Archive for March 3, 2012

Israel and Iran

March 3, 2012

Articles: Israel and Iran.

By Elise Cooper

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu is coming to America on March 5 to discuss with President Obama Iran’s continued development of its nuclear program.  The Atomic Energy Commission recently released a report stating that Iran has sharply stepped up its uranium enrichment development.  Secretary of Defense Leon Panetta believes that there is a strong likelihood that Israel will attack Iran in April, May, or June.  American Thinker interviewed some experts to get their opinion on the military option.

Israel does not want Iran to enter a “zone of immunity,” whereby enough of Iran’s nuclear materials will be buried underground and beyond the reach of Israeli airpower.  A former CIA high-ranking official noted that there are “no easy answers.  None of the options are so overwhelmingly attractive, and every option comes with large risks.”  Gilad Sharon, the son of former Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon, who advised his father and is currently a journalist, emphasized, “We cannot allow this regime to have a nuclear weapon. They arm and finance terrorism around the world.  Just look at what they recently did in India and Thailand.  Think about what would be the options and possibilities to react to Iran’s terrorist actions if they had a nuclear bomb.  The options would be very limited, and terror will bloom while they use their nuclear bomb as their umbrella.”

Everyone interviewed believes that it is not an Israeli problem, but a world problem and that any military strike would slow down Iran’s ability to have a nuclear weapon.  Elliott Abrams, a former Middle East adviser to President Bush, notes that the timeframe is very important to Israel regarding its decision.  “Israel has to ask the question: if we don’t act now, will we abandon the ability to protect ourselves and then [be] forced to leave it to the Americans?  Currently, no one knows who will be the next U.S. president, and will that person be willing to use force against Iran?”

Should Israel wait to see if the sanctions stop Iran from pursuing this goal?  All agreed that Iran is being hurt economically, and the sanctions could work if the timetable is unlimited.  Former CIA Director Michael Hayden would like to “accelerate the sanctions.  A lot of them do not take effect until this summer.  We should turn up the heat.  By doing this, the Iranians would not have the time to cushion the blow.  The current policy of sanctions seems to be happening in slow motion instead of all at once.”

Lately Iran is talking about coming back to the negotiating table.  However, Congressman Mike Rogers (R-MI), chairman of the House Intelligence Committee, believes that negotiations are “only a good move for Iran.  They can use it to stall.  If we are to negotiate Iran must come to the table with the announcement that they are stopping their program.  They need to do it the way Libya did, giving up its nuclear program.”

According to Abrams, America and its allies have emboldened Iran, as the Iranians have killed U.S. soldiers in Afghanistan and Iraq; undertaken a plot to kill the Saudi ambassador in Washington, D.C.; and recently attempted to kill Israeli diplomats.  “Yet, what price have they paid?  We have not responded to these threats when they don’t have a nuclear weapon, so would we be more likely to confront them when they do?  Several of our presidents, including Obama, have said that a nuclear Iran is flatly unacceptable and [that] they will prevent it.  Yet Iran might miscalculate and think America and Israel are not serious about a military option.  Think about it.  If they achieve their goal, they [will] have done it right in the teeth of America’s pledges to prevent it.”

The current goal of any military action is to substantially delay the ability for Iran to have a nuclear weapon.  This option could be successful, according to the former CIA official, because it would buy a lot of time since the program will not be easily reconstructed.  If Israel does strike, what are the aftereffects — the second, third, and fourth moves, as Hayden noted?  How do the Iranians react, what do Hamas and Hezb’allah do, and what role does America play in all of this?  Hayden, Rogers, and Abrams are not convinced that Hezb’allah will take retaliatory action or is a puppet of Iran.  The argument is that the Syrian government has its own troubles and will not be able to rebuild Hezb’allah, unlike the previous wars with Israel, if they provoke a new war.  They would hope that there will not be much world outcry and that the U.S. will block any sanctions in the U.N.  Abrams also suggests that Israeli action and the resulting time delay could bring about an “Iranian Spring” — i.e., a regime change.  The new regime will decide to eliminate its nuclear weapons program just as Brazil and the Ukraine did.

