Archive for June 24, 2012

Turkey-Syria tensions rising

June 24, 2012

Turkey-Syria tensions rising – Israel News, Ynetnews.

Ankara blames Syria for defaulting on military norms, shooting down its jet without warning. Iran urges both sides to exercise restraint

News agencies

Latest Update: 06.24.12, 12:45 / Israel News

Tensions between Ankara and Damascus are rising, following the downing of a Turkish jet by the Syrian Air Force over the weekend.

Turkish Foreign Minister Ahmet Davutoglu said Sunday that Syria “gave no warning” before shooting down the jet.

He also accused Damascus of spreading “disinformation” about the incident: “They have created the impression that Syria felt like it was an act of aggression and they shot it down…. from our perspective that’s not the case,” Davutoglu told reporters.

In the first official response by Turkey to the incident, Ankara’s FM stressed that international warfare rules in cases of a suspected breach of airspace were clear, and that Syria had failed to adhere to them.
הדמייה של האזור בו טס המטוס (צילום: EPA)

The incident area (Image: EPA)

“You have to first send a caution, a warning… If the warning doesn’t work, you scramble your planes, you send a stronger signal, you force the plane to land. There wasn’t enough time to do any of that in the time that our plane was in Syrian airspace.

“We have to question how it is that an unarmed, solo flight got this response from the Syrians,” Davatoglu said, adding that the jet was participating in a test of Turkey’s national radar system.

Turkish TV reported Sunday that the wreckage of jet was located at depth of 1,300 metres in Syrian waters.

Meanwhile, Iranian Foreign Minister Ali Akbar Salehiurged Turkey and Syria to show restraint following the incident.

In a telephone conversation with Davutoglu, Salehi said he hoped the two sides would “settle the issue peacefully to maintain regional stability.”

Signals from both sides suggest neither want a military confrontation over the incident and the countries have started a joint search for the missing airmen.

Envoys from NATO member states will meet on Tuesday at Turkey’s request for consultations over the incidnet.

“Turkey has requested consultations under Article 4 of NATO’s founding Washington Treaty. Under Article 4, any ally can request consultations whenever, in the opinion of any of them, their territorial integrity, political independence or security is threatened,” NATO spokeswoman Oana Lungescu said.

“The NAC (North Atlantic Council) will meet on Tuesday at Turkey’s request. We expect Turkey to make a presentation on the recent incident.”

Al Qaeda behind anti-Israel attacks from Gaza, Sinai. Egypt posts elite unit

June 24, 2012

Al Qaeda behind anti-Israel attacks from Gaza, Sinai. Egypt posts elite unit.

DEBKAfile Exclusive Report June 24, 2012, 12:25 PM (GMT+02:00)

 

Members of Egypt’s elite 999 anti-terror unit

Al Qaeda fighting elements from Libya are spearheading much of the violence against Israel from Sinai and the Gaza Strip since early June  –  a dangerous development Israel, Hamas, Egypt and the US prefer to conceal.

Deeply concerned, Cairo has just posted its elite counter-terrorist “999 unit” in El Arish, on Egypt’s border with the Gaza Strip and along the northern sector of its frontier with Israel, in an effort to counter the newly-arrived jihadis.
Israel also faces a menacing al Qaeda presence on its northern border with Syria.
Reporting this, debkafile’s military and counter-terror sources also disclose that this week, a special mechanism was quietly set up in Washington to coordinate intelligence and military operations against the burgeoning al Qaeda incursion around Israel’s borders. It is headed by David Michael Satterfield, head of the Multinational Force (MFO) in Sinai, whose original task was to oversee the 1979 Egyptian-Israeli peace accord.
Monday, June 18, Satterfield was urgently summoned to Washington after it turned out that the ambush of Israeli vehicles on Route 10, in which a workman was murdered, was a suicide attack by two members of Al Qaeda-Libya, a Saudi and an Egyptian, assigned by their masters in Benghazi to carry out a cross-border attack on Israelis from Sinai.
It was the Libyan al Qaeda wing’s first suicide attack on Israel from the Egyptian peninsula. Washington, Jerusalem and Cairo took it to be the opening shot of a bid by Libya’s warring Islamist militias to extend their field of operations to Egyptian Sinai and southern Israel.
This move appeared to be tie in with al Qaeda-Iraq’s foray into Syria, believed to be part of a master plan, the brainchild of Al Qaeda leader Ayman al-Zawahiri, for the purpose of creating a ring of fire around Israel from the north and the south.
Cairo was alarmed enough by the escalation at its back door to rush Egypt’s most professional elite unit for fighting external terrorist threats (Unit 777 specializes in countering domestic terrorism.) – even in the middle of the high-noon moment awaiting the announcement of the winning presidential candidate Sunday afternoon, June 24.
The ruling supreme military council was clearly concerned that the anti-Israel violence radiating from the Gaza Strip and Sinai might also spill over into Egypt itself or even touch off strife between the two countries.
According to debkafile’s military sources, the Gaza Strip’s two main terrorist militias,  the Hamas and Jihad Islami, decided to stay more or less clear of the week-long missile offensive against (except for Tuesday, June 19). They wanted no part of the offensive conducted by al Qaeda and its Gaza affiliates which had been armed with Qassam and Grad missiles from Libya.
And indeed, Hamas twice called for a ceasefire in the tit-for-tat attacks, after taking the brunt of Israeli punishment. Saturday night, June 23, Hamas spokesman Hayman Taeh announced ongoing efforts to persuade fellow Palestinian organizations in the Strip to hold their fire (“Peace will be met with peace”).
No sooner had he spoken, than 5 Grad missiles were aimed at the town of Ashkelon. All five were intercepted by an Iron Dome battery.
IDF retaliatory tactics have two goals:

