Archive for August 2013

‘US leaks on alleged Syria strikes could be attempt to harm Israeli interests’

August 2, 2013

‘US leaks on alleged Syria strikes could be attempt to harm Israeli interests’ | JPost | Israel News.

 

08/02/2013 11:36
Leaks attributed to US officials about alleged Israeli strikes in Syria are coming from unfriendly elements, experts say; Assessment: Elements in US intelligence might be involved, not Obama Administration.

Smoke rises in Syrian port city of Latakia [file]

Smoke rises in Syrian port city of Latakia [file] Photo: REUTERS

 

Unnamed US officials leaked information Thursday on alleged Israeli air strikes in Syria, and told The New York Times they expect an additional attack by Israel in the near future.

The sources, described by the Times as “American intelligence analysts,” discussed what they said were classified assessments, according to which a July 5 IAF strike on a Syrian facility housing Russian surface-to-sea missiles in Latakia failed to destroy them all.

Additional air strikes would be required to complete the job, the sources said.

The reports follow previous leaks by US defense officials on alleged Israeli strikes.

The American leaks have raised concerns among some observers in Israel that Syrian President Bashar Assad would be unable to refrain from responding to the attacks due to the embarrassment he would incur.

“The mere fact that such leaks happen often indicates that the Pentagon leadership does not have Israel’s interests at heart,” Prof. Efraim Inbar, director of the Begin-Sadat Center for Strategic Studies at Bar-Ilan University, told The Jerusalem Post. “It is difficult to assess the motivation of such leaks.”

Inbar listed several possible motives, including the wish to prevent future Israeli action.

Other possibilities include an attempt by Pentagon sources to embarrass US President Barack Obama, by pointing out the “ease” with which Israel allegedly operates in Syria at a time that the White House says US intervention is too complex and risky.

Alternatively, the leaks might stem from an effort to deter Russia from transferring advanced weapons to Syria.

Other possible motives include sending a signal to Saudi Arabia and Turkey that a US ally is harming Assad, or maintaining a good relationship between the Pentagon sources and the media, Inbar stated.

“What is clear is that they do not come from elements friendly to Israel, because Israel’s preferred modus operandi is low profile. [This is] intended to allow Assad to refrain from reacting,” he added.

Dr. Dan Scheuftan, director of the National Security Studies Center at the University of Haifa, said the identity of the sources was far from clear, but that he was sure it did not come from the Obama administration, which he said has a very good and cooperative relationship with Israel.

Scheuftan, a visiting professor in the Department of Government at Georgetown University, said he was not even sure the sources are really American as claimed, but that if they are, “it’s not the US government.”

“Coordination with the American government now is better than in the past,” Scheuftan said, adding that the US president would not have ordered the leak. He also doubted that it came from the Pentagon’s leadership.

The American intelligence community has a track record of attempting to influence political decisions, Scheuftan said, citing the National Intelligence Estimate of 2007, which claimed that Iran had frozen its nuclear program, as an example of politicized intelligence maneuvers.

But Scheuftan said he doubted the leak was the result of any kind of official move by the intelligence community.

“It could be many elements. US intelligence has played very dangerous games in the political field. I can’t rule out someone in US intelligence as a possibility,” he said. “There could be elements within American intelligence that are interested in damaging Israel or promoting a certain policy.

Scheuftan agreed with Inbar that the leak could be trying to harm Israel’s interests.

“If the source is really from the US, it could be someone who has access to this information and wants to damage Israel.”

The Times report said that “Israel carried out an attack on July 5 near Latakia to destroy the missiles, which Russia had sold to Syria. While the warehouse was destroyed, American intelligence analysts have now concluded that at least some of the Yakhont missiles had been removed from their launchers and moved from the warehouse before the attack.”

The report noted that the officials were sharing “classified information,” adding that the Assad regime attempted to cover up the fact that some of the missiles survived the air strike by setting fire to missile launchers and vehicles at the targeted facility.

The officials went on to say that Israeli fighter jets flying over the eastern Mediterranean fired air-to-surface missiles in the July strike, without entering Syrian airspace.

“The route of the Israeli aircraft led to some erroneous reports that the attack had been carried out by an Israeli submarine,” the Times report said.

Foreign media reports have attributed four Israeli air strikes on targets in Syria in 2013, reportedly to prevent the transfer of strategic arms to Hezbollah, which has sent fighters to support Assad in the Syrian civil war.

These include an alleged strike on a convoy ferrying SA-17 air defense missiles from Syria to Hezbollah in January, and two strikes in May in the Damascus area, targeting storage facilities housing guided, medium-range, Iranian Fateh-110 missiles.

Following the reports of strikes in May, a Syrian army post near the Israeli border opened fire at IDF soldiers patrolling the frontier.

The IDF returned fire with a guided Tamuz surface-to-surface missile, destroying the post and hitting two Syrian soldiers.

There were no injuries on the Israeli side.

A few days earlier, two Syrian mortar shells slammed into Mount Hermon.

Speaking shortly after reports surfaced on the air strikes in May, Defense Minister Moshe Ya’alon said Israel is not “interfering in the Syrian civil war,” but warned that Israel’s red lines are clearly defined, “whether it’s transferring quality weapons to a terrorist organization or violating our sovereignty along the border.”

“We are continuing with the same policy we set,” he said.

“As soon as there is fire from Syrian territory that endangers us, or enters our territory and violates our sovereignty, we identify the source of fire and destroy it.”

On May 30, Assad told Hezbollah’s Al-Manar television station that Syria would immediately retaliate for any future Israeli strike.

Thanks to Syria, Timing of Looming Iran Crisis Is Fortuitous

August 2, 2013

Thanks to Syria, Timing of Looming Iran Crisis Is Fortuitous « Commentary Magazine.

As I noted yesterday, the coming months will be decisive with regard to Iran’s nuclear program. This is an issue on which everyone would prefer if crunch time were never reached. But if a showdown must come, the timing couldn’t be more fortuitous–because it’s impossible to imagine a better geostrategic moment for military action against Iran than now.

One of the biggest concerns that opponents of military action in both Israel and America have always raised is the havoc Iran could wreak in response an attack. For Israelis, the main fear is massive missile attacks by both Iran and its allies; for Washington, the main concern is Iran’s ability to disrupt oil trade from the Gulf and attack American allies in that region.

But thanks to the Syrian civil war, the threat of Iranian retaliation has been dramatically reduced. Partly, of course, that’s because two of Iran’s principal allies, Syria and Hezbollah, are too preoccupied with that war to be able to mount serious reprisals against anyone. But even more importantly, the tremendous importance Iran attaches to Syria gives both Israel and America a powerful lever with which to restrain any Iranian reprisals.

