Archive for November 16, 2012

Iran’s first nuclear plant may have suffered new setback

November 16, 2012

Jerusalem Post – Breaking News.

 

By REUTERS

 

11/16/2012 22:18

 

VIENNA – Iran unloaded nuclear fuel from its first atomic power plant last month, a United Nations report said on Friday, a few months after the Russian builder said the long-postponed reactor was operating at full capacity.

The Bushehr plant is a symbol of what the Islamic Republic says is its peaceful nuclear ambitions, disputed by the West, and any new hitch would probably be seen as an embarrassment both for Tehran and Moscow, whose experts help run it.

The transfer of fuel assemblies from the reactor core to a spent fuel pond meant the plant was shut down, a diplomat familiar with the issue said. “It was certainly not foreseen, that’s for sure,” he said.

The reason for the unexpected move was unclear but it could be a sign of a new problem in running the Russian-built, 1,000-megawatt reactor near the Gulf city of Bushehr.

IAEA says Iran ready to double nuclear work in bunker

November 16, 2012

IAEA says Iran ready to double nuclear work in bunker.

International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) Director General Yukiya Amano. (Reuters)

International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) Director General Yukiya Amano. (Reuters)

Iran is set to sharply expand its uranium enrichment in an underground site after installing all the centrifuges it was built for, a U.N. nuclear report showed on Friday, a move that could increase Western alarm about Tehran’s nuclear course.

The latest quarterly International Atomic Energy Agency report on Iran came 10 days after the re-election of U.S. President Barack Obama, which raised hopes for a revival of nuclear diplomacy with Iran following speculation that Israel might bomb the nuclear facilities of its arch-enemy soon.

The Islamic state has put in place the nearly 2,800 centrifuges that the Fordow enrichment site, buried deep inside a mountain, was designed for, and is poised to double the number of them operating to almost 1,400, according to the confidential IAEA report obtained by Reuters.

“They can be started any day. They are ready,” a senior diplomat familiar with the IAEA’s investigation said.

If Iran chose to dedicate the new machines to produce higher-grade uranium, it could significantly shorten the time it would require for any bid to build an atomic bomb. Iran says it needs to refine uranium to make reactor fuel.

Tehran has produced about 233 kg (512 pounds) of higher-grade enriched uranium since 2010, an increase of 43 kg since August this year, according to the report issued in Vienna.

That could be sufficient for one bomb, security experts say. But the Iranians have fed about 96 kg of the uranium refined to 20 percent of fissile concentration for conversion into fuel for a medical research reactor in Tehran, the report said.

Such conversions make it harder for the material to be processed into 90 percent, or bomb-grade, enriched uranium and could be a step by Tehran meant in part to counter Western suspicions of a covert atomic bomb program.

But the stockpile of 20 percent uranium gas has still grown by nearly 50 percent to 145 kg in the last three months, approaching the amount required for a nuclear weapon.

The IAEA report also said that “extensive activities” at the Parchin military compound – an allusion to suspected Iranian attempts to remove evidence – would seriously undermine an agency investigation into indications that research relevant to developing a nuclear explosive were conducted there.

It is “necessary to have access to this location without further delay”, the report said.

?Window of time for democracy

Tehran denies U.S. and Israeli allegations that it is seeking a nuclear weapons capability, saying its program is entirely for peaceful energy. But U.N. inspectors suspect past, and possibly ongoing, military nuclear activity.

Obama this week said he believed there was still a “window of time” to find a peaceful resolution to the long standoff with Iran. But the IAEA report underlined the tough task facing Western powers pressing it to curb its nuclear program.

Fordow particularly worries the West as it is where Iran refines uranium to 20 percent purity, compared with the 3.5 percent level usually needed for nuclear energy plants.

Iran says it must do this to make fuel for the Tehran research reactor, but it also represents a major technical leap towards the threshold suitable for nuclear weapons.
The fact that Fordow is buried deep underground makes it less vulnerable to any air strikes, which Israel has threatened if diplomacy fails to stop Iran acquiring the means to produce atomic bombs.

The conversion of 20 percent uranium into fuel is reversible as long as it has not been introduced into a working reactor, but it would take a few months to turn it back into gas form.

This may explain why Israel, assumed to be the Middle East’s only nuclear-armed state, recently signaled that an attack on its arch-enemy’s nuclear sites was not imminent, after months of talk that it might be on the cards soon.

