Archive for June 7, 2012

US to blame for inadequate international response on Syria, says former Israeli ambassador

June 7, 2012

US to blame for inadequate international response on Syria, says former Israeli ambassador | The Times of Israel.

  • Thursday, June 7, 2012
  • Sivan 17, 5772
  • 7:32 pm IST
Itamar Rabinovich (photo credit: Moshe Shai/Flash90)

Itamar Rabinovich (photo credit: Moshe Shai/Flash90)

A distinguished former Israeli ambassador to the United States on Thursday accused the Obama administration of prime responsibility for the international community’s failure to stop the killings in Syria.

Itamar Rabinovich, who was also Israel’s chief negotiator under prime minister Yitzhak Rabin in abortive efforts at peacemaking with Syria in 1992-95, said that “it’s not Russia that’s preventing intervention. Russia is the pretext, the alibi” for the lack of substantive international action. “If someone wanted to ratchet up the pressure on Syria, they could,” he said.

The real block, he told Army Radio, is the US government. “The Obama administration is not looking for another major Middle East crisis before November.”

Asked therefore whether Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, despite her bitter rhetoric against Damascus, did not actually intend to take any action now, Rabinovich said, “Later, after November.”

Rabinovich, a former president of Tel Aviv University and a visiting professor at the Kennedy School of Government at Harvard University, expressed his dismay at the world’s response to the bloodshed in Syria and said that country was already “in a state of anarchy,” with “Sunnis and Alawites massacring each other.”

He said President Bashar Assad was “living on borrowed time,” and that Israeli security officials ought to be taking precautions against the possibility of Assad trying to draw Israel into the conflict. Although it was not highly likely, he said, they should take into account that Assad might resort “to some desperate action” as he strives to retain power.

Jeffrey Goldberg – New Report Finds an Israeli Attack on Iran to be a Comprehensively Bad Idea

June 7, 2012

International – Jeffrey Goldberg – New Report Finds an Israeli Attack on Iran to be a Comprehensively Bad Idea – The Atlantic.Jun 6 2012, 3:05 PM ET 118

Colin Kahl, who until recently served as the Pentagon’s top Middle East policy official, is just out with an exhaustive and authoritative report on the Iranian nuclear challenge. The report, written with Melissa G. Dalton and Matthew Irvine and published by the Center for a New American Security (where Kahl is a senior fellow), argues fairly persuasively that an Israeli attack on Iran’s nuclear facilities — an attack they seem to believe is highly plausible, if I’m reading them correctly — would have a great many negative ramifications.

Their conclusions are well thought-out and argued (even the ones with which I disagree). The authors believe, among other things, that:

1) The Iranian threat is serious but not imminent;

2)  Iran’s leaders are rational enough to believe that they would neither use a nuclear weapon or give one to terrorists (I’m not so sure they’re right on the first point, but pretty sure they’re right on the second — makes no sense to give your most prized weapon to unstable, and possibly semi-independent actors);

3) An Israeli-Iranian nuclear rivalry creates the risk of an inadvertent nuclear exchange (they downplay this risk somewhat, but not too much;  I tend to think that inadvertent escalation to nuclear exchange is the prime reason to keep the bomb out of Iran’s hands);

4) Containment of a nuclear Iran is not a great option for the U.S. (I’m with them on that).

On the one hand, the report represents mainstream American defense thinking on this question. On the other hand, it is not at all mindless and reflexive, unlike much of what I read on this subject these days.

I thought it would be interesting to have a conversation about the report with Kahl, who is now at Georgetown University. What follows is our exchange, which is long, but seriously, read the whole damn thing — it’s important. I should also note that Kahl is the same guy who spent the past two years working assiduously from inside the Pentagon to strengthen and deepen America’s security relationship with Israel. Or, to put it another way, his opposition to an Israeli strike on Iran’s nuclear program is not motivated by animus toward Israel, but by a concern that Israel stands to do something precipitous that could bring harm to itself, and accelerate Iran’s drive toward a bomb.

Jeffrey Goldberg: You argue that an Israeli strike on Iran’s nuclear facilities would almost certainly be disastrous for Israel. In a previous conversation (on Twitter), you suggested that Israel’s only real choice is to trust that the United States will prevent Iran from crossing the nuclear threshold. Israeli leaders point have pointed out to me that the United States wanted neither Pakistan nor North Korea to cross the nuclear threshold, but they did anyway. Why is this situation different? If you were an Israeli leader (or a Saudi, or Emirati, leader) would you trust the United States to use all elements of its national power to stop Iran from going nuclear?

Colin Kahl: Good question. I think there are several reasons Israel should trust the United States on the issue.

First, this administration has been pretty clear where it stands. Obama has consistently said that an Iranian nuclear weapon is unacceptable. He clearly prefers a diplomatic solution, believes a negotiated settlement is possible and the most sustainable outcome, and thinks there is time to pursue this course. Force should be a last resort, and there is still a window of opportunity to find a peaceful way out of this crisis. But Obama has also made clear that all options, including military force, are on the table to prevent Iran from developing nuclear weapons. In both his interview with you in March and his AIPAC speech, Obama said he does not favor a policy of nuclear containment. And his Secretary of Defense has stated more than once that Iran’s development of a nuclear weapon would represent a “red line” for the United States.

Second, historically Obama is a guy who means what he says, and does what he says. And Obama has consistently matched his words with his deeds on Iran. During the 2008 campaign, he said he was willing to enter into unconditional negotiations to test the Iranian regime’s willingness to reach a diplomatic agreement, and that is what he did in 2009. When Iran proved unwilling and incapable of responding, the president said he would work to forge a historic consensus to increase pressure on the regime — and that too is exactly what he did in 2010-2011, working with the UN, international partners, and with the U.S. Congress to put in place the toughest sanctions Iran has ever faced.

