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benny balerio
McCain Vows US Embassy Move to Jerusalem
July 26….(JTA) John McCain said he would move the US embassy to Israel to Jerusalem upon being elected president. "Right away," Sen. McCain (R-Ariz.) the presumptive Republican nominee for president told CNN Friday. "I've been committed to that proposition for years." President Bush also committed to moving the embassy during his 2000 campaign, but never did. Presidents oppose such a move as preempting Israeli-Palestinian negotiations and endangering US security interests in the Middle East. McCain's rival, Sen. Barack Obama (D-Ill.), has said that he would only consider such a move once the sides come close to a final status peace agreement. McCain would not comment on how he would react should Israel preemptively attack Iran to prevent its acquisition of nuclear weapons. All he would say was that "the United State of America is committed to making sure there is not a second Holocaust."

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benny balerio
Jul 26, 2008 14:36 | Updated Jul 27, 2008 2:16
Israel: Ahmadinejad is probably lying about centrifuges
By MARK WEISS AND AP

Israeli officials have expressed doubt over claims by Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad on Saturday that his country now possesses 6,000 centrifuges.


Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad speaks in a ceremony at Iran's uranium enrichment facility in Natanz.
Photo: AP

Slideshow: Pictures of the week Ahmadinejad's announcement, reported by a semi-official news agency, is a significant increase in the number of uranium-enriching machines in Teheran's nuclear program. It also comes a week after the US reversed course in negotiations over Iran's nuclear program by sending a top American diplomat to participate in talks between Teheran and world powers.

But an Israeli official who closely monitors the Iranian nuclear program told The Jerusalem Post that Ahmadinejad was probably lying.

"Our assessment, based on the latest available information and recent reports from the International Atomic Energy Agency, is that the figure of 6,000 centrifuges is unlikely," the official said. "We believe a figure of between 3,400 and 3,500 is more accurate."

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Ahmadinejad asserted Saturday that Iran's interlocutors had agreed to allow it to continue to run its program as long as it was not expanded beyond 6,000 centrifuges, state radio reported.

"Today, they have consented that the existing 5,000 or 6,000 centrifuges not be increased and that operation of this number of centrifuges is not a problem," state radio quoted Ahmadinejad as saying.

International negotiators are trying to persuade Teheran to agree to a compromise under which Iran would agree to temporarily stop expansion of enrichment activities.

"Announcements like this, whatever the true number is, are not productive and will only serve to further isolate Iran from the international community," said White House spokesman Carlton Carroll.

Iran declared in April that it was aiming to double the 3,000 centrifuges it was running in its underground uranium enrichment plant in Natanz.

"Islamic Iran today possesses 6,000 centrifuges," the semi-official Fars news agency quoted Ahmadinejad as saying Saturday in an address to university professors in the northeastern city of Mashhad.

The Israeli official explained that by exaggerating the numbers, the Iranian president hopes to achieve two goals.

First, he exerts pressure on his own nuclear technicians to step up the pace of their work aimed at producing enough fissile material to make a bomb.

Second, Ahmadinejad seeks conflict with the West so he can portray himself as the defender of Iranian national interests in the run-up to next year's presidential elections.

Ahmadinejad has failed to deliver on promises of improving the economy and creating jobs, and the nuclear issue remains his only hope of drumming up much needed domestic political support.

"Ultimately it is not president Ahmadinejad who decides Iran's nuclear policy but the country's spiritual leader Ali Khamenei," the Israeli official explained. "Ahmadinejad will not compromise because he seeks confrontation, but Khamenei or another presidential candidate may be tempted to accept a compromise package drawn up by the West in return for halting uranium enrichment."

The July 19 talks in Geneva were aimed at trying to reach a deal with Iran, and in exchange, the six world powers - the US, Germany, Britain, France, Russia and China - would hold off on adopting new UN sanctions against Iran.

But participants at Geneva said Iranian negotiators skirted the freeze issue despite the presence of US Undersecretary of State William Burns.

Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice later accused Iran of not being serious at the Geneva talks. She warned that all six nations were serious about a two-week deadline for Iran to agree to freeze suspect activities and start negotiations or else be hit with a fourth set of UN penalties.

On Saturday, Iran's chief delegate to the IAEA, Ali Ashgar Soltanieh, lashed back at American criticism of his country's role in the Geneva talks.

His US counterpart, Gregory L. Schulte, told Britain's Daily Telegraph in an interview published earlier this week that Teheran's chief negotiator delivered a "rambling" discourse in Geneva instead of focusing on the talks.

Soltanieh told The Associated Press on Saturday that Schulte's comments "further damage his credibility and that of his country." He described the Geneva talks as "successful and constructive."

A report by the UN's nuclear monitoring agency that was delivered to the UN Security Council in May said Iran had 3,500 centrifuges, though a senior UN official said at the time that Iran's goal of 6,000 machines running by the summer was "pretty much plausible."

In the enrichment process, uranium gas is pumped into a series of centrifuges called "cascades." The gas is spun at supersonic speeds to remove impurities. Enriching at a low level produces nuclear fuel, but at a higher level it can produce the material for a warhead.

The workhorse of Iran's enrichment program is the P-1 centrifuge, which is run in cascades of 164 machines. But Iranian officials confirmed in February they had started using the IR-2 centrifuge that can churn out enriched uranium at more than double the rate.

A total of 3,000 centrifuges is the commonly accepted figure for a nuclear enrichment program that is past the experimental stage and can be used as a platform for a full industrial-scale program that could churn out enough enriched material for dozens of nuclear weapons.

Iran says it plans to move toward large-scale uranium enrichment that ultimately will involve 54,000 centrifuges.

Ahmadinejad called the US participation in the latest round of nuclear talks "a victory for Iran." In the past, the US said it would join talks only if Iran suspends uranium enrichment first.

"The presence of a US representative... was a victory for Iran, irrespective of the outcome... The US condition was for Iran to suspend enrichment but they attended [the talks] without such a condition being met," Ahmadinejad was quoted as saying in the state radio report.

On Wednesday, Ahmadinejad praised the US participation at the talks as a step toward recognizing Teheran's right to acquire nuclear technology.
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benny balerio
Dark Cloud Forming Over Damascus
by Michael G. Mickey
(3-2-07)

Is it just me or is there a storm cloud forming over Damascus, Syria?

Isaiah 17:1: The burden of Damascus. Behold, Damascus is taken away from being a city, and it shall be a ruinous heap.

Damascus is considered by most historians to be the longest continuously-inhabited city on the planet earth, but will it remain so? As we look at Isaiah's prophecy above, the news of today doesn't bode well that it will.

On February 19, Haaretz reported that Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad said Iran and Syria would "form an alliance against what they referred to as U.S. and Israeli conspiracies against the Islamic world."

The Jerusalem Post reported recently that Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert instructed the IDF to prepare for war with Syria.

The Jerusalem Post is reporting that Syria has spent the past few months constructing and moving infrastructure to its southern border that could be used to launch a war against Israel.

Haaretz is reporting that "Syrian armed forces are being strengthened in an unprecedented way in recent memory with the help of generous funding from Iran." Not only that, the Haaretz report indicates "there has been a redeployment of forces along the front lines. It appears that the Syrians have moved forces closer to the border with Israel on the Golan Heights."

Top Palestinian intelligence officials are indicating that Israel this week conducted military training exercises in a Palestinian city for a possible war scenario against Syria or Iran, according to WorldNetDaily.com.

And now the clincher, which could demonstrate how Isaiah 17:1's fulfillment could be in the wings - a dark cloud of judgment forming over Damascus. Israel National News is reporting the following (emphasis mine):

Israeli security officials said if any war breaks out involving Iran, they expect Syria, Hizbullah and terrorist groups in Judea, Samaria and Gaza to join the fray and attack Israel. This assumption is echoed by terrorist leaders from several groups.

The security officials told WorldNetDaily.com that the greatest threat Syria poses to the Jewish state are the country's missiles. They noted that Syria recently test-fired two Scud-D surface-to-surface missiles, which have a range of about 400 km., covering most Israeli territory. The officials said the Syrian missile test was coordinated with Iran and is believed to have been successful. It is not known with what type of warhead the missiles were armed, but Syria is known to possess weapons of mass destruction.
All it is going to take, in a Syria-Israel war footing, is for Syria to roll out ONE WMD missile and fire it at Israel! Just one!

Guess what comes next in that scenario? Quite possibly, the fulfillment of Isaiah 17:1.
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benny balerio

Israeli Defense Minister To Visit US For Iran Nuclear Talks



JERUSALEM (AFP)--Israeli Defence Minister Ehud Barak is to travel to the U.S. Monday for talks with senior officials which are expected to focus on Iran, a defense ministry spokesman and public radio said Sunday.

The talks are expected to focus on Iran's nuclear program, which Israel views as a major strategic threat, and on preserving the "qualitative advantage" of the Jewish state's armed forces, according to a report on Israeli public radio.

The ministry spokesman declined to comment on the agenda of the talks but said Barak planned to meet with Vice President Dick Cheney, Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice, senior military officials and members of congress.

Barak is also expected to meet United Nations Secretary General Ban Ki-moon, he said.

Transport Minister Shaul Mofaz, a former defense minister involved in U.S.- Israeli strategic relations, is expected to visit Wednesday, and will also meet with Cheney and Rice, his spokesman told AFP.

"The main subject under discussion will be the threat posed by the Iranian nuclear program to the entire region," the spokesman said.

Mofaz, who is expected to compete to replace Prime Minister Ehud Olmert in a party primary in September, sparked a political firestorm in June when he said Israel would attack Iran if it didn't halt its nuclear drive.

Israel's army chief of staff said on a visit to Washington last week that he favored a diplomatic solution to the impasse over Iran's nuclear program but that "all options must be prepared."

Israel and the U.S. suspect Iran's nuclear drive is aimed at developing an atomic bomb, a claim vehemently denied by Tehran, which says its program is designed solely for civilian use.

Israel, the region's sole if undeclared nuclear power, considers Iran its main strategic threat because of its nuclear program and repeated predictions of the Jewish state's demise by senior Iranian leaders.

Israeli public radio has quoted Olmert as saying that Iran could have a nuclear weapon by the end of 2009, fueling speculation that Israel may attempt to set its efforts back with a military strike.

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benny balerio
Iran will have all the components ready for assembly by early 2009, that is, in 6-8 months"


In secret note, Olmert says Bush has deserted Israel against Iran
DEBKAfile Exclusive Report

July 26, 2008, 3:42 PM (GMT+02:00)


US-Israel confrontation on Iran behind welcoming ceremonial
Israeli prime minister Ehud Olmert this week shot off a strong secret note to US President George W. Bush, DEBKAfile’s sources reveal, protesting the administration’s strategic steps toward rapprochement with Iran.

Israel was not forewarned, Olmert wrote bitterly, although these steps directly violated US-Israel understandings on Iran of the past year. Bush, he said, had broken the promises he gave in face-to-face meetings with the prime minister earlier this year. If nothing is done to arrest Iran’s progress towards a nuclear bomb, Olmert warned, Iran will have all the components ready for assembly by early 2009, that is, in 6-8 months.

