Archive for September 2012

US and Iran may be at war in 2013, predicts former US envoy to Israel

September 17, 2012

US and Iran may be at war in 2013, predicts former US envoy to Israel | The Times of Israel.

Martin Indyk: Israel’s insistence that US set ‘red lines’ for Iran’s nuclear program is ‘unreasonable’

September 17, 2012, 1:57 pm 4
Former US envoy to Israel Martin Indyk (photo credit: Miriam Alster/Flash90)

Former US envoy to Israel Martin Indyk (photo credit: Miriam Alster/Flash90)

Former United States ambassador to Israel Martin Indyk on Sunday gave a dire prediction of impending conflict between the US and Iran next year.

“I am afraid that 2013 is going to be a year in which we’re going to have a military confrontation with Iran,” Indyk said on the CBS news show “Face the Nation.”

“There is still time, perhaps six months, even by Prime Minister Netanyahu’s own time table to try to see if a negotiated solution can be worked out,” he said, adding that “every effort and every chance” should be exhausted before employing a military strike against the Islamic Republic.

He also noted that Obama and Netanyahu don’t view the Iranian nuclear issue so differently. The US president is committed to preventing Iran from acquiring nuclear weapons, he said.

Indyk joined other policy experts who discussed, among other Mideast concerns, Israel’s pressuring of the US to set “red lines” for Iran’s nuclear program that, if crossed, would trigger military action.

It’s “unreasonable” for Israel to require the US to issue “red lines” for the Iranian nuclear program because such insistence is akin to an “ultimatum” — something “no president would do,” Indyk explained.

“If you noticed, Governor Romney is not putting out a red line; Senator McCain didn’t either. And neither is Bibi Netanyahu for that matter, in terms of Israel’s own actions,” he pointed out, “because it locks you in.”

Indyk’s comments come after weeks of increasing speculation about a possible Israeli strike on Iran. Israel has argued that due to its security concerns, it cannot afford to let Iran reach a “breakout” point in its nuclear program — meaning the stage in which manufacturing an atomic weapon becomes possible.

The Islamic Republic has refused to suspend its nuclear program, and IAEA inspectors have not been granted access to the country’s key nuclear sites. Iran’s nuclear chief is set to outline to a 155-country meeting of the IAEA Monday why it will not give up its uranium enrichment.

Indyk served as US ambassador to Israel twice. He is now the Director of Foreign Policy at the Brookings Institution in Washington, DC.

Iran accuses IAEA of being infiltrated by ‘terrorists and saboteurs’

September 17, 2012

Iran accuses IAEA of being infiltrated by ‘terrorists and saboteurs’ | The Times of Israel.

Explosion stopped power supply to Fordo facility in August, says nuclear chief; German Chancellor Angela Merkel calls Iran a threat ‘not just to Israel but to the whole world’

September 17, 2012, 4:54 pm Updated: September 17, 2012, 6:20 pm 1
Fereydoun Abbasi, head of Iran's Atomic Energy Organization, delivers a speech at an IAEA conference in Vienna on Monday (photo credit: AP/Ronald Zak)

Fereydoun Abbasi, head of Iran’s Atomic Energy Organization, delivers a speech at an IAEA conference in Vienna on Monday (photo credit: AP/Ronald Zak)

VIENNA — Iran’s nuclear chief said Monday that “terrorists and saboteurs” might have infiltrated the International Atomic Energy Agency in an effort to derail his nation’s atomic program, in an unprecedentedly harsh attack on the integrity of the UN organization and its probe of allegations that Tehran is striving to make nuclear arms.

Fereydoun Abbasi also rebuked the United States in comments to the IAEA’s 155-nation general conference, reflecting Iran’s determination to continue defying international pressure aimed at curbing its nuclear program and nudging it toward cooperation with the IAEA inspection.

As such, the speech was bound to give a greater voice to hardline Israeli leaders who say that both diplomatic efforts and economic penalties have failed to move Iran, leaving military strikes as the only alternative to stopping it from developing nuclear weapons.

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu made a direct appeal to American voters on Sunday to elect a president willing to draw a “red line” with Iran.

In the past week, Netanyahu has urged President Barack Obama and other world leaders to state clearly at what point Iran would face a military attack. But Obama and his top aides, who repeatedly say all options remain on the table, have pointed to shared US-Israeli intelligence that suggests Iran hasn’t decided yet whether to build a bomb, despite pursuing the technology and that there would be time for action beyond toughened sanctions already in place.

