Archive for August 24, 2012

Iran Strike Wouldn’t End Sanctions Regime

August 24, 2012

Iran Strike Wouldn’t End Sanctions Regime « Commentary Magazine.

Among the plethora of arguments made against an Israeli attack on Iran’s nuclear facilities, one of the most bizarre is that the ensuing wave of international sympathy for Iran would destroy the international sanctions regime and allow Iran to race for the bomb unhindered – an argument made by both Israeli and American security experts opposed to a strike.

After all, U.S. President Barack Obama has said repeatedly that preventing a nuclear Iran is “profoundly” in America’s security interest; various other world leaders have also said a nuclear Iran threatens their own security. So why would all of them suddenly decide that a nuclear Iran no longer threatens their countries’ interests just because Israel launched an attack? And unless they changed their minds in this fashion, why would any of them suddenly stop trying to prevent Iran from going nuclear? Normal countries don’t stop pursuing their own security interests merely because they are annoyed with another country.

In fact, there’s only one conceivable reason why any country currently backing the sanctions regime should reverse its position following an Israeli strike: If it never actually cared about preventing a nuclear Iran in the first place, and backed sanctions only in an effort to prevent an Israeli attack.

It’s certainly possible that many countries fall into this category. But if so, that’s an argument in favor of an Israeli strike – because if world leaders aren’t actually committed to stopping Iran from acquiring nuclear weapons, there’s no chance the sanctions regime will be maintained long enough and strictly enough to do so.

Indeed, the opposite is the case: If the world’s only interest in sanctions is preventing Israeli military action against Iran, those sanctions are sure to be eased once Iran has entered the “zone of immunity,” meaning its nuclear facilities are sufficiently protected that Israel no longer has the ability even to significantly delay its quest for the bomb. After all, most of the countries now participating in sanctions, especially in Europe, conducted a thriving trade with Iran until recently, and reviving that trade would benefit their own faltering economies. Thus the incentive to lift the sanctions would be overwhelming once the danger of an Israeli attack had passed.

In short, if other countries don’t truly believe it’s in their own interest to keep Iran from going nuclear, the sanctions effort will soon lapse regardless of whether or not Israel attacks – meaning Israel’s best play is to attack now and achieve whatever delay it can. That, as I’ve written before, isn’t an ideal solution, but it’s better than the certainty of Iran getting the bomb: Just as Israel’s 1981 attack on Iraq’s nuclear reactor bought just enough time for Saddam Hussein to provoke international intervention by invading Kuwait, an attack on Iran now could buy time for, say, a successful Iranian revolution, or an Iranian blunder (like closing the Straits of Hormuz) that would provoke international military action.

And if other countries do believe that preventing a nuclear Iran is in their own interests, they’ll continue working toward that end regardless of whether or not Israel attacks.

Sadly, in facing Iran, Israel is on its own and can’t rely on US

August 24, 2012

Israel Hayom | Sadly, in facing Iran, Israel is on its own and can’t rely on US.

We’ve been here before, says former Bush administration official, David Wurmser • Time and again, the message was sent to hold fire, give diplomacy a bit more time – if it does not work, the whole world will be behind preemptive action • But Iran never budged or changed, the international community never really rallied, and the West never acted • And Iran came to understand that its nuclear program is not a genuine Western red-line.

David Wurmser
Israel shouldn’t count on the U.S. to attack Iran, writes David Wurmser.

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Photo credit: Ori Porat

Israel Contemplates: What If America Doesn’t Come Through?

August 24, 2012

Israel Contemplates: What If America Doesn’t Come Through? | FrontPage Magazine.

Posted By P. David Hornik On August 24, 2012 @ 12:16 am In Daily Mailer,FrontPage | No Comments

In Israel’s internal debate for and against attacking Iran’s nuclear program, the basic dividing line is between those who put their trust in the United States/international community to take care of the problem and those who do not.

President Shimon Peres—supposed to be a figurehead who keeps out of politics—recently told Israel’s Channel 2 TV that “it’s clear to us that we can’t do it alone…. It’s clear to us we have to proceed together with America. There are questions about coordination and timing, but as serious as the danger is, this time at least we are not alone.”

