Archive for February 20, 2012

Israel has every right to defend itself against Iran

February 20, 2012

Israel has every right to defend itself against Iran – Telegraph Blogs.

According to an Associated Press report over the weekend, both Washington and London are urging Israel to hold back from military action against Iran’s nuclear facilities. In his report, the AP’s Josef Federman writes:

The United States and Britain on Sunday urged Israel not to attack Iran’s nuclear program as the White House’s national security adviser arrived in the region, reflecting growing international jitters that the Israelis are poised to strike.

In their warnings, both U.S. Army Gen. Martin E. Dempsey, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, and British Foreign Minister William Hague said an Israeli attack on Iran would have grave consequences for the entire region and urged Israel to give international sanctions against Iran more time to work. Gen. Dempsey said an Israeli attack is “not prudent,” and Mr. Hague said it would not be “a wise thing.”

… Asked whether he believed Israel could be deterred from striking, Gen. Dempsey said: “I’m confident that they understand our concerns, that a strike at this time would be destabilizing and wouldn’t achieve their long-term objectives. But, I mean, I also understand that Israel has national interests that are unique to them.”

Mr. Hague delivered a similar message in Britain. Speaking to the BBC, he said Britain was focused on pressuring Iran through diplomatic means.

“I don’t think a wise thing at this moment is for Israel to launch a military attack on Iran,” he said. “I think Israel, like everyone else in the world, should be giving a real chance to the approach we have adopted on very serious economic sanctions and economic pressure and the readiness to negotiate with Iran.”

At this stage it is doubtful that the counsel of the White House or Foreign Office will have much effect on Israeli thinking. For the Israelis this is a matter of survival, of averting a nuclear holocaust, not a faith-based initiative that rests upon weakened sanctions advanced by a divided UN Security Council, and the non-existent goodwill of an Islamist dictatorship that has threatened to wipe Israel off the map. The Obama administration’s naïve approach towards the Iranian nuclear threat has been one of weak appeasement, which coupled with the European Union’s foolish policy of “constructive engagement”, has bought Tehran precious time to advance its nuclear programme. While the West has dithered, the Iranians have become emboldened, strengthened in their belief that the Western powers do not have the stomach for a military confrontation. The Obama presidency has sent mixed messages to Tehran while treating Israel with contempt, part of a broader foreign policy that has rewarded America’s enemies while undercutting key US allies.

Israel has every right to defend itself against a barbaric tyranny that shows every intention of using nuclear weapons to kill hundreds of thousands of Jews. It would be a huge mistake to underestimate the threat that Israel now faces from a regime that brutalises its own people, arms and supplies an array of terrorist groups, and is driven by a desire to dominate the Middle East and crush its enemies. The Iranians also have British and American blood on their hands through their military support for Shia militias in Iraq, as well as the Taliban in Afghanistan, a point that both Washington and London would do well to remember. As Israeli prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu noted in his powerful address to Congress in May last year:

When I last stood here, I spoke of the dire consequences of Iran developing nuclear weapons. Now time is running out, and the hinge of history may soon turn. For the greatest danger facing humanity could soon be upon us: a militant Islamic regime armed with nuclear weapons.

Militant Islam threatens the world. It threatens Islam. I have no doubt that it will ultimately be defeated. It will eventually succumb to the forces of freedom and progress. But like other fanaticisms that were doomed to fail, militant Islam could exact a horrific price from all of us before its inevitable demise.

Now the threat to my country cannot be overstated. Those who dismiss it are sticking their heads in the sand. Less than seven decades after six million Jews were murdered, Iran’s leaders deny the Holocaust of the Jewish people, while calling for the annihilation of the Jewish state.

There are moments in history when nations must stand up to evil and defeat it.

The tiny nation of Israel has fought to defend its freedom for more than six decades, its seven million inhabitants encircled in a sea of hostility, and may be forced to do the same in the face of the Iranian threat. If Israel strikes Iran to secure its own future, the West must rally alongside it, and stand shoulder to shoulder with an ally. There can be no negotiation with the Mullahs of Tehran. A nuclear-armed Iran is unacceptable and the free world must do all in its power to prevent it.

Uncertain Future of a Nuclear Iran

February 20, 2012

Uncertain Future of a Nuclear Iran – Forward.com.

Experts Play Out Scenarios if Islamic Republic Gets Bomb

Whither Nuclear Iran? What would happen if the Islamic Republic is able to create a nuclear weapon. Experts do not agree whether its leadership would become more or less aggressive or what it might mean for Israel.

getty images
Whither Nuclear Iran? What would happen if the Islamic Republic is able to create a nuclear weapon. Experts do not agree whether its leadership would become more or less aggressive or what it might mean for Israel.

 

By Nathan Guttman

It is a scenario no one wants to imagine, but scholars are already gaming out its implications: What will the world look like after Iran achieves nuclear capability?

It is, for now, no more than an intellectual exercise. All experts see dire consequences. Yet most do not believe in the “existential” doomsday scenario that Israel has portrayed for itself. Iran, experts interviewed by the Forward predict, will not launch a nuclear attack on Israel.

Nevertheless, the regional and global implications of having Iran join the nuclear club, should that occur, will be dangerous and will impact Israel, the Gulf region, Europe, Latin America and, perhaps most of all, the United States.

Giora Eiland

Giora Eiland

kai mork
Giora Eiland

As a former Israeli general and top security official, Giora Eiland finds it hard even to consider the possibility that Iran will become nuclear. Official Israeli policy states that under no circumstances should Iran be allowed to acquire nuclear weapons, and Eiland believes that Israel will stick to this rule.

Pressed to speculate on how the region will look if Iran nevertheless somehow does become nuclear, Eiland draws a troubling but complex picture. Iran, the former head of Israel’s National Security Council said, will not necessarily launch a nuclear attack against Israel, since leaders in Tehran understand they’d face a devastating response from Israel and a nuclear attack from the United States that they could not sustain. “Iran doesn’t want a nuclear weapon to attack Israel,” said Eiland, who is now a senior research associate at Tel Aviv University’s Institute for National Security Studies. “What they want is regional deterrence.”