The downside of this option is that the mullahs will use it for propaganda purposes.  They would convince even those Iranians who are currently not anti-Israel that the program is needed and that there should be major retaliatory action.  Other Arab nations could have people on the street rioting to destroy Israel, as they see it as a Western society attacking a Muslim society.  Hayden sees the biggest danger being long-term terrorism, since “as DNI Clapper pointed out, we cannot rule out Hezb’allah organized attacks even here in the U.S.”

If Iran were to develop nuclear weapons, a former global strategist who was a special assistant to the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff said that America needs to emphasize loud and clear that Iran chose this path and that they are now in the “big boys’ club.  We should extend American nuclear weaponry right to Iran’s border.  Show them that they are on the edge of annihilation.  We need to extend the pressure by letting them know we have first-strike capabilities if we even think that they are launching a missile or plane.  We are not going to allow them to have fun with Israel and our other allies by making them go on constant alert.  Any attack would risk their entire civilization.  Remember this government’s top priority is regime survival.”

Another problem is that other countries in the area might not trust the United States, creating a nuclear arms race whereby more and more nations would attempt to have a nuclear program to protect themselves.  Rogers strongly believes that “Saudi Arabia, Turkey, and Egypt would get a nuclear weapon.  In the middle of all this, the president has announced that he is taking our arsenal down to a very small number.  This puts us in a very detrimental position when it comes to our overall national security and protecting our allies’ security.”

Congressman Rogers summarized everyone’s opinion: “Iran has said if they get nuclear weapons, they intend to use them on Israel.  We have to take them at their word.  We should not minimize Israel’s concerns.  Both Israel and Iran need to believe [that] the president is serious about the military option because currently this administration has put our allies and us in a very weak position,” with few good answers.

FM: Israel willing to help Syrian refugees

March 3, 2012

FM: Israel willing to help Syrian refugees – Israel News, Ynetnews.

Avigdor Lieberman says Israel willing to provide Syrian refugees with humanitarian aid immediately; stresses Jerusalem has no interest in intervening in Damascus’ affairs

News agencies

“Israel willing to provide Syrian refugees with humanitarian aid immediately,” Foreign Minister Avigdor Lieberman said.

An official Foreign Ministry statement released Friday, while Lieberman is on a state visit in Bulgaria, added that Israel was willing to relay the aid via one of the United Nations’ agencies, or through any other international organization.AP contributed to this report

Israel is interested solely in relieving the humanitarian crisis in Syria and has no interest in intervening in the country’s internal affairs, the statement said.

Liberman told Bulgarian President Rosen Plevneliev, with whom he met in Sofia on Friday, that “it is impossible for the international community to resign itself to the daily killing of innocent people in Syria.”

The Red Cross has been denied access to various parts of Syria, including Homs, where Syrian President Bashar Assad‘s troops are said to be “massacring men, women and children indiscriminately.”

The UN’s Humanitarian Commission says over 7,500 people have been killed in the near-year long uprising against Assad.

Syria executes 47 soldiers for defection attempt

March 3, 2012

Syria executes 47 soldiers for defection attempt – Haaretz Daily Newspaper | Israel News.

As the international community continues to chatter, the Assad regime continues to commit atrocities in Syria; Turkey tries to convince Iran to cut support for Assad.

By Zvi Bar’el

As the number of deaths in Syria continues to grow, the international community can’t formulate a practical decision on military intervention, the establishment of security zones for civilians fleeing from violence, or even the dispatching of secure humanitarian aid.

 

On Saturday, it was reported that 47 Syrian soldiers who tried to defect in the city of Idlib were executed by Syrian security forces. According to reports from opposition activists, civilians are being executed and kidnapped constantly and the Red Cross can’t reach the Baba Amr neighborhood in Homs to assist the wounded. In some places, there is no water and there is a severe shortage of basic food items, and civilians are not able to escape areas under attack due to the massive presence of Syrian forces.

