Author Archive

Once Again, Iran Blinks First

May 20, 2015

UN Says Iranian Ship With Yemen Aid Heading to Djibouti
UNITED NATIONS — May 20, 2015, 12:56 PM ET Via AP


(Wise decision on the part of Iran. – LS)

The United Nations says an Iranian ship with humanitarian supplies for Yemen is heading to Djibouti where the U.N. has its hub for the distribution of aid to the conflict-torn country.

U.N. deputy spokesman Farhan Haq said Wednesday the U.N. received word from the Iranian government that the ship “will proceed to Djibouti.” It was originally reported to be heading to Yemen’s Hodeida port.

Haq said given concerns about the situation on the ground in Yemen, Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon has urged all countries and organizations to arrange aid deliveries with the U.N. to Djibouti for onward distribution in Yemen.

Earlier Wednesday, Iran’s Deputy Foreign Minister Hossein Amir Abdollahian told the semi-official ISNA news agency that the vessel Nejat, or Rescue, will travel to Yemen in “full coordination with the U.N.”

Promises are Made to be Broken and Lies are Meant to be Kept

May 20, 2015

US, Israel said to discuss ‘compensation’ in wake of emerging Iran deal


(While increasing U.S. military aid to Israel is a good thing, tying it to a bum deal is not. If I had a say, I would take the deal and get all I can in terms of military hardware and technology. Afterall, bad deals never last, including one with Iran and including Obama’s term in office. – LS)

Additional F-35 jets, anti-missile defense batteries reportedly part of package to win Israel’s quiet acceptance of nuclear accord, Israeli media reports.

Israel and the US were reportedly holding preliminary and unofficial talks over a “compensation” package for Jerusalem that would include the delivery of advanced weapons in exchange for the Netanyahu government’s quiet acceptance of the emerging nuclear deal with Iran.

The package could include an increase of the amount of F-35 fighter jets the US was set to supply Israel with and additional batteries for Israel’s anti-missile defense systems, according to reports in both Haaretz(Hebrew) and Yediot Ahronoth this week.

A senior Obama administration official told Yediot that “the White House is willing to pay a hefty price to get some quiet from the Israelis at this point. We are surprised the demand has not been made.”

But the newspaper also quoted an unnamed Israeli source as conveying a more ambivalent stance about the reported talks.

“If we come with demands at this point, it would mean that we have given up our objections to the deal, and now it is just a matter of at what price. If Israel believes that the deal is bad for its security, it cannot appear as someone who gave up in the end,” the paper quoted the source as saying.

According to the reports in both Haaretz and Yediot, the US-Israel talks revolved around enhancing a previously negotiated deal to supply Israel with 33 F-35 aircraft, the first batch of which was expected next year. The total number of jets could go up to 50, Haaretz reported.

Israel was also said to be asking for more Iron Dome batteries, additional assistance with the Arrow 3 missile system developed jointly by the US and Israel, and possibly, for the purchase of technological systems for intelligence gathering.

Earlier this month, the US House of Representatives Armed Services Committee approved $474 million for Israel’s anti-missile systems.

Included in the US-Israel cooperative missile defense funds is $41.4 million for the short-range Iron Dome rocket defense system, $165 million for David’s Sling, another short-range system, and the longer-range Arrow-3 missile defense programs, as well as $267.6 million in research and development funds.

Israel has been a very vocal opponent of the nuclear deal the US-led P5+1 world powers are negotiating with Iran ahead of the June 30 deadline for an agreement. Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has warned that the deal paves the way for Iran to acquire nuclear weapons and that Israel’s very survival would be at stake.

“We oppose this deal and we are not the only ones,” Netanyahu said on Sunday, noting that regional Arab, largely Sunni Muslim states are also skeptical of the deal. “It is both necessary and possible to achieve a better deal because extremists cannot be allowed to achieve their aims, not in Iran, not in Yemen and not in Jerusalem.”

Arab states of the Gulf fear a nuclear deal could be a harbinger of closer US ties with their Shiite arch-foe Iran, a country they also see as fueling conflicts in Yemen, Syria and Iraq.

US President Barack Obama tried to reassure America’s Gulf allies at a Camp David summit last week that engaging with Iran would not come at their expense. These states were also reportedly negotiating their own “compensation packages” involving advanced equipment and weaponry from the US to counter the perceived Iranian threat.