Indeed, much tougher sanctions than the previous, ostensibly more “hawkish” Bush administration was ever able to accomplish. Israel and other partners should trust that he is willing to use all elements of national power to prevent Iran from developing nuclear weapons because he is already doing it. Sanctions, diplomatic efforts to isolate the Iranian regime, and intelligence activities have all been used and integrated toward that objective.

And, on the military front, when Obama says all options are on the table, he has actually backed that with concrete actions. Even as U.S. forces completed their drawdown from Iraq, he authorized the re-posturing of U.S. forces in the Gulf to ensure they were set to deal with any scenario, defend our partners, and check Iranian aggression in the region. He deployed a second aircraft carrier, improved U.S. air and missile defenses in the region, bolstered the defensive capabilities of Gulf states (including a record-setting arms package to the Saudis), and done more than any previous administration, in terms of security assistance and defense cooperation, for Israel’s security. Moreover, Gen. Martin Dempsey, the current Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, has noted on more than one occasion that the United States military is prepared and has a viable plan for any Iran contingency, and Secretary Panetta and others have pointed to the unique capabilities the United States military has developed–most notably the Massive Ordinance Penetrator–to ensure the maximum prospects for success should they be called upon. So, when Obama says “all options are on the table,” these aren’t just words — the options are viable and the table has been set.

Third, Obama recognizes the threat a nuclear-armed Iran would pose to Israel’s security and to the stability of a region that is absolutely vital to U.S. interests. He also believes that if Iran is allowed to cross the nuclear threshold it would do grave damage to the non-proliferation regime — an issue that he cares passionately about. Because, in Obama’s view, it is a vital U.S. interest to prevent Iran from acquiring nuclear weapons, one does not have to trust that he will take all necessary actions for Israel’s sake — one only has to trust that he will act in the U.S. national interest. He would clearly prefer not to use force — and has cautioned against cavalier and “loose” talk of war given the costs and uncertainties.

But Obama has shown, repeatedly, that he is willing to use force in the U.S. national interest — whether unilaterally or as part of a multilateral coalition. Don’t take my word on that front — just ask Osama Bin Laden or Muammar Gaddafi. Again, Obama clearly prefers a diplomatic solution, but no one should question the man’s mettle on issues like this.

Finally, I think the intelligence picture, the level of inspections, and the international focus is much greater in the case of Iran than was the case with either Pakistan or North Korea. As such, I think it is much less likely that Iran could slip across the nuclear threshold without us knowing about it in time to act. At the moment, for example, it would take at least four months for the Iranians to enrich to weapons-grade level, and they would have to do it at declared facilities — so they would get caught. Moreover, Western intelligence services have a pretty good track record of uncovering Iranian covert nuclear activities (e.g., Natanz and Fordow). I don’t mean to be sanguine about the intel picture — it is clearly imperfect and our assessments are fallible. But we are in a much better position to detect an Iranian break-out in time to act than was the case with other examples — and, importantly, we are already focusing all elements of national power on the issue so we are poised and capable of responding quickly in the event that the Iranians are foolish enough to try to dash to a bomb anytime soon.

JG: Okay, imagine you’re an intelligence officer with responsibility for Iran. You are handed evidence that Iran might — might — be trying a nuclear sneak-out. The evidence, like most such evidence in these cases, is ambiguous. You also know that if you, and your colleagues, were to reach the conclusion that Iran is making a dash for the bomb, you might be responsible for starting a war (intelligence officials certainly remember Iraq.) What I’m getting at is this: The U.S. intelligence community might understand that something nefarious is going on in Iran, but it might take months to process the intel, and the process might become politicized, precisely because the stakes are so high. So isn’t there a chance that even if we know more-or-less that Iran is making a move, we might not be able to respond in time?

CK: It depends on what the evidence is. Some types of evidence would be relatively clear. The most important evidence of a decision to go for a bomb would be the nature of enrichment activities — and, at least for now, these would likely be seen with enough time to react. If Iran diverted its existing stockpile of low-enriched uranium and began enriching above 90 percent or kicked out IAEA inspectors, that would both be noticed and be evidence of an intent to weaponize, and there would be enough time to react. Discovery of a wholly operational covert enrichment site (as distinct from Fordow, which was a structure under construction with no centrifuges in it when it was uncovered) might be another sign that Khamenei had made a decision to weaponize.

Where it gets trickier is if we started to see evidence that Khamenei had reversed the 2003 halt order on structured weaponization work (the order discussed by the 2007 unclassified NIE key judgments and (according to press reports) the 2010 update, and confirmed by the IAEA). We’d likely see it, but some of the evidence could be ambiguous and debated. That said, because of the technical hurdles (beyond just enrichment) that Iran would have to overcome to weaponize, current estimates suggest it would take a year from a decision to go for a bomb to generate a crude device. And that assumes a crash weaponization program. The more they rush, the more we’ll see it — and a year is a long time.

Still, at the end of the day, it is probably easier to see evidence of steps to produce weapons-grade uranium than it is to detect every element of covert weapons-related research and development, which is why it is important to limit Iran’s ability to substantially shrink their dash time to producing weapons-grade uranium. That is why the 20 percent LEU issue is so important — because, if they get one or more bombs worth of 20 percent uranium-235 they could shrink the time required to make the fissile material for the first bomb from four months to a couple of months. Similarly, if Iran began to install next generation centrifuges — which they are testing now, but have experienced problems with — on an industrial scale at Natanz or Fordow this could also shrink the dash time, because these machines are 3-4 times as efficient as the current models. If Iran were to successfully accomplish these steps, shrinking their dash time to a month or a few weeks, then you start getting into the margin for error where inspectors might miss something.