Iran has poured billions of dollars and thousands of crack fighters–from Hezbollah, Iranian-backed militias in Iraq, and its own Revolutionary Guards Corps–into propping up Bashar Assad’s regime in Syria, because it deems Assad’s survival strategically vital. As one senior Iranian cleric explained in February, “Syria is the 35th province [of Iran] and a strategic province for us. If the enemy attacks us and wants to take either Syria or Khuzestan [in western Iran], the priority for us is to keep Syria….If we keep Syria, we can get Khuzestan back too, but if we lose Syria, we cannot keep Tehran.”

And so far, the effort seems to be working. Assad’s forces have dealt the Syrian rebels several serious blows recently; they retook the strategic town of Qusair in June and made significant gains this week in the rebel stronghold of Homs. Whether the current constellation of forces opposing Assad can reverse this tide on their own is an open question.

But there are two players who have thus far chosen to sit out the game who are definitely capable of swinging the war in the rebels’ favor: America and Israel. Both have the capacity to mount airstrikes that would destroy Assad’s air force and tanks, which have hitherto given him a huge advantage over the rebels. And both could make it clear to Iran that they would do so if its reprisals crossed any red lines.

Though America has the military might to threaten Iran directly, Syria is a much easier target, with the added bonus that any such operation would be immensely popular with its Arab allies. Hence for Washington, the ability to threaten Syria lowers the cost of deterring Iran. Israel, in contrast, lacks the military capacity to threaten Iran directly with anything bigger than a targeted operation against its military facilities. Thus for Jerusalem, the ability to threaten Syria is the difference between having almost no deterrence against Iranian reprisals and having very substantial deterrence.

That Syria’s civil war erupted when it did was pure serendipity. But knowing how to take advantage of serendipity has always been a crucial element of statesmanship.

Iran’s Rohani Has Limited Time to Avert Nuclear Showdown – Bloomberg

August 2, 2013

Iran’s Rohani Has Limited Time to Avert Nuclear Showdown – Bloomberg.

The inauguration of Iran’s President Hassan Rohani in two days restarts the countdown toward a confrontation over the Islamic Republic’s nuclear program as it approaches Israel’s “red line” for military action.

After a decade of fruitless negotiations and tightening economic sanctions, the next 12 months may make or break the international effort to prevent Iran from acquiring nuclear weapons. Such weapons would pose an existential threat to Israel, endanger the U.S. and Europe, and trigger a nuclear arms race in the Persian Gulf region.

Rohani, who takes office Aug. 4 and was considered a relative moderate among the candidates permitted to run by the country’s Guardian Council, has spurred hopes in some quarters that Iran may be willing to curb its nuclear efforts. That view isn’t shared by Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, who calls Rohani a “wolf in sheep’s clothing,” and Iran’s nuclear advances are narrowing the window of time to avoid a conflict.

“There is a 75 percent to 80 percent chance that issue will have come to a head” by this time next year, said John McLaughlin, a former deputy director of the Central Intelligence Agency.

As negotiations stalled during the wait for the election to choose President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad’s successor, Iran increased its stockpile of medium-enriched uranium and added centrifuges capable of shortening the “breakout” time to produce enough highly enriched fuel for a nuclear device.

The country could have a nuclear weapon within a year if Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei chooses to do so, according to former U.S. Marine General James Mattis, who retired in March as commander of the U.S. Central Command.

Mideast Challenges

Iran joins Syria and Egypt on a mushrooming list of Mideast challenges for President Barack Obama. During a March visit to Israel, he said the U.S. “will do what is necessary” to keep Iran from acquiring nuclear weapons. Netanyahu has renewed his warnings of Israeli military action amid Iran’s nuclear advances and talk in the West of Rohani’s moderation.

“I’m convinced that last year Prime Minister Netanyahu wanted to attack Iran and was looking for some kind of green light, or at least a yellow light from Washington — and he didn’t get it,” said Gary Samore, who at the time was White House coordinator for arms control and weapons of mass destruction, proliferation and terrorism.

Obama has said there’s still time for talks and assured Netanyahu — as well as declaring publicly — that “all options are on the table” to thwart Iran’s nuclear ambitions.

Agreement Sought

By pressuring Iran with sanctions, the U.S. and other world powers are seeking an initial agreement that halts its production of 20 percent enriched uranium — a step short of weapons grade — and removes its stockpile of medium-enriched uranium so it can’t be diverted for weapons.

Iran says its enrichment program is intended solely for electric power generation and medical research. Netanyahu in June said Iran needs to stop all uranium enrichment activities so that the Islamic Republic won’t get nuclear weapons.

The negotiating window will shut if Iran moves to avoid International Atomic Energy Agency monitoring, such as kicking out global inspectors. In that case, “I think it would be impossible to hold back the Israelis,” Samore told a security conference in Aspen, Colorado, last month. “In fact, it would probably be impossible to hold back the United States.”

U.S. intelligence agencies have assessed that Khamenei, who has ultimate authority over the nuclear program, hasn’t decided to produce a weapon, though Iran is developing the ability to do so quickly.

Three Paths

The situation is complicated because Iran is advancing along three paths, each with weapons implications.

One is the production of 20 percent enriched uranium, which is the initial focus of Western concerns because it can quickly be purified to weapons grade. Netanyahu’s “red line” for a military strike is tied to the amount of medium-enriched uranium needed for a warhead, about 240 kilograms (529 pounds).

In May, the Vienna-based IAEA reported that Iran’s stockpile totaled 182 kilograms (401 pounds), up from 167 kilograms (368 pounds) three months earlier, after removing some for use in a reactor making medical isotopes. At that rate, Iran by mid-2014 would have enough to make one weapon, an amount the U.S. says is far more than needed to fuel its one existing medical research reactor and four others being planned.

Iran’s second effort involves thousands of new centrifuges at facilities at Natanz, 209 kilometers (130 miles) southeast of Tehran, and Fordow, near the holy city Qom, that cut the time needed to convert power-reactor grade uranium to weapons material. Iran has 5,000 centrifuges ready to join 12,000 in operation, Ahmadinejad said July 28, according to the state-run Mehr news agency.

Elude Safeguards

The growing number of centrifuges will give Iran the ability by mid-2014 to dash to a bomb while evading IAEA safeguards, according to a report this week by David Albright and Christina Walrond of the Washington-based Institute for Science and International Security. With enough centrifuges, “there simply would not be enough time to organize an international diplomatic or military response,” according to Albright, a former nuclear inspector, and Walrond, who urge talks on capping the number of Iranian centrifuges.

Iran’s third path is a heavy-water reactor at Arak, 241 kilometers (150 miles) south of Tehran, that’s to enter operation in mid-2014 to produce isotopes for medical and agricultural use, officials say. This type of reactor could yield about 10 kilograms (22 pounds) of plutonium a year — enough for about two nuclear weapons — if the weapons-grade material is separated from irradiated fuel, according to ISIS.

