Archive for April 25, 2013

‘Syria’s chemical weapons in Hezbollah’s reach’

April 25, 2013

‘Syria’s chemical weapons in Hezbollah’s reach’ | The Times of Israel.

Israeli UN envoy says European Union ignoring Lebanese group’s terror activity, Iran ‘spinning lies’ while racing toward the bomb

April 24, 2013, 7:19 pmIsrael's UN Ambassador Ron Prosor addresses the United Nations General Assembly, Thursday, Nov. 29, 2012. (photo credit: AP/Richard Drew) 4
Israel’s UN Ambassador Ron Prosor addresses the United Nations General Assembly, Thursday, Nov. 29, 2012. (photo credit: AP/Richard Drew)

Israel’s ambassador to the United Nations, Ron Prosor, on Monday warned the UN Security Council that Hezbollah was close to getting its hands on Syria’s massive stockpile of chemical weapons.

“In Lebanon, Hezbollah is building an army equipped with 50,000 missiles — more than many NATO members. Now they might have access to one of the largest stockpiles of chemical weapons in the world,” said Prosor, a day after the IDF’s top intelligence analyst said that President Bashar Assad was in possession of more than 1,000 metric tons of chemical weapons and had deployed sarin nerve gas against civilians.

Prosor blamed the European Union for ignoring Hezbollah’s terrorist actions and stubbornly refusing to brand the group a terror organization.

“Hezbollah doesn’t feel the need to limit its brand of terrorism exclusively to the Middle East,” he said. “Last month, a court in Cyprus jailed a member of Hezbollah for planning terrorist attacks against civilians. Yet this still isn’t enough for some EU members to call Hezbollah what it is – a terrorist organization. It operates with impunity on European soil, yet some European lawmakers continue to insist it is a social-services organization.

“It doesn’t take a Sherlock Holmes to understand the obvious facts of this case,” Prosor added.

The Security Council was deliberating new ways to advance the peace process between Israel and the Palestinians, and Prosor listed “three pillars” of any future agreement, echoing demands often set out by Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu.

Those pillars — Palestinian recognition of Israel’s Jewish character, a cessation of anti-Israel incitement in the PA, and security assurances for Israelis — “are the foundation that must remain standing in the shifting sands of the Middle East,” he said.

When it came to the international community’s ongoing effort to engage Iran in order to curb its nuclear program, Prosor warned that Tehran was playing for time to keep the West at bay while it scrambles to reach atomic weapons capability.

“The Iranian regime spins lies almost as quickly as they are spinning centrifuges,” he said. “The Iranian nuclear program continues to advance at the speed of an express train. The international community’s efforts to stop them are moving at the pace of the local train, pausing at every stop for some nations to get off and on.”

US, Britain now believe Assad used chemical weapons

April 25, 2013

US, Britain now believe Assad used chemical weapons | The Times of Israel.

Two days after Israeli bombshell, US defense secretary says intelligence confirms, ‘with varying degree of confidence,’ small-scale use of nerve agents

April 25, 2013, 7:09 pm
Chuck Hagel speaking with reporters after reading a statement on chemical weapon use in Syria during a press conference in Abu Dhabi on Thursday. (photo credit: AP/Jim Watson, Pool)

Chuck Hagel speaking with reporters after reading a statement on chemical weapon use in Syria during a press conference in Abu Dhabi on Thursday. (photo credit: AP/Jim Watson, Pool)

US Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel said Thursday that the US intelligence community now believes Syria has likely used chemical weapons on a “small scale” against its civilians.

Hagel added that the use of chemical weapons “violates every convention of warfare.”

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The statement came on the heels of a public declaration Tuesday by the Israeli army’s top intelligence analyst that forces loyal to President Bashar Assad had used sarin gas against rebel forces and civilians, and may push the US closer to intervening in the two-year-old conflict.

US Secretary of State John Kerry said the Syrian regime had launched two chemical attacks.

Hagel, speaking to reporters in Abu Dhabi, said the White House has informed two senators by letter that, within the past day, “our intelligence community does assess, with varying degrees of confidence, that the Syrian regime has used chemical weapons on a small scale in Syria, specifically, the chemical agent sarin.”

Britain followed the statement by saying London also believed there had been chemical attacks.