 

This is What American Soldiers Fought and Died For?

May 19, 2015

Iraqi troops retreat from Ramadi as Isis militants move in – video
Via The Guardian 5-19-2015 Source: Reuters

CLICK HERE FOR VIDEO

(To say something like ‘what a waste’ is a huge understatement. That sort of comment must be reserved for going into Iraq in the first place. – LS)

Iraqi government forces retreat from Ramadi as Isis militants claim control of the city on Sunday. Iraqi military vehicles are shown driving away from the city. Up to 500 people, Iraqi civilians and soldiers, have been killed in the battle for the city, and 8,000 have fled their homes. One woman describes the situation on the streets of Ramadi as chaotic and violent. On Monday, Iraqi militias were belatedly attempting to push back against Islamic State forces in Anbar province.

You Can Put Lipstick on a Pig, But It’s Still a Pig

May 19, 2015

If (When) Baghdad Falls, Keep American Soldiers Away From the Mess Created By Bush and Obama
BY H.A. Goodman Posted: 10/24/2014 6:57 am EDT Updated: 12/24/2014 5:59 am EST


(I’m not one to fully agree with a left of center blog such as the Huffington Post, but I have to say, in this case I fully agree and am a bit surprised that myself and so many others here in the USA are finding common ground on this important matter. Many, myself included, do not want to engage our young and brave soldiers in yet another pointless and politically correct war. While there are a growing number of reasons to go to war in the Mideast, none of these hellholes are worth another drop of their precious blood, especially if the means and a plan for total victory are AWOL.  While this article is over a half a year old, I feel it still carries a relevant and somewhat prophetic message. – LS)

When President Bush invaded Iraq in 2003, long before ISIS controlled an estimated 12,000-35,000 square miles of territory between Iraq and Syria, the Decider stated the following in his now infamous “Mission Accomplished” speech:

In the Battle of Iraq, the United States and our allies have prevailed…

In this battle, we have fought for the cause of liberty, and for the peace of the world…

In the images of celebrating Iraqis, we have also seen the ageless appeal of human freedom…

The Battle of Iraq is one victory in a war on terror that began on September the 11th, 2001, and still goes on…

Our mission continues. Al-Qaida is wounded, not destroyed…

The war on terror is not over, yet it is not endless.

From today’s vantage point, such rhetoric seems ludicrous, but it sounded good in the euphoria of the moment. Bush and his team made endless mistakes, proving time and again that flowery sentiments can’t stop a Sunni suicide bomber from blowing up a Shia mosque; even though both sides are Muslim. Removing Saddam from Iraq caused catastrophic upheaval and aroused a hornet’s nest of ancient hatreds. Also, Bush’s lofty nation building aspirations didn’t account for the fact that our soldiers would ultimately become targets of an unseen enemy.

Almost two-thirds of Americans killed or wounded in combat in both Iraq and Afghanistan have been victims of IED’s. Ultimately, 4,487 U.S. soldiers have lost their lives during Operation Iraqi Freedom, while 2,349 American soldiers have died in Operation Enduring Freedom. Including “non-fatal injuries,” which are often times life altering and debilitating, close to one million Americans (out of the 2.5 million Americans who served in both wars) have been wounded in Iraq and Afghanistan. Needless to say, the decision by Bush and his neocon advisors to play Stratego with the map of the world is one of the biggest foreign policy blunders in U.S. history.

Fast forward to 2014 and President Obama is quoted in The New Yorker as calling ISIS the “jayvee” squad of Al-Qaeda:

In the 2012 campaign, Obama spoke not only of killing Osama bin Laden; he also said that Al Qaeda had been “decimated.” I pointed out that the flag of Al Qaeda is now flying in Falluja, in Iraq, and among various rebel factions in Syria; Al Qaeda has asserted a presence in parts of Africa, too.

“The analogy we use around here sometimes, and I think is accurate, is if a jayvee team puts on Lakers uniforms that doesn’t make them Kobe Bryant,” Obama said, resorting to an uncharacteristically flip analogy.

While President Obama and others have disputed he was actually referring to ISIS with this remark, Politifact.com has ruled that “…it’s pretty clear this is the group that was being referenced in the conversation. The transcript backs this up, as do news events from the time of the discussion.”