JG: The Iranian regime is ultimately interested in its own survival, and so direct pressure on the regime might force it to reconsider its nuclear goals. Do you think there’s an appetite in Washington for regime-destabilization, and do you think it could work — if not to bring down the regime, than to force it to deal with the demands of the international community vis-a-vis its nuclear ambitions?

CK: There is an important distinction between a strategy that aims to hold the regime “at risk” — what I would call a compellence strategy–and a policy that actually aims at regime change. The former increases the costs to the Iranian regime to the point that it forces a difficult strategic choice–in this case a scaling back of their nuclear ambitions–that they would otherwise prefer not to make. Unprecedented sanctions and the credible threat of force can hold the Iranian regime at risk and thus help compel a change in behavior — but only because the regime has a way out. If the regime changes its behavior, the pressure is lifted.

In contrast, a “regime change” campaign aims to topple the regime, regardless of what they do. It is grounded in the view that the current regime is irreconcilable and must fall. Applied to Iran, however, this approach is deeply problematic. For one thing, it would provide no positive incentive for the supreme leader to strike a nuclear bargain because doing so would get him nothing–it wouldn’t be enough to save the regime. And, worse, it would validate the Islamic Republic’s existing narrative about Western motivations and encourage Tehran to move more quickly for a bomb to produce a nuclear deterrent against externally-imposed regime change and in order to invest the international community in the continued stability of the regime. Moreover, if the policy succeeds, there is no guarantee that the regime that followed would be better–it could be an IRGC-dominated military dictatorship, for example. Or what follows might simply be state collapse and chaos.

So, while I think it is important to hold the regime at risk–and I think elements of the current strategy do that, or are at least starting to do that–I think a policy of regime change would be deeply counterproductive to resolving the current nuclear crisis.

JG: Why wouldn’t a regime change program help compel the Supreme Leader to alter his nuclear course? Why wouldn’t he trade aspects of his nuclear program for a Western promise to desist from regime-change operations?

CK: It completely depends on what the specific actions are. A lot of actions aimed at regime change might convince the supreme leader that we are committed to his demise no matter what he does — making a deal less likely, and a bomb more likely. Better to increase pressure in a way that holds the regime at risk — through tough sanctions and leaving military action on the table — rather than make regime change our policy. This gives Khamenei a way out.

JG: A final question: How do we know that Iran would respond to a strike against its nuclear facilities by doubling-down on its program and rushing to breakout? Is there a chance Iran might simply decide that a nuclear program isn’t worth it? Asked another way, is there anything that Israel or the U.S. could do to thwart Iran’s nuclear ambitions post-strike? Would this require follow-up strikes, or is there a non-military option?

CK: We don’t know anything for sure, but the most likely outcome of a strike is an attempt by the Iranian regime to rapidly rebuild its program. The regime is currently pursuing a nuclear “hedging” strategy in order to give it the technical capability to produce nuclear weapons at some point in the future if the supreme leader decides to do so. One motivation for pursuing this strategy is to provide a deterrent against future external threats to the regime, including a possible attack by Israel or the United States. Khamenei looks around and sees Muammar Gaddafi gone and Saddam Hussein gone, but the North Korean regime still around and he likely concludes that the biggest reason for the difference is the fact that North Korea developed nuclear weapons and the other two states had their programs removed. A second motivation for seeking the capability to produce nuclear weapons is likely the hope that it would boost Iran’s prestige and Tehran’s potential for coercive diplomacy, facilitating expanded Iranian influence and advancing the regime’s ambitions for regional hegemony.

A strike would confirm the regime’s vulnerability and buttress the perception of the unrelenting hostility of foreign powers, which would provide decisive support to those inside the regime arguing that only a nuclear deterrent could prevent future attacks and arm Iran with what it needs to lead the resistance against the West. At the same time, an attack would allow Iran to play the victim, kick out the IAEA, and perhaps leave the NPT all together. And, in the absence of inspectors on the ground, Iranian leaders would likely calculate that they could rebuild their program more easily and engage in illicit activities without being detected. An Israeli attack would also shatter the international consensus that is currently slowing Iran’s nuclear progress through sanctions and other counter-proliferation activities.

This is not purely hypothetical; we have a past example of this happening. As we discuss at length in our report, Israel’s 1981 strike on Osirak did not end Saddam Hussein’s nuclear program and actually led him to double down, devote more resources and better organize his program, and create a widely dispersed clandestine nuclear program that — by the time of the 1991 Gulf War — was a year or two away from producing a bomb. Ultimately, it was not the 1981 Osirak attack that ended the program, but rather the destruction of the 1991 Gulf War followed by more than a decade of sanctions, diplomatic isolation, no-fly zones, and periodic bombing that ended the program — and even then the Bush administration thought (incorrectly) elements of the program remained.

This brings me to a final point: the only way to prevent Iran from rebuilding its program after a strike is to have sufficient international consensus and a large enough coalition to create and maintain a post-strike containment regime. Sanctions and counter-proliferation measures designed to disrupt Iranian attempts to obtain the materials necessary to rebuild their program would have to be maintained, and there would have to be regional support for the continuation of a robust military presence and potential re-strikes.