This time line is tighter than the one the prime minister gave the Democratic Senator Barack Obama when he visited Jerusalem Wednesday, July 23.

DEBKAfile’s Washington sources add that Bush has not replied to the letter, although the prime minister wrote in a spirit of extreme alarm over the threat to Israel’s security and indeed survival building up in Tehran.

The US response apparently came in the way American military chiefs brushed off Israeli chief of staff Lt. Gen. Gabi Ashkenazi, when he presented intelligence updates on the state of Iran’s military nuclear program. He was received with great honor during his week’s working visit, but his hosts declined to address the working theories guiding the IDF with regard to that program.

Res. Maj-Gen Yizhak Ben-Israel, former head of IDF Weapons Authority, strongly refuted Saturday, July 26, the estimate published by Time Magazine quoting former Mossad chief Ephraim Halevi (up until 2002) as speaking out against an Israeli attack on Iran, because it “could have an impact on us [Israel] for the next 100 years.”

Ben-Israel, a world-class expert on Iran’s nuclear and missile programs, countered that Israel’s failure to attack Iran’s nuclear sites would “jeopardize its security.” Time is working against the Jewish state,” he said.

As he spoke, Iranian president Mahmoud Ahmadinejad announced his country’s nuclear program had managed to double the uranium-enriching centrifuges operating in Natanz to 6,000.

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benny balerio
Russia
Russia could place bombers in Latin America, N.Africa - paper
14:27 | 24/ 07/ 2008



MOSCOW, July 24 (RIA Novosti) - Russian strategic bombers may soon be deployed at airbases in Cuba, Venezuela and Algeria as a response to the U.S. missile shield in Europe and NATO's expansion, Russian daily Izvestia said on Thursday.

Moscow has strongly opposed the possible deployment by the U.S. of 10 interceptor missiles in Poland and an accompanying tracking radar in the Czech Republic as a threat to its national security. Washington says the defenses are needed to deter a possible strike from Iran, or other "rogue" states.

Moscow has also expressed concern over NATO's expansion to Russia's borders and pledged to take "appropriate measures" to counter the U.S. and NATO moves.

Izvestia cited sources in the Russian Defense Ministry as saying that crews of Tu-160 Blackjack and Tu-95MS Bear strategic bombers recently visited Cuba and conducted an inspection of a site and facilities for a possible forward landing airfield that could be used as a refueling stopover for Russian strategic bombers.

Russia resumed strategic bomber patrol flights over the Pacific, Atlantic, and Arctic oceans last August, following an order signed by former president Vladimir Putin.

At present the Russian military is considering the possibility of establishing so-called "jump-up" bases in various regions of the world to provide refueling and maintenance support for the patrolling bombers.

"The flight to the U.S. [from southern Russia where the bombers are based] takes about 10 hours and even with two mid-air refuellings the aircraft can spend only 1.5 hours near the U.S. coast," said Gen. of the Army Pyotr Deinekin, former commander of the Russian Air Force.

The use of forward landing airfields in Latin America would practically erase the time constraints for the Russian bombers and make their presence near the U.S. borders almost permanent, the general said.

If a political decision is made, Cuba will most likely host Russian Il-78 aerial tankers, which will provide nuclear-capable strategic bombers with mid-air refueling, sources in the Defense Ministry told Izvestia.

Both Tu-160 and Tu-95MS bombers have been recently modernized and fitted with new X-555 cruise missiles with a range of over 3,500 km (2,200 miles). Therefore, the bombers do not have to be permanently based near the U.S. borders to hit any target on U.S. territory in case of a potential conflict. (Image Gallery)

In the meantime, the bombers may be primarily used to spy on the United States using electronic means, much like the former Russian SIGINT station at Lourdes near Havana, which was closed in 2002.

However, another Russian publication, Nezavisimaya Gazeta, said on Thursday that the ambitious plans of Russian politicians and some military commanders may be nothing more than "saber-rattling in empty air."

The prospect of maintaining refueling posts for Russian bombers all over the world would require an enormous amount of investment in construction of infrastructure, fuel supplies and re-supplies.

The Russian defense budget simply does not have sufficient resources to ensure the implementation of these plans, the newspaper said.

Russian bombers with nuclear missiles on board policing the globe would only harm Russia's image in the international arena, and it is unlikely that their presence near the U.S. borders will scare the Americans.

The U.S. military consider long-range bombers an obsolete and highly vulnerable component of the nuclear triad. The Pentagon stopped strategic bomber patrols almost two decades ago.

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benny balerio
Stratfor Intelligence Guidance: Week of July 27, 2008

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Posted for fair use....via Google News...

Intelligence Guidance: Week of July 27, 2008
July 25, 2008 | 2131 GMT

1. U.S.-Iranian talks: The United States has given Iran until Aug. 2 to respond to the latest — and most serious — offer of cooperation. Iran is holding out for something more, but also cannot ignore the risks it would be taking in dragging these talks out and missing the opportunity to reach a deal over Iraq with the current U.S. administration. It has never been about nuclear weapons, much less enrichment. Both sides are preparing their publics for a deal, and time is running short. This should be where the final issues get ground under and anyone who wants to derail a U.S.-Iranian understanding will take their best shot. The next few weeks should be lively.

2. Israel-Syrian peace talks: There is no must-solve issue or deadline to worry about, but that does not mean that those wanting to tank the process don’t need to act quickly. The player with the most to lose remains Hezbollah, and all involved with the talks are working to shatter the organization’s organizational coherence. We are close to the point where Hezbollah will either strike out or break down.

3. Turkey’s domestic politics: Turkey is nearing a balance point. The secularists are about to use the courts to break the Islamic-flavored Justice and Development (AK) Party government. There is only as much room for compromise as there is willingness on the AK Party’s behalf to cave — the secularists hold most of the cards. How far is the AK Party leadership willing to let itself be knocked back?

4. Russia’s plans: Russia is quiet — summer vacation. That means no crises in the near term. But the Kremlin is not led by a man with a reputation for snoozing the day away, and the rumors this past week of Russia remilitarizing its relationship with Cuba was no idle prospect. Russia may be richer than it has been in years, but its geopolitical position remains inherently weak — it must be proactive. What is Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin planning? Now is a perfect time to game out the Russians’ next (several) moves.

5. Oil prices: Oil’s plunge from its $148-a-barrel high continues. Has the combination of poor economic news finally convinced the markets that the price was unreasonable? Or is something else afoot? Don’t try to forecast the price — the markets gyrate wildly on the best of days — but look at who benefits from the lower prices and what they are doing to influence events. Prices can and will drop by $20 in a week, but it is not sustainable without a change in consensus about the fundamentals — such a new consensus has not manifested yet. Something else may be going on out there.

EURASIA

* July 26: Patriarch Alexei II of the Russian Orthodox Church will visit Ukraine — amid tensions between the two varying factions of the Ukrainian Orthodox Church, the Russian Orthodox Church and the Ukrainian government — for celebrations commemorating the 1020th anniversary of Russia’s christening.
* July 28: The United States and Germany will push for peace talks to be held in Berlin in an effort to move toward a resolution of the conflict over the Georgian separatist region of Abkhazia.
* Aug. 1: Armenian Foreign Minister Edward Nalbandian and Azerbaijani Foreign Minister Elmar Mamedyarov will meet in Moscow amid tensions over the secessionist region of Nagorno-Karabakh.

MIDDLE EAST/SOUTH ASIA

* July 26: The Tamil Tigers in Sri Lanka will begin a unilateral cease-fire with the country’s federal government as a result of a South Asian Association for Regional Cooperation summit in Colombo. Heads of state from Pakistan, India and Afghanistan will attend the meeting. The summit will focus on food security, energy, and anti-terrorism measures. The heads-of-state meeting will be held Aug. 2-3, after provisional talks.
* July 27: Iran will host the 15th annual Non-Aligned Movement in Tehran until July 30. Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad will give the opening address at the conference to be attended by representatives from Pakistan, Cuba, Venezuela and North Korea.
* July 28: An 11-judge panel of the Turkish Constitutional Court will begin final discussions on a verdict on the fate of Turkey’s governing Justice & Development party in Ankara.
* July 28: Pakistani Prime Minister Yusuf Raza Gillani will meet U.S. President George W. Bush in Washington, D.C. The heads of state are to discuss efforts to curb violence by Islamist militants along the Afghanistan-Pakistan border.
* July 30: The festival marking Mohammad’s ascent to a prophet (Maba’th) will be held in Iran. Iranian Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei will address the nation.
* July 31: The notional deadline for establishing the Status of Forces Agreement between Iraq and the United States will pass at midnight.
* Aug. 1: The International Atomic Energy Agency’s 35-member board will meet in Vienna to consider the proposed India-specific safeguards agreement to establish civilian nuclear energy in India.
* Aug. 1: U.S. and Indian special forces will conduct a joint counterterrorism exercise named Vajra Prahar at the Indian Army’s Counter-Insurgency and Jungle Warfare School in Vairengte. The exercise will last until Aug. 24.
* Aug. 2: Deadline for Iran to respond to calls from the International Atomic Energy Agency and the G5+1 countries (the United States, China, Russia, Germany, the United Kingdom and France) to halt its nuclear activities. Iran faces further sanctions if it fails to respond.

EAST ASIA

* July 26: Kuwaiti Prime Minister Sheikh Nasser al-Mohammad al-Sabah will visit Japan. He is scheduled to meet with Japanese Prime Minister Yasuo Fukuda and to have an audience with Emperor Akihito on July 29.
* July 27: Cambodia will hold a general election.
* July 27: South Korean Defense Minister Lee Sang-hee will embark on a three-day trip to Turkey, where he will hold talks with his counterparts on ways to increase military cooperation and promote Seoul’s defense goods.
* July 27: North Korean Foreign Minister Pak Ui Chun will wrap up a three-day state visit to Vietnam.
* July 31: A verdict on the tax evasion case against former Thai Prime Minister Thaksin Shinawatra’s wife is scheduled to be read. However, these are often delayed which would put the verdict squarely in August at the start of a new parliamentary session.

LATIN AMERICA

* July 30: Costa Rican President Oscar Arias will meet with Brazilian president Luiz Inacio “Lula” da Silva.

AFRICA

* July 25 (ongoing): South Africa is mediating power-sharing negotiations between the Zimbabwe African National Union-Patriotic Front and the Movement for Democratic Change political parties.
* July 28-30: Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak will travel to South Africa for a three-day state
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benny balerio
Saturday, July 26, 2008
UPDATE: WAR IN NOVEMBER?



Western intelligence analysts continue to look at the strong possibility that Israel could strike Iranian nuclear and military targets this fall, possibly in November. Now three new pieces of data need to be factored into the equation.


