New posts are found below this video.
Under dailly threat of annihilation from Iran, Israel is abandoned by it’s one friend… The United States of America. Fear not. We’ve got another friend who is even more powerful…
Under dailly threat of annihilation from Iran, Israel is abandoned by it’s one friend… The United States of America. Fear not. We’ve got another friend who is even more powerful…
Clinton: Decision to escalate row with Israel ‘is paying off’ – Haaretz – Israel News.
United States Secretary of State Hillary Clinton said on Friday that the Obama administration’s decision to ramp up pressure on Israel over construction of Jewish homes in East Jerusalem was bringing results.
In an interview with BBC television, Clinton was asked whether escalating the tone with Israel had paid off.
She said: “I think we’re going to see the resumption of the negotiation track and that means that it is paying off because that’s our goal.”
Over the past two weeks Israel has sought to cool American ire over plans for 1,600 new homes in Ramat Shlomo, a Jewish neighborhood that lies beyond the Green Line in East Jerusalem.
Clinton had described the announcement, which coincided with a visit to Israel by U.S. Vice President Joe Biden and led Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas to pull out of scheduled U.S.-mediated peace talks, as an “insult”.
It was now the Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s duty to overcome opposition within his coalition government and ensure that the stalled negotiations moved forward, Clinton told the BBC.
“I think what the prime minister has said repeatedly is that his government and he personally are committed to pursuing these negotiations and he just has to make sure that he brings in everyone else,” she said.
“That’s his responsibility and it’s not something that the United States can or is interested in doing.”
Over the past few days the U.S has signaled its desire to move beyond the row over Ramat Shlomo and focus on restarting so-called the ‘proximity talks’ between Israel and the Palestinians.
Palestinian officials told The Associated Press on Friday that it appeared unlikely Abbas would defy mounting international pressure for a return negotiations.
Israel also seems willing to return to the negotiating table.
At a news conference later Friday following a meeting of the Quartet of Middle East peace mediators in Moscow, Clinton indicated that Netanyahu is ready to address U.S. concerns.
“What I heard from the prime minister in response to the requests we made was useful and productive,” she said.
In a telephone call to Netanyahu last week, Clinton laid out U.S. expectations from Israel including a rollback to the housing plan, a gesture of good faith to the Palestinians and an express statement that all issues dividing Israel and the Palestinians, including the fate of divided Jerusalem, remain part of the negotiations.
Clinton said she expects to see Netanyahu in Washington next week, where both are to address the annual gathering of the American Israel Public Affairs Committee.
President Obama had planned to be out of town during Netanyahu’s visit but canceled his trip to remain in Washington for a vote on his health care overhaul.
According to reports on Friday, the president has scheduled a last-minute meeting with Netanyahu.
Obama to Iran: Offer of dialogue still stands – Haaretz – Israel News.
| U.S. President Barack Obama renewed his administration’s offer of dialogue and diplomacy with Tehran late Friday, a year after his offer of a new beginning with Iran failed to achieve concrete results.
Obama, who addressed Iranians in a new videotaped appeal to mark the observance of Nowruz – an ancient festival celebrating the arrival of spring – has pledged previously to pursue aggressive sanctions to prevent Iran from getting a nuclear weapon. “We are working with the international community to hold the Iranian government accountable because they refuse to live up to their international obligations,” Obama said in the address released on Saturday, according to excerpts released by the White House. “But our offer of comprehensive diplomatic contacts and dialogue stands,” he said. Iran denies it is seeking to build a nuclear bomb and says its nuclear program is aimed at generating electricity. Obama said Washington was committed to a “more hopeful” future for the Iranian people despite U.S. differences with Iran’s government. “The United States believes in the dignity of every human being and an international order that bends the arc of history in the direction of justice – a future where Iranians can exercise their rights, to participate fully in the global economy and enrich the world through educational and cultural exchanges beyond Iran’s borders,” Obama said in the video, which had Farsi subtitles. Obama has signaled a willingness to speak directly with Iran about its nuclear program and hostility toward Israel, a key U.S. ally. At his inauguration last year, the president said his administration would reach out to rival states, declaring “we will extend a hand if you are willing to unclench your fist.” Meanwhile, efforts to impose new sanctions on Iran have been slow to find unified support from U.S. allies. “Our offer of comprehensive diplomatic contacts and dialogue stands,” Obama said in the video. “Indeed, over the course of the last year, it is the Iranian government that has