Archive for December 2012

Iran: Newtown massacre was Israeli conspiracy

December 19, 2012

Iran: Newtown massacre was Israeli conspiracy – Israel News, Ynetnews.

( This defies any comment beyond noting that it is its own parody. – JW )

Tehran news website quotes ‘expert’ alleging horrific Connecticut shooting that claimed lives of 20 children, six adults was Israeli scheme meant to exert revenge on US following ‘humiliation at UN’

Dudi Cohen

Published: 12.18.12, 22:51 / Israel News

“The Newtown massacre was the result of an Israeli conspiracy” an Iranian news website proclaimed Tuesday.

The United States is still reeling from the murderous rampage that left 20 children and six adults dead in Newtown, Connecticut, on Friday. Tehran – which on Sunday offered its condolences to the victims and their families – is now promoting an alternative explanation to the horrific event.

Harris, reportedly citing the “numerous inconsistencies” in the shooting’s “cover story,” said that “This is another case where Israel has chosen violence and terrorism where their bullying in Washington has failed.”

Iran‘s Press TV website quoted Michael Harris, former Republican candidate for governor of Arizona and GOP campaign finance chairman, as saying that “An Israeli death squad was involved in the Sandy Hook shooting.”

According to the report, Harris called the Newtown tragedy a “terrorist attack,” adding that it was “Israel’s revenge” and that it was meant to “teach the US lesson,” following the Palestinian’s status upgrade in the UN.

According to the report, the shooter, Adam Lazna, was meant to be the scapegoat.

President Obama speaking at Newtown vigil

 

Press TV failed to note where Harris was interviewed. The website also dubbed him an “intelligence analyst,” but the GOP member has no known ties to the intelligence community in the US.

The report further quoted him as linking the Connecticut incident to Anders Behring Breivik’s murderous spree in Norway, in 2011.

“This is exactly what Israel did in Norway; the political party that voted for sanctions against Israel was retaliated against by a ‘lone gunman’ who killed 77 children.

“This is what Israel always does, they go after the children… The same thing happened at Sandy Hook. Nobody buys the lone gunman story anymore, not with the Gabby Giffords’ shooting, not with the Aurora ‘Batman’ shooting, certainly not with Breveik, and certainly not in Connecticut,” he said.

Defiant Iran vows to continue enrichment, dismisses sanctions as insignificant

December 18, 2012

Defiant Iran vows to continue enrichment, dismisses sanctions as insignificant | The Times of Israel.

Ahmadinejad says international pressure will not slow down Tehran’s nuclear program

December 18, 2012, 5:03 pm 0
Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad. (photo credit: AP/Bebeto Matthews)

Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad. (photo credit: AP/Bebeto Matthews)

Iranian officials said Tuesday that uranium enrichment would continue nearly unabated, despite Western sanctions aiming to quash their nuclear program.

President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad said the sanctions could cause a short delay in Tehran’s nuclear program but would not slow it down substantially.

“The West is not happy with Iran’s progress” in various technological fields, including uranium enrichment (a possible pathway to nuclear arms), Iranian state TV quoted him saying.

At the same time, Iran’s atomic energy chief asserted that Tehran would continue to enrich uranium to 20 percent purity “as long and as much as” it deems necessary and despite international pressure, semi-official Iranian Press TV reported.

“The production of 20 percent enriched uranium for use in Tehran’s reactor is the Iranian nation’s right and it will defend this right,” Iranian Atomic Energy Organization Fereydoun Abbasi said.

“Twenty percent enrichment is not an issue for the Westerners to agree to or oppose or even to seek a stance on,” he added.

The remarks come days after Tehran again prevented visiting UN nuclear agency inspectors from visiting the Parchin military base near the Iranian capital. The International Atomic Energy Agency has linked the site to suspected secret nuclear weapons research. Iran denies that, insisting Parchin is only a conventional military facility.

The international community has repeatedly condemned Iran’s unsanctioned nuclear program, which is widely suspected to be intended for military purposes.

Last month, the IAEA reported that it “has become increasingly concerned about the possible existence in Iran of undisclosed nuclear related activities involving military related organizations, including activities related to the development of a nuclear payload for a missile.”