Not only did Obama grossly underestimate the threat posed by ISIS, but he’s on record in September as stating, “We don’t have a strategy yet” in Syria. U.S. weapons intended for Kurdish fighters recently ended up in the hands of ISIS and Syrian Kurds have stated recent U.S. airstrikes are not working. Bush’s initial debacle of invading Iraq has now turned into Obama’s inability to adequately address threats like ISIS in a timely and effective manner.

While Baghdad has yet to fall, Gen. Martin Dempsey states, “I have no doubt there will be days when they use indirect fire into Baghdad,” meaning ISIS mortars or artillery shells could hit the city. Baghdad is more heavily guarded than most other places in Iraq, but ISIS already commits terror attacks inside Baghdad and hasclaimed responsibility for the October 11 suicide booming that killed 43 people. Also, ISIS isn’t far from the Iraqi capital, controlling an estimated 80% of the Anbar Province. A quick glance at the map shows just how much territory Islamic State controls and how fragile Iraq looks in the face of imminent collapse. All this happened under Obama’s watch and although he isn’t Nostradamus, he nonetheless failed to accurately predict the capabilities of al-Qaeda’s jayvee team.

With Iraq falling apart and a new enemy on the horizon that’s simply a rebranding of the old one, there’s a striking observation to be made about two presidents, Congress, and the leaders who send our soldiers off to war. Whereas we are perhaps governed by intelligent people, these bureaucrats don’t necessarily possess the wisdom needed to put this country, and our soldiers, in a position to win against a word called “terror.” The days of presidents like Washington, Lincoln, Roosevelt, and Eisenhower seem long gone, and instead we’re stuck with a generation of Bush’s and Obama’s; or the latest LBJs and Nixons.

Therefore, if and when Baghdad falls, President Obama should leave American troops out of any strategy to save Iraq.

A recent poll conducted by NBC News and The Wall Street Journal finds that 41% of Americans believe the military campaign against ISIS should include “air strikes and combat troops.” This poll runs in striking contrast to The Military Times poll indicating 70% of troops say “no more boots on the ground.” Unlike the vast majority of American’s who’ve never been to Iraq, a Marine interviewed in the poll states, “It’s kind of futile in the end — regardless of how well we do our job, the Iraqi government isn’t going to be able to hold up.

This sentiment is backed up not only by recent events, but also the fundamental reason why both Bush and Obama were clueless in recognizing their leadership faults in regards to the Iraq War. While Bush was convinced in his prediction that liberty would reign in Iraq, Obama was focused solely on not being another Bush. As a result, both presidents ignored the biggest obstacle to any military endeavor in Iraq: the Shia and Sunni rivalry and the implications of this centuries old sectarian battle.The Council on Foreign Relations explains this bloody conflict in The Sunni-Shia Divide:

In Iraq, for instance, remnants of the Ba’athist regime employed Sunni rhetoric to mount a resistance to the rise of Shia power following the ouster of Saddam. Sunni fundamentalists, many inspired by al-Qaeda’s call to fight Americans, flocked to Iraq from Muslim countries, attacking coalition forces and many Shia civilians. Abu Musab al-Zarqawi, who founded al-Qaeda’s franchise in Iraq, evoked ancient anti-Shia fatwas, or religious rulings, to spark a civil war in hopes that the Shia majority would eventually capitulate in the face of Sunni extremist violence.

Al-Qaeda in Iraq, decimated by the “Awakening” of Sunni Iraqis who joined the fight against extremists, the U.S.-led military surge, and the death of Zarqawi, found new purpose in exploiting the vacuum left by the receding Syrian state. It established its own transnational movement known as the Islamic State in Iraq and Syria (ISIS).

No amount of American ground troops, or military might from other Western nations, will adequately address the hatred fostered by this Shia and Sunni rivalry. Consequently, any further involvement by U.S. soldiers will turn into another counterinsurgency war where the ally in the day turns into the enemy at night.

We’re still learning in Afghanistan (the longest war in U.S. history and a war that is still ongoing) the same lessons we’ve already learned in Iraq: counterinsurgency wars don’t put our soldiers and our military in a position to win or create a lasting political reality. We already learned this in Vietnam, but repeated the mistake with Iraq, and now might repeat the mistake once again because of ISIS. As stated by General Daniel Bolger regarding the lessons of the Iraq War, “This enemy wasn’t amenable to the type of war we’re good at fighting, which is a Desert Storm or a Kosovo.”