The question of when and how quickly Iran might be able to assemble an atom bomb if it chose to do so is hotly debated because it could influence any decision by Israel to take military action – a step many fear would blow up into a broader Middle East war that would batter a stumbling global economy.

The IAEA report said Iran had removed fuel from the core of its first nuclear power plant, near the town of Bushehr on the country’s Gulf coast, indicating a possible new problem in operating the long-delayed Russian-built facility.

The diplomat said the plant had been shut down as a result, but gave no further details.

Cabinet approves call up of 75,000 reservists in advance of possible ground invasion

November 16, 2012

Cabinet approves call up of 75,000 reservists in advance of possible ground invasion | The Times of Israel.

Thousands of troops already mobilized to Gaza border, IDF says more draft orders to go out in matter of hours; Hamas fires missiles at Jerusalem, no injuries or damage; IDF says over 70 rockets fired from Gaza Strip hit Israel on Friday; IDF prepares fifth Iron Dome battery for deployment

November 16, 2012, 4:46 pm Updated: November 16, 2012, 8:46 pm Israeli soldiers at the Israel Gaza border

Hamas continues to fire into Israel, extending its attack still further — toward Jerusalem. The IDF continues to attack terrorist targets in the Gaza Strip. The IDF spokesperson reports that over 500 strikes have been carried out by the military since Operation Pillar of Defense commenced on Wednesday afternoon. Hamas and terrorist organizations in Gaza have launched more than 70 rockets on Friday alone. The Times of Israel is liveblogging developments. Press “Refresh” for latest updates and click here for our previous live blog detailing events as they unfolded on earlier on Friday. (Click here to receive our free daily newsletter, compiling the day’s key stories.)

Obama and Erdogan discuss the situations in Israel and the Gaza Strip and “share their concerns about the dangers to civilian populations on both sides,” AFP reports.

The two leaders reportedly share hopes that the fighting will end soon and raise worries that the fighting will diminish prospects for a “durable, lasting” peace in the Middle East.

Palestinian sources report that Israel killed senior Hamas field commander Ahmed Abu-Jalal and three of his brothers in an airstrike on central Gaza.

Initial reports said the men were killed when the vehicle they were driving suffered a direct hit from the air. The IDF says the men were killed while preparing to fire rockets on southern Israel.

 21:35

The Cabinet approves calling up 75,000 reservists to take part in Operation Pillar of Defense. The decision was reached in a phone survey of the ministers, while the inner security cabinet met to discuss the recent escalation in the conflict, after Hamas fired rockets towards Jerusalem earlier this evening.

The security cabinet is expected to approve introducing ground troops into the Gaza Strip. Channel 10 news is reporting that two of the ministers have recommended a long-term stay in Gaza, arguing that the quick exit after Operation Cast Lead did not bring about favorable results.

Three rockets fired from Gaza towards Beersheba. Iron Dome intercepts two, the third falls in unpopulated area. No injuries or damage reported.

Additional rocket lands in an open area in the Eshkol region causing no Injuries or damage.

A volley of rockets fired from the Gaza Strip was intercepted by the Iron Dome missile defense system near the city of Beersheba, November 15 (photo credit: Uri Lenzl/Flash90)

A volley of rockets fired from the Gaza Strip was intercepted by the Iron Dome missile defense system near the city of Beersheba, November 15 (photo credit: Uri Lenzl/Flash90)

Channel 2 news is reporting on a barrage of mortar shells fired towards Kerem Shalom, near the Israeli border with Egypt. Initial reports are saying the mortars were fired from the Sinai Peninsula, an indication that terrorist groups there may be joining the hostilities.

‘Surprise’ rocket fire at Jerusalem shows Hamas flailing but still seeking to escalate the conflict

November 16, 2012

‘Surprise’ rocket fire at Jerusalem shows Hamas flailing but still seeking to escalate the conflict | The Times of Israel.

Gaza’s Islamists, far from cowed, are pushing to their limits in a bid for ‘an achievement’

November 16, 2012, 8:21 pm 1
Border Police officers search for the remains of a missile that was shot from the Gaza Strip by Hamas and landed near the settlement bloc of Gush Etzion. (photo credit: Yonatan Sindel/Flash90)

Border Police officers search for the remains of a missile that was shot from the Gaza Strip by Hamas and landed near the settlement bloc of Gush Etzion. (photo credit: Yonatan Sindel/Flash90)

Jerusalem hasn’t been hit with rocket fire since 1970, when two Katyushas were fired from the Palestinian village of Batir.

