Archive for August 2012

5 Signs that Israel is Close to Attacking Iran

August 13, 2012

5 Signs that Israel is Close to Attacking Iran – Business Insider.

In the past year, it was easy to label the Israeli rhetoric about war as a diversion from burning internal affairs, such as social justice protests, tax reliefs for big companies, tax hikes for regular citizens and the issue of drafting ultra-orthodox Jews to the military. However, in the past few days, there are ominous signs that Israel is getting much closer to a strike on Iran.

Is this another bluff? Here are 5 signs that point to higher chances that Israel might be more serious now:

  1. Prime minister given extended authority: In a fast move that was deemed by many as undemocratic, the Israeli government gave (Aug. 12th) extended decision making powers to PM Benjamin Netanyahu. The first modification of government rules since independence makes it easier to bypass opposition within the government to a strike on Iran.
  2. Israeli Home Front holds huge drill: A major drill is held this week (Aug. 13-17)  to prepare the Israeli home front for the possible counter attack that Iran and / or its allies would launch on Israel.
  3. Bank of Israel gets ready: Israel highly regarded governor of the central bank, Stanley Fisher, said (Aug. 8) that he is taking steps to prepare the financial system for a possible Israeli strike on Iran.
  4. France is preparing mass evacuation: France has set up contingency plans for a mass evacuation of French nationals. Hundreds of thousands of Israelis also hold a French passport.
  5. Media Blitz: While the world is busy with so many economic issues, the debate about a strike in Iran flooded the Israeli media over the weekend, justifying such a move and preparing the public. These seem to be orchestrated by Israel’s defense minister Ehud Barak, who hints that the window of opportunity is closing. This includes the usually left-leaning Haaretz, which reported (Aug. 12) that Iran made progress towards a nuclear bomb. PM Netanyahu declared that Iranian threat “dwarfs” all others. This was the first topic of his opening statement in the weekly government meeting.

Netanyahu and Barak don’t have clear support in the Israeli public. While there’s no doubt that Israel cannot tolerate a nuclear Iran, many feel that an Israeli strike is not the way to go, and that it could be counterproductive. The current and former top military brass is opposed to the war, a

The sanctions imposed by the US and Europe on Iran are weakening the country: oil production is falling and rising prices of food are angering the public. The public outrage, especially regarding the price of chicken, caused Iran’s national police chief Esmail Ahmadi-Moqaddam to call state television not to broadcast films where people eating chicken are seen.

In case violence breaks out, oil prices would surely rise. The implications for currencies would be a stronger dollar and yen, with varying degrees of losses for other currencies. More details about potential currency movements are here.

The peg of the Swiss franc to the euro could break in such an event, as the franc could attract even stronger demand. This is what happened during the Arab Spring.

Pro-Obama Media at War with Government over Iran

August 13, 2012

Pro-Obama Media at War with Government over Iran – Inside Israel – News – Israel National News.

Liberal journalists in full frontal assault on government, hoping to prevent preventive Iran strike.
By Gil Ronen

First Publish: 8/13/2012, 12:30 PM

 

Israeli press

Israeli press
Flash 90

Israeli journalists who support U.S. President Barack Obama are waging a full-scale war against the government of Binyamin Netanyahu as Israel prepares to launch a preventive strike against Iran’s nuclear Holocaust program.

“I have been a journalist since 1957,” said veteran writer Shlomo Nakdimon on Galei YIsrael Radio Monday morning, “and a reigning government has never been attacked this way.” He accused the press of damaging the government’s ability to rule.

The accusation follows weeks in which Israel’s second-largest daily, Yediot Aharonot – which also publishes the Ynet website – and both of the commercial television stations, Channel 2 and 10, have been pummeling the Netanyahu government over its military plans.

Yediot Aharonot contended in its Friday issue that the plan to strike Iran is opposed by every single senior official in Israel defense establishment. Its writers – and the analysts on Channel 2 and 10 – portray Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu and Defense Minister Ehud Barak as men who are driven by “messianic” thinking to act against the advice of the entire security establishment, both present and past.

On the previous Friday, Yediot quoted unnamed sources in the Obama administration as saying that Saudi Arabia would shoot down Israeli jets en route to an Iran attack. Other “spins” launched by the newspaper recently are that the U.S. has presented to Israel detailed plans for its own Iran strike, which is supposed to take place in 2013, and that a strike on Iran would help get Obama reelected rather than hinder his reelection.

Naftali Bennet, who is running for the top spot in the Jewish Home party, wrote in a Facebook post Monday: “The press has fallen on its head – national strength is required!”

“This is the first time in the history of the state of Israel that an orchestrated and thorough campaign is being waged against the right of the state of Israel to defend itself – and this is being done from the inside,” he wrote.