Iran has often warned that any Israeli attack would trigger a devastating response, and on Monday Abbasi suggested that such strikes would not succeed in slowing down his country’s nuclear program. He said without elaboration that experts have “devised certain ways through which nuclear facilities remain intact under missile attacks and raids.”

Tehran denies seeking nuclear arms, and Abbasi, an Iranian vice president whom the agency suspects may have been involved in nuclear weapons research, again insisted on Monday that his country’s nuclear program is aimed only at making reactor fuel and doing medical research.

“The Islamic Republic of Iran … has always opposed and will always denounce the manufacture and use of weapons of mass destruction,” he said.

Tehran has long dismissed suspicions that it may re-engineer its uranium enrichment program from making reactor fuel to produce nuclear warheads and says accusations that it has worked secretly on nuclear arms are based on fabricated US and Israeli intelligence. It also frequently accuses the IAEA of anti-Iran bias in its push to ensure that all of Tehran’s nuclear activities are peaceful. But Abbasi’s comments Monday were the harshest to date on the agency itself.

“Terrorists and saboteurs might have intruded the agency and might be making decisions covertly,” he said. Citing what he said was an example of sabotage last month at an underground enrichment plant, he said IAEA inspectors arrived to inspect it shortly after power lines were blown up.

Abbasi said that an explosion had caused the power supply to the Fordo facility to stop. ”Does this visit have any connection to that detonation?” he asked.

It appeared to be the first mention of the alleged sabotage attack. The plant at Fordo, about 70 kilometers (40 miles) south of Tehran, is of particular concern to Israel because it is buried deep into a mountainside to protect it from attack. It also is being used to enrich uranium closer to the level needed for a nuclear warhead than what is used to power reactors.

Abbasi said that anti-Iran elements are helped by the agency, even when it reports what it sees “truthfully and with absolute honesty,” because “this information is easily accessible to saboteurs and terrorists through IAEA reports.”

However, Iran now can “ward off threats by targeting … cyber-attacks, industrial sabotage and use of explosives,” he said, without elaborating.

Abbasi said US pressure on Iran is the equivalent of an attack on all developing nations’ nuclear rights. He called US-led sanctions on Iran’s oil exports and financial transactions “the ugly face of colonization and modern slavery.”

“A state which has used nuclear weapons is not eligible to be present at the Board of Governors,” he said, questioning the right of the United States to sit on the 35-nation IAEA board that makes agency policy.

Meanwhile, statements critical of Iran on Monday were voiced in more traditional terms similar to that heard at previous IAEA meetings.

US Energy Secretary Stephen Chu accused Tehran of continuing “a decade-long pattern of evasion regarding questions over the nature of its nuclear program, including those related to possible military dimensions of its nuclear activities.”

A European Union statement warned of “deep concerns about possible military dimensions” to Iran’s nuclear program.

IAEA head Yukiya Amano said Monday that the independent body would hold further talks with nuclear talks with Iran “despite the lack of progress so far,” in an effort to clarify its concerns about the regime’s illicit atomic program.

Speaking at a press conference in Berlin on Monday, German Chancellor Angela Merkel said that Tehran  ”poses a threat not just to Israel but to the whole world.”

Despite the strong criticism of Iran, she said political solutions “have not been exhausted” when it comes to negotiations over Tehran’s nuclear advances, and urged the international community to continue down the avenue of diplomacy and dialogue.

Iran’s chief nuclear negotiator Saeed Jalili met with Turkish Foreign Minister Ahmet Davutoğlu Sunday, and he is to meet EU Foreign Policy chief Catherine Ashton on Tuesday as the IAEA talks continue.

Iran: Saboteurs cut power lines to underground nuclear site

September 17, 2012

via Iran: Saboteurs cut power lines … JPost – Iranian Threat – News.

By REUTERS
09/17/2012 16:22
Explosives were used to cut power lines from city of Qom to Fordow underground uranium enrichment plant last month, Iranian nuclear chief claims; says “terrorists, saboteurs” have infiltrated UN nuclear watchdog.

Iranian nuclear facility at Qoms

Photo: REUTERS

Explosives were used to cut the electricity power lines to Iran’s Fordow underground enrichment plant last month in an apparent attempt to sabotage Tehran’s atomic advances, its nuclear energy chief said on Monday.

It was believed to be the first time Iran has mentioned the incident, which Iranian atomic energy organization chief Fereydoun Abbasi-Davani said took place on Aug. 17.

He also told the annual member state gathering of the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) that “the same act” had been carried out on power lines to Iran’s main enrichment plant near the central town of Natanz, without giving a date.