First, Iran now claims to have 6,000 operational centrifuges, feverishly enriching uranium. That is double the number operating at the beginning of the year. "Islamic Iran today possesses 6,000 centrifuges," Ahmadinejad told a group of professors in the city of Mashhad. What's more, according to the Associated Press, "A total of 3,000 centrifuges is the commonly accepted figure for a nuclear enrichment program that is past the experimental stage and can be used as a platform for a full industrial-scale program that could churn out enough enriched material for dozens of nuclear weapons. Iran says it plans to move toward large-scale uranium enrichment that will ultimately involve 54,000 centrifuges." That said, not everyone is convinced Iran is telling the truth, or that all 6,000 centrifuges -- if they do have them -- are actually operational. "An Israeli official who closely monitors the Iranian nuclear program told The Jerusalem Post that Ahmadinejad was probably lying. 'Our assessment, based on the latest available information and recent reports from the International Atomic Energy Agency, is that the figure of 6,000 centrifuges is unlikely,' the official said. 'We believe a figure of between 3,400 and 3,500 is more accurate.'" The key, however, is that Iran is defying the international community and moving steadily in the direction of enriching enough uranium to high enough standards to be able to begin producing nuclear warheads, possibly within the next year or two, according to senior Israeli intelligence officials.
Second, U.S. officials now believe Russia will not be delivering to Iran this fall a promised and paid for state-of-the-art ground-to-air missile system. The S-300 system was supposed to be delivered to the Iranians as early as September, and operational within 6 to 12 months of delivery, according to Reuters. Pentagon press secretary Geoff Morrell said: "We firmly believe, based upon our understanding of the situation, that the Iranians will not be receiving that Russian anti-aircraft system this year." This buys the Israelis more time, but also increases pressure on Jerusalem to strike the Iranians -- if they are going to strike at all -- before the Russian air defense system is delivered and operational, and probably while President Bush is still in office. That calculus has some analysts looking to a possibly late fall or early winter preemptive strike.
Third, "Iran signaled Thursday that it will no longer cooperate with U.N. experts probing for signs of clandestine nuclear weapons work, confirming the investigation is at a dead end a year after it began," reported the Associated Press. "Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice on Monday accused Iran of not being serious at the Geneva talks. She warned that all six nations were serious about a two-week deadline for Iran to agree to freeze suspect activities and start negotiations or else be hit with a fourth set of U.N. penalties." Diplomacy is not working. The sanctions that are currently in place are not changing the dynamic. And time is running out. In many ways, the Israelis find themselves today in a situation somewhat like the spring of 1967 when Egyptian President Gamal Abdel Nasser and other Arab leaders were vowing to "throw the Jews into the sea" and were surrounding the Jewish State with military firepower that posed an existential threat. Israel had to make a decision: strike first and hope to gain the advantage with the element of surprise, or wait to be hit, and risk being annihilated. Let's keep praying for peace, therefore. After all, the nations of the epicenter are clearly preparing for war. [For more, see Time magazine's article, "Israel's Debate Over an Iran Strike."]

posted by Joel C. Rosenberg @ 10:47 PM
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benny balerio
Jul 28

What Is The Market Value Of An Arab Terrorist?

For several years, Israel and its Islamic foes have been conducting a bartering system. When they’re not exchanging gunfire with each other, they’re negotiating how to trade terrorists for captives.

The trading of captured soldiers has occurred throughout history. It was very common during the American Civil War. By having a typical one-for-one exchange, both sides can dispense with the task of having to feed and guard enemy soldiers, and they get healthy men back into battle.

There is nothing even-handed in the exchanges Israel has been making with terrorists. All the trades have been ridiculously lopsided. Here are a few examples:

In 1978, Israel traded 76 PLO members for one single captive soldier.

In 2004, Prime Minster Sharon traded 435 security prisoners and the bodies of 59 Lebanese combatants for the bodies of three Israeli soldiers and an Israeli civilian, a drug dealer.

Just a couple weeks ago, Israel traded five terrorists and the bodies of 200 Arabs killed trying to attack Israel for the remains of two soldiers, Ehud Goldwasser and Eldad Regev.

For over two years now, Hamas and Israel have been haggling over Gilad Shalit, who was abducted during a Palestinian attack on an army border post close to the Gaza Strip. The price for Shalit's freedom is very high. Hamas sent a long list of people it wants released via Egyptian mediators. It includes approximately 1,300 names, some of which are high-ranking Fatah members.

I think Israel is on a slippery slope with such prisoner exchanges. Shalit was captured for the very reason of using him to bargain for the release of fellow terrorists. Israeli soldiers have even expressed their unhappiness with trading terrorists for captives.

Officers and soldiers from one of the Israeli army's top reserve infantry brigades sent a letter to Israel Defense Forces Chief of Staff General Gabi Ashkenazi insisting that he not permit the exchange of jailed Palestinian terrorists for any of them should they be captured by the enemy in future military operations.

Hezbollah's deputy secretary-general, Sheikh Naim Kassem, said he would not rule out the abduction of more Israeli soldiers in order to achieve the organization's goals.

There is also the issue of who is being released. One of the five terrorists just set free was Samir Qantar, who had been serving a life term for the deaths of four Israelis, including a 4-year-old girl and her father. Qantar killed the toddler by bludgeoning her skull with the butt of a riffle. For his part, Qantar promised to add to his bloody record by continuing his fight against Israel.

I think the Arabs' willingness to agree to these exchanges reflects poorly on themselves. If Jews are the "descendant of pigs and dogs," it doesn’t speak well of the value of an Arab if they are willing to trade two Israelis for 200 of their own kind.

The fundamental problem is that the Islamic system has little regard for the value of life. In the Iraq and Afghanistan war, America has lost 4,000 soldiers, and we have killed 90,000 terrorists. But yet, we are the ones constantly being reminded by our foes that we are the ones suffering heavy losses.

With over a billion Muslins in the world and only six million Israeli citizens, the Jewish state cannot afford to continue this rate of exchange in the short run.

In the long term, the exchange rate looks far more promising. If Israel were smart, it would find some way to lock in the rate. The day is coming when the mountains of Northern Israel will be littered with the bodies of millions of dead Arab and Russian soldiers. When that day comes, Israel could ransom any captives several times over.

“And it shall come to pass in that day, that I will give unto Gog a place there of graves in Israel, the valley of the passengers on the east of the sea: and it shall stop the noses of the passengers: and there shall they bury Gog and all his multitude: and they shall call it The valley of Hamongog. And seven months shall the house of Israel be burying of them, that they may cleanse the land” (Ezek. 39:11-12).

“And, thou son of man, thus saith the Lord GOD; Speak unto every feathered fowl, and to every beast of the field, Assemble yourselves, and come; gather yourselves on every side to my sacrifice that I do sacrifice for you, even a great sacrifice upon the mountains of Israel, that ye may eat flesh, and drink blood” (Ezek. 39:17).

-- Todd

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benny balerio
No date fixed with Gates ahead of Barak trip to Washington
DEBKAfile Exclusive Report

July 28, 2008, 6:04 PM (GMT+02:00)

Monday, July 28, Israel’s defense minister Ehud Barak is due to land with both feet at the heart of the controversy with the US defense secretary Robert Gates over the wisdom of a pre-emptive attack on Iran’s nuclear weapons projects before it is too late.

American coordination with any Israeli strike plan would be contingent on Gates’ review and approval. However, DEBKAfile’s Washington sources report that, as Barak prepared to fly out, the Israeli defense ministry spokesman said he would be meeting vice president Dick Cheney, secretary of state Condoleezza Rice, senior military officials and members of Congress. Gates’ name was not on the agenda.

A senior adviser to minister Barak, Amos Gilad, said in a radio interview Sunday, “This is a very important visit. Israel cannot tolerate living under an Iranian nuclear threat. For the moment our priority is the diplomatic track, but Israel has to be prepared to use all options.”

DEBKAfile’s military sources note that Gates also avoided meeting Israel’s chief of staff Lt. Gen. Gabi Ashkenazi, although he spent all last week in Washington on a working visit at the invitation of the Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, Adm. Mike Mullen.

Jerusalem has not commented on these omissions, but the message has registered that Gates is so adamantly opposed to any military action against Iran, that he has decided not even to look at any Israeli plans of action.

The latest issue of Parameters, the US Army War College quarterly, carries an article in which the US defense secretary writes that a war with Iran would be “disastrous on a number of levels.” It is the last thing we need, he wrote, despite the fact that Iran “supports terrorism,” is “a destabilizing force through the Middle East and Southwest Asia and in my judgment, is hell-bent on acquiring nuclear weapons.”

Another cause of Israel’s concern is the Democratic presidential contender Barack Obama’s praise for Gates’ position on Iran.

Firing on all cylinders, Israel’s transport minister Shaul Mofaz, a former defense minister involved in U.S.-Israeli strategic relations, is expected in Washington on July 30. He too will meet Cheney and Rice. His spokesman told AFP:

"The main subject under discussion will be the threat posed by the Iranian nuclear program to the entire region.”

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benny balerio
Last update - 21:47 23/07/2008


Report: Israeli sources say Russia to supply new Iran air defenses

By Reuters

Tags: Nuclear, Air Defense, Iran

Iran is set to receive an advanced Russian-made anti-aircraft system by the year's end that could help fend off any preemptive strikes against its nuclear facilities, senior Israeli defense sources told Reuters on Wednesday.

The first delivery of the S-300 missile batteries was expected as soon as early September, one source said, though it could take six to 12 months for them to be deployed and operable - a possible reprieve for Israeli and American military planners.

Washington has led a diplomatic drive to deny Iran access to nuclear technologies with bomb-making potential, while hinting that force could be a last resort. Israel, whose warplanes have been training for long-range missions, has made similar threats.
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But the allies appear to differ on when Iran, which denies seeking atomic arms, might get the S-300. The most sophisticated version of the system can track 100 targets at once and fire on planes 120 km (75 miles) away.

Iran, which already has TOR-M1 surface-to-air missiles from Russia, announced last December that an unspecified number of S-300s were on order. But Moscow denied there was any such deal.

U.S. Secretary of Defense Robert Gates has denied knowledge of the Russian delivery.

"Based on what I know, it's highly unlikely that those air defense missiles would be in Iranian hands any time soon," said Gates, responding in a July 9 briefing to a question about the S-300 - also known in the West as the SA-20.

Gates meant that Iran was a good number of months away from acquiring the system, a U.S. official said.

An Israeli defense official said Iran's contract with Russia required that the S-300s be delivered by the end of 2008. A second source said first units would arrive in early September.

The official agreed with the assessments of independent experts that the S-300 would compound the challenges that Iran - whose nuclear sites are numerous, distant, and fortified - would already pose for any future air strike campaign by Israel.

Israel does not have strategic "stealth" bombers like the United States, though the Israeli air force is believed to have developed its own radar-evading and jamming technologies.

"There's no doubt that the S-300s would make an air attack more difficult," said the official, who declined to be named.

"But there's an answer for every counter-measure, and as far as we're concerned, the sooner the Iranians get the new system, the more time we will have to inspect the deployments and tactical doctrines. There's a learning curve."

