Archive for August 2012

U.S. top general Dempsey opposes unilateral Israeli action against Iran

August 31, 2012

U.S. top general Dempsey opposes unilateral Israeli action against Iran.

The U.S. chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, General Martin Dempsey, who said sanctions on Iran should be given a chance to succeed. (Reuters)

The U.S. chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, General Martin Dempsey, who said sanctions on Iran should be given a chance to succeed. (Reuters)

American top General Martin Dempsey, the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, has expressed Washington’s opposition to a unilateral Israeli military action against Iran, saying that it would only delay but not end the Islamic Republic’s nuclear ambition.

General Dempsey, who was in London to attend the opening ceremony of the Paralympic Games as head of the U.S. delegation, told reporters that such an attack would “clearly delay but probably not destroy Iran’s nuclear program,” the Guardian has reproted.

“I don’t want to be complicit if they [Israel] choose to do it.”

The high-ranking official said Washington does not know about Iran’s nuclear intentions, as intelligence did not reveal any succinct evidence.

But what was clear, he said, was that the “international coalition” applying pressure on Iran “could be undone if [Iran] was attacked prematurely.”

Previously, U.S. Defense Secretary Leon Panetta said that Washington does not believe Israel has made a decision on whether to attack Iran over its nuclear program.

Panetta, who visited Israel on July, told reporters at the Pentagon it was important that military action be the “last resort” and said there was still time for sanctions and diplomatic pressure to work.
Dempsey on Syria

On Syria, General Dempsey said that Washington was collaborating with the country’s neighbors, sharing intelligence and helping with military planning.

According to U.S. Department of State, Washington is providing more than $76 million this fiscal year in humanitarian assistance to help an estimated 500,000 people inside Syria, as well as the tens of thousands who have fled to neighboring countries to escape the violence.

The general, however, sounded that alarm over the implications of establishing a “humanitarian zone” inside Syria, proposed by others, including France.

He said, Syria was not Libya, and that there was no comparison.
He warned that establishing a humanitarian zone would beget other responsibilities, including providing protection against Syrian missiles.

Nuclear report on Iran puts Israel in a box

August 31, 2012

Nuclear report on Iran puts Israel in a box – The Tech.

THE NEW YORK TIMES
August 31, 2012

JERUSALEM — For Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, the International Atomic Energy Agency on Thursday offered findings validating his long-standing position that while economic sanctions and diplomatic isolation may have hurt Iran, they have failed to slow Tehran’s nuclear program. If anything, the program is speeding up.

But the agency’s report has also put Israel in a corner, documenting that Iran is close to crossing what Israel has long said is its red line: the capability to produce nuclear weapons in a location invulnerable to Israeli attack. With the report that the country has already installed 2,000 centrifuges inside a virtually impenetrable underground laboratory, and that it has ramped up production of nuclear fuel, officials and experts here say the conclusions may force Israel to strike Iran or concede it is not prepared to act on its own.

Whether that ultimately leads to a change in strategy — or a unilateral attack — is something that even Israel’s inner circle cannot yet agree on, despite what seems to be a consensus that Iran’s program may soon be beyond the reach of Israel’s military capability.

“It leaves us at this dead end,” said a senior government official here, speaking on the condition of anonymity because he is involved in the decision-making process. “The more time elapses with no change on the ground in terms of Iranian policies, the more it becomes a zero-sum game.”

The report accentuates the tension with Washington during the hot-tempered atmosphere of a presidential election. President Barack Obama and Netanyahu often say they have a common assessment of the intelligence about Iran’s progress. What they do not agree on is the time available.

U.S. officials have repeatedly tried to assure the Israelis that they have the country’s back — and to remind them that Israel does not have the ability, by itself, to destroy the facility, built beneath a mountain outside Qum. The United States does have weaponry that it believes can demolish the lab, but in Obama’s judgment there is still what the White House calls “time and space” for diplomacy, sanctions and sabotage, a combination that the Israelis say has been insufficient.

