Archive for August 27, 2012

Olmert struck Syrian nuclear reactor in 2007 immediately after Bush refused to do so

August 27, 2012

Olmert struck Syrian nuclear reactor in 2007 immediately after Bush refused to do so | The Times of Israel.

‘If you’re not going to act against the reactor, then we are,’ PM told president, says advisor Elliot Abrams. Then, as now on Iran, the US favored diplomacy

August 26, 2012, 10:51 pm 6
Before and after satellite images of the Syrian nuclear reactor struck during Operation Orchard in 2007 (AP/DigitalGlobe)

Before and after satellite images of the Syrian nuclear reactor struck during Operation Orchard in 2007 (AP/DigitalGlobe)

Former prime minister Ehud Olmert ordered the 2007 strike on a Syrian nuclear reactor immediately after former US president George W. Bush informed him that the Americans would not attack the facility, according to a Channel 10 report aired on Sunday evening.

Bush’s deputy national security adviser Elliot Abrams was present when the president called Olmert on September 6, 2007 and made clear that the US would not take action, and that then-secretary of state Condoleezza Rice would fly to Israel to hold a joint press conference with Olmert to alert the international community of the secret reactor. The US had decided to handle the Syrian threat via diplomacy.

Olmert responded to Bush that the secretary’s visit would not be necessary and that Israel would deal with the nuclear facility on its own.

“If you’re not going to act against the reactor then we are,” Abrams quoted Olmert as saying during the teleconference. “You don’t want to know where or when,” the former prime minister reportedly added.

The Israelis were convinced that time was fairly short, and that they had to strike the reactor — built by the Syrians with extensive input from the North Koreans — before it went live, the TV report said.

Israel has never claimed responsibility for the strike, named Operation Orchard, which occurred shortly after midnight on the same day. And Syria has never acknowledged that its nuclear reactor was destroyed.

According to Abrams, three hours after the strike, Olmert called the former US president and spoke briefly regarding the mission.

“I did what was necessary,” Abrams quoted Olmert as saying. To which Bush simply replied, “I thank you.”

According to the Channel 10 report, Defense Minister Ehud Barak was initially against the strike, possibly because of personal political considerations. However, the only minister who actually voted against taking out the reactor was Avi Dichter.

Dozens of Syrians were killed in the strike, as well as 10 North Koreans who were presumably helping with technical aspects of the secret facility, the TV report said.

The TV report was broadcast amid reports in recent days that Israel is considering a strike against Iran’s nuclear facilities. In contrast to the public silence before the Syrian strike, and before Israel’s 1981 raid that destroyed Saddam Hussein’s reactor at Osirak, however, the question of whether Israel should resort to military intervention against Iran’s nuclear facilities has been the subject of feverish public debate for months.

With Iran as with Syria, however, the Americans are urging that more time be given to diplomacy, and the Israelis are stressing the urgent imperative for action.

Israel’s Remaining Strategic Options

August 27, 2012

A7 EXCLUSIVE: Israel’s Remaining Strategic Options – Defense/Security – News – Israel National News.

Former Commander in Chief, US Strategic Air Command and renowned Int’l Law and Political Science Prof. co-author a must-read article for A7.

By Prof. L Beres & Gen. J. Chain

First Publish: 8/27/2012, 6:08 PM

 

Prof. L Beres & Gen. J. Chain

Prof. L Beres & Gen. J. Chain
Arutz Sheva

Louis René Beres (Ph.D., Princeton, 1971), is Professor of Political Science and International Law at Purdue. The author of many major books and articles in the field, including some of the very earliest publications on Israeli nuclear strategy, he was Chair of Project Daniel (Israel, 2003).

John T. Chain (USAF/Ret.) was Commander-in-Chief, U.S. Strategic Air Command (CINCSAC), and Director, Joint Strategic Target Planning Staff. General Chain also served as Chief of Staff, Supreme Headquarters Allied Powers Europe, and Director, Bureau of Politico-Military Affairs, U.S. Department of State.

Special to Arutz Sheva:

Sometimes, the scholar, the soldier, and the diplomat can learn from the playwright.

