We have experienced an endless array of debates, analysis and warnings regarding  Iran and why it's nuclear program is a grave threat to the world.  Naturally, we have all been primarily exposed to the Western perspective when it come to this important topic. Therefore, please put aside all the nonsense you have seen, read and heard about Iran. In my humble opinion, the following is more-or-less the reality as to why Iran has been presented to the global community as an existential threat. 
 
Simply put, a militarily powerful Iran independently executing self-serving political policy in  the  strategic region in question is a direct threat to the geopolitical ambitions of the  Western alliance and its regional friends. This more-or-less explains everything the reader needs to know about why Iran is being targeted.
Those who understand the political West understand that the  Angl0-American-Zionist alliance will simply not tolerate a politically independent  Iran freely operating in the much coveted strategic region under the secure cover of a nuclear deterrence. Thus, it will use every excuse in the book, including the standard "democracy" card of course, to undermine the Iranian state. The Anglo-American-Zionist alliance is not alone in not wanting to see a powerful Iranian state; Sunni Arabs  don't want it, Turks don't want it, Kurds don't want it and Europeans  don't want it. As a matter of fact, in principle, even Russians wouldn't  have wanted it. But in the case of Moscow, serious, if not grave, geostrategic considerations are compelling it to assist Tehran.
Policymakers in Moscow understand why the Western alliances has set its sights on Iran. Moscow also understands that if Iran falls to the West, it will eventually be its turn. The ultimate goal of the "Great Game" being played by the Western alliance is to gain a direct access to the energy rich Eurasian heartland and in doing so to also undermine Russia's and China's growth as super powers in the region. Due to these geostrategic considerations, Moscow has played a fundamental role in helping Tehran develop its nuclear technology. Moscow has also provided Iran with substantial military assistance. More recently, Moscow has also begun making serious military preparations with the intent of exploiting emerging situations once Western military strikes against Iran engulfs the region in a war. 
After Iran downed one of the most  advanced stealth aircrafts in US inventory, I immediately suspected Russian  involvement in the operation. My suspicions may have been correct. Please see the article about the "Avtobaza" that quietly made a subtle appearance in the news towards the bottom of this page. What's astonishing here is the fact that the pilot-less, remotely operated CIA drone was brought down fully intact! This means that electronic warfare experts  operating in Iran were able to hack into the aircraft's control system and commandeer it to the ground. In other words, they  waited until the CIA operated drone was deep inside Iranian territory  (which means they were able to track the stealth aircraft, something said to be virtually invisible  to even the most sophisticated radar systems in the world), they then took control of  it and safely landed it on an Iranian airfield. This was  simply an amazing feat of historic importance and a very major setback  for the Western war effort; and it underscores the nature of Moscow's military cooperation with Tehran.
Nevertheless, allowing Iran to acquire nuclear capability  is simply out of the question for the political West and its regional allies. The  West is not even comfortable with the idea of allowing independent nations take root in the region. Vladimir Putin recently mentioned: Washington is not seeking allies, it is seeking vassals. When a strategically important nation does not submit to Western rule willingly, and they are assessed to be politically vulnerable, they will eventually become a target. Tolerating a nuclear capable Iran, therefore, is out of the question. However, Tehran  has proven to be a tough opponent. Iranian  self-worth, an  organic national pride and perhaps a sense of destiny is what's driving   the Iranian regime today. Tehran is courageously, and I should also add   brilliantly, standing up to the West and its regional allies. Tehran has truly lived up to its noble Aryan  heritage.
 