1)  To force Hamas to rein in local Palestinian Jalalat groups which are branches of Al Qaeda Sinai and obey its orders; and 2) To appease the angry Israeli population enduring yet another battering from the Gaza Strip unaware of any difference between this one and the repeated missile poundings plaguing its homes and lives in the last decade.

Turkey: No Syria warning before downing jet – CNN.com

June 24, 2012

Turkey: No Syria warning before downing jet – CNN.com.

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Istanbul (CNN) — Syria gave no warning before shooting down a Turkish military jet that strayed into its territory, Turkish Foreign Minister Ahmet Davatoglu said Sunday in a strongly worded appearance where he also accused Syria of spreading “disinformation” about the incident.

“They have created the impression that Syria felt like it was an act of aggression and they shot it down…. from our perspective that’s not the case,” Davatoglu told reporters.

The plane in the Friday incident was unarmed, not sending hostile signals, and identifiable as Turkish, he said.

“You have to first send a caution, a warning,” he said in the first detailed Turkish statement on the international incident. “If the warning doesn’t work, you scramble your planes, you send a stronger signal, you force the plane to land. There wasn’t enough time to do any of that in the time that our plane was in Syrian airspace.”

“We have to question how it is that an unarmed, solo flight got this response from the Syrians,” he said.

The plane was participating in a test of Turkey’s national radar system, he said.

Turkish boats and helicopters are searching for the two-man crew inside Syrian waters, he said. He said the search-and-rescue mission was not a joint operation with Syria, but was being coordinated with Damascus because it is in their territory.

Davutoglu has spoken with U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon, the foreign ministers of the United States, United Kingdom, France, Russia and Iran, and the European Union foreign policy chief Catherine Ashton since the incident, spokesman Selcuk Unal told CNN on Saturday.

The Syrian military shot down the plane Friday as it flew just off the Mediterranean coast. A Syrian military spokesman said anti-aircraft artillery shot down what was an unidentified aircraft that entered its airspace at a very low altitude and high speed.

While on fire, the jet fell into the sea 10 kilometers, or more than six miles, from the shore of the town of Um Al-Tuyoor, the spokesman said.

On Saturday, Syrian state news agency SANA quoted a military spokesman as saying “the target turned out to be a Turkish military plane that entered Syrian airspace and was dealt with according to laws observed in such cases.”

Turkish President Abdullah Gul acknowledged Saturday that the jet may have entered Syria’s airspace, the Anatolia news agency reported.

“When you take in to account the speeds at which jet planes travel over the sea, it is routine for planes to go in and out of borders,” the news agency quoted him as saying.

“It is something that happens without bad intentions and that happens due to the high speeds.”

He added, “It is not possible to cover something like this up. Whatever needs to be done will be done, without a doubt.”

The U.N.’s Ban expressed his “deep concern” about the situation and the potential implications for the region during a phone call with Davutoglu on Saturday, the United Nations said.

He commended Turkey for the “restraint” it has shown.

The Turkish government called an emergency meeting after the warplane went missing near the border.

The Turkish military said the plane took off from Malatya Erhac Center and lost radar communication over the sea near Hatay province, which borders Syria.

The jet’s disappearance could spark an international crisis. Relations between the two neighbors have already deteriorated amid the bloody uprising against Syrian President Bashar al-Assad’s regime.

Erdogan has repeatedly called on al-Assad to step down, and Turkey has withdrawn its diplomats from Damascus.