But what if America were to shy off from attacking Iran, or decide it was not in its interest? Not to worry, said Peres: “I am convinced this is an American interest. I am convinced [President Obama] recognizes the American interest and he isn’t saying this just to keep us happy. I have no doubt about it, after having had talks with him.”

And former Mossad chief Meir Dagan became an international media hit by saying an Israeli attack would be “the stupidest thing I have ever heard.” A few months ago he and some colleagues, in a Wall Street Journal op-ed, went so far as to carefully advise the international community how to use sanctions to put a full stop to Iran’s program.

Although Peres is never quiet, Dagan at least has been quiet lately. Is he having second thoughts? One doesn’t know, but there would be good reasons for him to have them.

On Wednesday AP reported that Iran’s Asian oil-buying markets are keeping it economically afloat—and more—despite the sanctions. “When Iran welcomes world leaders to a world gathering [of the Non-Aligned Movement] next week,” AP notes, “few will get a grander reception than India’s prime minister.” That’s because, while

[o]il purchases by India, China and South Korea—which decided this week to resume Iranian imports—have not covered Tehran’s losses…they have given Iran a critical cushion that brings in tens of millions of dollars in revenue each day and means that Iran has dropped only one ranking, to stand as OPEC’s third-largest producer.

The report goes on to say that “The U.S. has pressed hard for Iran’s top customers—China, India, Japan and South Korea—to scale back on crude imports, with some success…. But Washington cannot push its key Asian trading partners too fast or too aggressively and risk economic rifts.”

It then quotes an expert who says: “Despite Western sanctions…China and Japan will remain major importers of Iranian crude oil and so will India.”

So much for sanctions? At least, it seems clear that Israel shouldn’t be putting its life on the line out of a totally unwarranted assumption that they’ll work.

Meanwhile the International Atomic Energy Agency—which is supposed to make sure rogue states don’t develop nuclear weapons—is resuming talks with Iran on Friday. The ostensible goal is to gain access to Parchin, the site 20 miles southeast of Tehran where—according to Western assessments—Iran has been carrying out explosives tests relevant to nuclear weapons.

The problem is that since last November, when the IAEA fingered Parchin as a problematic site, Iran has never granted the agency access to it.

And on Wednesday IAEA director-general Yukiya Amano said he “cannot be too optimistic” about a breakthrough: “We have been making our best efforts in a constructive spirit to work out an agreement between Iran and IAEA, but so far we have not been successful in reaching agreement. I have no indication this will change very soon.”

This at a time when Iran has been upping uranium enrichment to over 20 percent while activating hundreds more centrifuges; the latest U.S. National Intelligence Estimate says “Iran has made surprising, notable progress in the research and development of key components of its military nuclear program”; a senior Israeli official “has said Iran has made significant progress in assembling a nuclear warhead”; and the new NIE further states that Iran has “boosted its efforts to attach a nuclear warhead to ballistic missiles.”

So it appears that—as with the economic sanctions—when it comes to Iran’s nuclear program, that vaunted international community just isn’t coming through.

Tehran, for its part, was in a celebratory mood for its annual Jerusalem Day last Friday. With the usual crowds chanting “Death to America!” and “Death to Israel!,” the Israeli Foreign Ministry listed some especially high-decibel statements by Iranian leaders.

They include, from President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad: “You want a new Middle East? We do too, but in the new Middle East…there will be no trace of the American presence and the Zionists.” “The International Quds [Jerusalem] Day is the day of unity among all human beings to remove the Zionist black stain from the human society.” “Anyone who loves freedom and justice must strive for the annihilation of the Zionist regime in order to pave the way for world justice and freedom.” “The Zionist regime and the Zionists are a cancerous tumor….”

From Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei: “…liberating Palestine from the grip of Israel and its allies is a religious duty for all Muslims across the world.” “…the fake Zionist regime will soon fade away from geography….”

General Amir Ali Hajizadeh: “…if the Zionist hooligans embark on practicing their verbal threats, they will provide the best opportunity for the destruction of Israel because then the forged regime will be wiped out of the map and thrown into the trash bin of history for ever.”