“A day does not go by without a headline that says: ‘Israel is not ready for war’; ‘Netanyahu will lead us to a disaster’; ‘the home front is unprepared’, and more – all in order to frighten the Israeli public into opposing Israeli  measures against Iran’s nuclearization…

“Friends, they are trying to portray Netanyahu as messianic, delusional, crazy, irresponsible. Based on personal acquaintance with him, let me state clearly: Netanyahu is taking care of the future of the nation of Israel in its land, responsibly.

“What do they think? That Netanyahu wants to send people to their deaths? That he yearns for missiles to fly into Tel Aviv? That I and people like me are excited about wearing uniforms again, saying goodbye to our families and fighting again?”

In the News1 website, founded by independent investigative journalist Yoav Yitzchak, pundit Itamar Levin has penned two articles attacking Yediot and Ynet as “traitors” and “liars,” no less. Levin says Yediot reported that Barak held a meeting with the Mossad’s senior leaders in an attempt to convince them of the necessity of a strike on Iran, but failed to win them over. It later turned out that the meeting took place three years ago, but no apology or clarification was issued, Levin wrote.

Levin accused Yediot of endangering Israeli pilots by publishing the dates for a planned attack and the possible routes to be used by IAF jets. He explained that Yediot is motivated by commercial considerations, as it is fighting for its life in the face of the growing popularity of Israel Hayom – the competing newspaper owned by pro-Netanyahu Sheldon Adelson.

Iran can build an N-bomb by Oct. 1. Cairo coup hampers Israeli action

August 13, 2012

Iran can build an N-bomb by Oct. 1. Cairo coup hampers Israeli action.

DEBKAfile Exclusive Report August 13, 2012, 9:53 AM (GMT+02:00)

 

Binyamin Netanyahu and Ehud Barak visit scene of terrorist Sinai attack

At its present rate of enrichment, Iran will have 250 kilograms of 20-percent grade uranium, exactly enough to build its first nuclear bomb, in roughly six weeks, and two-to- four bombs by early 2013, debkafile’s military and intelligence sources report. Hence the leak by an unnamed Israeli security source Sunday, Aug. 12, disclosing Iran’s progress in developing the detonator and fuses for a nuclear warhead which can be fitted onto Shehab-3 ballistic missiles capable of reaching Israel.
Since 20 percent refined uranium is a short jump to weapons grade fuel, Iran will have the capability and materials for building an operational nuclear bomb by approximately October 1.
This knowledge is not news to US President Barack Obama, Saudi King Abdullah, Syrian ruler Bashar Assad, or Israeli Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu – and certainly not to Iran’s Ayatollah Ali Khamenei.  Netanyahu’s comment at the opening of the weekly cabinet meeting Sunday: “All threats against the home front are dwarfed by one – Iran must not be allowed to have nuclear arms!” – was prompted by that deadline.
Ex-Prime Minister Ehud Olmert did not have that information when he “assured” Tel Aviv students Sunday, “Iran’s nuclear program has not reached the threshold necessitating Israeli action now or in the near future.” He further claimed that Israel’s “defense leaders” don’t subscribe to the view that “action now is unavoidable.” Olmert, who stepped down under a cloud of suspected corruption in 2009, has not since then had access to regular intelligence briefings on Iran. So either he spoke out of ignorance or willfully joined an opposition chorus of voices speaking out against Netanyahu and Defense Minister Ehud Barak.

The fact is that when Olmert approved the Israeli strike for destroying a nuclear reactor under construction by Iran and North Korea in northern Syria in September 2007,  Iran was years away from accumulating enough enriched uranium and the capability to build nuclear warheads.
Both are now within Tehran’s grasp in weeks.

Leading an opposition campaign to bring down the incumbent government is legitimate. Discrediting belated Israeli action to pre-empt a nuclear Iran as fodder for that campaign is not.  If what Olmert and Barack (the same defense minister as today) did in 2007 was necessary then, action now for delaying Iran’s imminent “breakout” to a bomb is many times more necessary and far more urgent.
However Netanyahu and Barak have put themselves in a straitjacket by two lapses:

