Archive for February 2012

U.S. officials don’t believe sanctions will stop Iran’s nuclear program, says U.K.’s Guardian

February 18, 2012

U.S. officials don’t believe sanctions will stop Iran’s nuclear program, says U.K.’s Guardian – Haaretz Daily Newspaper | Israel News.

U.K.’s Guardian newspaper cites officials in key parts of Obama administration saying U.S. does not want conflict, but has few options left; say sanctions partly aimed at showing Israel U.S. serious over Iran.

By Haaretz and Reuters

U.S. officials increasingly believe that sanctions are not enough to stop the development of Iran’s nuclear program, and that the U.S will have to launch a military strike on Iran, or support Israeli action, the U.K’s Guardian newspaper reported on Friday.

According to the report, officials in U.S. President Barack Obama’s administration say the U.S. does not want a conflict, but that sanctions are not working.

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

“The White House wants to see sanctions work. This is not the Bush White House. It does not need another conflict,” the newspaper cited an official who is knowledgeable on U.S. Middle East policy as saying.

“It’s 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,” the official said. “Sanctions are all we’ve got to throw at the problem. If they fail then it’s hard to see how we don’t move to the ‘in extremis’ option.”

“We don’t see a way forward. The record shows that there is nothing to work with,” the newspaper quoted another U.S. official as saying.

One former U.S. official told the newspaper that the question of how serious Israel is about military action is part of the calculus behind U.S. policy toward Iran, the Guardian said.

“The sanctions are there to pressure Iran and reassure Israel that we are taking this issue seriously,” it quoted one official as saying. “The focus is on demonstrating to Israel that this has a chance of working. Israel is skeptical but appreciates the effort. It is willing to give it a go, but how long will it wait?”

Colin Kahl, who was U.S. deputy assistant secretary of defense for the Middle East until last December, told the newspaper, “It’s not that the Israelis believe the Iranians are on the brink of a bomb. It’s that the Israelis may fear that the Iranian program is on the brink of becoming out of reach of an Israeli military strike, which means it creates a ‘now-or-never’ moment.”

“That’s what’s actually driving the timeline by the middle of this year. But there’s a countervailing factor that [Ehud] Barak has mentioned – that they’re not very close to making a decision and that they’re also trying to ramp up concerns of an Israeli strike to drive the international community towards putting more pressure on the Iranians,” the newspaper cited Kahl as saying.

“If you look at the calendar, it doesn’t make much sense that the Israelis would jump the gun. They probably need to provide a decent interval for those sanctions to be perceived as failing, because they care about whether an Israeli strike would be seen as philosophically legitimate; that is, as only having happened after other options were exhausted. So I think that will push them a little further into 2012,” he added.

Obama said earlier this month that he did not believe Israel had decided how to respond to its concerns about Iran’s nuclear program, following public discussion within Israel about whether it should attack Tehran to stop it from getting a nuclear bomb.

The newspaper also reported that some criticism of sanctions stems from the belief that the Obama administration is using them to prepare the ground for a military strike.

“The latest drum beat of additional sanctions and war against Iran sounds too much like the lead-up to the Iraq war,” the Guardian cited Congressman Dennis Kucinich as saying this week.

“If the crippling sanctions that the U.S. and Europe have imposed are meant to push the Iranian regime to negotiations, it hasn’t worked,” he said.

“As the war of words between the United States and Iran escalates it’s more critical than ever that we highlight alternatives to war to avoid the same mistakes made in Iraq.”

Obama’s national security adviser Tom Donilon’s will visit to Israel on Saturday for two-days of talks on regional issues which will include Iran and Syria.

Iran: Our satellite photographed Israel’s Dimona reactor, IDF bases

February 18, 2012

Iran: Our satellite photographed Israel’s Dimona reactor, IDF bases – Haaretz Daily Newspaper | Israel News.

Iran and the West are now competing over who is getting more stressed – Europe over the possible disruption of oil flow, or Tehran, which has been busy uncovering new technologies.