Iran, however, denies those charges and claims the nuclear program is for peaceful purposes only. Recent nuclear talks between Iran and the five permanent members of the United Nations Security Council and Germany — the P5+1 — have yielded no tangible results.

Iranian Foreign Ministry spokesperson Ramin Mehmanparast said Tuesday, however, that Iran would “take measures which can lead to easing the IAEA concerns and you will witness its details, if we reach a comprehensive agreement which recognizes our rights” to a nuclear program, semi-official Iranian Fars news agency reported.

“We are seeking to reach all-out agreements in our talks with the IAEA and our country’s nuclear rights should be completely recognized in such an agreement and we should be able to utilize the know-how which includes (access to) the complete nuclear fuel cycle and enrichment for the development of the country and in line with peaceful purposes,” he said.

Iranian minister denies Syria’s Assad about to fall

December 18, 2012

Iranian minister denies Syria’s Assad abou… JPost – Middle East.

By REUTERS

 

12/18/2012 16:04
“Syrian army and the state machine are working smoothly,” says Iranian Deputy Foreign Minister, denies Russia has changed position despite the fact that it sent warships to Syria for possible evacuation.

FREE SYRIAN Army fighters pose on a tank

Photo: Reuters

Iran does not believe Syrian President Bashar Assad and his government are about to fall, Deputy Foreign Minister Hossein Amir-Abdollahian said on Tuesday.

Asked after talks in Moscow about Western suggestions that Assad and his government might soon be ousted, he told Reuters through a translator: “We have serious doubts about that. The Syrian army and the state machine are working smoothly.”

Like Russia, Iran has been a staunch ally of Assad throughout the 21-month uprising against his rule.

The minister dismissed suggestions that Moscow had altered its stance on Syria, despite remarks by a senior Russian diplomat last week acknowledging that Assad’s opponents could win the conflict.

“During our talks with our Russian partners, we have found there has been no change in the Russian position on Syria,” he told a news conference.

Russia has shielded Assad’s government from UN Security Council censure and sanctions, resisting Western pressure to join efforts to push him from power.

Russia sends warships to Syria for possible evacuation

Russia sent warships to the Mediterranean to prepare a potential evacuation of its citizens from Syria, a Russian news agency said on Tuesday, a sign Assad’s key ally is worried about rebel advances that now threaten even the capital.

Moscow acted a day after insurgents waging a 21-month-old uprising obtained a possible springboard for a thrust into Damascus by seizing the Yarmouk Palestinian camp just 2 miles from the heart of the city, activists said.

The anti-Assad opposition has posted significant military and diplomatic gains in recent weeks, capturing a series of army installations across Syria and securing formal recognition from Western and Arab states for its new coalition.

Assad’s pivotal allies have largely stood behind him. But Russia, his main arms supplier, appeared to waver this week with contradictory statements repeating opposition to Assad stepping down and airing concerns about a possible rebel victory.

Russia’s Interfax news agency quoted unnamed naval sources on Tuesday as saying that two assault ships, a tanker and an escort vessel had left a Baltic port for the Mediterranean Sea, where Russia has a port in Syria’s coastal city of Tartus.

“They are heading to the Syrian coast to assist in a possible evacuation of Russian citizens … Preparations for the deployment were carried out in a hurry and were heavily classified,” the Russian agency quoted the source as saying.

It was not possible to independently verify the report, which came a day after Russia confirmed that two citizens working in Syria were kidnapped along with an Italian citizen.

US: Hagel nomination irks pro-Israel conservatives

December 18, 2012

US: Hagel nomination irks pro-Israel conservatives – Israel News, Ynetnews.

Political figures criticize likely nomination of former Nebraska senator as defense secretary citing his refusal to recognize Hezbollah as terror organization, criticism of Israel

Yitzhak Benhorin

Published: 12.18.12, 09:47 / Israel News

WASHINGTON – The possible nomination of Chuck Hagel as the US secretary of defense is sparking criticism among pro-Israel conservatives.