Israel, which is assumed to have the Middle East's only nuclear arsenal, reportedly carried out a large-scale air force drill over the Mediterranean last month which was widely seen as a "dress rehearsal" for a possible raid on Iran. Some analysts also described it as a bid to pressure the West to step up sanctions.

The exercise involved overflying parts of Greece, which is among a handful of countries to have bought and deployed S-300s. But Greek media quoted Athens officials as saying that the system's radars were "turned off" during the Israeli presence.

According to the Israeli official, it would take a year for Iran to deploy the
S-300s and man them with trained operators.

Robert Hewson, editor of Jane's Air-Launched Weapons, said: "The minimum work-up time to be comfortable with the system is six months, but more time is preferable."

Hewson said the Iranian S-300 deal was being conducted via Belarus to afford discretion for Russia, which is already under Western scrutiny for helping Iran build a major atomic reactor.

"Belarus is the proxy route whenever Russia wants to deny it is doing the sale. But nothing happens along that route without Moscow saying so," he said.

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Jul 28

Don’t Feed the Animals

By Jim Fletcher



Jerusalem’s King David Street is a pleasant place. Tree-lined and filled with boutiques, the nearby King David Hotel is the crown jewel of the meeting of the old and new cities.

This week, another Palestinian worker manned another bulldozer in an attempt to murder innocents. Just a few hundred yards from the King David, a five-minute walk from the Old City walls, the worker attempted to mimic a recent murder spree, in which several people died. This time, 16 people were injured before bystanders shot the man to death.

These are but the latest attempts by Arab terrorists to kill Jews. And you can count on one thing:

The international community will beg the Palestinians to take gifts. Gifts of land, gifts of a state, gifts of legitimacy. It’s the old strategy of feeding the beast someone else, and hope he doesn’t eat you.

Democratic nominee Barack Obama is but the latest to travel down the Road of Insanity in this insane dance with the Palestinians. He actually said in his press conference in Israel that he hopes Hamas will decide to become a legitimate political movement dedicated to the Palestinian good, and that Hamas will recognize Israel.

Is he a liar, or really that naïve? It is doubtful a guy as smart as Obama is naïve. Let me digress here for a minute and bring up a hard point. This is harsh, but hear me out.

Obama said in the press conference that he understands the danger Israel lives with. He said that if someone were firing rockets at his house at night, at his daughters, he’d do everything possible to stop it.

I do not believe him. A man who has such low regard for human life (see his votes on abortion-related issues) will not put his own life on the line to save anyone. It won’t happen.

It is reminiscent of Bill Clinton’s comical-repulsive commitment to get in a ditch and fight for Israel, if necessary. No one seriously believed Bill Clinton would face existential danger for anyone but himself.

Nor would Barack Obama. His arrogance and narcissism would not allow him to make a moral decision of that magnitude.

Rather than pander to the animals and zoo keepers of “Palestine,” Obama should have condemned the vicious attacks that just took place in Jerusalem. When asked what fresh initiatives he could bring to the Arab-Israeli conflict (the media knew the question and answer would be meaningless), Obama should have said:

“Fresh ideas? How about this. The barbarians who are demanding a state carved out of Israel will not have a state on my watch. It would be left up to my successor to chart his own course on the matter, but I do not believe the Palestinian people deserve a better fate than the one they currently have until they decide to firmly join the community of civilized nations.”

Rest assured, that would set off a firestorm of media activity, and would place Obama himself on the Palestinian hit list.

But alas, it didn’t happen and won’t happen because the Palestine Zoo houses some of the most dangerous animals on the planet. Terrorists who storm tourist beaches at Tel Aviv; terrorists who kill children in front of their parents; terrorists who throw stones at vehicles; terrorists who train and dispatch homicide-bombers. On and on.

What if we stopped feeding the animals? Cut off aid. Shun them politically. Invite them to have a state in Western Arabia. The southern Sinai. The moon. Anywhere but the miraculous state of Israel.

Shaul Mofaz, former defense minister in Israel, said this week that he knew from personal experience — born and raised as a Persian Jew in Iran — that strength is the best option in the Middle East. The Arabs understand pain. They shrink back into their crevices and caves. But attempts to pacify them and understand them and help them ensure that you’ll get your hand bit off. Or worse.

Recently, Israel arrested a half-dozen terrorists with ties to Al Quaida…in east Jerusalem. If you’ve been a tourist in that part of the world, you know how close the eastern Arab city is to the civilized western part of the city. Stroll down the old stone streets and buy tourist junk and you’ll be greeted by smiles and offers of thick, black coffee. They love America! USA! USA! USA! So long as you keep the cash coming.

But rest assured that many Palestinians intend to mow-down Jews so they can get us in their sights.

Israel will survive, but it will be a hard road. For what it’s worth, I believe the Israelis will act to stop Iran’s nuclear program. The world quakes at the mere thought. The prevailing political advice is a knee-knocking “Don’t!”

That’s one of the reasons I hope they do. The Israelis won in 1948, and 1956, and 1967, and 1973. They won at Entebbe. They won in Beirut. They won at Osirik.

They will win against Haman, too, again. And they will do it in spite of cowards like the freshman senator from Illinois.

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benny balerio
Jul 28, 2008 23:54 | Updated Jul 28, 2008 23:58
Barak: Iran putting entire world at risk
By ELIE LESHEM
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Defense Minister Ehud Barak on Monday met with his American counterpart, Defense Secretary Robert Gates, in Washington.


Defense Minister Ehud Barak
Photo: AP

Slideshow: Pictures of the week The Defense Ministry announced that the two discussed a series of issues, including the Iranian nuclear issue, the situation in Gaza, and Syria and Hizbullah, including the violations UN Security Council Resolution 1701.

The two also discussed several bilateral issues concerning the two countries' defense establishments.

"Iran's plans put the entire region and the entire world at risk," Barak told Gates, according to a statement released by the Defense Ministry. "We insist that sanctions [the international community] step up the economic and financial sanctions on Iran."

However, Barak emphasized, "we must continue to stick with a policy that does not take any of the options off the table."
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Israel, Iran, and the November US Election
July 29….(Aaron Klein) A Jerusalem-based journalist says the overwhelming sentiment in Israel right now is that Barack Obama will be the next president of the United States, and that the Jewish state will have to take care of the Iranian nuclear problem on its own. Aaron Klein, Jerusalem bureau chief for WorldNetDaily, covered Senator Obama's recent visit to the Holy City. Even before Obama's arrival in Israel, says Klein, the people there had already made up their minds about the inevitability of Obama becoming president. So the clock may already be ticking for a unilateral Israeli strike against Iran's nuclear program, he says. "In Israel, there already is an assumption that Obama is going to win," the journalist states. "And then Israel knows that the window to do anything about it [Iran] would have to be before...the November elections or before the next president, which Israel does assume to be Barack Obama, is installed in January." On the other hand, Klein does not think it would be wise for Israel to attack Iran as long as Ehud Olmert is prime minister there. "The man couldn't handle a war against a few thousand guerrilla troops in Lebanon in 2006 and he has bungled every Israeli Defense Force operation since he's been in office," says the Middle East observer. Klein admits he is concerned about a scenario in which Barack Obama is the US president at the same time Ehud Olmert is prime minister of Israel.

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After strategic Mt. Sannine, Hizballah seizes Lebanese Mt. Barukh
DEBKAfile Exclusive Report

July 29, 2008, 11:03 AM (GMT+02:00)

Hizballah has moved on since its seizure of the towering Mount Sannine, the highest point of the Mount Lebanon range – which was first revealed by DEBKAfile.

As Iranian and Syrian radar and anti-air weapons officers settled on the strategic peak, our military sources report the Lebanese terrorist group proceeded to grab positions on the Western ridge of Jebel Barukh, east of Jezzine, a move which brings it closer to the Israel border.

(Click on the map accompanying this article).

Perched atop Lebanon’s two tallest mountain peaks, Hizballah, Syria and Iran are able to control most of Israel’s air space to the south and the heartlands of Lebanon’s Christian centers, as well as Mediterranean coastal waters.

Contrary to the picture presented by Israeli prime minister Ehud Olmert to the Knesset foreign affairs and defense committee Monday, July 28 (“Hizballah leader Hassan Nasrallah is losing his self-confidence”), Hizballah is back in strength in the military enclaves circled in the accompanying map, where its war preparations proceed apace.

These enclaves are off-limits to civilians.

Scores of military bases have arisen around three main centers close to the Israeli border at Marjayun, Nabatiya and Hasbaya. Marked on the map are two lines of fortifications and large-scale concentrations of fighting strength:

1. One line is arrayed northwest of the Zahrani River to obstruct Israeli forces attempting to break through to Jebel Barukh and Mt. Sannine, as well as shielding the 10th and 14th Syrian armored divisions straddling the Syrian-Lebanese border opposite the Israeli positions on Mt. Hermon and Mt. Dov.

2. North-west of the first line, a long chain of positions is ranged across the breadth of South Lebanon, from Mt. Hermon in the east, up to Sidon on the Mediterranean coast to the west. It is there to block an Israeli advance on Hizballah-ruled Shiite centers.
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benny balerio
Jul 29, 2008 22:32 | Updated Jul 29, 2008 22:36
Barak: Iran strike option still open
By ASSOCIATED PRESS
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Defense Minister Ehud Barak said Tuesday he told top US officials that Israel would not rule out a military strike against Iran, while Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice called Iran's latest response to diplomatic overtures a disappointment.

Barak, in the middle of two days of meetings at the White House, Pentagon and State Department, told reporters that he said during those meetings that there was still time to pursue tough diplomacy with Iran. At the same time he said he told the Americans that Iran posed a major threat to the whole world, and that for Israel "no option would be removed from the table."

Barak would not say what advice he had been getting from the Americans.

Rice said the US was still trying to coerce Iran to give up nuclear technology that the United States fears could be used to build a nuclear bomb.

She repeated a warning that the US would seek additional sanctions unless Iran moves quickly to resume meaningful negotiations.

"Iran can't have it both ways," Rice told reporters at the State Department. She called Iran's vague reply so far to a renewed offer of perks to Teheran "pretty disappointing" but not a surprise.

Rice took a political gamble in sending a top deputy to a meeting with Iran over its nuclear program 10 days ago, but the meetings apparently yielded no progress.

Separately, US officials are calling Israeli plans to expand Jewish settlements a problem in reaching a peace deal with Palestinians. Rice has sessions planned this week with the top Israeli and Palestinian peace negotiators. She is seeing each of them separately, and at a joint session
scheduled to last more than two hours.

Rice raised the settlement issue Tuesday when she met with Barak. Plans were announced just last week to create a new settlement in Maskiot, which would be the first new Jewish settlement in the West Bank in a decade.

Barak called the plans a "procedural move," and added that the settlement issue was always under discussion with US officials.


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U.S. Intel: Iran Plans Nuclear Strike on U.S.

Tuesday, July 29, 2008 9:00 AM

By: Kenneth R. Timmerman Article Font Size




Iran has carried out missile tests for what could be a plan for a nuclear strike on the United States, the head of a national security panel has warned.