Davatoglu pointedly refused to express support for al-Assad on Sunday, saying Turkey stands with “the Syrian people.”

However, Gul suggested the two countries were still liaising despite their differences.

“We pulled out representatives from Syria because it was not safe. This does not mean we are not in contact with them (the Syrians),” he said, according to Anatolia.

More than 30,000 Syrian refugees have spilled onto Turkish soil, and Turkey is hosting a number of Syrian opposition groups.

‘Sounds of War Everywhere’ in Western Negev

June 24, 2012

‘Sounds of War Everywhere’ in Western Negev – Defense/Security – News – Israel National News.

“You hear the sounds of war everywhere,” says a Negev resident as Gaza’s missile war continues. Home Front: “Quiet” proves itself.
By Tzvi Ben Gedalyahu

First Publish: 6/24/2012, 11:38 AM
Children take cover from incoming rockets in Kibbutz Kfar Aza

Children take cover from incoming rockets in Kibbutz Kfar Aza
Reuters

“You hear the sounds of war everywhere,” says a Western Negev resident as Gaza’s missile war on Israel continues. Meanwhile, Home Front Minister Matan Vilnai maintains that “quiet in exchange for quiet is proving itself so far.”

Terrorists in Hamas-controlled Gaza attacked the agricultural communities of the Eshkol Region with two more mortar shells overnight, causing no damage or physical injuries but leaving area residents in shock.

The latest barrage is one of dozens of rounds of missile and mortar shell attacks in the 11-year-old Second Intifada, also known as the Oslo War, which broke out in September 2000 and escalated after the Israeli government ordered the expulsion of all Jews out of Gaza and the withdrawal of all soldiers in the summer of 2005.

One missile scored a direct hit on a home last week. A mother and her child miraculously escaped to a bomb shelter before the rocket exploded. Dozens of children also were saved when they boarded a school bus minutes before a missile struck their bus stop near a kibbutz.

Tazpit News Agency’s Anat Silverman reported that Eshkol Regional Council  spokeswoman Ronit Minaker said, “This has been a very stressful time for us. You hear the sounds of war everywhere, and there is this feeling of constant pressure on your mind and in your body. You’re always watching yourself, thinking where you will take cover the next time the siren goes off.

“Not everyone here has a bomb shelter. The worst is for the families. There are parents who lay over their children to protect them when the siren sounds.”

Mainstream news agencies usually report that the missile attacks on the agricultural region of the Western Negev explode “harmlessly” in open areas, neglecting to mention that hundreds of people have been hospitalized the past several years for shock and trauma.

Minor injuries also are usually not reported. Tazpit stated that a kibbutz farmer, Max Yadger, was plowing his fields a few hundred feet from the Gaza security fence when an Arab terrorist fired at him, hitting the glass around the cab of the tractor and causing a light scratch on his face.

“I crawled down from the tractor and hid behind the big wheel for protection, waiting for 15 minutes until IDF troops came get me,” Yadgar said. “It was a very scary experience and I’m still not completely past it. I took a few days off and time has been the best medicine so far. I went to a synagogue and prayed. All I have is a scratch on my face from this attack but inside I’m rattled.”

With the return to relative calm Sunday, Home Front Defense Minister Vilnai told IDF Army Radio that the security situation is complicated. Egypt has brokered another ceasefire with Hamas, which has had difficulty controlling rival terrorists.

He said the government does not want to escalate the fragile situation.

The uneasy quiet may erupt later Sunday, depending on Hamas’ reaction to the announcement in Egypt of final election results and if the next president will be from the Muslim Brotherhood party, which spawned the Hamas terrorists movement decades ago.

Israel also wants to avoid a large-scale counterterrorist operation while Russian President Vladimir Putin visits this week.

Eyeballing Iran? US commissions 361 cruise missiles

June 24, 2012

Eyeballing Iran? US commissions 361 cruise missiles – Israel News, Ynetnews.

US Navy to get 361 new Tomahawk cruise missiles, most of which are meant for Fifth Fleet destroyers based in Bahrain. Meanwhile, pressure to mount military strike against Tehran is permeating presidential campaign

(Photo: AP)

Yitzhak Benhorin

Published: 06.24.12, 07:43 / Israel News

WASHINGTON – The United States has commissioned 361 new Tomahawk cruise missiles, and some 238 of them are meant to find their way to the Fifth Fleet, which is based in Bahrain, Ynet learned on Sunday.

According to the Business Insider, the deal – inked on the backdrop of repeated deadlocks in the nuclear negotiations between the West and Iran – may suggest that the US is gearing for a possible military campaign against the Islamic Republic.