The former Nebraska senator and Vietnam veteran is considered the frontrunner to replace Leon Panetta and has been known to criticize Israel and the pro-Israel lobby in the US.

Hagel was the first Republican senator to publicly criticize the war in Iraq and has declined to endorse the use force against Iran if negotiations don’t persuade it to give up its nuclear program.

In 2009 he signed a paper urging President Barack Obama to advance a Hamas-Fatah unity government.

Hagel also refused to be included in AIPAC’s statements of support of Israel. In a 2006 interview with veteran diplomat Aharon Miller he claimed that “the Jewish lobby” intimidates many Americans.

“I have always argued against some of the dumb things they do because I don’t think it’s in the interest of Israel. I just don’t think it’s smart for Israel,” he said.

הייגל עם אובמה. "נשבעתי לאמריקה, לא לישראל" (צילום: רויטרס)

Hagel with Obama (Photo: AP)

“I’m not an Israeli senator. I’m a United States senator,” he told Miller for his book “The Much Too Promised Land,” released in 2008.

“I support Israel, but my first interest is I take an oath of office to the Constitution of the United States, not to a president, not to a party, not to Israel. If I go run for Senate in Israel, I’ll do that,” the ex-senator said.

Former AIPAC spokesman Josh Block told politico.com that Hagel’s record “speaks for itself, on issues like consistently voting against sanctions on Iran to stop their pursuit of nuclear weapons capability, refusing to call on the European Union to name Hezbollah – which has killed more Americans than any terrorist group in the world except al-Qaeda – as a terrorist organization.”

In his Wall Street Journal column, conservative journalist Bret Stephens wrote, “In 2002, a year in which 457 Israelis were killed in terrorist attacks, Mr. Hagel weighed in with the advice that ‘Israel must take steps to show its commitment to peace.’

“This was two years after Yasser Arafat had been offered a state by Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Barak at Camp David.”

Furthermore in 2006, Hagel accused Israel of “systematic destruction of an American friend – the country and people of Lebanon.”

In 2007, the former Nebraska senator voted against designating Iran’s Revolutionary Guards Corps as a terrorist organization.

‘Hagel’s views not unusual’

Conversely, Hagel’s nomination is being endorsed by the more liberal-leaning pro-Israel group J Street.

Daniel Kurtzer, a US ambassador to Israel under President George W. Bush is also supportive of Hagel’s nomination claiming his views on AIPAC are “far from unusual among lawmakers.

“Anybody who has ever talked to senators or congressmen behind closed doors knows you hear a lot of that,” Kurtzer told politico.com. “A lot of people won’t talk about that publicly, but Hagel talks about it in pubic. One can question whether it’s good politics from his standpoint, but it’s not a view that’s foreign on the Hill.”

Kurtzer described the criticism of Hagel’s policy views “terribly misguided.”

“I found him in all the years I served, including as ambassador to Israel, to be a supporter of Israel and a man also ready to discuss very frankly with the Israelis the concerns we had about certain Israeli policies,” he said.

Ya’alon: US poised for action on Iranian nuclear program

December 18, 2012

Ya’alon: US poised for action on… JPost – Iranian Threat – News.

By REUTERS, JPOST.COM STAFF
12/18/2012 12:10
Vice prime minister says US effort on Iran issue has resumed since reelection of Obama, suggesting cautious optimism for international resolution of deadlock; Barak: determined to stop Iran becoming a nuclear power.

PM Netanyahu, Deputy PM Yaalon

Photo: Reuters

US-led efforts to curb Iran’s nuclear program have resumed since President Barack Obama’s re-election and include preparation for possible military action, Vice Prime Minister Moshe Ya’alon said on Tuesday.

Ya’alon’s remarks suggested cautious optimism at prospects for an international resolution to the decade-old standoff with Tehran, though Israel says it remains ready to attack its arch-foe alone as a last resort.

Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu has set out a mid-2013 “red line” for tackling Iran’s uranium enrichment project. The West says this program is aimed at developing the means to build atomic bombs. Tehran denies this, saying it is enriching uranium solely for civilian energy.

Ya’alon told Army Radio on Tuesday that Israel knew there would be no movement on the issue before the US election in November, but had expected renewed effort after the vote.