chosen to isolate itself and to choose a self-defeating focus on the past over a commitment to build a better future.” The United States has not had formal diplomatic relations with Iran since the 1979 Islamic Revolution. During his first year in office Obama marked Nowruz with a then-unprecedented message offering Iran a “new beginning” of diplomatic engagement with the United States. But Tehran rebuffed Obama’s gesture and relations soured further when Iranian authorities cracked down on opposition protesters after a disputed election last June, drawing U.S. condemnation. Iran’s supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, has criticized Obama as merely a continuation of President George W. Bush’s policies toward Israel. Khamenei has also called Israel a cancerous tumor that is on the verge of collapse and has called for its destruction. Last year, Obama’s message to the Iranians warned that better relations will not be advanced by threats. “We seek instead engagement that is honest and grounded in mutual respect.” Meanwhile, Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin told U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton on Friday that Russia could back a sanctions resolution on Iran, Russian news agencies quoted a senior Putin aide as saying. Putin’s deputy chief of staff, Yuri Ushakov, was quoted as saying that Putin had affirmed that a sanctions resolution “was possible,” Itar-Tass news agency reported. “Vladimir Vladimirovich gave his appraisal of the situation in Iran and underlined that such a situation (involving Russian support of a sanctions resolution) was possible,” RIA state news agency quoted Ushakov as saying. But Putin also cautioned Clinton that sanctions “do not always help to resolve such an issue and that sometimes they can have a ounterproductive impact,” Ushakov was quoted as saying by RIA. |
|||
DEBKAfile, Political Analysis, Espionage, Terrorism, Security.
Tags: Hillary Clinton
Iran nuclear
Vladimir Putin 

US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton landed in Moscow Thursday, March 18, on the wrong foot. She made no headway in persuading Russian leaders to line up behind tough sanctions for Iran, any more than defense secretary Robert Gates did in Riyadh earlier this week. These setbacks left a question hanging over President Barack Obama’s pledge Wednesday of “aggressive sanctions” against Iran, in the light of Russian and Chinese commitments to veto such penalties if tabled at the UN Security Council.
Clinton’s talks with Russian leaders turned on the Middle East, sanctions against Iran and a new treaty to cut both their nuclear arsenals. But straight after discussing Iran with her Russian hosts, the US Secretary of State heard prime minister Vladimir Putin announce: “The launch of the first unit of Iran’s nuclear power station [at Bushehr] should be implemented already this summer.”
He spoke during a video conference in the southern city of Volgodonsk.
Our sources report that President Obama and Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu had been given Putin’s word to ascertain that the Bushehr reactor would not go on line. Moscow had been expected to continue to drag its feet indefinitely before completing and activating the Iranian reactor.
Until now, all the fairly vague announcements about Russia’s involvement in its construction came from relatively low-ranking officials, the most senior being Sergei Kiriyenko, head of the Russian nuclear energy commission. The fact that the new commitment came from Putin in person was seen by debkafile‘s Moscow sources as a message to Tehran that the Russians now took exception to Washington’s line against Iran’s nuclear program and intended to go through with getting the reactor up and running by mid-year.
Faced with this second contretemps, Clinton was still mildly disapproving when she faced reporters with Russian foreign minister Sergey Lavrov:
“…we think it would be premature to go forward with any project at this time, because we want to send an unequivocal message to the Iranians” she said.
Lavrov just as unequivocally slapped her down by insisting the Bushehr project facility “would be finished. …and this plant will open and produce electricity.”
debkafile‘s intelligence sources report that, far from being a strictly civilian plant, the Bushehr reactor’s activation will make a real contribution to Iran’s military nuclear program by providing such by-products as plutonium extracted from spent fuel rods.
Friday, Clinton attended a meeting of the Middle East Quartet along with the Russian foreign minister, EU foreign policy executive Catherine Ashton, UN Secretary Ban Ki-moon and Quartet envoy Tony Blair. They predictably called on Israel and the Palestinians to help restart talks for creating a Palestinian state within 24 months and condemned Jewish housing in east Jerusalem.
US Middle East envoy George Mitchell is due to return to Jerusalem Sunday, March 21, to continue his effort to get proximity talks started.
Israel Faces Iranian-Sized Dilemma – The Philadelphia Bulletin.
Few in the know doubt the fact that Iran has acquired the knowledge to produce an atomic bomb. Israeli intelligence is far more concerned with Iran’s pace of advancement towards the bomb making than American or European intelligence sources. The question in Israel is no longer if Israel should eliminate the Iranian threat but rather when?
