Archive for August 2013

US Institute: Iran asphalts possible nuke site

August 22, 2013

US Institute: Iran asphalts possible nuke site – Israel News, Ynetnews.

Satellite images show major alterations of Parchin complex where Iran is thought to be developing atomic arms

Associated Press

Published: 08.22.13, 15:00 / Israel News

A US institute tracking Iran’s nuclear program says recent satellite images it has analyzed show further major alterations of a military site that the UN has long tried to access to follow up suspicions that Tehran may have used it in possible attempts to develop atomic arms.

The four photos from satellite company Digital Globe and GeoEye were seen by The Associated Press ahead of publication by the Institute for Science and International Security planned for Thursday. They images show what ISIS said was progressive asphalting of an area of the Parchin complex that the UN’s International Atomic Energy Agency says was a possible location for testing conventional explosive triggers for a nuclear blast.

Experts of the UN nuclear watchdog organization met Iranian negotiators 10 times over 18 months in sessions ending earlier this year in futile attempts to gain access to the site and test Tehran’s insistence that it was a conventional military area with no link to nuclear tests.

Iran has said the asphalting is part of regular maintenance and road work. But with its probe blocked — and signs of other activity — IAEA concerns have grown that it might be an attempt to cover up any work on a weapons program while it keeps away inspectors.

Asphalting the area would make it more difficult to take soil samples in the search for traces of the alleged testing. Beyond the asphalt work, IAEA chief Yukiya Amano told reporters earlier this year he was also concerned about soil removal, and “possible dismantling of infrastructures” at Parchin. Because of such alleged activities, he said “it may no longer be possible to find anything even if we have access to the site.”

Olli Heinonen, the previous head of the IAEA’s Iran probe, also said the standoff meant any inspection by agency experts could be inconclusive even if they do get eventual access. That, he said meant that Tehran “has lost an important opportunity” to prove that it had nothing to hide.

Heinonen suggested that paved over area resembles a huge parking facility but said that with “very little material movements and trucks driving in and out” of the site it was “hard to see what kind of work requires such parking lots.”

Iran dismisses suggestions it worked on atomic arms at Parchin or anywhere else, and has blamed the IAEA for the standoff, saying it is caused by the agency’s refusal to agree on strict parameters that would govern its probe. The agency in turn says such an agreement would tie its hands by putting limits on what it could look for and whom it could question. It bases its suspicions of nuclear-weapons research and development by Iran on its own research and intelligence from the U.S., Israel and other Iran critics.

A phone call Thursday for comment to Ali Asghar Soltanieh, Iran’s chief IAEA envoy, went to his voice mail.

The photos date from December 12, 2011, to Aug. 13 of this year. As seen by the AP, they show a gradually increased area of what appears to be blacktop around structures at the suspected site with only about a quarter remaining bare in the last image.

Alluding to earlier satellite photos indicating dismantling of buildings, apparent hosing down of the area in what the IAEA fears may be an attempt to wash away evidence, and other work, ISIS said they “clearly document activities at the Parchin site that are completely unrelated to any road-building activity.”

US intelligence officials say they generally stand by a 2007 intelligence assessment that asserts Iran stopped comprehensive secret work on developing nuclear arms in 2003. But Britain, France, Germany, Israel and other US allies think such activities have continued past that date, a view shared by the IAEA, which says some isolated and sporadic activities may be ongoing.

Obama under pressure to retaliate against Syria

August 22, 2013

Obama under pressure to retaliate against Syria – Israel News, Ynetnews.

Washington Post editorial says US should hold independent inquiry to confirm veracity of chemical attack reports, deliver vow not to tolerate such crimes; France says world should respond with force if allegations prove true

Roi Kais, new agencies

Published: 08.22.13, 12:32 / Israel News

The ball is in Obama’s court: The Washington Post, one of the most influential publications in the United States, has posted a scathing editorial criticizing the Obama administration’s handling of the Syria crisis in the wake of Wednesday’s chemical attack and urging it to reconsider its response to violations of what it has repeatedly defined as a “red line.

The West still waits a response from the White House on the Security Council’s decision to avoid an official investigation. On Wednesday, the US said it requested the UN to urgently investigate the allegation.

Meanwhile, France said on Thursday that the international community would need to respond with force if allegations that the Syrian government was responsible for a chemical attack on civilians proved true.

Protesting the White House for Syria (Photo: AFP)
Protesting the White House for Syria (Photo: AFP)

 

Mourning in Syria (Photo: AFP PHOTO / HO / SHAAM NEWS NETWORK)
Mourning in Syria (Photo: AFP PHOTO / HO / SHAAM NEWS NETWORK)

 

Lebanese cartoon: That I didn't do!
Lebanese cartoon: That I didn’t do!

 

Children funeral (Photo: Reuters)
Children funeral (Photo: Reuters)

“There would have to be reaction with force in Syria from the international community, but there is no question of sending troops on the ground,” French Foreign Minister Laurent Fabius told French television network BFM.