 

Syria October 1, 2011 (AP) In photo released by Syria’s official news agency SANA, Syrian army soldiers carry coffins of comrades killed in recent violence.
Photo by: AP

 

In the face of this massacre, civilians continue to demonstrate against the Assad regime in the main cities of Aleppo and Damascus, alongside dozens of demonstrations in cities like Homs, Daraa, Idlib and Latakia. But the Free Syrian Army, which withdrew from the Baba Amr neighborhood that was captured by the Fourth Brigade of the Syrian Army commanded by Maher al-Assad, cannot protect the demonstrators. The request of the Free Syrian Army commander, General Riad al-Asad, to receive arms and equipment was met with a hesitant response by the Arab League, especially Egypt which fears that arming demonstrators may cause a civil war and led to the disintegration of Syria. On the contrary, Gulf states, led by Saudi Arabia, Qatar and Kuwait, are unequivocally demanding to arm the Free Syrian Army and reportedly are also financing large-scale arms purchases. But the main problem is the transfer of weapons to the rebels, which is currently done in a haphazard manner by smugglers in Lebanon and Iraq.

 

Turkey, which could serve as an effective conduit of arms to the rebels, is preventing arms transfers until a decision is made by the UN, and is trying to convince Russia and Iran to change their position. Turkish President Abdullah Gul said on Friday that ultimately Iran and Russia will realize they have no choice but to join international efforts against the Assad regime.

 

The European Union has recognized the Syrian National Council – the largest opposition body – as the official representative of Syria and Libya offered it $100 million in financial assistance and permission to open an office in its territory, but these decisions have little practical significance. This is because the opposition is unable to speak with one voice. For example, after 20 of the 270 members of the national council left and announced the establishment of a military council, they were met with resistance and a lack of cooperation from the Free Syrian Army.

 

Even the statement of President Obama that “the days of Bashar Assad are numbered” sounds empty in Syria, since there is no plan of action behind it that shows how the American government will take out the Syrian president.  Also, Syrians don’t believe that salvation will come from condemnatory messages from the UN chief, the proposal to create a humanitarian conference for Syria or the Friends of Syria conference to be held in another week in Istanbul.

 

Meanwhile, Assad can continue to bomb systematically, kill indiscriminately and turn Syria into a “new Srebrenica”, as it was termed by a Gulf Cooperation Council representative in remarks at the UN.

Some in the Syrian opposition believe that the survival of the Assad regime serves the interests of the U.S. and Israel, as Washington wants to use Syria as a card in negotiations with Iran on the nuclear issue and Israel sees the Assad regime as a security guarantee on the Syrian border. The Syrian regime, however, holds the opposite theory, that the U.S. and Israel are trying to topple Assad. As proof, it reports on the presence of Israeli weapons in Homs.

Syrian blocks Red Cross access to Homs

March 3, 2012

Syrian blocks Red Cross access to Homs – Israel News, Ynetnews.

Damascus forces deny humanitarian aid convoy access to war-torn area. British journalist who escaped Homs: Assad’s troops performing indiscriminate massacre of men, women and children

Associated Press

 

The Syrian government blocked a Red Cross convoy from delivering badly needed food, medical supplies and blankets to a rebellious neighborhood of Homs, cut off by a month-long siege.

On Friday, activists accused regime troops who overran the shattered district of execution-style killings and a scorched-earth campaign.

Humanitarian conditions in the former rebel stronghold of Baba Amr have been described as catastrophic, with extended power outages, shortages of food and water, and no medical care for the sick and wounded.

British Prime Minister David Cameron called Homs “a scene of medieval barbarity.”

Syrian government forces took control of Baba Amr on Thursday after rebels fled the district under constant bombardment that activists said killed hundreds of people since early February. The Syrian regime has said it was fighting “armed gangs” in Baba Amr, and had vowed to “cleanse” the neighborhood.

“It is unacceptable that people who have been in need of emergency assistance for weeks have still not received any help,” said Jakob Kellenberger, president of the International Committee of the Red Cross.

The Red Cross said it had received permission from the government of President Bashar Assad on Thursday to enter Baba Amr, on the western side of Homs, and a convoy of seven trucks with 15 tons of humanitarian aid was poised to do so, but authorities then blocked their access.

There was no explanation from the government about the change. “We are staying in Homs tonight in the hope of entering Baba Amr in the very near future,” Kellenberger said.

UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon called on Syria to give humanitarian workers immediate access to people who desperately need aid.

