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benny balerio
Now to the topic at hand I REALLY want to discuss, which is reasons for us to pray.

2nd Chronicles 7:14: If my people, which are called by my name, shall humble themselves, and pray, and seek my face, and turn from their wicked ways; then will I hear from heaven, and will forgive their sin, and will heal their land.

It's time for those of us living in the United States to call on the Lord in humble, repentant prayer that our lands might be healed for truly we are entering a most perilous moment in our history, especially when our leaders on Capitol Hill begin calling on the nation to enter a period of non-stop prayer, as seen in a OneNewsNow.com article. Do the members of the Congressional Prayer Caucus Foundation, which is comprised of a walloping 10% of the House, know something we don't concerning the immediate future? Or do these leaders of ours sense, as many of us do, that we're on the verge of something BIG taking place, potentially in the not-too-distant future? It's hard to say, but I think they have chosen an outstanding moment to call our nation to 'round-the clock prayer!

Is it any wonder that we need to be in non-stop prayer as our nation continues to mock God by supporting the creation of a Palestinian state on Israel's God-given covenant lands? Not in my mind.

Is it a surprise to anyone that we might need to call out to God in prayer as our first Muslim Congressman, Keith Ellison, and House Speaker Nancy Pelosi plan to pay our and Israel's terrorist enemies in Damascus, Syria a visit in the coming days, as seen in a Jerusalem Post article? It certainly isn't to me!

Is it a shocker that we need to pray for God's hand of mercy to be upon us when even we, the United States of America, are beginning to get under Israel's skin, as seen in a Middle East Newsline article, as a result of our willingness to pressure Israel into giving its Arab enemies bent on the Jewish nation's destruction just what they want, part of which is the right for millions of Arab refugees and their descendants to resettle in Israel, which is practically suicide for Israel? Have we forgotten God's promise of blessing and curse found in Genesis 12:3 where the nation of Israel is concerned? Apparently so. Perhaps that's why at least some of our nation's leaders are calling for us to lift up our nation in prayer!

And, lastly, as tensions in the Persian Gulf continue to rise steadily between Britain and Iran, President Bush has entered the fray, having largely kept his tongue concerning the abduction of 15 British soldiers in Iraq to this point. According to Yahoo News, President Bush has "taken a low-key approach so far out of concern that more robust intervention might aggravate the situation and shake international resolve on Iran's nuclear program." But now he is on the record as saying, "Iran must give back the hostages. They're innocent, they did nothing wrong, and they were summarily plucked out of waters." One can only guess where this is leading, but it doesn't look good. Not at all.

Reasons to pray, Americans and Christians all over the world? We have PLENTY of them - and things aren't going to get any better on this side of the Rapture. As such, we may as well become accustomed to the practice of praying without ceasing.

2 Timothy 3:1 This know also, that in the last days perilous times shall come.

(printer friendly version)

Posted by Michael G. Mickey at 4:55 PM

Labels: God, Israel, Israeli-Palestinian crisis, Middle East peace, Palestinian, pray, prayer, two-state solution, United States
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benny balerio




JPost.com » International » Article


Apr. 1, 2007 1:00 | Updated Apr. 1, 2007 3:29
'US ready to strike Iran on Good Friday'
By JERUSALEM POST STAFF AND AP



The United States will be ready to launch a missile attack on Iran's nuclear facilities as soon as early this month, perhaps "from 4 a.m. until 4 p.m. on April 6," according to reports in the Russian media on Saturday.

According to Russian intelligence sources, the reports said, the US has devised a plan to attack several targets in Iran, and an assault could be carried out by launching missiles from fighter jets and warships stationed in the Persian Gulf.

Russian news agency RIA Novosti quoted a security official as saying, "Russian intelligence has information that the US Armed Forces stationed in the Persian Gulf have nearly completed preparations for a missile strike against Iranian territory."

The Russian Defense Ministry rejected the claims of an imminent attack as "myths." There was no immediate response from Washington.

The reports come as the Iranian chief of staff, Hassan Fayrouz Abadi, was quoted on Saturday by Iran's Fars news agency warning leaders of Arab countries that Israel plans to open a "suicidal attack" on its neighbors this summer, to "prevent the withdrawal of the US troops from Iraq and the area."

"I warn the dear leaders and Muslim brothers in the neighboring countries of the occupied territories that this suicidal attack of the Zionists is threatening them," he said.

The countries in danger, he said, were "Lebanon and Syria, and later Egypt, Jordan and Saudi Arabia."

Also on Saturday, Russia urged Britain and Teheran to resolve the dispute over 15 British sailors and marines captured by Iran last week, a local news agency reported.

Russian Foreign Ministry spokesman Mikhail Kamynin urged the two sides to provide the United Nations with their own assessments as to what happened and where exactly the detention occurred so that the body could conduct an independent probe.

"We hope these actions will provide a foundation for the soonest possible resolution of the crisis," Kamynin was quoted as saying by the Interfax news agency.

Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad insisted that the captured British sailors and marines trespassed in Iranian waters and called world powers "arrogant" for failing to apologize, the country's official news agency reported.

"The British occupier forces did trespass our waters. Our border guards detained them with skill and bravery. But arrogant powers, because of their arrogant and selfish spirit, are claiming otherwise," IRNA quoted Ahmadinejad as saying during a speech in the southeastern city of Andinmeshk.

The European Union grappled with a double bind over Iran Saturday - the country's nuclear program and its seizure of the British troops - and reported no progress on either issue.

A debate about Iran's nuclear ambitions had been scheduled as a key agenda item but "was overshadowed to a certain extent by the issue of the sailors and marines," German Foreign Minister Frank-Walter Steinmeier said after hosting a two-day EU foreign ministers meeting in Bremen, Germany.

The Foreign Ministry in Iran dismissed the EU's "biased and meddlesome" comments on the captured troops, saying the dispute solely involved the governments of Iran and Britain.

Speaking to reporters in Bremen, British Foreign Secretary Margaret Beckett urged Iran to resolve the crisis over the military personnel peacefully, saying London remains open to dialogue.

"We encourage Iran to peacefully resolve this issue," she said.

"We continue to express our willingness to engage in dialogue and discussions with Iran," she added. "That is very much in the best interest of our people and that is our foremost concern."

"I think everyone regrets that this position has arisen," she said. "What we want is a way out of it."

AP contributed to this report.


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benny balerio
An Iran Showdown and a Revived Sanhedrin
JRMI News Commentary
by Jerry Robinson
Posted: 3/30/07


--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

The recent Iranian capture of 15 British Royal Navy personnel in the Gulf has sparked a war of words between Iran and the UK. Iran, which has been under increasing international pressure due to its belligerent policies and state-sponsored terrorism, captured the British sailors several days ago after claiming that they had strayed into Iranian waters.
The British government has denied the claims and has called for an immediate unconditional return of the captured sailors. Britain claims that it has evidence that will prove the British group did not cross into Iranian waters and Blair has stated that efforts to release the 15 Royal Navy captives will enter a “different phase” if diplomatic moves fail. Blair insists that it will not negotiate or bargain with Iran.

On Thursday, the U.N. Security Council expressed "grave concern" over the capture of the 15 British sailors and called for an early resolution of the problem, including their release.

U.S. Show of Force off Iranian Coast

Interestingly, this week the U.S. Navy began its largest demonstration of force in the Persian Gulf since the 2003 invasion of Iraq. Russian military intelligence services are reporting a flurry of activity by U.S. Armed Forces near Iran's borders. However, Iran has denied reports of a large-scale U.S. Navy exercise in the Gulf.

While an imminent conflict between Iran and the West is uncertain, what is certain is a coming war between Iran and Israel. The ancient prophet Ezekiel prophesied that a group of Islamic nations, including Iran, would invade Israel in the last days. (Ezek. 38, 39) Iran’s increasing rhetoric and belligerence towards the nation of Israel, coupled with its strong Islamic eschatological expectations, make this an extremely volatile time in the Middle East. Our generation is witnessing the climactic conclusion of the ancient sibling rivalry between Isaac (Israel) and Ishamel (Arabs). Only now, they are weilding nuclear and chemical weapons, not stones and spears.


--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

A Revived Sanhedrin

More news coming forth this week about the revived Sanhedrin...
According to several Biblical passages, a re-establishment of the Jewish sacrificial system in a rebuilt Jewish Temple will precede the Second Coming of Christ. (See Dan. 9:27; Dan 11:31; 2 Thess. 2:4; Rev. 11:1) Such a revival of Jewish sacrifice and offering would logically necessitate a rebuilt Jewish Temple due to the strict codes and requirements as prescribed in the law of Moses (Torah.) It has often been deduced, perhaps correctly, that the Antichrist will make provisions for this Jewish sacrificial system in his 7 year covenant with the land of Israel before breaking it 3 ½ years later.

What makes all of this truly relevant in our day is the recent return of the Sanhedrin in Israel a few years ago. The Sanhedrin, which has been out of commission for nearly 1,600 years, was the ruling religious legal body during the Second Temple period in Jerusalem. The religious authorities in charge of this modern-day Sanhedrin are convinced that they are the only properly ordained body who can identify, verify, and authenticate the Jewish Messiah when he comes. Additionally, the Sanhedrin is aggressively pursuing the idea of rebuilding the Jewish Temple in order to re-commence the offering of sacrifice according to the Mosaic Law. And in a recent story in the Ha’aretz newspaper in Jerusalem, the newly re-established Sanhedrin has decided to “purchase a herd of sheep for ritual sacrifice at the site of the Temple on the eve of Passover” which falls in April 2007. The revival of the Sanhedrin, the rebuilding of the Hebrew Temple, and the re-institution of the Mosaic animal sacrifices are all highly prophetic in nature. Their near fulfillment indicate the nearness of Christ's return.

Jesus the Christ, who came in the flesh to make the Father God known unto the world, is coming again for those who have accepted Him. According to the Bible, His return is right at the door. You can accept Christ right now. Click here to find out more.


................................................benny cool.gif

An Iran Showdown and a Revived Sanhedrin
JRMI News Commentary
by Jerry Robinson
Posted: 3/30/07


--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

The recent Iranian capture of 15 British Royal Navy personnel in the Gulf has sparked a war of words between Iran and the UK. Iran, which has been under increasing international pressure due to its belligerent policies and state-sponsored terrorism, captured the British sailors several days ago after claiming that they had strayed into Iranian waters.
The British government has denied the claims and has called for an immediate unconditional return of the captured sailors. Britain claims that it has evidence that will prove the British group did not cross into Iranian waters and Blair has stated that efforts to release the 15 Royal Navy captives will enter a “different phase” if diplomatic moves fail. Blair insists that it will not negotiate or bargain with Iran.

On Thursday, the U.N. Security Council expressed "grave concern" over the capture of the 15 British sailors and called for an early resolution of the problem, including their release.

U.S. Show of Force off Iranian Coast

Interestingly, this week the U.S. Navy began its largest demonstration of force in the Persian Gulf since the 2003 invasion of Iraq. Russian military intelligence services are reporting a flurry of activity by U.S. Armed Forces near Iran's borders. However, Iran has denied reports of a large-scale U.S. Navy exercise in the Gulf.