The only way to create such a post-strike containment system is to go into the war with international support and a certain degree of international legitimacy. That means acting only after non-military options have been exhausted and in the face of evidence that Iran was going for a bomb (by enriching up to weapons grade or kicking out inspectors, for example). And it means the country leads the effort must be capable of crafting and holding together a coalition. Only the United States can meet these criteria. (By the way, the criteria are so stringent because the potential costs of military action are so high and the benefits are so uncertain.)

In 2003, the Bush administration made the historic error of launching war to disarm a regime they claimed was pursuing WMD without sufficient evidence that the Iraqi threat was imminent, without sufficient international support, and without a plan for the day after. We can’t make that mistake again.

Flame update: malware sought technical information from Iran

June 7, 2012

Flame update: malware sought technical information from Iran.

Kaspersky discovered the Flame virus that surfaced recently
Kaspersky discovered the Flame virus that surfaced recently
Kaspersky Lab discovered Flame during an investigation prompted by the International Telecommunication Union

Last week, Russian security firm, Kaspersky Lab reported that a new malware, identified as Flame was responsible behind a recent spate in data and information theft stretching back to 2010, dubbing the malware the “most complex threat ever detected.” It was noted that Flame had been responsible for infections at nearly every strata, from personal and business system to academic and even governmental ones, targeting the infrastructure of mostly Middle Eastern countries such as Israel and Iran.

Delving further into the infection, Kaspersky has revealed that Flame had performed a very targeted attack against Iran, seeking highly sensitive technical information from a ‘huge majority of targets.’ According to Kaspersky, Flame had a “high interest in AutoCad drawings, in addition to PDF and text files.” Professor Alan Woodward of the University of Surrey, speaking to the BBC, further added, “They were looking for the designs of mechanical and electrical equipment. This could be either to find out how far advanced some particular project was/is, or to steal some design(s) to sell on the black market. However, Iran isn’t likely to have any intellectual property not available elsewhere. So, this suggests more a case of intelligence-gathering than onward selling on the black market.”

Initial analysis of the malware had revealed that it had been operating since 2010 but now, Kaspersky Lab is saying that Flame may have been in operation much earlier, possibly since 2008. This assumption was founded on the basis of evidence of more than 80 domain names that had been registered to distribute the malware, with some of the domains registered since 2008.

Kaspersky has revealed that in studying the spread of Flame’s infection they had resorted to a method known as ‘Sinkholing’, which Vitaly Kamluk, a senior researcher at the firm described as “Sinkholing is a procedure when we discover a malicious server – whether it is an IP address or domain name – which we can take over with the help of the authorities or the [domain] registrar. We can redirect all the requests from the victims from infected machines to our lab server to register all these infections and log them.”

Since announcing the Flame infection, the malware has apparently stopped working but the source of the infection is still unknown. Kaspersky has said that the malware’s command and control centres or C&Cs were constantly changing, being hosted in a variety of locations such as Hong Kong, Turkey, Germany, Poland, Malaysia, Latvia, Switzerland and the UK.

Kaspersky has also drawn similarities between Flame and other malwares such as Stuxnet and Duqu, likening them to ‘high-profile cyber-espionage attacks’, with Kamluk adding, “The geographical spread is very similar,” he said. “It might be different attackers; however the interests are all the same here.”

Last week, Russian security firm, Kaspersky Lab reported that a new malware, identified as Flame was responsible behind a recent spate in data and information theft stretching back to 2010, dubbing the malware the “most complex threat ever detected.” It was noted that Flame had been responsible for infections at nearly every strata, from personal and business system to academic and even governmental ones, targeting the infrastructure of mostly Middle Eastern countries such as Israel and Iran.

Delving further into the infection, Kaspersky has revealed that Flame had performed a very targeted attack against Iran, seeking highly sensitive technical information from a ‘huge majority of targets.’ According to Kaspersky, Flame had a “high interest in AutoCad drawings, in addition to PDF and text files.” Professor Alan Woodward of the University of Surrey, speaking to the BBC, further added, “They were looking for the designs of mechanical and electrical equipment. This could be either to find out how far advanced some particular project was/is, or to steal some design(s) to sell on the black market. However, Iran isn’t likely to have any intellectual property not available elsewhere. So, this suggests more a case of intelligence-gathering than onward selling on the black market.”

Initial analysis of the malware had revealed that it had been operating since 2010 but now, Kaspersky Lab is saying that Flame may have been in operation much earlier, possibly since 2008. This assumption was founded on the basis of evidence of more than 80 domain names that had been registered to distribute the malware, with some of the domains registered since 2008.

Kaspersky has revealed that in studying the spread of Flame’s infection they had resorted to a method known as ‘Sinkholing’, which Vitaly Kamluk, a senior researcher at the firm described as “Sinkholing is a procedure when we discover a malicious server – whether it is an IP address or domain name – which we can take over with the help of the authorities or the [domain] registrar. We can redirect all the requests from the victims from infected machines to our lab server to register all these infections and log them.”

Since announcing the Flame infection, the malware has apparently stopped working but the source of the infection is still unknown. Kaspersky has said that the malware’s command and control centres or C&Cs were constantly changing, being hosted in a variety of locations such as Hong Kong, Turkey, Germany, Poland, Malaysia, Latvia, Switzerland and the UK.

Kaspersky has also drawn similarities between Flame and other malwares such as Stuxnet and Duqu, likening them to ‘high-profile cyber-espionage attacks’, with Kamluk adding, “The geographical spread is very similar,” he said. “It might be different attackers; however the interests are all the same here.”

Israeli official: Iran must feel threatened

June 7, 2012

Israeli official: Iran must feel threate… JPost – International.

06/07/2012 02:24
Three-pronged approach to stopping Tehran includes upgrading sanctions, demands, and “threat perception.”