In testimony before the House Armed Services Committee and in remarks to a private conference on missile defense over the weekend hosted by the Claremont Institute, Dr. William Graham warned that the U.S. intelligence community “doesn’t have a story” to explain the recent Iranian tests.


One group of tests that troubled Graham, the former White House science adviser under President Ronald Reagan, were successful efforts to launch a Scud missile from a platform in the Caspian Sea.


“They’ve got [test] ranges in Iran which are more than long enough to handle Scud launches and even Shahab-3 launches,” Dr. Graham said. “Why would they be launching from the surface of the Caspian Sea? They obviously have not explained that to us.”


Another troubling group of tests involved Shahab-3 launches where the Iranians "detonated the warhead near apogee, not over the target area where the thing would eventually land, but at altitude,” Graham said. “Why would they do that?”


Graham chairs the Commission to Assess the Threat to the United States from Electromagnetic Pulse (EMP) Attack, a blue-ribbon panel established by Congress in 2001.


The commission examined the Iranian tests “and without too much effort connected the dots,” even though the U.S. intelligence community previously had failed to do so, Graham said.


“The only plausible explanation we can find is that the Iranians are figuring out how to launch a missile from a ship and get it up to altitude and then detonate it,” he said. “And that’s exactly what you would do if you had a nuclear weapon on a Scud or a Shahab-3 or other missile, and you wanted to explode it over the United States.”


The commission warned in a report issued in April that the United States was at risk of a sneak nuclear attack by a rogue nation or a terrorist group designed to take out our nation’s critical infrastructure.


"If even a crude nuclear weapon were detonated anywhere between 40 kilometers to 400 kilometers above the earth, in a split-second it would generate an electro-magnetic pulse [EMP] that would cripple military and civilian communications, power, transportation, water, food, and other infrastructure," the report warned.


While not causing immediate civilian casualties, the near-term impact on U.S. society would dwarf the damage of a direct nuclear strike on a U.S. city.


“The first indication [of such an attack] would be that the power would go out, and some, but not all, the telecommunications would go out. We would not physically feel anything in our bodies,” Graham said.


As electric power, water and gas delivery systems failed, there would be “truly massive traffic jams,” Graham added, since modern automobiles and signaling systems all depend on sophisticated electronics that would be disabled by the EMP wave.


“So you would be walking. You wouldn’t be driving at that point,” Graham said. “And it wouldn’t do any good to call the maintenance or repair people because they wouldn’t be able to get there, even if you could get through to them.”


The food distribution system also would grind to a halt as cold-storage warehouses stockpiling perishables went offline. Even warehouses equipped with backup diesel generators would fail, because “we wouldn’t be able to pump the fuel into the trucks and get the trucks to the warehouses,” Graham said.


The United States “would quickly revert to an early 19th century type of country.” except that we would have 10 times as many people with ten times fewer resources, he said.


“Most of the things we depend upon would be gone, and we would literally be depending on our own assets and those we could reach by walking to them,” Graham said.


America would begin to resemble the 2002 TV series, “Jeremiah,” which depicts a world bereft of law, infrastructure, and memory.


In the TV series, an unspecified virus wipes out the entire adult population of the planet. In an EMP attack, the casualties would be caused by our almost total dependence on technology for everything from food and water, to hospital care.


Within a week or two of the attack, people would start dying, Graham says.


“People in hospitals would be dying faster than that, because they depend on power to stay alive. But then it would go to water, food, civil authority, emergency services. And we would end up with a country with many, many people not surviving the event.”


Asked just how many Americans would die if Iran were to launch the EMP attack it appears to be preparing, Graham gave a chilling reply.


“You have to go back into the 1800s to look at the size of population” that could survive in a nation deprived of mechanized agriculture, transportation, power, water, and communication.


“I’d have to say that 70 to 90 percent of the population would not be sustainable after this kind of attack,” he said.


America would be reduced to a core of around 30 million people — about the number that existed in the decades after America’s independence from Great Britain.


The modern electronic economy would shut down, and America would most likely revert to “an earlier economy based on barter,” the EMP commission’s report on Critical National Infrastructure concluded earlier this year.


In his recent congressional testimony, Graham revealed that Iranian military journals, translated by the CIA at his commission’s request, “explicitly discuss a nuclear EMP attack that would gravely harm the United States.”


Furthermore, if Iran launched its attack from a cargo ship plying the commercial sea lanes off the East coast — a scenario that appears to have been tested during the Caspian Sea tests — U.S. investigators might never determine who was behind the attack. Because of the limits of nuclear forensic technology, it could take months. And to disguise their traces, the Iranians could simply decide to sink the ship that had been used to launch it, Graham said.


Several participants in last weekend’s conference in Dearborn, Mich., hosted by the conservative Claremont Institute argued that Iranian president Mahmoud Ahmadinejad was thinking about an EMP attack when he opined that “a world without America is conceivable.”


In May 2007, then Undersecretary of State John Rood told Congress that the U.S. intelligence community estimates that Iran could develop an ICBM capable of hitting the continental United States by 2015.


But Iran could put a Scud missile on board a cargo ship and launch from the commercial sea lanes off America’s coasts well before then.


The only thing Iran is lacking for an effective EMP attack is a nuclear warhead, and no one knows with any certainty when that will occur. The latest U.S. intelligence estimate states that Iran could acquire the fissile material for a nuclear weapon as early as 2009, or as late as 2015, or possibly later.


Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld first detailed the “Scud-in-a-bucket” threat during a briefing in Huntsville, Ala., on Aug. 18, 2004.


While not explicitly naming Iran, Rumsfeld revealed that “one of the nations in the Middle East had launched a ballistic missile from a cargo vessel. They had taken a short-range, probably Scud missile, put it on a transporter-erector launcher, lowered it in, taken the vessel out into the water, peeled back the top, erected it, fired it, lowered it, and covered it up. And the ship that they used was using a radar and electronic equipment that was no different than 50, 60, 100 other ships operating in the immediate area.”


Iran’s first test of a ship-launched Scud missile occurred in spring 1998, and was mentioned several months later in veiled terms by the Commission to Assess the Ballistic Missile Threat to the United States, a blue-ribbon panel also known as the Rumsfeld Commission.


I was the first reporter to mention the Iran sea-launched missile test in an article appearing in the Washington Times in May 1999.


Intelligence reports on the launch were “well known to the White House but have not been disseminated to the appropriate congressional committees,” I wrote. Such a missile “could be used in a devastating stealth attack against the United States or Israel for which the United States has no known or planned defense.”


Few experts believe that Iran can be deterred from launching such an attack by the threat of massive retaliation against Iran. They point to a December 2001 statement by former Iranian President Ali Akbar Hashemi-Rafsanjani, who mulled the possibility of Israeli retaliation after an Iranian nuclear strike.


“The use of an atomic bomb against Israel would destroy Israel completely, while [the same] against the Islamic only would cause damages. Such a scenario is not inconceivable,” Rafsanjani said at the time.


Rep. Trent Franks, R, Ariz., plans to introduce legislation next week that would require the Pentagon to lay the groundwork for an eventual military strike against Iran, to prevent Iran from acquiring nuclear weapons and EMP capability.


“An EMP attack on America would send us back to the horse and buggy era — without the horse and buggy,” he told the Claremont Institute conference on Saturday. “If you’re a terrorist, this is your ultimate goal, your ultimate asymmetric weapon.”


Noting Iran’s recent sea-launched and mid-flight warhead detonation tests, Rep. Franks concluded, “They could do it — either directly or anonymously by putting some freighter out there on the ocean.”


The only possible deterrent against Iran is the prospect of failure, Dr. Graham and other experts agreed. And the only way the United States could credibly threaten an Iranian missile strike would be to deploy effective national missile defenses.


“It’s well known that people don’t go on a diet until they’ve had a heart attack,” said Claremont Institute president Brian T. Kennedy. “And we as a nation are having a heart attack” when it comes to the threat of an EMP attack from Iran.


“As of today, we have no defense against such an attack. We need space-based missile defenses to protect against an EMP attack,” he told Newsmax.


Rep. Franks said he remains surprised at how partisan the subject of space-based missile defenses remain. “Nuclear missiles don’t discriminate on party lines when they land,” he said.


Arizona Republican Sen. Jon Kyl, a long-standing champion of missile defense, told the Claremont conference on Friday that Sen. Obama has opposed missile defense tooth and nail and as president would cut funding for these programs dramatically.


“Senator Obama has been quoted as saying, ‘I don’t agree with a missile defense system,’ and that we can cut $10 billion of the research out — never mind, as I say, that the entire budget is $9.6 billion, or $9.3 billion,” Kyl said.


Like Franks, Kyl believes that the only way to eventually deter Iran from launching an EMP attack on the United States is to deploy robust missile defense systems, including space-based interceptors.


The United States “needs a missile defense that is so strong, in all the different phases we need to defend against . . . that countries will decide it’s not worth coming up against us,” Kyl said.


“That’s one of the things that defeated the Soviet Union. That’s one of the ways we can deal with these rogue states . . . and also the way that we can keep countries that are not enemies today, but are potential enemies, from developing capabilities to challenge us. “







© 2008 Newsmax. All rights reserved.


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Top Iranian official: Israel politically dead


Parliament speaker Larijani tells visiting Lebanese FM recent prisoner exchange 'historic defeat for Israel, great victory for Lebanon and world of Islam. Ahmadinejad: Major powers on descending course, approaching end of their era

Dudi Cohen and Reuters Published: 07.29.08, 16:51 / Israel News




"Israel has become politically dead after its humiliating defeat" in the Second Lebanon War, Iranian parliament speaker Ali Larijani said Tuesday.

US Visit

Barak to Gates: Keep military option on table with Iran / Yitzhak Benhorin

Defense minister meets with American counterpart in Washington, warns Tehran's plans threaten regional stability. Gates, who opposes US action against Iran, urged to tighten sanction against Tehran while keeping all options open
Full Story





According to the Islamic Republic News Agency, Larijani said the release of a group of Lebanese terrorists in the framework of the recent prisoner swap between Israel and Hizbullah "was a historic defeat for Israel and a great victory for Lebanon and for the world of Islam.



Larijani made the remarks in a meeting with the visiting Lebanese Foreign Minister Fawzi Salloukh, who is currently in Tehran to attend the 15th meeting of Non-Aligned Movement (NAM) foreign ministers.



"Courage and resistance of the Lebanese people have been well supported by regional states and the Islamic world," Larijani told Salloukh stressing that Lebanon has currently reached a point where "it can say the last word."



Israel released five Lebanese prisoners in return for the bodies of IDF soldiers Ehud Goldwasser and Eldad Regev on July 16.



During his inaugural speech at the NAM conference, Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad called for developing nations to unite to fight what he said was bias shown by the UN Security Council and other world bodies that only serve the big powers' interests.



Iran wants to broaden its international support in a row over its nuclear plans with Western capitals, which Ahmadinejad says manipulate the Security Council and other bodies to act against the Islamic Republic.



The Council has imposed three rounds of limited sanctions on Iran for its refusal to halt sensitive atomic work, which the West says is aimed at making nuclear bombs but Tehran insists is designed to meet electricity needs.