American soldiers have done enough in Iraq. Even if Bagdad falls, ISIS will never achieve the caliphate it desires; especially if both Saudi Arabia and Iran view them as heretics. In addition, with territorial gains comes the responsibility of holding this territory and that costs money, resources, and lives; something ISIS might not have in the long run. Most importantly, both Bush and Obama have proven that they’re not capable of using the U.S. Armed Forces for a war with decisive battles or a definite end date. So, until a war doesn’t involve religious rivalries and sectarian violence (or raiding houses in the middle of the night to capture insurgents), let’s keep our soldiers away from another Middle Eastern quagmire. Congress, as well as President Obama, should do everything possible to arm and fund the enemies of ISIS rather than send one more American to the Middle East.

Hezbollah Hard at Work Behind Lebanese Shield

May 15, 2015

Hezbollah hiding 100,000 missiles that can hit north, army says
BY AP May 13, 2015, 10:49 pm


(Surely the Lebanese people know they are at risk. Afterall, Hezbollah is a big operation that is flush with cash and needs food, clothing, etc as well as weapons. In other words, a good portion of thier money must end up in the hands of the locals. Do the economic benefits outweigh the risk to the Lebanese people? I’m sure they will find out in the near future. – LS)

The Lebanese group Hezbollah has built up a massive arsenal of rockets and other advanced weapons in Shi’ite villages of southern Lebanon, a senior Israeli intelligence official said Wednesday, warning civilians would be at risk if war breaks out.

According to the official, Hezbollah has an estimated 100,000 short-range rockets capable of striking northern Israel, several thousand missiles that can reach Tel Aviv and central Israel and hundreds more that can strike the entire country.

Most of the weapons have been transferred to Lebanon through war-torn Syria, coming from Hezbollah’s key allies, the Syrian government and Iran, he said.

The official showed reporters satellite photos of what Israeli intelligence believes are Hezbollah positions in dozens of Shiite villages in southern Lebanon.

The photos were marked with dozens of red icons, signaling what are believed to be missile launchers, arms depots, underground tunnels and command posts.

The official, who spoke on condition of anonymity under military guidelines, said an estimated 200 villages have been turned into “military strongholds.”

One photo showed the village of Muhaybib, with a population of around 1,000 people and 90 buildings, of which more than a third had been marked as Hezbollah assets. In the larger village of Shaqra, with some 4,000 people, Israeli intelligence identified Hezbollah targets in around 400 out of some 1,200 buildings.

The army refused to allow publication of the images.

If war breaks out and Hezbollah fires missiles at Israel, these buildings will be targeted by Israel’s air force, the official said, adding that Israel would give civilians time to evacuate.

Israel and Hezbollah fought a month-long war in 2006 that killed some 1,200 Lebanese, including hundreds of civilians, and 160 Israelis and caused heavy damage to Lebanon’s infrastructure.

Though another Israel-Hezbollah war is always possible, analysts say the group has no interest in renewing hostilities while it is busy fighting alongside President Bashar Assad’s forces against rebels trying to topple him in Syria.

People Died, Obama Tried…..to redefine chemical weapons.

May 15, 2015

Pressed on Syria Crossing Red Lines, Obama Says Chlorine isn’t ‘Historically’ a Chemical Weapon
Via the Washington Free Beacon 5-15-2015

(Prepare to be underwhelmed. – LS)

Iranian Pirates Attack Another Cargo Ship

May 14, 2015

First on CNN: Five Iranian boats fire shots in the Persian Gulf
By Barbara Starr, CNN Pentagon Correspondent Updated 11:32 AM ET, Thu May 14, 2015


(The cost of cargo ship insurance just went up. Shouldn’t someone be shooting back about now? Please use the link above to gain access to the original article containing a video report by Barbara Starr.  CNN video’s will not imbed in external web sites. – LS)

(CNN)Five Iranian boats fired shots across the bow of a Singapore flagged cargo vessel in the Persian Gulf on Thursday in an attempt to potentially stop the ship, a U.S. official told CNN. For the first time, the incident brought another Persian Gulf nation into the recent rising maritime tensions in the region.

