for a solution for the nuclear issue in a way that it is win-win for both sides,” he said.

“We understand the other side’s position and we want them to have conditions to save face. We are going into the talks with a positive outlook and we hope they will come to the negotiations with goodwill.”

Iran has sent a letter replying to an EU offer made in October to resurrect talks that collapsed in Istanbul in January 2011.

The European Union and the United States greeted the Iranian reply with cautious optimism. EU foreign policy chief Catherine Ashton, who made the October offer, called it “an important step” amid high international tensions over Iran.

Once a time and place are agreed, the negotiations between Iran and the so-called P5+1 group — the five permanent U.N. Security Council members and Germany — are expected to concentrate on Tehran’s nuclear program.

The United Nations and the West have imposed a raft of sanctions on Iran in an unsuccessful effort to force it to halt its atomic activities.

The Western measures have badly impacted Iran’s economy, but Tehran has responded by ramping up its uranium enrichment.

Salehi railed at what he saw as a “colonialist mindset” by the Western members of the P5+1, all of whom suspect Iran is pursuing nuclear weapons despite Tehran’s repeated denials.

Britain in particular drew his ire, after Foreign Secretary William Hague’s warning last Friday that an Iran with nuclear weapons capability could trigger “a disaster in world affairs” by sparking a “new Cold War in the Middle East”.

Hague’s remarks were “propaganda” designed to spur media hype, Salehi said.

“They think they can create concern. But we will go ahead with dignity and we are not worried because we consider we are in the right. We are sure about our peaceful nuclear activities,” he said.

“Nonetheless we are ready for the worst-case scenario,” he said, responding to threats from the United States and Israel of possible military action targeting Iran’s nuclear facilities.

Israel will make its own decision

Meanwhile Israel said later on Saturday that it will ultimately decree on an Iranian strike on its own, as a senior U.S. official arrived for talks on the Islamic Republic.

“Israel is the central guarantor of its own security; this is our role as army, the State of Israel should defend itself,” military chief of staff Lieutenant General Benny Gantz told state-owned Channel One TV.

“We must follow the developments in Iran and its nuclear project, but in a very broad manner, taking into account what the world is doing, what Iran decided, what we will do or not do,” he said.

Tensions between Iran and Israel have been simmering with Iranian warships entering the Mediterranean through the Suez Canal in a show of “might”, a move Israel said it would closely monitor.

On Wednesday, Iran said it had installed another 3,000 centrifuges to increase its uranium enrichment abilities and was stepping up exploration and processing of uranium yellowcake.

And Israel blamed a recent wave of attacks targeting Israeli diplomats on agents of Tehran, allegations Iran denies.

U.S. National Security Advisor Tom Donilon will on Sunday begin talks with Israeli officials on a range of issues including Iran, two weeks ahead of a Washington visit by Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu for White House talks with U.S. President Barak Obama on the same topic.

A recent article in the Washington Post said that U.S. Defense Secretary Leon Panetta thinks Israel may strike Iran’s nuclear installations in the coming months.

According to Gantz, whose interview was conducted prior to the Saturday developments, Iran was not only an “Israeli problem”, but also “a world and regional problem”.

On Saturday, Israeli Defense Minister Ehud Barak called on the world to tighten sanctions on Iran before the country enters a “zone of immunity” against a physical attack to stop its nuclear program.

Iran halts oil exports to France, Britain in retaliation to EU sanctions

February 19, 2012

Iran halts oil exports to France, Britain in retaliation to EU sanctions.

The United Nations and Western powers have imposed a raft of sanctions on Iran in an unsuccessful effort to force it to halt its atomic activities. (File photo)

The United Nations and Western powers have imposed a raft of sanctions on Iran in an unsuccessful effort to force it to halt its atomic activities. (File photo)

Iran has halted all oil sales to France and Britain in retaliation for a phased EU ban on Iranian oil that is yet to fully take effect, the Iranian oil ministry said on Sunday.

“Exporting crude to British and French companies has been stopped … we will sell our oil to new customers,” spokesman Ali Reza Nikzad Rahbar said in a statement on the ministry’s official website.

“We have taken steps to deliver our oil to other countries in the place of British and French companies,” he said.

The decision was not expected to have a big impact. France last year bought only three percent of its oil − 58,000 barrels a day − from the Islamic republic, and Britain was believed to be no longer importing Iranian oil.

But it was seen as a warning shot to other EU nations that are bigger consumers of Iranian oil, including Italy, Spain and Greece.

Although those countries were not affected by Iran’s announcement on Sunday, they are included in an EU decision to stop buying Iranian oil that was announced last month and which will take full effect from July.

According to the International Energy Agency, Italy sourced 13 percent of its oil, or 185,000 barrels per day, from Iran, while Spain imported 12 percent of its oil needs, or 161,000 bpd, and Greece bought 30 percent of its needs, or 103,000 bpd.