After dealing with self-destructive Arabs for all these years, the West is finding the going for it getting much tougher. Due  to Tehran's formidable capabilities and its good relations with Moscow  and Beijing, Western military leaders have been very cautious in their  approach with regards to Iran. Senior policymakers in the West are realizing that Iran will not be an easy task by any stretch of the imagination.  As  a matter of fact, Western leaders (military leaders in particular)  fully realize the grave dangers in taking on an opponent like Iran, but  their overwhelming desire to remain the supreme power in the  strategic region as well as protecting the Zionist state and ensuring the survival of their Sunni Arab client states are forcing them to take the risk. 
A brief political background
Despite all the fear-mongering we have been exposed to in recent years, let's first acknowledge that the nation of Iran  has not invaded another nation in centuries; while its antagonist in the West has been responsible for dozens of wars and invasions and the deaths of  millions of innocent people in recent years alone. Back in 1953, the  democratically elected secular prime-minister of Iran was ousted by a Western organized coup d'état and a brutal dictator operating under the guise of "Shah" artificially placed into  power. This Western action at the time has been widely recognized to have caused the radicalization Iranian society. After years of serving Western and Israeli interest in the region and brutally cracking down on his opposition, Iranians finally rose to reclaim their country back in 1979, when they overthrew Reza Shah Pahlavi.
As a punishment to the new Islamic government that had dared to oppose Western interests in Tehran, Western leaders stood-by Saddam Hussein when he invade Iran in 1980. When  Iraq's Hussein could not defeat the Iranians despite Western help (including the supply of chemical weapons), the West responded by arming and  funding various anti-Iranian factions in and around Iran.  And when that approach didn't bring any tangible results, the West simply  began to directly plan Iran's destruction.
The covert war against Iran
In recent years, Tehran  has seen series of invasions bringing massive amounts of  Western military assets near its eastern, western and southern borders. Tehran has  also been watching Sunni Arab states in the region being armed and readied for war by Washington. Tehran has seen Washington overtly embrace anti-Iranian terror groups such as the Mujaheddin Khalq in Iraq and Jundullah in Pakistan. There have been a series of Iranian uprisings instigated by Western and Israeli intelligence agencies. There have been a series of assassinations and bombings that have targeted Iranian scientists and military leaders. Western special operations teams and reconnaissance flights have regularly violated Iranian territory. The West has also waged an economic/financial war against Iran. Tehran has also been reeling under a massive media assault and  threatening rhetoric from leaders stretching from Washington to Riyadh. Tehran has been accused of plotting an assassination in the United States as well as having been involved in the September 11, 2001 attacks. Seeing how Iran has been treated by its antagonists for decades, how should we have expected the Iranian leadership react?
The Axis of Evil
Back in 2002, cowboys in Washington announced that Iran, Iraq and North Korea were a part of some dreaded "Axis of Evil" even though none of the aforementioned nations had an alliance with each another. But, as usual, reality does not matter for Washington because through its many levers it is fully capable of fabricating realty. Coming soon after the events of September 11, 2001, president Bush's infamous Axis of Evil speech reverberated throughout the world. The   Arab/Muslim world in particular shivered in fear as Washington readied itself   to pounce on the strategic region after one of its black operations  had  given it the carte blanche to do so with impunity.   Thus, it's easy to see that those on Washington's blacklist must have taken Bush's threats and warnings  at the time very  seriously.
Putting aside Iran for a moment, let's consider what happened to the other two members of  the so-called Axis of Evil: A besieged Iraq that had long  dropped its  nuclear ambitions was desperately signaling that it was  ready to  cooperate with Western powers, while North Korea was stubbornly  pressing ahead  with building its atomic bomb, which it did around the  year 2005. In the end, Iraq got invaded and shattered into bloody pieces while a nuclear   armed North Korea is allowed to sink South Korean warships and bombard South   Korean islands from time-to-time without anybody even raising an   eyebrow...
Lesson number one: Iraq  got invaded simply because it did not posses  potent weapons with which  it could protect itself. Lesson number two: North Korea can  continue acting tough on the world stage because  it has the "bomb". The same can be said  about Pakistan and the same can be  said about Israel, a nation that possesses  upwards of several hundred  nuclear warheads yet no one in the West wants to talk about it. 
And lesson number three: The so-called "Arab spring" has been hijacked by Western, Turkish and  Saudi interests and is currently being used as an excuse to give the Middle East a drastic makeover. 
Naturally, this bloody makeover of sorts, is ultimately being  orchestrated by senior level American officials. Similar to what it did in Iraq, Washington has also managed  to turn Libya into a failed state and it is currently working on toppling the regime in Damascus. Iran, Iraq, Libya and Syria had long been looked upon by the West as the region's loose-ends. With Iraq and Libya now dead, with Syria now stricken with a terminal ailment, Iran and its isolated Hezbollah allies in Lebanon remain the only entities in the region not yet under Western control. Needless to say, Tehran feels the noose around its neck getting gradually tighter.
Tehran's military options
Looking  at  all this and fully realizing that it is high on Washington's (s)hit  list, how should  we have expected Iranian officials to react, by  rolling over and playing  dead similar to what Arabs do? No, Iranians are not Arabs. Realizing that the Western noose is getting tighter-and-tighter around its neck  with each passing year, Iran is pursuing nuclear deterrence!   Thus, what we have today  is essentially a new global nuclear arms  race and one that is  in certain ways more  perilous than the one that  existed during the Cold  War; and we can all thank the Anglo-American-Zionist alliance and friends for bringing us to this dangerous point in human history.
As  it stands today, it is not a matter of if there will be a military strike against Iran, it  is simply a matter of when. If events continue digressing at this pace, if Moscow or Beijing do not step up and assume a more proactive role in protecting Tehran, I predict the war (or the airstrikes to be more precise) against Iran will begin by sometime next spring.
Although embattled and under the constant threat of a war, Tehran is, relatively speaking, in good shape. Despite how the situation in the region is portrayed by Western officials and their propaganda outlets, Tehran controls much of the situation on the ground currently. Tehran is perhaps the single most influential foreign force in Iraq  today. Iraq's  Baathist government was so utterly decimated by Western forces  that Washington inadvertently allowed the rise of the shattered nation's  Iran-leaning Shiites into power. A pivotal figure that helped facilitate  this transition was none-other-than Ahmad Chalabi, a  one time Washington insider who may actually have been an Iranian  double agent.  Loosing Iraq to Shiites was one of Washington's biggest  strategic failures in the region, but since CNN did not report it you  don't know about it. In fact, Tehran also has a significant presence in Afghanistan. 
Now, with specter of yet another war looming over the region, Western forces have been taken out of harms way in Iraq and repositioned elsewhere in the Persian Gulf. What we are seeing occur today is the preparatory phase of the upcoming war. When America's political/financial  elite's black slave in the White House announced that US forces would be  pulled out of Iraq and Afghanistan several years ago, the  American sheeple rejoiced and took comfort in their "democracy". When  I humbly suggested to some of the sheeple that US forces are being pulled out of Iraq and  Afghanistan simply to be repositioned and made ready for a future  operation against Iran, I was laughed at by them. Sadly, idiots, as it seems, make up a vast majority of human society. Please see a recent New York Times article on this page titled - "U.S. Planning Troop Buildup in Gulf After Exit From Iraq." I first publicly announced the troop pull-back deception back in April of this year in the following blog post - 
US forces in the region have only been in control of their military installations, and sometimes not even that. Any  military attack upon Iran by Western forces will most likely be   answered  swiftly by a massive uprising of Shiites  throughout Iraq; perhaps even with the participation of special forces from Iran.  A  well-organized and a well-armed 'Hezbollah'  style guerrilla force operating in Iraq can open up a new bloody front for Western  armies. Such a force is theoretically capable of making Western troops stationed in  Iraq retreat under fire within a matter of weeks or months. Although many of America's warmongering officials may not comprehend this possibility, US military high command does.  Thus, military leaders realize the need to reorganize and redeploy their regional assets and they are doing so under the cleaver guise of "pulling back troops from Iraq and Afghanistan to fulfill Obama's presidential campaign  promise." 
Despite  what Washington propaganda outlets such as CNN, ABC, CBS, NBC, MSNBC,  FOX, NPR, the New York Times, the Washington Post, the Boston Globe and  the Wall Street Times (to name only a  few)  are suggesting, the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan have been failures; their  geopolitical experiments in both nations have backfired miserably. Iraq  today is more-or-less under Shiite control and Afghanistan today remains  more-or-less under Pakistani control. Washington has come to the hard realization that it has no future in either place. In   addition to having an organic influence over the region's Shiite populations,  militarily, Tehran  also controls some of the strategic situation as well.
The Strait of Hormuz will be a theater of military operations
Iran has deployed thousands of missile systems (including anti-ship missiles), artillery of all calibers, rocket-launchers and combat aircraft of  all sorts near the strategic Straits of Hormuz. What most people fail to realize is that  approximately 40% of  the world's crude oil comes through the Straits of  Hormuz; and Iranian forces today are  fully capable of stopping all maritime  traffic in the strait essentially on command. Any prolonged shutdown of the strait will have a devastating impact upon the global economy.
Moreover, with its large missile arsenal, Iranian forces can  also target all Western military bases and Saudi  Arabian oilfields within  the region. In the event of a full-scale war, American and coalition warships within  the Persian Gulf would also be  very vulnerable to Iran's Russian and Chinese made anti-ship missiles. See the article on this page on "Iran's Sunburn Missile System". I have no doubt that US Naval high command realizes  its bleak prospects  in the region. In the summer of  2006, Hezbollah showed us that a single  Chinese made anti-ship missile could easily knockout a highly sophisticated warship.  The Iranian  military today, immensely more capable than the Hezbollah,  can deploy various missile systems that can hit any US Naval  vessels found in the region. Imagine the political  repercussions the sinking of an aircraft carrier will have  within the home-front. Such an incident will be a public relations catastrophe; it may even compel Washington to consider a nuclear strike in retaliation.
But if Washington resorts to attacking Iran with tactical nuclear bombs, as it has threatened to do so on several occasions, Tehran also has the capability of hitting Israel's  nuclear  power plant at the Dimona facility in retaliation. Simple put, consequences of attacking Iran is too unpredictable and the many risks of such an action are too horrible to even consider.
Iran is not Iraq, Afghanistan or Libya 
An attack on Iran can have disastrous repercussions for the   entire region on many levels. Some today speak of the  relative easy  with which Iraq was  defeated in 1991 and again in 2003, and  they go on   to suggest that Iran will be  more-or-less the same.      Foremost, as responsible members of human society, we should not be   seeking the violent overthrow of the regime in Tehran, especially by  non-Iranian interests. I personally would like to see sociopolitical  change in Iran. This change, however,  needs to be organic/native to Iran; it has to come from within Iranian  society and without foreign meddling. 
Nevertheless, Iran will not capitulate; its population is too nationalistic, its  military is very capable. After its military's collapse in the  aftermath of the fall of the Western-backed Shah, Iran has   systematically rebuilt its armed forces from scratch. During the   past two decades they  have invested hundreds of billions of their   oil dollars on their  military technology and infrastructure. Moreover, unlike   Iraq in 1983, Iran has its nuclear research and development sites and its military    command-and-control facilities spread-out throughout the country,   many being located in undisclosed underground locations. Unlike Iraq, Iran   deploys capable anti-aircraft missile systems. Unlike Iraq, Iran is much    larger geographically, much larger demographically and its topography   is much more  rugged. Unlike Iraq, Iran is not an isolated nation.  Also  unlike Iraq,  Iran is prepared for an eventual strike against it; they have in fact been  preparing for it for many years.
On  the diplomatic front, unlike Iraq and Libya, Iran is being assisted by Russia and China. Moreover, Tehran has a vital lifeline to the north open   through Armenia. If the region descends into a full-scale war, there is a real possibility that Russian forces based in Abkhazia and South Ossetia will drive south and linkup with Armenian forces to ensure a direct line-of-communication with Iran. It is also imperative to note here that Russian forces in Armenia have been operating in relative isolation. As one of the consequences of its war with Russia back in the summer of 2008, Tbilisi has refused to allow Moscow passage to resupply its military installations in Armenia. In the event of a major war in the region, Russia's military high command will most probably attempt to linkup with their forces stationed in Armenia as a measure to help Iran and to secure its interests in the Southern Caucasus. A very interesting RT article about Moscow's options appears below this commentary. Please read it, the article references Armenia and, interestingly, it also discusses the military measure I referred to above.
The global community is facing a third world war 
Psychological  warfare operations against Iran are going forward full throttle and covert  operations inside Iran by special forces are in full swing. Moreover, as  we have been witnessing, they are also diligently  working on the  destruction of Syria to prevent Damascus from opening a diversionary  front when military operations begin in Iran.  This may all be a prelude to a possible military strike against Iran by as early as next spring. Western officials are not be crazy enough to attempt a ground invasion; such an undertaking would prove disastrous for them. The only realistic option they have on their planning table are airstrikes. Concurrent to these air strikes against Iran, we may also see  the resumption of Israeli aggression  against Lebanon and the Gaza  strip. [Of course they recently released hundreds of  Palestinian  prisoners; they can now kill them all in the Gaza  concentration camp  with complete impunity.]
But a strike against Iran is not yet set in stone; it can still be thwarted, or at the very least delayed further! Had senior military officials in Washington and Tel Aviv felt confidant in a military strike against Iran, they would have attacked many years ago. The reason why Iran has not yet been attacked is the high level of uncertainty and anxiety within in Washington and Tel Aviv. Therefore, until they figure out what to do militarily, they will simply continue their threatening rhetoric, covert operations, economic sanctions and reconnaissance. The uncertainty in Washington and Tel Aviv over attacking Iran is the reason why aggressive posturing by Tehran, Moscow and Beijing are crucially important. Tehran's enemies must be convinced that an attack against Iran may not be worth the risk.
Iran must not fall. If Iran falls as a result of Western intervention, the entire southern periphery of the  Eurasian continent, from Spain to Pakistan, will more-or-less find itself under  one management. It is well known that the Western alliance has two primary intentions in the region: economic exploitation of the energy rich region and a preventative geostrategic measure of making  sure that no Eurasian power rises to challenge it.
Needless to say, Moscow and Beijing will not allow themselves to become passive spectators in this Great Game. Thus, key in all this is what will Russia and to a lesser extent  China do to forestall the Western-led campaign against Iran. Military officials in Moscow already seem to be preparing contingency plans and I'm pretty sure Washington is taking notice. Although an attack against Iran is not yet imminent, tensions in the region already saturated with troops and weaponry are currently very high; a misstep by any of the parties involved could prove catastrophic.
Although the Anglo-American-Zionist alliance is blinded by its long-term geostrategic pursuits, its arrogance and its blood-thirst, it is clear to the rest of us that a military strike against Iran can potentially trigger a major global confrontation. The global community today is facing a third world war.
Arevordi
December, 2011  
***
Global Warfare: Targeting Iran: Preparing for World War III
The military deployment of US-NATO forces is occurring in several regions of the World simultaneously. 
 