While an imminent conflict between Iran and the West is uncertain, what is certain is a coming war between Iran and Israel. The ancient prophet Ezekiel prophesied that a group of Islamic nations, including Iran, would invade Israel in the last days. (Ezek. 38, 39) Iran’s increasing rhetoric and belligerence towards the nation of Israel, coupled with its strong Islamic eschatological expectations, make this an extremely volatile time in the Middle East. Our generation is witnessing the climactic conclusion of the ancient sibling rivalry between Isaac (Israel) and Ishamel (Arabs). Only now, they are weilding nuclear and chemical weapons, not stones and spears.


--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

A Revived Sanhedrin

More news coming forth this week about the revived Sanhedrin...
According to several Biblical passages, a re-establishment of the Jewish sacrificial system in a rebuilt Jewish Temple will precede the Second Coming of Christ. (See Dan. 9:27; Dan 11:31; 2 Thess. 2:4; Rev. 11:1) Such a revival of Jewish sacrifice and offering would logically necessitate a rebuilt Jewish Temple due to the strict codes and requirements as prescribed in the law of Moses (Torah.) It has often been deduced, perhaps correctly, that the Antichrist will make provisions for this Jewish sacrificial system in his 7 year covenant with the land of Israel before breaking it 3 ½ years later.

What makes all of this truly relevant in our day is the recent return of the Sanhedrin in Israel a few years ago. The Sanhedrin, which has been out of commission for nearly 1,600 years, was the ruling religious legal body during the Second Temple period in Jerusalem. The religious authorities in charge of this modern-day Sanhedrin are convinced that they are the only properly ordained body who can identify, verify, and authenticate the Jewish Messiah when he comes. Additionally, the Sanhedrin is aggressively pursuing the idea of rebuilding the Jewish Temple in order to re-commence the offering of sacrifice according to the Mosaic Law. And in a recent story in the Ha’aretz newspaper in Jerusalem, the newly re-established Sanhedrin has decided to “purchase a herd of sheep for ritual sacrifice at the site of the Temple on the eve of Passover” which falls in April 2007. The revival of the Sanhedrin, the rebuilding of the Hebrew Temple, and the re-institution of the Mosaic animal sacrifices are all highly prophetic in nature. Their near fulfillment indicate the nearness of Christ's return.

Jesus the Christ, who came in the flesh to make the Father God known unto the world, is coming again for those who have accepted Him. According to the Bible, His return is right at the door. You can accept Christ right now. Click here to find out more.


................................................benny cool.gif
benny balerio
The statement that I posted at the bottom of post#1502.....It looks like I am not the only one who see's and realizes the possible meaning of current events............................................................................April 1, 2007
The EU's Solana: The Stage Is Being Set
by Michael G. Mickey
(4-1-07)

Mere days ago, literally, the Arab world was telling Israel to accept their peace proposal or else the "lords of war" would decide Israel's future, as seen in a Telegraph article. What a difference a few days can make!

In the days following the Arab world making its not-too-concealed threat to Israel to give it a peace plan that is beneficial to it alone or else, the revived Roman empire of Bible prophecy - the European Union (EU) - has been leaping for joy, as documented in a number of instances. Let's look at a few.

The European Union on Friday hailed a renewed Arab initiative for peace in the Middle East as encouraging, as documented in the Jerusalem Post.

According to an EUBusiness.com article entitled "EU seeks to push forward Mideast peace process", EU foreign ministers began talks yesterday (3-31-07) on how to handle the new Palestinian unity government and encourage the Middle East peace process, buoyed by a revived Arab League initiative.

It was also yesterday that Bloomberg.com quoted EU foreign policy chief Javier Solana as saying, "We're beginning to construct the dynamics that may arrive at a settlement. There may be a window in which we can move the process forward."

Adding to all the above, as seen in a Telegraph article, Palestinian leader Mahmoud Abbas offered Israel the "hand of peace" yesterday, stating, "We renounce violence in all its forms and manifestations because we were the first victims of violence. I repeat the sincerity of the Palestinian will in extending the hand of peace to the Israeli people. With the support of the Arab countries, we must not lose any chance to put an end to this historic problem."

Wow, huh? In a matter of less than a week we've gone from implied Arab threats of warfare to offering the hand of peace, which is secretly the backhand of war, although that will not be known until after the Antichrist, a prince (or leader) of Roman descent Daniel (9:26), arrives on the scene to confirm (or make strong) a seven-year covenant of peace between Israel and her enemies! (Daniel 9:27)

1st Thessalonians 5:3-6:


For when they shall say, Peace and safety; then sudden destruction cometh upon them, as travail upon a woman with child; and they shall not escape.

But ye, brethren, are not in darkness, that that day should overtake you as a thief.

Ye are all the children of light, and the children of the day: we are not of the night, nor of darkness.

Therefore let us not sleep, as do others; but let us watch and be sober.
Why do I feel led to remind Christians everywhere to live our lives as the children of light, remaining sober, alert and watching at this moment in time? For all the above, obviously, as well as a few other things we need to bear in mind.

EU foreign policy chief Javier Solana, as the headline of a Jerusalem Post article suggests, believes the stage is being set for something to take place in the Middle East that may be "beginning to construct the dynamic that could lead to the settlement of a crisis that has been with us for many years."

Recently, I asked a question on RaptureAlert.com. It was this: "Is confirmation of Middle East peace coming?"

In Bible prophecy we're told that a leader from within the revived Roman empire of Bible prophecy, today's European Union, is going to confirm peace in the Middle East "with many." Do I think we're getting closer and closer to that taking place? Absolutely - and not just by means of the passage of time.

If confirmation of Middle East peace doesn't occur via this plan, it will via another. It's just a matter of time but time almost certainly has to be running out as the ante continues to rise by the moment for all concerned and they absolutely must realize this is the case!

Iran, having openly stated it longs for the day when Israel will be wiped from the face of the earth, continues to seek a nuclear weapon in defiance of the entire world, playing a dangerous game of cat and mouse that all the leaders in the Middle East, whether spoken or unspoken, understand could lead to a nuclear war in the region (if that was God's plan, of course).

Slowly but surely, the stage is being set.

ARE YOU READY TO FLY? If you're not, it's way past time to get ready! Jesus Christ is coming soon and, potentially, VERY SOON and you can't afford to miss it!

SEE ALSO: Merkel says "there is movement" in Mideast process..........................benny cool.gif
benny balerio
Apr. 1, 2007 16:21 | Updated Apr. 1, 2007 17:45
'Iran, Syria, and Hizbullah preparing for summer war'
By JPOST.COM STAFF



Talkbacks for this article: 5

Iran, Syria, and Hizbullah are preparing their forces for the possibility of a summer war in the event that the US carries out a military strike against Iran, Head of IDF Military Intelligence Major General Amos Yadlin said Sunday.

"We are not speaking of preparations for a war to be carried out at their (Iran, Syria, and Hizbullah) own initiative. Their deployments, in our opinion, are those of a defensive nature," Yaldin said in his briefing at the government's weekly cabinet meeting.

"They fear military action initiated by the Americans, whom they anticipate to be planning an attack against Iran in the summer," Yadlin said.


'US ready to strike Iran on Good Friday'
He stressed repeatedly that the preparations were not of a nature that signified the Iranians and its allies were expecting an attack by Israel.

"We are closely following theses preparations, with concern that the parties can incorrectly interpret specific movement of forces in the region. I wish to remind you of the Six-Day War - when a war that no one wanted broke out as a result of the involvement of many players," Yadlin said.

"We need to be one side prepared, but on the other hand to be careful such steps will not result to erroneous thinking on our part," he added.

Yadlin said Hizbullah was observing the cease-fire because the organization had no interest in another bout with Israel at the present time.

"The organization is busy restoring its sources. This rebuilding has been giving acceleration from their point of view that, like the Syrians, they must prepare for a war in summer."

Addressing the Palestinian front, Yadlin said Hamas had increased its military activity and that Palestinian Authority Prime Minister Ismail Haniyeh had threatened to order a third intifada if the international community continues to refuse contact with Hamas ministers and the economic embargo on the PA is not lifted.

Yadlin added that Haniyeh transferred a million dollars to a Hamas terror cell in the days preceding the formation of the Palestinian unity government.
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Apr. 1, 2007 16:21 | Updated Apr. 1, 2007 17:45
'Iran, Syria, and Hizbullah preparing for summer war'
By JPOST.COM STAFF



Talkbacks for this article: 5

Iran, Syria, and Hizbullah are preparing their forces for the possibility of a summer war in the event that the US carries out a military strike against Iran, Head of IDF Military Intelligence Major General Amos Yadlin said Sunday.

"We are not speaking of preparations for a war to be carried out at their (Iran, Syria, and Hizbullah) own initiative. Their deployments, in our opinion, are those of a defensive nature," Yaldin said in his briefing at the government's weekly cabinet meeting.

"They fear military action initiated by the Americans, whom they anticipate to be planning an attack against Iran in the summer," Yadlin said.


'US ready to strike Iran on Good Friday'
He stressed repeatedly that the preparations were not of a nature that signified the Iranians and its allies were expecting an attack by Israel.

"We are closely following theses preparations, with concern that the parties can incorrectly interpret specific movement of forces in the region. I wish to remind you of the Six-Day War - when a war that no one wanted broke out as a result of the involvement of many players," Yadlin said.

"We need to be one side prepared, but on the other hand to be careful such steps will not result to erroneous thinking on our part," he added.

Yadlin said Hizbullah was observing the cease-fire because the organization had no interest in another bout with Israel at the present time.

"The organization is busy restoring its sources. This rebuilding has been giving acceleration from their point of view that, like the Syrians, they must prepare for a war in summer."

Addressing the Palestinian front, Yadlin said Hamas had increased its military activity and that Palestinian Authority Prime Minister Ismail Haniyeh had threatened to order a third intifada if the international community continues to refuse contact with Hamas ministers and the economic embargo on the PA is not lifted.

Yadlin added that Haniyeh transferred a million dollars to a Hamas terror cell in the days preceding the formation of the Palestinian unity government.
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benny balerio
Israeli military intelligence chief predicts Iran-Hizballah-Syria attack on Israel in summer

April 1, 2007, 9:50 PM (GMT+02:00)





In his briefing to the Israeli cabinet Sunday, April 1, Maj. Gen. Amos Yadlin, AMAN chief, reported that Iran, Syria, Hizballah and Hamas expect the United States to attack Iran in the summer and they are preparing to retaliate by going to war with Israel. In Yadlin’s view, a proliferation of players and a many imponderables could ignite a conflict, which none of the parties wants – as happened in the Six Day War of 1967.

DEBKAfile analysts note five salient points in Gen. Yadlin’s briefing:

1. His comments came one day after Iran’s chief of staff, Gen. Hassan Fayrouz Abadi, urged the Arabs to hurry up and join Iran in a defense treaty because, he claimed, Israel threatened a war offensive in summer, two months hence. According to the Iranian general, Israel was bent on a “suicide assault” against a number of Arab states to save the Americans from having to pull their troops out of Iraq (sic).

1. Iran, Syria, Hizballah and Hamas may be presumed to be acting on some piece of intelligence that point to a forthcoming US attack some time between April and early September 2007. Therefore, the Middle East faces at least five months of incendiary military instability during with everyone braced for an axe to fall.