The real impact of an Iranian bomb will be on the region. By obtaining nuclear capability, Iran will set off a regional nuclear arms race and will threaten Iran’s Sunni neighbors, Eiland said. “Every regional conflict will look different. A nuclear Iran will force all players to face many new constraints.” But there is a silver lining. While the short term is full of threats, in the long run, other Middle Eastern nations could acquire nuclear weapons and offset Iran’s advantage.

Israel’s strategic edge will not be lost, Eiland said, because it rests not only on its reported nuclear capabilities, but also on robust conventional military activity and on the full support that Israel receives from America.

Eiland also offers a counterintuitive idea: Introduction of a nuclear weapon by Iran could create communication channels between Jerusalem and Tehran that currently don’t exist. Citing the American-Soviet Cold War scenario and relations between two other nuclear foes, India and Pakistan, it is clear that some kind of an Israeli– Iranian dialogue will be needed in order to avoid a nuclear catastrophe. “We should also remember,” Eiland added, “that at the end of the day, Iran is a natural ally of Israel after the current regime falls.”

Ash Jain

Aish Jain

courtesy of aish jain
Aish Jain

A former member of the State Department’s policy planning team, Ash Jain recently published a paper detailing possible scenarios for a world in which Iran has nuclear power. His predictions, formulated in a research paper he prepared in his current position as visiting fellow at the Washington Institute for Near East Policy, are gloomy, but they do not include a nuclear war between Iran and Israel.

“The major concern,” Jain said, “is that Iran will feel shielded and have the freedom to pursue its regional ambitions by using asymmetrical methods such as terror and subversion.” First to feel the pressure, Jain believes, will be Iraq and the Gulf countries, which will be pushed to adopt anti-American and anti Israeli policies. “They want to diminish Western power and replace it with Iranian power,” he said, adding that “Israel will bear the brunt” of this Iranian attempt.

According to Jain, a nuclear Iran could provide Hezbollah and Hamas with a “nuclear umbrella” that will allow these groups to carry out attacks against Israel without fear of major retaliation. “In this context,” he added, “Iran could provide them with chemical and radiological weapons that will be directed at Israel.” He also argued that the chances of reaching a two-state solution between Israel and the Palestinians will decrease significantly once Iran turns nuclear, since extreme players such as Hamas will be bolstered while the moderates are sidelined.

Jain predicts that the small Gulf monarchies will accommodate Iran’s power. They may, for example, refuse to host American troops. Saudi Arabia, on the other hand, could respond by seeking its own nuclear capability. The challenge facing America under this scenario will be how to contain a nuclear Iran while regional players are turning their backs on the West. America will also be forced to turn south, where Venezuela, Ecuador and Bolivia will be used increasingly by Iran as a base for terror and perhaps for missile activity.

Shoshana Bryen

Shoshana Bryen

Shoshana Bryen

“Having it is better than using it.” This is how Shoshana Bryen views Iran’s calculations once it crosses the nuclear threshold. Bryen, who is senior director of the Jewish Policy Center and a leading conservative thinker on issues relating to the Middle East, believes that Iran will look at the North Korean model rather than immediately seeking a nuclear war. “North Korea, now that it has it, is way more sanguine that no one will attack them,” she said.

This does not mean Iran will be any less belligerent. Bryen believes that Iran could use its nuclear status to wreak havoc around the world, even by encouraging its allies in Venezuela and Ecuador to attack American-friendly Colombia.

Iran’s rise to the status of a nuclear country, Bryen said, will play out mainly on the fault lines between Sunnis and Shi’ites in the Muslim world. Beyond craving regional dominance, the ayatollah regime sees itself “as the vanguard of international Shi’ite Muslims” and will move to assert this position. This could mean taking actions to destabilize neighboring Iraq, to overthrow the Sunni rulers of Bahrain and to support Shi’ite separatists throughout the Arabian Peninsula.

And it gets worse. Bryen can imagine a situation in which a nuclear Iran essentially blackmails Western nations to limit their support for Israel in return for a promise from Tehran not to attack the Jewish state. While some scholars believe that nuclear nations tend to behave more responsibly, Bryen does not think this is the case with Iran, at least not until the regime is changed and a nationalistic Persian government takes power.

The worst outcome, however, will be felt in the United States. A nuclear Iran, Bryen believes, will show the world that America “has no credibility,” since it did not live up to its promise not to allow Iran to become nuclear. “So what good is it to be a friend of the U.S.?,” Bryen asked.

Trita Parsi

Trita Parsi

courtesy of trita parsi
Trita Parsi

Iran scholar and activist Trita Parsi believes that a decision by leaders of the Islamic Republic to break out and become nuclear will be met by a harsh international response that will gradually fade into recognition, if not acceptance, of the new reality. “There will be a very strong drive to isolate Iran so that no other country gets the impression that Iran got away with it,” Parsi said. “But as time goes by, the world will recognize the need to create communication channels and points of contact with Iran, because any misunderstanding in the nuclear context could be lethal.”

Parsi, president and founder of the National Iranian American Council, opposes the ayatollah regime’s nuclear ambitions but at the same time does not back harsh sanctions or threats of war. His recent book “A Single Roll of the Dice” argues that the Obama administration squandered a potential diplomatic resolution to the conflict.

According to Parsi, it is the United States that Iranian leaders think of when developing the country’s nuclear capabilities. If Tehran achieves nuclear aims, its first and main goal will be to force America to negotiate with Iran “as equals,” said Parsi, meaning as one nuclear nation to another. This, he believes, will not necessarily require the use of nuclear force or of any other aggressive measure.

“A lot of what Iran does stems from insecurity,” he said. “If they feel more secure, there is a potential for us to see Iran more relaxed in regard to the U.S.,” he said. On the other hand, Parsi does not necessarily believe that Iran will relax its approach toward Israel through its proxies in Lebanon.