The (Prime Minister Benjamin)Netanyahu government is skeptical about the Obama administration’s ability to reverse Iran’s quest for a nuclear weapon. And Hillary Clinton’s statement about offering the Arab Gulf states a protective umbrella against an Iranian nuclear threat intensified the Sunni-Arab state’s skepticism over America’s capacity to stop the Iranians. In fact, in the Middle East, it appears as if the weak and indecisive Obama administration has resigned itself to the reality of a nuclear Iran.
For several years now, a game of mutual intimidation has gone on between Israel and Iran. The Islamic Republic of Iran and its theocratic leadership advertised its successful testing of long-range missiles, while Israel responded with public show of long range refueling of its aircrafts. Iran acquired sophisticated anti-aircraft missiles to defend against aerial attacks, Israel responded in September of 2007 with the destruction of the Syrian nuclear facility.
This back and forth “game” is serious. Both sides understand the consequences of a nuclear attack. And although former Iranian President Akbar Hashemi Rafsanjani boasted that an Iranian attack would destroy Israel, an Israeli counterattack would only create acceptable damage. Mr. Rafsanjani’s point was that the Israel’s smallness makes it vulnerable to total destruction, whereas Iran’s huge size would deem an Israeli attack as only partly successful.
The real issue is not rooted in the impact of bombing by one side or the other. While an Iranian bombing of Israel might indeed devastate the Jewish State, it would not destroy it. An Israeli counterpunch could do a much greater damage to Iran than anticipated by Mr. Rafsanjani.
But let us assume that the Israeli Air Force attacked the nuclear facilities spread throughout Iran, and damaged or destroyed its capacity to produce a bomb for at least 3-5 years. It would certainly give Israel a respite and partial relief to its existential anxieties.
What Israel cannot eliminate by attacking the Iranian nuclear facilities is the know-how acquired by Iranian scientists, and it would become just a matter of time before the Iranians restore their nuclear capacity.
The consequences of an Israeli attack would doubtless be wide condemnation of the Jewish State in international forums and the U.N. in particular. More importantly, however, such a strike would solidify the mullahs’ control of Iran by appealing to the patriotism of all Iranians. It would force reformers and democrats who seek change to close ranks with the despised authoritarian regime.
As long as the Ayatollah Khamenei and Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad’s regime remains in tact, bombing and destroying most of Iran’s nuclear facilities is, at best, temporary relief. The cost of such bombing, however, might be too prohibitive. Iran would, undoubtedly, unleash its dependencies: Syria, Hezbollah and Hamas against Israel’s population centers with much greater damage to Israel civilian population than caused during the Second Lebanon War of 2006.
Israel and the U.S. must focus on eliminating the current Iranian regime. The regime change should be undertaken by the oppressed minority groups within Iran, who are currently combating the regime and its Revolutionary Guards. The persecuted and disaffected Iranian minorities (at least 55 percent of Iran’s population) — some of them experiencing ethnic cleansing, such as Ahwazi Arabs in the oil rich Khuzestan region of southwestern Iran, are ready to fight and die for their cause.
Military and financial support to the Ahwazi Arabs rebels would increase the chances for the disablement of Iran’s oil producing capacity. Since oil is the primary source of revenue for Iran, it would create a tremendous hardship for all Iranians-Persians included.
This would cause domestic discontent and expedite a regime change from within.
The largely Sunni-Muslim Kurds have been fighting the oppressive regime of the Ayatollahs for years, and they have made huge sacrifices in lives and property in seeking to attain at least cultural and religious rights. The Kurds, who number 7-10 million strong out of Iran’s 70 million people, have inflicted significant damage on the Tehran regime. Moreover, the Kurdish area is also oil rich … providing the Kurdish rebels with weapons, training and funds would result in a serious challenge to the Revolutionary Guards and to the regime’s survivability.
Last July, the Iranian theocracy hung 13 Baluchi students. The Sunni-Muslim Baluch minority in Iran (4-5 million strong), much like the Kurds, seek self determination for their people. The Kurds and Baluch are the only large nations in the Middle East without a sovereign national homeland. Like the Kurds, spread through Iraq, Iran, Syria, and Turkey, the Baluch people demand an independent Baluchistan as the homeland for their people in Afghanistan, Pakistan and Iran.