Militarization    at the global level is instrumented through the US military's Unified    Command structure: the entire planet is divided up into geographic    Combatant Commands under the control of the Pentagon. According to    (former) NATO Commander General Wesley Clark, the Pentagon’s military    road-map consists of a sequence of war theaters: “[The] five-year    campaign plan [includes]... a total of seven countries, beginning with Iraq, then Syria, Lebanon, Libya, Iran, Somalia and Sudan.” 
The Pentagon’s global military design is one of world conquest. A War on Iran has been on the drawing board of The Pentagon since 2004. Iran's    alleged nuclear weapons programme is the pretext and the   justification.  Tehran is also identified as a "State sponsor of   terrorism", for  allegedly supporting the Al Qaeda network.In recent   developments, what is unfolding is an integrated attack plan on Iran led by the US, with the participation of the United Kingdom and Israel.   While the media has presented Israeli and British  military planning   pertaining to Iran as separate initiatives, what we  are dealing with is   an integrated and coordinated US led military  endeavor. In early   November, Israel confirmed that it is  preparing to launch air attacks   against Iran's nuclear facilities,  without however acknowledging that   this would be carried out as part of a  US led initative:
Reportedly, Israeli   Prime Minister Benjamin  Netanyahu has recently sought to drum up   cabinet support for a military  strike against the nuclear sites of the   Islamic republic of Iran.  In joint efforts with the defense   minister Ehud Barak, Netanyahu has  succeeded in wringing support for   such a reckless act from the skeptics  who were already opposed to   launching an attack on Iran. Among those he  managed to convince was   Israeli Foreign Minister Avigdor Lieberman.There are still those in the   Israeli cabinet who are  against such a move including Interior  Minister  Eli Yishai of the  ultra-Orthodox Shas party, Intelligence  Minister Dan  Meridor, Strategic  Affairs Minister and Netanyahu  confidant Moshe  Yaalon, Finance Minister  Yuval Steinitz, army chief  Benny Gantz, the  head of Israel's  intelligence agency Tamir Pardo, the  chief of military  intelligence Aviv  Kochavi and the head of Israel's  domestic  intelligence agency Yoram  Cohen. However, the support  voiced by  Israeli  Foreign Minister Avigdor Lieberman is considered an  ace in the  hole for  Netanyahu who also enjoys the full-throated  support of  Washington. In  a show  of military prowess and obvious  brinkmanship, Israel  test-fired a nuke  capable missile on Wednesday  which cannot be taken  as a coincidence  considering the threat made by  Netanyahu. ( Ismail Salami.  An Israel Attack on Iran: Military Suicide , Global Research, November 3, 2011) 
Meanwhile, the British government has also signified that it will participate in a US led attack on Iran:
The Ministry of Defence believes the US may decide to fast-forward plans for targeted missile strikes    at some key Iranian facilities. British officials say that if    Washington presses ahead it will seek, and receive, UK military help for    any mission, despite some deep reservations within the coalition    government. In anticipation of a potential attack, British  military   planners are examining where best to deploy Royal Navy ships  and   submarines equipped with Tomahawk cruise missiles over the coming    months as part of what would be an air and sea campaign. They also   believe the US would ask permission to  launch attacks from Diego   Garcia, the British Indian ocean territory,  which the Americans have   used previously for conflicts in the Middle  East.  (The Guardian,   November 2, 2011 http://globalresearch.ca/index.php?context=va&aid=27439)  
The War on Syria 
There   is a military roadmap characterised by a sequence of US-NATO war   theaters. In  the wake of the war on Libya, there are also war plans   directed against  under NATO's Responsibility to Protect (R2P). These   plans are  integrated with those pertaining to Iran. The road to Tehran   goes  through Damascus. A US-NATO sponsored war on Iran would involve,   as a  first step, a destabilization campaign ("regime change")  including   covert intelligence operations in support of rebel forces  directed   against the Syrian government
The World is at dangerous crossroads.
Were    a US-NATO military operation to be launched against either Syria or    Iran, the broader Middle East Central Asian region extending from North    Africa and the Eastern Mediterranean to the Afghanistan-Pakistan  border   with China would be engulfed in the turmoil of an extended  regional  war. There are at present four distinct war theaters:   Afghanistan-Pakistan, Iraq, Palestine and Libya. An attack on Syria   would lead to the integration  of these separate war theaters,   eventually leading towards a broader  Middle East-Central Asian war. In   turn, a war on Syria would evolve towards a  US-NATO military campaign   directed against Iran, in which Turkey and  Israel would be directly   involved. It would also contribute to the  ongoing destabilization of   Lebanon.
Central   to an understanding  of war, is the media campaign which grants it   legitimacy in the eyes of  public opinion. A good versus evil dichotomy   prevails. The perpetrators  of war are presented as the victims. Public   opinion is misled: “We must  fight against evil in all its forms as a   means to preserving the Western  way of life.” Breaking the "big lie"   which upholds war as a  humanitarian undertaking, means breaking a   criminal project of global  destruction, in which the quest for profit   is the overriding force. This  profit-driven military agenda destroys   human values and transforms  people into unconscious zombies.
The   holding of mass  demonstrations and antiwar protests is not enough.   What is required is  the development of a broad and well organized   grassroots antiwar  network, across the land, nationally and   internationally, which  challenges the structures of power and   authority. People must mobilize  not only against the military agenda,   the authority of the state and its  officials must also be challenged.   This war can be prevented if people  forcefully confront their   governments, pressure their elected  representatives, organize at the   local level in towns, villages and  municipalities, spread the word,   inform their fellow citizens as to the  implications of a nuclear war,   initiate debate and discussion within the  armed forces. 
The   objective is to  forcefully reverse the tide of war, challenge the war   criminals in high  office and the powerful corporate lobby groups  which  support them. Break the American Inquisition. Undermine the   US-NATO-Israel military crusade. Close down the weapons factories and   the military bases. Members of the armed forces should disobey orders   and refuse to participate in a criminal war. Bring home the troops.
Source: http://www.globalresearch.ca/index.php?context=va&aid=27446
Moscow Optimizes its Military Grouping in the South
Russia prepares for an adequate response to Tel-Aviv and Washington’s possible strikes against Tehran
The  geopolitical situation unfolding around Syria and Iran is prompting  Russia to make its military structures in the South Caucasus, on the  Caspian, Mediterranean and Black Sea regions more efficient.  Nezavisimaya Gazeta’s (NG) Defense Ministry sources are saying that the  Kremlin has been informed about an upcoming US-supported Israeli strike  against Iran’s nuclear facilities. The strike will be sudden and take  place on “day X” in the near future. One could assume Iran’s reaction  will not be delayed. A full-scale war is possible, and its consequences  could be unpredictable.
This problem is currently being addressed  as a priority issue at the EU-Russia summit in Brussels with the  participation of President Dmitry Medvedev. A day before the event,  Russia’s envoy to the EU, Vladimir Chizhov, relayed a message from the  Kremlin, saying that an Israeli or US strike on Iran will lead to “a  catastrophic development of events.” The diplomat stressed that the  negative consequences will not only be felt by the region, “but also in a  much broader context.” Russia’s direct diplomatic pressure on Europe  and the global community in respect to issues concerning a possible war  in Iran began recently after the IAEA’s publication of a report on the  Iranian nuclear program in November.
However, in the military  sphere, Russia’s preparations for minimization of losses from possible  military action against Tehran began more than two years ago. Today,  they are nearly complete. According to the Defense Ministry sources, the  102nd military base in Armenia was fully optimized in October-November  2011. Military personnel’s families have been evacuated to Russia, and  the Russian garrison deployed near Yerevan reduced. Military sub-units  stationed in the area have been transferred to Gyumri district, closer  to the Turkish border. Strikes against Iranian facilities by US troops  are possible from Turkish territory. So far, it is unclear as to what  tasks the 102nd military base will perform in relation to this. But it  is known that Russian troops stationed at military bases in South  Ossetia and Abkhazia, have been on high alert since December 1 of this  year. Meanwhile, ships of the Black Sea Fleet are located not far from  the Georgian border which in this conflict could act on the side of the  anti-Iranian forces.
In Izberbash, Dagestan, nearly adjacent to  the Azerbaijani border, a coastal guided missile battalion equipped with  onshore anti-ship Bal-E missile systems with a range of 130 km, have  been put on permanent combat readiness status. All guided missile craft  of the Caspian Flotilla have been redeployed from Astrakhan to  Makhachkala and Kaspiysk districts to form a single group. Meanwhile,  the flagship of the Flotilla, the sentry rocket ship “Tatarstan”, will  soon be joined by the small gunboat "Volgodonsk” and missile ship  “Dagestan”. The flagships of the Flotilla are equipped with missile  systems with a range of up to 200 km.
Recently, the Northern  Fleet’s aircraft carrier group with the heavy aircraft carrier “Admiral  of the Fleet of the Soviet Union Kuznetsov”, headed towards the  Mediterranean with plans to ultimately enter the Syrian port of Tartus.  NG’s sources from the Defense Ministry did not confirm or deny the fact  that the surface warships are being accompanied by the Northern Fleet’s  nuclear submarines. The tasks that will be carried out by the army and  the navy in the event of a war against Iran are, of course, not being  disclosed. But Russia’s Defense Ministry is apparently concerned about  the logistical support of troops in Armenia. The 102nd military base is a  key point as it is Russia’s outpost in the South Caucasus. It holds a  very important geopolitical position. But Kremlin officials are worried  that this position will be lost. In the event of a US-Israeli war  against Iran, this will indeed be tragic for Russia.
In April of  this year, Georgia broke the agreement on the transit of military cargo  to Armenia from Russia. Essentially, the Russian-Armenian grouping in  the South Caucasus has been isolated. Supplies to the Russian army (POL,  food, etc.) are delivered only by air and through direct agreements  with Armenia which, in turn, purchases these products (gasoline, diesel  fuel, kerosene) from Iran. A war in Iran will close this supply channel.  
Lt.-Gen. Yury Netkachev, who for a long time served as the  deputy commander of the Group of Russian Forces in the Transcaucasus and  was personally engaged in work on the supply of arms and ammunition to  combined armed forces and units (including the 102nd military base),  believes that, in the event of a full-fledged war against Iran, Russia  will be looking to securely supply the military facility through  Georgia. “Perhaps, it will be necessary to break the Georgian transport  blockade and supply the transport corridors leading to Armenia by  military means,” said the expert.
“Apparently, Russia’s Defense  Ministry is also quite wary of Azerbaijan, which over the last three  years has doubled its military budget and is currently buying Israeli  drones and other advanced means of reconnaissance and topographic  location, naturally aggravating Tehran and Armenia,” says head of the  Center for Military Forecasting, Anatoly Tsyganok. “Baku has stepped up  its pressure on Moscow, demanding significantly higher rental fees for  the Gabala radar station. But even considering the disputes between Iran  and Azerbaijan over oilfields in the south of the Caspian Sea, one  could hardly argue that Baku will support an anti-Iranian military  campaign. It is also very unlikely that it will unleash hostilities  against Armenia.”
Col. Vladimir Popov, who was engaged in the  analysis of hostilities between Baku and Yerevan between 1991 and 1993,  and is currently following the military reforms conducted by Azerbaijani  President Ilham Aliyev, disagrees with the expert. Popov believes that  “the negotiation process on the settlement of the Karabakh conflict has  been unreasonably delayed.” Baku is making open statements on revenge.  “Azerbaijan pre-emptive strikes on Armenia and Nagorno-Karabakh, made in  order to finally settle the territorial dispute in its favor, are  possible,” says the expert. But, in his opinion, the question of how  Russia will behave is important. “If in the midst of a war in Iran,  Azerbaijan supported by Turkey, attacks Armenia, then, of course, all of  the adversary’s attacks against Armenia will be repelled by Russia in  conjunction with Armenian anti-missile defense forces. It’s hard to say  whether or not this will be considered as Moscow’s involvement in  military action. Russian troops will certainly not be engaged in  military action on the territory of Nagorno-Karabakh. But in the event  of a military threat to Armenia coming from Turkey or Azerbaijan, for  example, Russia will apparently take part in ground operations,” says  Popov.
The analyst does not exclude the possibility of Russia’s  military involvement in the Iranian conflict. “In the worst-case  scenario, if Tehran is facing complete military defeat after a land  invasion of the US and NATO troops, Russia will provide its military  support – at least on a military-technical level,” predicts Vladimir  Popov.
Source: http://rt.com/politics/press/nezavisimaya/military-russia-armenia-iran/en/
Trouble in the region: Russian military base in Armenia as factor in possible war on Iran