Iraq Attack

Israel in 1981 bombed a similar facility that was nearing completion in Iraq, and in 2007 it destroyed what allegedly was a similar heavy-water reactor secretly being built in Syria with North Korean assistance. Any attack on Arak would have to come in the next six to nine months — before fuel is loaded — to avoid spreading radioactive material.

To stop Iran’s programs, the U.S. has led an international effort to impose an array of sanctions that have hit Iran’s economy by sharply reducing Iran’s oil revenue, trade and international financial transactions.

In December, Economy Minister Shamseddin Hosseini said oil revenue had dropped 50 percent due to sanctions, according to the Tehran-based Khabar Online website. The national currency, the rial, lost more than half its value in the past year before Rohani’s June 14 election, and the International Monetary Fund forecasts a decline in gross domestic product of 1.3 percent this year, following a 1.9 percent contraction in 2012.

New Talks

Rohani, 64, who was Iran’s chief nuclear negotiator from 2003 to 2005, owes his election in part to public discontent over economic conditions, and he won’t be able to improve conditions without sanctions relief.

The six world powers negotiating with Iran — the U.S., U.K., France, Russia, China and Germany — are prepared for new talks and think Rohani’s election may provide an opportunity for progress, a Western diplomat told reporters in Brussels on July 19, speaking on condition of anonymity.

“The atmospherics and the mood have really changed,” Ray Takeyh, a Mideast analyst at the Council on Foreign Relations in Washington, said in a phone interview. “Given that change of atmosphere, I suspect that the prospects of confrontation, which I always thought were low, are likely to be even lower.”

That may depend on what Rohani does in the next few months. An initial test will be Iran’s response to the outstanding proposal from the Western nations, which call themselves the P5+1 because all but Germany are permanent members of the United Nations Security Council.

Western Proposal

They’ve offered to ease trade sanctions on petrochemicals, precious metals and civilian aircraft parts and to provide technical cooperation on nuclear energy if Iran halts production of 20 percent-enriched uranium and ships much of its stockpile out of the country, according to diplomats involved.

That would only be a first step, and wouldn’t give Iran relief from the main sanctions on the oil and financial sectors.

“The Iranians will be in for some sticker shock,” Samore said. “They’re going to have to pay a very high price in terms of limiting their nuclear program.”

Kenneth Katzman, a Mideast analyst at the Congressional Research Service, said he doesn’t expect the U.S. to alter its negotiating strategy following Rohani’s election.

“There’s a very deep hesitancy in the United States to make any advance concessions to Iran until the U.S. sees what Rohani wants to do and what he can do,” said Katzman, speaking at the Heritage Foundation, a Washington policy group.

Samore said an early test of whether Rohani can take a different path is whether Iran accepts Obama’s longstanding offer of a bilateral channel for talks. He called the P5+1 negotiations a relatively ineffective route toward a deal.

“I’ve sat through those meetings, and it’s really kind of staged event,” he said. To hammer out an agreement, he said, “you really have to get the two critical parties — the U.S. and Iran — in a room together and do some give and take.”

Off Topic – NSA spy leaks: Snowden thanks Russia for asylum

August 1, 2013

BBC News – NSA spy leaks: Snowden thanks Russia for asylum.

(For once, Russia has behaved ethically while the US has sunk to the level of the former Soviet Union. Totalitarianism has no future, whether Communist or Oligarchic.  LET FREEDOM RING!!! – JW )

Rossiya 24 TV footage of Edward Snowden leaving Moscow airport
Grainy TV footage showed Mr Snowden, centre, leaving the airport

US intelligence leaker Edward Snowden has thanked Russia for granting him temporary asylum, allowing him to leave the Moscow airport where he has been holed up since June.

In a statement, Mr Snowden also accused the US government of showing “no respect” for international law.

The US has charged Mr Snowden with leaking details of its electronic surveillance programmes.

Washington has expressed its “extreme disappointment” at Russia’s decision.

For someone willing to disclose the dirty secrets of others, Edward Snowden is infuriatingly keen on keeping private.

That, at least, is a view of journalists, dozens of whom were patrolling the inside of Moscow’s Sheremetyevo Airport trying to get a glimpse of this famous fugitive.

Each hint of Snowden’s possible appearance brought about a sea of cameras and a forest of microphone holders. Passions ran high, some cameras were trampled upon.

All in vain. Edward Snowden slipped away in a taxi, an unremarkable grey sedan.

That is, if we believe Russian lawyer Anatoly Kucherena, who has handled Mr Snowden’s asylum in Russia. According to him, the ex-CIA contractor took the taxi to a location of his own choosing.

Many Russians find it improbable that the vast Russian security machine is content simply to see Mr Snowden go.

Then again, he’s left the airport on Leningradskoe Shosse, a road notorious for its traffic jams.

Should Russian Federal Security Service change its mind, it can probably find Edward Snowden still stuck in traffic not far from the place which was his home for more than a month.

White House spokesman Jay Carney said they were considering whether a meeting between US President Barack Obama and his Russian counterpart Vladimir Putin in September should go ahead.

The latest developments came amid fresh revelations from the cache of documents leaked by Mr Snowden.

Documents seen by the UK’s Guardian newspaper appear to show the US government paid at least £100m ($150m) to the UK’s GCHQ spy agency to secure access to and influence over Britain’s intelligence gathering programmes.

‘Pursued man’

Mr Snowden’s lawyer, Anatoly Kucherena, said the former CIA contractor had left Sheremetyevo Airport at about 14:00 local time (10:00 GMT) for an undisclosed destination.

Showing a photocopy of the document issued to his client, he described Mr Snowden as “the most pursued man on the planet”.

Mr Kucherena said Mr Snowden was being looked after by a legal expert from the whistleblowing organisation Wikileaks.

Russia’s Federal Migration Service later officially confirmed that Mr Snowden had been granted temporary asylum for one year, Interfax news agency reported.

In a statement issued on the Wikileaks website, Mr Snowden said: “Over the past eight weeks we have seen the Obama administration show no respect for international or domestic law, but in the end the law is winning.

“I thank the Russian Federation for granting me asylum in accordance with its laws and international obligations.”

President Obama and President Putin had been scheduled to meet on the sidelines of a G20 summit in early September in Saint Petersburg.

However, Mr Carney said: “We’re extremely disappointed that the Russian government would take this step despite our very clear and lawful requests in public and in private to have Mr Snowden expelled to the United States to face the charges against him.

“We’re evaluating the utility of a summit in light of this and other issues.”