“We have limited but persuasive information from various sources showing chemical weapon use in Syria, including sarin,” a statement by the Foreign Office said. “This is extremely concerning. Use of chemical weapons is a war crime.”

Sarin, used by Saddam Hussein in aerial strikes against Iraqi Kurds in 1988 and in a Japan terror attack in 1995, is a nerve agent that cripples the respiratory system. It is hundreds of times more toxic than cyanide and is considered a weapon of mass destruction.

No information was made public on what quantity of chemical weapons might have been used in Syria, or when or what casualties might have resulted.

A victim of an alleged chemical attack in Jobar, Syria, earlier this month. (Screenshot via YouTube)

A victim of an alleged chemical attack in Jobar, Syria, earlier this month. (Screenshot via YouTube)

Hagel and US President Barack Obama have said in the past the use of chemical weapons would be a “game-changer” in the US position on intervening in the Syrian civil war.

White House legislative director Miguel Rodriguez, who signed the letter cited by Hagel, wrote that “because the president takes this issue so seriously, we have an obligation to fully investigate any and all evidence of chemical weapons use within Syria.”

The letter went to Sens. John McCain, R-Ariz., and Carl Levin, D-Mich.

The assessment, Rodriguez said, is based in part on “physiological samples.”

He also said the US believes that the use of chemical weapons “originated with the Assad regime.” That is consistent with the Obama administration’s assertion that the Syrian rebels do not have access to the country’s stockpiles.

Earlier in the week, Hagel and Secretary of State John Kerry had said they could not confirm a report by Israeli Brig. Gen. Itai Brun that the IDF was quite certain that President Bashar Assad deployed chemical weapons against rebel forces in Syria on March 19.

Speaking at a security conference in Tel Aviv on Tuesday, Brun said further that based on the pictures of the victims — the size of their pupils, “and the foam coming out of their mouths” — the army believed that Assad’s troops had used sarin.

Brun also claimed that in Syria today there are over 1,000 tons of chemical weapons, including sarin and VX, both of which can be deployed from artillery rounds and long-range ballistic missiles.

Chemical weapons have been used on more than one occasion in Syria, and the world’s persistent reluctance to act in response to the use of those weapons is typical of the major powers’ current approach to the tremors shaking the Middle East, Brun said.

“We should be very, very worried about [chemical weapons] falling into the hands of those who do not conduct gain-loss considerations,” he said.

Kerry responded to Brun’s comments by saying he had spoken to Israeli prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, who could not confirm them.

On Wednesday, Hagel said he had not been briefed on the Israeli assessment during consultations with Israeli Defense Minister Moshe Ya’alon.

He added then that Washington was looking for “real intelligence” on the issue of Syrian chemical weapon use. “Suspicions are one thing. Evidence is another,” Hagel said. “I think we have to be very careful here before we make any conclusions, draw any conclusions, based on real intelligence.”

Times of Israel staff contributed to this report.

We are almost alone

April 25, 2013

We are almost alone – Israel Opinion, Ynetnews.

( Almost? I love optimists…. JW )

Op-ed: US will only go to war for its own interests. Against Iran and Syria, Israel almost on its own

Eitan Haber

Published: 04.25.13, 20:05 / Israel Opinion

Even if as we speak American aircraft are preparing to attack the nuclear facilities in Iran, and even if as we speak American Tomahawk missiles are searching for the chemical weapon storage facilities in Syria, the truth should not be concealed: In this war we are (almost) on our own.

America will only go to war for its own interests. In the current atmosphere in the United States, as it is withdrawing from its current wars, Washington will not go to war for Jerusalem. Israeli government officials will say that, allegedly, there is no greater contradiction: The Sunni world is closer to the State of Israel more than ever before these days. The Sunni world is terrified of the Shiite world representing Iran, and like the State of Israel – Saudi Arabia, Jordan, the Gulf states (perhaps apart from Qatar) and even Egypt see Iran and its satellites as enemies for all intents and purposes. These countries would gladly join a strike in Iran if it were possible.

But the Americans are not hiding their intentions in regards to Iran and likely in regards to Syria as well. They are still very far from dipping their fingers in the nuclear and chemical mud. President Obama did say publicly, in Israel, and in clear Hebrew, “You are not alone,” but the Americans are looking for every excuse to avoid risking their people’s lives on the road to Tehran.