Abbasi-Davani made clear his view that sabotage would not be successful in slowing Iran’s nuclear program, which the West suspects is aimed at developing an atomic bomb capability but which Tehran says is purely peaceful.

Iran has often accused Israel and Tehran’s Western enemies of being behind the assassination of Iranian nuclear scientists and of trying to damage its nuclear program in other ways, such as cyber attacks.

Abbasi-Davani said explosives had been used to cut power lines from the city of Qom to the Fordow underground uranium enrichment plant on Aug. 17. The next morning, he said, IAEA inspectors had asked for an unannounced visit to Fordow.

“Does this visit have any connection to that detonation? Who, other than the IAEA inspector, can have access to the complex in such a short time to record and report failures?” Abbasi-Davani told the gathering in Vienna.

“It should be recalled that power cut-off is one of the ways to break down centrifuge machines,” he said, referring to the machines used to enrich uranium, which can have both civilian and military purposes.

He did not say whether the power had since been restored or give any other details.

Iran uses the Fordow facility to enrich uranium to a fissile concentration of 20 percent, the part of its work that most worries the West as it takes it significantly closer to the 90 percent level needed for bombs. It built the site some 80 metres below rock and soil to better protect it against enemy strikes.

Abbasi-Davani, in unusually strong language in an international forum, also accused the IAEA of a cynical approach and mismanagement and suggested that “terrorists and saboteurs” might have infiltrated it.

Abbasi-Davani told the IAEA gathering that included senior US and other Western officials: “Plotters of attack against Iran’s nuclear facilities have realized, through the IAEA published reports, that they have not gained any success in this regard.”

Iranian experts have devised “certain ways through which nuclear facilities remain intact under missile attacks and air raids,” he said.

Dan Meridor: Netanyahu is not trying to push the US into a corner

September 16, 2012

Dan Meridor: Netanyahu is not trying to push the US into a corner | The Times of Israel.

Deputy prime minister is convinced that despite public disputes, Israel and the US are on the same page when it comes to Iran

September 16, 2012, 8:59 am 0
Deputy Prime Minister and Minister of Intelligence and Atomic Energy Dan Meridor in his office, in April (photo credit Noam Moskowitz/ Flash90)

Deputy Prime Minister and Minister of Intelligence and Atomic Energy Dan Meridor in his office, in April (photo credit

Responding to US Defense Secretary Leon Panetta’s Friday statement in Foreign Policy that Israel’s insistence that the US draw a “red line” would place the US in an untenable position, Deputy Prime Minister Dan Meridor denied Sunday that the prime minister was trying to push the US to take a position against its will, but said that it was important to show determination on the issue.

Despite the recent public dispute between Washington and Jerusalem over setting “red lines” for Tehran,  Meridor said in an interview to Israel Radio he is convinced that the Israeli and US governments are on the same side, and are both determined to prevent a nuclear-armed Iran.

“Conflicts between Washington and Jerusalem are not desirable, but occur from time to time,” said Meridor. “It’s preferable for all that differences be discussed behind closed doors, but in an open world like ours, sometimes things come out.”

Even as the war of words on Iran continued to make headlines on both sides of the Atlantic, most recently with Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s interview on NBC, Meridor focused on the achievements of the two governments’ cooperation, citing the rigorous economic sanctions on Iran which he asserted has prevented Tehran from taking the final steps towards nuclear armament.

“I would not make light of President Obama’s assertion that he would not allow a nuclear armed Iran. If I was an Iranian leader, I would dwell on that from morning to night,” said Meridor, who is also Minister of Intelligence.

Meridor said that the campaign against Iran was of an “unprecedented scale with a huge risk to us and to the entire regional, and world, order,” and stressed that in dealing with the Iranian threat there have been successes as well as failures.

On one hand, because of its fear of the world’s response, Iran has not achieved a nuclear weapon, but on the other hand, it hasn’t stopped its attempts entirely either, said Meridor. He credited Netanyahu for bringing the issue to the forefront of world attention and added that the goal was to see Iran end its nuclear activities and fail to reach even the threshold stage of nuclear weapon development.

“An Iran that is a decision away from achieving nuclear weapons is also a nuclear-armed Iran,” said Meridor, referring to Obama’s assurance that the United States would not allow Iran to manufacture a nuclear weapon.

The US and Israel became embroiled in a standoff last week after first US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton and then President Barack Obama both publicly said they would not set “red lines” on Iran’s nuclear program, beyond which military action would be used.