Earlier, US Senator Robert Menendez, chairman of the powerful Senate Foreign Relations Committee, described Thursday’s development as “a setback to US-Russia relations”.

“Edward Snowden is a fugitive who belongs in a United States courtroom, not a free man deserving of asylum in Russia,” he said.

Republican Senator John McCain also issued a stinging rebuke, saying Russia’s actions were “a disgrace and a deliberate effort to embarrass the United States”.

“It is a slap in the face of all Americans. Now is the time to fundamentally rethink our relationship with Putin’s Russia. We need to deal with the Russia that is, not the Russia we might wish for,” he said.

Mr Putin has said previously that Mr Snowden could receive asylum in Russia on condition he stopped leaking US secrets.

The Russian president’s foreign policy adviser, Yury Ushakov, said the situation was “rather insignificant” and should not influence relations with the US.

Information leaked by Mr Snowden first surfaced in the Guardian newspaper in early June.

It showed that the National Security Agency (NSA) was collecting the telephone records of tens of millions of Americans.

The systems analyst also disclosed that the NSA had tapped directly into the servers of nine internet firms including Facebook, Google, Microsoft and Yahoo to track online communication in a surveillance programme known as Prism.

Prism was allegedly also used by Britain’s electronic eavesdropping agency, GCHQ. The agency was further accused of sharing vast amounts of data with the NSA.

Allegations that the NSA had spied on its EU allies caused indignation in Europe.

Will Iran Get a Bomb—or Be Bombed Itself—This Year?

August 1, 2013

Will Iran Get a Bomb—or Be Bombed Itself—This Year? – Graham Allison – The Atlantic.

Placing a bet on today’s biggest foreign policy issue.
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Israel’s Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu points to a red line he has drawn on the graphic of a bomb at the 67th United Nations General Assembly. (Lucas Jackson/Reuters)

That Iran’s nuclear challenge poses the most urgent threat to peace and security today is widely agreed across the national security community, and many argue that 2013 will be the decisive year for this issue.

As former Mossad head Ephraim Halevy notes, Israel “has long believed that mid-2013 would be an hour of decision in its dealings with Iran.” Henry Kissinger has recently warned that “we are in the last year where you can say a negotiation can conceivably succeed…. If nothing happens, the president will have to make some really tough decisions.”

There can be no question whatsoever that in 2013 Iran could get a bomb; there is also no question that Iran could be bombed. But my best judgement is that in 2013 Iran will not get a bomb, and Iran will not be bombed. To be precise, I am prepared to bet $51 of my money against $49 of those who want to bet that by December 31, 2013, Iran will either have a nuclear weapon or have been the target of a major bombing attack.

My conclusion is not meant as a counsel of complacency. Anyone who believes that there is a 20 percent chance that Iran could either get a bomb or be bombed within the next year should recognize that the consequences of either outcome drive this issue to the top of the foreign policy agenda, not only for Israel but for the United States.

Assessing Iran’s nuclear challenge requires confronting an array of complex technical issues. Advocates who find these details too demanding elevate their arguments to higher level abstractions. On the other hand, too many specialists take a deep dive into the technicalities in a way that produces fog, only to emerge in the end with recommendations that they claim follow from unfathomable analysis. This essay seeks to walk a fine line between technical realities, on the one hand, and policy debate, on the other. What follows are the answers to 12 key questions about Iran’s nuclear challenge:

1. When will Iran get a nuclear weapon?

My unambiguous answer is: it depends. Specifically, it depends on 1) Iran’s decision to do so; 2) the path Iran chooses to a bomb; 3) the obstacles Iran faces along each path to a bomb; and 4) the costs and benefits to Iran of acquiring a bomb versus stopping at a base camp on the path to a bomb.

On the first point, I agree with the assessment of the U.S. intelligence community, as stated by Director of National Intelligence Clapper in March 2013: “We assess Iran is developing nuclear capabilities to enhance its security, prestige, and regional influence and give it the ability to develop nuclear weapons, should a decision be made to do so. We do not know if Iran will eventually decide to build nuclear weapons.”

When will Iran get a nuclear bomb? My personal best bet is: not in 2013.

2. Where does Iran stand on the road to a nuclear bomb?

Tables 1 and 2 present graphically a “staircase” to making a bomb and note the steps Iran has already climbed.

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Table 1

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Table 2

This reminds us starkly that Iran has overcome the most significant obstacle to making a bomb: it has mastered the technologies to enrich uranium indigenously. It has operated production lines to produce a stockpile of low enriched uranium (LEU) that, after further enrichment, would provide the cores for more than six nuclear bombs. Since 2010 it has been enriching uranium to a level of 20 percent (medium enriched uranium or MEU). As a technical fact, that means it has done 90 percent of the work required to produce the highly enriched uranium (HEU) needed for an explodable nuclear bomb.

In a football metaphor, Iran has marched down the field into our red zone and now stands just 10 yards away from our goal line (Table 3).

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As the graph of Iran’s accumulation of enriched uranium demonstrates, despite newspaper headlines about a series of hostile attacks and sanctions, the trend line has progressed, uninterrupted (Table 4).

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Today, Iran has accumulated seven bombs’ worth of low- and medium-enriched uranium. Today, Iran is operating more than 10,000 centrifuges, producing an additional 230 kilograms of LEU and 15 kilograms of MEU monthly. When it brings all of its installed centrifuges into operation, it will triple its MEU production rate. It has also announced the installation of several thousand more advanced centrifuges, at least three times more efficient than the current generation.

3. On the current path, using the known facilities, when is the earliest that Iran could get a nuclear bomb?

From where it stands today, using known LEU or MEU at known facilities, Iran would require several months to build a bomb. Estimates for how long Iran would take to produce HEU and manufacture a bomb, sometimes down to the exact day, are announced by pundits with a deceptive confidence. Roughly speaking, however, from today my best judgment is that it would take Iran at least one to two months to produce the material for its first bomb, using its declared facilities, and at least another month to fabricate this material into a weapon.

The more important related question is: could Iran produce enough HEU for its first bomb using its known facilities before the U.S. discovered it? U.S. intelligence believes that the answer is clearly no. IAEA inspectors visit these facilities every week or two. Moreover, from press reports, it is evident that they are not governments’ only source of information about Iran’s program. The U.S. would know about diversion of material or operation of facilities to produce HEU well before that effort was completed.

The Iranians are aware that, as the U.S. Director of National Intelligence noted in March 2013, they “could not divert safeguarded material and produce a weapon-worth of HEU before this activity is discovered.” As long as this is the case, the risk of a sudden, undetected “break out” to the bomb is low.

4. How else might Iran get the bomb in 2013?

Knowing that that any attempt to “break out” to a bomb using its declared facilities would be discovered and interrupted decisively by the U.S. or Israel, Iran’s leaders are certain to have considered alternatives. The next path they must have considered is to “sneak out” using secret, undeclared facilities.