 
The United States has stepped up sanctions against Iran amid ongoing  information preparations for the possible application of force against  Iran. Both the Islamic Republic and Russia, which remains a major player  in the region, have warned that a military strike against Teheran may  entail unpredictable consequences. But Russia has gone further and, in fact, stated that it will take part  in the possible war, because it may affect its vital interests. Among these ‘vitally interests’ for Russia may also be its military  base, which is located in Armenia and which also has the functions of  protecting the security of the South Caucasus ally.
The influential Russian Nezavisimaya Gazeta newspaper published an  article on Thursday quoting sources as saying that the situation forming  around Syria and Iran “causes Russia to expedite the course of  improvement of its military groups in the South Caucasus, the Caspian,  Mediterranean and Black Sea regions.” The paper quotes sources at the  military department as saying that the Kremlin has been receiving  information about plans for a U.S.-backed Israeli strike against Iran’s  nuclear facilities. “The strike will be a sudden one and will happen  soon, but the data is unspecified. Tehran’s response is likely to be  quick, too, with the possibility of a full-scale war, whose consequences  could be unpredictable,” the Russian newspaper writes.
“Military base 102 [situated in Gyumri, Armenia] is a key point,  Russia’s outpost in the South Caucasus. It occupies a very important  geopolitical position. But the Kremlin fears lest it should lose this  situation,” the periodical adds. Remarkably, the Russian newspaper suggests a new war is possible between  Russia and Georgia. It says that Georgia now blocks the only land  transportation route for Russian military cargoes meant for the military  base in Armenia, and even fuel now has to be obtained from Iran. “In  fact, the Russian-Armenian group in the South Caucasus is already  isolated. The war in Iran would mean the cutting of supplies through  this channel.”
Russia has also decided to “strike” Azerbaijan, dropping hints that it  is from its territory that Israel might attack Iran. On Thursday it was  officially stated in Baku that Azerbaijan will not be used as a  springboard for an attack on Iran. But military expert Colonel Vladimir  Popov thinks that in such a situation Azerbaijan may also solve some of  its problems as well.
“If against the background of the war in Iran, Azerbaijan, with the  support of Turkey, attacks Armenia, then, of course, all the attacks of  the enemy aircraft against Armenia will be resisted by Russia together  with air defense units of the armed forces of Armenia. It is hard to say  whether this will be considered as Moscow’s participation in military  operations. Undoubtedly, Russian troops will not participate in  hostilities in the territory of Nagorno-Karabakh. But in the event of a  military threat to Armenia, for example, from Turkey or Azerbaijan,  Russia is likely to engage in ground battles,” says Popov.
Source: http://armenianow.com/news/34206/israel_urges_us_impose_sanctions_iran
NATO Plans Campaign in Syria, Tightens Noose Around Iran - Russian Envoy
"[This     statement] means that the planning [of the military campaign]  is   well   underway. It could be a logical conclusion of those military and      propaganda operations, which have been carried out by certain  Western     countries against North Africa," Rogozin said in an  interview with  the    Izvestia newspaper published on Friday. The  Russian diplomat  pointed  out  at the fact that the alliance is  aiming  to interfere only  with the   regimes "whose views do not coincide   with those of the  West."
Rogozin     agreed with the opinion expressed by some experts that Syria  and    later  Yemen could be NATO's last steps on the way to launch an  attack    on  Iran. "The noose around Iran is tightening. Military planning    against  Iran  is underway. And we are certainly concerned about an    escalation of  a  large-scale war in this huge region," Rogozin said.    Having learned  the Libyan lesson, Russia "will continue to oppose a     forcible  resolution of the situation in Syria," he said, adding that    the   consequences of a large-scale conflict in North Africa would be      devastating for the whole world.
Source: http://en.rian.ru/world/20110805/165570384.html 
 
Iran Readies Plan to Close Strait of Hormuz
Iran's Revolutionary Guards are making preparations for a massive   assault on U.S. naval forces and international shipping in the Persian   Gulf, according to a former Iranian intelligence officer who defected to   the West in 2001. The plans, which include the use of bottom-tethered   mines potentially capable of destroying U.S. aircraft carriers, were   designed to counter a U.S. land invasion and to close the Strait of   Hormuz, the defector said in a phone interview from his home in Europe.   They would also be triggered if the United States or Israel launched a   pre-emptive strike on Iran to knock out nuclear and missile facilities.
 