If the UN Security Council could not make a decision, one would have to be taken “in other ways,” he said, without elaborating.

The Washington Post reiterated the sentiment, adding direct criticism against the Obama administration. “If the allegations of a massive new attack are confirmed, the weak measure adopted by President Obama in June — supplying small weapons to rebel forces — will have proved utterly inadequate,” the editorial said.

“The United States should be using its own resources to determine, as quickly as possible, whether the opposition’s reports of large-scale use of gas against civilians are accurate. If they are, Mr. Obama should deliver on his vow not to tolerate such crimes — by ordering direct US retaliation against the Syrian military forces responsible and by adopting a plan to protect civilians in southern Syria with a no-fly zone.”

The reasons behind the US inaction were revealed in a letter authored by the chairman of the joint chiefs of staff, General Martin Dempsey.

Dempsey does not believe the Syrian rebels would support US interests in case America helps them defeat Assad.

In an August 19 letter to Congressman Eliot Engel (D-N.Y.), Dempsey writes that the US military had the capability to destroy the Syrian air force and thus shift the balance of the two year old war in favor of the rebels. The General however doubts the reasonability of doing so.

Meanwhile, President Bashar Assad‘s forces pressed on with a military offensive in eastern Damascus, bombing rebel-held suburbs.

The Britain-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said it had no word on casualties in the Thursday morning bombing of eastern Ghouta. It said Syrian warplanes conducted several air raids on eastern and western suburbs of Damascus, including three that took place within five minutes.

Obama can’t, or won’t

August 22, 2013

Israel Hayom | Obama can’t, or won’t.

Boaz Bismuth

On June 4, France was the first country to conclude with “certainty” that the Syrian regime had used chemical weapons in its brutal, never-ending civil war. London rushed to follow suit. No one could remain indifferent to the photos of the horrors perpetrated in the Khan al-Asal district of Aleppo in March. Syrian President Bashar Assad — personally, according to many Western intelligence sources — ordered his army to use chemical weapons. Only Washington refrained from clearly speaking up.

On Wednesday, photos of additional horrors emerged from Syria, this time from the district of Jubar on the outskirts of Damascus. All the evidence suggests that the Syrian army once again used Sarin gas, this time by way of rockets, to target an area where the rebels had made significant gains in recent days. The result, according to the Syrian opposition, was hundreds of casualties, including women and children. The photos are indeed horrifying. Western media outlets had to issue warnings of graphic content before airing the images. Hopefully, if the authenticity of these photos is verified, Washington officials will not be too busy playing golf or cards. If there is an iota of morality left in this hypocritical world, and even though the alternative is not very promising, Assad needs to go.

But Washington is in a real bind. It was just this week that the U.S. Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, General Martin Dempsey, ruled out U.S. military involvement in the Syrian conflict.

Dempsey’s argument is not entirely illogical, considering the alternative that awaits us after the Assad era, but what about the superpower’s word? Did U.S. President Barack Obama not vow to use military might if a red line was crossed, referring to the use of chemical weapons?

This red line was already crossed back in March, when it was proven that the Assad regime had used chemical weapons. But Obama did nothing then. What about now?

The U.S. is currently completely irrelevant in Egypt. It will be a dire situation for them, and for us, when they become irrelevant in Syria as well. Contrary to the Egypt situation, with Syria there are the Russians constantly lurking in the corner. Washington has got to take matters into its own hands. The Americans have enough allies in the region that could help. Isn’t that why Obama coerced Israel to apologize to Turkey? At this rate, Assad will remain in power, and Israeli-Turkish relations will deteriorate again.

Since March 15, 2011, the Syrian situation has gotten steadily worse. More than 100,000 deaths and 1.7 million refugees. No one in the world can claim that they didn’t know.

Assad sees, and understands, that Obama doesn’t want to, or can’t, or simply doesn’t know what to do. His foreign policy record is quite embarrassing. In the meantime, as Assad massacres his people and retains power in Syria, an Egyptian court decides to release deposed Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak from prison after clearing him of corruption charges. Mubarak is not finished with the justice system quite yet, but what sweet revenge for a man who gets to leave the man who usurped his seat, Mohammed Morsi, and Muslim Brotherhood spiritual leader Mohammed Badie, behind him in prison, and more importantly, his immediate successor former Field Marshal Mohamed Hussein Tantawi, now unemployed, who didn’t protect him.

Much like the French revolution, the Egyptian revolution is bringing nothing but harm to the Egyptians.

And above all, Israeli officials should be asking themselves one simple question: What kind of message is Obama conveying to Iran with his conduct in the Middle East?

For Assad, no fear, no shame

August 22, 2013

Israel Hayom | For Assad, no fear, no shame.

Yoav Limor

The despicable use of chemical weapons by the Syrian regime on Wednesday is a testament to one of two things: Either President Bashar Assad feels immune against an American-European countermeasure that he is allowing himself to employ a weapon of this nature, or his military situation is so problematic and his grip on power so tenuous that he has exhausted all other effective options to combat the rebellion.