Ahmadinejad accused world powers of trying to deny others peaceful nuclear energy while they stockpiled atomic weapons.



"The major powers are on a descending course. The extent of their influence drops day by day. They are approaching the end of their era," Ahmadinejad told a Non-Aligned Movement meeting.



'Soft declaration'
NAM, now with 118 members plus observers, was set up in 1961 to group many newly independent nations which wanted to avoid being caught up in the Cold War between Moscow and Washington. It has struggled to stay relevant since the Soviet Union fell.




"Any measure to change the world conditions and realize the joint interests of member states will not be possible except through effective efforts and collective cooperation of member states," Ahmadinejad told the ministerial meeting in Tehran.



He said the group together "can defend and repel aggression against any member subjected to aggression, and obstruct the violation by major powers of other countries."



Ahmadinejad called for an "arbitration council" that could resolve any disputes between NAM members as well as others, and a fund to back development in NAM but did not give details.



Ahmadinejad said the Security Council would never issue a resolution against the United States, Iran's arch-foe, as long as Washington, like four other big powers, had a permanent seat. The permanent council members have veto powers.



A draft NAM statement, obtained by Reuters, echoed previous calls backing Iran's right to develop, research, produce and use peaceful atomic energy, while welcoming Tehran's continued cooperation with the UN watchdog, the International Atomic Energy Agency. The final text has yet to be approved.



"We only pray that Iran, together with the International Atomic Energy Agency, together with the ... big powers, sit down and resolve this matter amicably," Tanzanian Foreign Minister Bernard Membe told Reuters on the sidelines of the meeting.



A European diplomat, attending the meeting, said Iran's push for more explicit support for its case against world powers had met opposition from some NAM states, including regional rival Saudi Arabia and Egypt, with which Iran does not have full ties.

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"It is going to be a soft declaration," the diplomat said.



A NAM diplomat, ahead of the meeting, had said the need for consensus would prevent NAM going beyond previous statements.



Six world powers -- the United States, Britain, France, Germany, Russa and China -- have offered Iran nuclear, trade and other incentives if its suspends its uranium enrichment, a process that can have both civilian and military uses.



Iran has refused. It has also, so far, not given any sign it is ready to freeze expansion of its nuclear work in return for a halt to steps to impose more UN sanctions, a proposal aimed at getting preliminary talks going before formal talks start.



Western powers on July 19 gave Iran two weeks to respond. Russia, which like China has tended to take a softer line on Iran, has said it opposes artificial deadlines, as well as any foot dragging by Tehran.


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Iranian president: 'Big powers' going down
Tuesday, 29 July 2008
The Associated Press

By GEORGE JAHN

TEHRAN, Iran (AP) — Iran's president on Tuesday blamed the U.S. and other "big powers" for nuclear proliferation, AIDS and other global ills, and accused them of exploiting the U.N. and other organizations for their own gain and the developing world's loss.

But, President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad said, time was on the poor countries' side.

"The big powers are going down," Ahmadinejad told foreign ministers of the Nonaligned Movement meeting in Tehran. "They have come to the end of their power, and the world is on the verge of entering a new, promising era."

The more than 100-member NAM is made up of such diverse members as communist Cuba, Jamaica and India and depicts itself as bloc-free. But most members share a critical view of the U.S and the developed world in general.

And with Iran assuming the chairmanship of the conference Tuesday, Ahmadinejad's keynote speech was tailored to reflect the struggle that some NAM members see themselves in against the world's rich and powerful countries.

A draft of the final document that ministers will be asked to approve, made available to The Associated Press as the conference opened Tuesday, reflected that struggle.

"The rich and powerful countries continue to exercise an inordinate influence in determining the nature and direction of international relations, including economic and trade relations, as well as rules governing these relations, many of which are at the expense of developing countries," it said.

NAM countries oppose "unilaterally imposed measures by certain states ... the use and threat of use of force, and pressure and coercive measures as a means to achieving their national policy objectives," said the draft.

That appeared to be an indirect slap at the United States, which has refused to rule out force as a possible means of last resort against Iran unless it heeds U.N. Security Council demands to curb its nuclear activities.

The draft also condemns "the categorization of countries as good or evil based on unilateral and unjustified criteria" — oblique criticism of President Bush's labeling of Iran as part of an "axis of evil" along with Saddam Hussein's Iraq and North Korea.

Iran has in the past counted on NAM countries to blunt pressure from the U.S. and its allies for harsh U.N. sanctions and other penalties because of its refusal to freeze uranium enrichment, which can produce both nuclear fuel or the fissile payload of warheads. Tehran has been slapped with three sets of U.N. sanctions because of its nuclear defiance and new penalties loom unless Tehran shows compromise.

Another draft statement also obtained by the AP before the meeting began seeks continued support. Submitted by Iran on behalf of the NAM, it asks the conference to agree that "sanctions imposed on Iran for its nuclear program are of a political nature and should be promptly removed."

The ministers "further affirm ... that there is no legal basis that (the) U.N. Security Council proceeds" in continuing to deal with the Iran nuclear file, said that draft.

While only infrequently mentioning the U.S. by name Tuesday, Ahmadinejad made clear that he blamed Washington and its allies for trying to "impose their political will on nations and governments."

He accused the great powers of "fomenting discord .... to intensify the military and arms race" so they can feed their arms industries. AIDS, he said, also was the result of world conditions "imposed by big powers."

Accusing the U.N. Security Council of being a tool of the world's haves — which use them against the have-nots — he said it was useless to expect that body to be the solution to the world's ills.

"If the United Nations and the Security Council ... were supposed to deal with the problems of the world ... we would not have a problem called Palestine," he declared, in indirect criticism of the creation of the Jewish state 60 years ago.
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benny balerio
Jul 31, 2008 1:58 | Updated Jul 31, 2008 4:37
Barak: Iran sanctions not effective enough
By ASSOCIATED PRESS
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Defense Minister Ehud Barak repeated his assertion Wednesday night that "no option should be removed" to prevent Iran from developing nuclear weapons and claimed that UN sanctions imposed on the Islamic republic were not effective enough.


Barak speaks to the media at UN Headquarters in New York.
Photo: AP

Slideshow: Pictures of the week Barak was speaking after meeting UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-Moon at UN Headquarters in New York.

"Basically, it's a challenge for the whole world," said Barak. "If Iran turned into a military nuclear power, this would be the end of any conceivable nonproliferation regime and it will significantly risk any considerable stable world order."

Barak said he emphasized to Ban that Israel believed the UN sanctions regime against Iran "is basically not working well enough" because it is smuggling into Lebanon "a flow of munitions, rockets and other weapons systems."

RELATED
Barak told strike on Iran still on cards
Nonaligned countries back Iran's nuclear program
Meanwhile, more than 100 nonaligned nations backed Iran's right to peaceful uses of nuclear power. The endorsement is key to Teheran in its standoff with the UN Security Council over its refusal to freeze uranium enrichment.

Senior Iranian officials are welcoming the support from a high-level conference of the 120-nation Nonaligned Movement.

Iranian Foreign Minister Manouchehr Mottaki said Wednesday that the conference's backing contradicts claims from some countries that the international community opposes Iran's nuclear program.
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benny balerio
US X-Band radar for early Iranian missile detection, but no US involvement in any Israeli attack
DEBKAfile Special Report

July 30, 2008, 6:37 PM (GMT+02:00)


US FBX radar
The United States agreed to link Israel up to two advanced missile detection systems against potential attack by a nuclear-armed Iran, Israeli defense minister Ehud Barak said Tuesday night, July 30, at the end of his Washington talks. But US officials made it clear that, while prepared to help Israel defend itself against Iranian missile retaliation, they are determined not to be involved in any Israeli attack on Iran’s nuclear sites.

DEBKAfile’s military sources report that Washington would deliver within six months “before the new US administration arrives” in January, a powerful forward-based X-band FBX-T radar. Increased access to its Defense Support Program (DSP) satellites, which spot missile launches, would take longer.

By putting a time frame around delivery, the Bush administration holds off a possible Israeli attack on Iran for as long as possible.

Barak’s talks with Vice President Dick Cheney, defense secretary Robert Gates and secretary of state Condoleezza Rice ended in agreement for Washington to deliver:

1.The transportable FBX-T radar system built by Raytheon Co. which, by providing early and accurate target-tracing and signature data, enlarges the effective battle space of missile interceptors. US officials say it can track an object the size of a baseball from about 4,700 km, and can be launched from air, sea or land.

It would allow the Israeli Arrow anti-missile system to engage an incoming Iranian Shehab-3 ballistic missile about halfway through its estimated 11-minute flight. This would give a potentially targeted Israeli population five minutes to prepare for an Iranian missile hit. This would make up for the deficiency of Arrow’s Green Pine radar, which can detect a missile launch in Iran only after it enters the atmosphere on its way to its Israeli target.

2. Increased access to the US Defense Support System (DSP) satellites, which spot missile launches, would help Israel cover the first 5.5 minutes of a Shehab is firing.

This access has hitherto been provided as per request - such as last September for the Israeli strike against Syria’s nuclear facility.- rather than on a constant basis.

DEBKAfile’s sources note that this access continues to be hedged around by the need in every case for lengthy discussion on whether it is applicable to a given military contingency. It is therefore unlikely to be available before the next president enters the White House and will then be subject to his confirmation. Here too, the Bush administration is stretching out the time table for an Israeli attack well into the future.

3. A US consent in principle to the upgrading of the Israeli, largely American-funded Arrow. The projected Arrow III would be capable of shooting down attacking missiles at greater atmospheric heights than the present version as a safeguard against nuclear fallout. It was not clear whether the administration means to grant Israel the required technology or replace the Arrow with American systems.

The upshot of the Israeli defense minister’s mission to Washington for a boost to Israel’s military capability for a possible preemptive attack on a pre-nuclear-armed Iran was therefore the promise of hardware to give Israel more time to defend itself against Iranian missile reprisals.

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benny balerio
'We don't want to get to Israeli strike'
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The UK does not want to get to the point of an Israeli strike on Iran and is focused on a diplomatic solution to the nuclear crisis, Reuters quoted British Foreign Secretary David Miliband as saying Thursday.


British Foreign Secretary David Miliband


Slideshow: Pictures of the week Asked during an interview to BBC radio whether the UK would support an Israeli attack on Iran's nuclear facilities, Miliband said: "We don't want to get there…we are 100 percent focused on the diplomatic track."

"It's a diplomatic resolution that must be found to this issue. It's massively in everybody's interest," he said.

"This is a very, very dangerous situation," he added. "It's one that can be resolved by diplomacy but the costs of the Iranian course need to be made very, very clear."
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benny balerio
Iran Building Secret Nuclear Reactor
By MEMRI
Memri | Thursday, July 31, 2008

On July 29, 2008, the Kuwaiti daily Al-Siyassa reported that, according to "highly reliable sources," Iranian authorities had begun construction of a secret nuclear reactor in the Al-Zarqan region close to the city of Ahwaz in southwest Iran, on the Iran-Iraq border.