The M-75s (or Fajr-5 missiles, depending on the report) that landed in an open space south of Jerusalem on Friday, in Kfar Etzion, were labeled by Hamas as “surprises.”

This is Hezbollah terminology. In Hezbollah leader Sheikh Hassan Nasrallah’s hands, the psychological potency of his threats have often been enormous.

During the first days of the 2006 Second Lebanon War he, too, promised surprises, and shortly thereafter on July 14 Hezbollah fired a C-802 surface-to-sea missile, striking and nearly sinking an Israeli Navy missile ship.

Hamas, however, stripped of most of its long-range weapons and of its supreme commander, appears to be flailing (though not cowed, by any means). The “surprises” landed in open space approximately 8 miles shy of Jerusalem, the very extreme limit of Hamas’s rocket range.

The rockets proved that Hamas is willing to fire at a city holy to Islam and at an area where many Muslims live but, as opposed to Hezbollah, it was unable to inflict damage.

More encouragingly, it is increasingly fabricating achievements.  Three hours before the rockets were fired, the organization claimed to have hit the Knesset, Israel’s parliament. Thursday witnessed a flurry of false claims, including the killing of several soldiers on a jeep.

“This is a positive sign,” said Lt. Col Avital Leibovich of the IDF Spokesperson’s Office, noting that it spoke to a sense of desperation and a dearth of true achievements.

That said, Friday’s fire is also a show of defiance and an escalation.

Terror organizations, when facing the IDF, have a comparatively infinitesimal weapons supply. Their strategic goal, therefore, in terms of their ability to deter the IDF, is to use those weapons wisely, ratcheting up the pressure with each increase in range.

This is why Nasrallah promised to hit targets “ba’ad, ba’ad Haifa” (beyond, beyond Haifa) toward the end of the Second Lebanon War. This enabled him to respond to each massive Israeli increase in pressure by snaking his fire ever-further south, toward Tel Aviv.

Hamas seeks a similar achievement — to be able to continue firing rockets throughout the conflict — and in that way to deny Israel a tangible success, and to remain armed with at least one more escalation at all times.

Its fire on Jerusalem Friday, as Jews around the country prepared to light Shabbat candles, was an unsuccessful expression of that desire.

Cabinet approves 75,000 troops for possible Gaza operation

November 16, 2012

Jerusalem Post – Breaking News.

( Unsure if this is a con to scare them into making a deal or the real thing… – JW )

By JPOST.COM STAFF
11/16/2012 21:26
The cabinet approved Defense Minister Ehud Barak’s request for 75,000 reserve troops in preparation for a possible ground operation in Gaza.On Thursday, the cabinet approved 30,000 reserve troops, 16,000 of which the IDF mobilized on Friday.

Obama, Erdogan: Gaza violence jeopardizes prospects for peace

November 16, 2012

Obama, Erdogan: Gaza violence jeopardizes prospects for peace – Israel News, Ynetnews.

US President Barack Obama called Turkish Prime Minister Erdogan to discuss the escalating violence in Israel and the Gaza Strip.

“The two leaders shared their concerns about the dangers to civilian populations on both sides and expressed their common desire to see an end to the violence,” the White House said in a statement. “The president and prime Minister agreed that the continued spiral of violence jeopardizes prospects for a durable, lasting peace in the region. (Ynet)

 

Barak seeks 75,000 reservists for possible Gaza operation

November 16, 2012

Barak seeks 75,000 reservists for possible Gaz… JPost – Defense.

 

By JPOST.COM STAFF, YAAKOV LAPPIN

 

11/16/2012 18:09
As government mulls a ground operation, defense minister seeks to increase cabinet’s approval of reservists from 30,000; thus far, 16,000 draft orders issued to reserves.

IDF forces mobilizing at Gaza border.

Photo: IDF Spokesman’s Office

Defense Minister Ehud Barak approved the IDF’s request on Friday evening to increase the maximum number of reservists it could enlist, seeking cabinet approval to mobilize up to 75,000 troops ahead of a possible Gaza ground operation.

On Friday morning, as Operation Pillar of Defense continued for a third day, IDF Chief of Staff Lt.-Gen. Benny Gantz issued draft orders to 16,000 out the 30,000 reservists the cabinet approved Thursday. Most of the reservists called up thus far serve in the IDF’s Engineering Corps.