2. A coordinated Iranian-Syrian-Hizballah-Hamas attack would lay Israel open to four warfronts and the common weapon to them all: missiles - anti-tank, short-range surface, medium range ballistic and surface-to-air.

3. Hamas threatens to launch the third Palestinian uprising (intifada) against Israel within three months unless the international blockade is lifted and funds are released to the Palestinian Authority.

The cabinet was informed that the IDF would start operating behind Gazan lines against the massive Palestinian military build-up.

For five months, the Olmert government’s policy was one of military restraint at the behest of US and European governments. This week, Israel’s leaders watched British discomfiture as the United States, the UN and the Europeans turned aside when asked for help to free 15 sailors seized by Iran in the Persian Gulf. It is obvious that Israel must be ready to stand alone and defend itself if attacked on four fronts.

4. Neither the chief of AMAN nor the ministers discussed the state of Israel’s armed forces’ preparedness. Asked about this, DEBKAfile’s military sources said their readiness was only partial as yet: The air force, some of the combat divisions are ready; other parts of the military, such as some reservist brigades, the Navy and the home front are not.
.............................................benny cool.gif....p.s. ....There's those words again of Israel may go it alone..."It is obvious that Israel must be ready to stand alone and defend itself if attacked on four fronts.".....Isaiah 17;4......Which says;..."In that day it will come to pass That the glory of Jacob will wane.".....This indicates that all world opinion was against Israel for an act that she did, against the worlds wishes..............
benny balerio
http://www.hallindsey.org/ ...........................watch video..............................benny cool.gif
benny balerio
http://www.haaretz.com/hasen/spages/844754.html


Last update - 03:12 02/04/2007
IDF, gov't preparing for possible Syrian strike on Golan
By Aluf Benn, Haaretz Correspondent

Israel's political and military leadership has been preparing in recent weeks for the possibility of a Syrian attack on the Golan Heights that will start as a result of a "miscalculation" on the part of the Syrians, who may assume that Israel intends to attack them.

Israel, however, has delivered a calming message, and has no plans to attack its northern neighbor.

According to information Israel received, the Syrians are concerned that the United States will carry out an attack against Iran's nuclear installations in the summer, and in parallel Israel would strike Syria and Lebanon.

Prime Minister Ehud Olmert, who visited IDF forces in the North last week, heard an intelligence assessment and was informed of the dangers of a Syrian "miscalculation."

Following his visit to the forces in the field, a decision was made to publicly address the concerns of a possible deterioration with the Syrians, and to send a message that Israel has no intention of attacking Syria, nor is there any coordinated plan with the U.S. for a joint attack against Iran.

The speaker of the U.S. House of Representatives, Nancy Pelosi, is scheduled to meet with Syrian President Bashar Assad in Damascus on Monday, and will deliver a message of calm from Israel.

"We hope the message will be understood," political sources in Israel said Sunday. "The question is whether Assad is looking for an excuse ... so that he can carry out an attack against Israel in the summer, or whether this is a mistaken assessment."

Pelosi visited Israel on Sunday and told her Israeli interlocutors that the country must speak with Assad and that the door should not be closed to Syria, even though she is aware that Syria supports terrorism and continued cooperation with Iran.

The Democratic congresswoman was critical of the Republican administration's policy of boycotting Damascus.

Her statements hinted that if the Democrats regained control of the White House in 2008, they will work toward renewing dialogue with Syria.

The chairman of the House Committee on Foreign Affairs, Tom Lantos, who accompanied Pelosi, said Assad should be given a final opportunity to disengage from the "axis of evil."

According to Lantos, in a few years, Sunni Muslims and not Iran under Mahmoud Ahmadinejad will be in control in the region, and it is to the advantage of Damascus to know which side to be on.

In a holiday interview with Haaretz, Prime Minister Ehud Olmert also commented on the assessments of a possible "war in the summer."

"The Syrians, according to their statements and those of others recently," Olmert said, "appear to be saying that there is an American plan to attack Iran in the summer, and at the same time, and in coordination with Israel, to also attack Syria and Lebanon."

"I can tell you that there is no such plan that we know about, and in any case, there is no reason for the Syrians to prepare for such an eventuality. There is always concern that when one side prepares for war, and the other side is preparing to counter the other side's preparations, then the first side interprets the preparations of the other side as if it is the manifestation of its fears, and the situation goes into a spin, and control is lost.

"We have no intention to attack the Syrians," Olmert said, "we prefer to make peace with the Syrians, but it is a fact that the army is carrying out very intensive training in all systems, all branches, all units, in all areas, and it will continue doing so as part of its annual plans, and it will be ready for any eventuality - including the possibility of what is called miscalculation ... But we take into account everything, and hope that the things that should not happen, do not happen."

On Sunday, Olmert denied reports of a planned coordinated offensive in which the U.S. would attack Iran and Israel would hit Syria and Lebanon at the same time.

During a joint press conference with German Chancellor Angela Merkel, Olmert dismissed the idea of a summer offensive, calling it "a plan we don't know of. It is baseless, and an unfounded rumor with no foundation. I hope no one will operate on the basis of unfounded rumor to create a move that would have no reason to drag us into a conflict."

The prime minister's denial came hours after Yadlin told a cabinet session on Sunday that Israel is closely monitoring preparations by Syria, Iran and Hezbollah for a U.S.-led war this summer.

According to Yadlin, Iran and Syria believe that a war this summer will be initiated by the U.S. and that Israel will be involved. He said that the preparations were defensive, adding that Iran, Syria and Hezbollah were not expected to initiate the war.

"What we are seeing is their preparation for the possibility of war in the summer. My assessment is that they are defensive preparations for war," Yadlin was quoted by a government official as saying, referring to Iran, Syria and Hezbollah.

"We are closely monitoring these preparations because [Iran, Syria and Hezbollah] could misinterpret various moves in the region," Yadlin said, according to the official.

Yadlin noted that, as in the case of the 1967 Six-Day War, military conflict could erupt despite that fact that neither side is interested in war, because of "the involvement of many players."

Regarding Hamas, Yadlin said that Haniyeh has warned that if the international financial embargo on Gaza is not lifted within three months, a third intifada will break out.

Yadlin added that there senior Hamas members that are displeased with the Saudi Arabian initiative, and that the military branch of Hamas has renewed its activity.

Meanwhile, U.S. House members meeting with Syrian President Bashar Assad Sunday said they believed there was an opportunity for dialogue with the Syrian leadership.

The U.S. House members, who included Virginia Republican Frank Wolf, Pennsylvania Republican Joe Pitts and Alabama Republican Robert Aderholt, also said they had raised with Syrian officials the issue of stopping the alleged flow of foreign fighters from Syria to Iraq.

In a statement issued by the U.S. Embassy in Damascus, the congressmen said they had talked about ending support for Hezbollah and Hamas, recognizing Israel's right to exist in peace and security, and ceasing interference in Lebanon.

"We came because we believe there is an opportunity for dialogue, the statement said. "We are following in the lead of Ronald Reagan, who reached out to the Soviets during the Cold War," it added.
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benny balerio
Iran Forces Israeli Rethink

April 02, 2007
The Guardian
Simon Tisdall
http://www.guardian.co.uk/iran/story/0,,2048070,00.html

Uzi Arad, former director of intelligence at Israel's spy agency, Mossad, has made a lifetime's study of revolutionary Iran. If international sanctions and diplomatic arm-twisting fail to halt its suspect nuclear activities, he is clear what the west must do: bomb Tehran.

Israel's official policy, like Britain and the US, stresses peaceful pressure to secure Iran's compliance with its nuclear obligations. The so-called military option has been assiduously talked down ever since President George Bush appeared to talk it up in January. In any case, military experts say, air strikes would have limited success.

Mr Arad has no such inhibitions: "A military strike may be easier than you think. It wouldn't just be aimed at the nuclear sites. It would hit military and security targets, industrial and oil-related targets such as Kharg island [Iran's main oil export terminal in the Gulf], and regime targets ... Iran is much more vulnerable than people realise."
Like most Israeli politicians and planners, Mr Arad says maximising pressure on Iran by all non-military means is the current priority.

"Instead of threatening war, my preference would be for building an international coalition to end the [nuclear] crisis," said Israel's veteran vice-premier Shimon Peres. Yet Iran's behaviour following its seizure of the 15 British service personnel showed how difficult that would be. "They will use every trick," Mr Peres said. "They will try and string it out, try to exert maximum pressure. It's blackmail ... But they will pay the price in the end."

To say Iran has become an obsession for Israeli leaders is an understatement. Tehran's sinister hand is seen in all the key problems facing the country, including Hizbullah in Lebanon and Hamas in Palestine, and in the fostering of what Professor Amnon Rubinstein calls Israel's "sense of abandonment surrounded by a rising sea of Islamism".

What is termed the Ahmadinejad phenomenon, after Iran's anti-Zionist president Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, represents by common agreement an existential threat. It is radically altering the way Israel views its neighbourhood.

One result has been the effective downgrading of the Palestinian issue. Officials welcome the latest US peacemaking efforts. But they say ongoing, low-level conflict can be "managed" almost indefinitely. Similarly, Israel's relations with Arab governments, including Saudi Arabia, have reached a sort of high in recent months, driven not by a developing affinity, but by shared fear of Iran.

But perhaps the most startling shift in Israel's outlook is its increased willingness to "internationalise" the search for solutions, whether in Lebanon, where it agreed to an enlarged peacekeeping presence after last summer's war, in Palestine, where it has sought EU and other help in isolating Hamas, and in terms of improving relations with the UN.

And as both Mr Arad and government ministers see it, facing down a potentially nuclear Iran is a global, not just an Israeli necessity - and will require a joint international effort. "We draw a parallel with the Third Reich," said a senior leader of the Likud opposition party. "They [Iran's leaders] are mad ... For Ahmadinejad, the cold war idea of mutual assured destruction is not a deterrent, it's an incentive."
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benny balerio
http://www.dailystar.com.lb/article....cle_id=81 080

Iranian officer reports incursion by US warplanes
By Agence France Presse (AFP)
Monday, April 02, 2007

TEHRAN: US warplanes have violated Iranian airspace in the southwestern oil-rich province of Khuzestan, Al-Alam Arabic language news satellite channel quoted a local military chief as saying on Sunday. "Two aircraft trespassed into Iranian airspace northwest of [the southwestern port city of] Abadan before flying southwest into Iraq," a local Revolutionary Guards commander in Abadan identified only as Colonel Aqili was quoted as saying on the channel's Web site.

"The planes left white vapor trails, attracting the local people's attention," he said, giving no time of the incident.

No further information was available as The Daily Star went to press on the alleged violation, which if true could have significant ramifications for already tense relations between Iran and the United States. - AFP
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benny balerio
Tehran spoiling for a fight

ANALYSIS
Bronwen Maddox
April 02, 2007
http://www.theaustralian.news.com.au...2-2703,00.html

THE most dangerous implication of the seizure of the 15 British sailors and marines - other than the direct threat to them - is that Iran is even more unpredictable and confrontational than it had seemed.

The second is that Russia, despite its own now-explicit unease about Iran's nuclear ambitions, is a serious obstacle to Britain's efforts to rally support.