The Americans are saying to themselves: We survived the Cold War and the Soviet nuclear threat, which has dozens and maybe hundreds of nuclear facilities, and we have nothing to be afraid of when it comes to the Iranian nukes. We got past Stalin, we got past Khrushchev (even with a series missile crisis in Cuba), and we’ll successfully get past Ahmadinejad too.

US constantly trying to clear the table

This is exactly what the Israelis are not thinking. Israel is not as spacious as the US; neither is it a world power unlike any other. Israel can estimate correctly the concern over any nuclear activity, after “foreign sources” have been claiming for years and generations that it has nuclear facilities. Israel also knows how the Iranians can deceive the entire world. Israel did it too and it can teach the Iranians every single trick.

It’s for a reason that the Americans are trying to delay the inevitable by arguing about timetables. On the Iranian issue, the timetable gap is pretty big and crosses every red line proudly drawn at the time by Benjamin Netanyahu in front of the UN General Assembly. On the Syrian issue, the Americans are searching everywhere for excuses not to recognize and admit the use of chemical weapons by the Syrian regime. The Americans know very well that admitting the use of chemical weapons in Syria means, most likely, war – or at least a long “day of battle” in which Syria will turn over and will never be the same again.

Indeed, America has promised Israel that “all options are on the table,” but it is constantly trying to clear the table. And so the apparent picture, in the days to come and at least in the near future, is that Israel, and the great IDF, are in this front against Iran and Syria almost on their own. The Americans, who understand Israel’s fears, are covering the thorny road to Tehran and Damascus with major purchase deals, which will likely be executed only after the “deluge.”

Iran says it’s ready to resume talks with world powers

April 25, 2013

Iran says it’s ready to resume talks with world powers – Israel News, Ynetnews.

Deputy nuclear negotiator Bagheri says Iran needs 20%-enriched uranium for Tehran research reactor, four others being built. ‘We are waiting for Ashton’s call,’ he adds

Reuters

Published: 04.25.13, 18:37 / Israel News

Iran is ready to resume talks with world powers on its disputed nuclear program and awaits word from the European Union on timing and details, Iran’s deputy nuclear negotiator said on Thursday.

Ali Bagheri, in an interview with Reuters in Geneva, said Iran needed 20%-enriched uranium for its Tehran research reactor and four others being built, and was continuing to convert some of its stockpile into reactor fuel.

“We are waiting for Lady Ashton to call Dr. Jalili, and Dr. Jalili is obviously ready to take the call,” Bagheri said.

EU foreign policy chief Catherine Ashton oversees diplomatic contacts with Iran on behalf of the the United States, Russia, China, France, Britain and Germany. Saeed Jalili is Iran’s chief negotiator.

The world powers and Iran failed in talks in the Kazakh capital Almaty this month to end the deadlock in a decade-old dispute over Tehran’s nuclear program, prolonging a standoff that could yet spiral into a new Middle East war.

Previous nuclear talks in Kazakhstan (Archive photo: EPA)
Previous nuclear talks in Kazakhstan (Archive photo: EPA)

Iran says its nuclear work is entirely peaceful and that it is only refining uranium to power a planned network of nuclear energy plants and for medical purposes. Critics accuse it of covertly seeking the means to produce nuclear weapons.

A report by the UN nuclear watchdog, the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA), in February said Iran had in December resumed converting to oxide powder some of the uranium it has enriched to 20% fissile concentration, for the production of reactor fuel.

That helped restrain the growth of Iran’s higher-grade uranium stockpile, a development that could buy more time for diplomacy.

In a potentially encouraging sign for the powers, Bagheri said on Thursday this conversion continued.

“We produce 20% uranium to provide fuel for Tehran’s research reactor, also four other reactors in four different parts of Iran which are under construction. With this in mind, plans have been drawn up to convert 20% uranium to 20% oxide,” Bagheri said.

“This is very much going according to plan. This activity is ongoing,” he added.

Embarrassment all around

April 25, 2013

Israel Hayom | Embarrassment all around.

“For those who still need more evidence, the U.S. simply does not want to use military force in the region.”

Both the U.S. and Israel have been embarrassed following comments by the head of the Research Division at IDF Military Intelligence that the Syrian army used chemical weapons against rebel forces. The public differences of opinion with the U.S. administration have painted Israel into an uncomfortable, and mainly unplanned, corner. All this amid the flourishing strategic relations the two countries have enjoyed recently.