“They can’t do it right without us,” a former adviser to Obama said recently. “And we’re trying to persuade them that a strike that just drives the program more underground isn’t a solution; it’s a bigger problem.”

The report comes at a critical moment in Israel’s long campaign to build Western support for stopping Iran from developing a nuclear weapon, which virtually every leader here regards as an existential threat.

An autumn abyss?

August 31, 2012

An autumn abyss? | GulfNews.com.

Syrian civil war has become a proxy in an openly declared battle for regional hegemony between foreign powers

  • By Joschka Fischer
Special to Gulf News
  • Published: 00:00 August 31, 2012

In the coming months, several serious regional economic and political crises could combine into one mega-watershed, fuelling an intense global upheaval. In the course of the summer, the prospect of a perilous fall has become only more likely.

The drums of war are being banged ever more loudly in the Middle East. No one can predict the direction in which Egypt’s Islamist president and parliamentary majority will lead the country. But one thing is clear: the Islamists are decisively altering the region’s politics. This regional re-alignment need not be necessarily anti-western, but it surely will be if Israel and/or the US attack Iran militarily.

Meanwhile, civil war is raging in Syria, accompanied by a humanitarian catastrophe. To be sure, President Bashar Al Assad’s regime will not survive, but it is determined to fight until the end. Syria’s Balkanisation among the country’s diverse ethnic and religious groups is a clearly predictable result. Indeed, a Bosnia-type scenario can no longer be excluded, while the prospect of the Syrian government’s loss of control over its chemical weapons poses an immediate threat of military intervention by Turkey, Israel, or the US.

Moreover, the Syrian civil war has become a proxy in an openly declared battle for regional hegemony between Iran on one side and Saudi Arabia, Qatar, Turkey, and the US on the other. Staying on the sidelines of this Arab-western coalition, Israel is playing its cards close to its chest.

Iran, for its part, has proclaimed Syria an indispensable ally, and is determined to prevent regime change there by all available means. Does that mean that Hezbollah’s militias in neighbouring Lebanon will now become directly involved in Syria’s civil war? Would such intervention revive Lebanon’s own long civil war of the 1970’s and 1980’s? Is there a threat of a new Arab-Israeli war hanging over the Middle East? And, as Kurds inside and outside of Syria grow more assertive, Turkey, with its large and long-restive Kurdish population, is also growing restive.

At the same time, the regional struggle currently playing out in Syria is becoming increasingly entangled with the other major source of war sounds: Iran’s nuclear programme. Indeed, parallel to the Syrian drama, the rhetoric in the confrontation between Israel and Iran over the programme has become dramatically harsher.

Dead end

Both sides have maneuvered themselves into a dead-end. If Iran gives in and agrees to a sustainable diplomatic solution, the regime will lose face on a critical domestic issue, jeopardising its legitimacy and survival. From the regime’s point of view, the legacy of the 1979 Islamic Revolution is at stake. But the international sanctions are hurting, and Iran risks losing Syria. Everything points to the regime’s need for success — now more than ever — concerning its nuclear programme.

Similarly, Israel’s government has backed itself into a domestic policy trap of its own. Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and Defence Minister Ehud Barak cannot accept a nuclear-armed Iran. They do not fear a nuclear attack against Israel, but rather a nuclear arms race in the region and a dramatic shift in power to Israel’s disadvantage.

From their point of view, Israel must either convince the US to attack Iran and its nuclear plants or take on the maximum risk of using its own military forces to do so.

Both sides have substantially reduced their options, thereby limiting the possibility of a diplomatic compromise. And that means that both sides have stopped thinking through the consequences of their actions.

Everywhere there is talk of a ‘military option’, which means air strikes. But, while advocates speak of a limited ‘surgical operation’, what they are really talking about is the start of two wars: an aerial war, led by the US and Israel, and an asymmetric war, led by Iran and its allies.