The paper said that according to sources, Iran was working to distance its nuclear installations from international oversight. The English version of the report, published in the Kuwaiti Arab Times, said, "Disclosing [that] Tehran directed international A-bomb inspectors to other places, sources warned [that] the project poses a very serious threat to international security."

Also according to the sources, the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) did not know about this site at all, since it was not included in negotiations with Iran in Geneva held in early July.

According to the report, the sources said that during 2000-2003, Iran expropriated the lands and homes of thousands of Arab citizens from the Al-Zarqan region, destroying homes of thousands of Arab citizens from the Al-Zarqan region.

Destroyed homes, fields, orchards, and wells, and built a three-meter-high wall around the project site, which allegedly measures hundreds of kilometers.

The report also said that "the construction of the reactor began with the laying of a pipeline for fresh water from the [nearby] KarounRiver to the site, and the expansion of the Al-Zarqan power station."

Also, the sources said that "the construction works seem to be routine and do not arouse attention, but the tight security around the region is what arouses suspicions regarding the nature of the work." They added that the site is guarded by Islamic Revolutionary Guards Corps (IRGC) personnel, reflecting its importance and sensitivity.

Following is a summary of the Al-Siyassa report, [1] and from its English [2] version in the Kuwaiti English-language daily Arab Times, which was also published July 29, 2008.

IRGC Commander's Letter to Construction Company: Maintain Complete Secrecy

In its report, Al-Siyassa included a letter dated April 7, 2008 from the office of the assistant of IRGC commander in Al-Ahwaz city Brig. Hassan Jalaliyan, marked "highly confidential," to Mohammed Kayafir, manager of the Mehab Qudus Company for Construction and Supervision, which is building the reactor. The following is a translation of the letter:

"From the IRGC Commander in the city of Al-Ahwas to the director in charge at the Mehab Qudus company for Construction and Supervision Mr. Mohammed Kayafir

"Re: The nuclear reactor at Al-Zarqan

"Greetings,

"I thank you for the good services of the Mehab Qudus company, and at the same time I must remind you of the following items:

"1. All construction materials must be transported from the warehouses to the construction site in top secrecy.

"2. As part of the doctrine of caution, we reiterate yet again that during the transport of all required materials, you must ensure that this [transport] does not arouse the suspicions of any citizen in the region through which you are moving.

"3. In general, it is absolutely forbidden to hire any Arabic speakers or any citizen from Khozestan in the framework of the 'Al-Zarqan Nuclear Reactor' construction project. You must ensure that all manpower, including the driver, the accountant, the warehouse manager, the laborer, the technician, or the guard, comes from the northern provinces.

"In conclusion, we say yet again that all the construction work in this project must be carried out under absolute secrecy.

"From the aide to IRGC commander in the city of Al-Ahwaz, Hassan Jalaliyan."

An Ideal Place to Build a Nuclear Reactor - The Local Residents Can Serve as a Human Shield

Al-Siyassa also reported that the "National Society for Arabstan State took satellite pictures of the location, which looked perfect for the construction of a secret nuclear reactor..." It added, "The site is more suitable for building a nuclear reactor than Bushehr, which is close to American bases." It noted that a nuclear power plant under construction at Darkhovin is in an open area on the main road between Ahwaz and Abadan - while the "Al-Zarqan nuclear reactor is in the middle of very highly populated areas, making it a very difficult target due to a possibility that the Iranian authorities will use civilians as human shields."

On January 31, 2008, the Iran Daily wrote that Iranian Atomic Energy Organization deputy head Ahmad Fayyazbakhsh had said that the nuclear power plant at Darkhovin, in southwestern Iran, would become operational in 2016.

Below is the satellite photo published by Al-Siyassa:



**************************

This is a disturbing report.
It comes from the Kuwaiti news organization Al-Siyassa, (Arab Times), a daily paper not known for hysteria. Memri, although definitely pro western is also a reliable source. The original article was somewhat more alarming. It started it's report this way...

"A secret nuclear bomb manufacturing center at Al-Zarqan Area in Al-Ahwaziya Region, which was first established in 2000, was discovered recently, highly reliable sources told Al-Seyassah."
http://www.arabtimesonline.com/kuwai...d=20349&ccid=9

There is another plant under construction less than 20 miles away at Darkhovin that was revealed in January of this year.
http://www.iran-daily.com/1386/3052/pdf/i2.pdf

There is little reason I can think of to have TWO plants in such close proximity for power generation, but it would make sense from a secrecy standpoint, especially in the construction phase.

The article in the Iran Daily is interesting from another standpoint. In articles from the same page they are denying that the Darkhovin plant is a copy of a Chinese design, there is a propaganda piece about why the Uranium enrichment program is needed when they have no nuclear facilities, (the reason they give is that it's their duty to share the technology with others that don't have it yet and that it's more cost effective to produce their own. A ridiculous statement). Another is a meeting in Tehran with Hamas concerning the West trying to establish a Jewish state alongside the Palestinian one and how it's doomed to fail. (I think they have it backwards, but that's just me...).
There are also copies of the original article and the letter from the IRGC Commander in Arabic in the original Memri article.
wardogs
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benny balerio
Iran Dismisses Nuclear Deadline

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

Iran today brushed off U.S. calls to decide by Saturday whether to halt uranium enrichment so that it can receive a multinational package of political and financial benefits, Agence France-Presse reported (see GSN, July 30).

Foreign Minister Manouchehr Mottaki said Iran agreed earlier this month it would consider the offer from six world powers while they studied Tehran’s own proposal for wide-ranging negotiations.

The United States, which is concerned that Iran’s uranium enrichment program is aimed at nuclear weapons development, yesterday said Tehran must respond to the six-nation offer by Saturday or face new penalties.

"The language of deadline-setting is not understandable to us. We gave them our response within a month as we said we would, now they have to reply to us," Iranian state media quoted Mottaki as saying.

At the July 19 meeting, Iranian nuclear negotiator Saeed Jalili left EU foreign policy chief Javier Solana with the impression that Iran would respond within two weeks to the incentives package offered by the five permanent U.N. Security Council member nations and Germany. However, Iran later said it had agreed to no firm deadline on its reply.

"Perhaps based on incorrect analysis, some of the Geneva participants got the wrong expectation, but our job was to give our views to the 5+1 framework... then we gave our own framework," Mottaki said (Agence France-Presse I/Google News, July 31).

The U.S. State Department warned yesterday that "there are consequences diplomatically for defying the just demands of the Security Council.

"It's clear. This is the other side of the two-track approach," said spokesman Sean McCormack, referring to a strategy of offering incentives for nuclear cooperation while responding to noncompliance with penalties.

"Nobody is really desirous of going down that pathway. The P-5 plus one does not want it,” he said.

"This is serious stuff and we along with the P-5 plus one are absolutely prepared to go down that pathway should the Iranian regime take the world down that pathway," McCormack added (Agence France-Presse II/Google News, July 30).

McCormack today, though, did not lock down Saturday as the deadline, AFP reported.

I didn't count the days. It's coming up soon," he said (Agence France-Presse III/Google News, July 31).

The European Union hopes to augment three sets of Security Council sanctions already imposed on Iran, a European diplomat said yesterday.

One diplomat said EU nations agreed Tuesday to enforce independent measures not included in the most recent sanctions resolution against the Islamic state, calling for European governments and businesses to exercise “restraint” rather than merely “vigilance” when dealing with Iranian banks or financially supporting trade.

France and the United Kingdom pushed the EU states to “go beyond” measures in the Security Council resolution “and apply the things they had to concede to Russia and China" to win approval for the penalties, the diplomat said (Agence France-Presse IV/Spacewar.com, July 30).

Italy has called for an "immediate, firm and serious response" from EU nations if Iran continues uranium enrichment, Reuters reported today.

"I'm very disappointed about the latest statement made by Mr. Khamenei … about their intention to continue in any case with the nuclear program of enrichment of uranium," Italian Foreign Minister Franco Frattini said, referring to a statement yesterday by Iranian supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei.

At the United Nations, Israeli Defense Minister Ehud Barak called for new economic penalties on Iran over its nuclear work and said other options for dealing with the nuclear program should not be eliminated from consideration.

Neither Israel nor the United States has ruled out military action against Iran as a final option to roll back its nuclear progress (Hosseinian/Dahl, Reuters, July 31).

U.S. Senator Barack Obama (D-Ill.) reportedly said he believes Israel would attack Iran if diplomacy fails to end activities that could support a nuclear weapons program, AFP reported yesterday.

"Nobody said this to me directly, but I get the feeling from my talks that if the sanctions don't work, Israel is going to strike Iran," the Democratic presidential candidate was quoted as telling a meeting of U.S. lawmakers following his trip to Israel

Wendy Morigi, Obama’s spokeswoman on national security matters, refused to comment directly on the alleged quote.

"Senator Obama has always said that Iran must end its illicit nuclear program,” she said (Agence France-Presse V/Yahoo!News, July 30).

In Tehran, 115 Nonaligned Movement member nations yesterday voted to support Iran’s right to develop a civilian nuclear energy program, the Associated Press reported.

Ali Asghar Soltanieh, Iran’s ambassador to the International Atomic Energy Agency, called backing by the group a "strong positive signal that the only way” to handle the nuclear dispute “is negotiation and dialogue."

"Get the message," he said. "Come to the negotiating table" (George Jahn, Associated Press/Google News, July 30).
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benny balerio
U.S. official: Iraqis told me WMDs sent to Syria
Former head of prisons says incarcerated ex-Saddam forces disclosed move

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Posted: July 30, 2008
11:20 pm Eastern


By Ryan Mauro
© 2008 WorldNetDaily



As U.S.-led troops pressed toward Baghdad in 2003, Saddam remained defiant in a walkabout among cheering crowds in the capital
A former American overseer of Iraqi prisons says several dozen inmates who were members of Saddam Hussein's military and intelligence forces boasted of helping transport weapons of mass destruction to Syria and Lebanon in the three months prior to Operation Iraqi Freedom.

Don Bordenkircher – who served two years as national director of prison and jail operations in Iraq– told WND that about 40 prisoners he spoke with "boasted of being involved in the transport of WMD warheads to Syria."

A smaller number of prisoners, he said, claimed "they knew the locations of the missile hulls buried in Iraq."

Some of the inmates, Bordenkircher said, "wanted to trade their information for a release from prison and were amenable to showing the locations."

The prisoners were members of the Iraqi military or civilians assigned to the Iraqi military, often stationed at munitions facilities, according to Bordenkircher. He said he was told the WMDs were shipped by truck into Syria, and some ended up in Lebanon's Bekaa Valley.

(Story continues below)



Other Iraqi military personnel, including former top Saddam associates, have made the same claim.

In early 2006, Saddam's No. 2 Air Force officer, Georges Sada, told the New York Sun Iraq's WMDs were moved into Syria six weeks before the war started.

