Archive for April 2013

Reports: IAF Aircraft Fly over Damascus

April 29, 2013

Reports: IAF Aircraft Fly over Damascus.

According to reports from Syrian media, IAF aircraft flew earlier today above the presidential palace in Damascus, apparently as a message for Assasd
Reports: IAF Aircraft Fly over Damascus

According to various reports from Syria, Israeli Air Force aircraft flew earlier today this morning above the presidential palace in Damascus, potentially as a message of sorts intended for Bashar al-Assad.
Several days ago, the head of the research division at the IDF Directorate of Military Intelligence, Brig. Gen. Itai Brun, said that the Assad regime has made use of chemical weapons. “There is a vast arsenal of chemical weapons in Syria. In our assessment, the regime has and continues to use lethal chemical weapons in a series of events, including those that occurred on March 19. The developments are disturbing – the very use of chemical weapons without appropriate global response may signal that it is legitimate. With regards to how this will develop, people should be very troubled over the possibility that chemical weapons might fall into the hands of less responsible elements who do not calculate gains and losses,” Brun said.
In the past, there have been several reports that claimed IAF aircraft flew over the presidential palace in Syria.
Furthermore, last January, foreign sources reported that Israeli aircraft attacked a weapons convoy moving from Syria to Lebanon. At the time, Syria claimed that the attack was directed at a research facility in the region of Damascus, and Syrian rebel forces told news agencies that the facility that was attacked served for the development of chemical weapons, among other things.
The IDF has declined to comment on the reports.

Israeli credibility on line over Iran nuclear challenge

April 28, 2013

Israeli credibility on line over Iran nuclear challenge – Alarabiya.net English | Front Page.

( Credibility?  Try our very existence… – JW )

Sunday, 28 April 2013
Tehran denies there is any military component to its nuclear activities. (AFP)
Reuters, Jerusalem –

Israel risks a loss of credibility over both its “red line” for Iran’s nuclear program and its threat of military action, and its room for unilateral maneuver is shrinking.

After years of veiled warnings that Israel might strike the Islamic Republic, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu laid out an ultimatum at the United Nations last September.

Iran, he said, must not amass enough uranium at 20 percent fissile purity to fuel one bomb if enriched further. To ram the point home, he drew a red line across a cartoon bomb, guaranteeing him front page headlines around the world.

However, a respected Israeli ex-spymaster says Iran has skillfully circumvented the challenge. Other influential voices say the time has passed when Israel can hit out at Iran alone, leaving it dependent on U.S. decision-makers.

“If there was a good window of opportunity to attack, it was six months ago – not necessarily today,” said Giora Eiland, a former Israeli national security adviser. Pressure from Washington, he said, had forced Israel to drop its strike plan.

Israel has long insisted on the need for a convincing military threat and setting clear lines beyond which Iran’s nuclear activity should not advance, calling this the only way to persuade Iran that it must bow to international pressure.

Serving officials argue that Netanyahu’s repeated warnings of the menace posed by Iran’s nuclear project have pushed the issue to the top of the global agenda and helped generate some of the toughest economic sanctions ever imposed on a nation.

But some officials have also questioned the wisdom of his red line, arguing that such brinkmanship can generate unwelcome ambiguity – as the United States has discovered with its contested stance on the use of chemical weapons in Syria.

Amos Yadlin, a former military intelligence chief who runs a Tel Aviv think-tank, suggested last week that Israel had also got itself into a tangle, saying Iran had expanded its nuclear capacity beyond the Israeli limit, without triggering alarms.

“Today it can be said that the Iranians have crossed the redline set by Netanyahu at the U.N. assembly,” Yadlin told a conference at the Institute for National Security Studies (INSS), which he heads.

Drum beat resumes

Netanyahu’s office declined to respond to Yadlin’s remarks, noting that the prime minister, in recent public statements, had said Iran was “continuing to get closer to the red line”.

Tehran denies there is any military component to its nuclear activities, saying it is focused only on civilian energy needs. It charges that Israel, widely believed to have the Middle East’s only nuclear arsenal, is the greater regional threat.

Keeping in step with Netanyahu, Israeli defense and military officials issued clear warnings this month that Israel was still prepared to go it alone against Iran, once more beating the drums of war after months of relative quiet.

“We will do what is necessary when it is necessary,” armed forces chief of staff Benny Gantz told Israel Radio on April 16.

But there is increasing skepticism within diplomatic circles about the viability of such an option. Envoys doubt that the Israeli military could now make much of a dent on Iran’s far-flung, well-fortified nuclear installations.

“If nothing happened last year, I struggle to see why it will happen this year,” said a top Western diplomat in Tel Aviv, speaking on condition of anonymity given the sensitivities.

Israeli President Shimon Peres has done little to bolster belief in unilateral action, making clear this month that he thought U.S. President Barack Obama would be the one to go to war against Iran if nuclear diplomacy failed.