And what if this ‘military option’ fails? What if Iran becomes a nuclear power, the region’s democratic movements are swept away by a wave of anti-western Islamic solidarity, and the Iranian regime emerges even stronger? Iran, too, evidently has not thought its position through to its logical conclusion. What does it stand to gain from nuclear status if it comes at the cost of regional isolation and harsh United Nations sanctions for the foreseeable future? And what if it triggers a regional nuclear arms race?

China, already in economic trouble, would be hit hardest, along with the whole of East Asia. With the US also economically weakened and facing a presidential election, America’s leadership ability would be seriously constricted. And could a weakened Europe cope with an oil shock at all? A regional and global security shock caused by asymmetric warfare could add still further to the world economy’s troubles, causing exports to slump even more.

Respice finem! (Consider the end), the Romans used to say. World leaders need to take this timeless wisdom to heart. And that applies doubly to Europeans. It would be absurd if we had to suffer a real catastrophe again in order to understand what European integration has always been about.

— Project Syndicate, 2012

Top US soldier: “I don’t want to be complicit” if Israel attacks Iran

August 31, 2012

Top US soldier: “I don’t want to be complicit” if Israel attacks Iran.

DEBKAfile Special Report August 31, 2012, 9:20 AM (GMT+02:00)

 

US Gen. Martin Dempsey meets PM Netanyahu in Jerusalem.
US Gen. Martin Dempsey meets PM Netanyahu in Jerusalem.

In its bluntest message yet, the US administration under Barack Obama, declared that Israel is on its own if it decides to go for Iran’s nuclear program with a military operation. 

Thursday, Aug. 30, Gen. Martin Dempsey, Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, offered the view for the third time in as many weeks that an Israeli attack would “clearly delay but probably not destroy Iran’s nuclear program.”
But this time, talking to journalists in London, he added impatiently: “I don’t want to be complicit if they [Israel] choose to do it.”

Dempsey then astonished his audience by saying he did not know Iran’s nuclear intentions, “as intelligence did not reveal intentions.” What was clear, he said, was that the “international coalition” applying pressure on Iran “could be undone if [Iran] was attacked prematurely.”
Sanctions against Iran were having an effect, he said, and they should be given a reasonable opportunity to succeed.
The general’s timing on this assertion was unfortunate. As he spoke, the International Atomic Energy Agency reported a 31-percent jump in Iran’s 20 percent enriched uranium to 189.4 kilograms from 145 in May.
It was therefore obvious to the world that Iran has not been deflected by sanctions one whit from its gallop towards a nuclear weapon capacity, a race that will continue so long as nothing effective is done to stop – or even delay – its progress.
The mistimed Dempsey remarks, say debkafile’s military sources, are the clearest sign yet that President Obama is fed up with hearing about Iran and its nuclear aspirations. He wants to be left alone to make his own judgments and decisions on the intelligence put before him – even though he might be too slow to stop Iran becoming a nuclear-armed power.
Israel, which is in direct line of an explicit Iranian threat of destruction, was therefore publicly slapped down by its best friend. Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu and Defense Minister Ehud Barak and their predecessors were shown to have wasted three years in tireless efforts to solve the Iranian nuclear peril in accord with that friend. Washington has just dumped them.

debkafile suggests that unless Gen. Dempsey spoke off the cuff (unlikely), he would certainly have been obeying a White House directive – even if Washington later issues a softening remark. That directive may have been prompted by information that Israel is on the point of attacking Iran, which Obama would seek to head off.
The latest IAEA quarterly report published Thursday must have seriously embarrassed the Obama administration by making nonsense of its dependence on diplomacy and sanctions.The top US soldier may have been deployed for an authorative answer.
But Iran’s leaders must be laughing up their sleeves at America’s futile efforts to isolate them, as they race toward their nuclear goal while showcasing Tehran as the stage for the Non-Aligned Summit attended by dozens of world leaders.

UN chief to Khamenei: Stop threatening Israel

August 30, 2012

UN chief to Khamenei: Stop threatening Israel – Israel News, Ynetnews.