It is not yet clear if any of the rounds hit the Alpine Eternity. There were no U.S. citizens or cargo on board. The Pentagon is still gathering information about the incident.

RELATED: Pentagon says Iranian escort ‘absolutely unnecessary’

The incident began when five small fast boats, believed to be manned by Iran’s Revolutionary Guard Corps Navy approached the cargo vessel just off the coast of the United Arab Emirates but in international water, the official said.

These Iranian boats are typically manned with smaller caliber weapons such as machine guns.

The Iranian boats fired across the bow, and at that point the cargo vessel turned and escaped by entering into UAE territorial waters, according to initial U.S. military reports of the incident. The UAE sent three of its coast guard boats out to the cargo vessel.

The incident began with the Iranians ordering the ship into Iranian waters. When the ships master refused, the Iranians began to fire in a way to try to disable the ship, not just as warning shots, the U.S. official said.

Several shots hit the cargo ship, but did not disable it. The ship went into UAE waters and the Iranians followed it into those territorial waters, continuing to fire, before breaking off.

The cargo ship’s master did call coalition warships in the vicinity on the radio including U.S. Navy warships to ask for help when the incident began. A P-3 from a country in the region was sent overhead and the Navy began moving, but the incident was over before it could get there.

The Pentagon recently stopped escorting commercial vessels through the Strait of Hormuz and it’s not clear if those operations will resume. They had been escorting commercial shipping but of two recent Iranian incidents interfering with cargo shipping in the area.

 

Barack Obama: ‘Trust me. I’ve Got Your Back.’

May 14, 2015

Saudis to warn Obama they will match Iran’s nuke buildup
By TIMES OF ISRAEL STAFF AND AP May 14, 2015, 12:26 pm


(The nuclear race is on. While a nuclear exchange in the Mideast could be contained, the fallout will not. Weapons such as this in the hands of tyrants is not only dangerous, it’s suicidal as well. – LS)

Riyadh and other Gulf capitals reportedly will insist they will have ‘whatever the Iranians have,’ as Camp David summit gets underway.

Saudi Arabian officials are warning that they will seek to match Iran’s nuclear arsenal, a US newspaper reported Thursday, as US President Barack Obama and leaders from six Gulf nations — including Riyadh — convened outside Washington to work through tensions sparked by the US bid for a nuclear deal with Tehran, a pursuit that has put regional partners on edge.

Along with Saudi Arabia, smaller Arab countries also say they also plan to pursue a nuclear weapons program to offset Iran’s, portending a much-feared nuclear arms race in the Middle East, according to the New York Times.

“We can’t sit back and be nowhere as Iran is allowed to retain much of its capability and amass its research,” one Arab leader attending the Camp David summit told the New York Times.

The official, who was unnamed, said he and others will also make their case to Obama at the meeting Thursday.

Obama is seeking to reassure the Gulf leaders gathering at Camp David that US overtures to Iran will not come at the expense of commitments to their security. He is expected to offer them more military assistance, including increased joint exercises and coordination on ballistic missile systems.

Obama and the leaders from Saudi Arabia, Qatar, United Arab Emirates, Kuwait, Oman and Bahrain opened their talks with a private dinner Wednesday night at the White House. Just two heads of state are among those meeting Obama, with other nations sending lower-level but still influential representatives.

Arab and Israeli officials have lobbied against the deal, though Gulf states have kept their criticism more discreet. Yet leaders around the region have warned that Iranian nuclear development will lead them to also pursue nuclear programs of their own, a worrying idea in a part of the world already riven by violent conflicts.

“Whatever the Iranians have, we will have, too,” former Saudi intelligence head Prince Turki bin Faisal said last month at a special session of the Asan Plenum, a conference held by the South Korean-based Asan Institute for Policy Studies, according to the New York Times.

Faisal also warned that the Iranian nuclear deal “opens the door to nuclear proliferation, not closes it, as was the initial intention.”

When Thursday’s meetings at the presidential retreat in the Maryland mountains conclude, it’s unlikely Obama will have fully assuaged the Gulf’s deep-seated fear of Iranian meddling in the region.

“My guess is that the summit is going to leave everybody feeling a little bit unsatisfied,” said Jon Alterman, the Middle East director at the Center for Strategic and International Studies.