Interior of Bushehr nuclear plant Photo: REUTERS/Stringer Iran

With the world powers set to meet Iran for another round of talks in Moscow in less than two weeks, Israeli officials said on Wednesday it was critical for the world to “upgrade the threat perception inside Iran.”

“Only if the Iranian regime believes the international community is determined that one way or another they won’t be allowed to develop nuclear weapons will the international pressure have a chance of succeeding,” one official said.

The international community has for some time declared that “all options are on the table” he said. “Now they must say it more clearly.”

The official said enhancing the threat perception was the third prong in a threepronged strategy to get Iran to halt its nuclear program that must also include the continuation and stiffening of economic sanctions, and an “upgrade” by the international community of its demands on Iran.

In recent days Jerusalem has stepped up its criticism of the negotiation stance taken by the world powers – the US, China, Russia, France, Britain and German – toward Iran. Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu said in an interview with the German Bild daily published Wednesday that the world powers known as the P5+1 had set the bar far too low.

“The Iranians were only asked to stop 20 percent enrichment of uranium.

That doesn’t stop their nuclear program in any way.

It actually allows them to continue their nuclear program,” Netanyahu said.

One official said that while in previous rounds of talks the international community had demanded an end to all uranium enrichment, now the demand was only to halt enrichment to 20%.

The demands on Iran have actually been lowered, the official said.

Iran, meanwhile, questioned the world powers’ readiness for negotiations , accusing the International Atomic Energy Agency of behaving like a Westernmanipulated intelligence agency, keeping up its sparring ahead of talks in Moscow.

Iranian media said Tehran had written twice to the P5+1 seeking preparatory meetings before the talks due on June 18, but had yet to hear back.

“The other side’s delay in meeting deputies and experts throws doubt and ambiguity on their readiness for successful talks,” Iran’s chief negotiator Saeed Jalili said in a letter to EU foreign policy chief Catherine Ashton, according to the IRNA news agency. Ashton is handling contacts with Iran on behalf of the six powers.

Diplomats say Iran may offer the IAEA increased cooperation in separate talks on Friday as a bargaining chip in the discussions in Moscow with the P5+1 later this month.

But Iran’s IAEA Ambassador Ali Asghar Soltanieh showed little appetite for making concessions, telling reporters in Vienna where he is attending the IAEA’s board of governors meeting, “Unfortunately the agency, which is supposed to be an international technical organization, is somehow playing the role of an intelligence agency.”

Full transparency and cooperation with the IAEA is one of the elements the world powers are seeking from Iran.

Israel has said that the world should be asking for an end to all uranium enrichment, the transfer of all enriched uranium out of the country, and the closing of the underground facility at Qom.

Israel’s representative at the IAEA Board of Governors meeting, Ehud Azoulay, said Tehran was proceeding at an “accelerated path towards acquiring nuclear weapons capability.” He said Iran was engaged in nuclear “deception, defiance and concealment.

Foreign Minister Avigdor Liberman expanded on this theme at the Knesset Foreign Affairs and Defense Committee on Wednesday, saying it was “obvious to all that Iran is trying to hide proof of its nuclear program, but we can see proof in satellite photos.”

According to Liberman, Iran is prepared to pay a price for nuclear weapons, and sanctions alone will not stop their aspirations.

The foreign minister also slammed former security officials who have said that an attack on Iran will not be effective, saying that their “hyperactive chatter” is damaging and moves international attention to Israel, instead of Iran.

Liberman added that the Iranians “try to hurt our representatives around the world every single day” He also pointed out that Iran is helping Syrian President Bashar Assad stay in power. “Assad is stronger than what [IDF] intelligence has been saying,” he stated.

“At the same time, I don’t think there is a chance he will stay in power.”

U.S. Continues to Assure Israel About Efforts on Iran – NYTimes.com

June 7, 2012

U.S. Continues to Assure Israel About Efforts on Iran – NYTimes.com.

WASHINGTON — President Obama and his senior advisers have said little publicly about Iran since the resumption of negotiations over its nuclear program in April, preferring to let the diplomats hash out the issues in the hope that tensions with Tehran can be managed, at least until the election in November.

 

In Israel, however, the United States is still saying plenty, with a stream of current and former officials traveling there to threaten additional sanctions on Iran and to reiterate Mr. Obama’s readiness to use military action against Iran if diplomacy fails.

 

“When the president said all options are on the table, let me reassure you that those options are real and viable,” said Michèle A. Flournoy, a former under secretary of defense, speaking at a security conference in Tel Aviv last week. Referring to the Pentagon’s planning for a possible military strike, she said, “Having sat in the Pentagon and spent a lot of my time on this issue, I can assure you of the quality of that work.”

 

David S. Cohen, a Treasury Department under secretary who oversees financial sanctions, told the Israeli newspaper Haaretz that if the next round of nuclear talks, in Moscow on June 18, break down, “there is no question we will continue to ratchet up the pressure.” Israel and the United States, he said, are considering unspecified new measures that would build on the oil sanctions set to take effect at the beginning of next month.

 

And their remarks followed a speech last month by the American ambassador to Israel, Daniel B. Shapiro, who said that the United States not only was willing to use force, but had also made preparations for a military operation.

 

The White House says it has not coordinated a message campaign in Israel; Ms. Flournoy, who stepped down earlier this year as chief policy adviser to Defense Secretary Leon E. Panetta, said she did not discuss her remarks in advance with either the Pentagon or the White House. But her statements dovetail with a concerted American effort that also includes frequent high-level meetings with Israeli officials — all aimed at giving Israel enough confidence in the diplomatic effort that it will hold off on a unilateral military strike.