Iran, OPEC’s second-biggest exporter after Saudi Arabia, pumps 3.5 million bpd of which it exports 2.5 million barrels.

The United Nations and Western powers have imposed a raft of sanctions on Iran in an unsuccessful effort to force it to halt its atomic activities.

The Western measures have badly impacted Iran’s economy, but Tehran has responded by ramping up its nuclear activities.

On Wednesday, Iran said it had installed another 3,000 centrifuges to increase its uranium enrichment abilities and was stepping up exploration and processing of uranium yellowcake.

In January, the European Union had imposed an immediate ban on oil imports and a gradual phase-out of existing contracts with Iranian exporters.

The EU embargo was an attempt to try to pressure Iran over a nuclear program the United States and its allies argue is aimed at developing nuclear weapons but which Iran says is for purely peaceful purposes.

Back in January, many Iranian lawmakers and officials called for an immediate ban on oil exports to the European bloc before its ban fully goes into effect in July, arguing that the 27 EU nations account for only about 18 percent of Iran’s overall oil sales and would be hurt more by the decision than Iran.

Egypt lawmakers press for further steps against Assad after withdrawal of envoy

February 19, 2012

Egypt lawmakers press for further steps against Assad after withdrawal of envoy.

Foreign Minister Mohammed Amr said on Wednesday that Cairo wants to see “a real and peaceful change in Syria,” starting with an immediate end to violence and with the “government responding to the aspirations of the Syrian people.” (File photo)

Foreign Minister Mohammed Amr said on Wednesday that Cairo wants to see “a real and peaceful change in Syria,” starting with an immediate end to violence and with the “government responding to the aspirations of the Syrian people.” (File photo)

Egyptian lawmakers on Sunday responded to a decision to withdraw Cairo’s ambassador to Damascus by urging the ruling military council to take further steps and break all ties with the Syrian regime in response to what they said was President Bashar al-Assad’s crimes against his people.

Speaker of the new People’s Assembly Mohamed Saad Katatni asked the Assembly’s Committee for Arab Affairs to discuss the lawmakers’ demands and present its recommendations during the next Assembly meeting.

Egypt’s foreign ministry had recalled its ambassador to Damascus on Sunday, in what appeared to be the latest step in a series of Arab diplomatic moves to intensify pressure on President Assad, who is trying to crush a popular uprising in Syria.

State news agency MENA said the decision was made after a visit from Egypt’s ambassador Shawky Ismail to Cairo. The foreign ministry decided to keep him in the Egyptian capital “until further notice.”

The move follows the withdrawal by several Arab and European countries of their envoys from Damascus as the authorities continue their brutal crackdown on anti-regime protests.

Foreign Minister Mohammed Amr said on Wednesday that Cairo wants to see “a real and peaceful change in Syria,” starting with an immediate end to violence and with the “government responding to the aspirations of the Syrian people.”

He said this was necessary to “prevent an overall explosion in the situation, which would have consequences for the stability of the region.”

On the ground, Local Coordination Committees reported that at least 20 people were killed throughout the country on Sunday.

Rights groups say more than 6,000 people have been killed since regime forces began cracking down on pro-democracy protests launched 11 months ago.

Syrian security forces had deployed heavily in a tense Damascus neighborhood where a mourner was shot dead in the largest anti-regime rally seen in the capital, blunting calls for a “day of defiance.”

Although the security force deployment thwarted attempts by activists to stage new protests in Mazzeh neighborhood, scene of a funeral Saturday that turned into a huge anti-regime rally, business there came to a halt, activists said.

Mohammed Shami, a spokesman for activists in Damascus province, said most shops were shut in Mazzeh as well as in the neighborhoods of Barzeh, Qaboon, Kfar Sousa and Jubar.

Student demonstrations had been expected in Mazzeh but security forces were deployed around schools, Shami said.

“Security forces are heavily deployed throughout Mazzeh,” he added.

Another activist, Abu Huzaifa from the Mazzeh Committee, said police forced the family of Samer al-Khatib, 34, who died after being shot in neck during the mass funeral on Saturday, to bury him in a small ceremony earlier than planned, in an apparent move to head off demonstrations.

In central Damascus, shops were opened as normal, witnesses said, while state television showed live footage from Mazzeh interviewing people who claimed life was proceeding normally.

Deeb al-Dimashqi, a member of the Syrian Revolution Council based in the capital told AFP earlier that “huge demonstrations” were expected, adding however that Syrian forces had clamped tight security around the city.

Mission impossible? US wants sanctions to hurt only Iran – Arab News

February 19, 2012

Mission impossible? US wants sanctions to hurt only Iran – Arab News.

US President Barack Obama hopes the toughest sanctions ever imposed on Iran will squeeze its oil exports — all without scaring markets, crimping growth, impoverishing ordinary Iranians or antagonizing allies.