All this after the United States, Britain, France, Germany, Russia, and China have been holding high-level diplomatic talks with Iran for months, with Obama insisting throughout his presidency—to this very day—that “engaging” Iran is the right, fruitful approach.

Any penalization of Iran for its ongoing incitement of the genocide of the Israeli people—illegal under the United Nations’ Genocide Convention, which lists “Direct and public incitement to commit genocide” as a punishable offense?

Apart from some mild rebukes by Washington and others, none at all. In fact, from August 26-31, Tehran will, as mentioned, be hosting the Non-Aligned Movement, which with 120 members comprises almost two-thirds of the countries of the world.

Israel is particularly upset that UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon is planning to attend. So is Egypt’s new Muslim Brotherhood president Mohamed Morsi—the first visit to Iran by an Egyptian head of state since the 1979 takeover by the ayatollahs.

On Thursday it was reported that in Lebanon this week Iran’s ally Hizbullah held its largest-ever military exercise—which can only be seen as preparation for a possible imminent war between Israel on one side and Iran and its proxies on the other.

All Israelis, of course, would prefer that events did not take this course, and that instead the U.S.-led international community would be shouldering its own responsibility and dealing seriously with the Iranian threat. But those Israelis who count on the nations of the world to effectively confront a threat to the Jews and to themselves are blind both to history and what can readily be seen in the present.

US sending aircraft carrier back to Persian Gulf four months early

August 24, 2012

US sending aircraft carrier back to Persian Gulf four months early | The Times of Israel.

Defense secretary tells sailors early deployment needed amid Iran and Syria fears

The USS Stennis. (photo credit: Department of Defense/Randi R. Brown, U.S. Navy)

The USS Stennis. (photo credit: Department of Defense/Randi R. Brown, U.S. Navy)

The US is deploying a large aircraft carrier to the Persian Gulf, the Department of Defense confirmed Thursday, cutting short leave for thousands of soldiers to send them back to the Middle East ahead of schedule.

The move comes amid growing fears of a possible military strike on Iran’s nuclear facilities, which analysts say could spark a wider war or the closing of the Strait of Hormuz, a key shipping lane that the US has said it will use its power to keep open.

The US Navy said the USS John C. Stennis was being deployed early “to maintain combatant commander requirements for the presence in the region.” The ship was scheduled to return to the gulf only in December and had arrived stateside in March.

Sailors were told about the early deployment in July.

Leon Panetta speaking to sailors on Wednesday. (photo credit: US Navy/Kenneth Abbate)

Leon Panetta speaking to sailors on Wednesday. (photo credit: US Navy/Kenneth Abbate)

Defense Secretary Leon Panetta addressed the sailors before leaving, telling them Iranian fears and the conflict in Syria were the main concerns behind sending them early.

“I understand that it is tough,” Panetta said. “We are asking an awful lot of each of you, but frankly you are the best I have and when the world calls we have to respond.”

The head of the US Fifth Fleet, which operates in the region, told Reuters the deployment was not a buildup of forces as the USS Enterprise was scheduled to leave the region soon to be decommissioned.

During its last deployment in January, the Stennis took part in rescuing an Iranian shipping vessel from pirates in the Persian Gulf.

The rescue came days after Iranian military officials threatened to attack the nuclear-powered ship if it returned to the gulf.

Ya’alon: History Will Judge the U.S. on Iran

August 24, 2012

Ya’alon: History Will Judge the U.S. on Iran – Defense/Security – News – Israel National News.

Strategic Affair Minister Moshe Ya’alon places the responsibility on the United States if Iran realizes its nuclear ambitions.

By Elad Benari

First Publish: 8/24/2012, 3:15 AM

 

Moshe Yaalon

Moshe Yaalon
Israel News photo: Flash 90

As the debate continues over Iran’s nuclear program and a possible Israeli strike on its nuclear facilities, Strategic Affair Minister Moshe Ya’alon on Thursday placed the responsibility on the United States if the Islamic Republic realizes its nuclear ambitions.

“History will judge whether the United States stood in the face of the Shiite threat and prevented the Iranian military nuclear capability in time,” Ya’alon said during a forum at the Gordon College of Education in Haifa. “A Middle East with a nuclear Iran is a Middle East with nuclear chaos.”