Brig. Gen. Itai Brun’s comment needs to be viewed in two ways: The visible and the essential. On the visible level, Brun erred egregiously. As someone who is privy to all the state’s secrets and decisions, he should have known he was crossing a red line and walking into a minefield. The fact that his superiors — the head of military intelligence (currently abroad), the chief of staff, the defense minister and the prime minister — were taken by surprise only made things worse, and his attempts behind closed doors Wednesday to clarify that his comments were only based on his own judgment and analysis were akin to putting out a forest fire with a few buckets of water.

One can assume that officials in Washington were not the only ones following this matter: It’s reasonable that Syrian officials were also wondering how Israel knows what weapons have been used and against whom. Offering a public appraisal of the situation, which normally takes place only behind closed doors, did not help solve the chemical weapons problem in Syria at all and merely served to create unnecessary suspicion between Washington and Jerusalem (which was forced to work overtime yesterday to reassure the Americans that they weren’t being manipulated into taking military action).

However, alongside the visible fallout, there is also a fundamental aspect underlying Brun’s comments — namely, for those who still need more evidence, the U.S. simply does not want to use military force in the region.

The rhetoric still seems to be clear: We won’t allow chemical weapons to be used in Syria or for a nuclear armed Iran. The translation of these words into action, however, is lacking. The Obama administration, which has just pulled out of Iraq and is still bleeding in Afghanistan, doesn’t want to be dragged into another conflict zone. It is searching for any excuse to avoid military action, even if this means casting doubt on a trustworthy ally’s seemingly solid intelligence information.

Israel must now navigate between these two levels in the hopes that Washington acts, but while avoiding unnecessary head-butting with it. The way to do this is to be synchronized, operationally, with intelligence information, and also with words.

Ya’alon: Diplomacy, sanctions haven’t stopped Iran’s centrifuges

April 25, 2013

Israel Hayom | Ya’alon: Diplomacy, sanctions haven’t stopped Iran’s centrifuges.

Israeli Ambassador to U.N. Ron Prosor: The Iranian nuclear program continues to advance at the speed of an express train, while the international community’s efforts to stop them are like a local train, pausing at every stop for nations to get off and on.

Israel Hayom Staff and News Agencies

 

Defense Minister Moshe (Bogie) Ya’alon says a viable military option for Iran’s nuclear program is required, even as a last resort.

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Photo credit: Ziv Koren

Hagel: US believes Syrian gov’t used some chemical weapons

April 25, 2013

Hagel: US believes Syrian gov’t used some chemical weapons | JPost | Israel News.

By REUTERS
04/25/2013 18:39
US secretary of defense says US intelligence community believes sarin gas used on small scale by Assad; White House adds that intel assessments not enough, corroborated facts needed; UK also says sarin used in Syria.

Chuck Hagel speaks in Islamabad, April 13, 2006

Chuck Hagel speaks in Islamabad, April 13, 2006 Photo: REUTERS/Mian Kursheed

US Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel on Thursday said the US intelligence community believes the Syrian government has used sarin gas on a small scale against rebels trying to overthrow the government of Bashar Assad.

“This morning the White House delivered a letter to several members of Congress on the topic of chemical weapons use in Syria. The letter … states that the US intelligence community assesses with some degree of varying confidence that the Syrian regime has used chemical weapons on a small scale in Syria,” Hagel told reporters traveling with him. He said it was sarin gas.

However, the White House stated that US Intelligence assessments on chemical weapons are not enough.

“Given the stakes involved, and what we have learned from our own recent experiences, intelligence assessments alone are not sufficient – only credible and corroborated facts that provide us with some degree of certainty will guide our decision-making,” Miguel Rodriguez, White House director of the office of legislative affairs, said in a letter to lawmakers. The White House added that the US is prepared for all contingencies on Syria to respond to any confirmed use of chemical weapons.

Shortly after the US announcement, Britain’s Foreign Office said on Thursday it had information showing chemical weapon use in Syria, and called on Assad to cooperate with international bodies to prove he had not sanctioned their use.

“We have limited but persuasive information from various sources showing chemical weapon use in Syria, including sarin. This is extremely concerning. Use of chemical weapons is a war crime,” a Foreign Office spokesman said in a statement.