“Do you know what it means to find yourselves face to face with a madman?” inquires Luigi Pirandello’s, Henry IV. “Madmen, luck folk, construct without logic, or rather with a logic that flies like a feather.”

In the unpredictable theatre of modern world politics, a real-life drama that can routinely shudder with absurdity, decisional constructions that are based on pure logic can collapse before madness. Moreover, if enemy madness and nuclear weapons should happen to coincide, an affected country’s resultant misfortunes could quickly become intolerable.

Still, even now, amid the ongoing strategic drama of Israel versus Iran, there is no compelling or convincing evidence that key decision-makers in Tehran are “mad.” Of course, irrationality is not the same condition as madness, and pertinent Iranian leaders might still meet the usually accepted criteria of an irrational or non-rational state. Here, however counterintuitive, Iran’s leaders could choose, at least on occasion, to value certain preferences more highly than national survival, yet maintain a consistent and transitive rank-ordering among these key preferences.

In all likelihood, both operationally and diplomatically, the window of Israeli preemption opportunity is already closed. Nonetheless, even in the absence of an effective eleventh-hour Israeli and/or American defensive first-strike against Iran, Israeli security would not necessarily suffer an irremediable or existential setback. Although an irrational Iran might not be responsive to the more orthodox strategic threats of retaliatory destruction, it could still remain subject to other relevant threats.

For Israel, this now implies, inter alia, a core obligation to (1) carefully and comprehensively identify such alternative threats, and (2) fashion this unorthodox hierarchy of alternative threats into a purposeful deterrence policy.

Undoubtedly, by “choosing” to forego anticipatory self-defense against Iran, the legal equivalent of a permissible first-strike, Israel could have to live with protracted uncertainty. After all, “coexistence” with an already-nuclear Iran could mean having to endure under a constant threat of devastating Iranian nuclear attack.

It is, in fact, with just such a bitterly unacceptable prospect in mind, that Israel has been steadily expanding and upgrading the country’s critical active defenses.

Improved Israeli interceptors contain new software to deal effectively with Iran’s Shahab and Sajil missiles. Naturally, there exist more-or-less related technologies to cope with Iran’s Conqueror rocket.

The central pillar of Israel’s active defense plan for Iran remains the Arrow anti-ballistic missile program. Iron Dome, a reinforcing system, is intended primarily for intercepting shorter-range rocket attacks. David’s Sling, now in earlier stages of development, is designed for use against medium-range rockets and cruise missiles.

Technically, judging from the most recent tests, everything appears entirely “on track.”

At the same time, no matter how promising the interpenetrating Israeli protection systems and their components happen to be, there are urgent reasons for MOD/IDF never to become too dependent upon active defense. This is because no system of ballistic missile defense (BMD) can ever be dependable enough to preclude or minimize a core strategy of deterrence. Even with the very best deployable systems of ballistic missile defense, there may be too-high levels of “leakage.” This actionable conclusion becomes especially obvious in those emotionally hard-to-imagine cases where incoming warheads would be biological and/or nuclear.

Israel must move, conspicuously, to strengthen its historically ambiguous nuclear deterrent. In order to be dissuaded from launching an attack, any rational adversary, and possibly also an irrational one, would first need to calculate that Israel’s second-strike forces were sufficiently invulnerable to any considered first-strike aggressions. Facing Israel’s Arrow, this adversary would likely require increasing numbers of missiles, in order to achieve an assuredly destructive first-strike capability.

Over time, however, this adversary could still undermine the critical deterrence benefits of Israel’s active defenses. It would achieve this valuable “efficiency” simply by adding regular rocket increments to its own arsenal of offensive missiles.

Israel must continue to develop, test, and implement a missile interception capability that will best match the enemy threat. It must also take prompt and even innovative steps to enhance the credibility of its still-ambiguous nuclear deterrent. If, as expected, Iranian nuclearization should continue to proceed unobstructed, Israel will then have to prepare, expeditiously, and among other things, to remove its bomb from the so-called “basement.”

In such palpably unstable circumstances, any continuing posture of deliberate nuclear ambiguity would simply cease to be reasonable or rational.