“The images which we have seen in Syria are atrocious,” said Ban. “It’s totally unacceptable, intolerable. How, as a human being, can you bear this situation?”
ההרס ברחובות חומס (צילום: AFP PHOTO / YOUTUBE)

Homs (Photo: AFP/YouTube)

UN Humanitarian Chief Valerie Amos has been trying, without success, to get permission from the Syrian government to visit, and Ban said Assad’s regime should let her into the country to assess the situation without delay.

British photographer Paul Conroy, who was wounded by shelling in Baba Amr and trapped there for several days until he escaped, told Britain’s Sky News that “It’s not a war. It’s a massacre – indiscriminate massacre of men, women and children.”

The European Union committed itself to document war crimes in Syria to set the stage for a “day of reckoning” for the country’s leadership, in the way that former Yugoslav leaders were tried for war crimes in the 1990s by a special UN tribunal.

EU leaders in Brussels condemned Assad’s regime for its nearly yearlong crackdown on an uprising that began with mostly peaceful protests but has veered toward civil war, with Syrian forces firing heavy artillery against civilians.

The UN has estimated that more than 7,500 people have been killed, while activists put the death toll at over 8,000.

Sunny, with clouds on horizon for PM, Obama

March 3, 2012

http://www.jpost.com/Features/FrontLines/Article.aspx?id=260127

By HERB KEINON 03/01/2012 22:32
Diplomacy: With electoral considerations, along with Iran very much on both their minds, it’s shaping up to be the warmest meeting yet – at least in public

Netanyahu and Obama. By Jim Young/ Reuters

Like classic American football games that are known by short titles – “The Ice Bowl,” “The Immaculate Reception,” “The Drive” – some of the more memorable White House meetings between Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu and US President Barack Obama lend themselves to this type of labeling.

There was “The Ambush” – that first meeting in May 2009, just weeks after both men took office, when Obama was determined to establish new rules of engagement (some would less charitably say he wanted to put the new prime minister in his place), and blind-sided Netanyahu with a call for a complete settlement freeze.

There was “The Disrespect” – that memorable White House meeting in March 2010, soon after the blowup with the US over the announcement of plans to build in Jerusalem’s Ramat Shlomo neighborhood that took place during Vice President Joe Biden’s visit.

As the Washington Post’s Jackson Diehl wrote of Obama’s treatment of Netanyahu at the time – refusing to allow non-official photographers to record the meeting, and issuing no statement afterward – Obama treated Netanyahu “as if he were an unsavory third-world dictator, needed for strategic reasons, but conspicuously held at arms length.”

And then there was “The Lecture” – the last meeting at the White House in May 2011, where Netanyahu turned the professorial tables on Obama and lectured him about why exactly it was impossible for Israel to return to the “indefensible” pre-June 5, 1967 lines, which Obama had called for the day before, albeit, with mutually-agreed land swaps.

And now the upcoming parley between the two, the ninth since May 2009, and likely the last before the US elections in November. How will that be remembered? Chances are good that this meeting will be remembered as “The Concord.” For even though there are differences between Israel and the US over the best policy to take toward Iran, and even though the two men have not developed chemistry or an abiding personal friendship over the last three years, they both have an interest in radiating unity, harmony and concord after their head-to-head talks.

For Obama it is a simple question of electoral mathematics.

Eight months before the November elections, he will do everything he can to show his support and friendship for Israel. He will articulate it at length during his Sunday speech to the AIPAC annual policy conference, and he will follow-up with signaling friendship and support for Israel at the press opportunity following his meeting with Netanyahu.

Despite polls now bouncing his way as a result of an uptick in the US economy, Obama needs Jewish voters and donors come November. In 2010 he captured 78 percent of the Jewish vote, but this time the polls are showing discontent among a good number of Jews.

A Pew Research Poll on trends in party identification by religion from last month showed that Jews supporting or leaning Republican, jumped from 20% in 2008, to 29% in 2011, while those supporting or leaning Democratic fell from 72% in 2008, to 65% in 2011. That is troubling news for the Obama campaign.

In key battleground states like Florida, Ohio, Pennsylvania and even Nevada – where there are significant Jewish populations – the shift by just a couple percentage points of the Jewish vote from Obama to his Republican opponent could make a huge difference in a close election.