During Tehran meeting with supreme leader, Ban says verbal attacks on Jewish state offensive, inflammatory; urges Iran to ‘prove nuclear program is peaceful.’ Netanyahu: International participation at Iran summit a ‘stain on humanity’

Dudi Cohen, agencies

Published: 08.29.12, 22:38 / Israel News

UN chief Ban Ki-moon met Iran’s president and supreme leader in Tehran on Wednesday to urge them to take concrete steps to prove the country’s nuclear program is peaceful and to use their influence to help end Syria’s 17-month conflict.

Ban’s spokesman Martin Nesirky said that in Ban’s separate meetings with President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad and Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, he further said their verbal attacks on Israel were offensive, inflammatory and unacceptable.

Ban arrived in Tehran on Wednesday for a three-day visit to attend a meeting of some 120 non-aligned nations. He defied calls from the United States and Israel to boycott the event.

“He said Iran needed to take concrete steps to address the concerns of the International Atomic Energy Agency and prove to the world its nuclear program is for peaceful purposes,” Nesirky, speaking from Tehran, told reporters in New York.

Iran says its program is peaceful, but Western powers and their allies fear it is aimed at developing atomic weapons. Iran has been hit with four rounds of UN Security Council sanctions for refusing to halt its nuclear enrichment program.

Khamenei said during the meeting that Iran was “working to allay the concerns regarding nuclear weapons.

“The Americans know Iran is not interested in (developing) nuclear weapons. They are just looking for an excuse,” he said.

The supreme leader said nuclear weapons in Israel’s hands poses a greater threat to the region. “I expect the UN to act on this issue,” he said. Israel has never acknowledged having nuclear weapons but is widely believed to have a large arsenal.

Following an earlier meeting with parliamentary speaker Ali Larijani, Ban told a press conference that “Iran can play an important role in solving the Syrian crisis peacefully,” adding that “the Syrian people have suffered a lot … with more than 20,000 dying in the past 18 months.”
ביקור אצל המנהיג העליון

‘Americans looking for an excuse.’ Ban (L) with Khamenei

Larijani, for his part, said “unfortunately, some big countries have acted adventurously in the region and have created disruption in the region like what we are witnessing in Syria.”

Iran, the chief ally of Syria’s regime, accuses the United States, Turkey, Saudi Arabia and Qatar of sustaining the armed revolt in Syria.

Ban with Ahmadinejad (Photo: EPA)
Ban with Ahmadinejad (Photo: EPA)

Addressing the Syrian crisis, Khamenei told Ban that the solution is to stop weapons shipments to the Syrian rebels, or as he put it, “irresponsible groups inside Syria,” according to his website.

A senior Iranian official gave details of the plan Iran is proposing at the summit.

“Iran’s proposal … is a cease-fire and the implementation of a three-month mechanism for national reconciliation talks in this country,” the official IRNA news agency quoted Deputy Foreign Minister Hossein Amir Abdollahian as saying Wednesday.

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu called the Non-Aligned Movement summit in Iran a “disgrace” to humanity.

During a meeting Wednesday evening with the Prime Minister of Lower Saxony, Germany, David McAllister, the PM said “Seventy years ago, six million of our people were destroyed in an act of genocide. The world pledged ‘never again’ . . . It appears that many among the international community haven’t learned anything. I think this is a disgrace and a stain on humanity.”

Netanyahu said that the Iranian “regime denies the Holocaust and is working to destroy the Jewish state. This regime oppresses its people, takes part in the butchering of innocent Syrians, and calls for death to America, death to Israel.”

Reuters, AFP, AP contributed to the report

BBC News – War talks fails to dampen spirits in Tel Aviv

August 30, 2012

BBC News – War talks fails to dampen spirits in Tel Aviv.

This doesn’t feel like a country hunkering down for war.

The beaches of Tel Aviv are heaving with holidaymakers. Restaurants, clubs and bars in the city are packed with happy diners, drinkers and dancers.