“And indeed it has been renewed,” he said, adding that the Iran issue is “still our top priority.”

He cited contacts among the United States, Russia, France, China, Britain and Germany and Iran about holding new nuclear negotiations, ongoing sanctions against Iran, “and preparations, mainly American for now, for the possibility that military force will have to be used”. He did not elaborate.

The P5+1 powers said last week they hoped soon to agree with Iran on when and where to meet. There have been suggestions it could happen this month, though January now seems more likely, Western officials say.

‘Zone of immunity’

A former armed forces chief, Ya’alon questioned Obama’s resolve on Iran during the Democratic president’s first term. By contrast, Defense Minister Ehud Barak, the lone centrist in Netanyahu’s coalition government, argued in Obama’s favour.

Ya’alon, a Likud member, is a frontrunner to succeed Barak, who has announced he will retire from politics after Israel’s January 22 election.

On Monday, Barak reiterated Israel’s determination to deny Iran the capability to make a nuclear weapon. Israel, widely assumed to have the Middle East’s only atomic arsenal, sees a nuclear-armed Iran as a mortal threat.

The prospect of unilateral Israeli air strikes, and ensuing retaliation by Iran, a big oil exporter, and its Islamist guerrilla allies in Lebanon and Gaza, worries world powers.

Speaking to Jewish leaders in New York, Barak acknowledged the limitations of Israel’s military against Iran’s distant, dispersed and well-defended nuclear facilities.

“The Iranians are deliberately trying to create a level of redundancy and protection for their program, what we call the ‘zone of immunity’. Once they enter the zone of immunity, fate will be out of our hands,” Barak said.

“The state of Israel was founded precisely so that our fate would remain in our own hands.” Barak’s term “redundancy” refers to Israel’s belief that Iran seeks to stockpile raw uranium and enrichment centrifuges on a scale that would allow it to restore independent nuclear capacity should its known facilities be attacked.

Barak added that Israel is “determined to prevent Iran from becoming a military nuclear power.”

The Iranian projects have been dogged by sabotage. While Israel has not publicly claimed responsibility, Ya’alon said there could be more in store, in parallel to global economic pressure.

“Sometimes malfunctions happen there – worms, viruses, explosions. Therefore this schedule is not necessarily chronological. It is more technological,” he told Army Radio.

“We are, without a doubt, closely tracking developments in the program there, lest they attempt to pass the red line.”

Azerbaijan nabs Iranian agents setting trap for Israel-made drone

December 17, 2012

Azerbaijan nabs Iranian agents setting trap for Israel-made drone.

DEBKAfile Exclusive Report December 17, 2012, 8:37 PM (GMT+02:00)

 

Hermes-450 UAV made in Israel
Hermes-450 UAV made in Israel

debkafile Special: Last week, the Azerbaijani police rounded up six Iranian agents who had infiltrated the country and were looking for the air bases where their government housed the drones purchased from Israel. The spies were found in possession of cash, fake passports, automatic pistols, advanced electronic equipment for tracking aircraft and electronic warfare devices for jamming flying vehicles and down them. Questioning the detainees uncovered an Iranian plot to capture one of the Israel-made UAVs as it flew over the Caspian Sea.

Following the arrests, Azerbaijan barred entry to the Iranian culture attaché serving at the embassy in Baku on his return from home leave in Tehran. No valid reason was offered for this step except that his visa had expired. Azerbaijani investigators were able to establish that he was an undercover agent who was running the captured ring.
The episode which triggered the considerable friction between Baku and Tehran surfaced on Dec. 9 when Iran spread through its media allegations that he US and Israel had stepped up their intelligence surveillance of the Astara Rayon region of southeastern Azerbaijan along the Caspian maritime frontier with Iran.

The Americans were claimed to have expanded the coverage of their radar, while Israel was said to have increased the number of Orbiter ultra-light drones spying on the region, as well as using the 10 Hermes-450 UAVs, made in Israel and recently sold to Azerbaijan. According to Iranian sources, the Hermes drones’ spying operations over the Iranian border are guided by Israeli military satellites.