By Zvi Bar’el

Iran and the West are now competing over who is getting more stressed: Europe that feared on Wednesday that Iran was about to cut the oil line, or Iran, which has been consistently busy uncovering new technologies.

 

In one example, the Iranian website Mashreq claimed that the recently launched Navid-class satellite was able to take detailed photographs of the nuclear reactor in Dimona as well as “sensitive sites, air forces bases, and various areas of Tel Aviv.”

Iran also displayed its ability to produce its own nuclear fuel on Wednesday, thus claiming to release itself from a dependence on the West, displaying its fuel rod before the IAEA inspectors. Later, Iranian Defense Minister Ahmad Vahidi said that Iran was about to christen a new base geared at launching satellites as heavy as one ton and that the base would be equipped and operational within the year.

 

Iran satellite launch - Press TV Launch of Iraninan Navid satellite, Feb. 3, 2012.
Photo by: Press TV

 

On the economic level, while the West is trying to prove the sanctions are working, Iran announced it is upgrading its trade ties with India, Pakistan and Afghanistan. Moreover, Iran says it is about to sign a deal with Iraq and Syria which will include cooperation in the energy sector, and plans to construct one of the largest power plants in the Middle East. The Islamic Republic is also working to renew negotiations with the UN Security Council. According to Turkish sources, the talks are scheduled to begin later this month in Istanbul, hosted by the Turks.

 

Iran seems busier with pre-elections political struggles on the domestic front than with the next round of sanctions. In light of the liberal parties’ expected boycott of the elections on March 2, Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei announced that “the people will deal the enemy a great blow by showing up en mass at the polling stations.” According to Khamenei, the “enemy” is trying to undermine the regime’s legitimacy by encouraging a low turnout of voters.

These are extremely important elections, as President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad is hoping to leave behind a political legacy that will continue his policies (he is barred from serving as president again unless he waits a term). Along with Ahmadinejad’s aspirations, there is also a struggle taking place in the last few months between his supports and the movements supporting Khamenei, while the liberal movements, who advocate a change in the regime, are being pushed aside. To further ensure that the opposition does not undermine the elections, the government has been trying to prevent the opposition from rallying by cutting off Internet access, monitoring the Internet, slowing down surfing speed and penetrating email and Twitter accounts of those deemed “suspects.”

 

Yet while Iran wishes to prove that the sanctions do not harm its nuclear program and technological development, there is no doubt that its economic situation has deteriorated over the last year. Iran’s currency has lost over half its value in less than three months, while conversely, prices have risen. It is very difficult to obtain raw materials for factories, and the government is now asking some subsidized industries to give up governmental aid.

On the other hand, Iranian economists point to the fact that a similar crisis took place in the mid-90s, when the currency’s value also dropped by 50 percent. Iran’s citizens, they say, adjusted to the situation rather quickly. At the same time, economists and parliament members prefer to blame Ahmadinejad’s government for its failed economic policy – which has emptied the treasury’s reserves – than to point their finger at the sanctions.

And yet Iran has foreign currency reserves worth about 120 billion dollars and approximately 907 tons of gold, while its foreign debt amounts to between 12 and 22 million dollars (depending on who you ask). Although the budget Ahmadinejad submitted to the parliament included certain cuts of 6.5 percent, he has also declared he intends to increase the development sector’s budget by 20 percent. The most important aspect of that budget is that it calculated oil prices at 85 dollars per barrel, while today a barrel is worth more than 110 dollars. These discrepancies may translate into significant profit for the state, and may give Iran room to maneuver if hit with more sanctions.

In light of this economic data, it seems that despite the pressure being felt by the middle class these days – a class that does not support the president anyway – it is doubtful that the current scope of sanctions can change the government’s policies, especially during an election year.