He added, “A nuclear Iran is a threat to world stability, and anyone who is concerned for the stability of the world should oppose a nuclear Iran, The challenge of Iran is not just an Israeli one; the Iranian regime challenges the Western civilization and the current world order. This is not a conflict between Iran and Israel, but between Iran and America and Western culture. This issue cannot be taken off our agenda and be swept under the carpet.”

While Minister Ya’alon refused to say whether he is for or against an Israeli attack, he hinted that the diplomatic efforts must be exhausted.

“The decision between a bomb and bombing comes at the end of the process,” he said. “Diplomatic isolation, more sanctions, a credible military threat – these need to do their job. If the Iranian regime will face the dilemma of having to choose between a bomb and survival, it will choose survival.”

Ya’alon emphasized, “I have gone through many wars and war is the last option. But when you recognize that in this matter there were quite a few moments of weakness from the Western world, and it was perceived as such by the Iranian regime, it is necessary to raise the issue.”

He also criticized the statements of former top officials in the defense system, such as former IDF Chief of Staff Gabi Ashkenazi, who said that Iran does not yet possess a nuclear weapon capability. Other former officials have said outright that Israel should not strike Iran.

“I was very sorry to hear the statements by those former officials,” said Ya’alon. “I’m in an environment where decisions are made rationally and not in a messianic way. I didn’t like some of the recent statements, including the ones from ministers who are currently serving in the government. I suggest we stop the chatter about Israel’s options.”

Israel and the U.S. are disagreeing regarding the path that should be taken to deal with the Iranian threat. While Israel appears to be in favor of an attack, the U.S. has made it clear that it believes there is still time for diplomacy.

State Department spokeswoman Victoria Nuland told reporters on Wednesday, “We believe there is still time for diplomacy to work, but we need to see a better effort from the Iranians to answer the concerns that we’ve had. So, we are focused on trying to have this dual-track policy of diplomacy backed by pressure work, and we are still focused on that.”

The chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, Gen. Martin Dempsey, said this week that Israel and the United States view the Iranian nuclear threat differently.

“Israel sees the Iranian threat more seriously than the U.S. sees it, because a nuclear Iran poses a threat to Israel’s very existence,” Dempsey said, adding that he and his Israeli counterpart, IDF Chief of Staff Benny Gantz, regularly confer on the issue.

“We speak at least once every two weeks, we compare intelligence reports, we discuss the security implications of the events in the region,” said Dempsey, adding, “At the same time, we admit that our clocks ticking at different paces. We have to understand the Israelis; they live with a constant suspicion with which we do not have to deal.”

On Thursday it was reported that Iran has accelerated its activities at the Fordo underground nuclear site near Qom.

The information, revealed by international diplomats, comes several days before the United Nations’ nuclear watchdog agency, the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA), is set to publish a new report on Iran’s nuclear program. According to the diplomats, the report will say that Iran has installed new centrifuges at the Fordo uranium enrichment facility.

Syrian envoy: We’ll destroy Israeli nuclear facilities with 20 missiles

August 24, 2012

Syrian envoy: We’ll destroy Israeli nuclear facilities with 20 missiles – Israel News, Ynetnews.

Jordanian media report that Syria’s ambassador in Amman, Bahjat Suleiman said that his country is capable of destroying Israel’s nuclear facilities should Damascus come under attack

Roi Kais

Published: 08.23.12, 19:24 / Israel News

Speaking during a meeting with a Jordanian-Syrian delegation at the embassy in Amman, Syria‘s Ambassador to Jordan Bahjat Suleiman said that Syria is capable of destroying Israel‘s nuclear facilities with 20 missiles, should Syria be attacked, in spite of the many casualties Syria would incur over such a move, Jordanian media reported Thursday.

The delegation arrived at the embassy in order to wish the ambassador and his country a happy Eid el-Fitr holiday and express support for Bashar Assad‘s regime.

“What the Zionists have, nuclear weapons-wise, could cause us major casualties should they attack Syria. In contrast, we could cause massive losses to their nuclear facilities and we wouldn’t need more than 20 missiles,” the ambassador told the delegation.