The Baluchis, Kurds, and Arab Ahwazis are determined to bring change into Iran, and their rebellion won’t subside anytime soon. The recent fraudulent elections in Iran, and the huge anti-regime demonstration made the minority groups even more convinced that time is on their side.
Azeris comprise the largest minority group, numbering over 20 million or one third of Iran’s population. Their mother tongue is Turkish, and they aspire to unite with their much better off brethrens in Azerbaijan. The Azeris, too, have been fighting the Tehran regime at a minimum for cultural autonomy.
Once the fire is lit by coordinated attacks coming from all corners of Iran: in the north and northwest by Kurds and Azeris, in the South and the southeast by Baluchis and Ahwazi Arabs, supported by America and Israel, it would provide a backwind for the Persian democrats seeking a democratic, free, and fair Iran. Only in coordination with such a collective uprising against the mullah regime, would the bombing of Iran’s nuclear facilities be effective and complete.
America’s Meddling in Israel’s Affairs May Lead to a New War in the Region.
By Gerard Group Friday, March 19, 2010
– Ilana Freedman
For Israel to embarrass Vice President Joe Biden during his recent visit to Jerusalem was diplomatically stupid. The issue was the announcement that the Jerusalem municipality had approved construction of 1,600 new apartments (not 1,600 settlements as some have reported) in an existing neighborhood in an already densely populated part of Jewish Jerusalem (not on land occupied by Arab residents, as was widely reported).
The announcement was badly timed. But it should hardly have been the trigger for such a massive verbal and diplomatic assault on Israel’s government. For the US to seize on this event and escalate the situation to its current hysteria is a measure of how far off the path of sound foreign policy we have strayed.
When the administration simultaneously gives lip service to “our special relationship with Israel”, while blasting its leadership and micromanaging such issues as neighborhood growth, the weakness of our leadership becomes a matter of concern.
Being the ‘leader’ of the free world comes with responsibility. The role of our government should be to mediate and calm the frazzled nerves of our allies, not inflame them. Israel has been in a state of war for nearly 63 years, living with neighbors who attack its citizens at will in the heart of its population centers and across its borders.
Israel’s powerful and sometimes savage response to ceaseless terrorism may not fit into our politically correct view of the world. But I would venture to say that we would do no less, were the terrorists on our border, flinging rockets at our cities, and attacking American families in their homes.
The list of diplomatic faux pas that the current administration has made during its first year has been embarrassing, from the gift of an I-pod to the Queen of England, to the President’s famous bow to the King of Saudi Arabia, to the return of a bust of Winston Churchill – given to the White House by then Prime Minister Tony Blair, and on and on. But the previous mistakes in diplomatic protocol were only embarrassing.
However, when our Secretary of State calls on the duly elected Prime Minister of a sovereign and berates him for 45 minutes, she crosses a host of diplomatic red lines. Hillary Clinton’s scolding of Prime Minister Benyamin Netanyahu was inappropriate and inflamed an already volatile situation.
When CENTCOM Commander General David Petraeus recently suggested that the West Bank and Gaza should be included in his area of command in order to change the negative impressions of the US currently held by Arabs in the region, he discarded his military objectivity and became a part of the political problem.
Although this idea was not a new one, as confirmed by former CENTCOM Commander Admiral William “Fox” Fallon, who said that talk about adding parts of Israel and the West Bank to his command was commonplace under his command, military intervention to impose “peace” within another sovereign state, when true partners to the peace process do not exist, is presumptuous and arrogant. It is also wrong.
In the case of the Queen’s I-pod, no lasting damage was done. But in this case, broken protocols may very well lead to war. The stakes are far too high for diplomatic incompetence to trump existential threat. Israel is a tiny country, the size of New Hampshire, surrounded by terrorist supporting states that would be happy to see her disappear.
The sad truth is that Israel stands alone. Her closest ally, the United States, is now taking significant steps to abandon their historic relationship. As we seek to appease those who openly seek our destruction, we are turning our backs on our true allies in the struggle against global terrorism. Instead, we are cozying up to America’s own fiercest enemies, including organizations like Hamas and nations like Iran and Venezuela.
The Obama administration’s new policy of hammering Israel is not acceptable. It is time for the American policy-makers to recognize the difference between our enemies and our friends. We need to assert our powerful (although swiftly diminishing) power in ways that are both constructive and honorable. Our current policy is leading us rapidly down the path to a global war in which our own existence as a free nation will be ultimately tested.