Israel can still take some comfort in a survey conducted by the American Pew Research Center, which found that 39 percent of Americans think the U.S. should help Israel take action against Iran (meaning a military strike). According to the poll, most of the Americans (62 percent) who support military action against Iran are Republicans, while a third who oppose such action are Democrats and Independents. If President Barack Obama takes these numbers seriously, it is unlikely that Israel will be given a green light to attack Iran during his term.

Report: U.S. drones flying over Syria to monitor crackdown

February 18, 2012

Report: U.S. drones flying over Syria to monitor crackdown – Haaretz Daily Newspaper | Israel News.

Pentagon officials say drones used to gather evidence to make case for international response; 40 Turkish intelligence officials captured in Syria, Assad regime claims Israel’s Mossad trained them.

By Zvi Bar’el

The United States is flying unmanned reconnaissance planes over Syria to monitor the regime’s escalating crackdown on dissent, U.S. defense officials told NBC television on Saturday.

The drones are being used to gather evidence on the Syrian security forces’ violence against pro-democracy protesters that can be used to “make a case for a widespread international response,” the U.S.-based broadcaster quoted the unnamed officials as saying.

Drone - AP - Jan. 31, 2010 A U.S. Predator drone flies over the moon above Kandahar Air Field, southern Afghanistan
Photo by: AP

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The Pentagon officials stressed that the U.S. is not preparing the ground for a military intervention, but is simply collecting evidence of President Bashar Assad’s crackdown on protesters.

There was no official comment from Syria on the report.

The West has ruled out a Libya-style military intervention in Syria to stop 11 months of bloodshed.

Meanwhile, there have been disagreements regarding what action must be taken against Syria. Turkey refuses to set up buffer zones for civilians on its border with Syria, and demands that the transfer of equipment and medicine be done via the sea and not through its territory.

France, on the other hand, maintains that such buffer zones must be on land and will anyhow spill over the Turkish border.

While the Syrian army continued to attack Daraa and Homs with tanks and heavy artillery, large protests also took place in Damascus, as well as Aleppo, a city which hasn’t taken part in anti-regime protests regularly thus far.

The resolution passed by the United Nations General Assembly condemning Syria, supported by 137 countries, has not impressed the Syrian regime which is only escalating its war against the opposition and widening its war zones. Russia continues to come to aid of the Assad regime with weapon shipments, and on Friday two Iranian warships passed through the Suez Canal on the way to Tartus port in Syria.

Western officials fear that Iranian military presence along with Russian aid could turn Syria into a center of international friction much worse than the struggle inside Syria. They fear that the control over actions in Syria will be taken over by a Russian-Iranian “partnership” which would exclude the European Union and Turkey and that U.S. involvement could be too late and inefficient.

Turkey fears this development after a diplomatic crisis erupted with Syria when more than 40 Turkish intelligence officers were captured by the Syrian army. Over the past week, Turkey has been conducting intensive negotiations with Syria in order to secure their freedom, and Syria insists that their release will be conditioned on the extradition of Syrian officers and soldiers that defected and are currently in Turkey.

Syria also conditioned the continuation of the negotiations on Turkey’s blockade of weapon transfers and passage of soldiers from the rebels’ Free Syria Army through its territory. It also demanded that Iran sponsor the negotiations of releasing the Turkish officers.

Turkey, who mediated several weeks ago between the Free Syria Army and Iran to secure the release of several Iranian citizens who were captured by the rebels, rejects Syria’s demands, and for this reason Turkish sources believe that Turkey will soon decide on hardening its stance on Syria.

Syria, on the other hand, has recently published “confessions” that it allegedly gathered from the Turkish officers that they were trained by Israel’s Mossad, and were given instructions to carry out bombings to undermine the country’s security. According to the Syrians, one of the Turkish officers said that the Mossad also trains soldiers from the Free Syria Army, and that Mossad agents came to Jordan in order to train al-Qaida officials to send to Syria to carry out attacks.

Top Obama aide heads to Israel for talks on Iran

February 18, 2012

Top Obama aide heads to Israel fo… JPost – Diplomacy & Politics.