It is certainly possible that in Syria’s current reality both options are true. American weakness, characterized by a lack of a responsiveness even after THE red-line of using chemical weapons was crossed at least three times already, has led Assad to conclude (probably justifiably) that this time, too, he will emerge unscathed. However, Assad’s quagmire may be more convoluted than the Western media has portrayed. He controls only about 40 percent of the country, the rebels have taken a large portion of Aleppo and they are advancing in Damascus as well.

However, even though the chemical-weapons Rubicon was already crossed three months ago, Wednesday’s incident sets a new and dangerous bar. For the first time in the Middle East, chemical weapons were used openly, in the light of day. This no longer constitutes selective use; the scale was wide enough to indicate an intention to cause massive casualties. There are no more controversial testimonies of uncertain veracity, rather a clear and indisputable event. If you will, Assad shed his fears, and his shame, on Wednesday.

Officially, Syria will almost certainly deny the accusations and attempt to cover its tracks, which is precisely how it will relate to the U.N. team of inspectors currently in the country to investigate the previous claims of chemical weapons attacks. In this regard, the specific use of Sarin gas must also be considered. Of all the chemical weapons available, Sarin dissipates the quickest — which is important if one intends to deny its use.

None of this directly pertains to us in Israel, as this is just another in a long line of atrocities and more victims to add to a death toll fast surpassing the 100,000 mark. However, a deeper look at the situation does raise a two-fold concern. Firstly, we understand that such weapons could be turned toward us and that we need to address the threat and neutralize it if need be (either to prevent it from being used or from falling into the irresponsible hands of others). Secondly, there is a need to formulate a new strategy to account for Western weakness in the region — echoed by the cries of anguish and desperation in Syria and accompanied by the other failed U.S. and European policies in the region, policies that could have far-reaching consequences for us as well.

The silence of the lambs

August 22, 2013

Israel Hayom | The silence of the lambs.

Dan Margalit

The photos of the scores of victims of Syrian President Bashar Assad’s chemical weapon attack Wednesday probably shocked even those who are used to seeing such atrocities. Yes, Assad and his loyalists can do such things. An official inquest is in order of course, but according to Defense Minister Moshe (Bogie) Ya’alon, Israel — the foremost intelligence source in the Middle East — believes the reports of what transpired in Syria on Wednesday are in fact the use of chemical weapons.

The international community will debate the incident. The Security Council has convened and has expressed its concern, but there is a real chance that even this horrible crime will not change the parties’ regional interests. The Americans would like to see Assad removed from power, but they will not lift a finger to make it happen. Well, maybe a finger, but nothing more.

The Syrian civil war is slowly turning into a global conflict and starting to remind historians of the 1936 civil war in Spain, which was a prelude of sorts to World War II.

Why did Assad do it? Can his regime still feign legitimacy after using chemical weapons on civilians? The Iranians and the Russians are not asking themselves that question. They have invested fortunes in the House of Assad for decades and they have no intention of forfeiting their gains — or the political capital.

Israel has refrained from interfering in the situation because it does not know who the rebels really are, and whether or not they are al-Qaida operatives, and because it has nothing to gain from taking action. So far, we have become accustomed to the fact that the Assad regime honors its agreements — the 1974 disengagement of forces agreement between Israel and Syria has so far been rigorously maintained.

We cannot, however, afford to become complacent, despite the relative calm in the area, be it in the Golan Heights or vis-à-vis Hezbollah on the Lebanese border. We must also ask ourselves how far the regional rulers would be willing to go in their fight against the hated Jews or the evil Western armies present on their soil, if they are willing to unleash chemical weapons against their own brethren.

The past few weeks have seen some age-old questions rehashed, mainly why does the world — and the enlightened West — act as it does and discriminate between the warring parties in the various Arab Spring countries. After all, the force exerted by the Egyptian military against the Muslim Brotherhood pales in comparison to what happened on the outskirts of Damascus. Wednesday bustled with reactions, but if the world does nothing, its silence will send an unequivocal message that mass killing is no longer taboo.

The world needs to cry out and intervene in Syria, but instead it is standing on the sidelines, politely admonishing the regime. If such regimes are not censured immediately, repeat offenses become the norm. Under these circumstances any outcry counts, no matter where it is in the world, but what is needed most is the outcry of the Arab nations, including that of the Israeli-Arabs.

Steinitz: Israeli intelligence believes Assad gassed civilians

August 22, 2013

Israel Hayom | Steinitz: Israeli intelligence believes Assad gassed civilians.

Israel concerned about U.S.’s “flexible red line” regarding Assad’s use of chemical weapons and how it may affect regional deterrence and other conflicts, such as the Iranian nuclear threat • Russia, China block U.N. probe of Wednesday’s attack in Syria.