US defense contractor Raytheon won the deal, for a reported $331 million.

According to the report, the deal – which follows repeated statements by both Israel and the US that “all options are on the table,” and in view of Iran’s recent naval maneuversand military exercises – is another sign that “all sides are getting ready for the possibility of military conflict.”

The missiles commissioned, the report added, “Will be designed to launch from submarines and the remainder from Navy ships currently operating with the Fifth Fleet based in Bahrain east of Iran.”  

Similar missiles were used by the US against Muammar Gaddafi‘s regime in Libya.

Additionally, the US Navy has commissioned 17,000 advanced submarine detection systems, for a reported $13 million.

‘Time to act’

Meanwhile, Washington is still trying to devise diplomatic ways to stem Iran’s pursuit of nuclear capabilities.

Dennis Ross, who served as a special advisor on Iran on the National Security Council, said that the only way to get Iran to suspend its nuclear activities is to make it realize that the threat of war is real. He further suggested “calling Iran’s bluff” by offering Tehran civilian nuclear capabilities.

Former Secretary of State James Baker said that should nothing change and Iran does, within one year’s time, reach nuclear capabilities, then the US should be the one to lead a strike against it, because it has the necessary force to end Tehran’s nuclear program.

The pressure on US President Barack Obamato present a viable military option against Iran is growing, as 44 senators – Democrats and Republicans – demanded the he set clear preconditions for continuing the nuclear talks.

The pressure to mount a military strike is also permeating the presidential campaign: The Emergency Committee for Israel, a neo-conservative organization headed by Weekly Standard editor William Kristol, aired a special spot in Florida, Pennsylvania and Wisconsin – key states in the presidential elections – urging Obama to strike Iran.

“President Obama has spent four years talking – Iran has spent four year building a secret nuclear site,” the video says. “Obama is still talking and Iran has enough fuel for five nuclear bombs. Talking isn’t working – it’s time to act.”

Iran urges restraint over downing of Turkish jet; 16 troops killed in Syria

June 24, 2012

Iran urges restraint over downing of Turkish jet; 16 troops killed in Syria.

Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan has often been ridiculed for making loud, and empty, threats against the Syrian regime.  (Image courtesy Khaled Jalal)

Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan has often been ridiculed for making loud, and empty, threats against the Syrian regime. (Image courtesy Khaled Jalal)

Iranian foreign minister Ali Akbar Salehi urged Turkey and Syria late on Saturday to show restraint following Syria’s downing of a Turkish warplane, his ministry said.

In a telephone conversation with Turkish foreign minister Ahmed Davutoglu, Salehi said he hoped the two sides would “settle the issue peacefully to maintain regional stability,” read a statement on the Iranian foreign ministry’s website.

Iran has supported Syrian President Bashar al-Assad since anti-government protests erupted across the country early last year and grew into an armed uprising.

Syria shot down a Turkish plane over the Mediterranean on Friday. According to a Syrian military account, the aircraft was flying fast and low, just one kilometer off the Syrian coast when it was hit.

Signals from both sides suggest neither want a military confrontation over the incident and the countries have started a joint search for the missing airmen.

Turkey has taken care not to inflame the sensitive incident by admitting its aircraft may have entered Syrian territory, adding that it may have been unintentional.

However, Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan said Ankara “will announce its final position and take necessary steps with determination after the incident is entirely clarified.”

On Sunday, Turkey’s Foreign Minister Ahmet Davutoglu, said in a TV interview that there was no warning before the downed jet was shot in international airspace.

He said that the planes sometimes cross over borders and that the downed plane had crossed 15 minutes before it was shot down.

The plane had no connection the crisis in Syria and was merely testing domestic radar system, he added.

Turkey, a NATO member, has been a vocal critic of Assad’s brutal crackdown against the unrest.

‘Cold War’

Turkey’s softened tone regarding the downed plane and Iran’s urging for stability show that regional powers are not interested in any confrontation, and that Cold War politics still lingers behind the Syrian conflict.

Russia and China vetoing any U.N. Security Council resolution against Assad’s regime, backed by Iran and Hezbollah, have created a Cold War climate.

Washington, Ankara’s ally, not intending to widen the conflict with its former Cold War foe, Moscow, has also sounded the alarm over potential transfer of “sophisticated” weapons to Syria and that al-Qaeda can hijack the uprising happening in the country; has accumulated reasons for not taking any bold measures to topple Assad’s regime.

Reports have also emerged that Iran’s antagonist, Gulf Arab states, supporting Syria’s opposition by supplying arms and money.