 

By REUTERS AND JPOST.COM STAFF 02/18/2012 02:37
National Security Adviser Tom Donilon to visit as ‘Guardian’ reports key US officials growing doubtful sanctions can deter Tehran.

Ahmadinejad attends unveiling of nuclear projects By REUTERS

US President Barack Obama’s top security aide will visit Israel for two days of talks on regional issues including Syria and Iran, the White House said on Friday.

US National Security Adviser Tom Donilon’s trip from Saturday through Monday comes amid tensions over Iran’s nuclear program, which the West says is aimed at securing weapons capability, but Tehran insists is for peaceful purposes.

US and European officials on Friday voiced cautious optimism over the latest signals from Tehran that it might be willing to resume talks with major powers on the nuclear issue, after the Iranians sent them a letter.

Donilon’s visit was “the latest in a series of regular, high-level consultations between the United States and Israel, consistent with our strong bilateral partnership, and part of our unshakable commitment to Israel’s security,” the White House said in a statement.

Obama said earlier this month that he did not believe Israel had decided how to respond to its concerns about Iran’s nuclear program, following public discussion within Israel about whether it should attack Tehran to stop it from getting a nuclear bomb.

British daily The Guardian reported on Friday that officials in key parts of the Obama administration are becoming increasingly convinced that sanctions cannot succeed in deterring Iran’s nuclear aspirations and that the US will be forced to launch a military operation against Tehran or watch Israel do so.

“The White House wants to see sanctions work. This is not the Bush White House. It does not need another conflict…Its 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,” The Guardian quoted an official familiar with Obama’s Middle East policy as saying.

“Sanctions are all we’ve got to throw at the problem. If they fail then it’s hard to see how we don’t move to the ‘in extremis’ option,” he added.

Sirens ring as Grad explodes near Beersheba

February 18, 2012

Sirens ring as Grad explodes near Beersheba – JPost – Defense.

 

By YAAKOV LAPPIN AND JPOST.COM STAFF 02/18/2012 12:36
Two other rockets from Gaza hit the South, explode in open fields; no injuries or damages reported in the attacks.

Beersheba By Thinkstock/Imagebank

Palestinian terrorists in Gaza took advantage of stormy weather conditions to fire rockets towards large southern cities over the weekend.

A Grad-type rocket was launched in the direction of the Negev’s largest city, Beersheba, on Saturday, triggering air raid sirens. Two additional rockets exploded in fields in the farming districts of the western Negev. All of the attacks failed to cause injuries or damages.

The upsurge in rockets began on Friday evening, when Palestinians fired projectiles into southern Israel, setting off sirens in Ashkelon.

Two rockets exploded in the farming region of Eshkol Regional Council, falling in open fields according to police.

Also on Friday, IDF soldiers were attacked by terrorists near the border. The terrorists attacked IDF troops with an RPG and set off an explosion on the Gazan side of the border fence, but all IDF soldiers were left unharmed.

IDF tanks returned fire upon the assailants. No injuries were reported in the clash between the IDF and Gazan terrorists.

Earlier this week, Ashkelon Regional Council head Yair Farjun told The Jerusalem Post that Israel could not “tolerate” endless rocket attacks on civilians. “It must be made clear to them that there is a price to this,” he said.

The last time terrorists in Gaza attacked Beersheba was last October, when the Iron Dome anti-rocket defense system intercepted rockets fired at the southern city.

The IDF said it holds Hamas responsible for all rocket attacks from the coastal enclave it governs.

Senators introduce legislation authorizing military force to stop Iran’s nuclear program

February 18, 2012

Crisis in US-Israel relations over nuclear talks with Iran

February 18, 2012

DEBKAfile, Political Analysis, Espionage, Terrorism, Security.