"The plan is to stop trade," the source said.
Between  15 and 16.5 million barrels of oil transit the Strait of Hormuz  each  day, roughly 20 percent of the world's daily oil production,  according  to the U.S. government's Energy Information Administration.  The source  provided NewsMax parts of a more than 30-page contingency  plan, which  bears the stamp of the Strategic Studies Center of the  Iranian Navy,  NDAJA. The document appears to have been drafted in  September or  October of 2005.
The NDAJA document was just one part of a larger  strike plan to be  coordinated by a single operational headquarters  that would integrate  Revolutionary Guards missile units, strike  aircraft, surface and  underwater naval vessels, Chinese-supplied C-801  and C-802 anti-shipping  missiles, mines, coastal artillery, as well as  chemical, biological and  nuclear weapons. The overall plans are being  coordinated by the  intelligence office of the Ministry of Defense,  known as HFADA.  Revolutionary Guards missile units have identified  "more than 100  targets, including Saudi oil production and oil export  centers," the  defector said. "They have more than 45 to 50 Shahab-3 and  Shahab-4  missiles ready for shooting" against those targets and  against Israel,  he added.
The defector, Hamid Reza Zakeri,  warned the CIA in July 2001 that Iran  was preparing a massive attack on  America using Arab terrorists flying  airplanes, which he said was  planned for Sept. 11, 2001. The CIA  dismissed his claims and called him  a fabricator. The source also  identified a previously unknown nuclear  weapons site last year to this  writer, which was independently  confirmed by three separate intelligence  agencies. NewsMax showed the  defector's documents to two native  Persian-speakers who each have more  than 20 years of experience  analyzing intelligence documents from the  Islamic Republic regime. They  believed the documents were authentic.
A  U.S. military intelligence official, while unable to authenticate the   documents without seeing them, recognized the Strategic Studies Center   and noted that the individual whose name appears as the author of the   plan, Abbas Motaj, was head of the Iranian navy until late 2005. A   former Revolutionary Guards officer, contacted by NewsMax in Europe,   immediately recognized the Naval Strategic Studies institute from its   Persian-language acronym, NDAJA. He provided independent information on   recent deployments of Shahab-3 missiles that coincided with information   contained in the NDAJA plan.
The Iranian contingency plan is  summarized in an "Order of Battle" map,  which schematically lays out  Iran's military and strategic assets and  how they will be used against  U.S. military forces from the Strait of  Hormuz up to Busheir. The map  identifies three major areas of  operations, called "mass kill zones,"  where Iranian strategists believe  they can decimate a U.S.-led invasion  force before it actually enters  the Persian Gulf. The kill zones run  from the low-lying coast just to  the east of Bandar Abbas, Iran's main  port that sits in the bottleneck  of the Strait of Hormuz, to the ports  of Jask and Shah Bahar on the  Indian Ocean, beyond the Strait.
Behind  the kill zones are strategic missile launchers labeled as "area  of  chemical operations," "area of biological warfare operations," and   "area where nuclear operations start." Iran's overall battle management   will be handled through C4I and surveillance satellites. It is unclear   in the documents shared with NewsMax whether this refers to commercial   satellites or satellite intelligence obtained from allies, such as   Russia or China. Iran has satellite cooperation programs with both   nations. The map is labeled "the current status of military forces in   the Persian Gulf and the Strait of Hormuz, 1384." 1384 is the Iranian   year that ends on March 20, 2006.
Iran plans to begin offensive  operations by launching successive waves  of explosives-packed boats  against U.S. warships in the Gulf, piloted by  "Ashura" or suicide  bombers. The first wave can draw on more than 1,000  small fast-attack  boats operated by the Revolutionary Guards navy,  equipped with rocket  launchers, heavy machine-guns and possibly Sagger  anti-tank missiles.  In recent years, the Iranians have used these small  boats to practice  "swarming" raids on commercial vessels and U.S.  warships patrolling the  Persian Gulf.
The White House listed two such attacks in the  list of 10 foiled  al-Qaida terrorist attacks it released on Feb. 10.  The attacks were  identified as a "plot by al-Qaida operatives to attack  ships in the  [Persian] Gulf" in early 2003, and a separate plot to  "attack ships in  the Strait of Hormuz." A second wave of suicide  attacks would be carried  out by "suicide submarines" and  semi-submersible boats, before Iran  deploys its Russian-built  Kilo-class submarines and Chinese-built  Huodong missile boats to attack  U.S. warships, the source said.
The 114-foot Chinese boats are  equipped with advanced radar-guided  C-802s, a sea-skimming  cruise-missile with a 60-mile range against which  many U.S. naval  analysts believe there is no effective defense. When  Iran first tested  the sea-launched C-802s a decade ago, Vice Admiral  Scott Redd, then  commander of U.S. naval forces in the Gulf, called them  "a new  dimension ... of the Iranian threat to shipping." Admiral Redd  was  appointed to head the National Counterterrorism Center last year.
Iran's  naval strategists believe the U.S. will attempt to land ground  forces  to the east of Bandar Abbas. Their plans call for extensive use  of  ground-launched tactical missiles, coastal artillery, as swell as   strategic missiles aimed at Saudi Arabia and Israel tipped with   chemical, biological and possibly nuclear warheads. The Iranians also   plan to lay huge minefields across the Persian Gulf inside the Strait of   Hormuz, effectively trapping ships that manage to cross the Strait   before they can enter the Gulf, where they can be destroyed by coastal   artillery and land-based "Silkworm" missile batteries.
Today,  Iran has sophisticated EM-53 bottom-tethered mines, which it  purchased  from China in the 1990s. The EM-53 presents a serious threat  to major  U.S. surface vessels, since its rocket-propelled charge is  capable of  hitting the hull of its target at speeds in excess of 70  miles per  hour. Some analysts believe it can knock out a U.S. aircraft  carrier.  The Joint Chiefs of Staff has been warning about Iran's growing  naval  buildup in the Persian Gulf for over a decade, and in a draft   presidential finding submitted to President Clinton in late February   1995, concluded that Iran already had the capability to close the Strait   of Hormuz.
"I think it would be problematic for any navy to  face a combination of  mines, small boats, anti-ship cruise missiles,  torpedoes, coastal  artillery, and Silkworms," said retired Navy  Commander Joseph Tenaglia,  CEO of Tactical Defense Concepts, a maritime  security company. "This is a  credible threat." In Tenaglia's view,  "the major problem will be the  mines. Naval minefields are hard to  locate and to sweep," and the United  States has few minesweepers. "It's  going to be like running the  gauntlet getting through there," he said.
When  Iran last mined the Gulf, in 1987-1988, several U.S. ships and   reflagged Kuwaiti oil tankers were hit, even though the mines they used   were similar to those used in the Battle of Gallipoli in 1915, Tenaglia   said. The biggest challenge facing Iran today would be to actually lay   the mines without getting caught. "If they are successful in getting   mines into the water, it's going to take us months to get them out,"   Tenaglia said.
Source: http://www.kentimmerman.com/news/200...ran-attack.htm
The Worst Case For War With Iran
If you'd like to read a textbook example of war-mongering disguised as "analysis," I recommend Matthew Kroenig's forthcoming article in Foreign Affairs, titled "Time to Attack Iran: Why a Strike Is the Least Bad Option." It is a remarkably poor piece of advocacy, all the more surprising because Kroenig is a smart scholar who has done some good work in the past. It makes one wonder if there's something peculiar in the D.C. water supply.   
There is a simple and time-honored formula for making the case for war, especially preventive war. First, you portray the supposed threat as dire and growing, and then try to convince people that if we don't act now, horrible things will happen down the road. (Remember Condi Rice's infamous warnings about Saddam's "mushroom cloud"?) All this step requires is a bit of imagination and a willingness to assume the worst. Second, you have to persuade readers that the costs and risks of going to war aren't that great. If you want to sound sophisticated and balanced, you acknowledge that there are counterarguments and risks involved. But then you do your best to shoot down the objections and emphasize all the ways that those risks can be minimized. In short: In Step 1 you adopt a relentlessly gloomy view of the consequences of inaction; in Step 2 you switch to bulletproof optimism about how the war will play out.  
Kroenig's piece follows this blueprint perfectly. He assumes that Iran is hellbent on getting nuclear weapons (not just a latent capability to produce one quickly if needed) and suggests that it is likely to cross the threshold soon. Never mind that Iran has had a nuclear program for decades and still has no weapon, and that both the 2007 and 2011 National Intelligence Estimates have concluded that there is no conclusive evidence that Iran is pursuing an actual bomb. He further assumes -- without a shred of evidence -- that a nuclear-armed Iran would have far-reaching geopolitical consequences. For example, he says that other states are already "shifting their allegiances to Tehran" but doesn't offer a single example or explain how these alleged shifts have anything to do with Iran's nuclear program.   
He also declares, "With atomic power behind it, Iran could threaten any U.S. political or military initiative in the Middle East with nuclear war." Huh? If this bizarre fantasy were true, why couldn't the former Soviet Union do similar things during the Cold War, and why can't other nuclear powers make similar threats today when they don't like a particular American initiative? The simple reason is that threatening nuclear war against the United States is not credible unless one is willing to commit national suicide, and even Kroenig concedes that Tehran is not suicidal. Nuclear weapons are good for deterring attacks on one's own territory (and perhaps the territory of very close allies), but that's about it. They are not good for blackmail, coercive diplomacy, or anything else. And if Kroenig is right in warning that an Iranian nuclear weapon might lead others to develop them too, then Iran would end up being deterred by the United States, by Israel, and by some of its other neighbors too. (As I've noted before, Iran's awareness of this possibility may be one reason why Tehran has thus far stayed on this side of the nuclear threshold.)   
Kroenig also declares that a nuclear-armed Iran would force the United States to "deploy naval and ground units and potentially nuclear weapons across the Middle East, keeping a large force in the area for decades to come." But why? Iran's entire defense budget is only about $10 billion per year (compared with the nearly $700 billion the United States spends on national defense), and it has no meaningful power-projection capabilities. Thus, contrary to what Kroenig thinks, containing/deterring Iran would not add much to U.S. defense burdens. The Persian Gulf is already an American lake (from a military point of view), and Washington already has thousands of nuclear weapons in its own arsenal. Given how weak Iran really is, containing or deterring them for the foreseeable future will be relatively easy.  
The key point is that Kroenig offers up these lurid forecasts in a completely uncritical way. He never asks the probing questions that any security scholar with a Ph.D. should axiomatically raise and examine in a sophisticated manner. Instead, his article is a classic illustration of worst-case analysis, intended to make not going to war seem more dangerous than peace.  
When he turns to the case for using force, however, Kroenig offers a consistently upbeat appraisal of how the war would go. (Needless to say, this is not the kind of analysis one would expect from a Georgetown professor.) He knows there are serious objections to his proposed course of action, and he works hard to come up with reasons why these concerns should be not be taken seriously. What if Iran has concealed some of its facilities? Such fears are overblown, he thinks, because our intelligence is really, really good. (Gee, where have we heard that before?) What about facilities that are hardened or defended? Not an insurmountable obstacle, he maintains, and in any case there are plenty of other facilities that are aboveground and vulnerable.  
Isn't there a danger of civilian casualties? Well, yes, but "Washington should be able to limit civilian casualties in any campaign." What if Iran escalates by firing missiles at U.S. allies, ordering its proxies to attack Israel, or closing the Strait of Hormuz to oil shipments? Not to worry, says Kroenig, "None of these outcomes is predetermined," and the United States "could do much to mitigate them." (Of course, none of the scary outcomes that Kroenig says would accompany an Iranian bomb are "predetermined" either.) Doesn't starting a war increase the risk of regional conflict, especially if Iran retaliates and Americans or Israelis die? Maybe, but not if the United States makes its own "redlines" clear in advance and if it takes prudent steps to "manage the confrontation." To do this we have to be willing to "absorb Iranian responses that [fall] short of these redlines" and reassure the mullahs that we aren't trying to overthrow them (!). Bombing another country is a peculiar way to "reassure" them, of course, and it's a bit odd to assume that those wicked Iranians will be cooperative and restrained as the bombs rain down. Won't Iran just reconstitute its nuclear program later, and possibly on a crash basis? It might, but Kroenig says that we would have bought time and that whacking the Iranians really hard right now might convince them to give up the whole idea. Or not.  
You see the pattern: When Kroenig is trying to justify the need for war, he depicts an Iran with far-reaching capabilities and dangerously evil intentions in order to convince readers that we have to stop them before it is too late. But when he turns to selling a preventive war, then suddenly Iran's capabilities are rather modest, its leaders are sensible, and the United States can easily deal with any countermeasures that Iran might take. In other words, Kroenig makes the case for war by assuming everything will go south if the United States does not attack and that everything will go swimmingly if it does. This is not fair-minded "analysis"; it is simply a brief for war designed to reach a predetermined conclusion.  
And let's be crystal clear about what Kroenig is advocating here. He is openly calling for preventive war against Iran, even though the United States has no authorization from the U.N. Security Council, it is not clear that Iran is actively developing nuclear weapons, and Iran has not attacked us or any of our allies -- ever. He is therefore openly calling for his country to violate international law. He is calmly advocating a course of action that will inevitably kill a significant number of people, including civilians, some of whom probably despise the clerical regime (and with good reason). And Kroenig is willing to have their deaths on his conscience on the basis of a series of unsupported assertions, almost all of them subject to serious doubt.  
Kroenig tries to allay this concern by saying that the main victims of a U.S. attack would be the "military personnel, engineers, scientists, and technicians" working at Iran's nuclear facilities. But even if we assume for the moment that this is true, would he consider Iran justified if it followed a similar course of action, to the limited extent that it could? Suppose a bright young analyst working for Iran's Revolutionary Guards read the latest issue of Foreign Affairs and concluded that there were well-connected people at American universities and in the Department of Defense who were actively planning and advocating war against Iran. Suppose he further concluded that if these plans are allowed to come to fruition, it would pose a grave danger to the Islamic Republic. Iran doesn't have a sophisticated air force or drones capable of attacking the United States, so this bright young analyst recommends that the Revolutionary Guards organize a covert-action team to attack the people who were planning and advocating this war, and to do whatever else they could to sabotage the forces that the United States might use to conduct such an attack. He advises his superiors that appropriate measures be taken to minimize the loss of innocent life and that the attack should focus only on the "military and civilian personnel" who were working directly on planning or advocating war with Iran. From Iran's perspective, this response would be a "preventive strike" designed to forestall an attack from the United States. Does Kroenig think a purely preventive measure of this kind on Iran's part would be acceptable behavior? And if he doesn't, then why does he think it's perfectly OK for us to do far more?
Source: http://walt.foreignpolicy.com/posts/2011/12/21/the_worst_case_for_war_with_iran 
 