1.  By foot-dragging on their decision for two years, they have led their opponents at home and in Washington – and Khamenei’s office too – to believe that, by turning on the heat, they can hold Israel back from military action against Iran’s nuclear program until it is too late. The time has been used not just for Iranian nuclear progress, but to enlist ex-politicians and retired generals at home and add them to the voices, especially in the White House, which believe Israel can learn to live with a nuclear-armed Iran.
2.  Netanyahu and Barak have behaved as though a decision on Iran is in their exclusive province, insulated from the turmoil and change swirling through Israel’s Arab neighbors in the past two years.
But the Middle East has a way of catching up with and rushing past slow-moving politicians:
Sunday, at 10:00 a.m. Netanyahu warned his ministers that no threat was worse than a nuclear Iran. At 17:55 p.m., Egyptian Muslim Brotherhood President Mohamed Morsi dropped a bombshell in Cairo. In one fell swoop, he smashed the Egyptian military clique ruling the country for decades, sacked the Supreme Military Council running Egypt since March 2011 and cut the generals off from their business empire by appropriating the defense ministry and military industry.
That fateful eight hours-less-five-minutes have forced Israel’s leaders to take a second look at their plans for Iran.
Morsi’s lightning decisions were the finishing touches that proved the Islamist Bedouin terror attacks in Sinai of Aug. 5 fitted neatly into a secret master plan hatched by Morsi and the Muslim Brotherhood to seize full control of rule in Cairo – a plan debkafile first revealed exclusively last Friday, Aug. 10.
Netanyahu now faces one of the hardest dilemmas of his political career – whether to go forward with the Iran operation, which calls for mustering all Israel’s military and defense capabilities – especially for the repercussions, after being suddenly confronted with unforeseen security challenges on its southwestern border, for thirty years a frontier of peace.

The exceptional talents of Netanyahu and Barak to put off strategic decisions until they are overtaken by events has landed Israel in an especially perilous plight, surrounded now by a soon-to-be nuclear-armed Iran from the east;  threatened Syrian chemical warfare from the north and the Muslim Brotherhood takeover of Egypt to its south.

‘US would actively support Israel if it attacks Iran’

August 13, 2012

‘US would actively support Israel if it attacks Iran’ | The Times of Israel.

Washington would provide air defense against Tehran and its proxies, sources say

August 13, 2012, 9:44 am 0
Illustrative photo of the USS Enterprise, an aircraft carrier that was deployed earlier this year to the Persian Gulf (photo credit: Official U.S. Navy Imagery/flickr)

Illustrative photo of the USS Enterprise, an aircraft carrier that was deployed earlier this year to the Persian Gulf (photo credit: Official U.S. Navy Imagery/flickr)

The US would support Israel if Jerusalem were to take military action against Iran’s nuclear program, the Hebrew daily Maariv quoted diplomatic sources saying on Monday.

According to the report, Washington would provide Israel with an air defense ‘umbrella’ against the anticipated retaliation by Tehran and its proxies — notably Hezbollah — in the event of a strike. There is no indication from the report that the US would engage in offensive military action against Iran.

Messages passed from Republican and Democrat policy makers in Washington to Israeli counterparts suggest that should Israel decide to bomb Iran in advance of the US presidential elections in November, President Barack Obama would order the American armed forces to join in the military effort.

Such an intervention, the sources explained, would all but guarantee Obama a second term in office. If he chose not to act, the president would likely be handing the office over to the Republicans, they said.

Advisers close to Republican candidate Mitt Romney and Israeli ambassador to the US Michael Oren were among those who passed the messages between Washington and Jerusalem, Maariv claimed. The Israeli embassy in Washington declined to respond to the report.

Obama is scheduled to meet with Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu at a UN summit in September, in what could be a meeting that determines whether or not Israel would go it alone against Iran.

Iranian officers led Syrian regime militias in Homs: defected general

August 13, 2012

Iranian officers led Syrian regime militias in Homs: defected general.

A resident walks past buildings damaged in what activists said was an air strike by the Syrian Air Force at al-Khalidiah neighborhood in Homs. (Reuters)

A resident walks past buildings damaged in what activists said was an air strike by the Syrian Air Force at al-Khalidiah neighborhood in Homs. (Reuters)

Defected Brigadier General Ibrahim al-Jabawi said on Monday that the Syrian regime’s gang-like militia, the Shabiha, were led by Iranian military advisors when they stormed al-Shamas district in Homs.

According to Jabawi, each Shabiha group followed an Iranian military advisor, Al Arabiya news channel reported him as saying

The defected general said Shamas did not have elements from the opposition Free Syrian Army (FSA), but it had people who fled other besieged areas in the central flashpoint city. Criticism is increasing against the FSA for hiding in civilian areas.

Jabawi also reported that 10 civilian men were executed and 350 others were detained.

His account was similar to the opposition Syrian National Council and activist groups on Sunday, when they said that the Shabiha summarily executed 10 civilians during a round-up in Homs.

“Ten young men were executed in the Shamas neighborhood of Homs city after the army and pro-regime gunmen stormed the area and rounded up 350 young people,” it said.

“The army called from the mosques surrounding the district for all the young men to come out into the streets with their hands behind their heads,” it said.

“Militiamen detained nearly 350 people from the Shamas district, assembled them in a courtyard and executed 10 of them,” activist group, the Syrian Revolution General Council, said.

“The fate of the nearly 340 others is unknown and we fear greatly that they have met the same fate as the 10 martyrs,” the group added.

Three children on a minibus were killed as they tried to flee with their parents from the Shamas district during the military operation, the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said.