“He knows no one else will do it,” Peres told Israeli TV.

The United States offered Netanyahu a new array of military hardware last week, including refueling tankers that could be used to get fighter jets to and from Iranian targets.

However, Israel cannot match the sort of firepower that the United States could bring to a battlefield. For example, Israel lacks the biggest bunker-busting bombs that experts say would be needed to penetrate Iran’s underground Fordow enrichment plant.

Such limitations always cast doubt on a possible Israeli assault and the more time passes, the more the doubts grow.

Ehud Barak, the previous Israeli defense minister, said in November 2011 that within nine months it would probably be impossible to halt Iran because it was increasing the number of centrifuges and its network of sites, creating what he termed a “zone of immunity”. Seventeen months have gone by since then.

Reconversion rates

Washington has promised Israel it will not let Iran develop a nuclear bomb. Israelis get jittery, however, because they have set a very different clock for when they believe it would be necessary to intervene – hence the importance of the red line.

The Israelis make no distinction between Iran developing the capacity to build an atomic bomb and having the actual weapon. Yadlin told the INSS conference that as soon as Tehran could put just one rudimentary device on a boat and sail it to an Israeli port, it was a de-facto nuclear-armed nation.

Some analysts question whether Iran would indeed attack Israel if it had an atom bomb, or even try to build one, rather than just establish an apparent nuclear capability to project deterrence and regional power. To fire a nuclear weapon at Israel, they say, could spell the ruin of the Islamic Republic in counter-strikes by a foe with a far bigger nuclear arsenal.

Gantz himself said last year he felt Iran’s leadership was “very rational” and unlikely to build an atomic bomb.

The U.S. concern is to prevent Iran, which has called for Israel’s destruction, from reaching the verge of acquiring a nuclear bomb – a nuance at variance with Israel’s position that provides a longer window of opportunity to continue diplomacy.

Exasperated by Washington’s refusal to set a clear ultimatum, Netanyahu came up with his 240-250 kg (530-550 pound) limit for 20 percent enriched uranium, hoping this would concentrate minds. The Iranians stayed below this threshold by converting 110 kg of the gaseous material to solid form that they say is destined to power a research reactor.

Yadlin said that rather than turn all of this into solid reactor fuel, Iran had kept 80 kg of it in the interim powdered state. That, he said, could be converted back to original gas form in around a week, inflating the stockpile beyond 250 kg.

With the red line in possible jeopardy, and unilateral military action in doubt, one security official suggested that Israel might turn to covert sabotage, with renewed focus on those specifically working on the 20 percent enrichment.

Five Iranian scientists and academics have been killed or attacked since 2010 in incidents believed to have targeted Iran’s nuclear program. Israel has remained silent about the attacks and other known acts of sabotage at Iranian sites.

Syrian missiles hit Jordan as Assad forces step up air strikes against rebels

April 28, 2013

Syrian missiles hit Jordan as Assad forces step up air strikes against rebels – Middle East – Israel News | Haaretz Daily Newspaper.

Two air force generals said to have defected to Jordan with their MiG-21 fighter jets.

By DPA | Apr.28, 2013 | 7:42 PM | 2
Syria missiles

Smoke rises after what activists said was a missile fired by a Syrian Air Force fighter jet loyal to President Bashar al-Assad in Deraa, April 26, 2013. Photo by Reuters

Several Syrian missiles landed in neighboring Jordan Sunday, witnesses and security sources said, as Damascus renewed its aerial bombardment of rebel-held areas along the border and elsewhere.

Residents said several missiles landed in the northern village of Thneibat, setting several hectares of farmland ablaze. Jordanian security sources confirmed the missile landings, saying no casualties or damage was reported.

The incident came less than 24 hours after Syrian missiles reportedly landed near the village of Sama Sahran outside the city of Mafraq. The area hosts most of the 500,000 Syrians who have sought refuge in Jordan during the two-year conflict.

Meanwhile, a rebel source told DPA that two air force generals defected to Jordan on Sunday. The two reportedly flew their MiG-21 fighter jets across the border to Ramtha.

Jordanian security officials denied that any Syrian aircraft had landed Sunday.

Amman has granted asylum to some 50 Syrian air force pilots and around 6,000 military officers so far.

Violence intensified on the Syrian side of the 370-kilometer border Sunday, the Local Coordination Committees said.

The opposition group said heavy shelling was reported in the villages of al-Taybeh, Shajareh, Um al-Mayathan and al-Naiman.

Residents said Free Syrian Army has been withdrawing its forces in face of the air offensive, which began two weeks ago.

“As of this week, there are no Free Syrian Army forces on the ground – we are all alone,” said Mohammed al-Saud, a 35-year-old resident of Dalaa. The village was taken by rebel forces last month and has been a targeted in the offensive.