In the interest of maintaining an ongoing, if tenuous, stability in the region, Prime Minister Netanyahu should remember the principle on which he has expounded for many years: that only strong and courageous leadership can overcome the onslaught of tyrants and terrorism. He must now follow his own advice and stand firmly against the interference of American power-brokers masquerading as statesmen, so that he can protect his country from the next war.
That is the war that will be started by the impact of American interventions and power-broking in a region that cannot afford any more wars.
Ilana Freedman is a Senior Intelligence Analyst and CEO of Gerard Group International, Inc.
With friends like Obama, does Israel stand alone?.
Were The Munitions Delivered To Diego Garcia Meant For Israel All Along?
In a story yesterday titled United States readies attack on Iran, there has been speculation in some quarters that deliveries of bunker buster bombs to Diego Garcia in the Indian Ocean have been to prepare the United States for an attack on the nuclear facilities infrastructure in Iran.
It now appears that these munitions may have been meant for delivery to Israel and were instead diverted by the Obama administration as punishment for the Israeli plan to build settlement houses in Jerusalem.
This is consistent with Obama administration treatment of all Israeli requests for military aid. Since President Obama entered the White House, most if not all Israeli requests for advanced weapons systems have been denied.
According to a congressional source, “This is really an embargo, but nobody talks about it publicly.”
Punishment For Settlement Houses Compromises The Security Of Our One True Friend In The Middle East
The Obama administration, unhappy over the announced plan to build settlement houses in East Jerusalem, is taking a wrong turn in the method of punishment. Denying Israel the ability to defend itself would be like dropping your child off in gang territory, wearing the colors of a rival gang, as punishment for staying out past curfew.
Given the speculation during the presidential campaign that now President Obama might not be the best friend of Israel, his actions, or lack thereof, speak volumes more than any words ever could.

As this issue closed, DEBKA-Net-Weekly‘s Washington sources reported that President Barack Obama had reconsidered his position on the crisis with Israel and resolved to halt the downward spiral. The White House is working on a document for putting the friendly relations back on an even keel. Netanyahu has not yet decided whether to travel to Washington to address the AIPAC annual conference next Monday, March 22. But before he does, he will ascertain that the administration has withdrawn the threat to close its doors to him.
The White House also told the Palestinians it was time to stop their “over-the-top” utterances against Israel and street outbreaks and start cooperating with the US and Israel in their effort to restart peace talks.
Earlier, DEBKA-Net-Weekly ran the following Special Report:
For Israeli prime minister Binyamin Netanyahu, two big bones of contention with the Obama administration have been blown up by Washington into matters of life or death. They are the status of Jerusalem as Israel’s undivided capital and the vital need to eliminate Iran’s capacity for building a nuclear weapon. Netanyahu’s coalition government would not last long if he bent to Washington’s will on these two issues. Furthermore, his surrender would in itself spark a deadly chain of events.
Israeli intelligence chiefs put dire predictions of catastrophe before the seven members of Israel’s inner cabinet, which spent 96 hours this week reviewing the spiraling crisis in relations with Washington.
According to DEBKA-Net-Weekly‘s sources, they warned that if Israel let itself be bullied into submission by the Obama administration, it would become fair game for its enemies.
Iranian-backed Hizballah and the Palestinian extremist Hamas would take Israel’s loss of its senior ally, the US under president Barack Obama, as an open an invitation for an ever-expanding campaign of terror, thereby laying the ground for Tehran to consolidate its proxy’s grip on Beirut, and move in on the Gaza Strip and the West Bank.
Iran’s president Mahmoud Ahmadinejad already jumped in this week with this comment: “The Islamic revolution of Iran is a humane revolution reaching beyond the geographic boundaries of Iran. Our existence and our breathing space require that we expand our borders of conflict even closer to the command centers of the enemy. One who sits and waits for the enemy to approach… will be dressed in the robe of misery.”
Ahmadinejad issues battle cry for Israel’s weakened state
This was the Iranian president’s battle cry, a call to exploit the friction between Washington and Jerusalem for “expanding our borders of conflict” and making Israel the one “who sits and waits for the enemy to approach.” It was the first time an Iranian leader had openly articulated a frankly aggressive doctrine beyond the familiar Islamic Republic’s goal to “export of revolution” through terrorist surrogates.If Obama aimed at deterring Israel from attacking Iran, he misfired and achieved the reverse effect. His policy has brought the Iranian peril out in the open and forces Israel to hurry up and pre-empt it.