In one cafe, couples were tapping their feet to Leonard Cohen’s “Dance me to the End of Love.”

They were not wearing flak jackets. Or carrying gas masks.

But some are taking precautions.

Israelis fearful that an attack on Iran might bring revenge rockets from Hezbollah have collected gas masks from distribution centres.

Deep beneath the Habima national theatre in Tel Aviv, part of an underground car park has been set aside as a shelter for 1,600 people.

During the 1990-91 Gulf War, 39 Scud missiles from Iraq landed in Tel Aviv and in Haifa. Three people died, and more than a thousand Israelis had to stay in hotels while Scud damage to their apartments was repaired.

But it was not the Blitz. During the six months from September 1944, nearly 3,000 German V1 ‘Doodlebug’ cruise missiles and V2 rockets fell on London. Nine thousand Londoners were killed, and more than 25,000 were injured.

And Iraq’s rocket assault on Teheran during the Iran-Iraq war in the 1980s killed an estimated 2,000 people.

‘Limited threat’

Iran this month unveiled a new ballistic missile – the Fateh-110. President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad said it was designed to help Iran to defend itself.

Iranian missiles are not believed to be capable of inflicting serious damage here in Israel.

An expert on missile defence technology at MIT, Professor Theodore Postol, told the BBC earlier this year that the current threat from Iran’s ballistic missiles was limited.

“There is no realistic threat to troops, cities, oil refineries, and the like from Iranian ballistic missiles,” he said.

“They can simply not carry large enough conventional munitions to do extensive damage… and they lack the accuracy to hit prescribed targets with reliability.”

But the rhetoric from Tehran has become more threatening.

Iran’s supreme leader Ayatollah Khamenei described Israel as “a Zionist cancerous tumour”.

He looked forward to the day when “the Zionist regime will disappear from the landscape of geography”.

‘All talk?’

In a shopping centre in Tel Aviv, mother of two Khaia Lavi told me, “Iran does not love us. I believe they want to destroy us. I believe it in all my heart.”

I asked her if she believed Israel should attack Iran. “Yes, but not alone, not alone.”

I suggested to her that an attack by Israel on Iran might put Israel in danger.

“This is our fear,” she said. She has collected gas masks for her family. And, like most recently built Israeli homes, they have a blast-proof safe room inside their apartment, with a filtered air supply.

Numerous reports suggest that the Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and his Defence Minister, Ehud Barak, are planning a unilateral attack on Iran to halt the nuclear weapons programme, which Iran says does not exist.

But the Israeli President, Shimon Peres, argues that Israel should not attack Iran without the approval and support of the United States.

And the former chief of the army Shaul Mofaz, and the recent head of the Mossad external security agency, Meir Dagan, are also opposed to an attack on Iran now.

A Tel Aviv taxi driver – Itzig Schleiffer, who was born in Germany in 1946 and who came to Israel when he was two years old – says there’s so much talk about war that it’s unlikely to happen.

“If you talk too much, you don’t do anything,” he told me, “Don’t talk, do!”

And a businessman, who just wanted to be named as Ofer, said the admittedly poisonous rhetoric from Iran did not justify war.

“You can call me a cancerous growth if you like,” he laughed, “but this does not mean I have to kill you.”

Some commentators here argue that the Israeli prime minister’s talk of imminent war with Iran is just rhetoric, designed to put pressure on President Obama to impose stricter sanctions on Iran.

Others argue that Mr Netanyahu wants to keep Iran on the front pages in order to persuade voters to support Mitt Romney in the US presidential election in November. He is perceived as more supportive of Israel than Barack Obama.

‘Terrorist acts’

Front pages here have been dominated by a different threat – Jews attacking Arabs. There have been two chilling incidents.

In central Jerusalem one night last week, a group of male and female Jewish teenagers attacked three Arabs as they walked through Zion Square in the city centre.

One, Jamal Julani, was so seriously injured that he had to be resuscitated with a defibrillator and 10 minutes of CPR to keep his lungs oxygenated and his heart pumping. Five of the teenagers have been arrested.