The engineering corps would play a vital part in any ground operation into the Gaza Strip, enabling armored vehicles to move across the border into Gaza. The IDF operation to root out terror in the coastal territory has consisted of air raids on terror targets thus far.

The Knesset Foreign Affairs and Defense Committee unanimously authorized on Thursday Defense Minister Ehud Barak’s request to enlist up to 30,000 reservists.

The IDF will issue “order nine,” which is an irregular order in cases of emergency for reservists to immediately report to duty.

“The residents of the south are in the real line of fire, and only their strength will allow the IDF to meet its capabilities,” Foreign Affairs and Defense Committee chairman Ronnie Bar-On (Kadima) said. “Israel is passing on a clear message to terrorist organizations in Gaza that disrupting life in the South will not continue.”

Morsi warns Israel will pay heavy price

November 16, 2012

Morsi warns Israel will pay heavy price – Israel News, Ynetnews.

Egyptian president sharpens his ton against Israel, threatening: ‘If I see the homeland in danger, I won’t hesitate to take unusual steps.’ He vows that his country will ‘stop this brutal aggression’

Roi Kais

Published: 11.16.12, 16:07 / Israel News

Egyptian President Mohamed Morsi sharpened his tone against Israel on Friday, while Palestinian terrorists continued to fire rockets into southern Israel and Tel Aviv.

After concluding the Friday prayer at a mosque in Cairo, Morsi warned Israel of the consequences of its strikes in Gaza. According to the al- Shorouk newspaper, Morsi tweeted on his Twitter page: “We have the power to uproot the aggressiveness just like it uprooted exploitation.

“I don’t want to take unusual steps,” Morsi added, “but if I see that the homeland is in danger, I won’t hesitate.”

Morsi said earlier that “Gaza will not remain alone as it was,” adding that the aggressors “know they will pay a heavy price is they continue their aggression.”

He further said that the post-Mubarak Egyptwas completely different and that all Egyptians were determined to stop the offensive on the Gaza Strip.

According to Morsi, “The blood spilled over there will not get the other side peace and will serve as a curse on them. It will incite all the people of the region against them.”

Morsi added that the Egyptian prime minister’s visit to Gazastressed the message stressed by revolutionary Egypt and will “stop this brutal aggressiveness.”

He also said that “the Egyptians throughout their history were not an aggressive people, but they are capable of stopping any attack.”

The Egyptian president also said that “Egypt doesn’t want to fight and constantly calls for peace, but real peace is not just for one side at the expense of another side, so that one side enjoys the good life while the others suffer from attacks and ongoing killing.”

Calls against Jews

The al-Ahram newspaper’s website reported that the audience chanted slogans against Jews while Morsi spoke. The newspaper also said that the Egyptian president commented about Israel without mentioning its name.

Russian President Vladimir Putin said in a phone conversation with Morsi that he supports an end to airstrikes in Gaza.

Putin also said that he expected the region to go back to normal and that military operations leaving civilians dead should be stopped.

Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas is expected to speak in Ramallah on Friday evening at the start of a Palestinian leadership meeting on the escalation in the Gaza Strip.

Report: Iranian FM expresses desire to visit Gaza

November 16, 2012

Report: Iranian FM expresses desire to visit Gaza – Israel News, Ynetnews.

The IRNA news agency reported that Iranian Foreign Minister Ali Akbar Salehi telephoned the Islamic Jihad’s secretary-general, Ramadan Sallah, and expressed his desire to visit the Gaza Strip in support of the Palestinians.

Salehi added that he had spoken with UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon and called on him to act immediately to “stop the Zionist crimes in Gaza.” (Dudi Cohen)

Hamas: We’ll avenge Israeli bombing of Sudan arms plant

November 16, 2012

Jerusalem Post – Breaking News.

 

By REUTERS

 

11/16/2012 19:23

 

KHARTOUM – The exiled leader of Hamas told Sudan on Friday his Palestinian group would take revenge on Israel for the deadly bombing of an arms factory in Khartoum, state news agency SUNA reported.

Treated as a star guest at an Islamist conference in Sudan, Khaled Meshaal used the meeting to rally support for Hamas’s conflict against Israel in the Gaza Strip and told worshipers at Friday prayers his group would avenge the factory blast.

“Hamas will take revenge for Sudan from Israel in retaliation for its aggression … You will hear good news soon,” Meshaal told said at the mosque of the Sudanese armed forces in Khartoum, SUNA said.

He did not elaborate but said Hamas’s use of long-range missiles showed it was able to surprise Israel.