 

“There is, and has been, a consistent interest in reassuring the Israelis that we’re not going to be played,” said Dennis B. Ross, who was one of the president’s senior advisers on Iran and is now at the Washington Institute for Near East Policy. “That the goal is to raise pressure, not to relieve it, and that the objective remains prevention, not containment.”

 

Mr. Ross did his part for the effort at a public gathering in New York City last week, in which he recounted a meeting he had with King Abdullah II of Saudi Arabia in April 2009 when Mr. Ross was still in the administration. The king, he said, warned him explicitly that Saudi Arabia would press for its own nuclear bomb if Iran acquired nuclear weapons. Though Saudi Arabia’s alarm about Iran was well known through leaked State Department cables, it was the first time a former Obama official had publicly confirmed the king’s threat.

 

Mr. Ross’s remarks flew largely under the radar in the United States. But they were published prominently in Israel, where he is a well-known figure after decades as a negotiator on Middle East peace issues. By underscoring the danger of a nuclear arms race in the region — something Mr. Obama himself has emphasized in speeches and interviews — Mr. Ross was trying to reassure Israelis, some of whom harbor lingering suspicions that the White House would rather contain a nuclear Iran than go to war to prevent it.

 

Israeli jitters have hardly been eased by the first two bargaining sessions between Iran and the major powers, which in addition to the United States include Britain, France, Germany, Russia and China. The second meeting, in Baghdad last month, ended badly amid signs that the Iranians were unwilling to suspend enrichment of uranium to 20 percent purity — a demand by the major powers that was intended to build confidence for a broader deal.

 

For some Israelis, the latest signs of an impasse vindicate their worries that Iran will use the negotiations as a way to stall the West, delay the oil sanctions and buy itself time to stockpile more enriched uranium. In an interview published Wednesday in the German newspaper Bild, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu complained that the major powers were making “inadequate” demands of Iran at the bargaining table.

 

Israeli officials also balked when the senior American nuclear negotiator, Wendy R. Sherman, an under secretary of state for political affairs, declared on a visit to Israel after the Baghdad meeting that the United States and Israel were on the same page when it came to dealing with Iran. “We believe that the Iranian goal is to drag this out as long as possible,” said an Israeli official, speaking on the condition of anonymity because of the delicacy of the matter.

 

“We’re happy to hear what they have to say,” this official said of the visiting Americans. “We’re happy to try to be reassured.”

 

Ms. Flournoy, who now advises the Obama campaign, devoted most of her remarks in Tel Aviv to making the case that Israel should not launch a premature or unilateral strike on Iran’s nuclear facilities. Such an attack, she said, would set back the Iranian nuclear program, at most, one to three years. And it could splinter the coalition the United States has assembled to impose crippling sanctions on Tehran.

 

“Here’s the rub,” Ms. Flournoy said at Tel Aviv University’s Institute for National Security Studies. “If Israel or any other country were to launch a unilateral strike against Iran’s nuclear program prematurely, before all other options to stop Iran have been tried and failed, it would undermine the legitimacy of the action.”

 

In an interview on Wednesday, Ms. Flournoy said she was encouraged because several Israelis approached her at the conference to express opposition to an Israeli strike and skepticism of the government’s assertions that the window was fast closing for a military attack that would incapacitate Iran’s nuclear abilities.

But she added that the diversity of opinion among ordinary Israelis did not ease her fears of military action since, she said, Mr. Netanyahu and Defense Minister Ehud Barak “are getting clearer and clearer in their intentions.”

Donald Rumsfeld on Israel sharing information with the U.S. government: “I think they would be very careful about doing that”

June 7, 2012

 

Vodpod videos no longer available.

This evening “Piers Morgan Tonight” welcomed back former U.S. Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeldfor his third visit to the primetime program.Joining host Piers Morgan for a live interview, Rumsfeld shared his candid perspective on the relationship between the United States and Israel, and how it might impact the latter taking military action against Iran:

“I was asked the question: ‘Do I think that the Israelis would contact the United States government if they planned to engage in an attack on Iran,’ and my response was ‘I think they would be very careful about doing that for fear that it would leak out of the administration.'”

In response to the suggestion that the host misrepresented the guests’ stance, Morgan attempts to clarify:

“Just to defend my own position,” he began.

“It’s indefensible!” came Rumsfeld’s response.

“I set this up by saying that you basically did not believe that the Israeli administration could trust the Obama administration,” insists Morgan.

“Not so,” declares the guest. “If you go back and read the transcript of what you said at the end of the last segment, I think you’ll find it is quite different.”

And with that, the “Piers Morgan Tonight” host pushed forward:

“Let’s agree to disagree.”

Watch the clip, and listen to the interview, as America’s 13th and 21st Secretary of Defense further explains his thoughts on the current administration, and past intelligence leaks.

Iran doubts P5+1 willingness for success in nuclear talks

June 7, 2012

Iran doubts P5+1 willingness for success in nuclear talks.

President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad says “Iran is ready to pursue negotiations in Moscow, and even in Beijing, and has made good proposals,” but P5+1 are not willing to make the nuclear talks a success. (File Photo)

President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad says “Iran is ready to pursue negotiations in Moscow, and even in Beijing, and has made good proposals,” but P5+1 are not willing to make the nuclear talks a success. (File Photo)

Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad accused major world powers on Wednesday of looking for ways to “find excuses and to waste time” in talks over Tehran’s controversial nuclear program.