When Iran seized the sailors, it was reasonable to hope this might be one of the impetuous accidents to which this complicated regime is prone, its factions often disorganised or contradictory. That hope determined Britain's initially low-key response - it was plausible that an over-enterprising group in the Islamic Revolutionary Guards might have decided to seize the sailors, leaving government officials, scrambling into their offices during Iran's New Year holiday, to fit a framework of policy on to some awkward freelancing.

That hope has gone. If officials found the original predicament embarrassing, they have chosen to escalate it, particularly with the letter from Leading Seaman Faye Turner calling on British Prime Minister Tony Blair to pull out of Iraq.

Why now? The clash over Iran's nuclear program is one reason. Britain, along with the US and France, has been pushing in the UN Security Council for tough sanctions against Tehran for its failure to reassure the world that its efforts to develop nuclear power do not conceal a weapons program. The recent imposition of some sanctions had already ratcheted up tension.

British officials have been encouraged that in the nuclear talks, even since the election of hardliner President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad two years ago, Iran has behaved like a "rational regime" that wants to avoid sanctions and calculates the penalties and rewards of its actions. It appeared shaken by the united front of the Security Council last year, while the US's financial sanctions appeared to have a real and rapid effect.

Most of all, Tehran has appeared perturbed by the sudden coolness of Russia, which has withheld shipments of fuel from Iran's first nuclear reactor because of concerns about the ultimate intentions.

Yet Russia's support for the Western position on the nuclear issue has not extended to the hostage crisis - Moscow forced the council to water down the tough condemnation that Britain originally wanted.

No Western diplomat can have taken comfort from Iran's escalation of the nuclear conflict. It has threatened to stop co-operating with the International Atomic Energy Agency. That co-operation is the basis for its claim to be behaving legally under the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty, and has given other countries their only windows on to Iran's nuclear sites.

Iraq is another probable cause of the seizure of the sailors. Iran has condemned the US surge of troops and the US seizure of Iranians claimed to be military agents. Still, the US is not Britain; it cannot have been lost on Tehran that Mr Blair has said he will soon withdraw about a third of the British forces in Iraq. To hold hostage the troops of a country that says it is heading for the exit counts as picking a fight.

A letter from Tehran, said to be asking for Britain's commitment never to enter Iranian waters again, might be the first sketch of an exit from the crisis that Tehran would consider face-saving. But now the stand-off has gone into its second week, one can only conclude that the regime in Iran, in its various conflicts with the West, is behaving in a more systematically confrontational way than those who negotiate with it had hoped.

The Times
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benny balerio
Dudi Cohen
Published: 04.01.07, 10:34 / Israel News

Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad praised his country's ability to recruit "hundreds of suicide bombers a day," saying "suicide is an invincible weapon."


Ahmadinejad made the comments during a visit to a site south Iran used to prepare suicide bombers during the Iraq-Iran war, Iranian state television reported.


He praised Hizbullah fighters for their suicidal spirit during last summer's confrontation with Israel.


Iran recruited thousands of suicide bombers, many of whom were children, and sent them to the frontline to face Saddam Hussein's army.


"Suicide bombers in this land showed us the way, and they enlighten our future," he said.


The Iranian president said the will to commit suicide was "one of the best ways of life."

Link
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JohnK

Olmert denies Syrian war rumours
Abraham Rabinovich, Jerusalem
  • April 03, 2007
ISRAELI Prime Minister Ehud Olmert attempted to scotch rumours of war sweeping the Middle East yesterday, citing reports emanating from Damascus and Tehran of a US plan to attack Iran in co-ordination with an Israeli attack on Syria and on Hezbollah in Lebanon. HTTP://www.theaustralian.news.com.au/story...11-2703,00.html


benny balerio
Damascus airport- busy place!!!!!!!!!!!

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DEBKAfile Exclusive: Damascus airport has become the hub for thousands of Hizballah, Hamas, Jihad Islami fighters heading out to Iranian training camps

April 2, 2007, 6:05 PM (GMT+02:00)
Vital link between terrorist recruits and Tehran


Vital link between terrorist recruits and Tehran


According to DEBKAfile’s military and intelligence sources, in the last several weeks, Damascus international airport main has become the main transport hub for a stream of Lebanese and Palestinian terrorists heading for Revolutionary Guards installations in Iran. Hence Israel military intelligence chief’s pessimistic briefing to the Israeli cabinet Sunday, April 1. (See separate item on this page) Damascus airport is also the transit point for returning terrorists to gather and pick up their assignment for various Middle East countries, as well as Lebanon, the Gaza Strip and the West Bank. Syrian military intelligence and Iranian RG officers have set up a joint depot at the Syrian airport for directing the incoming and outgoing traffic - much of it ferried by Syrian Airways.

A high-ranking Western intelligence source in the Middle East told DEBKAfile that the number of such terrorist-trainees commuting between Damascus and Tehran has grown to more than three times the volume of Muslim and al Qaeda fighters heading out from Syria into Iraq. This source calculates Iran is running a crash program to prepare an army of trained terrorist strength to retaliate for a potential US attack on its nuclear installations. That will be the signal for these men to ignite a regional war of terror across Iraq, Lebanon, Israel, the Gaza Strip, the West Bank and out to Sinai and Egypt.

Four Iranian command centers have been set up at home, in Iraq, Syria and Lebanon, to coordinate the movements of fighting men and the arms consignments that are being shipped through marine smuggling routes to their various destinations.

According to our intelligence and military sources, new training methods are employed for the new intake of terrorists. They are no longer being trained at special facilities provided for them at the camps run by the Al Quds Brigades, the RGs international branch. From the beginning of 2007, they have been integrated in regular RG training facilities and are taking basic training along with Iranian recruits in line with a revised Iranian military doctrine. The entire Middle East is deemed henceforth a single integrated line designed to defend the ayatollahs’ regime in Tehran in case of American attack. This line will be manned entirely by units which underwent training in the same combat tactics and operate the same weapons systems and communications.

Syria’s high command and military intelligence are pivotal to the construction, administration and control of this new fighting-terrorist machine. The personal say-so of president Bashar Assad would have been necessary for this project. Damascus airport facilities are a pivotal link in the mechanism wiring Tehran to the terrorist groups and transporting them from training centers to operating bases ready to fight for the Islamic Republic. Without Damascus’ aid, the operation would have taken much longer.

Israel’s AMAN chief, Maj. Gen. Amos Yadlin views this burgeoning war-***-terror machine as a dangerous element that could tip the region over into a full-blown conflict without prior warning. No one outside Iran, even seasoned military intelligence observers, can know for certain when, why or for which location, some high-up in the wildly-radical Revolutionary Guards will decide to push the button to activate it.

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Russian expert says Iran can make nuclear weapons

Mon Apr 2, 2007 12:14PM EDT
By Guy Faulconbridge

MOSCOW (Reuters) - Russia's leading nuclear scientist said on Monday that it was just a question of time before Iran developed a nuclear weapon and it should be stopped.

The Islamic republic, facing a showdown with the United States over its nuclear ambitions, clearly has the know-how to make atomic weapons, said Yevgeny Velikhov, a leading physicist and close associate of Russian President Vladimir Putin.

"From a scientific point of view of course they could create nuclear weapons," Velikhov, president of Russia's Kurchatov Institute, told reporters. "When they could do it is a more difficult question."

"If you remember, U.S. scientists expected the Soviet Union would only be able to create a nuclear bomb by around 1954 at the earliest," he said.

"They were rather surprised when we created one in 1949," he said with a chuckle. Velikhov trained under Igor Kurchatov, the leader of the Soviet atomic bomb project.

The United States and European Union powers suspect Iran wants to build nuclear arms while Tehran says its nuclear fuel program is meant only for civilian power generation.

"If they have decided to create nuclear weapons, then they could create them," said Velikhov, who was part of Putin's 2004 re-election campaign team.

"It is important that Iran does not get nuclear weapons. If Iran gets nuclear weapons it will be very negative for the security of the whole world."

ENRICHING URANIUM

Western powers persuaded the U.N. Security Council to impose sanctions on Iran over its refusal to stop enriching uranium in centrifuge machines. The program remains at the research stage but Iran aims to ramp it up to "industrial-scale" enrichment later this year.

Russian officials have said it would take Iran years to assemble nuclear warheads and that Tehran has a right to develop civilian nuclear power.

But analysts say Moscow has toughened its policy toward Iran -- including a delay to the Bushehr nuclear power station which Russia is helping build -- over concerns about Tehran's nuclear program and worries about a war in the Gulf.

Most diplomats and nuclear experts believe Iran remains a few years away from bomb capacity as it has yet to overcome technical problems such as older centrifuges prone to cracking and overheating, and impurities in uranium feedstock.

They cannot rule out Iran might have made more progress at secret military facilities, but there is no intelligence pointing to clandestine activity at this time.

A Vienna-based diplomat familiar with International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) monitoring said Iran had already grasped enrichment technology so Western powers should focus on trying to limit the program rather than shut it down.

"In fact, however, they already have enrichment technology. To continue to insist on zero centrifuges is doomed to failure and bound to drive Iran to further reduce the IAEA's access."

Velikhov, who devoted his life to nuclear technology, said the world's nuclear powers should reject nuclear weapons.

"I consider biological, chemical and nuclear arms should be forbidden and that the holding and development of nuclear weapons should be considered a crime against humanity.

"I think all states should reject nuclear weapons, including the U.S. and Russia," he said.

(Additional reporting by Mark Heinrich in Vienna)

http://www.reuters.com/article/world...2?feedType=RSS

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Exclusive: Iran Nuclear Bomb Could Be Possible by 2009

April 02, 2007 6:15 PM

Brian Ross and Christopher Isham Report:

Natanz_centrifuges_nr Iran has more than tripled its ability to produce enriched uranium in the last three months, adding some 1,000 centrifuges which are used to separate radioactive particles from the raw material.

The development means Iran could have enough material for a nuclear bomb by 2009, sources familiar with the dramatic upgrade tell ABC News.

The sources say the unexpected expansion is taking place at Iran's nuclear enrichment plant outside the city of Natanz, in a hardened facility 70 feet underground.

A spokesperson for the United Nation's International Atomic Energy Agency, the IAEA, declined to comment citing the "extreme sensitivity" of the situation with Iran.

Iran has already declared its above-ground operations at Natanz have some 320 centrifuges.

Click Here for Full Blotter Coverage.

The addition of 1,000 new centrifuges, which are not yet operational, means Iran is expanding its enrichment program at a pace much faster than U.S. intelligence experts had predicted.

"If they continue at this pace, and they get the centrifuges to work and actually enrich uranium on a distinct basis," said David Albright of the Institute for Science and International Security, "then you're looking at them having, potentially having enough highly enriched uranium for a nuclear weapon in 2009."

Previous predictions by U.S. intelligence had cited 2015 as the earliest date Iran could develop a weapon.

Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad has publicly predicted his country would have 3,000 centrifuges installed by this May, but few in the West gave his claim much credence, until now.

"I think we have all been caught off guard. Ahmadinejad said they would have these 3,000 installed by the end of May, and it appears they may actually do it," Albright said.

The new centrifuges are in open defiance of the U.N. Security Council which last week imposed a new set of sanctions on Iran for refusing to halt enrichment.