Hagel’s comments came after he said on Wednesday the US effort to determine whether Syria has used chemical weapons is a “serious business” that cannot be decided in a rush just because several countries believe evidence supports that conclusion.

“Suspicions are one thing, evidence is another,” Hagel told reporters as he wrapped up a visit to Egypt that included talks about Syria and other regional issues.

“I think we have to be very careful here before we make any conclusions (and) draw any conclusions based on real intelligence. That’s not at all questioning other nations’ intelligence. But the United States relies on its own intelligence.”

The United States has warned that any chemical weapons use by Syria, now convulsed by civil war, would cross a “red line” that would trigger some unspecified response.

Hagel rejected suggestions the United States was undermining its credibility by saying it was continuing to assess the issue, even as France, Britain and Israel have concluded evidence suggests chemical arms have been used in Syria’s conflict.

A top Israeli military intelligence officer said on Tuesday that evidence supported the conclusion Syrian government forces had used chemical weapons – probably sarin – several times against rebels trying to overthrow President Bashar Assad.

The officer’s remarks came in the final moments of a three-day visit by Hagel to Israel.

Hagel, who had not previously commented on the Israeli report, said that while he had discussed the Syrian conflict and chemical weapons with Israeli leaders, he had not been given the findings cited by the intelligence officer.

“When I was in Israel they did not give me that assessment. I guess it wasn’t complete so I haven’t seen the specifics, haven’t talked to any Israeli officials, nor have I talked to any of our intelligence officials specifically about it.”

White House to Congress: Assad has used chemical weapons. Israeli jets down Hizballah drone opposite Haifa

April 25, 2013

White House to Congress: Assad has used chemical weapons. Israeli jets down Hizballah drone opposite Haifa.

DEBKAfile Special Report April 25, 2013, 6:56 PM (GMT+02:00)

 

Hizballah drone

In a remarkable reversal, Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel said in Abdu Dhabi Thursday afternoon, April 25, that the US intelligence community believes the Syrian government has used chemical weapons against its own people, determining with “varying degrees of confidence” that Syrian President Bashar Assad’s forces have used the nerve agent sarin against civilians and forces fighting to remove Assad from power.

The White House is informing Congress about the chemical weapons use now, Hagel said, hours after he voiced reservations about the assessment Tuesday by senior Israeli military intelligence officer Brig. Gen. Itai Brun that the Assad regime had begun to practice chemical warfare.
Earlier Thursday, Israel Air Force F-16 warplanes downed a Hizballah drone 8 kilometers out at sea from the big port of Haifa. It flew south from the direction of Lebanon. Witnesses on Haifa’s Mt. Carmel watched the smoke trails of the Israeli jets and heard exploding rockets.
Israeli Navy ships are out searching for debris in the Mediterranean Sea.

The Israeli army spokesman issued a statement: An attempt by an unmanned aerial vehicle to enter Israel’s air space was thwarted. The UAV was identified flying from the north past the coast of southern Lebanon and continuing south. It was tracked continuously until it was downed by Israeli fighter planes and attack helicopters.

They went into action after the drone was identified as not coming from a friendly source. The Air Force gave the order to shoot it down.”

Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu said: “We take an extremely grave view of this attempt to violate our borders and will continue to guard them and keep our citizens safe.” He added, “We are watching events in Syria and Lebanon with extreme concern. Syria is breaking up and Lebanon is unstable. Both places pose not inconsiderable perils to Israel – two emanating directly from Syria. The first is the possible transfer of sophisticated weaponry to terrorist organizations and the second, attempts by terrorists to break through our borders and attack our towns and villages. Israel stands ready to counteract any threats from Syria or Lebanon by sea, air and land.”

debkafile adds: The drone, which was launched from the Lebanese coast of Sidon towards the Israeli coast, was but the first move in a larger plan. Just as the Syrian civil war is already spilling over into Lebanon and threatens to crash through another border into Jordan, there are plans afoot to spread the violence into Israel.

The Hizballah’s UAV intrusion thwarted by the Israeli Air Force and the repeated shooting attacks from the Syrian side of the Golan were omens of more to come. Syria’s Bashar Assad, Hizballah and Iran will not put up with any intervention in the Syrian conflict by the US, Israel, Jordan or Turkey – even though foreign intervention is already present in the form of 3,000 Hizballah commandoes fighting with Assad’s army in Qusayr and Damascus sectors.