With big powers still not reaching a consensus on Syria, violence, meanwhile, continues in the Levant country.

At least 16 government troops were killed on Sunday in clashes with rebel fighters in the northern province of Aleppo, the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights reported.

“The clashes happened almost simultaneously at dawn,” the Observatory’s Rami Abdel Rahman told AFP in Beirut by telephone.

According to the Britain-based watchdog, the fighting took place in the town of Dara Aza, and at military checkpoints near the town of Al-Atarib and the village of Kafr Halab.

For its part, state news agency SANA reported that on Saturday the bodies of 46 military and law enforcement members were “escorted from Aleppo Military Hospital, Tishreen Military Hospital and Harasta Police Hospital in Damascus to their final resting place.”

“Solemn funeral ceremonies were held for the martyrs who were targeted by armed terrorist groups while they were in the line of duty in the provinces of Damascus, Homs, Aleppo, Idlib and Daraa,” SANA added

More than 15,000 people, the majority civilians, have been killed in Syria since the outbreak of the revolt, according to Observatory figures.

Why Russia Won’t Play Ball on Iran ?

June 24, 2012

Why Russia Won’t Play Ball on Iran | The Diplomat.

(Thanks to Renbe for finding this piece.  – JW )

The Obama Administration has sought to enlist Moscow in the effort to increase pressure on Iran to cooperate with the international community and verifiably renounce any ambitions it might have to acquire nuclear weapons. But while Russia would undoubtedly prefer a non-nuclear to a nuclear Iran, joining the U.S. and its allies in more forcefully sanctioning Iran for not cooperating on this matter involves risks for Moscow that it doesn’t wish to incur. 

The geostrategic, economic, and political relations between Russia and Iran are, in a word, complex.  Historically, Russia and Iran have been geostrategic rivals. In the 19th century in particular, Tsarist Russia made gains in both the Caucasus and Central Asia at Iran’s expense. In both the 19th and 20th centuries, Iran often had reason to fear a powerful, encroaching Russia (or Soviet Union) – an important factor underpinning the alliance between the United States and Iran from the end of World War II through the overthrow of the Shah in 1979. Even after the Shah’s regime was replaced by the virulently anti-American Islamic Republic, Soviet-Iranian relations remained tense – especially since Tehran regarded both the Soviet occupation of Afghanistan (1979-89) and Soviet support to Iraq in the Iran-Iraq War (1980-88) as highly threatening.

With the end of the war with Iraq and the Soviet withdrawal from Afghanistan, followed by the breakup of the Soviet Union itself, Iranian threat perceptions of Russia were greatly reduced.  Underpinned by certain common geostrategic interests, Russian-Iranian relations have been greatly improved since then. First and foremost among these shared interests is a common desire to limit American influence, especially in the countries of the Caucasus and Central Asia that became independent from the Soviet Union in 1991.  Another geostrategic interest which Moscow and Tehran share is a common fear of radical Sunni Islamist movements such as al-Qaeda and the Taliban which, in addition to being anti-Western, are virulently anti-Russian and anti-Shi’a. Yet another overlapping interest between Russia and Iran is fear and opposition to secessionism, which both states are vulnerable to it.

Russia and Iran also cooperate with each other economically. The overall trade volume between them – which has grown to approximately $4 billion per year – isn’t large. Russia, though, is one of the few arms and atomic reactor manufactures willing and able to sell them to Iran. Similarly, Iran is one of the few customers for arms and atomic reactors willing and able to buy them from Russia. Both consider the continuation of their trade in these items to be a vital interest.

Despite this, Russia and Iran are both petroleum producers with highly competitive interests. For Moscow, U.S.-led economic sanctions efforts against Iran have been both an economic and a geostrategic godsend. The U.S. blockage of the construction of pipeline routes to Iran from Azerbaijan, Turkmenistan, and Kazakhstan has meant that these former Soviet states remain heavily reliant on export routes through Russia or countries subject to Russian intimidation (i.e., Georgia). And to the extent that American-led embargo efforts have led to reduced Iranian ability to sell its petroleum on the world market, Moscow has benefited both from higher oil prices as well as the increased need for others to buy Russian oil that this has resulted in.  Moscow has no interest in seeing this situation change.

Finally, it should be noted that while Moscow and Tehran share a common animosity toward the United States, their ability to cooperate against it is limited by the mutual fear that each would gladly sacrifice its relationship with the other in exchange for concessions from the U.S.  The Obama administration’s stated desire to improve relations with Iran when it first took office on the one hand and its continuing efforts to improve relations with Russia so that it “will help us with Iran” on the other have served to arouse suspicion in Moscow and Tehran about how the other might be contemplating a “sell-out” to Washington at its expense.