In Israel, there was little doubt that Tehran was laying the groundwork for an attempt to force down an Israeli-Azerbaijani drone with the same sort of  traps used against two American drones – the ScanEagle, which was downed over the Persian Gulf earlier this month, and the MQ 1 Predator which came under fire from two Iranian Air Force SU-25 fighters as it approached the skies over the Bushehr nuclear reactor.
Referring to the ScanEagle, Revolutionary Guards Navy commander Adm. Ali Fadavi said Tuesday, Dec. 4, that one of his units had captured a US drone flying over his forces in the Persian Gulf.
Catching Israeli drones is a challenge of a different order since none fly near Iranian borders. All the same, Tehran was suspected of planning to net one of the drones Azerbaijan bought from Israel and, despite the purchaser’s military markings, present it as the capture of an Israeli spy drone controlled by the Israeli Air Force and military intelligence, MI.
This would have been a feather in Tehran’s cap on a par with its success on Oct. 6 in keeping an Iranian drone, launched by Hizballah from Lebanon, on the loose for two hours in Israeli airspace before it was downed.

Iranian FM: Nuclear deadlock with West must end

December 17, 2012

Iranian FM: Nuclear deadlock wit… JPost – Iranian Threat – News.

By REUTERS
12/17/2012 15:40
Following talks with the International Atomic Energy Agency, Ali Salehi says Iran, world powers are both ready to “exit the current stalemate” over the Iranian nuclear program, but fails to specify when or how to achieve this.

Iranian FM Ali Akbar Salehi

Photo: REUTERS

DUBAI – Iran’s foreign minister said on Monday a way must be found to end the deadlock with major powers over its nuclear program, an Iranian news agency reported, but he offered no new initiative on how to achieve this.

Ali Akbar Salehi’s comments came ahead of an expected resumption of diplomacy, perhaps next month, aimed at preventing the decade-old nuclear dispute from degenerating into a Middle East war that could damage an already fragile world economy.

Israel, widely reported to be the Middle East’s only nuclear-armed power, has threatened military action to prevent its arch-enemy from acquiring nuclear weapons. Iran denies any such goal and says it would hit back hard if attacked.

“The two sides (Iran and world powers) have reached a conclusion that they must exit the current stalemate,” Salehi was quoted as saying by the Iranian Students’ News Agency.

The West suspects Iran is trying to develop the means to build atomic bombs under the cover of a declared civilian nuclear energy program. The Islamic Republic says it is enriching uranium as fuel for civilian energy, not bombs.

Iran and the six powers – the United States, Russia, France, China, Britain and Germany – have expressed readiness to revive efforts to find a negotiated solution. But Salehi said he did not know when the next meeting would be held.

The powers, known as P5+1, said last week they hoped soon to agree with Iran on when and where to meet. There have been suggestions it could happen already this month, though January now seems more likely, Western officials say.

Analysts and diplomats believe there is a window of opportunity for a new diplomatic initiative with Iran after last month’s re-election of US President Barack Obama.

The powers want Iran to scale back its uranium enrichment program and cooperate fully with UN nuclear inspectors.

The priority for Iran, a major oil producer, is for the West to lift punitive sanctions increasingly hurting its economy.

Three rounds of negotiations earlier this year – the last one in Moscow in June – failed to achieve a breakthrough.

The big powers have prepared an updated version of package that was rejected by Tehran in the previous talks, Western diplomats say, without giving details.

Their immediate priority is for Iran to halt higher-grade enrichment that could relatively quickly be further processed to bomb-grade material, close the Fordow underground plant where this work is carried out and ship out the stockpile.

Shutting Fordow ‘not enough’

Iran has hinted at flexibility regarding its enrichment to a fissile concentration of 20 percent, but it wants substantial sanctions easing in return, something the powers say would be premature before Tehran makes significant concessions.

Iran also wants recognition of what it says is its “right” to refine uranium, which can have both civilian and military purposes. “Iran demands its inalienable, legal and legitimate right and wants nothing more,” Salehi said.