The impact that a nuclear breakout will have on Iran’s internal political struggle is unclear, Parsi said. Currently there is no public debate on the issue, and therefore no way to measure how becoming nuclear would change realities for the regime’s domestic opposition.

Gary Sick

Gary Sick

courtesy columbia/sipa
Gary Sick

A former National Security Council advisor on Iran during the country’s Islamic revolution, Gary Sick does not envision a situation in which Iran decides to break out and build a bomb, unless it is first attacked. Actually crossing the nuclear threshold would be “inviting an attack,” Sick said, and would not be in Tehran’s interest.

But even if Iran doesn’t build a bomb, its demonstrated capability to do so, Sick explained, will make it a member of a small club of nations, such as Japan, Brazil and Sweden, that can acquire a nuclear weapon if they break away from the Non-Proliferation Treaty. In either case, Iran’s goal is to assert its position as a major player in the region, one that the world should take seriously and with which it should consult. “Iran feels that it is entitled to that,” he said. “They have an image of themselves as natural leaders.”

Sick, currently a senior research scholar at Columbia University’s Middle East Institute, does not see an imminent change in Iran’s regional behavior if the country gets closer to having a bomb. It already supports Hezbollah with all its force, and it has not shown much of an appetite for meddling in its neighboring Gulf countries, Sick said. “Their foreign policy has been not to open wars and conflicts,” he noted. But this cannot be interpreted as adopting a moderate policy toward Israel. “If Iran will be able to make life miserable for Israel, they’ll do it,” Sick said, “but this doesn’t mean they’ll go to war.”

Contact Nathan Guttman at guttman@forward.com

 

Iran’s global terror campaign has been stifled, for now

February 20, 2012

Iran’s global terror campaign has been stifled, for now – Haaretz Daily Newspaper | Israel News.

With international intelligence services ratcheting up their efforts against Iran, and mounting domestic pressure in advance of the country’s elections − perhaps the regime’s ability to monitor execution of terror attacks has slackened.

By Avi Issacharoff and Amos Harel

As of Thursday afternoon, the roster of Iran’s global terror assault on Israel had five new additions: one wounded Israeli and four injured citizens of India, as a result of the New Delhi explosion. A terror attack in Georgia’s capital, Tbilisi, failed. A planned attack in Thailand was thwarted and within a day, three persons, each with passports from the Islamic Republic, were detained.

Iran vociferously denied Israel’s accusation that it sponsored the attacks in New Delhi and Tbilisi.

Iran graphic - Wolkowski - Feb 2012 Illustration by Eran Wolkowski.

The explosive planted by a motorcyclist on an Israeli embassy car in
India caused limited damage. The device that was intended to destroy the car of a Georgian driver from the embassy in Tbilisi was snatched from the vehicle before it was detonated, and was then defused. And the three detainees in Bangkok were apparently unable to furnish persuasive cover stories.

The initial investigations suggest that the explosive devices employed in the different locations resembled one another. If the Iranians are operating other terror cells that were supposed to strike other targets in this wave of violence − the arrest of the Bangkok squad probably made them bring the militants back to Iran, lest Tehran’s complicity in this recent global assault become more manifest. There is a distinct possibility that Tehran’s global terror campaign has been stifled, at least for now.

Car bomb Dehli - AP - Feb 2012 Indian police forensics experts examine the Israeli Embassy car that was invovled in the New Dehli explosion
Photo by: AP

This week’s episodes would appear to belie the ominous comments by top
Israeli officials − this week, as well − that describe Iran’s intelligence and security services as the “world’s leading producer of terror.” Still, there are other pieces in the puzzle that deserve to be deciphered before final conclusions are drawn.

One possible explanation for the gap between the expectations and the results is that Israeli intelligence and diplomatic officials deliberately exaggerate the level of the threat posed by Iran, just as the CIA and hawkish politicians in the U.S. inflated dangers posed by the Soviet Union during the Cold War era. It bears mentioning that Iran and Hezbollah have in recent years launched close to 20 failed attempts to attack Israeli and Jewish targets overseas, in reprisal for the death of Imad Mughniyeh, the head of Hezbollah’s terror network. Only on Monday − four years and one day after Mughniyeh’s assassination in Damascus − did these reprisal efforts tally their first success, when an Israeli diplomat’s wife, Tali Yehoshua-Koren, was wounded in New Delhi. The Iranian scheme to assassinate the Saudi ambassador in Washington that was uncovered last year was also revealed to be amateurish in its design.

A major question mark looms over the character of the attack in Bangkok this week. It’s possible this wasn’t exactly a “work accident” that occurred in the preparation of an explosive; indeed, it might have been a foiled terror attack. Thai police raided the apartment in which the Iranian terrorists were hiding, and it was around that time that the explosion took place. Later, one of the terrorists was wounded when he tried to flee the site, while carrying explosives.

Last month, another planned attack, this one intended for Israeli tourists in Bangkok, was thwarted; a Lebanese suspect was detained after this incident. Media in Thailand estimated that local police forces operated then on the basis of a “tip” supplied by a foreign intelligence service. The possibility that the same dynamic was at play this week should not be ruled out.

Israeli intelligence officials were surprised by the attacks in India and Georgia. The picture regarding Thailand is less clear. A logical evaluation holds that the Iranians used local “subcontractors” in the three incidents this week. The safe house exposed in Bangkok served as a preparatory facility for terror: It’s possible that the Iranian citizens were not supposed to carry out the actual attacks, but that their proxies were supposed to pick up the bombs at a later time.

Haste and pressure

The attacks’ failed execution might have been the product of haste and pressure. In fact, Iran’s intelligence services are facing pressure to attain immediate results. The attacks appear to have been timed not only to coincide with the anniversary of the Mughniyeh killing; they also might have been quickly arranged reprisal attempts for the killing of five Iranian nuclear scientists, the most recent of which occurred last month. Tehran blames Israel for these killings. Ahead of parliamentary elections in March, Iran’s leaders want to demonstrate that they have ways of responding to such attacks on their nuclear program.