We should remember that Iran’s current declared enrichment facilities were previously secret — until they were exposed by foreign intelligence services. Had they not been discovered, one or both of them could already have produced the HEU for Iran’s first bomb. Many argue that Tehran must be wary of constructing further secret facilities, fearing that it could be caught by foreign intelligence services yet again. But it is certainly possible that they have done so and thus have an additional path to the bomb.

The defining differences between the “break out” scenario on which most observers focus, and the more likely “sneak out” option are two. First, in breaking out, Iran would take actions that “break the glass,” sounding an alarm; in sneaking out, it would create a fog of confusion beneath which it would divert LEU or MEU to a secret site for further enrichment. It has been suggested, for example, that Iran could stage an explosion that releases radioactivity at Natanz, blame Israel for an attack, declare the area quarantined to inspectors and, under this cover, move LEU or MEU. Second, sneaking out requires a secret site to which the material would be moved and where centrifuges would produce HEU that would be shaped into uranium metal and used for a bomb.

Table 5 reminds us that in addition to building a bomb, overtly or covertly, there is a third possible path to a bomb.

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Iran could buy one. As former Secretary of Defense Robert Gates famously said, North Korea has demonstrated its readiness to “sell anything they have to anybody who has the cash to buy it.” Unfortunately, North Korea has already established a precedent for such a deal. It sold Syria a plutonium-producing Yongbyon-style reactor that would by now have produced enough plutonium for Syria’s first bomb — if Israel had not bombed it in 2007. If the Iranian Supreme Leader concluded that nuclear weapons were the only way to guarantee the survival of his regime, buying a bomb for a billion dollars could be an attractive bargain.

Are such scenarios very likely in 2013? No. Are there technical reasons why either could not occur? No.

5. How has the U.S. attempted to prevent Iran’s acquiring a nuclear bomb?

For the past decade, the principal strategy followed by the U.S. government under both Republican and Democratic administrations has been to declare demands: Iran must not do A; Iran will not be permitted to do B (after Iran has done A); Iran cannot do Z. Despite the limits of a “strategy” that consists essentially of repeating one’s demands, this remains an American favorite.

In addition, the U.S. has led an effort to impose economic pain on Iran through sanctions. Initially, these were largely symbolic. In the past two years, however, the U.S. and key allies have begun taking actions that are actually biting (see Tables 6 and 7).

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Table 6

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Table 7

If one believes what one reads in the papers, the program of sanctions has been complemented by a series of covert actions including cyberwar or cyber-sabotage that included Stuxnet, Duqu, and Flame, assassinations of key scientists in the Iranian nuclear program, and unnatural explosions at key Iranian missile and steel plants.

6. Is a deal that stops Iran short of a bomb possible? Is it possible to identify the terms of a deal that would be better for both Iran and the United States than either attacking Iran or acquiescing in an Iranian bomb?

My answer is unambiguously yes. Having been engaged in sustained consultations with U.S. government policymakers on this issue for most of the past decade, I can identify at least two occasions on which, viewed simply from the perspective of the recognized national interests of both parties, there seems to me to have been a zone of agreement. In 2003-2004, after the U.S. had toppled Saddam in three weeks without breaking a sweat, Iran feared that it might be next and appeared eager to accept an arrangement in which its enrichment activity would be constrained to a single cascade and subject to full transparency. Since 2009, the U.S. and Iran have been circling around potential terms of an agreement that would cap all enrichment at 5 percent; stop expansion of facilities for enriching to 20 percent; swap current materials enriched to 20 percent for fuel assemblies for the Tehran Research Reactor (TRR); provide maximum transparency; and include credible threats to impose catastrophic costs on Iran if the agreement were violated. Each time an agreement appeared within reach, however, one or the other inserts yet another demand or consideration that scuppers the deal.

Imagine that this issue today were given to Metternich and Talleyrand in 1815, or Kissinger and Zhou Enlai in 1972. They would find reaching agreement easier than the negotiations they concluded successfully.

7. Why then is it hard to reach an agreement?

Failure has been more a function of confusion and division within the parties than between them. In my course at Harvard, I try to help students understand that making one agreement in international relations requires three deals: first a deal within party A; then a deal within party B; and then sufficient overlap between each party’s minimum requirements that diplomacy can reach agreement. When Iran was motivated to offer terms that the U.S. should have found acceptable in 2003-2004, the U.S. was unwilling to accept them. When the U.S. was prepared to make a deal in 2009, Iran was too divided to accept it.

The outcome of Iran’s June election presents a new window of opportunity. Even in the constrained, semi-democratic Iranian political system, the population’s decisive preference for a new approach was clear. President-elect Rouhani has stated clearly that, while “extremists on both sides are determined to maintain the state of hostility and hatred between the two states, logic says that there should be a change of direction in order to turn a new page in this unstable relationship and minimize the state of hostility and mistrust between the two countries.” While the sharp partisan divide in Washington means that any compromise by the U.S. will be loudly opposed, President Obama, having won a second term, has considerable room to maneuver.

8. When will we come to the crossroad at which a president will be forced to choose between attacking and acquiescing?

Israeli Prime Minister Netanyahu will continue to press for an early decision, arguing that sanctions are ineffective and only give Iran more time to expand its nuclear program. Expect President Obama, key members of the Israeli national security establishment, and others to continue arguing that sanctions and covert actions must be allowed more time to work, and that new sanctions and covert actions will be even more effective.

At the UN last September, Netanyahu drew a clear red line, near to but short of a nuclear bomb, and threatened that crossing it would trigger an attack on Iran. But his speech revealed his own frustration about the predicament in which he finds himself. He knows that Israel and the U.S. have been complicit in a drama in which they have repeatedly drawn red lines, asserted that Iran would never be allowed to cross them but, after watching Iran cross the line, retreated to the next operational obstacle on the path to a bomb, and declared it to be the real red line (see Table 8).

Slide8edited.jpg

Netanyahu himself was sounding the alarm as long ago as 1992, when he suggested Iran was “3 to 5 years” from a bomb; in 1996, he warned Congress that the “deadline for preventing an Iranian nuclear bomb is getting extremely close.” Since then, Israeli politicians and officials have announced numerous “last chances” and “points of no return.” In 2003, the head of Israeli military intelligence forecast that Iran would soon cross the “point of no return” at which “it would require no further outside aid to bring the program to fruition.” A year later, Prime Minister Ariel Sharon warned that Iran would cross this point if it were allowed to develop a “technical capability” for operating an enrichment facility. As Iran approached that capability, Defense Minister Shaul Mofaz described the tipping point not as the capability, but as the “enrichment of uranium” itself. Simultaneously, the head of the Mossad, Meir Dagan, warned that Iran would reach this technological point of no return by the end of 2005. After Iran began enriching uranium, Prime Minister Ehud Olmert drew a new line in 2006 as enrichment “beyond a limited number of cascades.”