Battles rage in Aleppo

Meanwhile, the Syrian army pressed its assault on rebels in commercial capital Aleppo on Sunday, while both sides reported atrocities and Arab foreign ministers postponed a planned meeting on the 17-month conflict.

The Arab League gave no reason for the indefinite postponement of its planned meeting in Saudi Arabia that had been due to discuss a replacement for international envoy Kofi Annan who announced his resignation earlier this month.

On Tuesday, Saudi Arabia is to host an Islamic summit focused on Syria to drum up support for the anti-regime revolt. Arab foreign ministers of the Gulf held talks late Sunday in the Saudi city of Jeddah to prepare for the summit.

In Aleppo, troops shelled rebel-held districts as fighting flared anew around a southwestern neighborhood that rebel fighters had quit last week, the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said.

The Shaar, Tariq al-Bab, Sakhur, Hanano and Bustan al-Qasr neighborhoods all came under bombardment, as the army pressed a ground offensive it launched on Wednesday to recapture areas seized by rebels since July 20, the group said.

The Britain-based monitoring group also said that “communications of all forms have been cut off in the city of Aleppo as well as large areas of the province since the morning.”

The Observatory said 150 people were killed across the country on Sunday, including 49 civilians, 56 rebels and 45 regular soldiers.

In Damascus, gunfire was reported in the Qadam neighborhood. Outside the capital, machinegun fire was heard in the town of Al-Tal, where 15 civilians were killed in shelling and clashes the previous day.

Meanwhile, FSA said that it stormed an air force brigade in al-Ain in the countryside of Damascus.

On the situation in the capital, the pro-government al-Watan newspaper spoke of “foiled bids to break the calm in Damascus, which was cleansed of terrorist groups who terrified residents.”

In Aleppo, the paper said that the army was poised to assault the Sukari neighborhood in the south of the city, after its recapture of the nearby Salaheddin district on Thursday.

They were among 148 people — 85 civilians, 43 soldiers and 20 rebels — killed across Syria on Saturday, according to the Observatory.

Israel: Are We Ready For Strike Against Iran?

August 13, 2012

The Yeshiva World Israel: Are We Ready For Strike Against Iran? « » Frum Jewish News.

The speculation surrounding a military strike against Iran remains a top news story. The big question is “Are we ready?”

In recent years, the military has spent billions of NIS towards improving the military’s outstretched arm, the air force’s capabilities to strike distant targets. The experts feel that today, the IAF is at an unprecedented level of readiness and striking ability. Much time and expense has been dedicated to perfecting mid-air fueling and other actions that are required if IAF fighter jets are sent on a mission to a far off country. According to many foreign reports, the IDF also has an arsenal of long range accurate surface-to-surface missiles.

An attack against Iran’s nuclear facilities would be a complicated operation, far more complex than Israel’s air strike against the Iraqi nuclear reactor in 1981 or the strike against the Syrian reactor in 2007. Regarding the latter, Israel never accepted responsibility for that aerial assault but Jerusalem is believed responsible.

For one thing, Iraq and Syria were unprepared for an assault. This is not the case regarding Iran. Additionally, the experts do not agree regarding the number of targets but according to the conservative approach, fighter planes would have to effectively strike at least four facilities while evading advanced anti-aircraft systems.

Yediot Achronot reports the IAF will require a minimum of 100 F15 (Ra’am) and F16 (Sufa) fighter jets, which will have to travel far, over 1,300km (780 miles) and dozens of planes will have to refuel in midair. According to American reports Israel does not have a sufficient number of refueling planes for such a mission, so if Israel decides to go ahead without prior US knowledge and cooperation, the situation would become increasingly complicated since if the US is not behind the move, it may not be willing to provide the needed equipment to actualize an assault.

Foreign reports cite three possible aerial routes to Iran, the southern [dangerous] route amid reports Saudi Arabia will down Israeli planes violating its airspace; the northern route via hostile Turkey and Syria with the latter in the midst of a civil war or the NY Times route, perhaps the safest, over Jordan and Iraq. Analysts add Jordan is likely to agree to ‘close its eyes’ to fighter jets and according to reports, Iraqi anti-aircraft capabilities is quite limited and this route would pose the least danger to IAF aircraft.

Realizing the Iranians are prepared the air force is also taking into account that some planes will be fired upon and downed, and pilots taken prisoner, but even if all the planes make it home safely, it is not guaranteed that the mission will succeed in delaying the nuclear program a number of years. It does not appear that anyone expects to eradicate the nuclear program due to the reality there are too many facilities buried too deeply in mountains or underground.

On the homefront the IDF is prepared for a confrontation with Hizbullah in Lebanon and against Hamas and other terror organizations in Gaza. The Arrow system is being relied upon to defend the homefront against long range missile attacks into Israel along with the Iron Dome operating in the south guarding against short range rockets.

Experts feel the IDF is far better prepared along the northern border than in 2006, including both standing and reserve duty forces. The intelligence community had a list of 200 targets in southern Lebanon when the Second Lebanon War began and today, that number has increased to 2,000.