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu had called for such lines as a way of calming Israeli fears over Iran’s drive toward a nuclear weapon.

After Clinton’s comments, Netanyahu rebuked Washington, saying a country that would not set “red lines” had no right telling Israel not to take military action itself.

On Friday, Panetta seemed to admonish Netanyahu over his attempt to push the US into committing to an ultimatum, saying that was not how the real world works.

“What [leaders] have are facts that are presented to them about what a country is up to, and then they weigh what kind of action is needed to be taken in order to deal with that situation,” he said. “I mean, that’s the real world. ‘Red lines’ are kind of political arguments that are used to try to put people in a corner.”

The US is insistent that it is committed to Israel’s security, even without going along with Netanyahu’s demands.

On Friday, Obama told a group of rabbis that there was no distance between Washington and Jerusalem on the Iranian issue.

Netanyahu doesn’t mince words when ‘Israel’s future is at stake’

September 16, 2012

Israel Hayom | Netanyahu doesn’t mince words when ‘Israel’s future is at stake’.

On the eve of what could be Israel’s most dramatic year yet, the prime minister puts the cards on the table in the clearest way possible: “I don’t say things in a blunt way, but in an honest way. I tell the truth. I could make nice and word things delicately, but our existence is at stake.”; “The only thing guiding me is not the U.S. elections but the centrifuges in Iran. It is not my fault that the centrifuges aren’t more considerate of the Americans’ political timetable.”

Shlomo Cesana and Hezi Sternlicht
Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu tells it like it is to Israel Hayom.

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Photo credit: Maya Baumel Birger

Netanyahu: Iran Puts Zealotry Above Survival

September 16, 2012

Netanyahu: Iran Puts Zealotry Above Survival – Defense/Security – News – Israel National News.

Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu says Iran’s leaders are guided by “unbelievable fanaticism” and can’t have nuclear weapons.

 

By Elad Benari

First Publish: 9/16/2012, 5:43 AM
 Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu

Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu
AFP/Pool/File

 

Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu said on Saturday that Iran’s leaders are guided by “unbelievable fanaticism.”

 

Netanyahu’s comments, quoted by AFP, were made as part of an interview to be aired on NBC television’s “Meet the Press” on Sunday. Parts of the interview were made available on Saturday.

 

“I think Iran is very different. They put their zealotry above their survival. They have suicide bombers all over the place. I wouldn’t rely on their rationality,” Netanyahu said, suggesting Iran cannot be contained in the same way as the Soviet Union during the Cold War.

 

He added, “Since the advent of nuclear weapons, you have countries that had access to nuclear weapons who always made a careful calculation of cost and benefit. But Iran is guided by a leadership with an unbelievable fanaticism.”

 

Netanyahu made a link between Iran’s hardline leadership and the wave of violent protests against U.S. and other Western diplomatic posts around the world triggered by an amateur Internet film made in the United States that denigrates Islam and its Prophet Mohammed.

 

“It’s the same fanaticism that you see storming your embassies today. You want these fanatics to have nuclear weapons?” he asked.

 

Netanyahu said that critics who argue that taking action against Iran’s nuclear program was “a lot worse” than a nuclear-armed Tehran, or that an Iran with nuclear weapons would stabilize the Middle East, “have set a new standard for human stupidity.”

 

The comments come amid reports that U.S. President Barack Obama this week rejected an appeal by Netanyahu to spell out a specific “red line” that Iran could not cross in its nuclear program. Obama rejected the idea during a phone conversation with Netanyahu on Tuesday.

 

The telephone conversation came after a tense day between the sides. It began with comments by Netanyahu that the Obama administration had no “moral right” to restrain Israel from taking military action on its own if it refused to put limits on Iran. It continued with reports that the White House had rebuffed a request by Netanyahu’s office for a meeting with Obama during the meeting of the United Nations General Assembly in New York this month. The White House denied those reports, saying the two were simple not in New York at the same time.

U.S. Defense Secretary Leon Panetta joined Obama on the weekend and dismissed Netanyahu’s “red line” demand, saying that red lines “are kind of political arguments that are used to try to put people in a corner.

As Israel eyes Iran and anti-US protests flare, Middle East presents frightening prospects – Telegraph

September 16, 2012

As Israel eyes Iran and anti-US protests flare, Middle East presents frightening prospects – Telegraph.

Anti-US riots show why President Barack Obama’s support for the Arab Spring may yet backfire, especially if Israel intervenes against Iran, says Richard Spencer.