The most notable absence from the meeting is Saudi King Salman. On Sunday, Saudi Arabia announced that the king was skipping the summit, just two days after the White House said he was coming.

Crown Prince Mohammed bin Nayef and Deputy Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman were representing Saudi Arabia instead. They held a separate meeting with Obama before the other leaders arrived.

The president made no mention of Saudi skepticism of the Iran talks as he opened the meeting, but acknowledged the region is in the midst of a “very challenging time.”

The White House and Saudi officials insist the king is not snubbing Obama. But Salman’s conspicuous absence comes amid indisputable signs of strain in the long relationship between the US and Saudi Arabia, driven not only by Obama’s Iran overtures, but also the rise of Islamic State militants and a lessening US dependency on Saudi oil.

“There have been disagreements under this administration and under the previous administration about certain policies and development in the Middle East, but I think on a set of core interests, we continue to have a common view about what we aim to achieve,” said Ben Rhodes, Obama’s deputy national security adviser.

The Gulf summit comes as the US and five other nations work to reach an agreement with Iran by the end of June to curb its nuclear ambitions in exchange for relief from international economic sanctions. The Gulf nations fear that an influx of cash will only facilitate what they see as Iran’s aggression.

The White House says a nuclear accord could clear the way for more productive discussions with Iran about its reputed terror links. The US has criticized Iran’s support for Hezbollah, as well as terror attacks carried out by Iran’s Quds Force.

In 2011, the Obama administration accused Iran of plotting to kill the Saudi ambassador to the United States in Washington.

The Saudis are also particularly concerned about the situation in Yemen, where Houthi rebels with ties with Iran have ousted the US- and Saudi-backed leader.

For more than a month, a Saudi-led coalition has tried to push back the Houthis with a relentless bombing campaign. On Tuesday, a five-day humanitarian ceasefire went into effect, though the pause in fighting was already at risk. A jet fighter from the Saudi coalition on Wednesday struck a military convoy belonging to Shiite rebels and their allies in southern Yemen.

Saudi officials cited the ceasefire as one of the reasons why King Salman needed to stay in Riyadh and not make the trip to the United States.

The Saudi king isn’t the only head of state sending a lower-level representative to the summit. The heads of the United Arab Emirates and Oman have had health problems and were not making the trip.

Bahrain’s royal court announced Wednesday that rather than travel to Washington, King Hamad bin Isa Al Khalifa would be attending a horse show and meeting with Queen Elizabeth II.

Is It Really Difficult to Get the Iranians to Go to War?

May 13, 2015

Is Iran really a defensive state?
J. Matthew McInnis May 13, 2015 2:25 pm Via AEIdeas


(Interesting reading. – LS)

On Tuesday, AEI released my first in a series of working papers on Iranian strategy and decision-making, titled “Iran’s Strategic Thinking: Origins and Evolution.” My first key finding may come as a bit of a surprise to some Washington audiences: Iran remains fundamentally a defensive state, principally concerned with its own survival. But everyone knows we worry about Iran’s expanding influence in the region, Tehran’s efforts to destabilize its neighbors, and its pursuit of a nuclear weapons capability. What gives?

These questions hit at the central conundrum all security analysts of Iran face. On one hand, Iran has been aggressive with its use of proxy forces and sponsorship of terrorism since 1979. On the other, Tehran has not initiated a direct military conflict in the past 36 years (and really for almost 300 years). Instead it builds its military forces around deterrence and retaliation. The bottom line is that it is really difficult to get the Iranians to go to war. Any military or defense expert who has participated in an Iran war game or crisis simulation in recent years, whether inside the US government or in the think tank community, will probably tell you the same thing.

So why does Iran avoid direct military conflict? First, Tehran would be severely challenged to seize and hold territory, or gain and sustain air or naval superiority anywhere in its immediate neighborhood. In comparison to any of the regional powers—let alone any of the world powers—Iran’s conventional military is simply not up to the task.

Second, their military power is first and foremost tasked to preserve the state. The Iranian leadership’s constant fears of regime collapse trump everything else. Iran’s military doctrines are primarily designed to defend against invasion from without, or to suppress insurrection from within, rather than launch offensive conventional military campaigns beyond its borders.