DEBKAfile Special Report February 18, 2012, 6:57 AM (GMT+02:00)

 

They agree to talk

In the last 24 hours, the approach of international talks with Iran on its nuclear program has escalated already high tensions over the issue between the Obama administration and the Israeli government and triggered the following developments:
US President Barack Obama decided to send his US National Security Adviser Tom Donilon to an urgent visit to Israel Saturday, Feb. 18, for three days of talks “on regional issues including Syria and Iran.”
This unusually long trip by a top White House official over the weekend is a measure of the crisis in relations.
The visit is part of the US “unshakeable commitment to Israel’s security,” according to a White House statement. It was called “the latest in a series of regular, high-level consultations between the United States and Israel, consistent with our strong bilateral partnership.”
Such pledges no longer wash in Jerusalem, debkafile’s political sources report, in light of Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu’s strong sense of betrayal from what he sees as surreptitious US diplomacy with Iran for promoting talks that will end the promised sanctions for halting Iran’s momentum for building a nuclear weapon now in its final stages. T

The existence of those back-channel exchanges and the imminence of negotiations with Iran were first disclosed by DEBKA-Net-Weekly 529 of Feb. 17.
In private conversations, Netanyahu has said he feels cheated. By its actions the Obama administration leaves Israel with no recourse other than to grapple with the Iranian menace on its own, he has said, and be less sensitive to Washington’s wishes.
A bipartisan group of concerned US senators warned President Obama Friday that they would strongly oppose any proposal in talks with Iran that would allow it to continue uranium enrichment activities.
A letter signed by a dozen senators from both parties expressed concern that Iran would try to use a resumption of talks with world powers on its nuclear program to buy time and dilute international pressure on it.
“Such tactical maneuverings are a dangerous distraction and should not be tolerated,” the senators said.
Belgium-based SWIFT, which provides 10,000 banks in 210 countries with a system for moving funds around the world, said Friday that it was ready to block its network to money transfers by Iranian banks.
Expelling Iranian banks from the Society for Worldwide Interbank Financial Telecommunication would shut down Tehran’s main avenue for doing business with the rest of the world.
Two Iranian warships sailed through Suez Canal to Mediterranean Friday on their way to Syria. Israel called their mission a provocation.
Wednesday, Netanyahu blasted Iran – and indirectly Washington– when he said in Cyprus that sanctions “haven’t worked” and that for a regime which attacks diplomats to have nuclear weapons “is something of enormous concern for the United States and for Israel.”

Why Iran has trouble targeting Israeli diplomats

February 18, 2012

Why Iran has trouble targeti… JPost – Features – Week in review.

By YAAKOV KATZ 02/17/2012 17:37
Security and Defense: Stepped-up security and the vacuum left by Imad Mughniyeh’s death may provide the answer.

Thai police escort Iranian terror suspect By Chaiwat Subprasom/Reuters

Once upon a time, it seemed that all Iran and Hezbollah needed to do was press a button and poof – up went an Israeli target.

This is exactly what happened in 1992, when just a month after Israel killed Hezbollah chief Abbas al-Musawi, the Lebanese terrorist group – with Iranian help – succeeded in bombing the Israeli Embassy in Buenos Aires.

Two years later, in the same city, the Iranian- Hezbollah partnership bombed the AMIA Jewish community center.

“If I were Iran, I would be frustrated,” a senior defense official said this week. “They are trying and trying but not succeeding.”

This doesn’t mean though that they won’t. While the Iranians seem to have been plagued this week by a string of failures, Israel has also run into a spate of good luck.

The plot in Bangkok, for example, was uncovered due to a “work accident” which occurred as the Iranian cell was assembling bombs it planned to use to target Israeli diplomats. Had it not been for the work accident, it is possible that the plot would have succeeded.

The attack in Georgia was foiled when the driver of the embassy car noticed something banging against the street as he was driving, and even the bombing in New Delhi, which injured a diplomat’s wife, did not fully succeed.

Before this week, similar plots in Azerbaijan, Turkey, Egypt, Bulgaria and Thailand were also foiled.

The question is why? The answer is slightly more complicated. One explanation which came up in intelligence assessments in Israel this week is that operationally Hezbollah is having a difficult time.