Both of the leading English-language newspapers – the Jerusalem Post and Ha’aretz – at first reported this as a “lynching”. Then they dropped the quotation marks. A lynching.

A Ha’aretz columnist, Eyal Megged, described it as “a Jewish mob attack.”

In the other incident, near a West Bank settlement, a fire-bomb was thrown at a Palestinian taxi, wounding six passengers. Three 13-year-old youths from the settlement have been arrested.

The deputy prime minister Moshe Ya’alon described these two attacks as “terrorist acts.”

And – referring to existential fears about Iran – the columnist, Eyad Megged, wrote: “A Jewish mob attack on Arabs is far more dangerous than the Iranian menace… a Jewish mob is the real existential threat…. the eradication of the domestic racist blight should come before the eradication of the foreign nuclear one.”

But such racism is absolutely not universal here.

For the three-day Muslim festival of Eid-al-Fitr, which ends the fasting month of Ramadan, the ministry of defence approved permits for 130,000 West Bank Palestinians to enter Israel and visit those beaches in Tel Aviv.

Yes, 130,000. They cooked kebabs on barbeques on the sand, and they danced in the surf – the women fully clothed and wearing their headscarves.

For many of them, it was the first time in their lives that they had seen the sea.

Another Ha’aretz writer, Gideon Levy, commented: “Why can’t this happen twice a year? In fact, why not every day, damn it?”

Odds of War With Iran Increase to 40%

August 30, 2012

Odds of War With Iran Increase to 40% – Dominic Tierney – The Atlantic.

Our expert panel gauges the odds that the United States or Israel will strike the Islamic Republic in the next year.

 

dial_40.pngThe probability of conflict with Iran is now at 40 percent, according to The Atlantic‘s Iran War Dial.

We’ve assembled a high profile team of experts from the policy world, academia, and journalism to periodically predict the chances that Israel or the United States will strike Iran in the next year. For more on the Iran War Dial and the panelists, visit our FAQ page.

Peace remains more likely than war. But the chances of conflict have ticked upward for the second month in a row, from 36 percent in June, to 38 percent in July, and now 40 percent in August.

This month, three of the panelists offered comments explaining why there was a serious risk of war.

Shibley Telhami, the Anwar Sadat Professor for Peace and Development at the University of Maryland, sees the rhetorical battle between Israel and Iran, and Israel’s desire to protect its reputation, as potentially powerful forces for war.

In my opinion, the chance of an Israeli attack has slightly increased since the last estimate. It is still uncertain whether or not the Israeli posture is a mere bluff or a function of a real desire to attack Iran under the right circumstances. But in a world where perception of power is sometimes almost as important as power itself, the rhetorical escalation between Iran and Israel, and the seeming rise in Iran’s influence in hosting the Non-Aligned Movement summit and gaining the important participation of Egypt’s new president, have created a new challenge for Israel. Israel’s deterrence posture is very a much a function of how strong Arabs and Muslims believe it is in comparison to its enemies.

For now, there are many who have come to believe a view expressed by one of the readers of Aljazeera.net: “For the second week in a row, Israelis are demonstrating in Tel Aviv in front of the minister of war, Ehud Barak, opposing his statements regarding the waging of war on Iran, as they are very scared of the consequences of an Iranian [counter-]attack. They chanted that Barak and Netanyahu would hide in fortified hideouts while the Israeli people will be totally destroyed by an Iranian attack….Shimon Peres and others oppose an Israeli strike against Iran because of the fear of the consequences of the Iranian counter-attack which will render Israel’s very existence in the future unknown.”

So add to all the other calculations that Israelis have to make, this one: If they don’t attack, people in the region will see their refrain to be a direct function of Iran’s growing power and Israel’s weakness–something that Israelis have always seen as undermining their deterrence. This is why I had expressed the view that rhetoric matters more than politicians sometimes know. The outcome in this case may be disastrous.