“Iran is ready to pursue negotiations in Moscow, and even in Beijing, and has made good proposals,” Ahmadinejad said in the Chinese capital, referring to talks set for later this month in Moscow amid claims by Tehran that the so-called P5+1 powers are dragging their feet on preparatory arrangements.

“But taking into account that, after a meeting in Baghdad and, in conformity with what was agreed, our efforts to arrange a meeting between the deputies of (EU foreign policy chief Catherine) Ashton and the deputy of (Iranian negotiator Saeed Jalili) have not been successful, we consider that the West is looking for excuses to waste time.”

Ahmadinejad’s remarks were posted on the government website.

Meanwhile, the United States denied Wednesday that world powers were dragging their feet on setting up more talks with Iran over its suspect nuclear program.

Earlier on Wednesday, Jalili said Iran doubts the willingness of world powers to succeed in upcoming crunch talks in Moscow over its disputed nuclear program.

“Delay by the other side in holding the meeting of experts and deputies is casting doubt and uncertainty on the willingness (of the P5+1) for success in the talks in Moscow,” state news agency IRNA quoted Jalili as saying.

Jalili, who made the comments in a letter to Ashton, the P5+1 lead negotiator, said: “The process of talks only for (further) talks is fruitless.”

Iran’s doubts were publicized a day after reports that it had sent two letters to Ashton deputy Helga Schmid asking for a preparatory meeting of experts as agreed in talks last month in Baghdad.

Iran’s Supreme National Security Council, which oversees the nuclear talks, found the EU response to the letters “unsatisfactory” and only touching on “general topics,” according to the reports.

Jalili, who is the council’s secretary, said he hoped the P5+1 (Britain, China, France, Russia and the United States, plus Germany) would be ready for the meeting between his deputy, Ali Bagheri, and Schmid to prepare an agenda for the talks in Moscow on June 18-19.

Ashton spokeswoman Maja Kocijancic told AFP in Brussels on Wednesday that to succeed in Moscow “engagement on substance is key, not the process.”

“The issue is of (a) political nature and we need (a) clear signal of Iranian readiness to engage on the substance” of proposals made by the P5+1 in Baghdad, she said.

“Ashton will take up the issue directly” with Jalili, she added without elaborating.

A diplomatic source close to the talks told AFP that further meetings at “technical” levels would serve no purpose, and that the Moscow meeting should be prepared by contacts at the highest level on substantive issues.

The last negotiations, held in Baghdad on May 23-24, exposed a gulf between the two sides’ positions that looked almost unbridgeable, and nearly caused the talks to collapse.

The priority issue for the P5+1 going into the Moscow round is convincing Iran to give up enriching uranium to 20 percent level, hand over its 20-percent stocks in a fuel-swap deal and shut down its Fordo plant, a mountainside bunker near Tehran.

Iran says it needs uranium enriched to 20 percent — just a few technical steps short of bomb-grade 90 percent — for a Tehran reactor that produces medical isotopes.

Western governments suspect Iran is intent on developing a nuclear weapons capability, a suspicion echoed by the International Atomic Energy Agency, which has identified a “possible military dimension” to some of Iran’s nuclear activities.

Iran insists its atomic work is for civilian purposes only.

The U.N. Security Council has issued six resolutions demanding Iran suspend all uranium enrichment. It has also imposed four sets of sanctions on Iran, which Western powers have hardened with their own tough economic sanctions.

Iranian officials had previously said they remained “optimistic” about the prospects for the Moscow talks, while admitting it would be “difficult” to achieve results immediately.

Ahmadinejad said last week that as much as Iran would like to see the nuclear dispute resolved, a “miracle” in Moscow was not on the cards.

Syrian regime denies carrying out Hama ‘massacre,’ blames ‘terrorist group’

June 7, 2012

Syrian regime denies carrying out Hama ‘massacre,’ blames ‘terrorist group’.

Syrian anti-government protesters carry the body of Yaser Raqieh, whom activists say was killed by forces loyal to Syria’s President Bashar al-Assad, near Hama on June 5. (Reuters)

Syrian anti-government protesters carry the body of Yaser Raqieh, whom activists say was killed by forces loyal to Syria’s President Bashar al-Assad, near Hama on June 5. (Reuters)

The Syrian government on Thursday rebuffed accusations that it carried out a massacre in the country’s central Hama region where activists said around 100 people were killed on Wednesday, although the regime reported only nine deaths.

Opposition groups said the “new massacre” was carried out at a farm by the pro-regime Shabiha militia armed with guns and knives after regular troops had shelled the area, the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said in a statement.

But the Syrian regime denied any involvement in the deaths.

“What a few media have reported on what happened in al-Kubeir, in the Hama region, is completely false,” the government said in a statement on official television.

“A terrorist group committed a heinous crime in the Hama region which claimed nine victims. The reports by the media are contributing to spilling the blood of Syrians,” the statement said.

Prominent opposition group, the Syrian National Council, told AFP news agency earlier on Wednesday that forces loyal to President Bashar al-Assad “massacred” about 100 people, including many women and children, at al-Kubeir.

Other sources also reported that a “massacre” had taken place in the same area, including opposition activists and the British-based Observatory, which tentatively put the number of dead at 87.

The deaths follow a two-day massacre that began on May 25 near the central town of Houla, where at least 108 people were killed, while most of them women and children who were summarily executed, according to the United Nations.

Syria’s 15-month revolt against President Assad’s rule has grown increasingly bloody in recent months, raising concerns the country may be slipping towards civil war.

Syrian forces had been shelling Kubeir and the nearby village of Maazarif, which are around 20 km (12 miles) from the central city of Hama.