Rebel sources however refuted the claim, saying they were regrouping in advance of a counter-offensive.

The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, a watchdog based in Britain, reported heavy shelling and ground fighting in Douma, a suburb north-east of the capital Damascus, and further north in the provinces of Idlib and Aleppo.

The organization said government troops and rebel forces were battling for control of the Abu al-Dhuheir military airport outside Idlib.

At least 70,000 people have been killed in Syria since the uprising against the regime of President Bashar al-Assad began in March 2011, according to UN estimates. The LCC said at least 45 people were killed across Syria on Sunday alone.

More from Haaretz.comFrom around the web

Hezbollah will ‘wipe out’ Israel in war, Iran says

April 28, 2013

Hezbollah will ‘wipe out’ Israel in war, Iran says | The Times of Israel.

Senior Revolutionary Guard general claims Tehran’s borders now extend all the way to the coast of the Mediterranean

April 28, 2013, 7:44 pm
Hezbollah fighters hold party flags during a parade in a southern suburb of Beirut, Lebanon. (photo credit: AP/Hussein Malla/File)

Hezbollah fighters hold party flags during a parade in a southern suburb of Beirut, Lebanon. (photo credit: AP/Hussein Malla/File)

A top general in the Iranian Revolutionary Guards Corps on Sunday warned Israel that any military action against Lebanon and the Hezbollah terror group would result in Israel’s destruction.

In an address in the southwestern Iranian city of Shahrekord, Brigadier General Mohammad Hossein Sepehr claimed that Iran now extends all the way to the Mediterranean coast, presumably an allusion to Tehran’s influence in Lebanon and Syria via its proxy Hezbollah.

The semi-official FARS news agency quoted Sepehr as saying that Hezbollah’s sizable stockpile of rockets can overcome Israel’s Iron Dome missile defense system, and if Israel and Hezbollah engage in war, “the resistance front will wipe out Israel.”

In recent weeks, the Israeli Air Force conducted a number of mock raids over southern parts of Lebanon. The low-altitude flights increased after a drone sent from Lebanon was shot down by an IAF F-16 Thursday some five miles off the coast of Haifa.

According to recent assessments among Israel’s political and security echelons, Iran’s Revolutionary Guard forces were directly behind the launch of the drone.

Iranian forces operate on Lebanese soil to aid Hezbollah’s drone capabilities, as well as provide support to the Assad regime, Ynet reported.

Israel initially maintained that Hezbollah had sent the drone.

The prime minister’s helicopter was forced to make an emergency landing as jets scrambled to identify and intercept the aircraft.

“I view with utmost gravity this attempt to violate our border. We will continue to do everything necessary to safeguard the security of Israel’s citizens,” Netanyahu said after the incident.

Hezbollah denied any involvement, the group’s Al-Manar TV station reported.

Deputy Defense Minister Danny Danon accused the Iranians of using Hezbollah to test Israel. “We’ll respond where we see fit, but there will be a response,” he said.

American lawmakers call for intervention in Syria

April 28, 2013

American lawmakers call for intervention in Syria | The Times of Israel.

Obama’s ‘red line’ on chemical weapons ‘can’t be a dotted line,’ says Republican congressman; Israeli ex-general warns ‘things will only get worse’ after Assad

April 28, 2013, 8:31 pm An illustrative photo of US Marines during a drill in California (photo credit: LCpl Ali Azimi/US Marines)

An illustrative photo of US Marines during a drill in California (photo credit: LCpl Ali Azimi/US Marines)

Former presidential candidate John McCain on Sunday joined other US lawmakers in calling for American action in Syria in the wake of revelations that President Bashar Assad’s regime had ordered chemical weapons to be deployed against civilians in the country.

US officials last week declared that the Syrian government probably had used chemical weapons twice in March, newly provocative acts in the two-year-long civil war that has killed more than 70,000 people and displaced hundreds of thousands more. The US assessment followed similar conclusions from Britain, France, Israel and Qatar — key allies, some of whom are eager for a more aggressive response to the Syrian conflict.

President Barack Obama has said Syria’s likely action — or the transfer of Assad’s stockpiles to terrorists — would cross a “red line” that would compel the United States to act.

McCain said the Syrian people, whom he called “angry and bitter,” needed help from the US. The senator said Washington needed to play a larger role in the conflict, warning that children would continue to be killed “unless we assist them.”

McCain cautioned, however, that the US should only take action along with a coalition of other nations. ”The worst thing we could do is put boots on the ground,” he said.

“The president has laid down the line, and it can’t be a dotted line. It can’t be anything other than a red line,” said House Intelligence Committee Chairman Mike Rogers, a Republican. “And more than just Syria, Iran is paying attention to this. North Korea is paying attention to this.”