The geopolitical equivalent of threading a needle is made even more difficult by elections in both the United States and Iran. Obama’s goal, persuading Iran to curb its nuclear program, seems far from assured.

In recent weeks, US officials have crisscrossed the globe to meet allies such as Japan and South Korea that rely heavily on Iranian oil and are worried that the new law may hurt their economies.

The United States also wants to fend off any dramatic spike in oil prices that could hurt its own economy, the top issue for voters who will decide whether Obama is re-elected in November.

US officials say their talks have been productive so far and stress they are not looking to make enemies of their friends, and so will implement the sanctions with care.

“There is flexibility on the sanctions, countries will make their own financial decisions and the United States will work with them,” Daniel Glaser, assistant secretary for terrorist financing at the US Treasury, said in an interview.

“The goal here is not to punish any individual country, the goal is to target Iran,” he said.

The new law gives Obama the ability to cut off foreign banks, including central banks, from the US financial system if they conduct petroleum-related transactions with Iran’s central bank, the main clearing house for its oil exports.

Yet even before the new sanctions go into effect, evidence is mounting that Western pressure may be hitting some of the wrong targets. Shipments of grain to Iran, exempt from the sanctions like other humanitarian goods, have been held up because of financial restrictions on Iranian banks that would handle the transactions.

If previous sanctions efforts elsewhere are any guide, Iran’s elites will find ways to insulate themselves from economic pain imposed from outside.

The director of the US Defense Intelligence Agency, Lt. Gen. Ronald Burgess, told Congress on Thursday that despite increased pressure on Iran, “Tehran is not close to agreeing to abandon its nuclear program.”

Still, the sanctions are clearly having some impact.

Iran, which denies Western charges that it is seeking to build nuclear weapons, this week offered what it called “new initiatives” for nuclear talks with world powers. The move was widely seen as a response to mounting economic pain.

In Iran, the rial currency has weakened sharply to about 20,000 to the US dollar on the black market from about 13,000 before Obama signed the law on Dec. 31.

“The precipitous drop in the value of the rial as well as their inability to responsibly manage their economy is the best evidence of the effectiveness of sanctions,” Glaser said.

“Isolating Iran’s central bank from the international financial system will make it difficult for Iran to manage its economy. That, over time, is going to be as important as directly impacting Iran’s oil revenue,” he said.

The United States has not set a specific target, saying only that it wants to see a “significant” reduction in Iran’s oil exports, deliberately leaving that term vague to preserve some latitude.

Analysts say a 20-25 percent reduction in Iran’s oil revenue would show sanctions biting, while some US senators say significant means an 18 percent reduction in total payments to Iran for oil.

“I think it is a success if there is a 25 percent reduction in Iranian revenue or exports,” said Frank Verrastro, director of the energy and national security program at the Center for Strategic and International Studies. Facing rising prices for staples such as meat, bread and rice, many Iranians are withdrawing savings to buy increasingly scarce hard currency to preserve their purchasing power as the rial plummets. “I think psychology has started to take over, started to take hold perhaps more than is warranted,” said Ken Katzman, a Middle East specialist at the Congressional Research Service. “It’s almost irrelevant whether these fears are unfounded or not because they are creating an economic reality with the fear.”

The new US sanctions go into effect for non-petroleum transactions with the Iranian central bank on Feb. 29 and for oil-related transactions on June 28. That is aimed at giving Iran’s oil customers — China, the European Union, Japan, India, South Korea and Turkey top the list — time to adapt, and to avoid whipping up oil prices.

“The United States continues to talk to buyers of Iranian oil about their energy needs and alternate sources with the goal being a significant, steady reduction in oil purchases from Iran over time, but it won’t happen all at once,” Glaser said.

“We need to understand what’s in the realm of the possible, and it is unrealistic to apply one standard to all countries. This is going to have to be done on a case-by-case basis.” Glaser spoke with Reuters before traveling to Oman, Qatar and Russia last week to discuss the sanctions and other issues.

Verrastro, a former energy official, said while the US administration wants sanctions to have a meaningful impact, it may tolerate some “leakage” if it keeps oil markets calm.

“I think they want some leakage, because they are also trying to mitigate huge price spikes. So it doesn’t have to be 100 percent effective,” Verrastro said. The United States is hoping that Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates and other oil producers will help fill the gap created by restrictions on Iranian oil.

But the long phasing-in of the US sanctions gives Iran time to devise strategies for evading them and Iran is considered adept at subterfuge to reroute its trade.

“If you target one bank they’ll try to use another untargeted bank,” Glaser said.

Similarly, Reuters reported this week how the Islamic Republic of Iran Shipping Lines (IRISL), while blacklisted by the United Nations, continues to move cargo using a web of shell companies and diverse ownership.

But trying to evade sanctions raises the cost of doing business for Iran, US officials say.