As Iran has crossed successive red lines, Israel has retreated to the next and, in effect, hit the repeat button. From conversion of uranium; to production of LEU; to a stockpile of LEU sufficient (after further enrichment) to make one nuclear bomb; to a stockpile sufficient for a half dozen bombs; to enrichment beyond LEU to MEU; to the operation of centrifuges enriching MEU at the deep underground, formerly covert facility at Fordow, that created a “zone of immunity”; to achievement of an undefined “nuclear weapons capability,” Israel’s warnings have grown louder — but no more effective. That these “points of no return” have been passed is a brute fact and hard to ignore.

This does not mean that these Israeli warnings were, or are, unfounded. The children’s story about the boy who cried wolf is often cited to counsel against exaggeration of threat. We should remember how the story ends: The wolf actually arrives, and eats the boy.

Iran’s long-delayed reactor at Arak may become operational in late 2014, providing Iran a plutonium path to a bomb. Once it is loaded with fuel, which on the announced schedule will be in early 2014, an attack on the reactor would spread radioactive materials. Iran’s accumulated stockpile of MEU and deployment of advanced centrifuges will also continue shortening the timeline for a dash to a bomb. Nonetheless, neither is likely to have material consequences in 2013 for the calculus of risk described earlier.

This fall, if and when negotiations fail to produce a breakthrough, expect Netanyahu to reject the Obama administration’s (and much of his own security establishment’s) arguments and press vigorously for a U.S. attack, threatening to act unilaterally otherwise. At that point, unless a major diplomatic initiative shows promise, I predict that there will be a more intense exploration of options short of attack for slowing or stopping Iran’s nuclear progress. I have identified at least three such options, and there are no doubt others. Watch this space.

 

9. What will trigger an Israeli attack on Iran’s nuclear facilities? What will be the key drivers?

Most analysts’ answers to this question focus on external factors, particularly Iranian actions that increase the threat. The most recent retired red line was former Israeli Defense Minister Barak’s “zone of immunity.” In last fall’s famous UN speech, Netanyahu drew onto a cartoon bomb what he said was a new, clear red line: one bombs-worth of MEU. (Israeli officials later clarified that this amount was equivalent to 250 kg of MEU in hexafluoride form.) In the months since then, Iran has made the strategic decision to avoid breaching this line, at least for the time being, by converting most of its new MEU hexafluoride into oxide fuel for the TRR.

Nonetheless, in placing bets about Israeli action, or inaction, internal factors will be as important as external factors. The blunt truth is that there will be little material change in the risks Israel faces from Iran in the near term if Iran continues its current, careful, cautious, deliberate but steady advance toward the nuclear goal line. Nor will there be significant material change in the impact Israeli airstrikes can have on Iran’s nuclear facilities in the months between today and December 31, 2013.

For perspective, recall Prime Minister Menachem Begin’s decision to attack Iraq’s nuclear facility at Osirak in 1981. In that case, the principal trigger was not a change in the facts on the ground in Iraq, but Begin’s fear that he would no longer be Prime Minister. He believed that he would be succeeded by Shimon Peres, and that Peres would not have what it took to do what was required, when it was necessary. The runner-up in the last Israeli election, Yair Lapid, has already declared that he will be the next Prime Minister. In assessing prospects of an Israeli attack, power shifts in Netanyahu’s cabinet will be more important than the latest IAEA report.

10. What would trigger a U.S. attack on Iran’s nuclear facilities?

Were the U.S. to discover unambiguous evidence that Iran had begun breaking out on a timetable that could be stopped by an American attack, an attack would be likely. Aware of this threat, Iran is highly unlikely to take such an action.

A more likely trigger of U.S. military action against Iran would be an Israeli airstrike prompting an Iranian response that threatened U.S. interests, including the flow of oil through the Strait of Hormuz or Saudi Arabia itself. The U.S. has made clear to the Supreme Leader that any attempt to close the Strait of Hormuz would cross a “red line” and invite an American military response.

11. What is the most likely future for 2013: a bomb or be bombed?

My best bet is that Iran will proceed cautiously, carefully, and steadily. Indeed, I agree with Israeli Chief of Staff Benny Gantz’s assessment that Iran is “going step by step to the place where it will be able to decide whether to manufacture a nuclear bomb. It hasn’t yet decided whether to go the extra mile.” In my view, the Obama Administration will pursue every alternative to attack, recognizing the costs and risks.

A bomb or be bombed? Both are real possibilities; either could occur without violating any laws of science and engineering or observed political behavior. But my best judgment is that neither is likely in 2013. If required to answer yes or no: no bomb; no attack.

12. Why could I be wrong?

After having heard (or made) a convincing argument for a controversial conclusion, America’s greatest Secretary of State, George Marshall, would frequently ask: “Just one more question: Why could I be wrong?”

While the future is strictly unknown, some futures are more easily predictable than others. Bets about whether Israel will attack Iran before the end of this year hinge on choices made by one individual or by a small group. Regardless of the strong opposition from his military and security establishment, and his own president, and the fact that 80 percent of Israelis oppose a unilateral attack without U.S. support, if Prime Minister Netanyahu ultimately decides to attack Iran, then he is likely to be able to do so. This would depend on Netanyahu’s ability to convince his new “security cabinet,” made up of eight ministers, on the merits of an attack. So far, it is unclear how new members such as Yair Lapid or Tzipi Livni would cast their votes.

Betting about outcomes based on one person’s calculations of an uncertain future is inherently vulnerable to error. Nonetheless, I have registered my bet.


This article develops arguments initially presented at the Aspen Strategy Group.

Netanyahu: US House sanctions send ‘clear message’ to Iranian regime

August 1, 2013

Netanyahu: US House sanctions send ‘clear message’ to Iranian regime | JPost | Israel News.

 

08/01/2013 18:21
Prime minister welcomes US House of Representatives decision imposing new, punishing sanctions on Iran; sources in PMO say move important as first time an international body steps up sanctions since Rouhani election.

Netanyahu at the US embassy's annual Fourth of July celebration, July 4, 2013

Netanyahu at the US embassy’s annual Fourth of July celebration, July 4, 2013 Photo: מוטי מילרוד / “הארץ”

 

Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu on Thursday warmly welcomed a US House of Representatives decision imposing new, punishing sanctions on Iran, and saying this sent an important message that Iran will not get a period of grace because of the election of Hassan Rouhani.