Time to Call Diplomatic Effort on Iran a Failure, Israeli Official Says – NYTimes.com

August 13, 2012

Time to Call Diplomatic Effort on Iran a Failure, Israeli Official Says – NYTimes.com.

 

 

JERUSALEM — Amid intensifying Israeli news reports saying that Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu is close to ordering a military strike against Iran’s nuclear program, his deputy foreign minister called Sunday for an international declaration that the diplomatic effort to halt Tehran’s enrichment of uranium is dead.

 

Referring to the Iran negotiations led by the five permanent members of the United Nations Security Council plus Germany, the minister, Danny Ayalon, told Israel Radio that those nations should “declare today that the talks have failed.” After such a declaration, if Iran does not halt its nuclear program, “it will be clear that all options are on the table,” Mr. Ayalon said, not only for Israel, but also for the United States and NATO.

 

Asked how long the Iranians should be given to cease all nuclear activity, Mr. Ayalon said “weeks, and not more than that.”

 

The comments came after a frenzy of newspaper articles and television reports over the weekend here suggesting that Mr. Netanyahu had all but made the decision to attack Iran unilaterally this fall. The reports contained little new information, but the tone was significantly sharper than it had been in recent weeks, with many of Israel’s leading columnists predicting a strike despite the opposition of the Obama administration and many military and security professionals within Israel. Articles in Sunday’s newspapers also examined home-front preparedness for what experts expect would be an aggressive response not just from Iran but also its allies, the militant groups Hezbollah and Hamas.

 

“Lord help us, would you just do it already and be done with it?” wrote Ben Caspit, a columnist for the newspaper Maariv, referring to the Israeli leadership. “When one looks around the impression received is that it isn’t only in Israel that they aren’t being taken seriously any longer, but the world refuses to get worked up over them either.”

 

“Maybe they’ll bomb Iran in the end just to prove that they’re serious,” Mr. Caspit added.

 

Mr. Netanyahu and his top ministers have been saying for weeks that while the sanctions against Iran have hurt its economy, they have not affected the nuclear program, which Iran’s leadership insists is for civilian purposes. On Sunday, Deputy Prime Minister Silvan Shalom called on the United States to enact “even more extensive and even more comprehensive sanctions which could overwhelm the Iranian regime and possibly even topple it, or bring it to make the decision to abandon the nuclear program.”

 

The mixed messages from Mr. Shalom and Mr. Ayalon came two days after Mr. Netanyahu called Ban Ki-moon, the secretary general of the United Nations, and urged him not to go to Iran for a meeting scheduled for the end of this month of the so-called nonaligned nations (countries that were not allies of either the United States or the Soviet Union during the cold war).

 

“Even if it is not your intention, your visit will grant legitimacy to a regime that is the greatest threat to world peace and security,” Mr. Netanyahu told Mr. Ban, according to a statement released by his office Friday night. “Not only does it threaten countries throughout the Middle East, not only is it the greatest terrorism exporter in the world, but it is impossible to exaggerate the danger it presents to Israel.”

 

“Mr. Secretary General, your place is not in Tehran,” Mr. Netanyahu added.

 

At a cabinet meeting on Sunday, Mr. Netanyahu seemed to be trying to rebut the Israeli newspaper articles questioning domestic preparedness as he bid farewell to the current home-front defense minister, who is becoming ambassador to China.

“There has been a significant improvement in our home-front defense capabilities,” Mr. Netanyahu said, according to a transcript released by his office. “One cannot say that there are no problems in this field because there always are, but all of the threats that are currently being directed against the Israeli home front pale against a particular threat, different in scope, different in substance, and therefore I reiterate that Iran cannot be allowed to have nuclear weapons.”

Batten Down the Hatches: Israel Likely to Strike Iran Before November

August 13, 2012

Batten Down the Hatches: Israel Likely to Strike Iran Before November.

More Washington insiders are coming to the conclusion that Israel’s leaders are planning to attack Iran before the U.S. election in November in the expectation that American forces will be drawn in. There is widespread recognition that, without U.S. military involvement, an Israeli attack would be highly risky and, at best, only marginally successful.

At this point, to dissuade Israeli leaders from mounting such an attack might require a public statement by President Barack Obama warning Israel not to count on U.S. forces — not even for the “clean-up.” Though Obama has done pretty much everything short of making such a public statement, he clearly wants to avoid a confrontation with Israel in the weeks before the election.

President Barack Obama on the campaign trail. (Photo credit: barackobama.com)

However, Obama’s silence regarding a public warning speaks volumes to Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu.