However, there is more than domestic election concerns at play here: Iran is conducting wars on several fronts, and it is not especially pleased with the way any of them is going.
There is, of course, the mostly clandestine global struggle being waged by Iran against Western intelligence services. Only the tip of this campaign’s iceberg is visible to the public. The struggle involves arms smuggling, the assassination of scientists, cyber-war and, now, attacks on Israeli diplomatic installations. In tandem, Iran’s main investment of effort is in the nuclear sphere.

The international sanctions campaign, whose purpose is to stifle Iran’s nuclear efforts, moved into higher gear this past January, with the declaration of a European embargo on Iranian oil, to begin in July. Israel continues to threaten about a possible attack on Iranian nuclear facilities, plus tensions about the continued supply of oil are on the rise in the Persian Gulf.

In addition, Iran has its hands full in dealing with regimes in the Arab world. Its effort to spearhead a Shi’ite revolution in Bahrain was foiled by a joint Saudi-Jordanian effort. Furthermore, its joint attempt with Hezbollah to contain popular unrest against Bashar Assad’s dictatorial regime in Syria have not been crowned with success.

With so many things happening at once in the Arab world, and with so many world intelligence services stepping up efforts against Tehran, it’s quite possible that its regime’s ability to monitor attack plans has slackened, with one consequence being such malfunctions as the mishaps in Bangkok and Tbilisi.

Low-profile activity

Do the attacks against Israeli targets overseas this week portend anything regarding the campaign against Iran’s nuclear efforts? Might they in fact accelerate Israeli plans to attack Iranian nuclear sites? On the one hand, it would appear that the sides are maintaining a low profile vis-a-vis the dispute, and that it is not likely, for now, to spill over into full conflict. But plans can always go awry. It’s by no means certain that Israel would have been content with public censure had the explosion in New Delhi occurred after Yehoshua-Koren had picked up her kids from school and was driving with them in the embassy car.

On Monday, following the incidents in India and Georgia, urgent consultations were conducted by officials from the IDF General Staff, the Mossad and the Shin Bet security service. The historical precedents confused the issue at hand: In 1982, Israel used an assassination attempt against its ambassador in London, Shlomo Argov, as a pretext to launch the first Lebanon War, which had been in planning for quite some time. In contrast, in 1992, it opted for restraint after the bombing of the embassy in Buenos Aires, which was perpetrated by Iran and Hezbollah in reprisal for the killing of the latter’s secretary-general, Abbas al-Musawi.

This time, Israel refrained from immediate responses, although it stepped up its rhetorical assaults. Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu twice denounced the Iranian terror attacks, and Foreign Minister Avigdor Lieberman promised that Israel “will not carry on with business as usual” and overlook them. Defense Minister Ehud Barak, who was in Singapore’s airport at the time, twice pointed out that he had made an interim landing in Bangkok just hours before the explosion there.

It’s hard to imagine that Barak was the Iranians’ target. Yet the defense minister, a frequent flyer whose trip to Singapore has spilled over into a weekend excursion in Japan, implied that there was some sort of connection between the Iranian moves and his trip to the Far East. In any case, in view of Barak’s sober warnings about the critical point to which affairs related to Iran have reached, it’s somewhat surprising that he has found so much cause in recent weeks to leave the country for trips abroad.

Renewed opposition?

Iran’s regime has decided to ban stoning as a method of execution, and from now will sanction hanging alone as its means for meting out the death penalty. On Tuesday, the regime forcibly dispersed a protest rally, and arrested a few opposition activists.

The next day, President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad officiated at a festive unveiling of fuel rods produced in Tehran’s nuclear research reactor. This was a deliberate ploy designed to attain a number of goals: the demonstration of a technological accomplishment; the obtainment of leverage ahead of possible future, renewed negotiations with the international community ‏(enrichment of uranium to a 20-percent level is now an established fact in Iran’s reactors‏); and a show of strength for the country’s citizenry.

Yet this week’s protest demonstration, two years to the day when two leaders of the failed Green Revolution of the preceding summer − Mir-Hossein Mousavi and Mahdi Karubi − were arrested, is likely to mark the start of renewed efforts on the part of opposition movements. Though a relatively small number of people took part in this latest protest, the combination of a domestic economic crisis and the winds of change generally blowing through the Middle East is liable to promote stirrings of dissent in the Islamic Republic.

In the Wall Street Journal this week, Mehdi Khalaji, an expert on Iranian affairs and a senior fellow at the Washington Institute for Near East Policy, quoted comments made by a recently retired Iranian general, Hossein Alai, founder of the Revolutionary Guard Navy. Writing in Tehran’s Ettelaat newspaper, Alai had drawn comparisons between the current situation in Iran and the circumstances preceding the Islamic revolution. He suggested that should Iran’s spiritual leader Ali Khamenei fail to work out a compromise with the reformist leaders, Mousavi and Karubi, he will be making an error similar to ones perpetrated by the shah, prior to his fall.

For his part, Khalaji claimed that many former Revolutionary Guard officers are today businessmen involved in the oil business and in Iran’s banking system. These retired officers, like the Guard itself, are liable to incur a devastating blow when a new round of international sanctions is applied. Khalaji explained that Khamenei’s political status depends largely on the situation of the country’s nuclear program − as well as upon his image as someone who knows how to handle outside pressure. “Holding firm” against sanctions, Khalaji wrote, “is a matter of life or death” for Iran’s supreme spiritual leader.

The only factor that could lead to a change in Khamenei’s position is the disposition of the Revolutionary Guard. In Khalaji’s view, the Guard represents the sole force in Iran today with the power to make the country’s spiritual leader adopt a course of compromise.

Historic rift

Hamas’ political leadership in Gaza, headed by Ismail Haniyeh and Mahmoud Zahar, has failed to date in its efforts to torpedo the reconciliation agreement forged by the head of the organization’s political division, Khaled Meshal, with Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas. Surprisingly, in this showdown Meshal enjoys the support of the senior officials of the organization’s military branch, headed by Ahmed Jabari.