Both massacres have happened in the presence of United Nations observers, a 300-strong force sent into Syria to observe a ceasefire deal brokered by international envoy Kofi Annan. The truce was hardly observed by the government or the rebels, who last week said they would no longer honor the ceasefire because of recent killings.

Meanwhile, there were additional reports late Wednesday claiming fierce fighting broke out in the outskirts of Syria’s capital, Damascus, and surrounding suburbs, anti-government activists said.

Residents in Damascus city centre said they heard heavy gunfire from the fighting, while activists in nearby suburbs s a id they heard explosions and machinegun fire. In some areas, local activists reported seeing helicopters buzzing overhead.

Heavy gunbattles also erupted in Jobar, a district on the outskirts of Damascus, the Observatory for said.

No casualties were reported by the activists, and such reports are difficult to verify as the government has restricted international media’s access into Syria.

While Assad’s forces have maintained control of the capital and northern business hub Aleppo, fighting has been increasing in and around the cities.

Friends of Syria

U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton told Western and Arab nations at a meeting in Istanbul on Wednesday that a transition strategy in Syria must include President Bashar al-Assad’s full transfer of power, a senior U.S. State Department official said.

“Tonight the secretary laid out a set of essential elements and principles which we believe should guide that post-Assad transition strategy, including Assad’s full transfer of power,” the official told reporters after the meeting.

Clinton also told the meeting that transition in Syria must include a fully representative interim government that would lead to free and fair elections.

Hosted by Turkish President Ahmet Davutoglu, the late night meeting included top officials from the EU, the United States, Britain, France, Germany, Spain, Italy, Jordan, Egypt, Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, UAE, Qatar, Tunisia, Morocco and Turkey.

In a written statement, host country Turkey said the members had agreed to convene a “coordination group” to provide support to the Syrian opposition. Each country had agreed to send a representative to Istanbul on June 15-16 to attend the coordination meeting of all the Syrian opposition groups.

Speaking on condition of anonymity, the U.S. official suggested that Clinton was trying to lay down a set of minimum benchmarks for how a transition in Syria could unfold in the hopes Russia might back it despite its past support for Assad.

The official all but acknowledged the failure of U.N. special envoy Kofi Annan’s six-point peace plan.

“We have all been hoping, expecting, pressuring Assad to live up to his commitment to meet Kofi Annan’s six points,” the official said.

“In the absence of any significant movement by Assad on any of the tracks and in fact increased violence, it’s time for the international community, working with the Syrian people, to start fleshing out the alternatives to Assad and how this is going to go,” the official added.

Clinton, meanwhile, was cool to the idea of bringing Iran into the discussions.

“It’s a little hard to imagine inviting a country that is stage managing the Assad regime’s assault on its people,” she said, referring to Iran.

France had also announced at the meeting it would hold a full “Friends of Syria” meeting in Paris on July 6, the U.S. official said.

New Annan proposal puts the Syrian crisis in Iranian and Russian hands

June 7, 2012

New Annan proposal puts the Syrian crisis in Iranian and Russian hands.

DEBKAfile Special Report June 6, 2012, 11:18 PM (GMT+02:00)

 

The Syrian connection
The Syrian connection

Israel remains dormant despite the serious consequences to its strategic and security situation threatened by the new proposal the UN-Arab League envoy for Syria Kofi Annan is to present to the UN Thursday, June 7, for saving his peace plan. The nub of his proposal, debkafile’s sources disclose, is the creation of a “contact group” for handling the hot Syrian potato. It is to be composed of the five permanent Security Council members (US, UK, France, Russia and China) plus Iran, Turkey, Saudi Arabia and Qatar.
The proposal has won the blessing of the Obama administration, meaning its consent to letting the two powers that will dominate the contact group, Russia and Iran, determine the course and outcome of the Syrian crisis.
Washington believes that only they have the clout in the Syrian army for bringing about Bashar Assad’s removal and his replacement in Damascus by a provisional military regime.
Washington also hopes, according to our sources, that this gesture will give Moscow a strong incentive to lean hard on Tehran for concessions at the next round of its talk with the six world powers on June 13.
Neither Iran nor Moscow have promised the US anything of the sort, but the administration hopes Iran will start being forthcoming on its nuclear program after being permitted to assume a central role in Damascus.

There is less optimism outside administration circles and in Israel. They expect from Tehran nothing more at the next round of talks than token nuclear concessions, and none at all toward curtailing its work on a nuclear weapon.
However the Obama administration appears to have opted for this course, even though it is the first time since the outbreak of the Arab Revolt in December 2010 that the United States is willing to let go of a major Middle East crisis and allow its foremost Middle East rivals, Moscow and Tehran, to take charge.
debkafile reported exclusively on May 31, that President Barack Obama had proposed to President Vladimir Putin the creation of a large force of 5,000 international monitors for Syria, most of them Russians, to safeguard Assad’s stock of biological and chemical weapons against falling into the hands of al Qaeda or Syrian rebels. This team consisting of thousands of Russian troops would be the operational arm of the future “contact group.”

As far as Israel is concerned, the plan has disastrous connotations. Instead of containing the spread of hostile Iranian influence in the region, as Obama promised Israel, he is opening for the door for Iran to extend its nfluence squarely in the countries neighboring on – and still at war with – Israel, while at the same time moving back from a focused effort to draw the sting of Iran’s nuclear bomb program.
Israel’s political and security tacticians never took into account that a consequence of the Syrian revolt would be the establishment of full-blown Iranian sway over Damascus in partnership with Russia. Indeed, for 15 months, they insisted that the Syrian uprising was proof of America’s success in breaking up the dangerous Tehran-Damascus-Hizballah axis.