The reality is that Moscow isn’t as concerned about the prospect of a nuclear Iran as the U.S. and its Western, Arab, and Israeli allies. In Moscow’s (however unfortunate) view, Iran simply may not have the capacity to acquire nuclear weapons. Further, while Moscow doesn’t regard the Iranian acquisition of nuclear weapons as desirable, it’s far more sanguine about this possibility than America and many of its allies are. However unpleasant the leaders of the Islamic Republic might be, Moscow sees them as (just like the Putin administration) focused primarily on remaining in power and thus unlikely to undertake any actions that could undermine this goal, such as actually using nuclear weapons. Meanwhile, Moscow sees Pakistan as far more volatile than Iran, and thus the Pakistani possession of nuclear weapons as being more problematic than Iranian acquisition of them. Ultimately, just as they had to accept and deal with a nuclear-armed Pakistan and North Korea, Moscow anticipates that the international community – including the U.S. – will just have to accept and deal with a nuclear-armed Iran if and when this emerges.

Moscow understands that an important reason why the Obama administration has pursued its “reset” policy aimed at improving Russian-American relations is that it seeks to enlist Moscow’s help in the effort to prevent Iran from acquiring nuclear weapons. Moscow, though, sees itself as having very little leverage over Iran on this issue. Putin has on several occasions proposed that the solution to the Iranian nuclear crisis is for Russia to enrich all uranium for Iran (either in Russia, Iran, or a third country), but Tehran has always insisted that it will continue to enrich at least some of its own uranium even if it agrees to cooperate with any of these Russian proposals.  Otherwise, the only positive inducements that Tehran might actually respond to that Moscow can offer are either ones that the United States and its allies would object to (more arms, more nuclear reactors), or ones that both they and Russia itself would oppose (Russian support for the export of Caspian Basin petroleum via Iran).

Moscow could threaten negative sanctions against Iran unless it cooperates on the nuclear issue, or actually impose them for not doing so. The most obvious of these would be to stop watering down and delaying new Security Council economic sanctions on Iran. Other measures might be cutting back, or even ending, Russian arms sales to Iran. Imposing negative sanctions on Iran, though, involves important risks for Moscow. Just because Russia cooperates with the West on Iran doesn’t mean that China will. The Russian imposition of negative sanctions on Iran, then, might simply result in Iran turning more toward (and becoming increasingly dependent on ) Beijing. In addition, Moscow worries about the possibility of Iranian retaliation against Russia for cooperating with the West against Iran on the nuclear issue. Tehran could, for example, end the hopes of Russian firms to invest in the Iranian oil and gas sectors. And while Tehran hasn’t previously supported Chechen and other Muslim opposition groups inside Russia, it could always begin doing so and thus exacerbate the internal security challenges that Moscow faces.

It is, of course, unclear what costs Tehran could actually impose on Moscow for cooperating more fully with the West on the Iranian nuclear issue. Moscow, though, does not wish to find out.

America, Russia and Iran

Moscow views U.S. efforts to get Russia to cooperate with the U.S. and its allies on Iran with deep skepticism and even suspicion. Moscow sees Washington as being well aware that Russia has little leverage over Iran on the nuclear issue and that Tehran could impose significant costs on Russia for cooperating with the West on this. Moscow, then, suspects that Washington is pushing Russia to cooperate with it on the Iranian nuclear issue not because it expects that this will result in Tehran becoming more compliant, but merely because Washington wants to bring about the deterioration of Russian-Iranian relations.

This line of reasoning may seem preposterous to Americans, but not to Russians. This is because, many Russians reason, if Washington truly regarded Russian cooperation on the Iranian nuclear issue as being important, then surely the U.S. would offer significant inducements and concessions to Moscow in order to obtain it. Just what these should be might not be clear to Moscow itself, but would at minimum involve the abandonment of America’s ballistic missile defense plans and repeal of the Cold War-era Jackson-Vanik restrictions on Russian-U.S. trade that the Kremlin has repeatedly called for. Putin would probably also demand an end to American “interference in Russia’s internal affairs” (i.e., U.S. government criticism about the state of democracy and human rights in Russia) as well as respect for Russia’s “privileged interests (as Medvedev referred to them in 2008) in the former Soviet republics.