Iran maintains its enrichment facilities are only meant to produce fuel for nuclear power reactors.

But the uranium they are enriching could not be used in the Russian nuclear power reactor they are currently building.

State Department spokesman Sean McCormack declined to comment on the details of Iran's new centrifuges but told ABC News, "This kind of expansion of Iran's centrifuge capability is why we went to the U.N. Security Council and pushed for a stronger resolution and stronger sanctions."

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benny balerio
Iran Mends Fences with Arabs – Starting with Saudis

DEBKAfile Exclusive Report

April 1, 2007, 7:44 PM (GMT+02:00)





The live wire at last week’s Arab League summit in Riyadh was undoubtedly the non-Arab guest of honor, Iranian foreign minister Manouchehr Mottaki.

He breezed around the Arab delegations hard-selling the notion of a mutual defense treaty between Iran and the Arabs on the lines of the Tehran-Damascus pact. Mottaki argued that a treaty of this kind would allay Arab fears of an Iranian nuclear threat, put a stop to a Middle East nuclear arms race, provide the Arabs with a protective umbrella against Israeli aggression and set up an Arab-Islamic front against US and other foreign intervention in the region.

The Iranian diplomat’s proposition fell on willing ears.

DEBKAfile’s Middle East sources report that he had a long conversation in Riyadh with Saudi foreign minister Prince Saudi al-Faisal, at which they looked the treaty plan in some detail and agreed that their defense ministries would assign special teams to explore it further. The Iranian minister argued that the joint effort of Riyadh and Tehran to pacify Lebanon and reconcile the internal differences among its rival factions could work as well for the Palestinian Authority. He said increasing Saudi-Iranian cooperation in joint diplomatic-strategic projects across the Middle East ought to extend to the military sphere.

Our source also reported exchanges between the Iranian and Egyptian delegations to the Arab summit last week on the resumption of diplomatic ties.

Saturday, March 31, Iran’s chief of staff Gen. Hassan Fayrouz Abadi, prodded the Arabs again; he urged them to hurry up and join Iran in a defense treaty because, he claimed, Israel threatened a war offensive in summer, two months hence. According to the Iranian general, Israel was bent on a “suicide assault” against a number of Arab states to save the Americans from having to pull their troops out of Iraq.

Before the conference ended, the Saudi foreign minister arranged a four-way meeting between King Abdullah, Mottaki, and the two Palestinian leaders, Mahmoud Abbas and Ismail Haniyeh of Hamas. Together they discussed how Iran and Saudi Arabia could work together to apply the Mecca reconciliation accords which established a unity government between Fatah and Hamas. This was taken by Iran as Riyadh’s approval of the military assistance Tehran gives the Palestinians and a formal, collective Arab endorsement.

DEBKAfile’s political analysts take this step as a mark of Saudi contempt for Israel, and further, the collapse of the Saudi initiative led by national security adviser Prince Bandar bin-Sultan for direct Saudi-Israeli talks. Instead, the Saudi-Iranian rapprochement led by Saudi al-Faisal has prevailed. The Israel-Palestinian issue has been shifted to the Saudi-Iranian ken by the Faisal faction which has attained ascendancy in Riyadh and argues that the time has come for the Arabs to take their fate in their own hands and drop their dependence on foreign powers, namely the Americans.

DEBKAfile’s sources have learned that talks for the resumption of Egyptian-Iranian diplomatic relations have already begun. Egyptian president Hosni Mubarak entertained for breakfast in Cairo last week Iranian ex-president Muhammad Hatami, who now heads the Institute for Dialogue among Cultures. Present too was Egyptian prime minister Ahmed Natif. Relations were broken off in 1979, the first year of the Islamic revolution, after Ayatollah Khomeini praised the murderers of President Anwar Sadat and a Tehran thoroughfares for one of the assassins, Muhammad Islambouly.

Hatami pressed his host to seriously consider resuming diplomatic relations, maintaining that the Muslim world is beset by a crisis caused by Western domination. Muslim powers must therefore work together to recover control of their own countries. He spoke highly of Egypt’s importance in the Arab and Muslim worlds. By working together, the two governments could make a difference, he said.

After the meal, Hatami and Natif put their heads together and agreed that a high-ranking Iranian delegation would visit Cairo in April to set up arrangements for the two embassies to re-open. The Iranian leader made a similar attempt to restore relations in 2001 when he was president. It broke down when Iranian extremists refused to take down Islambouli’s street name as demanded by Cairo.

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benny balerio
Iran Could Wait for Blair To Go, America Fears

April 02, 2007
New York Sun
Eli Lake
http://www.nysun.com/article/51606

WASHINGTON -- American officials, hoping for a tougher line from Europe and Britain, fear the Iranian government will hold hostage the 15 royal marines seized on March 23 until Prime Minister Blair is out of office this summer.

That was a concern this week as Iran hardened its line in negotiations, demanding an official apology from London and airing an alleged apology from one of the seamen captured last month, the second such televised confession of a British captive.

Yesterday, an American intelligence official said the combination of the provocative aired confessions and changing demands made in diplomatic channels has led the Pentagon and military to conclude that the Iranians intend to drag out any negotiations for the release of the hostages until Mr. Blair is out of office, a move in line with the negotiation tack favored by the mullahs in the hostage crisis with the Carter administration. The Iranians waited until after the 1980 election to release the diplomats they had held for 444 days.

While Mr. Blair has not yet announced when he will step down as prime minister, the British press wrote in September that he is preparing to step down as the head of the Labor Party on May 31 and will leave 10 Downing Street on July 26. If the Iranians hold onto the hostages until Mr. Blair is out of office, it would also be a blow to American prestige, as Mr. Blair was the most vocal ally of America's war to topple Saddam Hussein.

The concern that the mullahs are playing for time was influenced in part by promises by the Iranian foreign ministry to begin a show trial of the 15 sailors in the coming weeks. Through diplomatic channels, the Iranians have demanded the release of five members of their Quds Force taken hostage. That could set the stage for a swap. But the demand for a hostage exchange has also varied widely depending on the diplomatic channel.

"There is no hard intelligence right now on the motivations behind this," the intelligence official told the New York Sun yesterday. "It is an informed analysis that circulated in the intelligence community. It is one of the explanations thrown out to explain what they are doing right now."

Other possibilities discussed in the analysis include a response to the vote in Congress to set a date for withdrawal from Iraq and a warning to other great powers that have recently cooperated with the United Kingdom and America diplomatically and financially on sanctioning the Islamic Republic for its defiance of the International Atomic Energy Agency. This source yesterday said, "No conclusions have been made on this."

The British defense minister, on a trip in Afghanistan, which borders Iran, said that his country was taking the diplomatic route for now. In an interview yesterday with the BBC, Des Browne said, "There is no reason to continue to keep them there. We are anxious that this matter be resolved as quickly as possible and that it be resolved by diplomatic means and we are bending every single effort to that."

One such effort was scuttled on Friday when Germany, the European country that does the most trade with Iran, refused a British request to suspend trade with the Islamic Republic. Mr. Blair over the weekend condemned the airing of the public confessions of the sailors. President Bush demanded Saturday from Camp David that the Iranians release the hostages, calling the seizure "inexcusable."

The British people appear to favor a diplomatic route for winning the release of the hostages. A poll published Sunday by the Sunday Telegraph found only 7% of Britons favored military action today. Of those polled, 44% favored military action as a last resort, while 48% opposed military action as a last resort.

In Tehran yesterday, local press reports said 200 people protested outside the British embassy chanting "death to Britain," and "death to America." The regime has cracked down on almost all protests against it, and the protests yesterday are likely to have been coordinated in part with the state and its allied militia known as the Basij.
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benny balerio
Iran Bushehr nuclear power plant ready, awaits Russian fuel

Iran-Russia, Politics, 4/2/2007
http://www.arabicnews.com/ansub/Dail...007040207.html

The logistic units of Bushehr nuclear power plant including its pump house and 400-KW power station will be commissioned tomorrow in the presence of First Vice President Parviz Davoudi, Vice President and Head of Iran's Atomic Energy Organization Reza Aqazadeh as well as his deputies.

The logistic units of the power plant were primarily expected to be commissioned on March 13, 2007, but it was postponed to April 3.

Meanwhile, the fuel units of Bushehr nuclear power plant are also ready for operation.

Deputy Head of Iran's Atomic Energy Organization (IAEO) for international affairs, Mohammad Saeedi, had also declared earlier that the technical and legal grounds have been prepared for dispatch of fuel to Bushehr nuclear power station.

The Russian Atom Stroi Export Co. started the construction of Iran's first nuclear power plant in Bushehr in 1995.

Based on the fifth agreement signed by Iran and Russia on September 26, 2006, the Russian contractor accepted commitment to finalize the power plant project in September of 2007.

Though it also accepted to supply the required fuel six months prior to its commissioning, namely in March 2007, Atom Stroi Export Co. has not yet dispatched it.

The Russian company claimed towards the end of the past Iranian year (ended March 20) that it was unable to complete the project on schedule, given that Iran had not complied with its financial commitments on time.

In response to the Russian contractor, Iran dismissed such a claim and declared that it had fully fulfilled its commitments on schedule.

Following extensive talks between Iran and Russia on the issue, despite the developments taking place over the past weeks, the Russian side declared that Iran has resumed paying the relevant funds to the Russian contractor and is attempting to carry out its commitments.
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benny balerio
U.S. could strike Iran but not win-Russian general
03 Apr 2007 08:38:20 GMT
Source: Reuters
Alert Me | Printable view | Email this article | RSS [-] Text [+]

MOSCOW, April 3 (Reuters) - The United States could not defeat Iran although its military forces in the Gulf are capable of striking the Islamic republic, Russia's top general told local media on Tuesday.

"It is possible to damage Iran's military and industrial potential, but it is impossible to win," Interfax news agency quoted General Yuri Baluyevsky, head of the Russian general staff, as saying.

"However, such possible strikes (on Iran) would be a huge political mistake," he said.

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An Indonesian Muslim student wears a mask depicting U.S. President George W. Bush during a protest in Bogor, west Java, April 3, 2007. Dozens of protesters rallied on the street to oppose Indonesia's decision to support Resolution 1747 of the United Nations on Iran's nuclear program. The word on the mask reads: "Devil."


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US ready for direct Iran talks if enrichment stops: Rice

Posted: 03 April 2007 0925 hrs
http://www.channelnewsasia.com/stori...268159/1/.html

WASHINGTON : US Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice said Monday she was open to direct talks with Iran if it froze its sensitive uranium enrichment work.

"If Iran suspends its enrichment and reprocessing activities and we go to six-party talks...you would never rule out that it might be useful at some point to have a bilateral encounter that moves forward those (talks)," Rice said.

"But what you don't want to do, I think, is make this US-Iranian negotiations over the Iranian nuclear weapon," she said.

Rice has previously said she was open to talks on Iran that would include major negotiators Russia, China, Britain, France and Germany, but has until now excluded the possibility of bilateral talks with Iran.

The UN Security Council resolution has imposed sanctions on Iran for failing to suspends uranium enrichment, which makes fuel for civilian nuclear reactors but also produces material for atomic bombs.