David Baron, Lilach Shoval, The Associated Press, Reuters and Israel Hayom Staff
A Syrian man who lives in Beirut, during a vigil in front the U.N. headquarters in Beirut on Wednesday

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Photo credit: AP

How Iran’s revenge bomb plot over nuclear programme took shape

August 22, 2013

How Iran’s revenge bomb plot over nuclear programme took shape | World news | theguardian.com.

Investigators piece together movements in India, Thailand and Georgia of Iranian conspirators behind triple bombing attempt

Race Course Road in the centre of Delhi is one of the quieter roads in a city known for its chaotic traffic. Yet the scene at 3.15pm on 13 February was anything but calm.

A grey Toyota Innova people carrier was in flames with its two occupants, the wife of the Israeli defence attaché and her driver, on the ground nearby. Police and bystanders tried to call ambulances but none were available. More people milled around another vehicle, its windows blown in. As ever in India, there was much shouting, pushing and sirens. The perpetrator was already heading out of the country and back to Iran. His victims were put in a three-wheeled motorised rickshaw and sent to the nearest hospital.

The attack was one of three incidents over a 36-hour period that had taken at least 10 months to plan. On the day of the Delhi bombing – which involved a device the size of a large smartphone stuck to the side of the diplomatic car with magnetic strips – a second bomb was found attached to an Israeli diplomat’s vehicle in Tbilisi, Georgia.

The day after, an explosion destroyed much of a house in a lane off the central Sukhumvit Road in Bangkok. A 28-year-old Iranian stumbled out and threw makeshift grenades at taxi drivers and police, before collapsing, badly injured. It did not take long for Iran to be blamed.

Rogue elements

The attacks followed months of escalating tension between Tehran and its enemies, particularly Israel. In the preceding weeks, Iran tested new missiles, boasted of breakthroughs in technology that could bring development of a nuclear weapon nearer, and threatened to shut down shipping in the Strait of Hormuz if further western sanctions were imposed over its nuclear programme. The EU responded by imposing new sanctions, including a curb on petroleum imports, the latest in a series of economic measures introduced since 2006 that had started to bite on the Iranian economy.

In October a bizarre plot to kill the Saudi Arabian ambassador in Washington had been uncovered by US authorities, blamed on possible “rogue” elements within the Iranian Revolutionary Guards.

Israel and the US were reported to have been behind a computer worm called Stuxnet, which infected the operating systems at Iran’s uranium enrichment plant in Natanz and contributed to its temporary shutdown in November 2010.

A succession of attacks on Iranian nuclear scientists deepened the mood of mistrust. In November 2010 Majid Shahriari, a nuclear scientist, was killed and Fereydoon Abbasi Davani, Iran’s atomic chief, survived an attack by assailants on motorcycles. In January this year, another prominent scientist, Mostafa Ahmadi-Roshan, died after a magnetic bomb was attached to his car, the same modus operandi as the Delhi bombing a month later.

“We will not neglect punishing those responsible for this act,” Iran’s supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, said after Ahmadi-Roshan’s death. General Masoud Jazayeri, the spokesman for Iran’s joint armed forces staff, said simply: “The enemies of the Iranian nation, especially the United States, Britain and the Zionist regime, or Israel, have to be held responsible for their activities.”

An editorial in a hardline newspaper close to Khamenei said ominously that Iran had long experience of conducting assassinations overseas and was well-placed to extract revenge.

Shadow war

It is not known when or by whom the plots were conceived. But investigators in Delhi and Thailand know when those involved began preparations. Houshang Afshar Irani, the man accused of the Delhi bombing, first arrived in the Indian capital on 25 April 2011.

Irani stayed in Delhi for three weeks, leaving in mid-May. Based at a mid-priced hotel in the city’s central Connaught Circus, he spent hours, investigators say, researching possible targets. They say he also spent time with at least three call girls, contacted through an intermediary who had placed advertisements in local newspapers.

The first visit to Thailand came around this time too. A 31-year-old woman, identified as Leila Rohani, arrived in Thailand on a tourist visa on 17 April last year and stayed for four weeks.

The summer appeared to see a pause in the “shadow war” between western intelligence agencies and Iran with diplomacy returning to the forefront. But preparations for an operation continued. Rohani returned to Thailand in July, staying until September. In June, a mobile phone number used by Irani in Delhi in April was used for a two-week period in Tbilisi, one of the few links between the Georgia plot and the others.

Meanwhile, Mohammed Kazmi, a 50-year-old journalist in Delhi who worked for Iranian news organisations, travelled twice to Tehran where, according to Indian investigators, he met two Iranian men involved with the plot and received $5,500. The detained journalist also helped Irani conduct surveillance of the Israeli embassy and other potential targets, investigators claim. Kazmi’s family told the Guardian he was innocent of any wrongdoing and the victim of a conspiracy by “major powers” to defame Iran and Muslims.

Preparations continued through the late autumn. On 18 October, Rohani returned to Thailand. Two months later, on 19 December, she rented a house on Soi Pridi Phanomyong in central Bangkok that became the bomb factory, Thai investigators have revealed.