And Tehran faces a much more united front than it has before. For years, Germany and other leading members of the European Union were slow to heed US calls for tougher sanctions on Iran. Now, the EU has decided to cut off imports of Iranian oil by mid-year.

Diplomats said Europeans overcame their historical resistance to imposing harsh sanctions on Iran because of a belief that Obama genuinely pursued diplomacy when he first came into office, the reality that talks have led nowhere and the fear that Israel might attack Iran’s nuclear sites.

“The Europeans could no longer just continue to say ‘Oh we have to give diplomacy a chance here,’” said a diplomat from one of the major powers seeking to negotiate with Iran.

“If we are serious about stopping them from getting a nuclear weapons program — and I think everybody is — this was inevitably where it was going to go,” he said.

Still, a Western diplomat said he expected no major movement on the nuclear issue from Iran either before or directly after its parliamentary elections next month, saying there was “paralysis in Tehran” caused by jockeying for power.

An American expert on Iran said the White House might prefer no negotiations this year because Obama’s political opponents could criticize the president as soft on Tehran for holding talks, especially if discussions faltered.

Reuters

BBC News – William Hague warns of Iran threat to peace of the world

February 19, 2012

BBC News – William Hague warns of Iran threat to peace of the world.

UK Foreign Secretary William Hague has warned in a BBC interview about Iran’s “increasing willingness to contemplate” terrorism around the world.

He cited an attempt to assassinate the Saudi ambassador to the US, plus alleged involvement in recent attacks in New Delhi, Georgia and Bangkok.

Mr Hague said it showed “the danger Iran is currently presenting to the peace of the world”.

Iran denies any involvement in the recent attacks.

It also says its nuclear programme is for purely peaceful purposes.

The West has expressed fears that Iran is secretly trying to develop a nuclear bomb.

Mr Hague said that if Iran did develop nuclear weapons it would either lead to an attack on it and war, or there would be an arms race in the region and a Cold War with long-term sanctions on the country.

He told BBC One’s The Andrew Marr Show programme that it would be more dangerous than the Cold War between the West and the Soviet Union because there would not be safeguards to avoid “accidents or misunderstandings” triggering nuclear conflict.

Mr Hague’s interview came amid heightened tensions in the Middle East, with Israel accusing Iran of masterminding attacks on its embassies in New Delhi in India, Bangkok in Thailand and in Georgia. Iran denies the allegations.

Iran, in turn, blames Israel and the US for the assassination of several Iranian nuclear scientists in recent years, allegations the country denies.

Speaking earlier this month, US President Barack Obama emphasised that Israel and the US were working in “unison” to counter Iran.

London Olympics

However, some commentators have suggested that behind the scenes Washington is deeply alarmed by reports that Israel may strike Iran as early as April.

US Defence Secretary Leon Panetta reportedly said there was a strong likelihood of such an offensive.

Mr Hague told Saturday’s Daily Telegraph that Britain had urged Israel not to strike: “All options must remain on the table” but a military attack would have “enormous downsides.”

The Foreign Secretary told the BBC that the UK had not been shown any plans by Israel for an attack on Iran and had not been asked to be involved in any such attack.

He said that the UK was 100% focused on using diplomacy and economically targeted sanctions “bringing Iran back to the table”.

Fresh reports that Iran plans to expand its nuclear programme did not necessarily mean that the strategy was failing, he said.

There had been recent signs of a willingness to negotiate and he said that Iran’s desire to make “bold statements” might be because they were “not confident about the future”.

Mr Hague said there was “no specific information” about a threat to the London Olympics but “clearly Iran has been involved increasingly in illegal and potentially terrorist activity in other parts of the world”.

“We saw the Iranian plot recently to assassinate the Saudi ambassador to Washington on US soil. It’s alleged that they have been involved in what happened in the last week in New Delhi, Georgia and Bangkok.

“I think Iran has increased in its willingness to contemplate utterly illegal activities in other parts of the world – this is part of the dangers that Iran is currently presenting to the peace of the world.”

Elaborate ceremony

Shadow foreign secretary Douglas Alexander said in response to an interview with Mr Hague in the Daily Telegraph: “Instead of raising the rhetoric, the government should be focused on redoubling their efforts to increase the diplomatic pressure on Iran and find a peaceful solution to the issue.”

Talks between Iran and six world powers – the US, UK, France, Germany, Russia and China – on Tehran’s nuclear programme collapsed a year ago.

In recent months, Western countries have stepped up pressure on Iran over the nuclear issue, with the EU and US both introducing wide-ranging sanctions on the country.

On Wednesday, Iran staged an elaborate ceremony to unveil new developments in its nuclear programme.

It said it had used domestically made nuclear fuel in a reactor for the first time.

On Friday, the US and European Union expressed optimism at the possibility of a resumption of talks with Iran.