10 Factors That May Lead to War With Iran
 
Over the last several days, much time has been spent speculating about the likelihood of war with Iran. Several encouraging pieces  have been written indicating that the war is unlikely thanks to  international pressure for the U.S. to back off, particularly from China  and Russia. Others  have indicated that Israel will not launch attacks against Iran. I  sincerely pray they are right. Unfortunately, while I hope I am wrong,  it seems necessary to draw attention to some disturbing conditions  surrounding the possibility of war with Iran.  
1. New “nuclear concerns” have arisen.
The International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) has released a new report that indicates Iran may be working on nuclear warhead components. Such reports are supposed to be confidential  and are delivered only to “member states,” but they are quickly leaked.  The newest report is no exception. Such reports are already being used  by those pining for war to create public panic. It might be the  justification they hoped for.  
2. Britain is increasingly supportive of war.
Britain has already begun to make threatening military gestures toward Iran. One article in The Guardian states,  
Britain’s  armed forces are stepping up their contingency planning for potential  military action against Iran amid mounting concern about Tehran’s  nuclear enrichment program, The Guardian has learned. The Ministry of  Defense believes the U.S. may decide to fast-forward plans for targeted  missile strikes at some key Iranian facilities. British officials say  that if Washington presses ahead it will seek, and receive, U.K.  military help for any mission, despite some deep reservations within the  coalition government. In anticipation of a potential attack, British  military planners are examining where best to deploy Royal Navy ships  and submarines equipped with Tomahawk cruise missiles over the coming  months as part of what would be an air and sea campaign. They also  believe the U.S. would ask permission to launch attacks from Diego  Garcia, the British Indian ocean territory, which the Americans have  used previously for conflicts in the Middle East. 
 
In  other words, not only are the British making public military  “contingency”plans, but they are already forming a coalition with the  U.S. and giving a kind of permission to attack Iran. 
3. Israel is still saber-rattling. 
Last  week, Israeli leaders began debating the merits of preemptive strikes  against Iran’s nuclear facilities. Some have suggested that these (and  Britain’s actions as well) are merely rhetorical tools intended to  create more severe international pressure on Iran. Perhaps that will  work. After all, China and France came out to pressure  Iran just last week. Let’s hope it is simply a ploy. But there is also a  point to be made that such threats and saber-rattling have been the  cause of actual military conflict in the Middle East before. The  1967 war, for example, between Israel and the Arab coalition of Egypt,  Jordan, and Syria began with political threats, not overt military actions. It has been accurately pointed out  that Israel would be insane to attack Iran by itself, but that would  never happen given America’s allegiance to Israel and the current push  for war in the U.S. No, Israel would not go it alone, but it wouldn’t  have to.  
4. The alleged assassination ploy didn’t work.
Someone has been trying to incite war with Iran in more direct ways recently. But who knew that people would question  that an Iranian-American used-car salesman from Texas would work with  the Iranian government in recruiting help from a Mexican drug cartel to  kill the Saudi Arabian ambassador on American soil? Strangely, people  doubted. With that ploy ruined, more serious tactics must be sought to  justify increased aggression against Iran, something many in Washington  have wanted for years. And they want it badly enough to throw out this  kind of ridiculous plot. I mean, if this story were made into a movie,  it would be bad enough for Ben Affleck and Jennifer Lopez to co-star in.   
5. The calls for sanctions have failed.
As  soon as the story of the alleged assassination plot broke, many began  calling for stern action against Iran. “They must pay,” “all options are  on the table,” and whatnot. Severe economic sanctions were the first proposal, but they have been met with resistance  from many in the international community. So, with the assassination  story going over with a thud and the calls for sanctions failing  internationally, what will be done to hold Iran accountable for its  ongoing nuclear program and (yes, Washington still pretends to believe  this) its attempt to kill the Saudi ambassador?  
6. Democrats are pressuring Obama for sanctions anyway.
Some  Democrats are seeking to push the sanctions forward despite the  problems that may develop in the oil market. For example, Rep. Adam  Smith said,  “All these steps entail huge risks, but our best approach is to  continue to ramp up economic pressures.” Rep. Howard Berman, another  Democrat, even proposed a bill that would require the president to  sanction Iran (particularly its central bank) under broad conditions,  not limited to the development of nuclear weapons.  
7. Iran has stated that sanctions would be an “act of war.”
Such pressure from the Democrats comes even in light of Iran’s statement that it would consider such sanctions an “act of war.” 
8. Republicans are calling for war.
It  is surprising to some that Democrats are taking a hard line on  sanctioning Iran, but of course no one can outdo the Republican hawks.  Many of them are calling for all-out war. In a New York Times article  published Monday, several GOP presidential candidates indicated their  support for military action. (Ron Paul strongly disagreed.) Rick Perry  said the U.S. should use any method in dealing with Iran, “up to and  including military action.” Herman Cain warned Iran that “he would  equate an attack on Israel with an attack on the United States,” and  Michele Bachmann echoed that sentiment. Mitt Romney said he would also  consider military options against Iran. Rick Santorum has been calling  for war with Iran for years now, and he has even publicly supported Israel’s use of preemptive strikes. Newt Gingrich, another GOP presidential candidate, has been beating the war drum against Iran and North Korea  for some time now. While such calls from the opposition could cause  President Obama to reject tangling with Iran, when coupled with pressure  from Democrats, they may not. Not only that, the bipartisan support for  war may be an indication of how the U.S. Congress would vote in the off  chance Obama sought their approval for war.  
9. Obama desperately wants to be reelected. 
In  2004, one of the tactics of the Bush reelection campaign was to point  out that a nation should not change its commander in chief in the middle  of an ongoing war. Even the press pointed this out. Similarly, the late David Broder, an influential journalist for The Washington Post and 400-time guest on Meet the Press, argued  last year that Obama needs war with Iran to gain conservative support  for his reelection and spur the economy. Crazy? Yes, but it could be  just crazy enough to work. Americans love war, after all.  
10. America is arrogant, and arrogance makes you stupid.
This  is really more of a summary than a separate point. Democrats and  Republicans are both calling for sanctions and/or military action  against Iran, in spite of the tremendous spike this would cause in oil  prices and international tension. Arrogance makes you stupid. One could  have taken heart in knowing that other nations would resist our actions,  because Americans love building “coalitions.” But, as the days unfold,  Israel’s cries for preemptive strikes have gotten louder, and Britain  has jumped on the bandwagon. Israel and Britain are buckled up, just  waiting for America to climb in and drive the car into yet another war.  And when was the last time common sense, good judgment, and love for  peace so dominated American policy that we were talked out of war? I  hope I am wrong. I pray that cooler heads will prevail, but I fear there  are too few cool heads leading America.
Source: http://original.antiwar.com/bphillips/2011/11/08/10-factors-that-may-lead-to-war-with-iran/
12 Consequences of Attacking Iran
 
The murdered Israeli leader Gen. Yitzhak Rabin opposed the First Gulf   War in 1990, warning that one never knows when starting a war where it   will lead. As Bush and the neocons are reportedly planning to attack   Iran, we should all think of the likely consequences.
Most  Americans already believe that George Bush is not much influenced  by  facts, but rather by his ideology. Already he is reportedly thinking  of  his legacy and dreaming that history will prove him "right." More   disturbing are his religious beliefs, in particular his daily readings   of Scottish preacher Oswald Chambers, who argues that if plans and   events go wrong, it just means that God is testing believers' faith, not   that strategies should be changed. This may also explain Bush's   aversion to diplomacy. After all, God does not "negotiate" with evil.   Various reports state that Iran is years away from the ability to   produce a single nuke. In a few years' time the government in Iran could   easily change or modify its positions; indeed, already President   Mahmoud Ahmadinejad is losing power. But time is running out for Bush   (although not for America).
An article about Iran in The American  Conservative by former CIA officer  Phil Giraldi says that Bush may  attack before Tony Blair retires in  April. Blair has already just sent  two British minesweepers to the Gulf.  U.S. war plans are reportedly  counting on a few weeks of war (as they  did with Iraq) to disable  Iran's nuclear and military industries. The  concept that the U.S. could  simply destroy much of Iran then proclaim  the war over neglects all  the lessons of Iraq, namely that a wounded  Muslim nation only gives up  when it wants to. Repeatedly, the U.S. loses  when we expect enemies to  play by American rules. Following are consequences we must anticipate following such an American attack:
    1. Iran wouldblockade the Straits of Hormuz. Iran has new, "state  of  the art" Russian anti-aircraft defenses as well as powerful Sunburn   anti-ship missiles purchased from the Ukraine, Chinese mines, and also   itself manufactures other missiles. Anti-ship mines may already be in   place, able to be activated from shore.
 
