Archive for April 17, 2012

US lawmakers say Iran talks inadequate, urge more penalties

April 17, 2012

US lawmakers say Iran talks inad… JPost – Iranian Threat – News.

By REUTERS
04/17/2012 00:19
“US shouldn’t mistake diplomatic developments for compliance with UNSC resolutions,” Senator Kirk says; “We have five weeks to convince the Iran that (December) sanctions were only a first step,” Senator Menendez says.

An oil platform at Iran's Soroush oil fields
Photo: REUTERS/Raheb Homavand

WASHINGTON – US lawmakers on Monday pushed for more sanctions against Iran after talks between Tehran and global powers failed to stop Iran from developing its nuclear program.

Although the talks between Iran, the United States and five other world powers were described as “constructive” by the European Union’s foreign policy chief, Catherine Ashton, some US lawmakers said they were unimpressed.

“The United States should not mistake positive diplomatic dialogue for compliance with United Nations Security Council resolutions,” said a spokesman for Republican Senator Mark Kirk.

Kirk and several other US legislators have been pressuring the White House to get tougher on Iran and are pushing for a range of additional penalties that would further isolate Iran and prevent it from trading with the rest of the world.

US President Barack Obama warned on Sunday there would be more sanctions imposed on Iran if there was no breakthrough in talks in coming months.

Iran’s foreign minister said Tehran was ready to resolve nuclear issues if the West starts lifting sanctions.

‘We have five weeks’

US sanctions that Obama signed into law in December have already forced some of Iran’s biggest trading partners, such as Japan, to reduce their Iranian oil imports.

Other countries are scrambling to cut purchases of Iranian crude before a mid-year deadline. If they fail to do so, those countries could see their banks blocked from US markets.

“We have five weeks to convince the Iranians that the sanctions we passed in December were only a first step,” said Democratic Senator Robert Menendez, who along with Kirk helped design the sanctions that were signed into law in December.

Iran and the group of world powers, which comprises the five permanent members of the UN Security Council – the United States, Russia, China, France and Britain – plus Germany, have agreed to reconvene talks in Baghdad May 23.

Ashton, who leads the negotiations for the six global powers, has said she expects subsequent meetings would lead to concrete steps “towards a comprehensive negotiated solution which restores international confidence in the exclusively peaceful nature of the Iranian nuclear program.”

Many Republican and Democratic Senators support legislation that would force the United States to target Iran’s main oil and shipping companies and require publicly traded companies to disclose their Iran-related activities.

But the legislation stalled when Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid refused to allow lawmakers to consider adding further penalties to the bill.

A spokesman for Reid said he had not decided whether to bring the bill to the Senate floor during the current session. Reid has chastised Republicans for blocking the bill although there has been bipartisan support for further measures.

Menendez said it was crucial that Congress pass the legislation quickly to send a message to the Iranian government that the United States “won’t allow them to use the Baghdad talks to stall for more time to advance their covert nuclear program.”

Internet Anthropologist Think Tank: Israeli EMP attack on Iran

April 17, 2012

Internet Anthropologist Think Tank: Israeli EMP attack on Iran.

Israeli EMP ( non-nuclear ) attack on Iran.
The electromagnetic pulse generated by the blast would fry microchips, which are at the heart of electronic devices.
Without that infrastructure, the military would find it difficult to operate as well. Since microchips control vehicles, trains, and airplanes, most would become inoperable.
No one could get to work.

An EMP attack “could not only take down power grids, which are fragile anyway in this country, and telecommunications networks, and financial networks, and traffic controls and many other things, but in addition, there is a very close interrelationship among those national infrastructure capabilities,” Graham says.

“So, for example, we need telecommunications to re-establish the power network, and we need the power network to keep telecommunications going for more than a few hours. And we need the financial network to continue to operate to maintain the economy, we need the transportation system, roads, street lights, control systems, to operate just to get people to the failed power, telecommunication and other systems,” he adds.

Life after an EMP attack “would probably be something that you might imagine life to be like around the late 1800s but with several times the population we had in those days, and without the ability of the country to support and sustain all those people,” Graham says. “They wouldn’t have power. Food supplies would be greatly taken out by the lack of transportation, telecommunication, power for refrigeration and so on.”

….computers are connected to things that either are antennas or look like antennas,” he says. “Even a mouse cable looks like an antenna to an electromagnetic signal. Certainly power lines, telecommunication lines, all act as antennas to pick up EMP signals and check them in the computers. And we have done tests with computers, and EMP tends to burn out the computer circuits.”


Stock and banking transactions would also be wiped out.


SOURCE:

The EMP attack would set Iran back 5 years or more.

Enough time to replace the current regime.


Gerald

Internet Anthropologist


UPDATE:
Tehran hears a loud clap of thunder, and Iran scrambles jets
as the Israeli jets retreat back across the Iranian border.
Fluorescent lights and television sets will glow eerily bright, despite being turned off. 
The putrid smell  of ozone mixed with smoldering plastic will seep from outlet covers as electric wires arc and smoking telephone lines melt.  Your MP3 player and cell phone will get hot, their batteries overloaded
hot enough to burn your skin if left in contact with them..  Your computer, and every bit of data on it, will be gone deleted to a crisp. Suddenly you hear the birds as silence decends.  The background noise of civilization, the mufflers of autos and trucks will have stopped, engines that will never start again.  
You check your body for damage and you feel well, just an feeling of creeping disaster as you recognize
you are back in the 1800’s. 
ATMs, Banks phones, cell phones, computers, TV, radios, all transportation DEAD.
Never to run again.
Data bases wiped clean, deleted, financial records, medical records, police records and most
of the Iranian Governments electronic records destroyed, unretrievable.


The regime unable to communicate to its armys, un able to govern, Society reverts back
to tribal methods of governance the regime decapitated and replaced.


Citizens elect a new Government and world governments revert to a rescue effort
to restart the Iranian culture, minus any nuclear capability.


And not one Iranian killed by the NNEMP.






Gerald


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