Added Sen. Saxby Chambliss, also a Republican: “For America to sit on the sidelines and do nothing is a huge mistake.”

Obama has insisted that any use of chemical weapons would change his thinking about the US role in Syria, but said he didn’t have enough information to order aggressive action.

“For the Syrian government to utilize chemical weapons on its people crosses a line that will change my calculus and how the United States approaches these issues,” Obama said Friday.

But Rep. Jan Schakowsky, an Illinois Democrat, said Sunday the United States needs to consider those weapons. She said that when Assad leaves power, his opponents could have access to those weapons, or they could fall into the hands of US enemies.

“The day after Assad is the day that these chemical weapons could be at risk … (and) we could be in bigger, even bigger trouble,” she said.

Both sides of the civil war already accuse each other of using chemical weapons.

Republican Sen. Lindsey Graham said the United States could safeguard the weapons without a ground force, echoing McCain’s position. But he cautioned the weapons must be protected for fear that Americans could be targeted. Raising the specter of the lethal bomb at the finish line of the Boston Marathon, Graham said a future attack on US soil could employ weapons that were once part of Assad’s arsenal.

“The next bomb that goes off in America may not have nails and glass,” he said.

Rogers and Schakowsky spoke to ABC’s “This Week”; Chambliss and Graham were interviewed on CBS’s “Face the Nation”; and McCain appeared on NBC’s “Meet the Press.”

Israelis, too, were split Sunday over the prospect of American intervention in Syria.

Environmental Protection Minister Amir Peretz (Hatnua) called for US military intervention in the ongoing civil war.

Peretz said action should have been taken long ago, due to the high civilian death toll. “We expect that whoever defines red lines will also do what is needed, first and foremost the US and, of course, the entire international community,” he said.

Yoav Galant, a prominent former general and candidate for chief of staff, expressed concern that such intervention would hasten the fall of Assad and usher in extremist elements.

“In the short term, the fall of Assad weakens the radical axis. But in the long term, we’ll be facing the extremist organizations that have entered Syria and are establishing themselves therein,” Galant told students on Sunday.

“Things will get worse,” he cautioned.

On Saturday, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu instructed his ministers to stop giving interviews on the situation in Syria, and specifically on the Assad regime’s reported use of chemical weapons.

Netanyahu’s strict orders came in response to deputy foreign minister Ze’ev Elkin’s remarks on Army Radio Friday, in which he was seen to be calling on the international community to take control of, and eliminate, Assad’s chemical weapons arsenal.

The Associated Press contributed to this report

US, Israel plotting to oust Assad by June, Iranian official claims

April 28, 2013

US, Israel plotting to oust Assad by June, Iranian official claims | The Times of Israel.

Legislator in Tehran warns that American intervention would result in blowback against Jewish state

April 28, 2013, 12:51 pm US President Barack Obama answers a question regarding the ongoing situation in Syria during his meeting with Jordan's King Abdullah II, in the Oval Office of the White House in Washington, Friday. (photo credit: AP Photo/Pablo Martinez Monsivais)

US President Barack Obama answers a question regarding the ongoing situation in Syria during his meeting with Jordan’s King Abdullah II, in the Oval Office of the White House in Washington, Friday. (photo credit: AP Photo/Pablo Martinez Monsivais)

A senior Iranian official on Sunday claimed that the United States and Israel were conspiring to depose the Syrian government in advance of Iran’s presidential elections in June.

Lt. Gen. Yahya Safawi, a senior adviser to the head of the Iranian Revolutionary Guard Corps, was also quoted by IRIB news, an Iranian state broadcasting station, warning Iranians of “hostile tactics” that may be used to damage the unity of the Iranian people and disrupt the elections.

Iranians head to the polls in mid-June to elect a new president as President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad’s second term comes to a close.

US President Barack Obama has indicated that Syrian President Bashar Assad’s use of chemical weapons against his own people constituted a crossing of a red line, but as yet no steps have been taken toward military intervention.

“For the Syrian government to utilize chemical weapons on its people crosses a line that will change my calculus and how the United States approaches these issues,” Obama said on Friday.

Israel has largely refrained from involvement in the two-year-old civil war, and Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu on Saturday instructed his ministers to stop giving interviews on the situation in Syria, and specifically on the Assad regime’s reported use of chemical weapons.

Environmental Protection Minister Amir Peretz (Hatnua) ignored Netanyahu’s request and told reporters that the international community needed to intervene in Syria a long time ago considering the hundreds killed in the civil war each day. Peretz, a former defense minister, said that Israel would be forced to intervene in Syria if chemical weapons fall into the hands of “irresponsible organizations” like Hezbollah.

Amid increased discussion of international intervention in Syria, the head of Iran’s senior foreign policy and national security committee warned that any international military action against Damascus would result in a backlash against Israel.