In an organization that has steadfastly upheld an image of unity during its 24 years of existence, the crisis in Hamas is historical. Signs of the rift surfaced last May, during the reconciliation ceremony staged by Abbas and Meshal in Cairo. On this occasion, Meshal expressed relatively moderate views regarding Israel − which stirred Zahar’s wrath. The controversy continued through the end of last year, after Meshal spoke about a transition to “popular resistance” against Israel, and announced that his organization was prepared to join the PLO.

The straw that broke the camel’s back was Meshal’s statement of his readiness a few weeks ago to establish a unity government headed by Abbas. Haniyeh, who became the main victim of Meshal’s rapprochement strategy, refused to keep mum this time.

After having been described by Israel for years as a predatory, dangerous militant, Meshal is now promoting a rapprochement strategy with the PA, and enjoys support from Saudi Arabia, Qatar and Egyt. For his part, Haniyeh, who has been thought of as being relatively pragmatic, went off to embrace Ahmadinejad in Tehran, ignoring the sentiments of the moderate Arab camps.

In all likelihood, Benjamin Netanyahu will bring the photo of the Hamas leader’s appearance at the Tehran rally with him to the White House when he visits there early next month.

Hamas’ leadership in Gaza is apparently fed up with Meshal’s proclivity for taking independent action. As far as the organization’s political leadership in Gaza is concerned, in view of the impending collapse of the Syrian patron, and of Hamas’ strengthened position in the Strip, they deserve to play a more prominent role in decisions made by Hamas’ governing council. As the movement’s leaders in Gaza see it, rapprochement and a subsequent election campaign could jeopardize the organization, which could face a setback in the election. Plus, even a victory in the elections would not alter Hamas’ standing in the West Bank, since Israel would hunt it down there in such a scenario.

This position, however, has been offset by that of Hamas’ military wing, which decided to align itself with Meshal. In the Hamas power struggle, this military branch seems to be the big winner, at least for now, since it tips the balance in any contest between the Gaza leadership and Meshal’s political wing.

Though influenced by personal interests and ego, these arguments about Hamas’ strategy and policies reflect processes by which the organization has matured into an establishment force on the Gaza Strip, after five years of rule. Top IDF officers were asked this week to cite the last time Hamas figures took part in rocket attacks against Israeli targets. The last time that happened, they responded, was about half a year ago.

The American Spectator : Still in Denial on Iran

February 20, 2012

The American Spectator : Still in Denial on Iran.

Is it rational to view its regime as rational?

https://i0.wp.com/spectator.org/assets/db/13297008715975.jpg

U.S. national security adviser Tom Donilon is now in Israel for talks with top officials. The Telegraph reports that while Washington claims the visit is routine, “Israel’s option of launching a strike on Iranian nuclear facilities was expected to be the urgent topic of discussion.”

Israel has indeed been getting some further unfriendly messages from Iran lately. Last week Iran attacked or attempted to attack Israeli diplomats in Azerbaijan, India, and Thailand, with Israeli sources warning of further attempts. Currently two Iranian warships have docked at Syria’s port of Tartus.

Yet the message from Washington continues to be — don’t do anything, the situation’s under control. It was further amplified over the weekend by Joint Chiefs of Staff chairman Gen. Martin Dempsey, who told CNN:

It’s not prudent at this point to decide to attack Iran. A strike at this time would be destabilizing and wouldn’t achieve their [Israel’s] long-term objectives…. We are of the opinion that Iran is a rational actor. We also know, or we believe we know, that the Iranian regime has not decided to make a nuclear weapon.

Those finely attuned to Iran’s rationality could feel further encouraged by its recent letter to EU foreign policy chief Catherine Ashton, which proposes yet another round of nuclear talks and promises “new initiatives.” Secretary of State Hillary Clinton called it an “important step.” State Department spokeswoman Victoria Nuland was more restrained, noting that “we’ve had negotiations that… ate up a lot of time and didn’t go where they needed to go.”

But is it rational to view Iran as rational? Steadily mounting evidence says no.

Last week Israeli prime minister Binyamin Netanyahu asserted that the sanctions on Iran are not working, and “if anybody needed a reminder… it was the guided tour by Iran’s president in the centrifuge hall.” He was referring to President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad’s proud flaunting of Iran’s new, domestically produced nuclear fuel rods at a Tehran reactor.

Netanyahu added:

They send children into mine fields, they have suicide bombers, they send tens of thousands of rockets into our cities and towns. Such a regime should obviously not have an atomic bomb….

The Israeli leader, though, is not the only one with a grim assessment of the sanctions’ effectiveness. The Guardian reported on Friday that U.S. officials “are increasingly convinced that sanctions will not deter Tehran” from pursuing nukes, and that “the US will be left with no option but to launch an attack on Iran or watch Israel do so.”

The Guardian quotes one U.S. official saying the “problem is that the guys in Tehran are behaving like sanctions don’t matter, like their economy isn’t collapsing, like Israel isn’t going to do anything.” And another one: “We don’t see a way forward. The record shows that there is nothing to work with.”

And at a meeting of the Senate Armed Services Committee on Thursday, Defense Intelligence Agency chief Lt. Gen. Ronald Burgess said Iran is “not close” to stopping its nuclear program. Yet, while allowing that “Iran’s technical advances, particularly in uranium enrichment” mean Iran is “more than capable” of producing a weapon, Burgess said that decision would be made by Supreme Leader Ali Khameini — who “would base [it] on a cost-benefit analysis,” something that “plays to the value of sanctions….”

Again, that strange mix of recognition and denial of reality, as if to say: yes, there is a threat, but we’re dealing with it effectively even though the indications are that we’re not.

The Iran-as-rational-actor notion is even harder to sustain in light of mounting concerns about Iranian terror attacks on U.S. soil. Such worries are, of course, more than plausible given Iran’s plot, uncovered last October, to murder the Saudi ambassador to the U.S. in a Washington restaurant.