And not only among voters. Jews are major contributors to the Democratic Party, and the Obama campaign wants to ensure that steady flow of funds continues. On Monday, according to Politico, Obama held a “Jewish constituency focused” fundraiser in Washington that included Obama and Jewish leaders.

According to the report, 25 supporters paid $35,800 to attend. That adds up to $825,000.

One need not go too far out on a limb to assume that for some of those 25 supporters – and hundreds of other Jewish financial contributors, the Obama campaign is eyeing – Israel is an important issue.

Obama and his staff know very well that despite Obama campaign clips showing Netanyahu and Defense Minister Ehud Barak saying what a good friend of Israel he is, and despite the oft repeated mantra – both in the US and Israel – that the Israeli- US security relationship has never been better, many American-Jewish voters still suspect Obama, and think that his heart is “not in the right place” when it comes to Israel.

Netanyahu’s visit, and the AIPAC appearance, gives him a prized opportunity to demonstrate the opposite.

Netanyahu also has an interest in a harmonious visit for political reasons. The night before Netanyahu went to the AIPAC conference last time, in May 2011, Obama gave a speech outlining his vision of the Mideast and talked about a return to the 1967 lines, with mutually-agreed swaps. Even before he got on the airplane, Netanyahu issued an extremely harsh response, signaling that he was interested in tangling publicly with the president. The next day they met and, afterward, Netanyahu delivered “The Lecture,” as cameras whirled.

That visit came just days after hundreds of Palestinians rushed the country’s northern borders on “Nakaba Day,” and Netanyahu calculated there would be huge public support for saying clearly to Obama that Israel could not return to the 1967 lines.

Netanyahu’s comments were crafted carefully to align with the vulnerability felt by many in the country after the border incidents.

And he calculated correctly. A Haaretz poll shortly after the visit showed that his popularity skyrocketed after that Washington trip.

Now, however, Netanyahu’s political calculations are a bit different.

A Geocartography poll last week showed that if elections were held today, Likud would win 39 seats.

Netanyahu is going to Washington in a strong political position: his coalition is solid, and it seems safe to assume there will be elections before the end of 2013 only if he wants them.

And if Netanyahu does decide to call new elections before the end of his term – many are discussing the possibility that he might like to see them before the end of the year – he is vulnerable is to criticism that he caused a rift with the US; that Jerusalem’s relations with Washington are at their lowest ebb in years; and that the intimacy Israel enjoyed with the Oval Office during the Bush and Clinton years faded away under his watch.

A good, friendly, warm meeting with Obama on Monday can be used by Netanyahu to dispel those charges. Obviously, Obama is not the only one with electoral considerations; Netanyahu has them as well.

For the last few weeks, the issue that seemed to threaten to derail the harmony was not the Palestinian diplomatic track, or the settlements – as has been the case in the past – but Iran. Media outlets in both countries reported a great deal of daylight between the sides over how to approach Iran. These reports were fueled by public comments made by Gen. Martin Dempsey, chairman of the US Joint Chiefs of Staff, who said it would not be “prudent” now to attack Iran, and who characterized Iran as a “rational” actor.

While the US and Israel share the same goal – that Iran should not gain nuclear weapons – and are in pretty close agreement as to how far the Iranians are in their progress toward achieving nuclear capability, their disagreement centers around that point when sanctions need to be ditched and military action taken.

The Israeli position is that military action should be taken before Iran has all the technological capabilities needed to assemble a bomb, while the American position is that a strike is needed only after the political decision in Tehran is made to put together a nuclear device.

And that is a fundamental difference, because Iran could have all the bomb-making capabilities – even begin fortifying their installations to make them invulnerable to attack – and yet only decide to actually assemble a device years down the road.

It is this difference that has very much been in the air over the last few weeks, as US and Israeli officials traveled back and forth to each others’ capitals. And it is a difference that threatens to cast a shadow over the upcoming meeting.

Yet, an important indication of how the sides are keen on dismantling potential land mines on the road to successful Obama- Netanyahu talks Monday came already on Wednesday.

Speaking before the US House Committee on Foreign Affairs, US Secretary of State Hilary Clinton inched toward Israel’s position saying, “It’s absolutely clear that the president’s policy is to prevent Iran from having nuclear-weapons capability.”