The committee’s chairman, MP Alaeddin Boroujerdi, told IRIB that “Syria has turned into the scene of failures of the US and its regional allies.” He emphasized that conditions were not suitable for an American intervention in the civil war, and that “any offensive against Syria would be tantamount to spread of war to the Zionist regime.”

Upwards of 70,000 people have died in the two-year conflict in Syria and over a million have fled the violence to neighboring Turkey, Jordan, Iraq and Lebanon.

Is US moving to accommodate Iran?

April 28, 2013

Israel Hayom | Is US moving to accommodate Iran?.

( This potentially frightening story has no specific gravity whatsoever.  Weinberg jumps to his conclusions with little more than his “feelings.”  Pickering is not Obama.  – JW )

David M. Weinberg

Thomas R. Pickering is the former U.S. undersecretary of state for political affairs, and considered by many the ultimate American career diplomat. He was U.S. ambassador to Russia, the U.N. and Israel. He is still called upon by the administration to lead important investigations, including one into the killing last fall of the American ambassador to Libya.

Now, Pickering is back at the head of a panel of former senior U.S. officials and outside experts called “The Iran Project,” urging U.S. President Barack Obama to drop sanctions and covert action against Iran, and instead negotiate more intensively with Tehran.

“I fundamentally believe that the balance between sanctions and diplomacy has been misaligned,” says Pickering. He and his colleagues (who at the time included Chuck Hagel, now defense secretary) write that the sanctions policy seems to be backfiring and has “contributed to an increase in repression and corruption within Iran.” They worry that sanctions “may be sowing the seeds of long-term alienation between the Iranian people and the United States.”

In an interview with The New York Times, Pickering also contends that Obama should review the covert program against Iran — which reportedly has included computer sabotage of its nuclear facilities — to “stop anything that is peripheral, that is not buying us much time” in slowing Iran’s progress.

You could see this coming. Last November, Pickering showed up in Israel and asked to meet experts at the Begin-Sadat Center for Strategic Studies. He forwarded several chapters of the draft report (without its final recommendations) and suggested that he wanted feedback. Six BESA Center associates (including me) read the document and held a spirited debate with Pickering. Pickering then gave a public lecture at the center, detailing his views.

At the time, Pickering was coy about his policy recommendations, but his reservations about the Western efforts to confront Iran were already clear. There was little evidence, he said, that sanctions were curbing progress of the Iran’s nuclear program, although sanctions were seriously impinging on the Iranian economy.

On this point, there was little disagreement. In fact, as far back as 2005, BESA Center director Professor Efraim Inbar argued that economic sanctions alone would not deter the mullahs from building a bomb.

Nevertheless, Pickering wanted our understanding for a nuanced, “sophisticated,” soft view of Iran. Iran is emerging as a significant regional and global actor, he said, that must be engaged. It is strategically located in central Asia, with trade ties to Europe and Asia, is rich with energy resources, and in control of global shipping lanes, he told us.

While a “grand bargain” between the U.S. and Iran was very unlikely, Pickering admitted, he was hopeful that over time the two countries could reach a modus vivendi through diplomatic talks. After all, he pointed out, “relations between countries in conflict often unfold slowly. It took seven years for the U.S. and China to move from first contact to full diplomatic relations.”

What about the use of military force to crush the Iranian nuclear bomb program? Well, Pickering was basically not prepared to countenance the use of American military force against Iran under any circumstances. Military force should be the very last resort taken by the U.S., Pickering told us, “and probably not at all.”

The costs of a military operation against Iran, he said, would be too onerous. In the short term, he said, a strike on Iran would cost more than the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq combined. A successful U.S. attack would take weeks and would involve an extensive ground mission. Another short-term cost, he warned, would be the Iranian response, which could take the form of attacks launched by the Revolutionary Guards, Hezbollah, or small terror cells operating against American citizens across the globe. In addition, Israel would be expected to bear the brunt of an Iranian response.

Pickering also warned of “numerous, negative long-term ramifications” of an American military strike on Iran: the skyrocketing of oil prices, an “increase” in Iranian determination to get the bomb, the strengthening of the Iranian people’s loyalty to their government, and damage to America’s reputation in Islamic countries around the world.

Pickering had nothing to say about the long-term strategic costs to the West of not confronting Iran.

The upshot was clear: American should work towards a new “understanding” with Iran; and failing that, work to contain, but not confront, a nuclear Iran.

It’s important to understand that Pickering faithfully represents the views of large segments of the academic, diplomatic and defense establishments in Washington and New York, who don’t see Iran as an oversized threat to America — for example, Flynt Leverett and Hillary Mann Leverett, former U.S. National Security Council staffers, in a new book, “Why the United States Must Come to Terms with the Islamic Republic of Iran.” Iran is a powerful, rational actor in the Middle East, they write. Consequently, the U.S. needs a “Nixonian moment,” in which Washington would seek strategic accommodation with Tehran, as it did with Beijing.