But Iran continues to defy the international community and has vowed to increase its enrichment capacity, arguing that its nuclear program is strictly for civilian energy purposes.

Iran also says it will not halt enrichment as a precondition to talks on its nuclear program.

The United States and Iran have had no diplomatic relations since Washington severed ties in 1980 in the wake of the seizure of its embassy in Tehran by Islamist students.

A rare meeting between representatives of Iran and the United States took place last month at conference of Iraq's neighbours in Baghdad, when US ambassador to Iraq Zalmay Khalilzad challenged his Iranian counterpart over Tehran's alleged interference in Iraq.

Tehran rejected accusations that it was supplying arms and other support to Iraqi insurgents, while Khalilzad described the exchange as not "substantive" and lasting only a few minutes.

A new Iraq conference on the ministerial level is being prepared - though no final date has been set - at which Rice could have the opportunity to speak with her Iranian counterpart Manouchehr Mottaki. - AFP/ch
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Persian Gulf stranglehold

Posted: April 2, 2007
1:00 a.m. Eastern



When Dr. Jerome Corsi and I wrote ''Black Gold Stranglehold'' in 2005 we alerted America to the stranglehold our enemies could impose limiting our ability to obtain sufficient crude oil to support our economy. Soon we may well feel the effects of not heeding the warning.

The free flow of crude oil coming from the Persian Gulf is not only critical for America's energy needs but for that of other countries as well. 23.5 percent of America's oil along with 60 percent of Europe's and 90 percent of Japan's is transported daily through the Persian Gulf and more specifically the Strait of Hormuz; one of the most strategic waterways in the world due to its importance in world oil transportation. According to the U.S. Department of Energy, it is a geographic ''choke point.''

There continue to be serious territorial disputes between Iran and other Gulf nations as to who controls the Gulf. Recently the seizure of 15 British sailors is prima facie evidence on how Iran views their ownership and territorial rights within the Gulf. The U.K., being a NATO member nation, has every right to be in the Gulf. This taking of hostages should be viewed as an act of war under Article 5 of the treaty. Yet nothing short of ''a talking to'' has been imposed on Iran for these clearly hostile actions.

Why?

Iran's leaders, while looked at as a bunch of religious nut-case barbarians, are very smart cookies. For years they have beefed up their military presence in the Gulf, knowing full well one day they would play the ace card they hold by placing America, Europe and Japan in a virtual stranglehold. That day may have arrived.





By way of description, the Persian Gulf is a 600-mile long body of water that narrows to 34 miles at the Strait before connecting to the Arabian Sea. To the west are Iraq and Saudi Arabia. To the East is the country of Iran. Most of the area of Iran bordering the Gulf is a rugged mountainous region with great strategic value. These mountains have several artillery batteries equipped with 155mm artillery shells filled with chemical agents, according to former Secretary of Defense William Perry.

The Asian Times reports that Abu Musa Island, along with the mountainous areas, is teeming with Supersonic cruise missiles such as Yakhonts, Moskits, Granits, and Brahmos controlled by Iran. Iran holds the fourth-largest stockpile of bottom-rising sea mines, capable of great damage to sea-going vessels, in the Gulf.

It is without dispute Iran possesses the ability to disrupt, if not completely stop, the flow of oil from the Gulf. Massive oil tankers carrying 15.5 millions barrels per day could soon see themselves held in safe ports by insurance companies fearing the ships and their cargo could be caught in the crossfire of opposing forces or hit an undetected sea mine. This disruption would send shockwaves through all of Europe, Japan and America – and Ahmadinejad knows it.

Iran's president continues to defy U.N Security Council resolutions, reminiscent of his pal Saddam Hussein. Ahmadinejad is clearly exploiting the politically weakened George Bush and Tony Blair as the U.S. Congress plays politics with the future of the Middle East for a few more votes in 2008. Iran knows full well the impact that shutting down the Strait would have on the world. Sad part about this scenario is it was totally preventable.

Dr. Corsi and I outlined in our book America's ability to be energy independent. If we had opened up the ANWR, fast tracked offshore oil leases in the Outer Continental Shelf (OCS), pursued deep oil in the Gulf (as found this last year in the Jack Two Well), pursued alternatives (like solar, wind, hydroelectric, and nuclear) and encouraged conservation we could now tell the Iranians to go fly a kite.

Instead, we find ourselves in a stranglehold imposed by a two bit thug with beady eyes who is taunting most of the free world with his clearly illegal and vicious antics. Capturing and parading hostages, supporting the killing of American servicemen and women in Iraq and ignoring U.N. Resolutions should never be tolerated. Yet as a drug addict can never confront his supplier, the world cannot confront Ahmadinejad for fear of disruptions of oil.

Currently the U.S.S. Eisenhower and the U.S.S. John Stennis aircraft carrier strike groups are in the Gulf and the Arabian Sea. They have been joined by the French aircraft carrier group Charles de Gaulle. This represents dozens of guided missile destroyers, amphibian assault boats, mine sweepers, F/A 18 Hornets, Super Hornets, EA-6B's, S-3 Vikings ... not to mention four ballistic submarines.

My point?

We have enough firepower in the Gulf and surrounding areas to turn Tehran into a solid piece of glass a hundred feet thick. The question is will we use it? I suspect not. I wish otherwise.

The world can no longer ignore a terrorist who blows up children for his religious and political objectives. The day has come for brute force to do the dirty work. Diplomacy has failed to deliver. Diplomacy only works when the Diplomats all agree on truth and honest negotiation. It is well documented that, along with terrorism, Iran and radical Islamists fully embrace the use of lies and deception. Their own religion condones and encourages it.

I assume the ''war games'' currently underway in the Gulf are in the foolish hope that Iran will see the awesome power and might of the U.S. military and back down. Don't bet on it. They know full well Pelosi, Murtha, Biden, Kerry and Reid are in charge now. Arrogant Nancy Pelosi said it herself – there is a new sheriff in town.

Iran smells the weakness and will exploit it once again holding the world in a stranglehold that should have never been. My hope is George Bush will do the right thing and not back down. Oh, what I wouldn’t give to have President Reagan back for six months right now. Trust but verify. Peace through strength.

Regardless of how the recent Gulf region tensions that brought us $65/barrel oil and $3.50/gallon gasoline turn out, I only hope we learn from our past mistakes and move to energy independence as a nation. We have the resources, ingenuity and capital markets to get it done. Question is do we have the will?



http://worldnetdaily.com/news/articl...TICLE_ID=54986
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Persian Gulf stranglehold

Posted: April 2, 2007
1:00 a.m. Eastern



When Dr. Jerome Corsi and I wrote ''Black Gold Stranglehold'' in 2005 we alerted America to the stranglehold our enemies could impose limiting our ability to obtain sufficient crude oil to support our economy. Soon we may well feel the effects of not heeding the warning.

The free flow of crude oil coming from the Persian Gulf is not only critical for America's energy needs but for that of other countries as well. 23.5 percent of America's oil along with 60 percent of Europe's and 90 percent of Japan's is transported daily through the Persian Gulf and more specifically the Strait of Hormuz; one of the most strategic waterways in the world due to its importance in world oil transportation. According to the U.S. Department of Energy, it is a geographic ''choke point.''

There continue to be serious territorial disputes between Iran and other Gulf nations as to who controls the Gulf. Recently the seizure of 15 British sailors is prima facie evidence on how Iran views their ownership and territorial rights within the Gulf. The U.K., being a NATO member nation, has every right to be in the Gulf. This taking of hostages should be viewed as an act of war under Article 5 of the treaty. Yet nothing short of ''a talking to'' has been imposed on Iran for these clearly hostile actions.

Why?

Iran's leaders, while looked at as a bunch of religious nut-case barbarians, are very smart cookies. For years they have beefed up their military presence in the Gulf, knowing full well one day they would play the ace card they hold by placing America, Europe and Japan in a virtual stranglehold. That day may have arrived.





By way of description, the Persian Gulf is a 600-mile long body of water that narrows to 34 miles at the Strait before connecting to the Arabian Sea. To the west are Iraq and Saudi Arabia. To the East is the country of Iran. Most of the area of Iran bordering the Gulf is a rugged mountainous region with great strategic value. These mountains have several artillery batteries equipped with 155mm artillery shells filled with chemical agents, according to former Secretary of Defense William Perry.

The Asian Times reports that Abu Musa Island, along with the mountainous areas, is teeming with Supersonic cruise missiles such as Yakhonts, Moskits, Granits, and Brahmos controlled by Iran. Iran holds the fourth-largest stockpile of bottom-rising sea mines, capable of great damage to sea-going vessels, in the Gulf.

It is without dispute Iran possesses the ability to disrupt, if not completely stop, the flow of oil from the Gulf. Massive oil tankers carrying 15.5 millions barrels per day could soon see themselves held in safe ports by insurance companies fearing the ships and their cargo could be caught in the crossfire of opposing forces or hit an undetected sea mine. This disruption would send shockwaves through all of Europe, Japan and America – and Ahmadinejad knows it.

Iran's president continues to defy U.N Security Council resolutions, reminiscent of his pal Saddam Hussein. Ahmadinejad is clearly exploiting the politically weakened George Bush and Tony Blair as the U.S. Congress plays politics with the future of the Middle East for a few more votes in 2008. Iran knows full well the impact that shutting down the Strait would have on the world. Sad part about this scenario is it was totally preventable.

Dr. Corsi and I outlined in our book America's ability to be energy independent. If we had opened up the ANWR, fast tracked offshore oil leases in the Outer Continental Shelf (OCS), pursued deep oil in the Gulf (as found this last year in the Jack Two Well), pursued alternatives (like solar, wind, hydroelectric, and nuclear) and encouraged conservation we could now tell the Iranians to go fly a kite.

Instead, we find ourselves in a stranglehold imposed by a two bit thug with beady eyes who is taunting most of the free world with his clearly illegal and vicious antics. Capturing and parading hostages, supporting the killing of American servicemen and women in Iraq and ignoring U.N. Resolutions should never be tolerated. Yet as a drug addict can never confront his supplier, the world cannot confront Ahmadinejad for fear of disruptions of oil.

Currently the U.S.S. Eisenhower and the U.S.S. John Stennis aircraft carrier strike groups are in the Gulf and the Arabian Sea. They have been joined by the French aircraft carrier group Charles de Gaulle. This represents dozens of guided missile destroyers, amphibian assault boats, mine sweepers, F/A 18 Hornets, Super Hornets, EA-6B's, S-3 Vikings ... not to mention four ballistic submarines.

My point?

We have enough firepower in the Gulf and surrounding areas to turn Tehran into a solid piece of glass a hundred feet thick. The question is will we use it? I suspect not. I wish otherwise.

The world can no longer ignore a terrorist who blows up children for his religious and political objectives. The day has come for brute force to do the dirty work. Diplomacy has failed to deliver. Diplomacy only works when the Diplomats all agree on truth and honest negotiation. It is well documented that, along with terrorism, Iran and radical Islamists fully embrace the use of lies and deception. Their own religion condones and encourages it.

I assume the ''war games'' currently underway in the Gulf are in the foolish hope that Iran will see the awesome power and might of the U.S. military and back down. Don't bet on it. They know full well Pelosi, Murtha, Biden, Kerry and Reid are in charge now. Arrogant Nancy Pelosi said it herself – there is a new sheriff in town.