The recent pilgrimages to Israel by very senior U.S. officials — including the Secretaries of State and Defense carrying identical “PLEASE DON’T BOMB IRAN JUST YET” banners — has met stony faces and stone walls.(Actually, this remarkable parade reminded me (and perhaps even Netanyahu) of the biting comment by Longfellow’s beautiful Priscilla Mullins to a timid suitor, “Why don’t you speak for yourself, Obama, er, I mean John?”)

Windows of Opportunity

Like the Guns of August in 1914, the dynamic for war appears inexorable. Senior U.S. and Israeli officials focus publicly on a “window of opportunity,” but different ones.

On Thursday, White House spokesman Jay Carney emphasized the need to allow the “most stringent sanctions ever imposed on any country time to work.” That, said Carney, is the “window of opportunity to persuade Iran … to forgo its nuclear weapons ambitions.”

That same day a National Security Council spokesman dismissed Israeli claims that U.S. intelligence had received alarming new information about Iran’s nuclear program. “We continue to assess that Iran is not on the verge of achieving a nuclear weapon,” the spokesman said.

Still, Israel’s window of opportunity (what it calls the “zone of immunity” for Iran building a nuclear bomb without Israel alone being able to prevent it) is ostensibly focused on Iran’s continued burrowing under mountains to render its nuclear facilities immune to Israeli air strikes, attacks that would seek to maintain Israel’s regional nuclear-weapons monopoly.

But another Israeli “window” or “zone” has to do with the pre-election period of the next 12 weeks in the United States. Last week, former Mossad chief Efraim Halevi told Israeli TV viewers, “The next 12 weeks are very critical in trying to assess whether Israel will attack Iran, with or without American backup.”

It would be all too understandable, given Israeli Prime Minister Netanyahu’s experience with President Obama, that Netanyahu has come away with the impression that Obama can be bullied, particularly when he finds himself in a tight political spot.

For Netanyahu, the President’s perceived need to outdistance Republican presidential candidate Mitt Romney in the love-for-Israel department puts Obama in a box. This, I believe, is the key “window of opportunity” that is uppermost in Netanyahu’s calculations.

Virtually precluded, in Netanyahu’s view, is any possibility that Obama could keep U.S. military forces on the sidelines if Israel and Iran became embroiled in serious hostilities. What I believe the Israeli leader worries most about is the possibility that a second-term Obama would feel much freer not to commit U.S. forces on Israel’s side. A second-term Obama also might use U.S. leverage to force Israeli concessions on thorny issues relating to Palestine.

If preventing Obama from getting that second term is also part of Netanyahu’s calculation, then he also surely knows that even a minor dustup with Iran, whether it escalates or not, would drive up the price of gasoline just before the election — an unwelcome prospect for Team Obama.

It’s obvious that hard-line Israeli leaders would much rather have Mitt Romney to deal with for the next four years. The former Massachusetts governor recently was given a warm reception when hetraveled to Jerusalem with a number of Jewish-American financial backers in tow to express his solidarity with Netanyahu and his policies.

Against this high-stakes political background, I’ve personally come by some new anecdotal information that I find particularly troubling. On July 30, the Baltimore Sun posted my op-ed, “Is Israel fixing the intelligence to justify an attack on Iran?” Information acquired the very next day increased my suspicion and concern.

Former intelligence analysts and I were preparing a proposal to establish direct communications links between the U.S. and Iranian navies, in order to prevent an accident or provocation in the Persian Gulf from spiraling out of control. Learning that an official Pentagon draft paper on that same issue has been languishing in the Senate for more than a month did not make us feel any better when our own proposal was ignored. (Still, it is difficult to understand why anyone wishing to avoid escalation in the Persian Gulf would delay, or outright oppose, such fail-safe measures.)

Seekinginput from othersources with insight into U.S. military preparations, I learned that, although many U.S. military moves have been announced, others, with the express purpose of preparation for hostilities with Iran, have not been made public.

One source reported that U.S. forces are on hair-trigger alert and that covert operations inside Iran (many of them acts of war, by any reasonable standard) have been increased. Bottom line: we were warned that the train had left the station; that any initiative to prevent miscalculation or provocation in the Gulf was bound to be far too late to prevent escalation into a shooting war.

Searching for a Casus Belli

A casus belli — real or contrived — would be highly desirable prior to an attack on Iran. A provocation in the Gulf would be one way to achieve this. Iran’s alleged fomenting of terrorism would be another.

In my op-ed of July 30, I suggested that Netanyahu’s incredibly swift blaming of Iran for the terrorist killing of five Israelis in Bulgaria on July 18 may have been intended as a pretext for attacking Iran. If so, sadly for Netanyahu, it didn’t work. It seems the Obama administration didn’t buy the “rock-solid evidence” Netanyahu adduced to tie Iran to the attack in Bulgaria.

If at first you don’t succeed … Here’s another idea: let’s say there is new reporting that shows Iran to be dangerously close to getting a nuclear weapon, and that previous estimates that Iran had stopped work on weaponization was either wrong or overtaken by new evidence.