With these words she clearly set the US “red line” way before Iran actually makes a decision to assemble a bomb.

And Dempsey, in testimony the same day before the House Budget Committee, said regarding Iran that, “There’s no group in America more determined to prevent Iran from achieving a nuclear weapon than the Joint Chiefs of Staff. I assure you of that.”

Is it coincidence that these statements were made just prior to the Obama-Netanyahu meeting? Probably not. Rather, it is a sign that the public parts of this meeting will be harmonious.

What happens in private, however, is a different question altogether.

Netanyahu warns against renewed talks with Iran

March 3, 2012

Netanyahu warns against renewed t… JPost – Diplomacy & Politics.

By HERB KEINON 03/03/2012 01:29
During visit to Canada, Netanyahu says he is not looking for US “red lines” on Tehran, nor will he spell out his own.

Netanyahu shakes hands with Candian counterpart
By REUTERS

OTTAWA – Four days before a much anticipated meeting with US President Barack Obama expected to focus on Iran, Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu spelled out Friday the conditions Israel felt Iran should meet before the world could once again negotiate with Tehran over its nuclear program.

“Right now Iran is feeling the pressure of economic sanctions, and it could try to evade that pressure by entering talks,” Netanyahu told a press conference after emerging from a meeting with Canadian Prime Minister Stephen Harper.

Israel wanted to see a “peaceful solution” to the Iranian crisis, he said, but Tehran must be kept from using the negotiations again to gain more time and advance its nuclear program.

To avoid “falling into this trap,” Netanyahu said, the international community should place three conditions on Tehran before entering negotiations: Iran must dismantle its nuclear facility at Qom; stop all uranium enrichment inside the country; and remove all uranium already enriched beyond 3.5% out of the country.

“Anything short of that would enable Iran to continue its nuclear program by other means, which is exactly what they have done up to now,” Netanyahu said.

The Prime Minister’s comments came amid voices being raised in Iran about a willingness to negotiate over its nuclear program, as the latest round of stiff sanctions is being felt inside the Islamic Republic.

Netanyahu dismissed speculation that during his meeting with Obama on Monday he will ask for the US to spell out Washington’s red lines regarding Iran, beyond which it would consider military action.

“I have no intention of establishing red lines for the US,”Netanyahu said, adding that Israel wanted to maintain its own freedom of action “against threats to eliminate us from the map.” Netanyahu’s comment was an acknowledgment that if Israel asked for a great deal of specificity in US plans, American would then ask the same of Israel, thereby significantly reducing the country’s maneuverability.

Harper, considered perhaps Israel’s best friend among the leaders of the world, skirted the issue when asked directly whether a preemptive Israeli strike on Iran would be acceptable to Canada.

Saying that Canada has been “very clear about the dangers of a nuclear armed Iran, its intentions and capabilites,” Harper added that in terms of “hypothetical situations” Canada’s position was clear: “We of course recognize Israel’s right to defend itself as a sovereign state, as a Jewish state. That said, we want to see a peaceful resolution of this issue, and we want to see every action taken to get a peaceful solution to the situation.”

Senior officials in the Prime Minister’s Office described the reception Netanyahu received in Ottawa, including a welcoming ceremony with military honors at Parliament Hill, as “exceptionally warm.”

Netanyahu acknowledged the extremely strong Canadian-Israeli ties, telling Harper that he was carrying “very warm feelings” for Canada “not only from myself, and my delegation, but also from the people of Israel.

“Perhaps when we speak of the difficulties in our area and troubles we all face, it is particularly encouraging to come to Canada, and later on the United States, and know that I stand among friends who share the same values and the same goals. You are such a friend,” Netanyahu said to Harper.

Harper met Netanyahu for a private meeting before the press conference, and then hosted him for an informal luncheon afterward. On Saturday he and his wife invited Netanyahu and his wife to lunch at his official residence.

Netanyahu, while still in Ottawa Sunday morning, is expected to listen to Obama’s speech, before meeting Canadian Jewish leaders, and then Opposition head Bob Rae. He is scheduled to leave Ottawa for Washington late Sunday afternoon.