U.S. strategy calls for destroying all the anti-ship missile   emplacements and small missile and mine-laying boats long deployed along   Iran's coastline. Obviously, a surprise U.S. attack may miss some   Iranian weaponry, or U.S. Navy anti-missile systems may not work to   defend all ships in the Gulf. Probably Iran would try to sink tankers   (see a projected scenario) to set off a worldwide panic for oil rather   than just aim at U.S. Navy ships. Even the threat of this would cause   insurance rates to skyrocket and possibly shut down the straits. Just   the risk of all this happening should be cause of great concern for   America and the whole world.
 
2.  War quickly gets out of hand. U.S. plans to destroy Iran's   anti-aircraft and military infrastructure could easily escalate to   destroying Iran's oil-loading and shipment facilities. This would take   even more millions of barrels off the market for a prolonged period. If   Bush/Cheney hadn't shown themselves to be so incompetent, one might   imagine it was a plan of their Texas oil friends to raise oil prices to   the stratosphere. Jim Cramer warned on MSNBC's Scarborough Country on   Jan. 30 that war would quickly drive U.S. gas prices to $5 per gallon.
 
The far greater risk is that Iran would then retaliate against  the  hopelessly exposed Kuwaiti, Saudi, and Gulf states oil facilities.  Iran  has already warned Qatar, where the U.S. has CENTCOM, that its  vast gas  compression facilities would be targeted if it allows a U.S.  attack.  Washington announced that it was sending Patriot missiles to  defend our  "allies," but there is no assurance that these would all  work. After  all, only one Iranian missile (or ground attack from  sympathetic Shias)  would need to get through. Also, the Bush  administration has made secret  the publication of test results for the  U.S. anti-missile program. This  could easily cover up corruption and  incompetence. We already now are  finding out that some of our largest  defense contractors have designed  ships for the Coast Guard that aren't  even seaworthy.
 
 
3. The whole  world's prosperity would be at risk if oil didn't flow  again quickly.  Any such severe shock to the world economy would cause  foreigners to  cut back on financing U.S. deficits, with a consequent  sharp rise in  U.S. interest rates. This would cause very severe  repercussions to the  whole U.S. economy and government spending. Any  real constriction of  the Chinese economy would cause a collapse in  worldwide commodity  prices, with consequent effects on Third World  buying power.
 
4. American citizens and businesses in many nations would be under   threat of attack by militant Iranians and other Muslims. War would   multiply our terrorist enemies tremendously. Administration officials   keep arguing that by fighting in the Middle East we are avoiding   terrorist attacks in America. This is the usual American "body count"   way of fighting wars. The reasoning assumes that the number of   terrorists is somehow finite. But if we keep creating more enemies, we   then increase the risk of reprisals inside the U.S.
 
5. The attack would make America even more suspect and hated in the   whole Islamic world. Zbigniew Brzezinski, a former U.S. national   security adviser, told Congress the war in Iraq was a calamity and was   likely to lead to "a head-on conflict with Iran and with much of the   world of Islam at large."
 
6. War would greatly  increase Russian power vis-à-vis Europe as the  latter would become  even more dependent upon Russian energy supplies.  Already a majority of  Europeans think that Washington is the greatest  threat to world peace.  War would severely strain the American alliance. In Latin America, new,  higher oil prices would further strengthen  President Hugo Chavez of  Venezuela, giving him more money to subsidize  further damage against  American interests all over the continent.
 
7.  We don't know the effectiveness of the Russian and Chinese weapons  that  have been sold to Iran. There is a risk that they might be very   effective.
 
8. We might even lose an aircraft  carrier. Bush's plan may be to  provoke Iran to attack first by putting  ships in harm's way in the  narrow Gulf. He may be thinking that after  such an attack he would have  all Americans behind him in retaliating  against Iran. It is hard to know  what is in his (and Cheney's) mind,  but we do know that they are  ignorant and full of wishful thinking.
 
9. American forces in Iraq would be very vulnerable to modern war   supplies from Iran, for example, effective anti-tank weaponry such as   that used by Hezbollah to destroy dozens of Israeli tanks. The long U.S.   supply convoys from Kuwait would be subject to much greater attacks. A   sustained Iranian missile attack on the Green Zone in Baghdad or the   Doha base camp in Kuwait could kill many Americans.
 
10. War would curtail the great influence of the religious Right in   Washington. Christian fundamentalists are the backbone of support for   continuing wars and chaos in the Middle East (see Armageddon Lobby).   Their power would finally backfire as more Americans become wary of   leaders who claim a direct line to God. The fundamentalists' passion for   war, callousness towards the death of foreigners, fear and (almost   total) ignorance of the outside world, and unstinting support for police   state measures out of Washington have already discredited them among   many Americans. Their fomenting another war would be a final blow.
 
11. The disasters for America could also weaken and challenge the   power of the Israel Lobby, especially AIPAC. At least that is the   concern of writers at the major Jewish newspaper The Forward. The   writers note concern for the perceptions that Israeli interests fomented   the attack on Iraq. The antiwar and anti-empire movement is also   heavily Jewish, but without "the New York money people" pushing America   into war with Iran, as warned by Gen. Wesley Clark.
 