One Western official said it was too early to say whether the new diplomatic attempt may yield results: “We see that sanctions do have an economic impact on Iran and it is a matter for Iran to really take this offer seriously.” Iran’s economic minister was quoted on Sunday saying the country’s oil revenues had been cut in half as a result of sanctions.

Another Western diplomat said the powers were increasingly concerned about Iran’s expanded enrichment capacity at Fordow, and wanted to address this issue in the new proposal. This could mean, he said, asking Iran to partially dismantle the facility.

“Shutting Fordow is not enough,” the diplomat said, adding it would take longer to restart the facility if the enrichment installations had been taken apart.

The world powers hope to gain momentum in dealings with Iran by introducing “confidence-building measures” before approaching a final agreement at a later date, diplomats say.

They say the powers are likely to offer Iran some form of sanctions relief in return but any measures may be limited.

Salehi spoke a few days after the International Atomic Energy Agency and Iran both said progress was made in talks last Thursday on resuming a long-stalled IAEA investigation into suspected atomic bomb research in the country.

A senior Iranian legislator said on Monday that Iran would expect some sanctions relief in return for granting IAEA inspectors access to the disputed Parchin military complex.

The IAEA believes Iran has conducted explosives tests with possible nuclear applications at Parchin, a facility southeast of the Iranian capital, and has repeatedly asked for access.

“They must certainly give some incentive in return, and in my opinion a reasonable and equal incentive would be lifting the sanctions,” said Alaeddin Boroujerdi, who chairs the national security and foreign policy committee in the Iranian parliament.

Iran says it captured 2 US drones prior to the one it boasted of two weeks ago

December 17, 2012

Iran says it captured 2 US drones prior to the one it boasted of two weeks ago | The Times of Israel.

Revolutionary Guard naval chief says a ScanEagle captured in early December was the third American UAV the army has downed

December 17, 2012, 1:05 pm 0
Iranian state TV shows what purports to be an intact ScanEagle drone aircraft, December 4, 2012 (photo credit: AP/Al-Alam TV)

Iranian state TV shows what purports to be an intact ScanEagle drone aircraft, December 4, 2012 (photo credit: AP/Al-Alam TV)

TEHRAN, Iran (AP) — The naval chief of Iran’s Revolutionary Guard claims Iranian forces had captured at least two other US drones before unveiling a purportedly downed ScanEagle craft earlier this month.

Monday’s report by the official IRNA news agency does not say when the two other drones were allegedly taken.

It quotes Adm. Ali Fadavi as saying the drone shown on state TV was the third captured ScanEagle, a relatively simple surveillance craft made by a Boeing subsidiary.

Fadavi says Iranian-made copies of the ScanEagle have been put into service, but did not elaborate.

Earlier this month, the US Navy said none of its drones were missing from recent missions, but some might have fallen into the sea in the past. There was no immediate comment from the U.S. 5th Fleet in Bahrain.

Copyright 2012 The Associated Press.

Explosion in Hezbollah weapons depot

December 17, 2012

Explosion in Hezbollah weapons depot – Israel News, Ynetnews.

Lebanese media reports of mysterious blast in Tair Harfa, town near Israel border. Hezbollah cordons off area

AP, Roi Kais

Published: 12.17.12, 09:48 / Israel News

Lebanon‘s state agency has reported a large explosion in the country’s south near the border with Israel. The blast hit a Hezbollah weapons cache.

National News said early Monday the reasons behind the blast near Tair Harfa were not clear. Andrea Tenente, who is a spokesman for the UN peacekeeping force in the area, UNIFIL, said it was investigating.

South Lebanon, the scene of bitter fighting between Israel and Lebanese militant Hezbollah guerrillas in 2006, is considered a Hezbollah stronghold.

Security officials said Hezbollah had cordoned off the area. They asked not to be named because they are not authorized to speak publicly.

Some two months ago, a series of blasts killed at least nine people and wounded seven in the Hezbollah-controlled Beqaa Valley of eastern Lebanon.

The Shiite terror group announced that three of its members were killed and a few others were injured in the blasts, which hit an arms stockpile in a building under construction in an uninhabited area between the villages of Nabishit and Khodr.