Meanwhile Britain’s Sky News reports that “Iran and al Qaeda’s core leadership… have established an ‘operational relationship’ amid fears the terror group is planning a spectacular attack against the West.” Sky News says it has seen a “secret intelligence memo” that states:

Against the background of intensive co-operation over recent months between Iran and al Qaeda — with a view to conducting a joint attack against Western targets overseas…Iran has significantly stepped up its investment, maintenance and improvement of operational and intelligence ties with the al Qaeda leadership in Pakistan in recent months.

Western refusal to come to grips with the fanatic nature of the mullahs’ regime has a long pedigree. Such facts as Ahmadinejad’s fervent belief in the Mahdi — the mystical Shiite redeemer whose arrival, he believes, can be hastened with violent chaos — will not impress those determined not to be impressed by them.

But in trying to get Israel — smack in the Middle East and with much direct experience of it — to wait contentedly for Tehran to apply “cost-benefit” calculations, the Obama administration has its work cut out for it.

About the Author

P. David Hornik is a writer and translator in Beersheva, Israel, blogging at PDavidHornik.typepad.com.

West abandoning Israel in face of Iran threat?

February 20, 2012

israel today | Israel News | West abandoning Israel in face of Iran threat? – israel today | Israel News.

West abandoning Israel in face of Iran threat?

Western powers have for years made grand pronouncements regarding their commitment to Israel’s security in the face of the Iranian nuclear threat. But now that Iran is drawing so close to being able to field a nuclear weapon, America and Europe appear to be backing off and leaving Israel to the wolves.

The most damning evidence that the West would not, contrary to the promises of US President Barack Obama and others, do everything necessary to protect Israel came when NATO Secretary-General Anders Fogh Rasmussen suggested this week that an early-warning radar system in Turkey would not provide Israel with advanced warning of an Iranian missile launch.

Speaking to reporters in Turkey, Rasmussen insisted that “data is shared within our allies, among our allies. It’s a defense system to protect the populations of NATO allies.”

After being further baited by Turkish reporters, Rasmussen again stressed that “it is a NATO system and the data within the system will not be shared with third countries.”

While Rasmussen was reluctant to single out Israel as one of those “third countries,” Turkish Foreign Minister Ahmet Davuto knew exactly what his nation’s press wanted to hear: “Especially if it’s about Israel, our view is clear.”

Earlier this month, Israel’s military intelligence chief, Maj.-Gen. Aviv Kochavi, said that intelligence suggests Iran already has enough nuclear material to build four atomic bombs. Kochavi told the annual Herzliya Conference that if Iran decided today to build a nuclear bomb, it could do so in less than one year.

With the situation clearly reaching a critical junction, talk of the possible need to launch a preemptive strike has reached fever pitch in Israel. The consternation of Israelis has been further exacerbated by recent calls from within Iran’s religious leadership to attack and destroy Israel no later than 2014.

In a document published by Iran’s Alef news agency, the chief strategist of Iranian Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, Alireza Forghani, argued that “in the name of Allah, Iran must attack Israel by 2014. All our troubles are due to Israel!”

Alireza insisted that even in the absence of a preemptive Israeli strike, Iran was still perfectly justified in striking the Jewish state over its “occupation” of “Palestinian lands.”

And it is precisely at this moment that the US, Britain and other European powers are showing themselves most apathetic and incapable of facing down the Iranian threat.

Almost completely ignoring the history of the Iranian nuclear crisis up until now, US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton and European Union foreign policy chief Catherine Ashton last week expressed hope that negotiations with Iran would reopen after Ashton received a moderately-worded letter from Tehran.

Such letters and talk of negotiations has been used repeatedly by Iran to stall Western efforts to curb its nuclear program.

Days after Clinton and Ashton were taken in by the Iranian letter, the Chairman of the US Joint Chiefs of Staff, Gen. Martin Dempsey, cautioned Israel to back off any preparations for a preemptive strike on Iran. Dempsey’s interview with CNN effectively signalled Israel that if it strikes Iran at this time, it will do so without American support and backing.

British Foreign Secretary William Hague issued a similar warning on Sunday, and demonstrated the same type of selective memory that plagues Clinton and Ashton when he insisted that negotiations must be given “a real chance” before military options are seriously considered.

Report: Iranian ships disrupt Syrian opposition communications

February 20, 2012

Report: Iranian ships disrupt Syrian opposition communications – Israel News, Ynetnews.

Egypt security sources, Syrian opposition members say Iranian vessels that docked at Tartus port over the weekend have ‘military communications jamming devices’

Roi Kais

Egyptian security sources and members of the Syrian opposition are claiming that the two Iranian ships docked off the Syrian coast are equipped with “military communications jamming devices that are disrupting communications made by the Syrian opposition via satellite,” the London-based Arabic newspaper Asharq al-Awsat reported Monday.

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According to the report, an Egyptian security source noted that recently the Syrian regime has been finding it hard to monitor opposition calls after it began using secure communication lines.

The regime in Damascusis finding it particularly difficult to monitor calls made by of the Free Syrian Army and the Coalition of Syrian Revolutionary Committees, the source told the newspaper.

Two Iranian navy ships docked at the Syrian port of Tartus over the weekend.

The flotilla, consisting of a destroyer and a supply ship, arrived at Tartus port, 220 kilometers (137 miles) northwest of the Syrian capital Damascus after receiving permission from the Egyptian armed forces to sail through the Suez Canal into the Mediterranean Sea on their way to the Syrian coast.

On Sunday Asharq al-Awsat quoted a State Department official as saying that the US was concerned by the arrival of Iranian vessels to Syria and considers it an Iranian attempt to aggravate the situation in the region.

Israel should try talking to Iran before launching a strike

February 20, 2012

Israel should try talking to Iran before launching a strike – Haaretz Daily Newspaper | Israel News.

For dialogue with Tehran to succeed, the insolent tone and threatening language of the Israeli government spokespeople and their neoconservative friends in the United States must be toned down.