We may presume that Israel already has a secure and penetration-capable nuclear force.

This second-strike capacity, hardened and dispersed, should now be made more recognizably ready to inflict an unacceptably damaging retaliatory salvo. As any exclusively “counterforce” targeting posture could have major deterrence shortfalls, Israel’s primary nuclear targets must generally be identifiable enemy cities. From the standpoint of optimally enhancing nuclear deterrence, it may also be time for Israel to release certain carefully selected information about its sea-based retaliatory forces.

There is more. Israel must clarify that Arrow and its other corollary active defenses would always operate simultaneously with Israeli nuclear retaliations. This point is incontestable. Iran must be made to understand that, where appropriate, Israel’s defensive deployments would never supplant, or even render less probable, an Israeli nuclear reprisal.

Iran should never have been allowed to proceed this far with its illegal military nuclearization. Now, in consequence, Israel will have to deal with a uniquely hostile enemy regime by instituting steady enhancements of both its nuclear deterrence and active defense capabilities. Although the prospect of regime-change in Tehran might at first appear desirable and perhaps even compensatory, such an actual leadership transformation could ultimately offer Israel little more than a transient illusion of enhanced security.

Conceivably, in fact, a successor regime in Tehran could prove more worrisome for Jerusalem, and also for Washington. Indeed, examined from the all-important perspective of blatantly annihilatory Jihadist inclinations, Ahmadinejad and his current clerical masters may still not represent the most dangerous possible expression of an Iranian national leadership. Sometimes, we may witness, truth is starkly counterintuitive.

In the matter of enemy delivery systems, Iranian nuclear harms could be directed toward Israel, not only via direct missile strike, but also by terrorist-proxy platforms. These platforms could include cars, trucks, and boats. Should a newly-nuclear Iran ever decide to share certain of its weapons-usable materials and/or scientific personnel with Hizbullah in Lebanon, Israel might then have to face a heightened prospect of nuclear terrorism. The multiple perils posed in this scenario could also impact American cities.

Soon, leaders in Israel and the United States will no longer be able to “kick the Iranian nuclear can” down the road. More than likely, however, in their now too-long delayed tactical calculations, the preemption option will finally have to be rejected. Unassailably, in time, this controversial option will simply have become demonstratively more costly than gainful.

What’s left? The “good news” is that deterrence, even of an enemy state that might sometime not value its physical survival above all other relevant values, could still work. For Israel, successfully deterring a possibly irrational nuclear adversary in Tehran need not be judged out of the question. Irrationality, we should recall, is not the same as madness.

As we have already noted, an irrational Iranian adversary might still display a consistent and transitive hierarchy of preferences. Almost certainly, the very top of any such preference ordering would reveal the thoroughly immutable religious expectations of Shiite Islam. Significantly, in particular circumstances, no-longer-rational leaders in Iran could plausibly calculate that the overriding theological benefits of any long-term peace with Israel would plainly exceed the expected costs.

It is possible, and perhaps even probable, that, for the foreseeable future, authoritative Iranian leadership elites will remain entirely rational, thus valuing their country’s physical survival more highly than any other preference, or combination of preferences. Here, Iran would remain subject to the very same “normal” threats of retaliatory destruction that ordinarily affect other rational states in world politics. While there can never be any absolute guarantees of such a distinctly preferred scenario, it is also be premature to conclude that a newly-nuclear Iran, whether rational or irrational, would lash out viscerally, at Israel, or at its other enemies.

In the interminably high-stakes drama of world politics, irrationality is not the same as madness. It follows that even an irrational Iranian nuclear regime might not lie outside or beyond the ordinary calculations and readily determinable consequences of Israeli nuclear deterrence. An intransigent Tehran could still confront Israel with the intimidating aspect of incessant belligerence, but this could be substantially less ominous than offering Jerusalem the indecipherable and utterly indifferent face of genuine madness.

Listen to what Iran is saying about Israel

August 27, 2012

Ghitis: Listen to what Iran is saying about Israel.

Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad speaks at the conclusion

Photo credit: AP | Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad speaks at the conclusion of an annual pro-Palestinian rally at the Tehran University campus, in Tehran, Iran. Iran’s president says Israel’s existence is an “insult to all humanity.” (Aug. 17, 2012)

In recent days, much attention has focused on signs from Israel that an attack on Iran’s nuclear installations may be imminent. Amid the flurry of analysis, little attention has gone to what Iran is telling the world about its views. We would do well to listen closely. The world should never become jaded, immune to the genocidal hatred spewed by leaders of a nation that is still treated as a full-fledged member of international institutions.

On Aug. 17, Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad proclaimed that Israel’s existence is an “insult to all of humanity.” A couple of weeks earlier, he told a gathering of Muslim diplomats that, “anyone who loves freedom and justice must strive for the annihilation of the Zionist regime.” Ever the optimist, the president explained that this would help “solve all the world’s problems.” Global attention has lately centered on the news from Israel. Observers and analysts have posed valid questions about whether or not attacking Iran is the best course of action, and about whether Israeli officials are bluffing or are truly preparing for a new armed conflict.

Israel’s plans, of course, are a legitimate subject of debate. But we should not take our eyes away from Iran, not just its actions in pushing ahead with its fast-growing nuclear enrichment program, but also its words, the rhetoric of its leaders — the men who set the country’s agenda — for hints into their worldview.


MORE: Analysis and discussion from Viewsday | Newsday columnists | More opinion

CARTOONS: Walt Handelsman’s Cartoons | National Cartoon Roundup


Ahmadinejad is not the country’s top leader. But that should offer little comfort. The views of Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei are even more chilling. A few months ago, Khamenei declared that Israel is a “cancerous tumor that should be cut and will be cut.” Then he pledged his support to anyone willing to participate in carrying out the operation. “From now on, in any place, if any nation or any group confronts the Zionist regime, we will endorse and we will help.” The rhetoric coming from Tehran is so extreme that it strikes against a western tendency to simply dismiss ideas that clash too violently against our own. There’s just no place in our minds, in civilized society, to file the repulsive words disgorging from the Ayatollah and his acolytes.

In case anyone doubted him, Khamenei openly admitted for the first time something everyone already knew. “We have intervened in anti-Israel matters,” he said, boasting of Iran’s participation in wars between Israel and Hezbollah and Hamas in recent years.

If you want to understand the larger ideology, Ahmadinejad told Muslim ambassadors in Tehran that “it has now been some 400 years that a horrendous Zionist clan has been ruling the major world affairs,” saying the Jews control “the major power circles in political, media, monetary and banking organizations in the world.” Now, where have we heard this before? It would be pointless to note that if the Jews controlled everything, they might not have faced the, shall we say, troubles they have faced over the centuries, including the near-annihilation of Jewish life in Europe during the 1940s. But that, of course, is just a myth, according to the Iranian leadership. It’s unfortunate for Ahmadinejad and his friends that they don’t believe 6 million Jews were killed, since they would surely derive a great deal of joy from that thoroughly and conclusively documented fact.

The Iranian regime has emerged as the world leader in Judeophobic conspiracy theories and incitement. Verbal taunts, smears and calumnies often include vicious attacks and libel against Americans, the U.S., and the West as a whole.

Those who thought Ahmadinejad’s words had been incorrectly translated in 2005 when he called for Israel to be “wiped off the page of time,” have now heard ample and repeated clarification. That was exactly what he meant.

When combined with Tehran’s defiance of calls to stop enriching uranium and pushing forward its nuclear program on many fronts, the words take on added significance. It’s worth remembering that in Khamenei’s “Israel is a cancer” speech he also vowed that “the hegemony of Iran will be promoted.” That’s why Iran’s Arab neighbors want Tehran stopped.

The question, of course, is what to do about all this. The thought of another war in the Middle East is sickening. But the idea of this regime becoming even more powerful is just as terrifying, perhaps more. Pity the people, in Washington and Jerusalem, who have to make the call. If they get it wrong, the costs will be unimaginable.

As we ponder the choices, let’s keep listening to Iran’s leaders. Their words as much as their actions should guide the decision.