Washington might well respond that it shouldn’t have to make any concessions to Moscow in order to obtain its cooperation on this matter since preventing Iran from acquiring nuclear weapons benefits everyone, including Russia. Moscow, though, doesn’t agree, but instead sees only high costs and low benefits from active Russian cooperation with the U.S. on the Iranian nuclear issue. The only way that the U.S. might obtain such cooperation from Moscow is through concessions of such magnitude that Washington would not – indeed, could not – make.

All this means that any expectation that exists in Washington that Moscow can be persuaded to make a meaningful contribution either to inducing Tehran to cooperate on the nuclear issue or punish it for not doing so is simply misplaced.

Mark N. Katz is a professor of government and politics at George Mason University, and is the author of Leaving without Losing: The War on Terror after Iraq and Afghanistan (Johns Hopkins University Press, 2012).

Target: Syrian WMD

June 24, 2012

Target: Syrian WMD | Washington Free Beacon.

U.S. concerned Israel may launch attacks on Syrian WMD sites
Bashar al-Assad / AP

BY: – June 22, 2012 5:00 am

U.S. intelligence agencies are closely watching Israel’s military for signs it will conduct strikes on Syria’s stockpiles of chemical weapons, amid concerns the deadly nerve agents could fall under the control of Hezbollah or al Qaeda terrorists, U.S. officials said.

Syria’s arsenal remains vulnerable as the result of the internal conflict currently underway in Syria between government forces and opposition rebels, one official said.

“Everyone suspects Syria maintains an active chemical weapons program; and it would be dangerous not to plan accordingly,” the official said.

As for concerns the weapons will be captured or transferred, the official said: “Most countries that have CW stocks view it as a strategic, not tactical, tool—and strategic tools are usually pretty well protected and aren’t given away lightly.”

However, other U.S. officials said special operations forces are prepared to take action inside Syria in the event the regime falls and the country spirals further into chaos. The teams would seek to secure or destroy stockpiles of chemical arms to keep them from being taken over by terrorists. Hezbollah has been very active in Syria, and there are reports that al Qaeda terrorists have moved into Syria during the current crisis.

The exact size of the Syrian chemical arsenal is not known. The Center for Strategic and International Studies reported several years ago that Syria has stockpiled 500 to 1,000 metric tons of chemical agents. The weapons are said to include long-lasting VX nerve agent and less-persistent Sarin nerve agent, as well as mustard blister agents.

Most but not all of the weapons stockpiles are known to U.S. intelligence agencies.

The New York Times reported Thursday that CIA operatives are working in southern Turkey to coordinate foreign assistance to Syrian rebel forces.

Recent statements by senior Israeli military officials prompted U.S. concerns over an Israeli strike on Syria.

Senior officials in Israel told the newspaper Yedioth Ahronoth that if Syria’s army gave chemical weapons to Hezbollah or other terrorists an Israeli attack would be needed.

The newspaper reported May 31 that Israel failed to prevent Syria’s transfer of M-600 rockets to Hezbollah and the weapons can now threaten central Israel. One military source was quoted as saying that mistake would not be repeated.

Israeli Maj. Gen. Yair Golan, commander of forces deployed on the Syrian and Lebanese front, was quoted in press reports expressing concerns about Syria being used as “a warehouse for war materiel that feeds terrorist elements in the region.”

Golan also said there were reports that al Qaeda terrorists are working against the regime in Damascus and those terrorists eventually would target Israel, perhaps in the coming months.

IDF Deputy Chief Maj. Gen. Yair Naveh also said June 11 that Israeli forces must be on alert because Syria’s military has “the largest chemical weapons arsenal in the region, which can reach any spot in Israel.” He expressed worries that the weapons could “fall into the hands of the rebels or the terrorists.”

A State Department arms compliance report from 2010 stated that Syria is also believed to have an offensive biological weapons program in addition to the chemical arms.

Calls for military intervention could increase if Syrian forces begin using the deadly chemical weapons in battling opposition forces.

A Syrian rebel leader, Col. Riad al-Asaad of the Syrian Free Army, told Al Jazeera June 8 that Syrian military aircraft had dropped chemical bombs that poisoned people, and that government forces had distributed gas masks to troops 10 days earlier in preparation for the use of the weapons against northern areas of the country.

State Department cables disclosed last year revealed Syria had obtained large quantities of chemical weapons precursor agents from China, Italy, and other states.

A July 10, 2008, cable said: “While Syria proclaims its desire to cooperate with the IAEA in investigating serious evidence of a covert nuclear program and allowed an extremely restricted June 22-25 IAEA visit to investigate a covert nuclear program, Syria has never accounted for its [chemical weapons] stocks, refuses to join the Chemical Weapons Convention, and is modernizing its long-range missile systems in cooperation with Russia, North Korea, and other countries.”