As Israel eyes Iran and anti-US protests flare, Middle East presents frightening prospects

The US is concerned at the ambiguous response of the new government in Egypt, where the police failed to protect their embassy Photo: Amr Abdallah Dalsh/REUTERS

When President Barack Obama decided to support the Arab Spring last year, it was as if a bomb disposal expert had decided to conduct a controlled explosion on a clearly unstable device without knowing quite what was inside.

He must have known there would be flames, and casualties, but even as it burns, the final damage remains impossible to guess at.

The riots spreading across the Muslim world in protest at a crude film mocking the Prophet Mohammed are in a way the least of his problems: the “known unknowns”, as the former US defence secretary Donald Rumsfeld might say.

Far more frightening are the prospects of former allies, like Egypt, turning hostile; of anti-American Islamist groups seizing power or causing mayhem in war-torn countries like Syria.

Or of “The Big One” – an attack on Iran by Israel prompting a violent response by Tehran and its proxies, with ordinary Muslims across the region incensed at another military intervention in the Middle East.

Particularly since 9/11, any perceived offence to Islam has been met with protests. In the wake of the publication in a Danish newspaper of cartoons showing the Prophet in 2005, there were deaths in Colonel Gaddafi’s Libya and Mohammed Karzai’s Afghanistan, in Nigeria and Lebanon.

This time, the US is concerned at the ambiguous response of the new government in Egypt, where the failure by police to protect the embassy in Cairo was made worse by a slow personal reaction from President Mohammed Morsi.

His Muslim Brotherhood was vitriolic in its criticism of the US for not having somehow stopped the film being shown, while Mr Morsi’s condemnation of the embassy attack was half-hearted.

But Egypt’s ambiguity is also normal. Few Middle Eastern governments have the courage to stand up to their Islamist elements when they think they have public opinion on their side.

The US is equally wary about the Egyptian government’s improving relations with Iran, with which it had a frosty relationship under Mr Morsi’s deposed predecessor, Hosni Mubarak. Hence Mr Obama’s equivocal response when asked in a recent interview whether the new regime in Cairo was an ally or an enemy. He replied simply that it was “new and trying to find its way”.

Mr Morsi does not want to offend Washington yet. He is, after all, seeking debt forgiveness and is also still in recipient of two billion US dollars a year in military aid. But he has also extended a hand, not of friendship perhaps but at least of co-operation, to Iran, by attending a recent meeting of the Non-Aligned Movement there and inviting Tehran to join talks on the future of Syria.

Expressions of alarm at this development – politely expressed as doubts as to whether Iran can play a “constructive role” over Syria – have already started to emanate from Western foreign ministries.

Governments across the Arab world are also nervous at what the events of the last 18 months have unleased, in particular the danger that a sectarian conflict in Syria could get out of hand. The likes of Saudi Arabia also worry that pro-democracy uprisings will not stop at dictatorships but spread to monarchies.

Such fears make America’s already difficult calculations over Iran almost impossible.

Two years ago, American allies like Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates, secure in their control over their people and wealthy beyond even their dreams due to sky-high oil prices, saw a rising Iran as their only threat.

While their public postures focused on their hostility to Israel, their private demands, memorably revealed by Wikileaks, were for “the head of the snake” to be cut off in Iran. It seemed to ensure that if America, or Israel, did attack Iran, America’s Middle Eastern front line in the Gulf would be solid in its support.

Now, as Iran behaves like a wounded bear over its likely loss of its Syrian friend, the Sunni world is suddenly nervous. But even so, it is clear they think that now is not the time to throw another western military intervention into the mix.

And nor do their backers – which is why a succession of envoys have been sent by Western leaders, including David Cameron, begging Benjamin Netanyahu to lay off.

It is less than two months to the US election. The forces of anti-Americanism have a well-tuned instinct for the weaknesses imposed by the American electoral cycle, and it may be no coincidence that the risk President Obama took 18 months ago in backing the Arab Spring is coming back to haunt him right now.

He would say, probably rightly, that he had no other option than his semi-controlled explosion. But as embassies burn and Israel weighs its options, the fact that it had a well-timed fuse may prove difficult for him.

Armada of British naval power massing in the Gulf as Israel prepares an Iran strike – Telegraph

September 16, 2012

Armada of British naval power massing in the Gulf as Israel prepares an Iran strike – Telegraph.

An armada of US and British naval power is massing in the Persian Gulf in the belief that Israel is considering a pre-emptive strike against Iran’s covert nuclear weapons programme.