Iran smells the weakness and will exploit it once again holding the world in a stranglehold that should have never been. My hope is George Bush will do the right thing and not back down. Oh, what I wouldn’t give to have President Reagan back for six months right now. Trust but verify. Peace through strength.

Regardless of how the recent Gulf region tensions that brought us $65/barrel oil and $3.50/gallon gasoline turn out, I only hope we learn from our past mistakes and move to energy independence as a nation. We have the resources, ingenuity and capital markets to get it done. Question is do we have the will?



http://worldnetdaily.com/news/articl...TICLE_ID=54986
.......................................................benny cool.gif
benny balerio
Blair warns of 'tougher decisions' if sailors not released

LONDON (AFP) - Prime Minister Tony Blair warned Tuesday that Britain would have to take "increasingly tougher decisions" if Iran did not release 15 captive sailors as soon as possible.

Speaking in Glasgow, he said the government has had "two very clear tracks" throughout the crisis.

"One is to try and settle this by way of peaceful, calm negotiation, get our people back as quickly as possible ... The other is to make it clear that if that's not possible, then we have to take increasingly tougher decisions," Blair declared.

http://news.yahoo.com/s/afp/20070403...7QrLdJ21cUewgF

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April 3, 2007

Iranian gambit may force US into a moveGerard Baker: American view
Since they invented the game we now call chess, Iranians are generally deemed by outsiders to be unusually well equipped at dealing with situations that require complex mental gymnastics. The ability to see several moves ahead of your opponent is key to winning at chess, and Iranian political thinkers are believed to be fiendishly clever at outmanoeuvring their enemies on the chequered board of geopolitics.

Applying this thinking to current events, some observers think that Iran is in the middle of a cleverly executed gambit. The seizure of the 15 British hostages by Iran looks to them like some brilliant move designed to block British and US attempts to prevent the Iranians achieving nuclear weapons status.

Count me sceptical. Empirical evidence about his behaviour inclines me more to the Ahmadinejad-is-an-absolute-madman school of thought than the idea that we are in the early stages of some brilliant geopolitical execution of the Sicilian Defence. But I could be wrong.

Intentional or otherwise, however, this engineered crisis has had one impact that must leave the Iranians feeling quite pleased with themselves. By raising fears of shortages in oil supply from the Gulf, it has led to a sharp spike in prices. And here Iran’s sense of timing at least seems impeccable. Crude prices had been rising for more than a month before these latest developments.

Related Internet Links
Comment Central: Why the Iranians wanted Faye Turney to "confess"
Comment Central: What does Iran hope to achieve?
A number of factors — especially the belated arrival of winter in the United States and Western Europe and miscellaneous refining problems — have pushed prices higher since late January. Spot crude prices were up by more than 15 per cent in the six weeks to mid-March; the British hostage crisis has added another 5 per cent to that in just a week.

The timing is exquisite from another point of view — the potential impact of higher oil costs on the US economy. Financial markets are now frail with fear that America is at an inflexion point that could herald a recession. The first quarter was bumpy enough as it was, what with volatile equity prices and nervousness about the health of some parts of the financial system, without another bout of concerns about energy prices.

But since late January, wholesale prices are almost 50 per cent higher than they were eight weeks ago and retail petrol prices are up by 25 per cent. The Iranians may or may not succeed in frustrating their potential enemies in the Middle East, but how sweet would it be if they could undermine the US economy and, at least for a while, pocket a few million extra from higher oil prices in the meantime?

Of course, much sharper increases in energy prices last year did not derail the US economy and nor should this sudden rise — especially if it proves temporary, as most analysts think it will. Yet there is a broader question about whether the US is now in a much more vulnerable condition than it was when crude prices were more than $70 a barrel late last summer.

The economic outlook has clearly deteriorated in the past few weeks. Although it was clumsily handled, the Federal Reserve’s recalibration of the risks it sees facing the economy at its last open market committee meeting two weeks ago demonstrated that policymakers are more concerned than they have been for a long time about the risk of recession. Ben Bernanke, the Chairman of the Fed, explained in better detail what the central bank was trying to do when he testified before Congress. Although the FOMC’s members remain of the view that the risks are weighted still towards higher inflation than recession, he said, they acknowledge that risks of economic weakness are greater than they were.

The challenge for the Fed, leaving aside the issue of a rate of inflation that is persistently and irritatingly higher than it would like, is that the signals from the US economy are especially mixed at present. On the one hand the housing market’s weakness is persisting longer than the Fed had hoped. The problems in the sub-prime mortgage market may not spread, as feared, to the broader market, but they do not have to. February was another weak month for housing in general, with new home sales at their lowest level since 2000.

More worrying, perhaps, because it suggests a degree of caution among companies in the broader economy, is the weakness in capital spending. Non defence-related capital goods spending in January and February was 9 per cent below the monthly average in the final quarter of 2006. On the other hand, the consumer, as he has done pretty consistently for the past 15 years, continues to spend with steady abandon, despite probable declines in the first quarter in both his housing and equity market wealth.

The key to determining which of these positive and negative forces prevails in the US economy is employment. Consumers remain buoyant because job growth has been solid for the past year and wages have been edging up. Corporate profits, which reached record levels as a share of GDP at the end of last year, may be starting to edge down now. The big uncertainty is whether companies will respond by continuing to trim investment or whether they might start taking a harder look at payrolls. On Friday — Good Friday of all days — we should get a clearer sense of where this is headed, with the publication of the employment report for March. If jobs still look plentiful and wage growth still seems solid, fears about recession will ebb.

Yet if the data show the labour market softening at last, then expect something of a full-scale panic to break out in financial markets. The demand for American workers, rather than the designs of Iranian mullahs or the incarceration of British sailors will matter most in what happens next in the US economy. gerard.baker@thetimes.co.uk

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benny balerio
We know that Israel,cannot wait much longer on making a move against Iran.....Recently, in the news there has been propaganda of a schedueled cordinated attack by Israel and the U.S. on April 6th, 2007....An interesting note:....Good Friday is on April 6th...and also, it is believed that on April 6th 32 A.D. was the day that the Lord Jesus rode into Jerusalem on a little donkey.....It was the day of thier visitation,...a day of whether all of Israel were to accept Him as Lord and Messiah...........It is in my opinion that Israel will not make a move against Iran, while the British troops are in Iran's hands..................................benny cool.gif
benny balerio
Is the US Navy vulnerable in the Gulf? The myth of US invincibility
by Mark H. Gaffney
April 17, 2005

During the summer of 2002, in the run-up to President Bush’s invasion of Iraq, the US military staged the most elaborate and expensive war games ever conceived. Operation Millennium Challenge, as it was called, cost some $250 million, and required two years of planning. The mock war was not aimed at Iraq, at least, not overtly. But it was set in the Persian Gulf, and simulated a conflict with a hypothetical rogue state. The “war” involved heavy use of computers, and was also played out in the field by 13,500 US troops, at 17 different locations and 9 live-force training sites. All of the services participated under a single joint command, known as JOINTFOR. The US forces were designated as “Force Blue,” and the enemy as OPFOR, or “Force Red.” The “war” lasted three weeks and ended with the overthrow of the dictatorial regime on August 15.

At any rate, that was the official outcome. What actually happened was quite different, and ought to serve up a warning about the grave peril the world will face if the US should become embroiled in a widening conflict in the region.

As the war games were about to commence on July 18 2002, Gen. William “Buck” Kernan, head of the Joint Forces Command, told the press that the operation would test a series of new war-fighting concepts recently developed by the Pentagon, concepts like “rapid decisive operations, effects-based operations, operational net assessments,” and the like. Later, at the conclusion of the games, Gen. Kernan insisted that the new concepts had been proved effective. At which point, JOINTFOR drafted recommendations to Gen. Richard Myers, the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, based on the experiment’s satisfactory results in such areas as doctrine, training and procurement.

But not everyone shared Gen. Kernan’s rosy assessment. It was sharply criticized by the straight-talking Marine commander who had been brought out of retirement to lead Force Red. His name was Lt. Gen. Paul Van Riper, and he had played the role of the crazed but cunning leader of the hypothetical rogue state. Gen. Van Riper dismissed the new military concepts as empty sloganeering, and he had reason to be skeptical. In the first days of the “war,” Van Riper’s Force Red sent most of the US fleet to the bottom of the Persian Gulf.

Not all of the details about how Force Red accomplished this have been revealed. The Pentagon managed to keep much of the story out of the press. But a thoroughly disgruntled Van Riper himself leaked enough to the Army Times that it’s possible to get at a sense of how a much weaker force outfoxed and defeated the world’s lone remaining Superpower.1

The Worst US Naval Disaster Since Pearl Harbor

The war game was described as “free play,” meaning that both sides were unconstrained, free to pursue any tactic in the book of war in the service of victory. As Gen. Kernan put it: “The OPFOR (Force Red) has the ability to win here.” Much of the action was computer-generated. But representative military units in the field also acted out the various moves and countermoves. The comparison to a chess match is not inaccurate. The vastly superior US armada consisted of the standard carrier battle group with its full supporting cast of ships and planes. Van Riper had at his disposal a much weaker flotilla of smaller vessels, many of them civilian craft, and numerous assets typical of a Third World country.

But Van Riper made the most of weakness. Instead of trying to compete directly with Force Blue, he utilized ingenious low-tech alternatives. Crucially, he prevented the stronger US force from eavesdropping on his communications by foregoing the use of radio transmissions. Van Riper relied on couriers instead to stay in touch with his field officers. He also employed novel tactics such as coded signals broadcast from the minarets of mosques during the Muslim call to prayer, a tactic weirdly reminiscent of Paul Revere and the shot heard round the world. At every turn, the wily Van Riper did the unexpected. And in the process he managed to achieve an asymmetric advantage: the new buzzword in military parlance.

Astutely and very covertly, Van Riper armed his civilian marine craft and deployed them near the US fleet, which never expected an attack from small pleasure boats. Faced with a blunt US ultimatum to surrender, Force Red suddenly went on the offensive: and achieved complete tactical surprise. Force Red’s prop-driven aircraft suddenly were swarming around the US warships, making Kamikaze dives. Some of the pleasure boats made suicide attacks. Others fired Silkworm cruise missiles from close range, and sunk a carrier, the largest ship in the US fleet, along with two helicopter-carriers loaded with marines. The sudden strike was reminiscent of the Al Qaeda sneak attack on the USS Cole in 2000. Yet, the Navy was unprepared. When it was over, most of the US fleet had been destroyed. Sixteen US warships lay on the bottom, and the rest were in disarray. Thousands of American sailors were dead, dying, or wounded.

If the games had been real, it would have been the worst US naval defeat since Pearl Harbor.

What happened next became controversial. Instead of declaring Force Red the victor, JOINTFOR Command raised the sunken ships from the muck, brought the dead sailors back to life, and resumed the games as if nothing unusual had happened. The US invasion of the rogue state proceeded according to schedule. Force Red continued to harass Force Blue, until an increasingly frustrated Gen. Van Riper discovered that his orders to his troops were being countermanded, at which point he withdrew in disgust. In his after-action report, the general charged that the games had been scripted to produce the desired outcome.