This could be the result, as some officials said, of the loss in 2008 of Imad Mughniyeh, Hezbollah’s terrorist mastermind and commander of its operations overseas.

Described by former Mossad chief Danny Yatom as having a “satanic and creative mind,” Mughniyeh was instrumental in the two bombings in Buenos Aires in the 1990s as well as in a string of other terrorist attacks overseas in the years up until his death in a meticulously planned car bombing in Damascus four years ago.

Israeli intelligence believes that despite the years that have passed, Mughniyeh’s place as commander of Hezbollah’s military forces and overseas operations – run by Hezbollah Unit 1800 – has yet to be completely filled. Instead, the roles have been separated and given to a mixture of Iranians and Lebanese positioned high up in the group’s hierarchy.

At the same time, Israel has dramatically improved the security of its missions overseas and possibly even more important has used the years since Mughniyeh’s demise to bolster cooperation with foreign intelligence agencies.

In October 2010, for example, then-Mossad chief Meir Dagan paid a visit to Sofia for talks with Bulgarian Prime Minister Boyko Borisov. A picture from the meeting was distributed to the press but nothing was said about what was discussed.

Last month, though, a possible result of that meeting was demonstrated when Bulgarian authorities foiled a plot to attack an Israeli-chartered tourist bus. It is possible that they were acting on Israeli intelligence.

A similar scenario took place in Bangkok last month when an earlier effort by Hezbollah to bomb Israeli targets there was thwarted.

According to Thai defense officials, Israel had tipped them off – once in late December and again in early January – about Hezbollah operative Hussein Atris’s movements and with exact details of when and where the attack he was planning would take place. When Atris was arrested he led Thai security agents to a warehouse filled with bombmaking materials.

The question though is why is Tehran taking such risks, particularly now when it is under the world’s spotlight and is facing increased economic sanctions and growing diplomatic isolation. It seems that it would make more sense for Iran put a lid on things, to hunker down and wait for the storm to pass.

Even in New Delhi, where this week’s attack was a partial success, Israel’s ties with India are extremely strong and there are growing calls for the government there to cut off its dependency on Iranian oil to aid Western efforts to undermine the Islamic regime’s pursuit of nuclear weapons.

Just days before the attack, Mossad chief Tamir Pardo reportedly visited India. While the Indian press portrayed his visit as proof that Israel did not know about the planned bombing, the opposite is possible and his trip might have been meant to coordinate what would happen after such an attack took place.

The fact that the Iranians are doing the exact opposite is a cause of major concern in Jerusalem. This might mean that as the pressure mounts, instead of the regime becoming more moderate it is becoming more radical. This does not mean that the sanctions effort is misguided.

It simply means that the process could be slightly dangerous.

This radicalization was apparent in October when the US Justice Department announced it had thwarted an Iranian plot to assassinate Saudi Arabia’s ambassador to the United States with the assistance of a Mexican drug cartel.

The wave of unsuccessful bomb attacks in India, Georgia and Thailand might be indicative of a regime that is panicking and is shooting in every possible direction, even in the dark.

While that might be the case, the Iranians could also be trying to show the world that a price will be paid for an escalation in efforts to stop its nuclear program. In the past two months alone plots have been uncovered in Europe, Asia and the former Soviet Union.

While they were not successful, the possibility that this infrastructure could be activated in the aftermath of a military strike against Iran’s nuclear facilities should worry both Israel and the US.

Tehran’s desperation was apparent again on Wednesday when it revealed what it termed “breakthroughs” in its nuclear program but which were really modest advances that were expected and already known in the West.

Nevertheless, the loading of independently manufactured fuel rods into the Tehran Research Reactor was a sign of how Iran is continuing to move forward with its program, even if the steps are sometimes small and predictable.

Iran’s strategy of so-called “nuclear hedging” remains as it has been for the past few years – to straddle the threshold and keep up its enrichment of uranium so that when it makes the decision to build the bomb it will take the shortest amount of time possible.