“Obama has decided to break Israel and scrap it as a factor in US-Iranian diplomacy,” said a senior minister to DEBKA-Net-Weekly this week. He refused to speak openly because the ministers were under Netanyahu’s orders to refrain from commenting on the crisis with Washington.
Another Israeli official said: “President Obama denies there is a crisis in the relations. He said [n an interview to Fox on March 17]: ‘Israel is one of our closest allies and that will not go away.’
“But let’s put the facts on the table,” said the Israeli source: “Not only is the crisis there, but we are dealing with an administration whose behavior is irrational – or that’s how it looks from here. The US president is willing to bend facts for the sake of bringing the Israeli government to its knees. That, we cannot accept.”
This Israeli comment, say our sources, referred to Vice President Joe Biden‘s angry remark to Netanyahu in Jerusalem on March 8: “What you are doing here undermines the security of our troops who are fighting in Iraq, Afghanistan and Pakistan,” and Gen. David Petraeus‘ reply to a question from the Republican Senator Lindsey Graham of South California on the length of time available before Iran was able to build a nuclear weapon. The general said: “It has, thankfully, slid to the right a bit, and it is not this calendar year, I don’t think.”
Pummeling Israel does not benefit the United States
This answer, which is not borne out by intelligence data, was seen in Jerusalem and most other Middle East capitals as another US attempt to dodge the sanctions option and play for time to engage in more fruitless negotiations with Iran.
How does this benefit the United States? It doesn’t. On March 18, the day US secretary of state Hillary Clinton visited Moscow, prime minister Vladimir Putin administered a slap in the face to Washington by announcing the first unit of the Bushehr nuclear power plant in Iran, constructed by Russian experts, might be put into operation this summer – in direct breach of his pledges to the US and Israel.
Our Jerusalem sources stress that no Israeli government, right, center or left, will ever accept Washington’s attempt to link Jewish settlements to the conflicts in Iraq and Afghanistan or the Islamic Republic of Iran’s race for a nuclear weapon. This false theory was drummed up by the most anti-Israel elements in the West.
Its aim is to tie Israel down and strip it of the motivation and resources for withstanding the very real threats to its existence which Iran, Syria, Hizballah and Hamas do not trouble to conceal.
Binyamin Netanyahu feels he has leaned over backwards to meet Barack Obama’s demands and deeply resents the US president’s accusations of Israeli “unhelpfulness” to the peace process. He endorsed the US president’s two-state doctrine (Israel and Palestinian) living in peace and security, accepted a 10-month settlement construction moratorium and, in keeping with his Economic Peace Program, has made vital contributions to the West Bank’s current prosperity under the Palestinian Authority, as well as handing over West Bank cities to Palestinian rule.
Yet Washington insists that the improvements are solely due to Palestinian prime minister Salam Fayyad‘s successful leadership and ignore Israel’s initiative.
The bottomless pit of US demands
Now, Obama wants more Israeli incentives to coax the stubborn Mahmoud Abbas into gracing peace negotiations with his presence, while refusing to credit Israel with any previous contributions to the process. The feeling in Jerusalem is that Israel is being pushed toward a bottomless pit; Washington will not be satisfied until Israel unloads all its strategic assets to meet Obama’s insatiable demands.
This week, Israel’s leaders decided to draw the line, after he laid down three preconditions for restoring normal relations with Jerusalem:
1. The 10-month freeze on West Bank settlement construction must include East Jerusalem;
2. It must be renewed after running out in September for the duration of peace negotiations with the Palestinians;
3. More Israeli concessions are needed to tempt Mahmoud Abbas.
The Netanyahu government made the gesture of offering to halt Jewish purchases of land and property in, or add Jewish residents, to Arab neighborhoods in Jerusalem in the course of negotiations with the Palestinians.
DEBKA-Net-Weekly‘s Washington sources report that the White House rejected any form of compromise and wants Israel to comply with all three demands in full.
Asia Times Online :: Middle East News, Iraq, Iran current affairs.
|
|
![]()
|
The American Spectator : Thinking About Bombing Iran.
According to an article in the Financial Times, “Do Not Even Think About Bombing Iran” by Michael O’Hanlon and Bruce Riedel, both of the Brookings Institution, “the strike option” on Iranian nuclear facilities “lacks credibility.” The authors believe that this is so because of “Iran’s ability to retaliate against the U.S. in Iraq and Afghanistan…” This logic, like much else in this anti-war polemic posing as analysis, just doesn’t withstand scrutiny.