Dalia Dassa Kaye, a senior political scientist at the RAND Corporation, also believes that Israel’s concerns over protecting its credibility may heighten the odds of war.

The main variable in weighing the likelihood of a military attack against Iran in the coming year is the cost-benefit assessment of such an option in Israel. Unfortunately, Israelis who believe the advantages of attacking Iran outweigh the dangers may have the upper hand at the moment, making the odds of an attack higher now than in previous months.

Yes, the majority of Israel’s military and security establishment oppose an attack (preferring the United States take the lead instead) and the Israeli public is divided and wary of a strike without U.S. support. There is also broad understanding among Israel’s security elites that a military strike can only slow but not stop Iran’s program and may only give Iran more incentive to reconstitute its program, much as Saddam Hussein did after Israel attacked Iraq’s nuclear reactor. For this reason, many speculate that the recent spike in Israeli war talk is more bluff designed mainly to elicit even tougher international and American actions against Iran. But it would be a mistake not to take Israeli threats seriously this time.

The leaders most associated with favoring a military option and the ones who could ultimately make the decision–Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and Defense Minister Ehud Barak–have staked their domestic and international reputations on these threats. They are not just talking about war but they are asking the Israeli population to prepare for it. And Israel is telling the United States and the international community that diplomacy and sanctions have run their course.

Despite the unprecedented levels of U.S. assistance and military cooperation with Israel in recent years, Netanyahu’s government does not appear convinced that the United States will deal with Iran down the road (i.e., launch a military attack) if Israel holds off now, when it believes it has the best operational ability to set back Iran’s program before the so-called ‘zone of immunity’ kicks in.  Israeli leaders may also believe they will be more immune from American censure if they act during a presidential election.

As a consequence, Israel may be conditioning its own society and the world for military action. Israeli leaders must understand how their threats at a certain point lose their credibility, both among their own population and abroad, if they never act on them. The effectiveness of such threats in ramping up international pressure against Iran in order to stave off an Israeli attack also begins to diminish at a certain point, and we may be reaching that point.

Some prominent Israeli analysts have recently suggested an exit strategy from Israel’s escalation of military threats–get the United States to more forcefully and explicitly commit to military action if Israel holds off attacking Iran now. But boxing the United States into commitments to take military action against Iran would be a dangerous way to avoid an Israeli attack. The risks and drawbacks of military action that have led many Israelis to oppose this option are just as pertinent to a U.S. strike. Let’s hope we can find other ways to convince the Israelis that a military strike against Iran is a bad idea. But assuming the Israelis aren’t serious is not an option.

Ken Timmerman, executive director of the Foundation for Democracy in Iran, sees a “dramatic uptick” in the odds of war in recent weeks.

It is warranted by a volume of recent statements from top Israeli leaders warning about an impending decision on whether to strike Iran. Israel has made clear that it views Oct. 1 as a “threshold” for Iran’s nuclear weapons capability, since that is when the IAEA estimates Iran will have enriched enough 20% uranium to make at least one 1st generation nuclear explosive device after further enrichment. Since the IAEA has also concluded that Iran has tested all the non-nuclear components for an implosion device, this clearly is a key capability. By most estimates, Iran will be able to carry out further enriching to weapons grade in somewhere between 6 to 8 weeks.

Israel has two parallel fears. The first is that the spinning centrifuges will produce an imminent Iranian nuclear capability. The second is that the failure to strike Iran–after all of Israel’s tough language–will destroy Israel’s credibility so that its promises and threats will no longer be believed. Would a country really fight a war to protect its reputation? The single biggest reason why the United States fought the Vietnam War for eight years, with 58,000 American deaths, was the hope of avoiding a humiliating defeat and defending American credibility.

Apple – Computer Reuse and Recycling – Apple Store (U.S.)

August 29, 2012

Apple – Computer Reuse and Recycling – Apple Store (U.S.).