Through late December and January, as tensions mounted once again between Tehran, Israel and the west, at least six more Iranians arrived in Bangkok and Delhi. Western intelligence services believe the trigger for the attacks may have been the death of Ahmadi-Roshan.

There is no “smoking gun”, but western officials believe circumstantial evidence is sufficient to indicate that the plot originated with “an element” of the Iranian state. After completing their investigation, Indian intelligence agencies told senior ministers that Tehran was behind the attack. Israeli officials immediately went much further, explicitly blaming Iran for the bombings and claiming that the plot was part of a wide-ranging campaign to launch violent attacks against Israeli interests across Asia and beyond.

Officially, all three countries where the February incidents occurred have refrained from blaming anyone publicly. Iran is a big oil supplier to India and good relations with Iran are seen as key to India’s traditional non-aligned foreign policy in west Asia.

“If the Iranians chose India because they thought Delhi wouldn’t make too much of a fuss, they’ve been proved right,” said one western diplomat in the Indian capital.

Asymmetric capability

Though Indian authorities have posted Interpol notices for suspects in the Delhi bombing, including Irani, a trip by senior policemen from the capital’s serious crimes department to Tehran has been repeatedly stalled.

The question of ultimate responsibility within Iran remains unclear. Most analysts discount the use by Tehran of a proxy such as the militant group Hezbollah. More likely, they say, the plot was an attempt by elements within the Revolutionary Guards to show an “asymmetric capability” to deter western or Israeli military strikes on Iranian nuclear installations and to indicate that the assassination of Iranian nuclear scientists would not go without a response.

Forensic analysis in Thailand, Georgia and India has revealed that all devices in the plot were composed of explosives – C4 plastics combined with either TNT in India or a urea fertilizer mix in Thailand – enclosed in a hard container which had been imported. Magnetic strips were used in India and Georgia to fix the bomb to vehicles.

“You could chose any number of targets or types of attack. Why go to the trouble of replicating exactly how [the scientist] was killed in January in Tehran unless you want to make a point?” the western official said.

Experts point out that the effective command structure of the Revolutionary Guards, as with all elements of the Iranian security establishment, remains poorly understood and that pinpointing who was in overall charge of the plot is very difficult.

What is now known, however, is that the weeks after the killing of the scientist in Tehran saw new activity. On 8 February, according to immigration records, Saeed Moradi, the Bangkok bombmaker, flew into the Thai resort of Phuket. With another Iranian, Mohammed Khazaei, he then travelled to the sleazy resort of Pattaya, where the pair were photographed on a phone “smoking and drinking with bar girls”.

Irani had flown in to Delhi on 29 January, staying this time in a hotel in the west of the city but once again contacting call girls. Two weeks later, CCTV footage shows him leaving the hotel on a red Honda Pulsar motorcycle. At 3.15pm, as the Israeli embassy car stopped at lights at the junction in Delhi, Irani pulled up next to it, placed the magnetic bomb against its rear side and rode away. By 4.30pm he was at Delhi’s international airport where he checked in for Malaysia Airlines flight MH191 to Kuala Lumpur. Before midnight, Irani was on his way out of India, later heading back to Iran on a connecting flight that left the following morning via Dubai, investigators believe.

In Bangkok things went less smoothly. The blast at the bombmaking factory and the struggle that followed led to Moradi losing both his legs and being detained. Khazaei was also picked up. Finally – and perhaps most damaging of all – a 31-year-old Iranian identified as Sedaghatzadeh Masoud was arrested at Kuala Lumpur aiport as he waited to board a flight to Tehran on the morning of 15 February. His passport included visas both for India and Thailand and a notebook that included phone numbers for many of those identified in Tblisi, Delhi and Bangkok as well as in Tehran. This was the first major breakthrough for investigators. Rohani, who had rented the house, had left Bangkok in early January. Her whereabouts are unknown.

* An inaccurately captiioned picture was removed from this article on Monday 18 June

The Assad regime, like Tehran, crosses “red lines” under cover of Western doubletalk

August 22, 2013

The Assad regime, like Tehran, crosses “red lines” under cover of Western doubletalk.

DEBKAfile Special Report August 22, 2013, 9:53 AM (IDT)

 

Damascus under alleged chemical attack

Damascus under alleged chemical attack

 