Later, Van Riper also aired his frustrations in a taped-for-television interview: “There were accusations that Millennium Challenge was rigged. I can tell you it was not. It started out as a free-play exercise, in which both Red and Blue had the opportunity to win the game. However, about the third or fourth day, when the concepts that the command was testing failed to live up to their expectations, the command at that point began to script the exercise in order to prove these concepts. This was my critical complaint. You might say, ‘Well, why didn't these concepts live up to the expectations?’ I think they were fundamentally flawed in that they…leaned heavily on systems analysis of decision-making. I'm angered that, in a sense, $250 million was wasted. But I'm even more angry that an idea that has never been truly validated, that never really went through the crucible of a real experiment, is being exported to our operational forces to use.

What I saw in this particular exercise and the results from it were very similar to what I saw as a young second lieutenant back in the 1960s, when we were taught the systems engineering techniques that Mr. [Robert] McNamara [Secretary of Defense under Presidents John F. Kennedy and Lyndon Johnson] had implemented in the American military. We took those systems…to the battlefield, where they were totally inappropriate. The computers in Saigon said we were winning the war, while out there in the rice paddies we knew damn well we weren't winning. That's where we went astray, and I see these new concepts potentially being equally ill-informed and equally dangerous.”2

“We didn’t put you in harm’s way purposely. It just...happened.”

As a result of Van Riper’s criticism, Gen. Kernan, the JOINTFOR commander, faced some pointed questions at a subsequent press briefing. In defending the operation, the general explained the embarrassing outcome as due to the unique environment in which the war simulation, by necessity, had been conducted:

Q: General, one thing that Van Riper made much of was the fact that at some point the blue fleet was sunk.

Gen. Kernan: True, it was.

Q: I want to set-aside for a moment the allegation that the game was rigged because the fleet was "re-floated." I mean, I understand, I've been told that happens in war games.

Gen. Kernan: Sure.

Q: And I'm curious. In the course of this experiment or exercise, your fleet was sunk. I'm wondering if that did teach you anything about the concepts you were testing or if that showed anything relevant.

Gen. Kernan: I'll tell you one of the things it taught us with a blinding flash of the obvious, after the fact…And of course, it goes back to live versus simulation, and what we were doing. There are very prescriptive lanes in which we…conduct sea training and amphibious operations, and these are very, obviously, because of commercial shipping and a lot of other things, just like our air lanes. The ships that we used for the amphibious operations, we brought them in because they had to comply with those lanes. Didn't even think about it.

Now you've got basically, instead of being over the horizon like the Navy would normally fight, and at stand-off ranges that would enable their protective systems to be employed, now they're sitting right off the shore, where you're looking at them. I mean, the models and simulation that we put together, it couldn't make a distinction. And we didn't either, until, all of a sudden, whoops, there they are. And that's about the time he attacked. You know?

The Navy was just bludgeoning me dearly because, of course, they would say, ‘We never fight this way.’ Fair enough. Okay. We didn't mean to do it. We didn't put you in harm’s way purposely. I mean, it just, it happened. And it's unfortunate. So that’s one of the things that we learned…”3

Gen. Kernan’s nuanced defense was that the simulation had necessarily been conducted in the vicinity of busy sea lanes, hence, in the presence of live commercial shipping; and this required the Navy to “turn off” some of its defenses, which it would not have done in a real wartime situation. All of which is probably true, but the general’s remark that in a real Gulf war the fleet would be deployed differently, in a stand-off manner, with its over-the-horizon defenses fully operable, was a misrepresentation of the actual situation in the Persian Gulf, today. The US Navy’s biggest problem operating in Gulf waters are the constraints that the region’s confined spaces impose on US naval defenses, which were designed for the open sea. The Persian Gulf is nothing but a large lake, after all, and in such an environment the Navy’s over-the-horizon defenses are seriously compromised.4 Nor can the Navy withdraw to a safe distance, so long as its close-in presence is required to support the US occupation forces in Iraq. The serious implications of this simple fact for a possible future conflict, for instance, involving Iran, have never, to my knowledge, been discussed in the US press.

Gen. Kernan’s remark was not a misstatement. He repeated himself again, later in the same interview, while fielding another question:

Q: As a follow-up...Van Riper also said that most of the blue Naval losses were due to cruise missiles. Can you talk about that and say how concerned you are about that?

Gen. Kernan: “Well, I don't know. To be honest with you, I haven't had an opportunity to assess...what happened. But that's a possibility, once again, because we had to shut off some of these self-defense systems on the models that would have normally been employed. That's a possibility. I think the important thing to note is that normally the Navy would have been significantly over-the-horizon. They would've been arrayed an awful lot differently than we forced them to because of what they had to do for the live-exercise piece of it....Yeah, I think we learned some things. The specifics of the cruise-missile piece...I really can't answer that question. We'd have to get back to you.”5

Safely Over-the-Horizon?

Gen. Kernan’s remarks are surprising, because at the time he made them, in August 2002, as he well should have known, at least two separate studies, one by the US Government Accounting Office (GAO,) based on the Navy’s own data, and another by an independent think-tank, had already warned the Office of the Navy about the growing threat to the US fleet posed by anti-ship cruise missiles.6 As recently as 1997 some forty different nations possessed these awesome weapons. By 2000 the number had jumped to 70, with at least 100 different types identified, and a dozen different nations actively pursuing their own production and research/development programs.

While the numbers are not available for 2004, there is little doubt that the technology has continued to spread rapidly. And why are anti-ship cruise missiles so attractive? The answer is that they are relatively simple to develop, especially in comparison with ballistic missiles. Cruise missiles can be constructed from many of the same readily available parts and components used in commercial aviation. They are also reliable and effective, easy to deploy and use, and are relatively inexpensive. Even poor nations can afford them. One cruise missile represents but a tiny fraction of the immense expenditure of capital the US has invested in each of its 300 active warships. Yet, a single cruise missile can sink or severely disable any ship in the US Navy.

According to the GAO report, “the key to defeating cruise missile threats is in gaining additional reaction time,” so that ships can detect, identify and destroy the attacking missiles. The thorny problem, as I’ve pointed out, is that the Navy’s long-range AWACs and intermediate-range Aegis radar defense systems are significantly less effective in littoral (or coastal) environments, the Persian Gulf being the prime example.

The other important factor is that cruise missile technology itself is racing ahead. The GAO report warned that the next generation of anti-ship missiles that will begin to appear by 2007 will be faster and stealthier, and will also be equipped with advanced target-seekers, i.e., advanced guidance systems. In fact, one of these advanced anti-ship cruise missiles is already available: the Russian-made Yakhonts missile. It flies at close to Mach 3 (three times the speed of sound), can hit a squirrel in the eye, and has a range of 185 miles: enough range to target the entire Persian Gulf (from Iran), shredding Gen. Kernan’s glib remark that in a real war the US expeditionary force will stand-off in safety “over the horizon” while mounting an amphibious attack. Nonsense. Henceforth, in a real Gulf war situation there will be no standing off in safety. The Yakhonts missile has already erased the concept of the horizon, at least, within the Persian Gulf, and it has done so without ever having been fired in combat---yet.

Gen. Kernan should have known also that, according to Jane’s Defense Weekly and other sources, Iranian government officials were in Moscow the previous year (2001), shopping for the latest Russian anti-ship missile technology.7 By their own admission the Russians developed the Yakhonts missile for export. No doubt, it was high on Iran’s shopping list.

The 2000 GAO report’s conclusions were not favorable. It stated that for a variety of reasons the Navy’s forecasts for upgrading US ship defenses against cruise missile attack are overly optimistic. The Navy’s own data shows that there will be no silver bullet. The technology gap is structural, and will not be overcome for many years, if at all. US warships will be vulnerable to cruise missile attack into the foreseeable future, perhaps increasingly so.

But the GAO saved its most sobering conclusion for last: It so happens that the most vulnerable ship in the US fleet is none other than the flagship itself, the big Nimitz-class carriers. This underscores the significance of Force Red’s victory during Millennium Challenge. Just think: If Van Riper could accomplish what he did with Silkworms, the lowly scuds of the cruise missile family, imagine what could happen if the US Navy, sitting in the Gulf like so many ducks, should face a massed-attack of supersonic Yakhonts missiles, a weapon that may well be unstoppable.

It would be a debacle.

So we see that the 2002 US war games afforded a glimpse of the same military hubris that gave us the Viet Nam War and the current quagmire in Iraq. The difference is that the peril for the world today in the “Persian Lake” is many times greater than it ever was in the Gulf of Tonkin.

---
Mark Gaffney’s first book was a pioneering study of the Israeli nuke program. His latest is a best-selling book about early Christianity, Gnostic Secrets of the Naassenes. Mark can be reached for comment at mhgaffney@aol.com

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Is the US Navy vulnerable in the Gulf? The myth of US invincibility
by Mark H. Gaffney
April 17, 2005

During the summer of 2002, in the run-up to President Bush’s invasion of Iraq, the US military staged the most elaborate and expensive war games ever conceived. Operation Millennium Challenge, as it was called, cost some $250 million, and required two years of planning. The mock war was not aimed at Iraq, at least, not overtly. But it was set in the Persian Gulf, and simulated a conflict with a hypothetical rogue state. The “war” involved heavy use of computers, and was also played out in the field by 13,500 US troops, at 17 different locations and 9 live-force training sites. All of the services participated under a single joint command, known as JOINTFOR. The US forces were designated as “Force Blue,” and the enemy as OPFOR, or “Force Red.” The “war” lasted three weeks and ended with the overthrow of the dictatorial regime on August 15.

At any rate, that was the official outcome. What actually happened was quite different, and ought to serve up a warning about the grave peril the world will face if the US should become embroiled in a widening conflict in the region.

As the war games were about to commence on July 18 2002, Gen. William “Buck” Kernan, head of the Joint Forces Command, told the press that the operation would test a series of new war-fighting concepts recently developed by the Pentagon, concepts like “rapid decisive operations, effects-based operations, operational net assessments,” and the like. Later, at the conclusion of the games, Gen. Kernan insisted that the new concepts had been proved effective. At which point, JOINTFOR drafted recommendations to Gen. Richard Myers, the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, based on the experiment’s satisfactory results in such areas as doctrine, training and procurement.

But not everyone shared Gen. Kernan’s rosy assessment. It was sharply criticized by the straight-talking Marine commander who had been brought out of retirement to lead Force Red. His name was Lt. Gen. Paul Van Riper, and he had played the role of the crazed but cunning leader of the hypothetical rogue state. Gen. Van Riper dismissed the new military concepts as empty sloganeering, and he had reason to be skeptical. In the first days of the “war,” Van Riper’s Force Red sent most of the US fleet to the bottom of the Persian Gulf.

Not all of the details about how Force Red accomplished this have been revealed. The Pentagon managed to keep much of the story out of the press. But a thoroughly disgruntled Van Riper himself leaked enough to the Army Times that it’s possible to get at a sense of how a much weaker force outfoxed and defeated the world’s lone remaining Superpower.1

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The war game was described as “free play,” meaning that both sides were unconstrained, free to pursue any tactic in the book of war in the service of victory. As Gen. Kernan put it: “The OPFOR (Force