Armada of British naval power massing in the Gulf as Israel prepares an Iran strike

The Strait of Hormuz is only 21 miles wide at its narrowest point  Photo: ALAMY

Battleships, aircraft carriers, minesweepers and submarines from 25 nations are converging on the strategically important Strait of Hormuz in an unprecedented show of force as Israel and Iran move towards the brink of war.

Western leaders are convinced that Iran will retaliate to any attack by attempting to mine or blockade the shipping lane through which passes around 18 million barrels of oil every day, approximately 35 per cent of the world’s petroleum traded by sea.

A blockade would have a catastrophic effect on the fragile economies of Britain, Europe the United States and Japan, all of which rely heavily on oil and gas supplies from the Gulf.

The Strait of Hormuz is one of the world’s most congested international waterways. It is only 21 miles wide at its narrowest point and is bordered by the Iranian coast to the north and the United Arab Emirates to the south.

In preparation for any pre-emptive or retaliatory action by Iran, warships from more than 25 countries, including the United States, Britain, France, Saudi Arabia and the UAE, will today begin an annual 12-day exercise.

The war games are the largest ever undertaken in the region.

They will practise tactics in how to breach an Iranian blockade of the strait and the force will also undertake counter-mining drills.

The multi-national naval force in the Gulf includes three US Nimitz class carrier groups, each of which has more aircraft than the entire complement of the Iranian air force.

The carriers are supported by at least 12 battleships, including ballistic missile cruisers, frigates, destroyers and assault ships carrying thousand of US Marines and special forces.

The British component consists of four British minesweepers and the Royal Fleet Auxiliary Cardigan Bay, a logistics vessel. HMS Diamond, a brand-new £1billion Type 45 destroyer, one of the most powerful ships in the British fleet, will also be operating in the region.

In addition, commanders will also simulate destroying Iranian combat jets, ships and coastal missile batteries.

In the event of war, the main threat to the multi-national force will come from the Islamic Revolutionary Guards Corps navy, which is expected to adopt an “access-denial” strategy in the wake of an attack, by directly targeting US warships, attacking merchant shipping and mining vital maritime chokepoints in the Persian Gulf.

Defence sources say that although Iran’s capability may not be technologically sophisticated, it could deliver a series of lethal blows against British and US ships using mini-subs, fast attack boats, mines and shore-based anti-ship missile batteries.

Next month, Iran will stage massive military manoeuvres of its own, to show that it is prepared to defend its nuclear installations against the threat of aerial bombardment.

The exercise is being showcased as the biggest air defence war game in the Islamic Republic’s history, and will be its most visible response yet to the prospect of an Israeli military strike.

Using surface-to-air missiles, unmanned drones and state-of-the-art radar, Iran’s Revolutionary Guards and air force will combine to test the defences of 3,600 sensitive locations throughout the country, including oil refineries and uranium enrichment facilities.

Brigadier General Farzad Esmaili, commander of the Khatam al-Anbiya air defence base, told a conference this month that the manoeuvres would “identify vulnerabilities, try out new tactics and practise old ones”.

At the same time as the Western manoeuvres in the Gulf, the British Response Task Forces Group — which includes the carrier HMS Illustrious, equipped with Apache attack helicopters, along with the French aircraft carrier Charles de Gaulle – will be conducting a naval exercise in the eastern Mediterranean. The task force could easily be diverted to the Gulf region via the Suez Canal within a week of being ordered to do so.

The main naval exercise comes as President Barack Obama is scheduled to meet Benjamin Netanyahu, the Israeli prime minister, today to discuss the Iranian crisis.

Many within the Obama administration believe that Israel will launch a pre-emptive strike against Iran’s nuclear facilities before the US presidential elections, an act which would signal the failure of one of Washington’s key foreign policy objectives.

Both Downing Street and Washington hope that the show of force will demonstrate to Iran that Nato and the West will not allow President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, the Iranian leader, to develop a nuclear armoury or close Hormuz.

Sir John Sawers, the head of MI6, the Secret Intelligence Service, reportedly met the Israeli prime minister and Ehud Barak, his defence secretary, two weeks ago in an attempt to avert military action against Iran.

But just last week Mr Netanyahu signalled that time for a negotiated settlement was running out when he said: “The world tells Israel ‘Wait, there’s still time.’ And I say, ‘Wait for what? Wait until when?’

“Those in the international community who refuse to put red lines before Iran don’t have a moral right to place a red light before Israel.”