By two comments, Israel confirmed Wednesday and Thursday, Aug. 21 and 22, that the Assad regime had used chemical weapons on civilians in the region of Damascus – the first came from Defense Minister Moshe Ya’alon, who said “The use of chemical weapons by the regime is not a first” and the second from Strategic Affairs Minister Yuval Steinitz. The latter reported corroborative intelligence obtained by Israel.
They were referring to the allegations of the use of poison gas by Syrian activists causing up to 1,300 deaths. Wednesday night, Russia and China again saved Bashar Assad from UN Security Council action or even condemnation of his actions.
debkafile’s military sources add: When a chemical warhead is fired at any point on the globe, it is picked up at once by US monitoring devices. American and Israeli spy satellites passing over Damascus every few hours can also tell when chemical shells are fired. This makes nonsense of the pretense by US and Western powers that Syrian opposition claims are short on proof and Independent on-the-spot expert investigation is needed to establish the facts of the case.
Wednesday night, the phone conversation between US Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel and Moshe Ya’alon on the situation in Syria focused on an exchange of intelligence. Israel had recordings of commanders of the Syrian gas missile batteries ordering them to be fired earlier that day. The other purpose of the conversation was to hold Israel back from responding to the chemical attack on Damascus – or even warning Assad. Hence, Steinitz’s verbal contortions to account for Israeli inaction by the overworked pretext that it only strikes when its national security is in jeopardy.
This argument is not only absurd, it is dangerous: If the Syrian ruler is capable of using poison gas against his own people in his own capital, he would have no compunctions about launching chemical missiles against Israeli and Jordanian cities, whenever he feels his regime is in danger or judges it beneficial to his interests. The US and Israel ought to have acted in good time to avert the human disaster befalling the citizens of Damascus Wednesday and taking chemical weapons out of the Syrian equation. But they didn’t.
At the UN Security Council, as in world capitals, diplomats can be counted on for language to cover up the fact that Syria has crossed the “red line” set by Washington and Jerusalem – just like Iran, with regard to the point reached by its nuclear weapons program. Clouds of diplomatic claptrap are put in circulation to take the heat off for direct action against either peril.

International community calls for probe into alleged Syrian chemical attack

August 21, 2013

International community calls for probe into alleged Syrian chemical attack | JPost | Israel News.

By REUTERS
08/21/2013 18:43
Syrian regime’s ally Russia suggests such attack could be provocation by rebels; UK, France, US to officially request UN investigate alleged gas attack in which hundreds were reportedly killed; Arab League: “Deplorable crime.”

Boy affected by alleged chemical weapons attack in Syria [file]

Boy affected by alleged chemical weapons attack in Syria [file] Photo: REUTERS

The international community on Wednesday called for investigations into reports that troops loyal to Syrian President Bashar Assad had carried out a chemical weapon attack near Damascus.

Russia’s Foreign Ministry called for a fair and professional investigation into the allegations.

Foreign Ministry Spokesman Alexander Lukashevich said circumstances around the reports, including the presence of UN inspectors in the country, suggested that the attack could be a provocation by the opposition.

“All this cannot but suggest that once again we are dealing with a pre-planned provocation. This is supported by the fact that the criminal act was committed near Damascus at the very moment when a mission of UN experts had successfully started their work of investigating allegations of the possible use of chemical weapons there,” Lukashevich said in a statement.

Russia is a longtime ally and arms supplier to Assad.

Meanwhile, the head of the United Nations chemical weapons inspectors in Syria said reports of a nerve gas attack killing hundreds of people near Damascus should be investigated.

Britain, France and the United States will send a letter to UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon later on Wednesday to officially request a UN investigation into the alleged gas attack, a UN diplomat said on condition of anonymity.

Swedish scientist Ake Sellstrom told news agency TT that while he had only seen TV footage, the high number of casualties reported sounded suspicious.

“It sounds like something that should be looked into,” he told TT by phone from Damascus. “It will depend on whether any UN member state goes to the secretary general and says we should look at this event. We are in place.”

In response to the reports, Arab League Secretary General Nabil Elaraby called for United Nations inspectors to immediately investigate reports of the chemical attack, Egypt’s state news agency said.

“The secretary general said in a statement he was surprised this deplorable crime would happen during the visit of a team of international investigators with the United Nations who are already tasked with investigating chemical weapons use,” the official news agency MENA said.

“He called on the inspectors to head immediately to the eastern Ghouta (suburb of Damascus) to determine what happened.”

Britain said it would raise the reported chemical weapons attack by forces loyal to Syrian President Bashar Assad at the United Nations Security Council and called on Damascus to give UN inspectors access to the site.

“I am deeply concerned by reports that hundreds of people, including children, have been killed in airstrikes and a chemical weapons attack on rebel-held areas near Damascus,” British Foreign Secretary William Hague said in a statement.

Hague said reports of the attack, which has been denied outright by the Syrian government, remained uncorroborated and that Britain was urgently seeking more information.

“But it is clear that if they are verified, it would mark a shocking escalation in the use of chemical weapons in Syria,” he said, adding that Britain would try to hold to account anyone who used chemical weapons or ordered their use.

“I call on the Syrian Government to allow immediate access to the area for the UN team currently investigating previous allegations of chemical weapons use. The UK will be raising this incident at the UN Security Council,” said Hague.

Britain provides non-lethal assistance to rebels fighting to overthrow Assad, but has stopped short of sending them arms and has seen its diplomatic efforts to put pressure on Assad frustrated by Russia and China at the United Nations.

The United States is “deeply concerned” by reports that hundreds of Syrian civilians have been killed in Syria in a chemical attack perpetrated by the government of Bashar Assad, the White House said on Wednesday.