According to recent Israeli and Western media reports, citing Western diplomats and senior Israeli officials, U.S. intelligence has acquired new information — “a bombshell” report — that shows precisely that. Imagine.

Israeli Defense Minister Ehud Barak told Israeli Radio that the new report is “very close to our [Israel’s] own estimates, I would say, as opposed to earlier American estimates. It transforms the Iranian situation to an even more urgent one.”

Washington Postneocon pundit Jennifer Rubin was quick to pick up the cue, expressing a wistful hope on Thursday that the new report on the Iranian nuclear program “would be a complete turnabout from the infamous 2007 National Intelligence Estimate that asserted that Iran had dropped its nuclear weapons program.”

“Infamous?” Indeed. Rubin warned, “The 2007 NIE report stands as a tribute and warning regarding the determined obliviousness of our national intelligence apparatus,” adding that “no responsible policymaker thinks the 2007 NIE is accurate.”

Yet, the NIE still stands as the prevailing U.S. intelligence assessment on Iran’s nuclear intentions, reaffirmed by top U.S. officials repeatedly over the past five years. Rubin’s definition of “responsible” seems to apply only to U.S. policymakers who would cede control of U.S. foreign policy to Netanyahu.

The 2007 NIE reported, with “high confidence,” the unanimous judgment of all 16 U.S. intelligence agencies that Iran stopped working on a nuclear weapon in the fall of 2003 and had not restarted it. George W. Bush’s own memoir and remarks by Dick Cheney make it clear that this honest NIE shoved a steel rod into the wheels of the juggernaut that had begun rolling off toward war on Iran in 2008, the last year of the Bush/Cheney administration.

The key judgments of the 2007 NIE have been re-asserted every year since by the Director of National Intelligence in formal testimony to Congress.

And, unfortunately for Rubin and others hoping to parlay the reportedly “new,” more alarmist “intelligence” into an even more bellicose posture toward Iran, a National Security Council spokesman on Thursday threw cold water on the “new” information, saying that “the U.S. intelligence assessment of Iran’s nuclear activities had not changed.”

Relying on the unconfirmed Israeli claim about “new” U.S. information regarding Iran’s nuclear program, Rubin had already declared the Obama administration’s Iran policy a failure, writing:

“Foreign policy experts can debate whether a sanctions strategy was flawed from its inception, incorrectly assessing the motivations of the Iranian regime, or they can debate whether the execution of sanctions policy (too slow, too porous) was to blame. But we are more than 3 1/2 years into the Obama administration, and Iran is much closer to its goal than at the start. By any reasonable measure, the Obama approach has been a failure, whatever the NIE report might say.”

Pressures Will Persist

The NSC’s putdown of the Israeli report does not necessarily guarantee, however, that President Obama will continue to withstand pressure from Israel and its supporters to “fix” the intelligence to “justify” supporting an attack on Iran – the kind of “fixing” that was done before the attack on Iraq in March 2003.

Some promise can be seen in Obama’s refusal to buy Netanyahu’s new “rock-solid evidence” on Iran’s responsibility for the terrorist attack in Bulgaria. Hope can also be seen in White House reluctance so far to give credulity to the latest “evidence” on Iran’s nuclear weapons plans.

An agreed-upon casus belli can be hard to create when one partner wants war within the next 12 weeks and the other does not. The pressure from Netanyahu and neocon cheerleaders like Jennifer Rubin — not to mention Mitt Romney — will increase as the election draws nearer, agreed-upon casus belli or not.

Netanyahu gives every evidence of believing that — for the next 12 weeks — he is in the catbird seat and that, if he provokes hostilities with Iran, Obama will feel compelled to jump in with both feet, i. e., selecting from the vast array of forces already assembled in the area.

Sadly, I believe Netanyahu is probably correct in that calculation. Batten down the hatches.

Ray McGovern works with Tell the Word, a publishing arm of the ecumenical Church of the Saviour in inner-city Washington. During his 27 years in CIA’s analysis division, his duties included preparing and delivering the President’s Daily Brief and chairing National Intelligence Estimates.

Amid talk of Iran strike, IDF set to reactivate long-range intelligence drone

August 13, 2012

Amid talk of Iran strike, IDF set to reactivate long-range intelligence drone – Israel News | Haaretz Daily Newspaper.

The Eitan will be returning to service following a lengthy break, after one crashed in January; craft able to stay 36 hours in the air, and carry cargo of up to 1 ton.

By Gili Cohen | Aug.12, 2012 | 8:48 PM
Eitan - IAI - Archive

The Israel Defense Forces is set to reactivate its long-range reconnaissance drone, amid ongoing speculations concerning the possibility of a nearing Israel strike against Iran’s nuclear facilities.

The Eitan will be returning to service following a lengthy break, enforced after a drone crashed near the town of Gedera in January.