By Akiva Eldar

The convoy of senior American officials who are making weekly pilgrimages to Jerusalem, in an attempt to stop the Israel Air Force from attacking Iran, is no doubt chalking up plenty of flight hours for the U.S. Air Force. But the secretary of defense, the head of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, the national security adviser and even President Barack Obama himself will not succeed in convincing Israel’s leadership that sanctions alone will suffice to stop the Iranian nuclear project.

Who knows better than Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu that there are principles in whose name nations are prepared to ignore the whole world, and for which nations will even pay with their best interests? The prime minister assumes, and justifiably so, that the chance that Tehran will submit to sanctions without conditions is about the same as the chance that economic pressure will convince the Likud central committee to divide Jerusalem. And that’s about the same as an Iranian admission that Israel is allowed to have an atomic bomb ‏(as per foreign sources‏) along with Pakistan and India ‏(and that the large Islamic republic is a pariah and/or crazy‏).

But fresh sanctions are certainly having an effect on the Iranian leadership − and how! Its support for its protege, Syrian President Bashar Assad, who is mowing down the Sunnis in his country, has augmented Shiite Iran’s isolation and undermined its regional standing. These pressures are the reason behind the statement by Foreign Minister Ali Akbar Salehi that his country is prepared to renew talks with the five permanent members of the United Nations Security Council as well as Germany. Even our friend Dennis Ross, who recently left the team of senior advisers to President Obama and has returned to the Jerusalem-based Jewish People Policy Planning Institute, stated in recent days that the time is ripe for diplomatic initiatives in the Iranian arena.

The question is not whether to talk to the Iranians before shooting at them: The question is what to talk about, who does the talking, and how should it be done. For example, what would we do if Tehran announces that it is prepared to put an end to its nuclear plans and to open up its facilities for all to see, on condition that Israel signs the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty and opens its facilities to inspectors from the International Atomic Energy Agency?

If Iran were to forgo its nuclear program and all the Arab states were to follow suit, the international community would ask, rightfully, why does Israel need a bomb? Whom does it have to deter? Either no country can have weapons of mass destruction, or all of them can. Sooner or later, Israel will have to agree to regional demilitarization.

In an article in The New York Times earlier this month, former American diplomats William Luers and Thomas Pickering recommended to Obama that he open diplomatic channels with Tehran, in the way that former President Nixon breached the diplomatic embargo on China. They proposed that Obama appoint a special envoy who enjoys the trust of the Iranians, to hold secret talks in an effort to prevent a conflagration. The president should equip his emissary with guarantees that military action would not be taken, and that public pressure on Iran would be lessened during any such contacts.

For the dialogue with Tehran to succeed, the insolent tone and threatening language of the Israeli government spokespeople and their neoconservative friends in the United States must be toned down.

The word “respect” appears in every speech by the Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmedinejad. In his speech a week ago to mark the anniversary of his country’s revolution, he stated that the door was open to negotiations “in a framework of justice and respect.”

Doron Pely, who has spent many years researching the mechanism of the Islamic sulha ‏(a means for resolving disputes‏), has drawn my attention to the decisive importance of the concept of respect in Islamic culture. He says that particularly in terms of the ancient Persian nation, respect is the main component in resolving disputes, particularly those with the West, and above all with Israel.

The sanctions, like the assassination of Iranian scientists, and like military activities in Iranian skies, can defer the development of a bomb for some years but they will not wipe it out. The best scientists have not been able to invent a weapon against national-religious respect. It is possible that ultimately there will be no choice but to shoot. But when missiles fall on us, we must know that we asked our friends to do their best to use all other options against the Iranians. Including speaking to them with respect and wisdom.

Israel must listen to U.S. warnings against Iran attack

February 20, 2012

Israel must listen to U.S. warnings against Iran attack – Haaretz Daily Newspaper | Israel News.

Does Iran truly intend to use nuclear technology for military purposes, or do its leaders recognize that the international response to such a development could jeopardize its very survival?

Haaretz Editorial

Fear of Iran’s nuclear program is pushing Israel into a dangerous corner. The state could find itself in a conflict of interest, or even on a collision course with the American administration just when it needs U.S. support more than ever before.

It’s enough to hear the warning of the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, Gen. Martin E. Dempsey, that a strike on Iran could be harmful to Israel, and to see the stepped-up pace of visits here by senior U.S. officials to realize just how anxious Washington is about the prospect of Jerusalem deciding to bomb Iran.

Iran nuclear Bushehr A worker in the nuclear power plant in Bushehr, Iran.
Photo by: AP

The United States in particular, or the West in general, cannot be accused of ignoring the Iranian threat. The burden of sanctions imposed on Iran, together with Washington’s frequent declarations that the military option is still on the table, demonstrate the administration’s concern over Tehran’s nuclear program. The big question for the United States is not only about the effect of an Israeli attack against Iran on American interests in the region, but also about the efficacy of such a strike and concern about its potentially disastrous implications for Israel.

Israel and the United States are in agreement on both the dimension of the threat and the understanding that Iran has not yet decided to obtain nuclear weapons. Not enough attention has been paid to the big question − why that decision has not been made − and there is no consensus on the answer.

Does Iran truly intend to use nuclear technology for military purposes, or do its leaders recognize that the international response to such a development could jeopardize its very survival?

Dempsey believes, correctly, that Iran is a “rational actor” that considers the political implications of its actions. He concludes from this that the sanctions must be given a chance before trapping the region and the world in a war the final outcome of which is unknowable.

One can disagree with the American assessment that the sanctions are already having an effect, and one can find data that prove the opposite. But the fact that even in Israel there is disagreement on the issue indicates that there’s a chance the sanctions could prove effective. Israel, which succeeded in enlisting the Western countries to take action against Iran, must listen to the warnings coming out of Washington and refrain, for now, from unilateral measures.

Hard talk with US officials on Iran fails to move Israel from military option

February 20, 2012

DEBKAfile, Political Analysis, Espionage, Terrorism, Security.