The US will thus formally request that the United Nations “urgently investigate this new allegation,” and has called an urgent meeting of the UN Security Council.

French President Francois Hollande called on United Nations inspectors to visit the site of the alleged chemical attack as well.

“With regard to the information coming out of Syria, the president asks that the UN goes to the site,” Najat Vallaud-Belkacem told a weekly news briefing.

Turkey also called on UN inspectors to look into the Syrian rebel reports and said it was monitoring the situation “with great concern”.

“Light must immediately be shed on these claims and the United Nations mission that was formed to investigate chemical weapons claims in Syria should look into these claims and reveal its findings,” the Foreign Ministry said in a statement.

“If these allegations are found to be true, it will be inevitable for the international community to take the necessary stance and give the necessary response to this savagery and crime against humanity,” it said.

Ankara, once an Assad ally but now one of his fiercest critics, has long been concerned about the possible use of Syrian chemical weapons against its own people.

Saudi Arabia also responded to the Syrian rebel reports and called for an emergency UN Security Council meeting, Saudi Foreign Minister Prince Saud al-Faisal said.

“It is time for the Security Council to shoulder its responsibility and overcome differences between its members and restore the confidence of the international community by convening immediately to issue a clear and deterrent resolution that will put an end to this human crisis,” Prince Saud said in a statement.

‘Iran would barely retaliate if its nuclear program were attacked’

August 21, 2013

‘Iran would barely retaliate if its nuclear program were attacked’ | The Times of Israel.

Israel doesn’t need a US green light to strike Tehran’s nukes, says Yuval Steinitz; Iran couldn’t cause much damage in response

August 21, 2013, 7:33 pm Minister of International Relations and Minister of Strategic Affairs Yuval Steinitz speaks to the press ahead of the weekly cabinet meeting at the PM's office in Jerusalem on June 23, 2013. (photo credit: Marc Israel Sellem/Pool/Flash90)

Minister of International Relations and Minister of Strategic Affairs Yuval Steinitz speaks to the press ahead of the weekly cabinet meeting at the PM’s office in Jerusalem on June 23, 2013. (photo credit: Marc Israel Sellem/Pool/Flash90)

Iran is unlikely to unleash a war in response to a military strike on its nuclear facilities, Strategic Affairs and Intelligence Minister Yuval Steinitz said, estimating that possible retaliation would include not more than “two or three days of missile fire” against Israel and/or Western targets in the region, causing “very limited damage.”

Speaking to The Times of Israel earlier this week, Steinitz predicted that Iran’s new President Hasan Rouhani will offer minor goodwill steps to signal his willingness to compromise on the nuclear question, which he will follow up with demands to ease the sanctions while the regime continues to inch toward weapons capability. Steinitz urged the international community not to be fooled by Rouhani’s seemingly moderate rhetoric, and called instead for an internationally endorsed deadline that, if crossed, would be followed by the destruction of the country’s military facilities.

In the second part of an extensive interview conducted in his Jerusalem office (read part 1), Steinitz, a close ally of Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, said he was not sure whether the United States was currently willing to attack the Iranian nuclear facilities. If so ordered, the American army is capable of “relatively easily, or at least quickly and efficiently,” taking out those facilities, the minister said.

“And I don’t think the result would be a world war or even a regional war,” the Likud minister added. “I think Iran’s possibilities to retaliate are very limited. It’s also not in their interest to start a drawn-out war with the US. After all, their relations in the region are rather sensitive. I suppose there would be a response of two or three days of missile fire, perhaps even on Israel, on American bases in the Gulf. But I don’t think it would be more than that — very limited damage.”

Steinitz’s assessment contradicted previous estimations of some Israeli government ministers, who said they expected hundreds of casualties in an Iranian retaliatory response if Israel attacked Iran.

Former home front defense minister Matan Vilnai last year spoke about possibly hundreds of rockets and missiles falling on Israeli population centers each day, with an anticipated 500 deaths. “It could be that there will be fewer fatalities, but it could be there will be more,” he said. Former defense minister Ehud Barak made similar assessments.

The Iranians have repeatedly threatened Israel with all-out war if it intervenes militarily to thwart the nuclear program: “If they attack, Iran’s deterrent power would deal a mortal blow to them and the Israeli death rate would not be less than 10,000,” a senior member of Iran’s Expediency Council and former Revolutionary Guards Corps commander said in October.

‘There is no third way, there is nothing in the middle, there is no more room to maneuver. Enough is enough’

However, Steinitz said, Iran is aware that the US military is far superior to its own armed forces — so much so that it could destroy Iran’s nuclear facilities “within a few hours.” In addition, Iranian targets are exposed and vulnerable to airstrikes, he said. “The Iranians know that; they understand that they are in a sensitive situation and that their capability to retaliate is actually limited.”

Steinitz refused to talk about potential Israeli plans for a strike on Iran’s nuclear facilities, but he did reject reports about Washington vetoing an attack. “Israel doesn’t need a green light or a red light,” he said, noting that US President Barack Obama has said the Jewish state needs to be able to defend itself by itself. “Between Israel and the US there is a relationship of mutual respect.”