The crisis hinges on Iran’s nuclear enrichment programme, which Israel believes is designed to build an atomic weapon. Tehran has long argued that the programme is for civil use only and says it has no plans to an build a nuclear bomb, but that claim has been disputed by the West, with even the head of MI6 stating that the Islamic Republic is on course to develop atomic weapons by 2014.

The Strait of Hormuz has long been disputed territory, with the Iranians claiming control of the region and the entire Persian Gulf.

Rear Admiral Ali Fadavi of the Iranian Revolutionary Guard Corps recently boasted that “any plots of enemies” would be foiled and a heavy price exacted, adding: “We determine the rules of military conflict in the Persian Gulf and the Strait of Hormuz.”

But Leon Panetta, the US defence secretary, warned that Iranian attempts to exercise control over the Strait of Hormuz could be met with force.

He said: “The Iranians need to understand that the United States and the international community are going to hold them directly responsible for any disruption of shipping in that region — by Iran or, for that matter, by its surrogates.”

Mr Panetta said that the United States was “fully prepared for all contingencies” and added: “We’ve invested in capabilities to ensure that the Iranian attempt to close down shipping in the Gulf is something that we are going to be able to defeat if they make that decision.”

That announcement was supported by Philip Hammond, the Defence Secretary, who added: “We are determined to work as part of the international community effort to ensure freedom of passage in the international waters of the Strait of Hormuz.”

One defence source told The Sunday Telegraph last night: “If it came to war, there would be carnage. The Iranian casualties would be huge but they would be able to inflict severe blows against the US and British.

“The Iranian Republican Guard are well versed in asymmetrical warfare and would use swarm attacks to sink or seriously damage ships. This is a conflict nobody wants, but the rhetoric from Israel is unrelenting.”

Al-Qaeda claims responsibility for killing US ambassador in attack on US consulate in Libya

September 15, 2012

Al-Qaeda claims responsibility for killing US ambassador in attack on US consulate in Libya | The Times of Israel.

Terror group says assault was response to US drone strike in Pakistan that killed its Libyan-born number two

September 15, 2012, 7:10 pm 1
A Libyan man walks through the rubble of the damaged US Consulate in Benghazi after an attack that killed four Americans, including Ambassador Chris Stevens, on the night of Tuesday, Sept. 11, 2012 (photo credit: AP/Mohammad Hannon)

A Libyan man walks through the rubble of the damaged US Consulate in Benghazi after an attack that killed four Americans, including Ambassador Chris Stevens, on the night of Tuesday, Sept. 11, 2012 (photo credit: AP/Mohammad Hannon)

Al-Qaeda claimed responsibility on Saturday for Tuesday’s attack on the US consulate in Benghazi, in which US Ambassador Chris Stevens and three other Americans were killed.

The terror group said the assault was timed to coincide with the anniversary of the 9/11 attacks and executed in response to a US drone strike in Pakistan that killed the organization’s number two, Abu Yahya al-Libi.

Libi was a Libyan national who served as lieutenant to Ayman al-Zawahiri, the head of al-Qaeda.

Eastern Libya’s deputy interior minister, Wanis el-Sharef, said Friday that four people had been arrested in connection with the attack.

In an audio recording released to coincide with the 9/11 anniversary, Zawahiri asserted an Islamic duty to “liberate” every inch of Muslim lands, and called upon Muslims to “purify” their countries of corrupt leaders during what he termed a period of “American weakness.” Muslims should “topple the western proxies” left in their countries “and especially the Saud clan and the gulf sheiks in the Arabian peninsula,” he declared.

US envoy Chris Stevens speaking to local media in Benghazi last year. (photo credit: AP/Ben Curtis)

US envoy Chris Stevens speaking to local media in Benghazi last year. (photo credit: AP/Ben Curtis)

As early as Wednesday, Israeli and American media reported that al-Qaeda operatives had carried out the attack, using the release of an anti-Islam movie that sparked violent protests around the Muslim world as a pretext for the chaos.

Killed in the attack in Benghazi were Stevens, information management officer Sean Smith, and private security guards Glen Doherty and Tyrone S. Woods.

Stevens died as he and a group of embassy employees went to the consulate to try to evacuate staff when the mob of protesters, including gunmen armed with machine guns and rocket-propelled grenades, attacked.

The consulate is a one-story villa located in a fenced garden in downtown Benghazi. A small contingent of Libyan security forces protecting the facility also fired in the air, trying to intimidate the attackers, said el-Sharef. But faced with the mob’s superior size and firepower, the Libyan security withdrew, el-Sharef said. Gunmen stormed the building, looted its contents and torched it, he said.