“Following the Iranian elections the House of Representatives has sent a clear message to the Iranian regime that international pressure will increase until Iran meets its obligations and ceases its pursuit of a nuclear weapons capability. We will judge Iran by its actions alone,” he said.

The US House of Representatives passed a bill on Wednesday by a commanding 400-20 bipartisan majority to tighten sanctions on Iran’s petroleum sector. The move came just days before the inauguration of their new president, Hassan Rouhani.

Sources in the Prime Minister’s Office said the Congressional move was important because it was the first time an international body has stepped up the sanctions since Rouhani was elected to replace Mahmoud Ahmadinejad in June.

Netanyahu has called ever since the elections for the world not to “let its guard down” because of the Iranian elections, but rather to keep up intense pressure on Tehran and not to let the election of someone perceived in much of the West as a “moderate” lead to a relaxation of pressure on the Islamic Republic.

“This is a message to the Iranians that they don’t get a year of grace, that words and smiles will not be enough, and that if they do not want sanctions upgraded, they will have to take tangible measures,” the sources said.

“The timing of this measure is crucial,” the sources said. “These are the first serious measures taken after the elections.”

Days before Rouhani to be sworn in, US House sends message to Iran with harsh new sanctions

August 1, 2013

Days before Rouhani to be sworn in, US House sends message to Iran with harsh new sanctions | JPost | Israel News.

08/01/2013 10:04
Bill passed by US House aims to bring Iranian oil exports essentially down to zero within a year from full passage; vote shows growing disagreement between Obama, who wants to give Rouhani a chance, and Congress.

Hassan Rouhani.

Hassan Rouhani. Photo: REUTERS/Raheb Homavandi

WASHINGTON — The US House of Representatives passed a bill on Wednesday containing punishing new sanctions against Iran, entrenching the US position on the Islamic Republic’s controversial nuclear program just days before the inauguration of their new president, Hassan Rouhani.

The Senate is expected to support the legislation— the toughest sanctions package to date, targeting what remains of Iran’s oil sector— once Congress reconvenes from its month-long summer recess, sources told The Jerusalem Post.

The bill aims to bring Iranian oil exports essentially down to zero within a year from full passage. Iran has already experienced a 60 percent decrease in oil exports since 2011 due to sanctions.

And yet, despite Western efforts to divorce Iran from its customers, the Persian state still exports over a million barrels a day. Because of the high price of oil, Iran experienced its fourth best year on record for oil revenues in 2012.

Those remaining customers— companies concentrated mostly in China, South Korea, India and Turkey— will no longer be granted exemptions for their activities by the Treasury Department if Wednesday’s legislation becomes law.

Previously given a pass for diplomatic reasons, the exemptions will expire after a year-long grace period, during which Iran’s customers will face the choice of finding oil elsewhere or else be cut out of the US economy.

The US says there is spare capacity in the global market to replace Iran’s exports. Libyan oil production is back online since its revolution ended in 2011, and Saudi Arabia is prepared to accommodate Iran’s customers, with spare production capacity already at 2 million to 2.5 million barrels.

Mark Dubowitz, executive director of the Foundation for Defense of Democracies in Washington, said that House members were keen on voting on the bill before Rouhani’s Sunday inauguration, and said the legislation would “massively intensify” ailing conditions in Iran.

Dubowitz noted that past sanctions regimens “tended to be front loaded,” suggesting that Iran might experience the impacts of this new round by the end of the year.

“Everything is really coming to a head in the next twelve months,” Dubowitz said.

On the House floor during debate on the bill, Representative Keith Ellison (D-Minnesota) stood nearly alone against his colleagues, saying that Mr. Rouhani ran his presidential campaign “on a policy of promise to pursue a path of moderation.”

“Obviously we don’t have rose-colored glasses,” Ellison said, calling on the chamber to wait for a round of negotiations with the new Iranian government. “Why don’t we wait and see?”

Representative David Price (D-North Carolina) joined Ellison in opposing the bill.

“The bill before us today could not come at a worse time,” Price charged, noting that he has voted previously in favor of harsh sanctions against Iran. The bill “could slam the opportunity shut” to test the genuineness of Rouhani’s overtures, he said.

Eliot Engel (D-New York), ranking member of the House Foreign Affairs Committee, noted that his committee had cast unanimous, bipartisan support for the bill.

“I have no reason to believe that the results of the recent Iranian election will fundamentally alter Iran’s current course,” Engel said in his speech on the floor, charging that Rouhani “was directly involved in efforts to deceive the international community when he served as Iran’s chief negotiator.”

House Speaker John Boehner called the sanctions “strong and targeted,” and said they provided the president with the “political and economic tools” required to tighten the screws on the Iranian government. In an unusual sight, House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi joined Boehner on the floor to voice support for the legislation.

The bill, H.R. 850, had 375 cosponsors in the 435-member body. The bill passed by a large margin of 400-20, but the Obama administration, which in previous rounds had pushed for exemptions for Chinese and Turkish companies, has voiced reservations in recent days over the timing and consequences of some of the bill’s strictest provisions.

Uncertain how Rouhani will act in his first months as president, Obama would like to give him time, officials say. And the threatened expiration of exemptions may not intimidate Chinese companies, forcing the US to make decisions that would harm its own economy or, alternatively, renege on the law’s requirements, weakening America’s diplomatic clout.

“We continue to work with Congress on all sanctions legislation concerning Iran,” State Department spokesperson Jen Psaki told journalists the day before the vote, calling the administration’s sanction’s regimen against Iran “unrelenting.”

The State Department declined to comment on the specific House vote.

“Iran is increasingly cut off from the global financial system,” Psaki continued. “Significant amounts of Iranian oil are coming off the market. The Iranian currency is plummeting in value. And firms all over the world are divesting themselves of business with Iran.”

China stands to lose the most from the new legislation. Iran remains its third-largest source of oil after Saudi Arabia and Angola, and the companies that facilitate that trade have major assets in the United States. PetroChina, China’s largest oil producer, is one such company listed on the New York Stock Exchange.

These Chinese firms have repeatedly voiced their opposition to extraterritorial sanctions and to taking orders from the United States.

The House bill also targets other loopholes in the current sanctions regimen, including foreign exchange reserves that have allowed Iran to deal in euros. It also targets Iranian shipping with stricter inspection and flagging regulations.

The US and European Union have increased sanctions pressure on Iran significantly since early 2012, seeking a diplomatic solution to the Islamic Republic’s pursuit of nuclear technology. The West believes Iran is developing the capability to build nuclear weapons through converging uranium enrichment and weaponization programs.

Some Syria Missiles Eluded Israeli Strike, Officials Say – NYTimes.com

August 1, 2013

Some Syria Missiles Eluded Israeli Strike, Officials Say – NYTimes.com.