Professor Kenneth N. Waltz of Columbia University’s Saltzman Institute of War and Peace Studies even argues that Iran should get the bomb. It would create “a more durable balance of military power in the Middle East,” he writes in the establishment journal Foreign Affairs.

Needless to say, Pickering got a cold shower from his Israeli interlocutors. We understood what he was doing: paving the way in Washington for a climb-down from Obama’s declared policy of “preventing” (and not merely containing) Iran’s obtaining a nuclear weapon.

For the moment, and at least on record, the administration is sticking by its “dual track approach of rigorous sanctions and serious negotiations,” as a State Department spokesman said in response to the Pickering report. “All options,” including military force, are theoretically still “on the table,” we have been reassured by Chuck Hagel (who, as I mention, was a member of Pickering’s task force). And Obama himself reassured the American Israel Public Affairs Committee in March that “I’ve made clear time and again during the course of my presidency, I will not hesitate to use force when it is necessary to defend the United States and its interests.”

But last week, a top journalist from Washington with inside knowledge of the Obama administration told Israeli colleagues that he deeply doubted that Obama would give a strike order against Iran — even if the CIA director came to the president with incontrovertible evidence that the Tehran was days away from actually assembling its first deliverable bomb.

A top former Israeli intelligence official who heard this assessment agreed. Instead, he predicted, Obama would tell the American people that he had painfully considered all the difficult options, and reached the conclusion that sending American troops to war against Iran would be “counterproductive.” Obama would claim to have made best efforts at stopping Iran, but with the Iranian bomb now a fait accompli, he would argue for a realistic policy of defending American interests and allies in the region.

The American people, predicted this Israeli official, would then laud Obama for his “brave and appropriately cautious leadership.”

Between Washington and Tehran: Ankara

April 28, 2013

Israel Hayom | Between Washington and Tehran: Ankara.

Zalman Shoval

The first meeting between the Israeli and Turkish delegations to determine reparations for the families of those killed in the Mavi Marmara incident ended without result, but this “appeasement” between the two countries needs to be examined further.

The move, facilitated through American mediation, is perhaps the most important concrete achievement of U.S. President Barack Obama’s visit to Israel. The achievement pertains not only to the bilateral relationship between Jerusalem and Ankara, but perhaps, to a greater extent, to a potential campaign against Iran.

U.S. strategy in our region has been based throughout the years on the American-Israeli-Turkish axis, until the diplomatic rupture with Ankara rendered this axis fundamentally disjointed. The role played by the U.S. in realigning the sides was most certainly crucial, and to assure the relationship’s long-term rehabilitation it will need to continue playing such a central role.

The Israeli interest is clear, and is not merely strategic or connected to cooperation between the countries’ defense establishments and military industries. It also relates to economic and geopolitical interests. The Turks, while trying to create the impression that they were forced to go along, have just as much interest in renewing ties as Israel does.

For some time now, various analysts have posited that the U.S. had lost interest in the Middle East; not only because it announced that its main focus would shift toward Southeast Asia, but because its increasing energy independence would allegedly reduce its need to remain actively involved in the region. It appears these conclusions were reached too quickly, and that despite its failures and mistakes over the years, America does not intend to abandon the regional stage, diplomatically or militarily.

Washington, in the meantime, has also realized that the Palestinian issue is not the most burning issue in the area, and that the clock on other matters is ticking at an increasing rate.

Additionally, an Israeli-Turkish agreement will be of vital importance if Obama shows he is serious about warning Iran to abandon its nuclear weapons program. Indeed, if Washington decides to act militarily against Tehran, it will not only want to ensure that Turkey doesn’t make things difficult for the U.S. as it did in Iraq, bit that it is an active partner. It is reasonable to think, therefore, that Washington’s large weapons deals with Israel, Saudi Arabia and Gulf States, as well as Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel’s recent visit to the region, are related to the Iranian issue.

Turkey also had other motives, outside its strategic considerations and its need to realign with the American position. Its pretentious foreign policy has recently led to a string of failures: The “Arab Spring” and the chaos in Syria have dashed, for the time being, Turkey’s neo-Ottoman dream; the EU has given Turkey the cold shoulder; and on the Palestinian front it hasn’t been invited to center stage at the negotiating table.

Moreover, its competition with Iran, either overt or covert, threatens Turkey’s ambitions to attain prominent status in the Arab world in general and in Iraq specifically.

The Turks realized the need to look in the mirror and ask themselves if the continued hostility toward Israel truly serves their basic interests, while “appeasement” allows them to come down from the tall tree they’ve climbed, even if it means losing face with their Hamas friends (which is why Turkish Prime Minister Erdogan has insisted on visiting Gaza).