“There remain suspicions Syria could be sharing missile technology with Hezbollah,” the cable said, noting, “Just as Washington has done in past demarches regarding Syrian WMD and missile programs, Post believes a new scrub of releasable intelligence would strengthen our arguments regarding the gap between Syrian rhetoric and actions.”

A June 20, 2006, cable reported that Iran was assisting Syria’s chemical warfare program with construction of four to five precursor chemical production facilities.

“Iran would provide the construction design and equipment to annually produce tens to hundreds of tons of precursors for VX, sarin, and mustard,” the cable said.

How not to write an analysis piece on a possible war with Iran

June 24, 2012

The Axis-Israel News – Haaretz Israeli News source..

A report published on the Business Insider website, saying Israel and the U.S. are preparing for a strike against Iran, contains nothing exclusive, no new information, and is riddled with gross inaccuracies.

 

By Anshel Pfeffer | Jun.23, 2012 | 10:50 PM

 

 

Bushehr Iran nuclear facility

Iranian technicians at work at the Bushehr Nuclear Plant in Iran, November 2009. Photo by AP

 

 

 

A great deal gets written about Iran and a possible war between the Islamic Republic, Israel and the United States. How much of that is reliable and worth reading is another question. Take for example a piece that appeared today on the American financial website, Business Insider. The headline is “Here’s How US and Israel Are Preparing For a Possible War With Iran” and it has an “exclusive” banner over it. It is a lesson of how not to write an analysis on such an issue.

 

For a start, there is nothing “exclusive” about it – all there is in the piece is a collection of quotes and links culled from other publications, the connection between them often tenuous at best. Second, the piece doesn’t tell you anything about how the U.S. and Israel are preparing for a war on Iran, not even if they are indeed doing so. Instead, there is a list of recent US defense acquisitions, which probably have no connection to a possible operation in Iran, and some quotes from Israeli officials on the need to “prepare other options” for countering Iran’s nuclear program. Nothing new there then.

 

There is one very interesting detail though. According to Business Insider, there is “an Iranian F-16 acquisition” in the works, which would be groundbreaking news, if only it could be true. But besides this report, there has been no indication anywhere the U.S. is about to reverse its arms embargo against the Islamic Republic, in force for 33 years (except for some clandestine deals such as Iran-Contras). After that dreadful mistake, nothing else in the piece really matters, but still, just a few pointers.

The writers highlight recent arms deals by the Pentagon such as the purchase of 361 Tomahawk cruise missiles and another for a 17 thousand sonar buoys. The U.S. has been buying from Raytheon thousands of Tomahawks from the early 1980s, it has been the most effective and widely-used ship-launched missile in all the armed confrontations America has fought since then. An additional 361 is just keeping up operational levels, and making sure that wherever the U.S. Navy will find itself, it will be able to launch a devastating strike. With regard the sonar buoys, they are a standard, if advanced, instrument used to pinpoint the location of enemy submarines. But the old Soviet-era submarines of the Iranian Navy are hardly a reason for the Americans to buy advanced hardware – the threat to American ships in the Persian Gulf is not underwater; it is small and fast surface-attack boats and anti-shipping missiles.

 

Another detail that seems significant to the writers is the passing of the United States-Israel Enhanced Security Cooperation Act last month in Congress. This is an important bill, but it is designed in part to reassure Israel that America is resolutely guaranteeing its security, and therefore it does not have to launch a strike on Iran.

 

Two other small but not irrelevant inaccuracies: The report mentions that Israel just ordered “its fourth German-made sub.” Actually, it ordered its sixth sub and just took delivery of the fourth. Not that this has any connection with a possibly impending strike on Iran, which would almost certainly be airborne.

 

The other inaccuracy is their writing that the Iranians are preparing for war with “some of the most advanced military technology of anyone out there.” Not to belittle Iran’s power, but it is not based on “advanced military technology.” Most of the military technology Iran has is what is left from the Shah’s purchases from the US in the 1970s, augmented by some nascent attempts to develop an indigenous arms industry, with North Korean assistance. There are a number of nations in the region with much more advanced military technology – Israel, Turkey, Egypt, Saudi Arabia, and the other Gulf States. That’s why General David Petraeus said in 2009 that the United Arab Emirates air force, a much smaller country, “could take out the entire Iranian air force.”

The basic premise of the piece could be true – the U.S. and Israel may be preparing a possible war on Iran, though it still seems that the U.S. is mainly trying to prevent such a war. But none of the details in the report actually support the headline.