Israeli Air Force jets down a Hizballah drone at sea 8 kilometers from Haifa

April 25, 2013

Israeli Air Force jets down a Hizballah drone at sea 8 kilometers from Haifa.

DEBKAfile Special Report April 25, 2013, 5:22 PM (GMT+02:00)

 

Hizballah drone

Israeli Navy ships are out searching for debris in the Mediterranean Sea after Israel Air Force F-16 warplanes downed a Hizballah drone Thursday, April 25, eight kilometers out at sea from the big port of Haifa. It flew south from the direction of Lebanon. Witnesses on Haifa’s Mt. Carmel watched the smoke trails of the Israeli jets and heard exploding rockets.The Israeli army spokesman issued a statement: An attempt by an unmanned aerial vehicle to enter Israel’s air space was thwarted. The UAV was identified flying from the north past the coast of southern Lebanon and continuing south. It was tracked continuously until it was downed by Israeli fighter planes and attack helicopters.

They went into action after the drone was identified as not coming from a friendly source. The Air Force gave the order to shoot it down.”

Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu said: “We take an extremely grave view of this attempt to violate our borders and will continue to guard them and keep our citizens safe.” He added, “We are watching events in Syria and Lebanon with extreme concern. Syria is breaking up and Lebanon is unstable. Both places pose not inconsiderable perils to Israel – two emanating directly from Syria. The first is the possible transfer of sophisticated weaponry to terrorist organizations and the second, attempts by terrorists to break through our borders and attack our towns and villages. Israel stands ready to counteract any threats from Syria or Lebanon by sea, air and land.”

 

debkafile adds: The drone, which was launched from the Lebanese coast of Sidon towards the Israeli coast, was but the first move in a larger plan. Just as the Syrian civil war is already spilling over into Lebanon and threatens to crash through another border into Jordan, there are plans afoot to spread the violence into Israel.

The Hizballah’s UAV intrusion thwarted by the Israeli Air Force and the repeated shooting attacks from the Syrian side of the Golan were omens of more to come. Syria’s Bashar Assad, Hizballah and Iran will not put up with any intervention in the Syrian conflict by the US, Israel, Jordan or Turkey – even though foreign intervention is already present in the form of 3,000 Hizballah commandoes fighting with Assad’s army in Qusayr and Damascus sectors.

Yaalon: Iran’s Involved in All the Conflicts

April 25, 2013

Yaalon: Iran’s Involved in All the Conflicts – Defense/Security – News – Israel National News.

Defense Minister Moshe Yaalon meets Canadian Chief of Staff, emphasizes need to stop Iran’s nuclear program.
By Elad Benari

First Publish: 4/25/2013, 2:13 AM

 

Defense Minister Moshe Yaalon and Canada's Chief of Staff Thomas J. Lawson

Defense Minister Moshe Yaalon and Canada’s Chief of Staff Thomas J. Lawson
Ariel Hermoni

Defense Minister Moshe Yaalon met on Wednesday with the Chief of Staff of the Canadian Forces, General Thomas J. Lawson.

During the meeting, Yaalon praised the strong relations between Israel and Canada, adding that the two countries will work even closer together.

“Israel and Canada have a relationship based on shared values ​​and interests,” said Yaalon. “Canada, led by Prime Minister Stephen Harper, is a true friend of Israel and an example of a country that manages policies based on values ​​and moral clarity.”

“It is important, in light of this, that we tighten our cooperation in the face of the challenges and with an emphasis on the fight against terrorism,” he added. “Infighting on the future and identity of neighboring countries, between extremist Islamic movements ethnic and national movements, is going on in the Middle East today.”

“This can be seen in Syria, where there is a struggle between the Alawites, the Sunnis and the Shiites, with the involvement of other factors such as al Qaeda and the Muslim Brotherhood,” he said.

Ya’alon emphasized that “the Iranian regime is involved in all the conflicts, it deploys its branches through the Al-Quds forces in different areas in the world and tries to export the Iranian revolution to countries in the region and beyond.”

“In this context it is important to stop the Iranian nuclear program in one way or another,” emphasized Yaalon. “Presently, the diplomatic channel is not stopping the project, the economic sanctions still do not stop the centrifuges and a credible military option, with a willingness to carry out even if it is a last resort, is required.