Frida Ghitis writes about global affairs for The Miami Herald. Readers may send her email at fjghitis@gmail.com.

Carrier strike group rushes to PersianGulf – UPI.com

August 27, 2012

Carrier strike group rushes to PersianGulf – UPI.com.

The aircraft carrier USS John C. Stennis is being rushed to the Persian Gulf as tensions between Israel and Iran edge closer to the boil over point.

 

Published: Aug. 27, 2012 at 6:30 AM

 

WASHINGTON, Aug. 27 (UPI) — The U.S. Navy aircraft carrier USS John C. Stennis is being rushed to the Persian Gulf as tensions between Israel and Iran edge closer to the boiling point.

The Nimitz class carrier, with an air wing of about 90 aircraft, sets sail Monday on an eight-month deployment to the region — four months ahead of schedule.

In the gulf it will join the USS Enterprise Strike Group, giving the United States a powerful deterrent to any Iranian attack on commercial oil tankers in the Persian Gulf and Strait of Hormuz or a counterpunch to Iranian military action against U.S. military facilities in the region or those of its allies.

“It’s tough,” U.S. Defense Secretary Leon Panetta said to sailors recalled early from leave. “We’re asking an awful lot of each of you. And frankly, you are the best I have — and when the world calls, we have to respond.”

Panetta said the Stennis Strike Group, which includes a guided missile cruiser and four guided missile destroyers, is necessary in the gulf to guard against threats to U.S. national security interests and “obviously, Iran is one of those threats,” he said.

The word “crisis” has become nearly a synonym for the Middle East. U.S. and Israeli ally Hosni Mubarak, for decades the president of Egypt, has been ousted and replaced by a Muslim fundamentalist regime that has sent tanks to the Sinai border in violation of peace accords; and Syrian strongman Bashar Assad is battling a rebellion that has left thousands dead and threatens his demise.

Syria is known to have chemical weapons, which the West fears could fall into the hands of jihadist groups or be used in what is as close to a civil war as you can get in Syria.

But the United States is hindered in how much it can do to aid Syrian rebels – Assad is an ally of Iran, which funnels money and weaponry to Hezbollah in Lebanon, who in turn use the largesse in terror attacks on Israel.

Tehran has slammed Western powers and gulf allies for supporting the Syrian rebellion and warned of unspecified consequences.

Yet as serious as those issues are, none has topped the conundrum of Iran’s nuclear ambitions, which Tel Aviv views as a direct threat to Israel’s very existence, an existence that Tehran’s leadership repeatedly vows to end.

“The very existence of the Zionist regime is an insult to humankind and an affront to all world nations,” the official Islamic Republic News Agency reported Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad saying in a recent speech.

“Confronting Zionists will also pave the way for saving the whole humankind from exploitation, depravity and misery.”

Annihilating Israel, he said, was the duty of humankind.

Iran’s railing against the Jewish state is nothing new since the overthrow of Shah Reza Palavi in 1979 but Iran is now believed to have missiles capable of hitting Israel and is suspected of being intent on building a nuclear weapon.

Since Iranian dissidents first disclosed the existence of nuclear sites that Tehran had not reported to the International Atomic Energy Agency – a U.N. body – the Iranian government has played an unending game – agreeing to cooperate with international inspectors and then not doing so; agreeing to international negotiations over its suspected weapons programs and nuclear fuel enrichment, and then stonewalling on substantive discussions.

Iran is processing nuclear fuel at a 20 percent enrichment level, higher than that needed for civilian nuclear energy, which it claims are its true ambitions. Nuclear power facilities, it insists are a sovereign right.

IAEA reports show indications that Iran may indeed be moving toward acquiring a nuclear weapon.

Israel, meanwhile, has responded by warning it has a right to defend itself and a pre-emptive military strike against Iranian nuclear facilities is a distinct possibility, something which the West fears will draw them into a conflict that could spiral out of control.

Iran, for its part, has threatened to use force to close the Strait of Hormuz — through which about 40 percent of the world’s seaborne crude passes – strike back at Israel and also hit U.S. military installations in gulf countries.