Promises by American leaders that Tehran will not be allowed to get an atomic bomb, and their statements “that all options are on the table,” are insufficient, he said. Rather, the US or NATO need to issue an explicit ultimatum, with a deadline, that makes plain that if Tehran does not comply with relevant United Nations Security Council resolutions, Iran “shouldn’t be surprised” if its nuclear facilities are attacked.

UK Foreign Secretary William Hague and International Relations Minister Yuval Steinitz in London, July 24, 2013 (photo credit: Spokesperson of Intelligence and Strategic Affairs Ministry)

UK Foreign Secretary William Hague and International Relations Minister Yuval Steinitz in London, July 24, 2013 (photo credit: Spokesperson of Intelligence and Strategic Affairs Ministry)

Since Rouhani was elected in June, the new president has signaled an intention to steer away from his predecessor Mahmoud Ahmadinejad’s belligerent rhetoric and achieve a diplomatic solution to the standoff with the West. He has promised a change of course regarding negotiations with Western powers regarding the nuclear program but vowed not to abandon it entirely. “Reconsidering foreign policy doesn’t mean a change in principles because principles remain unchanged,” Rouhani said Saturday. “But change in the methods, performance and tactics, which are the demands of the people, must be carried out.”

According to Steinitz, Rouhani is a “wolf in sheep’s clothing” who is planning to win over the West by making minor compromises while buying time to complete the regime’s race toward a nuclear weapons capability. The Iranian leadership needs to be given a clear choice, the Israeli minister said: Give up your nuclear program, enabling the West to ease the sanctions, or continue with your nuclear program and destroy your economy even more, while risking a military attack.

“There is no third way, there is nothing in the middle. There is no more room to maneuver,” Steinitz said. “Enough is enough.”

Steinitz said he was ready to bet that Rouhani’s first step in the forthcoming negotiations with the so-called P5+1 — the five permanent members of the UN Security Council and Germany — will be to look for the middle way, neither dropping the nuclear program nor seeking further confrontation.

“He will come to the West, just like he did in 2003 [when Rouhani was Iran’s chief nuclear negotiator], and say: ‘Let’s make an interim deal. I’ll make a few concessions here, you will make some concessions there,” Steinitz said. The Iranians might even offer unilateral gestures, such as, for example, halting uranium enrichment at the Qom facility for three or four months, in a bid to appease the P5+1, Steinitz predicted.

“But after that, [Rouhani] will request reciprocity. He will say, ‘Now show me that you are easing the sanctions so that I can prove to the Iranian people that this approach pays.’ He will come with a concept of confidence-building measures. He will say there is no trust, and trust is built step by step,” Steinitz said. “That will be his strategy. Therefore it is extremely important not to give him this room to maneuver.”

By voting for Rouhani — billed as the least favorite candidate of Iran’s supreme leader, Ayatollah Khamenei, because of his perceived moderation — the Iranian people made clear that if they have to choose between the economy and the nuclear program, they prefer the former, Steinitz said. “It’s possible that this will lead to something.” However, he emphasized, now is the time not to ease sanctions but to reinforce the message that there are only two options: giving up the nuclear program or face more sanctions and a military attack.

European foreign ministers and intelligence officers have shown “great understanding” for Israel’s position on Iran, asserted Steinitz, who is also international relations minister and recently returned from official visits to London, Paris and Berlin. “I think most European experts, those who are experts in the subject matter, really understand the danger.”

Responding to EU foreign policy chief Catherine Ashton’s declaration Sunday that she will “soon” meet the new Iranian foreign minister to renew negotiations, Steinitz said: “Ashton is one thing, but Germany, France and Britain aren’t less important parts of this process.”

Still, he warned: “If Catherine Ashton will be impressed by the smile on Rouhani’s face — and he’s going to smile — and by his moderate rhetoric, and offers in exchange for these smiles to ease the sanctions, she hurts the chances for a diplomatic solution.”

The sanctions are “very effective,” Steinitz said, citing research carried out by his ministry that suggests they have cost Iran’s economy $80 billion to $120 billion. The Islamic Republic’s GDP is around $450 billion, he said. If the sanctions are maintained for another six to 12 months, he said, the Iranian economy stood to collapse.

Yet the sanctions can only succeed if they are backed by a credible military threat, Steinitz insisted. If the Iranians feel they are hurting economically but believe they could eventually become a nuclear power, that will galvanize the necessary staying power on their part, the minister argued. But if they know that the international community will destroy their nuclear sites if the program advances beyond a certain point, they will feel they are hurting for no reason and be ready to give up their nuclear ambitions for the sake of their economy, he said.

“Even Persians cannot convince themselves that it makes sense to pay something for nothing,” he said. “Therefore, when you want to increase the chances of achieving a breakthrough through diplomatic means, you have to increase the sanctions and you have to increase the military threat.”