It would have been far better if O’Hanlon/Riedel admitted from the beginning that they, like the Obama Administration, have no stomach for an attack on a murderous, ambition-crazed, self-perpetuating and self-justifying theocracy in the Middle East that seeks to dominate the region. Instead the authors prefer to present unsupported arguments such as, “… even a massive strike would not slow Iran’s progress toward a bomb for long.”
What militarily and technically inaccurate pap! For some reason O’Hanlon/Riedel seem to believe that operational nuclear weapon and development sites are actually capable of being hidden from counteraction. They present as evidence the fact that the media discovered a new nuclear development site in Qom last year. Digging in the middle of a major city can’t be seen on the ground or by satellite, eh?
Obviously these authors — and other liberal Washington pundits — are thinking only in conventional weapon terms in relation to any attack on Iranian nuclear weapon facilities. There is no reason for such a limitation. There are a panoply of classified exotic systems currently available to disrupt and destroy any and all Iranian attack modes, nuclear or not. The claim that O’Hanlon/Riedel make that “Iran can rebuild fairly fast…” is again based on a perception that only conventional weapons would be available for use in the current international political context.
The FT column argues that President Obama would not militarily attack Iran because he is bound by “his effort to recast the U.S. as a country playing by international legal norms.” Here is where O’Hanlon/Riedel may be completely correct. Obama has shown very little stomach for directly countering military threats. He certainly will stretch out as long as possible the program of sanctions along with diplomatic threats.
A key point in the O’Hanlon/Riedel argument is that Iran has already supported terrorist attacks and proxy wars on Israel and the United States. They contend that the danger of Iranian nuclear weapon buildup is lessened by the fact that Tehran has done quite well in its efforts at conventional and irregular warfare. Suggesting that Iran shouldn’t waste time pursuing nuclear weapons when it’s already doing so well with terrorists and surrogate forces doesn’t seem to hold much potential.
The O’Hanlon/Riedel commentary neglects to consider Israel’s unilateral capability to defend itself whenever it perceives imminent danger from Iran. The article offers the suggestion: “We should also pledge to provide a nuclear umbrella over Israel and other threatened states.” The authors ignore this protection has been implicit in the Middle East, and elsewhere, for decades.
It is also possible, however, to consider the use of the currently highly classified weapons mentioned earlier. Certain of these weapons are already available and could be utilized at a point when Iran is seen to have created its first nuclear-armed missile or just before. These capabilities should be emphasized more. The perspective would be improved.
Among the best known would be the electro-magnetic pulse (EMP) weapon that might be detonated at an altitude up to 400km in salvos above a central Iranian target set. This action effectively would disable all electricity-dependent instruments from automobiles to home appliances and on to missile batteries and even deep underground facilities (as discovered by the Russians years ago in their own test firings).
Ultimately all power grids throughout the targeted areas in Iran would be shorted out for hundreds of miles. There would be no need for selective targeting other than to avoid “spill-over” into non-Iranian border regions. The details of such range and target control mechanisms remain some of the most highly sensitive and thus of the strictest classification.
To compliment and supplement the EMP barrage there would be a massive computer hacking effort before and during the attack. This cyber offensive pulverizing Tehran’s tactical command and control systems reportedly has been gamed successfully on several occasions — again highly classified. The combination of the two attacks is believed to be able effectively to bring Iran to a standstill.
Defense consultant Chet Nagle, U.S. Naval Academy graduate and author of the acclaimed work, Iran Covenant, characterized the overall effect: “In fact, if the strike [EMP] was at noon on a sunny day, the people below would not know it happened except their lights would go out, cars would stop, fridges die, power line transformers short out, oil refineries shut down, and those uranium enrichment centrifuges in caverns would stop spinning.”
Such an action would immobilize Iran and allow conventional U.S. sea and air forces time to attack the already degraded Iranian coastal defense, thus preventing the closing of the Straits of Hormuz. Such a scenario supports the fact that the issue is not whether Iran can be shut down, but whether the Obama Administration would have the will to do so.
The Iranians and O’Hanlon/Riedel are betting against American will. The Israelis may agree with them, but such a view only further insures an Israeli preemptive strike. So perhaps it might be better if we did talk about — “bombing” Iran!
Recent Comments