Western intelligence agencies predict it would take anywhere from nine to 12 months for Iran to build a bomb. The Iranians are, however, trying to shorten the process to around half a year.

Interestingly, as the bomb plots were uncovered this week, the story that had topped the headlines for the previous month – if and when Israel will attack Iran – was pushed aside.

Even US Secretary of Defense Leon Panetta played down remarks attributed to him by The Washington Post earlier this month saying that Israel would attack sometime between April and June. Speaking before the Senate, Panetta said that Israel had yet to decide whether it will attack.

This seems to be a more accurate description of the standoff between Israel and Iran. While Israel is serious about the use of military force it is also quite amazed at the way the world has, for the first time, enlisted in the economic crackdown on Iran and believes that there might be a chance for it to work. For that to happen, though, Israel will need to give the process time.

On the other hand, there is Defense Minister Ehud Barak’s idea of the “immunity zone,” a phrase he coined to describe Iran’s dispersal of capabilities and fortification of facilities to the point that a strike by Israel might no longer be possible. The problem is that not everyone who deals with Iran agrees with the notion.

The first sign of this was when Strategic Affairs Minister Moshe Ya’alon said at the Herzliya Conference this month that anything built by man can be destroyed by man. Next was an article in The New York Times which quoted senior administration officials as calling Barak’s phrase an “ill defined term” and saying that it reflected a narrow Israeli take on Iran’s nuclear progress.

The bigger problem is that Barak is an enigma. When he invents such a term is it being done 1) sincerely since it reflects reality 2) to speed up a strike by Israel – possibly for political purposes so he can be re-appointed defense minister after the (hopefully successful) strike and ensuing war, or 3) to provoke the US to take tougher action against Iran? Like a lot about Barak, the answer to this question is not available.

Israel links Quds Force with attacks – Arab News

February 17, 2012

Israel links Quds Force with attacks – Arab News.

By DAN WILLIAMS | REUTERS

JERUSALEM: A senior Israeli official accused Iran’s shadowy Quds Force on Friday of masterminding a string of attacks on Israeli diplomats abroad this week, fleshing out allegations denied by Tehran.

Monday’s apparently coordinated attempts to bomb staff at Israel’s embassies in New Delhi and Tbilisi killed nobody but left the wife of the defense attaché to India wounded.

Georgian police defused the bomb in Tbilisi, while Thailand said it had uncovered an Iranian squad of saboteurs who had plotted an attack on Israeli interests Tuesday.

Iran has denied involvement but Israeli Vice Prime Minister Moshe Yaalon named Brig.-Gen. Qasem Soleimani, commander of the Quds Force, a covert arm of Iran’s Revolutionary Guards Corps, as the mastermind. “We see what is happening in India, Georgia and Thailand. It is the same pattern. The same bomb, the same lab, the same factory,” Yaalon said in a newspaper interview.

“Soleimani is subordinate to the Iranian leaders and is responsible for the special force and for subversive activity against everybody,” Yaalon told the Maariv daily, adding that the Iranian general had coordinated operations with Lebanon’s Hezbollah guerrillas.

The United States blamed the Quds Force last year for an alleged plot to assassinate the Saudi ambassador to Washington. Iran rejected that as baseless.

US officials have previously also charged Quds proxies with carrying out attacks in Iraq and Afghanistan, while a European government source said in October that Britain was looking into possible new Quds plots.

The Netanyahu government was quick to accuse Iran over the attacks, but some analysts have puzzled over why Tehran might risk what say saw as inept and rash actions — especially on the territory of its big oil client India.

Yaalon said Iran was “under economic and political pressure,” a reference to the stiffening of international sanctions meant to curb its controversial nuclear program, and the domestic tensions that they have helped stoke.

Despite Iran denying involvement in this week’s bombings, it has repeatedly vowed to avenge Israel’s alleged assassinations of several of its nuclear scientists in car bombings.