Third, Iran does not necessarily need traditional military dominance to achieve its foreign policy objectives—proxies and covert actions can usually get the job done. Using others to fight its battles also minimizes the risk of escalation to a conventional conflict, especially if there is some plausible deniability of Iran’s behind-the-scenes role.

I do not see Iran as a passive, benign actor. Quite the contrary. The Islamic Republic remains a revisionist state intent on reshaping the political, economic, cultural-religious, and security architecture in the region and the world. Iran is a threat to the United States and to our allies. There is no indication that any nuclear deal or desired de-escalation with the United States will change any of that, despite the hopes of some in the Obama administration.

This is also not a static assessment. Iran’s open proxy campaign in Iraq against ISIS may be a sign of a developing expeditionary mindset. As Iran modernizes its conventional forces or feels less threatened, it may become more militarily adventurous. Tehran still wants to be the regional hegemon. But analysts and policymakers must understand better how Iran’s leaders think they will achieve that status if the United States hopes to successfully shape Iran’s behavior, deter, contain, or defeat it. We need to ask honest, tough questions about why Iran does what it does. Read the report. Let the debate begin!

 

Iran Has Another Temper Tantrum and Threatens the Saudis

May 13, 2015

Iran Makes This Declaration To Saudi Arabia: ‘We Will Cut Off Your Hand And Ignite The Flames Of War.’ The Standoff Between Saudi Arabia And Iran Begins
by Shoebat Foundation on May 13, 2015


(Perhaps the blockade should be closer to Iran’s shores instead. – LS)

Last time Iran tried to send an Iranian plane to land in Sana’a airport under the guise of “humanitarian aid” to Yemen, Saudi Arabia responded by bombing the airport in Sanaa to prevent it from landing just to make a point that Iran cannot ignore Saudi warnings that a blockade on Yemen is enforced.

Now this is happening all over again at a much larger scale and a more dangerous posture. Iran’s latest attempt is sending a humanitarian ship The Shahed cargo ship as a flotilla to break the Saudi-enforced blockade, which departed Iran on Monday and is currently in the Gulf of Aden.

Iran is mimicking the Gaza aid Flotilla, which caused world attention in Israel in 2010, and this new Iranian flotilla is accompanied by a direct threat from Iran “we [Iran] will cut off the hand that touches it”. And to ensure they make good on their threat, they are accompanying this ‘Flotilla’ with two warships, Alborz and the Bushehr proclaiming by such posture that Iran will break the blockade despite warnings by Saudi Arabia and the United States.

The U.S. advised Iran to reroute such humanitarian efforts and use a United Nations distribution hub in Djibouti, which is the normal avenue for such humanitarian assistance. It has then become obvious that Iran is attempting a standoff with Saudi Arabia and a showdown between the two nations can become imminent.

Iran is also including civilian foreign activists onboard in order to mimic the Gaza flotilla and escalate the condemnation of Saudi Arabia in case of civilian casualties. The state-run IRNA news agency quoted Iranian Admiral Hossein Azad as saying that the 34th naval group “is present in the Gulf of Aden and Bab al-Mandab strait and has been given the specific mission of protecting the humanitarian aid ship.”

Tehran says the warships are necessary in case Saudi-led coalition forces from their naval blockade intercepts the humanitarian cargo ship.

But unlike Israel, Saudi Arabia is not known to have restraint. Just hours before the ceasefire’s beginning in Yemen, Saudi-led coalition forces pounded the Yemeni capital Sanaa with a massive attack on weapons installations.

Despite Saudi resolve to crush the Houthi rebellion in Yemen, a senior Iranian commander has stressed that attacking the Iranian aid ship heading to Yemen will “ignite the flames of war” in the region.

Deputy Chief of Staff of the Iranian Armed Forces Brigadier General Masoud Jazayeri made the remarks in an interview with Arabic-language news channel al-Alam on Tuesday.

Saudi Arabia, the United States, and their allies must keep in mind that if they want to block Iran’s humanitarian aid to the regional countries, “they will start a fire which they cannot put out,” the commander added.

“I clearly announce that the self-restraint of the Islamic Republic of Iran has its limits,” Jazayeri stated.

Meanwhile the US on Tuesday warned Iran against “provocative actions,” saying it was tracking the Iranian warships. There are some six U.S. warships already in the region around Yemen, including in the Gulf of Aden.