According to Jordanian reports, the ambassador said that in spite of the disparity in the number of casualties, Israel would not be able to bear the loss of life and the significant strategic losses.

He explained that this would lead Israelis to emigrate elsewhere and would symbolize the beginning of the end of the State of Israel.

According to the Ambassador, Syria would not stand idly by if attacked, but would not be the one to launch a war.

Suleiman also commented on the defection of Syrian Prime Minister Riyad Hijab, claiming that he fled the country and joined the rebels in exchange for $20 million.

Meanwhile, tensions between Syria and Jordan remain high following the firing four Syrian missiles in Jordan’s northern region, injuring a child and several others.

This led to a strong response from the Jordanian government which summoned the top Syrian diplomat in Amman to protest the attack.

A Jordanian government spokesman said that he believed the missile fire was unintentional but a government official warned that Jordan would take the appropriate measures should the missile fire be repeated.

‘Iran expands nuclear capacity underground’

August 24, 2012

‘Iran expands nuclear capacity u… JPost – Iranian Threat – News.

By YAAKOV LAPPIN, REUTERS
08/23/2012 21:26
Diplomatic sources in Vienna say Iran added more uranium enrichment machines at underground bunker in Fordow.

Interior of Bushehr nuclear plant

Photo: REUTERS/Stringer Iran

Iran has installed many more uranium enrichment machines in an underground bunker, diplomatic sources said on Thursday, potentially paving the way for a significant expansion of work the West fears is ultimately aimed at making nuclear bombs.

Several sources said Iran had put in place additional enrichment centrifuges in its Fordow facility, buried deep inside a mountain to protect it against any enemy strikes.

One source suggested it involved hundreds of machines.

“Our basic understanding is that they were continuing to install,” a Vienna-based diplomat said, adding the new centrifuges were not yet operating.

If confirmed in a report expected next week from the UN atomic watchdog, the development is likely to be seen as a sign of Iran’s continued defiance of international demands to curb its nuclear program, which Tehran says is entirely peaceful.

At Fordow, near the holy Shi’ite city of Qom, Iran is enriching uranium to a fissile concentration of 20 percent, activity which the West wants it to stop immediately as it brings it closer to the level required for nuclear weapons.

In a possible sign of further Iranian defiance in the face of such pressure, several sources said Iran had put in place additional enrichment centrifuges in the Fordow facility, buried deep inside a mountain to protect it against enemy strikes.

One source suggested hundreds of machines had been installed.

The most recently retired IDF chief of staff, Lt.-Col (res.) Gabi Ashkenazi, has added his voice to the chorus of former defense officials saying that there was no need for a military strike on Iran’s nuclear program at this time.

One Western envoy said that the suspected clean-up at Parchin was “intensifying” and that this made it doubtful that inspectors from the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) would uncover any hard evidence there, even if they were allowed to go.

“Given the extent of the cleanup, it is indeed unlikely the agency, if it ever gets access, would find anything at Parchin,” the diplomat said.

There was no immediate comment from Iran’s mission to the Vienna-based UN atomic agency. It has previously dismissed the allegations about Parchin, which it says is a conventional military facility, as “ridiculous.”

In video footage taken by a Makor Rishon journalist and aired on Channel 2 on Thursday evening, Ashkenazi said that “we’re still not there,” adding that a metaphorical nuclear suitcase was not about to be sent in Israel’s direction from Iran.

Instead of a strike, Ashkenazi said, a “combination of strategies” should be employed at this time, listing a covert war and economic sanctions coupled with diplomacy as some of the required steps.

“These should be supported by a third strategy, and that is keeping a military option that is realistic and credible,” Ashkenazi added. “That is what I think has to be done.

The former army chief said he hoped a combination of all the measures would be enough to get Iran to suspend its nuclear program.

Turning his attention to the civil war raging in Syria, Ashkenazi said the toppling of the Assad regime would “at the end of the day improve our strategic situation… even if Assad is replaced by a Sunni regime or government.”

Ashkenazi said that he did not believe Egypt would turn into a violent Islamist regime hellbent on using force against Israel anytime soon.

“I don’t think they can commit a serious act even if they get [the capabilities],” he said.