If you want to upgrade, you can sell your 4s directly back to Apple.  Mine (32 gig) would fetch me $330.

http://store.apple.com/us/browse/reuse_and_recycle
Abba

Israel warns Iran to ‘choose between nukes and survival’

August 29, 2012

Israel Hayom | Israel warns Iran to ‘choose between nukes and survival’.

( Can’t say we didn’t warn ’em… – JW )

Vice PM Moshe Ya’alon speaks at Bulgaria memorial ceremony for victims of last month’s terrorist attack in Burgas and accuses Iran of funding, arming, and training terrorists • Ya’alon calls on the EU to add Hezbollah to list of terrorist organizations.

Shlomo Cesana, Eli Leon, Meital Yasur Beit-Or
Speaking in Bulgaria on Tuesday, Vice Prime Minister Moshe Ya’alon says, “The dangerous Iranian leaders are serious in their intentions.”

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Photo credit: David Saranga

Netanyahu faces Begin’s dilemma

August 29, 2012

Israel Hayom | Netanyahu faces Begin’s dilemma.

( AMEN ! – JW )

Eli Hazan

Electoral politics and ego. These comprise the essence of arguments made by those critical of Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s intention to attack Iran. The main underlying message of these arguments is that Netanyahu has failed in his job and found an easy target to which to divert attention.

Electoral politics and ego. These were also the essence of criticism raised against former Prime Minister Menachem Begin after he decided to attack Iraq in 1981. Browse through newspaper clippings and film segments from that time and one will prominently see then-opposition leader Shimon Peres accusing Begin of attacking Iraq “just for elections.”

The main problem of the arguments made by the opponents of Begin and Netanyahu is their lack of good faith, as well as basic belief in the necessity of the actions. Moreover, the arguments are hollow. Why? Because they ignore that a failed attack could lead to electoral failure.

If Netanyahu was cynical and utilitarian, he would avoid dealing with the Iran problem and push it off forever. Similarly, the claim that political considerations motivated Begin to destroy the Iraqi reactor appeared absurd even at the time, which was shortly after Jimmy Carter lost his 1980 re-election bid for the U.S. presidency. A factor in Carter’s loss was the U.S. military’s failed rescue attempt of the 52 American hostages held in Tehran. Begin saw this example but was not deterred from striking the Iraqi reactor, even though he was explicitly told that there was a chance the operation would fail and that at least two Israeli pilots would not return home.

The considerations for taking action were therefore similar, if not the same, then as they are now. Even the political circumstances are similar. Also in 1981, there was a clash with the American government, the heads of the Israeli defense establishment opposed taking action and the Left claimed that the prime minister was motivated by electoral considerations.

The opposition of the Left should again be examined. Why? Because when a leftist government orders military action, the muses are silent. And the question should be asked: Why is it not political when a leftist government leads an attack? The risks are the same risks, but the media silence, and sometimes support, speaks volumes. Also, the leaders of the nationalist camp don’t create demoralization during leftist-led military operations.

This is how it was, for example, in 1976 when Yitzhak Rabin and Peres ordered the Entebbe operation, which had many risks. Begin, then the opposition leader, supported them. “On this matter, we are together, even if God forbid the operation fails,” Begin said. This is also how it was in 1996, when Peres, then the prime minister, launched Operation Grapes of Wrath in Lebanon, just a month and a half before elections. No one claimed that he ordered this action due to electoral considerations. Netanyahu, then the opposition leader, supported Peres, even though he knew that this could hurt his chances of defeating Peres in the upcoming elections. Netanyahu also supported then-Prime Minister Ehud Olmert’s decision in 2007 to bomb the Syrian nuclear reactor. Needless to say, in these cases, the voices of today’s critics were not heard from afar.

Peres and the opponents of the Iraq operation were wrong 31 years ago. They are also wrong today. Netanyahu must decide whether to implement the “Begin Doctrine,” in the spirit of Churchill, Thatcher and Reagan, or if he will be remembered as the unwitting successor of Chamberlain and the West’s policy of appeasement.