UK’s military chief: Intervention in Syria risks all-out war

April 28, 2013

UK’s military chief: Intervention in Syria risks all-out war – Israel News, Ynetnews.

Sunday Times reports Sir David Richards urged UK government to consider whether apparent use of chemical weapons by Assad forces should be a tipping point

Roi Kais

Published: 04.28.13, 10:01 / Israel News

Britain’s most senior military officer has warned Prime Minister David Cameron that intervening in Syria would risk dragging UK forces into an all-out war, The Sunday Times reported.

General Sir David Richards, chief of the defense staff, believes any military response to the use of chemical weapons by Bashar Assad‘s regime would have to be on a huge scale to succeed.

According to the British newspaper, Richards urged the government to consider whether what appears to have been a small-scale use of chemicals should be a tipping point. “Even to set up a humanitarian safe area would be a major military operation without the co-operation of the Syrians,” he told senior defense figures. “In Syria, we have to be prepared to go to war.”

The Sunday Times said top Foreign and Commonwealth Office (FCO) figures also fear that creating safe zones could drag Britain into a full-scale military engagement. They warn that British forces might have to defend the zones against attack by Syrian forces.
קצף מהפה. אחד הנפגעים בתקיפה מוקדם יותר החודש

Victim of alleged chemical attack in Syria this month

Richards has argued that a limited operation to create a no-fly zone like the one over Bosnia in 1993 would be insufficient because of Syria’s air defenses, according to the report.

On Friday Cameron condemned an apparent nerve gas attack on civilians in Aleppo as a “war crime”, but stressed that he would not rush to send British troops to the Syrian battlefield. The British PM said that the UK should instead work toward strengthening the Syrian opposition in order to oust Assad.
אחרי המתקפה החשודה ליד חלב, מוקדם יותר החודש (צילום: רויטרס)

Aftermath of alleged chemical attack in Aleppo earlier this month (Photo: Reuters) 

“I don’t want to see (deployment of troops) and I don’t think that is likely to happen,” Cameron said.

Meanwhile, the state-run Syrian newspaper Al-Watan reported Sunday that chemical weapons have been used against Assad’s forces. The report could not be confirmed.

The government’s mouthpiece quoted sources who are “familiar with the issue” as saying that many soldiers were admitted to a hospital in Damascus following a “chemical attack” launched by the rebels. The paper said the attack resulted in some deaths as well.

Al-Watan quoted a medical official as saying the wounded soldiers were fighting rebels near the Barzeh neighborhood in north Damascus. The same “medical official” told the newspaper a missile was fired from Barzeh at Syrian army forces deployed on the outskirts of the neighborhood.

President Barack Obama has suggested that the use of deadly chemical agents could be the “red line” for the US to intervene in the two-year-old Syrian war, but over the weekend he made clear he was in no rush to intervene in the Syrian civil war on the basis of evidence he said was still preliminary.

Speaking a day after the disclosure of US intelligence that Syria had likely used chemical weapons against its own people, Obama mixed talked tough while calling for patience as he sought to fend off pressure for a swift response against Syrian President Assad.
אובמה עם המלך עבדאללה ביום שישי. לא ממהר לתקוף (צילום: AFP)

‘That is going to be a game changer.’ Obama with King Abdullah (Photo: AFP)

“Horrific as it is when mortars are being fired on civilians and people are being indiscriminately killed, to use potential weapons of mass destruction on civilian populations crosses another line with respect to international norms and international law,” Obama told reporters at the White House as he began talks with Jordan’s King Abdullah.

“That is going to be a game changer,” he said. But Obama stopped short of declaring that Assad had crossed “a red line” and described the US intelligence evaluations as “a preliminary assessment.”

While some more hawkish lawmakers have called for a US military response and for the arming of anti-Assad rebels, several leading congressional voices urged a calmer approach after Secretary of State John Kerry briefed them.

“This is not Libya,” said Nancy Pelosi, the senior Democrat in the House of Representatives, referring to the relative ease with which a NATO bombing campaign helped overthrow Muammar Gaddafi in 2011. “The Syrians have anti-aircraft capability that makes going in there much more challenging.”

US officials said on Thursday the intelligence community believes with varying degrees of confidence that Assad’s forces used the nerve agent sarin on a small scale against rebel fighters.

Reuters contributed to the report

US gains more from arms deal

April 28, 2013

US gains more from arms deal – Israel Opinion, Ynetnews.

Analysis: Americans building Mideast coalition to assist them in case they will have to act in Iran or Syria

Published: 04.28.13, 10:41 / Israel Opinion

The Middle Eastern arms deal announced by the New York Times last week is not the largest the US has ever signed with the region’s countries – in terms of money, the amount of weapons and the different kinds of weapons involved. But this deal, in the framework of which Israel is expected to purchase advanced refueling tanker planes, a number of V-22 Osprey troop transport aircraft, radars for fighter jets and missiles designed to take out air-defense radars, is by far the deal which is the hardest to implement, politically speaking, for any American government, and particularly for the Obama administration.