Al-Sharef said Stevens and a consulate staffer who had stayed behind in the building were killed in the initial attack on the consulate. The rest of the staff successfully evacuated to another building nearby, preparing to move to Benghazi Airport after daybreak to fly to the capital, Tripoli, he said. Hours after the storming of the consulate, a separate group of gunmen attacked the other building, opening fire on the more than 30 Americans and Libyans inside. Two more Americans were killed and 32 were wounded – 14 Americans and 18 Libyans, he said.

Stevens, he added, was visiting Benghazi to inaugurate an American culture center in the city. His body was identified by his Egyptian interpreter. Stevens died of severe asphyxiation from smoke inhalation, according to the Libyan doctor who tried for 90 minutes to save him. Ziad Abu Zeid said that Stevens was brought to the Benghazi Medical Center by Libyans the night before, with no other Americans, and that initially no one realized he was the ambassador. Stevens was practically dead when he arrived close to 1 a.m. on Wednesday. “We tried to revive him for an hour and a half but with no success,” Abu Zeid said.

Stevens was a career member of the US Foreign Service specializing in the Middle East, and served at various diplomatic posts around the region, including a stint as political section chief at the US consulate in Jerusalem.

He served as deputy chief of mission at the US Libyan embassy from 2007-2009, as part of the team that re-established US-Libyan official relations after a decades-long hiatus. During the Libyan civil war, he was the US representative to the Libyan Transitional National Council, and assumed his post as ambassador on May 22, 2012.

Panetta: ‘Little red lines’ on Iran a political ploy

September 15, 2012

Panetta: ‘Little red lines’ on I… JPost – Iranian Threat – News.

By JPOST.COM STAFF
09/15/2012 19:57
US defense secretary says Netanyahu is trying to pin Obama into a corner by demanding the US set deadlines on Iran, confirms US has sent military assets to ME, N. Africa that can be deployed to quell ongoing protests.

Netanyahu, Panetta shake hands

Photo: Screenshot

Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu is attempting to pin Barack Obama into a corner by demanding the US president delineate “little red lines” which if passed would prompt US military action against Iran’s nuclear facilities, US Secretary of Defense Leon Panetta affirmed Friday night.

In an interview with Foreign Policy‘s National Security Channel, Panetta dismissed Netanyahu’s engagement of Obama on the issue of pre-emption, saying, “The fact is [that] presidents of the United States, prime ministers of Israel or any other country – leaders of these countries don’t have, you know, a bunch of little red lines that determine their decisions.”

“What they have,” Panetta asserted “are facts that are presented to them about what a country is up to, and then they weigh what kind of action is needed to be taken in order to deal with that situation. I mean, that’s the real world. Red lines are kind of political arguments that are used to try to put people in a corner.”

Despite the apparent friction between the US and Israel over Iran, Panetta dismissed the notion of a rupture in relations between the two countries.

“Let’s just say, when you have friends like Israel you engage in vigorous debates about how you confront these issues,” he said. “And that’s what’s going on.

When asked about the ongoing protests throughout the Middle East and North Africa over the the Innocence of Muslims film, Panetta confirmed the US had upped its preparedness by positioning forces that could be deployed to as many as 18 countries in the event they are needed to quell unrest.

Panetta said that the US is “paying particular attention” to a number of countries in the region, where demonstrations erupted this week in defiance of a US-based amateur movie which denigrated the Islamic prophet Mohammed.

While Panetta admitted the region is experiencing “convulsions” following last year’s Arab Spring, and that al-Qaida and other terrorist elements are trying to capitalize on the resulting power vacuum, he nonetheless warned against discounting the general shift towards democracy. “[O]ne demonstration of extremists,” he said, “any more than a Ku Klux Klan demonstration in the United States, is not necessarily reflective of what the rest of the country feels.”

With respect to the attack on the US’ mission in Bengahzi,  Libya, in which Ambassador Chris Stevens, two former Navy SEALs, and a State Department worker were killed, Panetta reiterated that authorities had yet to identify the perpetrators. According to the defense secretary, “it’s something that’s under assessment and under investigation, to determine just exactly what happened here.”

He conceded, however, that al-Qaida has become more active in Libya and across North Africa, but denied that this reality conflicts with his statement last year that the terror group was nearing “strategic defeat.”

“The al-Qaida that attacked the United States of America on 9/11, we have gone after in a big way,” he said,” but “we always knew that we would have to continue to confront elements of extremism elsewhere as well.”