WND also reported in 2006 a former general and friend of Saddam who defected alleged WMDs were hidden in Syria and said the regime supported al-Qaida with intelligence, finances and munitions. Ali Ibrahim Al-Tikriti, the southern regional commander for Saddam's militia in the late 1980s, said the regime had contingency plans established as far back as the 1980s in the event either Baghdad or Damascus was taken over.

Saddam knew the U.S. eventually would come for the weapons, Al-Tikriti said at the time, and had "wanted since he took power to embarrass the West, and this was the perfect opportunity to do so." So he denied they existed and made sure they were moved into hiding, the former general said.

Among other claims, WND also reported a former U.S. federal agent and counter-terrorism specialist deployed to Iraq before the war said he waged a three-year, unsuccessful battle to get officials to search four sites where he believed the former Saddam regime buried weapons of mass destruction.

Bordenkircher said four of the Iraqi prisoners who separately offered to speak to the "right" people about Saddam's alleged transport of WMD later became involved with U.S. and Iraqi intelligence agencies.

Some prisoners said the drivers, upon return from transporting the WMDs out of Iraq, discussed the movement. They said, according to Bordenkircher, the materials shipped out would return once Iraq got "a clean bill of health from the U.N., and then the program could be kick-started easily."

Four of the prisoners – civilians attached to the Iraqi military – said they worked at the al-Muthana Chemical Industries site. They said the cargo included nitrogen mustard gas warheads for Tariq I and II missiles.

Bordenkircher said the stories of the military personnel and the civilians matched and did not contradict one another.

Bordenkircher also said prisoners confirmed al-Qaida had a presence in Iraq before Operation Iraqi Freedom began, specifically in Mosul and Kirkuk.

Iraqis under the command of Uday Hussein, one of Saddam Hussein's sons, supported the al-Qaida elements in the country with training and providing safe harbor, they said.

Bordenkircher also was a senior adviser to South Vietnam's correctional system during the war in Southeast Asia, from 1967-72. His task was to improve conditions for 80,000 civilian prisoners. The U.S. Department of Justice asked him to play a similar role in Iraq, sending him first to Baghdad's infamous Abu Ghraib prison in Baghdad in March 2006 to shut it down.

Bordenkircher previously served as Marshall County sheriff of Moundsville, W.Va., and police chief and warden of the state penitentiary at Moundsville.

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benny balerio
I doubt that any formal land agreement would ever be accomplished between Israel and Syria on this side of the rapture and Isaiah 17;1.
Syria has already signed a military pact with Iran.Obviously,Syria wish's only to gain control of the Golon Heights, to again use this high ground to attack Israel.Obviously, Israel is not blind to her surrounding circumstances.I think that the arabs believe that Israel would not dare use her nuclear weapons.But when the arabs attack her (regardless of reason)
and use overkill from all fronts....."Damascus will cease to exist."


Aug 1, 2008 10:39 | Updated Aug 1, 2008 12:24
'Syria willing to cut ties with Iran'
By JPOST.COM STAFF
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A peace agreement with Syria is within reach, according to Prime Minister Ehud Olmert's envoys to talks with Syria, who returned from another round of indirect negotiations in Turkey and were quoted in a Maariv report Friday.


Olmert stands behind Assad at the Bastille Day parade in Paris earlier this month.
Photo: AP

Slideshow: Pictures of the week According to the report, the sides have already formulated a sketch of a peace deal and have told the Turkish mediators that they are willing to pay the price, which, for the Syrians, would include cutting off Iran.

The Jerusalem Post could not confirm the report.

The sketch includes several clauses, the report said. According to the first, general, chapter, the two countries will end the state of war between them, establish a viable peace, including an exchange of ambassadors and the establishment of diplomatic relations.

RELATED
Analysis: We'll take the dowry - you keep the bride
The second clause of the agreement delineates the terms of normalization between Jerusalem and Damascus.

The third chapter will reportedly deal with security arrangements and will include a full Israeli withdrawal form the plateau and the demilitarization of the area. According to the Maariv report, the chapter will also specify a drastic reduction in the magnitude of Syrian armed forces stationed between the Golan and Damascus as well as the erection of an early warning station manned by international forces on Mount Hermon.

According to the report, there was no way to directly prevent Syria from having ties with Iran. The agreement could, however, forbid Damascus from providing weapons to - or harboring representatives of - nations or organizations that threaten Israel.

The report quoted officials familiar with the negotiations as saying that the Syrians had expressed their awareness of Israel's demand and did not reject it.

The officials also said that talks with Israel had already exacted a price from Syrian President Bashar Assad in terms of his relationship with Teheran.
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benny balerio
Israeli Prime Minister Olmert Resigns
(Olmert's move could precipitate Israeli confrontation with Iran)

July 31….(WND) Prime Minister Ehud Olmert today announced he will resign from office after his Kadima party holds internal elections in September to choose a new leader. Olmert said he is stepping down due to a criminal investigation described by police officials as "serious" in which he is accused of corruption and financial improprieties. The move could have far reaching consequences, including establishing a more hawkish Israeli leadership that favors tough action against Iran. "I have decided I won't run in the Kadima movement primaries, nor do I intend to intervene in the elections," Olmert said in a televised address from his official Jerusalem residence. "When a new (Kadima party) chairman is chosen, I will resign as prime minister to permit them to put together a new government swiftly and effectively," he said. Olmert's resignation immediately sent political shock waves throughout the country, as it could result in his Kadima party retaining power or the election of a prime minister from a different party. When Kadima elects a new leader in September, that person will work to form a coalition government consisting of more than half the Knesset's 120 seats. If a Knesset plurality is established, Kadima can retain its control over the prime minister's seat. But if the Kadima party cannot establish a ruling coalition, new elections will be held in which the leader of the party with the most seats becomes prime minister. Currently, opposition leader and former prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu is the favorite to win. Olmert had little choice but to resign. He stood no chance of winning his party's September leadership primaries, which he agreed to hold as a condition for retaining his major coalition partner, the leftist Labor party. Labor had threatened to bolt in June unless Olmert agreed to early Kadima primaries. Now top Kadima figures will battle for the party's leadership and possibly the prime minister's seat. The fight looks ready to be launched between Foreign Minister Tzipi Livni and Transportation Minister Shaul Mofaz, a former defense minister. Mofaz seems to be Olmert's favored candidate. Mofaz has made strong statements in support of military action against Iran. If he wins the Kadima primaries, he could form an alliance with Netanyahu's Likud party, which also favors strong action against Iran. If a new Kadima head cannot form a government, Netayahu looks likely to become Israel's next leader, although Labor chairman Ehud Barak, another former prime minister, also eyes the top position.

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benny balerio
This is a smoke screen.. cool.gif

'Syria willing to cut Iran ties for peace with Israel'
By JPOST.COM STAFF
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A peace agreement with Syria is within reach, according to Prime Minister Ehud Olmert's envoys to talks with Syria, who returned from another round of indirect negotiations in Turkey and were quoted in a Ma'ariv report Friday.


Olmert stands behind Assad at the Bastille Day parade in Paris earlier this month.
Photo: AP

Slideshow: Pictures of the week According to the report, the sides have already formulated a sketch of a peace deal and have told the Turkish mediators that they are willing to pay the price, which, for the Syrians, would include cutting off Iran.

The Jerusalem Post could not confirm the report.

The sketch includes several clauses, the report said. According to the first, general, chapter, the two countries will end the state of war between them, establish a viable peace, including an exchange of ambassadors and the establishment of diplomatic relations.

RELATED
Analysis: We'll take the dowry - you keep the bride
The second clause of the agreement delineates the terms of normalization between Jerusalem and Damascus.

The third chapter will reportedly deal with security arrangements and will include a full Israeli withdrawal form the plateau and the demilitarization of the area. According to the Ma'ariv report, the chapter will also specify a drastic reduction in the magnitude of Syrian armed forces stationed between the Golan and Damascus as well as the erection of an early warning station manned by international forces on Mount Hermon.

According to the report, there was no way to directly prevent Syria from having ties with Iran. The agreement could, however, forbid Damascus from providing weapons to - or harboring representatives of - nations or organizations that threaten Israel.

The report quoted officials familiar with the negotiations as saying that the Syrians had expressed their awareness of Israel's demand and did not reject it.

The officials also said that talks with Israel had already exacted a price from Syrian President Bashar Assad in terms of his relationship with Teheran.
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benny balerio
The following suggests that Israel will go it alone in it's attack against Iran.To those who have eyes that can see,and ears that can hear. To those who can discern. The Lord made it clear that Day would not come upon us as a Thief.(1Thessalonians 5;4)
Anything can change at a drop of a hat,....But based on understanding of current events byway of prophetic scriptures that do paint a picture.Obviously, there is a 95% chance that the Day that the Lord was speaking about in 1Thessalonians 5;4.....may happen around the time of Rosh Hashanna.

Tehran hosts Assad to celebrate winning nuclear dispute with West and cooling of US-Israel ties
DEBKAfile Exclusive Analysis

August 3, 2008, 5:30 PM (GMT+02:00)


Assad and Ahmadinejad congratulate each other
The Syrian president Bashar Assad was due to visit Tehran in a week’s time. The trip was brought forward to Saturday, Aug. 2 to coincide with the deadline the six powers gave Iran for an answer to its offer of benefits in return for its consent to suspend uranium enrichment – or face a fourth round of sanctions.

DEBKAfile’s Middle East sources report: Iranian and Syrian rulers are so pleased with their unforeseen success in outmaneuvering the West that they called an urgent summit for follow-up planning.

When a line of Iranian leaders rejected the ultimatum on their “right” to develop a nuclear program, Washington responded mildly “we are not counting the days”, while the European Union said there was no hurry. In any case, as DEBKAfile reports in a separate article on this page, a huge German energy deal with Iran has drawn the sting of any prospective penalties.

The Syrian-Iranian get-together also follows the failure of top Israeli leaders traveling to Washington in the past three weeks to persuade the Bush administration of the urgency of considering military action against Iran’s nuclear installations – or at least backing an Israeli operation.

Transport minister Shaul Mofaz was the last arrival after chief of staff Lt. Gen. Gabi Ashkenazi, foreign minister Tzipi Livni and defense minister Ehud Barak.

Iran’s supreme ruler Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, president Mahmoud Ahminejad and Assad can therefore pat each others backs over the cooling of US-Israeli strategic relations in on top of their other successes.

DEBKAfile’s analysts report that their feats owe more to the way the West plays into their hands than their own ingenuity:

1. In mid-June, the Bush administration decided to embark on a secret dialogue with the Islamic Republic. DEBKA-Net-Weekly was the first publication to expose this radical turn of events and to trace its progress. After procuring a direct line for business with US government leaders, and wrapping up deals, mostly behind Israel’s back, on the burning issues of oil pricing, Iraq and Lebanon, Iran nullified any leverage Washington had. Tehran can now afford to make light of the six-power ultimatum on its nuclear activities.

2. At about the same time, Israel entered into peace talks with Syria through Turkish mediation. The result: While Iran was developing its back-door rapprochement with the US, the Syrian ruler had hit the jackpot fo