International efforts to pressure Iran on its nuclear program and sidestep a military confrontation are hurting Iran but Tehran remains defiant. EU countries, which accounted for about 18 percent of Iranian petroleum exports, have stopped importation of oil from Iran and banned companies from insuring Iranian oil tankers or tankers carrying Iranian petroleum products.

U.S. sanctions, which bars financial dealings between U.S. banks and those abroad that facilitate payments for Iranian petroleum are also taking their toll on the Iranian economy, which depends on oil exports for about 80 percent of foreign exchange earnings. U.S. measures, however, allow for exemptions for countries that are heavily dependent on Iranian oil but are scaling back on their importation of it — most notably, Japan, South Korea.

Others are believed to be engaged in sub-rosa deals with Tehran and Iranian front companies to obtain oil, but at lower prices that the Tehran regime would like.

Israel is doubtful of the efficacy of the sanctions regime and made it clear it will act with force to keep Iran from becoming a nuclear power. In recent weeks speculation has been rife of an imminent strike, possibly before the U.S. presidential election. Israel, however, is apparently divided on the issue.

Given the ratcheting up of tensions, two U.S. carrier strike groups in the Persian Gulf appears a sensible.

Netanyahu to Lebanon: Israel will strike in case of Hezbollah provocation

August 27, 2012

Netanyahu to Lebanon: Israel will strike in case of Hezbollah provocation – Israel News | Haaretz Daily Newspaper.

Haaretz has learned that Netanyahu conveyed this message to the Lebanese government through a Western diplomat he met in Jerusalem several weeks ago.

By Barak Ravid | Aug.27, 2012

New border

 

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has warned the Lebanese government that Israel would strike Lebanon if Hezbollah attempted any provocation against Israel.

Haaretz has learned that Netanyahu conveyed the message to the Lebanese government through a Western diplomat he met in Jerusalem several weeks ago.

A senior official who is aware of the details of the meeting said Netanyahu sees Hezbollah as part of the Lebanese administration. The prime minister therefore reportedly clarified to the government that if Hezbollah attacks Israel, the Israel Defense Forces will strike back forcefully – without differentiating between Hezbollah and the State of Lebanon.

“As far as we’re concerned, the Lebanese government is responsible for whatever happens in its jurisdiction,” Netanyahu apparently told the Western diplomat.

The prime minister’s office declined to comment on the matter.

If Netanyahu follows through on this threat, it means any confrontation with Hezbollah would lead to IDF strikes against Lebanon’s infrastructure, including power plants, air and sea ports, government buildings, etc., and would not be limited to targets identified with Hezbollah.

In the Second Lebanese War, Israel limited strikes against Lebanese infrastructure due to pressure from the United States.

Netanyahu’s warning comes as Israel is preparing for several scenarios that might include a confrontation with Hezbollah, including an attempt by Hezbollah to transfer chemical weapons, missiles or anti-aerial rockets from Syria following the collapse of the Assad regime.

Netanyahu and Defense Minister Ehud Barak have explicitly said that Israel might attack convoys transferring such arms to Hezbollah. Defense Ministry officials have indicated that such a strike might cause Hezbollah to launch missiles and rockets at Israel.

It is also possible that Hezbollah could attack Israel following an Israeli or U.S. strike against Iran’s nuclear facilities. Defense officials believe that Iran’s Revolutionary Guard would instruct Hezbollah to launch missiles at population centers in Israel, including the Tel Aviv area, and at strategic facilities and military bases.

Speaking at a Jerusalem Day rally, Hezbollah leader Hassan Nasrallah said earlier this month that Hezbollah is capable of killing tens of thousands of Israelis with precise missiles launched at Israeli targets.

“Israel constitutes only a limited amount of targets,” Nasrallah said, adding, “Hitting these targets with a limited number of missiles would make the lives of hundreds of thousands of Zionists hell on earth. Tens of thousands would be killed.” Nasrallah added that “Iran is threatened but strong. Lebanon is threatened, but we have the courage and ability to react. If we are attacked, I want you to know that we won’t await anyone’s approval to react.”