According to an investigation of the incident the Eitan went down during a flight geared at testing one of the navigational components fitted on the craft’s wing; the wing broke during the test, crashing a few seconds later.

No damages were reported as a result of the crash, but the Eitan itself suffered damages estimated at several million dollars.

In recent weeks, the two teams that were appointed to probe the incident – one by the Israel Air Force and the other by the Israel Aerospace Industries – submitted their report, with IAF officials asking the IAI to conduct more tests before approving the craft’s return to service, which is estimated to take place in a few weeks.

A source with information of the probe said: “These drones have more than half a million hours in the air – in the air force and elsewhere. All of the precautions have been taken to ensure that these malfunctions won’t repeat in the future insertion of these crafts into the air force.”

The Eitan, which can take off and land automatically, is able to stay in the air for 36 straight hours and reach a maximum flight height of 45,000 feet. In addition, the craft can carry cargo weighing up to one ton.

All of these qualities make the Eitan especially suited for long-range and advanced reconnaissance and intelligence missions. Foreign reports have linked the Eitan with attacks against convoys of arms smugglers in the Sudan.

Experts: Attack on Iran will cause global recession – Globes

August 12, 2012

Leading economists say an attack by Israel will cause a sharp jump in oil prices, and a severe worldwide recession.

12 August 12 19:45, Adrian Filut

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As the likelihood of an Israeli attack on Iran grows, the need to assess the probable economic consequences to the Israeli economy grows as well. In an extraordinary move, compared with security events in the past decade, such as the 2006 Second Lebanon War, Operation Defensive Shield during the second intifada in 2002, and Operation Cast Lead in Gaza in January 2009, this time, most experts believe that an Israeli attack on Iran would not only have a massive impact on the domestic economy, but most of all, it would affect the global economy, through oil prices.

The experts say that such an attack would cause a sharp reduction in oil production, resulting in a jump in prices, which will affect manufacturing costs, reduce disposable income, and worsen the global slowdown and recession. Prof. Nuriel Roubini, for example, says that oil prices would jump by at least 50%. other economists add that an attack at a time of economic slowdown and falling business product would likely further worsen the situation and its effect on the economy.

Former Bank of Israel deputy governor Prof. Zvi Eckstein and Bank Leumi VP Prof. Daniel Tsiddon have written one of the most serious analyses of the economic impacts of Israel’s wars. They compared with the economic consequences of the 1973 Yom Kippur War and the second intifada and found that both conflicts were accompanied by severe external shocks to the Israeli economy: the oil crisis in 1973-74, and the dot.com bubble 2001-02. They also found that the economic damage in both times was severe, and included a fall in GDP by several percent.

The Bank of Israel and Ministry of Finance refused outright to requests by “Globes” for estimates and assessments about the expected blow to GDP in the event of an Israel-Iran war.

Another question is how would an Israeli attack on Iran affect defense spending, which already accounts for a substantial proportion of the state budget, especially at a time of huge fiscal challenges for the Israeli economy. Tsiddon and Eckstein say that the Yom Kippur War caused a permanent surge in defense spending as a proportion of GDP in general and in government spending, which resulted in huge deficits and jump in Israel’s debt-to-GDP ratio.

As for the second intifada, Tsiddon and Eckstein say that the defense budget rose by NIS 5 billion in 2003, which they describe as “relatively modest”. It should be noted in this context that the Brodet Committee, which was written in the aftermath of the Second Lebanon War, advised increasing defense spending by NIS 100 billion over ten years, from 2007 through 2017.

“The defense establishment has been riding the Iran wave for three years now, in order to ask for budget supplements. If an attack takes place in 2012, at least there is a chance for a drastic cut in defense spending in 2013,” a top economist, who has been involved in defense budget discussions for years, told “Globes” with a smile. “But, from what I know about the defense establishment, they have already found another reason why the budget must not be cut, but supplemented,” he added.

Governor of the Bank of Israel Prof. Stanley Fischer is leading the assessments of the effect of an Israel-Iran war. For years, the Bank of Israel has been holding discussions and scenarios about it.

The Bank of Israel assessments operated at two levels: technical and financial. The technical assessment is more related to its activities and functions in the event of a counterattack on Israel, including specific scenarios. At the financial level, “We have $76 billion in foreign currency reserves, which says it all,” a top Bank of Israel official told “Globes”. It does not conceal the fact that some of the reasons for its accumulation of foreign currencies over the past four years, from $27 billion to $76 billion, have been due to Israel’s geopolitical challenges.

One scenario in an Israel-Iran war is massive foreign investor flight, causing a sharp depreciation of the shekel against the dollar. The Bank of Israel’s large foreign currency reserves give it flexibility to deal with such a scenario.

Published by Globes [online], Israel business news – http://www.globes-online.com – on August 12, 2012

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via Experts: Attack on Iran will cause global recession – Globes.