This deal gives the Saudis and the United Arab Emirates the ability to attack targets on the ground from a great distance and with great precision. In the past the Americans vowed never to provide such capabilities to oil-rich Arab states which foster radical Islam. But in this deal they are doing precisely that – big time. Two years ago the US signed a deal with Saudi Arabia worth more than $80 billion for the supply of F-15 jets. Now these warplanes will also have the ability to attack targets on the ground from dozens of kilometers away – perhaps more than 100 kilometers away. Such targets exist in Iran – but also in Israel.

Congress would never have approved such a deal because Saudi Arabia – where Osama bin Laden was born – is the birthplace of radical Islam, and also because these weapons may fall into the hands of Jihadists or Salafists in the event of a revolution. The danger to Israel and American interests in the region should such advanced weapons end up in the hands of extremist Islamic elements requires no further explanation.

There is no way Congress would have approved this connection between advanced F-15 warplanes and long-range, accurate weapons without sweetening the pill for the American lawmakers with Obama’s visit to Israel and by offering Israel some ‘biscuits’ as well. The Americans will sell Israel missiles capable of dealing with SA-17 batteries, different kinds of mobile surface-to-air missiles, as well the aforementioned refueling planes, transport aircraft and radars for warplanes.

The timing of the arms deal and of Obama’s visit to Israel is not coincidental. While the deal is the result of the hard work of former defense minister Ehud Barak and former US defense secretary Leon Panetta over a period of months, it is aimed at providing Israel with capabilities it currently lacks and at improving the relations between Jerusalem and Washington, which hit an all-time low following the elections in the US.
המטוס-מסוק V-22. מחוץ לכספי הסיוע (צילום: AP)

V-22 Osprey troop transport aircraft (Photo: AP)

Obama’s visit to Israel was meant to remove any last objections Israel and its friends on Capitol Hill may have had. It seems that Obama succeeded not only in getting Prime Minister Netanyahu to apologize to Turkey, he also got the final approval for the deal, which may have other aspects to it that have yet to be revealed.

The Obama administration stands to gain the most from the deal. The agreement with the UAE, and mainly with the Saudis, which will apparently be signed this week, will provide extensive work for aviation and weapons plants in the US – plants which were supposed to be hit hard by the substantial cuts in the Pentagon’s budget. This was the reason for Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel’s visit to the region. The arms deal also boosts the self-confidence of Israel and the Arab Gulf states in the face of the Iranian threat.
מטוס תדלוק KC-135. יחליף את הבואינג 707 הישן

KC-135 refueling tanker plane

The US is giving its allies in the Middle East the ability to deal with conventional threats –such as the possibility that extremist Islamic elements in the region will get their hands Syria’s chemical weapons or that Salafist groups in Sinai will seize control of advanced weapons. The aid package will also help Israel react in the event that Hezbollah manages to obtain advanced anti-aircraft batteries it does not have at this point.

In addition, should the US decide to use force against Iran, it will be able to do so with the cooperation of its allies in the region. In other words: The Americans are building a regional coalition which will be able to assist them in case they will have to act in Iran, Syria or other countries.

The supply of KC-135 refueling tanker planes will extend the “long arm” of Israel’s military. According to foreign sources, Israel currently has nine refueling planes which are actually converted Boeing 707 passenger planes. But the advanced American refueling planes would dramatically increase the Israeli Air Force’s ability to activate an aerial force for a long period of time and increase the number of strikes this force could launch – in Iran and northern Syria, for example.

The problem is that these refueling planes will be transferred to the Air Force only a few years from now, when it is entirely possible that Israel will have to deal with the Iranian threat much sooner. But there is no doubt the KC-135 planes will significantly boost the Air Force’s capability to use its full aerial force against remote targets.

The V-22 Osprey troop transport aircraft allows Israel to operate in remote locations and also contribute to the protection of Israel’s offshore gas fields.

In conclusion, Israel will see the fruits of the deal a few years from now, so the aircraft and systems it will receive as part of the deal will most likely not be used by Israel in any attack on Iran that is launched before the end of 2016. This way, the Americans are showing Israel they are helping it maintain the qualitative edge without encouraging Israel to launch a go-it-alone strike in Iran.

The deal includes a clause stating that Saudi Arabia and the UAE are permitted to use the smart bombs they will receive only under American supervision, and it seems that the US will keep the technological components needed to activate these bombs. But Israel cannot ignore the fact that countries inclined toward radical Islam will possess smart weapons technology and the F-16 and F-15 warplanes needed to make actual use of this technology. However, as far as Israel is concerned, the most important aspect of the deal is that it will improve its relations with the US.