Last July, an air-to-ground missile fired by an Israeli plane detonated a surveillance device that was planted between the southern Lebanese towns of Zrariyeh and Tayr Filsay.

According to the report, the device was planted on a Hezbollah telecommunications cable. The device was destroyed by Israel because the terror group had exposed it, the National News Agency reported.

US pulls war fleet from Syrian water. Ahmadinejad cancels Turkey visit

December 16, 2012

US pulls war fleet from Syrian water. Ahmadinejad cancels Turkey visit.

DEBKAfile Exclusive Report December 16, 2012, 10:33 PM (GMT+02:00)

 

Patriot missile destined for Turkey
Patriot missile destined for Turkey

Shortly before the deployment of two American Patriot missiles manned by 400 US servicemen for defending Turkey against Syria was announced Thursday, Dec. 13, Washington quietly recalled from Syrian waters the USS Eisenhower aircraft carrier and its strike group and the USS Iwo Jima Amphibious Ready group and the 2,000 Marines on their decks.

This US fleet, now on its way to home base, stayed opposite the Syrian coast from the third week of November ready to take part in direct US intervention in the Syrian conflict.
Now that the American warships are gone, Russia’s Black Sea Fleet task force, which docked at the Syrian port of Tartus on Dec. 5, is the only war fleet remaining around the Syrian coast. According to debkafile’s intelligence sources, the Russian ships came to deliver a large consignment of arms for Bashar Assad’s army, although Russian sources claimed the vessels put into port for minor repairs and refueling.

US naval, air and marine forces pulled back from the eastern Mediterranean, to be replaced American-manned Patriot missile interceptors just as Syria became engulfed in another peak wave of violence. This deeply perturbs Syria’s neighbors, Turkey, Jordan, Qatar, Saudi Arabia and Israel. They all fear Assad’s Scud missiles fitted with chemical warheads are pointed at them, no less than rebel forces, and he will have no qualms about shooting or dropping them against any of those neighbors if he becomes desperate. Their intelligence agencies believe the Syrian ruler is just as likely to direct chemical weapons against US military facilities on their soil.
Although the five governments are not openly criticizing the Obama administration, a senior Turkish officer in Ankara said to debkafile’s sources that America’s action in removing its naval forces from the eastern Mediterranean is “hard to understand and unacceptable to Ankara.”

This is especially so, he said, in view of the discovery, reported by US official sources Friday, that the Syrian ruler has a larger chemical arsenal than previously believed – several dozen bombs and shells loaded with the lethal chemical sarin.

To appease the Turks, our sources report that Defense Secretary Leon Panetta paid a short visit Friday, Dec. 14, to the big air base in southern Turkey where US strike aircraft are stationed alongside Turkish warplanes.
Panetta also conferred with Defense Minister Ismet Yilmaz, Turkish Chief of Staff Gen. Necdet Ozel and senior US commanders, including NATO chief, Adm. James Stavridis.
The admiral said after the meeting: “Over the past few days, a handful of Scud missiles were launched inside Syria, directed by the regime against opposition targets. Several landed fairly close to the Turkish border, which is very worrisome.”

In the view of debkafile’s military sources, President Barack Obama decided to pull the formidable warship fleet away from the neighborhood of Syria in an effort to defuse the military tensions rising between Iran, Turkey and Syria.

He also hoped that the Iranian president Mahmoud Ahmadinejad’s scheduled visit to Turkey Monday, Dec. 17, for talks with Turkish Prime Minister Tayyip Erdogan, would be a useful opportunity to achieve some sort of understanding with Iran over the Syrian crisis.
However, Tehran had other ideas. Saturday, Iran’s chief of staff Gen. Hassan Firouzabadi, raised regional temperatures when he referred to the NATO Patriot missiles posted along Turkey’s border with Syria as “meant to cause a world war. They are making plans for a world war, and this is very dangerous for the future of humanity and for the future of Europe itself,” he said.

Sunday, Ahmadinejad slammed the door on any hoped-for understanding with Ankara by his last-minute cancellation of his trip to Turkey in view of the peril of war – further escalating the stresses radiating from Syria’s 21-month uprising.