While Israel has neither confirmed nor denied having a role in the covert killings, Yaalon acknowledged that the Jewish state was seen as being responsible.

“This is their answer,” he said, referring to the embassy bombings. “They want to create deterrence, or to take revenge.”

He said Israel feared more attacks, potentially large-scale, on its interests abroad.

A counter-terrorism adviser in Netanyahu’s office warned Israelis to exercise caution while traveling, but in a briefing to the media on Friday provided no details about any geographically specific threats.

“We have generalized information that reflects mounting intentions to carry out terrorist attacks,” said the adviser, who would not be named given the sensitivity of the subject.

Report: U.S. Believes Iran Attack Inevitable

February 17, 2012

Report: U.S. Believes Iran Attack Inevitable – Middle East – News – Israel National News.

Officials in key parts of the Obama administration are convinced that sanctions will not deter Tehran from pursuing its nuclear program.
By Elad Benari, Canada

First Publish: 2/17/2012, 10:10 PM

 

Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad

Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad
Israel news photo: Flash 90

Officials in key parts of the Obama administration are increasingly convinced that sanctions will not deter Tehran from pursuing its nuclear program and believe that the U.S. will be left with no option but to launch an attack on Iran or watch Israel do so, the British Guardian reported on Friday.

According to the report, despite the fact that President Barack Obama has made it clear that he is determined to give sufficient time for measures such as the financial blockade and the looming European oil embargo, there is a strong current of opinion within the administration – including in the Pentagon and the State Department – that believes sanctions are doomed to fail, and that their principal use now is in delaying Israeli military action.

An official who is knowledgeable on Middle East policy told the Guardian, “The White House wants to see sanctions work. This is not the Bush White House. It does not need another conflict. Its 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.”

The official added, “Sanctions are all we’ve got to throw at the problem. If they fail then it’s hard to see how we don’t move to the ‘in extremis’ option.”

Another official told the newspaper that some members in the administration “don’t see a way forward,” adding that “the record shows that there is nothing to work with.”

The Guardian said that if Obama concludes that there is no choice but to attack Iran, he is unlikely to order such an attack before the presidential election in November unless there is an urgent reason to do so. The question which remains, the report noted, is whether the Israelis will hold back that long.

U.S. Defense Secretary Leon Panetta said earlier this week he does not think Israel has made a decision to launch a military strike on Iran to thwart its nuclear ambitions.

Earlier this month, however, Panetta told the Washington Post that he thought the window for an Israeli attack on Iran is between April and June.

Colin Kahl, who was U.S. deputy assistant secretary of defense for the Middle East until December, told the Guardian, “With the European oil embargo and U.S. sanctions on the central bank, the Israelis probably have to give some time now to let those crippling sanctions play out.

“If you look at the calendar,” he added, “it doesn’t make much sense that the Israelis would jump the gun. They probably need to provide a decent interval for those sanctions to be perceived as failing, because they care about whether an Israeli strike would be seen as philosophically legitimate; that is, as only having happened after other options were exhausted. So I think that will push them a little further into 2012.”

Kahl said part of Washington’s calculation is to judge whether Israel is seriously contemplating attacking Iran, or is using the threat to pressure the U.S. and Europe into confronting Tehran.

“It’s not that the Israelis believe the Iranians are on the brink of a bomb,” he said. “It’s that the Israelis may fear that the Iranian program is on the brink of becoming out of reach of an Israeli military strike, which means it creates a ‘now-or-never’ moment.”

On Friday, polls produced by the Gallup Institute and the Pew Research Center revealed that 58 percent of Americans support using force to prevent Iran from getting nukes.

When it came to the question of supporting an Israeli attack on Iran’s nuclear program, 62 percent of the Republicans favored such support as compared with 33 percent for Democrats and Independents.

(Arutz Sheva’s North American Desk is keeping you updated until the start of Shabbat in New York. The time posted automatically on all Arutz Sheva articles, however, is Israeli time.)