WASHINGTON — American intelligence analysts have concluded that a recent Israeli airstrike on a warehouse in Syria did not succeed in destroying all of the Russian-made antiship cruise missiles that were its target, American officials said on Wednesday, and that further Israeli strikes are likely.

Israel carried out an attack on July 5 near Latakia to destroy the missiles, which Russia had sold to Syria. While the warehouse was destroyed, American intelligence analysts have now concluded that at least some of the Yakhont missiles had been removed from their launchers and moved from the warehouse before the attack.

The officials who described the new assessment declined to be identified because they were discussing classified information.

Israeli officials have said that they do not intend to enter the civil war in Syria, but that they are prepared to prevent sophisticated weapons from falling into the hands of Hezbollah, the Lebanese militia, which has joined the war to support President Bashar al-Assad of Syria and which controlled the warehouse where the missiles were stored.

American and Israeli naval officials consider the missiles to be a serious threat to their ships.

After the Israeli attack, the Assad government sought to hide the fact that the missiles had been missed by setting fire to launchers and vehicles at the site to create the impression of a devastating blow, according to American intelligence reports.

The Pentagon did not respond to a request for comment. Israel has a longstanding policy of silence on pre-emptive military strikes.

Another factor that could lead to a military response by Israel is the continuing flow of weapons to the Assad government, some of which Israel fears may make its way to Hezbollah in neighboring Lebanon.

Russia, American officials say, recently sent SA-26 antiaircraft missiles to Syria, and it is also believed to be sending technical experts to help set up the system.

The Russians have also recently delivered two refurbished Mi-24 Hind helicopters to the Russian naval base at Tartus, Syria, for use by the Syrian military.

Russian officials have insisted that they are merely fulfilling old weapons contracts. But even the old contracts have involved the transfer of sophisticated arms.

In addition, American officials say that the transfer of Yakhont missiles to Hezbollah by Syria would violate an “end user agreement” that the Russian missiles would not be provided to third parties.

The July 5 attack near Latakia was the fourth known Israeli airstrike in Syria this year.

Providing new details, American officials said that it had been carried out by Israeli aircraft that flew over the eastern Mediterranean, fired air-to-ground missiles and never entered Syrian airspace. The route of the Israeli aircraft led to some erroneous reports that the attack had been carried out by an Israeli submarine.

In addition to targeting the Yakhont missiles, Israel carried out an airstrike in late January aimed at another system provided by Russia: a convoy of SA-17 surface-to-air missiles that Israeli officials believed were destined for Hezbollah.

Iran’s arms shipments are also a concern for the Israelis.

In May, Israeli warplanes conducted two days of airstrikes that targeted, among other things, a shipment of Fateh-110 missiles — mobile surface-to-surface missiles that had been provided by Iran and flown to Damascus, Syria, on transport planes that passed through Iraqi airspace.

The Fateh-110 missiles, which the Israelis feared were also intended for Hezbollah, have the range to strike Tel Aviv and much of Israel from southern Lebanon.

Iran has sent members of its paramilitary Quds force into Syria, under the supervision of Maj. Gen. Hossein Hamdani, a senior officer of the force who is in charge of operations in Syria and oversees Iran’s arms shipments to Hezbollah, according to American intelligence officials. Hezbollah’s attempt to acquire weapons is supervised by Shaykh Salah, a senior official in charge of the militia’s operations in Lebanon, according to American officials.

Iran has also pressed Iraqi Shiites to join the fight in Syria in support of the Assad government. That includes about 200 members of the Badr Corps, Iraqis who were supported by Iran during Tehran’s long war against Saddam Hussein, and who later returned to Iraq after he was ousted from power, American officials say.

The support of Iran and Hezbollah for the Assad government, and Israel’s military interventions, reflects how the conflict has drawn in outside powers.

Both Saudi Arabia and Qatar have been arming the Syrian rebels, and Congress recently dropped objections to a proposal by President Obama to provide training and light arms to them.

Security expert doubts direct linkage between peace talks and possible US attack on Iran

August 1, 2013

Security expert doubts direct linkage between peace talks and possible US attack on Iran | JPost | Israel News.

08/01/2013 02:06
Former deputy nat’l security adviser Freilich: Obama prefers diplomacy with Tehran.

CHUCK FREILICH

CHUCK FREILICH Photo: Harvard.edu

Chuck Freilich, a former deputy national security adviser in Israel and today a senior fellow at Harvard’s Kennedy School of Government, says he doubts there is explicit “linkage” between the Israeli-Palestinian peace talks and Iran.

“Don’t expect linkage between Iran’s nuclear program and the peace process,” Freilich told The Jerusalem Post on Tuesday during an interview in Herzliya, adding that US President Barack Obama did not want to take military action at this time, nor did he want Israel to.

On Monday, Defense Minister Moshe Ya’alon hinted that secret considerations had gone into the country’s recent decision to release 104 Palestinian prisoners as a way to restart negotiations between Israel and the Palestinians. Ya’alon did not elaborate.

Freilich does not see Israel bombing Iran this year, as the US is probably going to make a major outreach effort to Teheran in order to reach a diplomatic solution. The military option might delay Iran’s nuclear program for a few years but it would be “at a great cost to us,” he said, adding that “Iran and Hezbollah will hit us hard.”

If Obama can reach a lastminute deal with the Iranians to freeze the program, even temporarily, he explained, it would buy a few more years and probably be better than the military option.

“Obama does not want to get involved in the Middle East,” he told the Post.

Freilich said the US president’s reluctance was obvious when looking at the fact that even while thousands were being slaughtered in Syria, he was not doing anything. The fact that Syria had crossed his “red line” by using chemical weapons without drawing a tough response, he said, was adding to Israel’s worries over US attitudes toward Teheran.

When asked what would happen should Obama’s outreach efforts fail, Freilich said that “he will face the moment of decision, his cards largely used up.”

The American leader, he said, has been trying to negotiate with Iran for over four years. If he still can’t after the relatively moderate president- elect Hassan Rouhani takes over, “sanctions will be seen to have failed and it will come down to military action or a policy of deterrence and containment, which the president has specifically rejected.”

Everything depends on what the Iranians do, Freilich said. Will they go for a breakout or continue the current policy of stopping just short of achieving nuclear capability? He added that the US was more comfortable than Israel in allowing Iran to continue its current policy, although 3Obama had gone on record as agreeing with the consensus in the US that Iran could not be allowed to go nuclear.

“There are some people close to the president who believe that Obama would take military action,” Freilich said. “The attractiveness of this option grows if the peace process makes any progress, giving Obama diplomatic cover in the Arab world and international community.”

Freilich went on to state that it was well established that the US had greater capabilities than Israel to launch an attack against Iran, and that experts believed that if it came to military action, the US should be the one to do it.