DEBKAfile Exclusive Report February 20, 2012, 12:53 PM (GMT+02:00)

 

Natanz nuclear site air defenses

White House National Security Adviser Tom Donilon faced an acrimonious Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu in two hours of stormy conversation in Jerusalem Sunday, Feb. 19, according to updates reaching senior US sources in Washington. The main bones of contention were Iran’s continuing enrichment of uranium and its ongoing relocation of production to underground sites.
Israeli officials declined to give out any information on the conversation. Some even refused to confirm it took place.
According to debkafile’s sources, Netanyahu accused the Obama administration of drawing Iran into resuming nuclear negotiations with world powers by an assurance that Tehran would be allowed to continue enriching uranium in any quantity, provided it promised not to build an Iranian nuclear weapon. The prime minister charged that this permit contravened US administration guarantees to Israel on the nuclear issue and, moreover left Tehran free to upgrade its current 20 percent enrichment level to 90 percent weapons grade. This Israel cannot tolerate, said Netanyahu, so leaving its military option on the ready.
He warned the US National Security Adviser that no evidence whatsoever confirms Washington’s claim that Tehran intends suspending enrichment and other nuclear advances when negotiations begin. Quite the contrary: Even before the date was set, Iran started working at top speed to build up its bargaining chips by laying down major advances in its nuclear program as undisputed facts.
Tehran now claims to have progressed to self-reliance in the production of 20 percent-enriched uranium, the basis for the weapons grade fuel, in unlimited quantity. Once the talks are underway, Netanyahu maintained, there would be no stopping the Iranians without stalling the negotiating process. Going by past experience, Tehran would use dialogue as an extra fulcrum for its impetus toward weapon production without interruption.
Monday, Donilon and his delegation meet Defense Minister Ehud Barak.
The mission of this high-powered US delegation in Israel takes place to the accompanied of a resumed US media campaign for discouraging Israeli military action against Iran’s nuclear installations.
Sunday, Gen. Martin Dempsey, Chairman of the Joint US Chiefs of Staff, offered this opinion to CNN: “Israel has the capability to strike Iran and delay the Iranians probably for a couple of years. But some of the targets are probably beyond their reach.”
Monday’s New York Times carried an assessment by “American defense officials and military analysts close to the Pentagon” under the caption, “Iran Raid Seen as a Huge Task for Israel Jets.” debkafile’s military sources report the main argument, dredged up from the past and long refuted, is that Israeli Air Force bombers cannot cover the distance to Iran without in-flight refueling.
That array of “analysts” apparently missed the CNN interview and therefore contradicted the assessment of America’s own top general that “Israel has the capability to strike Iran…”
Reality has meanwhile moved on. Four events in the last 24 hours no doubt figured large in the US delegation’s talks with Israeli leaders:
1.  Monday, the IAEA sent to Tehran its second team of monitors this month for another attempt to gain access to nuclear facilities hitherto barred by the Iranians. The inspectors will also demand permission to interview scientists which according to a list drawn up at the agency’s Vienna headquarters hold key positions in their nuclear program.
2. The Russian Chief of Chaff Gen. Nikolai Makarov estimated that the attack on Iran would be “coordinated” by several governments and “a decision would be made by the summer.”
3.  Moscow recalled Russian aircraft carrier Admiral Kutznetsov from the Syrian port of Tartus to its home base at Severomorsk on the Kola Peninsula.
4. Turkey is beinding over backward to assure Iran that data collected by the US missile shield radar stationed at its Kurecik air base will not shared with Israel. It is especially anxious not to annoy Tehran after foreign minister Ali Akbar Salehi announced that the resumed nuclear talks with the five Permanent Security Council members and German (P5+1) would be held in Istanbul.
However, the Iranians certainly know exactly what is going on after watching the recent joint US-Israeli radar test which demonstrated that Israel is fully integrated in the missile shield radar network and that the US radar station in the Israeli Negev interfaces with its station in Turkey and Israel’s Arrow missile Green Pine radar.
When he visited Ankara last week, NATO Secretary-General Anders Fogh Rasmussen assured his Turkish hosts that “Intelligence data collected within the missile defense system will not be shared with third countries. It will be shared with the allies within our alliance.”
His statement was quite accurate – except for the fact that the radar stations collecting the intelligence data are not controlled by NATO but by US military teams, both of which, including the Turkish-based radar, are integrated and coordinated with Israeli radar and missile interceptors.

 

PM: I Was Right to Doubt ‘Arab Spring’

February 20, 2012

PM: I Was Right to Doubt ‘Arab Spring’ – Defense/Security – News – Israel National News.

Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu said Sunday night that he been right when he presented a ‘pessimistic’ view of the ‘Arab Spring’
By David Lev

First Publish: 2/19/2012, 9:59 PM

 

Netanyahu

Netanyahu
Israel news photo: Flash 90

Speaking at a meeting of the Conference of Presidents of Major American Jewish Organizations Sunday night, Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu reminded listeners at the opening of the meeting that he had warned last year not to be overly optimistic about the effects of the “Arab Spring”. At the time, Netanyahu said, he was accused of “not being optimistic enough,” but that his prediction then, that the revolutions in the Arab world could be hijacked by Islamic groups. “It turned out that we were right,” he said.

One result of the revolutions in the Arab world, he said, was an increase in Israel’s security levels, and as a result, it was now more difficult to consider coming to a peace deal with the Palestinian Authority. “As we see a major change in the region, we realize that we are going to have to takes steps to defend ourselves,” Netanyahu said.

The Prime Minister thanked the heads of the 38 largest American Jewish organizations that had gathered for their annual meeting in Jerusalem for their groups’ activities on behalf of Israel. However, he said, assistance by Jews and others around the world were no guarantee of success for Israel. “Only one source exists that will be able to help us grow – and that is through the growth of the Israeli economy,” Netanyahu said. “As Israel’s economy has grown, we have been able to fund our defense and other needs.

“That growth must continue,” the Prime Minister added. And how could he guarantee that the economy would continue to grow? “By continuing what we have been doing,” Netanyahu said, referring to the present policies of the government and Finance Minister Yuval Steinitz.