12. Finally, another war might be the final nail in the Republican   coffin for a generation. The party would fracture. Republicans may be   the "Daddy Party," which once was thought to provide masculinity to   foreign policy, but as James Pinkerton says, "If dad keeps wrecking the   car, then there may be reason to change."
Source: http://www.antiwar.com/utley/?articleid=10477
'Bring It On': Why Dr. Ahmadinejad Is Not Worrying 
The Iranians are contemplating two developments. First, to create a new   oil exchange in March 2006, which will sell Iranian oil for euros.   Second, to develop the nation's nuclear technology capabilities,   possibly for producing nuclear weapons, but officially for the   generation of electricity.
Officially, the Bush Administration is  deeply concerned about the second  development. I have no doubt that it  is deeply concerned in a surrogate  sort of way, because politicians in  the State of Israel are deeply  concerned. They resent the fact that an  Islamic country that is a  signatory to the Nuclear Nonproliferation  Treaty (1970) is taking steps  that might conceivably lead to a  deliberate violation of that treaty – a  treaty that the State of Israel  never signed, so as not to interfere  with the production of hundreds  of nuclear weapons.
In contrast to its official concern over  Iran's nuclear developments,  the Bush Administration says not a word  publicly about the first  development, strictly peaceful, which would  create new international  demand for euros in place of dollars. This  could break apart the  lock-step decision of OPEC governments to accept  payment only in  dollars, a possibility welcomed by the Islamic press.
In  an era when the dollar is the world's reserve currency, held by   central banks as a legal reserve for their nations' domestic currencies,   central bankers inflate their domestic currencies in order to purchase   dollar-denominated, low-return investment assets. This is part of the   mercantilism of central banking: an indirect subsidy to the domestic   export sectors at the expense of monetary stability and also consumer   sovereignty at home.
The introduction of a new oil market  transacted in euros is a  significant symbolic challenge to U.S.  economic leadership. Symbols are  important, which is why political  leaders adopt them. After all,  President Bush did not have to be flown  in a naval jet from San Diego's  Naval Air Station to the Abraham  Lincoln, which was floating just far  enough away from San Diego to make  a helicopter flight plausibly  unacceptable. The carrier could have  come a few miles closer to shore on  the day before the famous "Mission  Accomplished" photo-op and speech,  which remains on the White House  website: President Bush Announces Major  Combat Operations in Iraq Have  Ended. But, as the title of that speech  reveals, symbols are not a  politically safe substitute for reality.
How safe is Iran? To answer this crucial question, consider how it might be answered by Iran's President, Mahmoud Ahmadinejad.
THE DOCTOR IS IN!
The  President of Iran holds a Ph.D. in engineering. Presumably, he has a   working concept of cause and effect. He rules in a Shi'ite-dominated   nation that is sitting on top of what are the second-largest oil   reserves in the world: 126 billion barrels. Iraq, commonly cited as   number two, is probably number three, and given its present pipeline   infrastructure and delivery problems, not a major factor.
He has  replaced rule by the mullahs, who have been unable to persuade  Iran's  youth to give up Western fashions, music, and dreams of economic   prosperity. Yet toned-down attacks on Khomeini's "Great Satan" still   have a political market. The President regards himself as what the   American political tradition designates as a populist. He still lives in   a small house in a working class neighborhood. Symbols do count for   something. From what we can tell from his language, he is a certifiable   apocalyptic. He has said publicly that his work must prepare the way  for  the return of the Mahdi, Islam's long-expected messianic deliverer.
In  December 2005, after the crash of an ancient C-130 military plane in   which 108 people died, he made : "But what is important is that they   have shown the way to martyrdom which we must follow." This was a   calculated political statement that was aimed at the hearts of tens of   millions of Shi'ite voters. He who assumes otherwise does not understand   the rhetoric of successful politicians. They know their market.
Why would this man fear an air attack by the United States? What has he got to lose?
HEADS, HE WINS
Consider  his situation. He presides over a country whose majority  regards Iran  as a working political and spiritual model for the rest of  Islam. Iran  has oil. It is modernizing. It is Shi'ite. Shi'ites have now  seen the  defeat of their long-time Sunni enemy, Iraq. The elected  government in  Iraq is predominantly Shi'ite. He has positioned himself  as the Middle  East's preeminent nose-tweaker of the United States. In  his November  17, 2005 speech before the United Nations General Assembly,  he  challenged the moral authority of the United States government to   oppose Iran's development of nuclear power. He did not mention the   United States by name. He did not need to. His audience understood.
Thousands  of nuclear warheads that are stockpiled in various locations  coupled  with programs to further develop these inhuman weapons have  created a  new atmosphere of repression and the rule of the machines of  war,  threatening the international community and even the citizens of  the  countries that possess them.
Ironically, those who have actually  used nuclear weapons, continue to  produce, stockpile and extensively  test such weapons, have used depleted  uranium bombs and bullets against  tens and perhaps hundreds of  thousands of Iraqis, Kuwaitis, and even  their own soldiers and those of  their allies, afflicting them with  incurable diseases, blatantly violate  their obligations under the NPT,  have refrained from signing the CTBT  and have armed the Zionist  occupation regime with WMDs, are not only  refusing to remedy their past  deeds, but in clear breech of the NPT, are  trying to prevent other  countries from acquiring the technology to  produce peaceful nuclear  energy.
All these problems emanate from the fact that justice and  spirituality  are missing in the way powerful governments conduct their  affairs with  other nations. He was killing two birds with one  rhetorical stone,  linking the Great Satan with the Middle East's  universally hated nation,  and then blaming the United States for that  pariah nation's nuclear  weapons capabilities.
How could this  speech hurt him back home? How could it hurt him in  Islamic streets?  What if the United States drops assorted non-nuclear  weapons on Iran  before the bourse opens? The potential targets are many;  the  underground facilities will be hard to destroy. But what if all of  them  are taken out?
Iran instantly wins the legitimacy sweepstakes.  Dr. Ahmadinejad becomes  the first universally respected Shi'ite  political leader in the Sunni-  and Wahhabi-dominated Middle East. All  across the Middle East, restive  Muslims in the streets will start  murmuring: "Where is our leader? Why  doesn't he stand up to the United  States?" The answer is obvious:  because he has long been bought off by  the United States. Because, in  the immortal words of Lyndon Johnson,  the United States has his pecker  in its pocket.
There will soon  be a lot of newly exposed members at risk. An unprovoked  American  attack on Iran will instantly and permanently de-legitimize  every  American client state in the Middle East. If the United States  bombs  Iran, the Bush Administration might as well send that "Mission   Accomplished" banner to Al Qaeda headquarters.
The crucial issue  here is political legitimacy of the nation-state. This  is the supreme  political issue of our day, as the great Israeli  military historian  Martin Van Creveld has argued in his book, The Rise  and Decline of the  State (Cambridge University Press, 1999). It is also  the supreme  strategic issue of fourth-generation warfare, the warfare of  the rest  of this century. The day the bombs begin to fall, the mullahs  will join  ranks with teenagers in the streets of Tehran. Dr. Ahmadinejad  will  become as politically immune from public criticism as Mr. Bush was  on  September 12, 2001.
TAILS, WE LOSE
The day after  the bombs begin to fall on Iran, clandestine weapons will  begin to flow  westward across the Iran-Iraq border. The Shi'ites in Iraq  will  instantly become the long-lost cousins of the Sunni resistance   movement. There is an old Muslim saying, "My brother and I against our cousin. We and our cousin against the world."
The  United States' troops on the ground will discover the deadly power  of  that alliance. All co-operation from the Shi'ites will cease. There   will be a unified anti-American front south of the Kurdish region. The   United States will be told to get out. If the government of Iraq does   not issue this order immediately, its members had better be sure to   renew their life insurance policies. The Iraqi army will melt into the   countryside. Anyone who stands up will be shot down.
HEAP BIG SMOKE, BUT NO FIRE
President  Bush can issue warnings. The Administration can talk tough.  But what  is the point? The President of Iran can call the President of  the  United States's bluff, if it is a bluff. He is doing this, day by  day.  He is not going to cooperate with the United Nations. There is no  need  to. If it is not a bluff, and the bombs fall, the United States'  client  regimes in the Middle East are as good as gone. We will then be  driven  out of Iraq. This message will be fully understood by every  Muslim in  the street. The Great Satan can be whipped. No better reason  exists to  start looking for a local client to whip.
CONCLUSION
Iran  cannot be occupied by U.S. troops. As retired four-star general and   NBC commentator Barry McCaffrey said in mid-2005, the wheels are   already close to coming off the Army's machine in Iraq. So, the   enforcement of any anti-nuclear technology development program is a   bluff.
Iran's program can be delayed a few years by bombing, but  only at the  price of solidifying Dr. Ahmadinejad's rule in Iran and  making him a  regional symbol of Islamic defiance. In this non-elected  office, he will  replace Osama bin Laden. The difference is, Ahmadinejad  is a  legitimately elected President of a nation with a lot of oil.
This  is about oil, political power, currencies, and above all,  legitimacy.  It is about the ability of the United States to change  regimes its way  and then preserve these new regimes from replacement by  domestic  enemies. The United States and its client state regimes will be   replaced in the Middle East. It is only a matter of time. If the United   States bombs Iran, the timetable will speed up. You may have heard of the catbird seat. Dr. Ahmadinejad is sitting in it.
Source: http://www.lewrockwell.com/north/north429.html
Bye Bye, American Lie
The  biggest foreign policy event of the past few weeks has been the  UN  Security Council vote on the draft resolution on Syria, tabled by a   US-led group of Western countries and eventually vetoed by Russia and   China. The United States and its allies were hoping to push through a   resolution condemning President Bashar al-Assad and his government for   their crackdown on anti-government protesters, which would provide for   an increased international pressure on Damascus, and possibly pave the   way for a military operation. Their intended scenario appeared similar   to that in Libya: using the country’s internal violence to justify an   intervention and launching an air strike campaign to depose Syria’s   present government. But this time, Russia and China made it clear they   would not allow the West to stage the same stunt in Syria.  
Following this slapdown, US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton declared that Moscow and Beijing would now have to “explain their vetoes to the Syrian people.” What   I find most remarkable is how the United States always manages to   assume a self-righteous posture and point fingers without even trying to   apply a similar reasoning to itself. 
For  starters, why doesn’t  Washington try to explain itself to the people  of Iraq? What do you say  was your case for invading that country – and  whatever it was, was it  worth the 100,000 to 300,000 civilians that  have since perished there?  Furthermore, Senator Clinton should have  something to tell the people of  Afghanistan with regard to all the  “collateral damage” regularly  inflicted by coalition forces. Last but  not least, the US and NATO owe  an explanation for the ongoing bombing  campaign in Libya, which was  launched on the pretext of protecting the  civilian population and has  claimed hundreds of civilian lives,  including women and children, with  NATO jets pulverizing urban  neighborhoods for their own safety. 
Secretary   of State Clinton’s rant has testified to the fact that the US under   President Obama is not giving up its double standards on foreign   affairs, not by a long shot. All its human rights rhetoric and posturing   boils down to a familiar attitude: we are the force for good, and we   define what “good” means, so either you jump on our bandwagon or shut   up. The bottom line is that, in  stark contrast to US actions in  Iraq, Afghanistan and Libya, Russia has  not committed any crimes against  civilians in Syria. So it is not  Russia that owes an explanation. 
The   veto imposed by Russia and China was to be expected. Neither Moscow  nor  Beijing would like to see the Libyan scenario replayed in Syria.  The  UNSC Resolution 1973 on Libya has taught the world a lesson, as it  was  used by NATO to provide direct military support to the insurgents  by  supplying them with arms and deploying spec op squads in a  supposedly  internal conflict. 
The  UNSC vote on Syria was also telling in  that three other up-and-coming  international players chose to abstain  from it: Brazil, India and South  Africa, which form the BRICS together  with Russia and China. The  policy makers in Washington had presumably  pushed for the vote hoping  that Moscow and Beijing would eventually back  down and not go as far as  exercising their right to veto. Turns out  they guessed wrong. 
The  argument in the Security Council saw a  proper exchange of harsh  criticism between the US and Russian  delegations. Russia’s Permanent  Representative Vitaly Churkin blasted  the Western draft resolution,  saying it could “spark off a full-scale  military conflict in Syria and  eventually destabilize the entire region.”US  Ambassador Susan Rice  retorted by describing the Russian-Chinese stance  as a “cheap ruse by  those who would rather sell arms to the Syrian  regime than stand with  the Syrian people.” The Russian envoy  returned the accusation,  saying he found it odd that such criticism  should come from the  representative of a nation that has been “pumping hundreds of billions of dollars worth of military hardware into the area.” 
The   UNSC vote has also demonstrated that the world’s most prominent   non-NATO countries are no longer willing to unquestioningly stand behind   the United States and its allies in all of their military adventures.   The stonewalled resolution on Syria is not a one-off, occasional  failure  of US diplomacy: it is a yet another event signaling a  fundamental  change in the global balance of power. America’s free-shoot  bonanza of  the 1990s–2000s is over, and there is no way Washington  will turn the  tide.
Source: http://rt.com/politics/columns/aleksey-pushkov-column/syria-us-russia-military/
Avoiding War in Iran is Russia's Aim
No other sphere of Russia’s    foreign policy is subject to such wide-ranging scrutiny as Moscow’s policy    towards Iran, says Dmitry Babich.  Conservative American analysts in think-tanks such as the Heritage  Foundation    often view Russia as a tacit ally of Iran, turning a blind  eye to its    dangerous nuclear programme and ignoring the Iranian  regime’s aggressive    form of Islamist fundamentalism.   
Israeli government officials, when visiting Moscow, persistently point  to the    divergence of Russia’s national interests with those of Iran,  citing    Russia’s own troubles with Islamist fundamentalism in the  North Caucasus    and, earlier, in Central Asia and Afghanistan.  Obviously pursuing their    country’s national interest, those Israeli  officials believe in the    possibility of a return to the very cold  peace that existed between the    Soviet Union and Iran in the Eighties,  when Moscow was very wary of the    effect of Ayatollah Khomeini’s  teachings on its Muslim minorities.  
So what is the Russian authorities’ attitude now? And where does  Russia’s    national interest in the Iranian question lie? The truth is  that the Kremlin    has been sending out a whole array of signals on the  issue, some of which    are contradictory. On the one hand, Russia  stopped selling or transiting any kind of weapons to    Iran, fulfilling  UN resolution 1929, which was adopted in June 2010. This    meant  cancelling the contract to ship S-300 surface-to-air missiles to Iran,     which could have helped the Iranians to challenge Israel’s superiority  in    the air. On the other hand, Russia finished the construction of  the nuclear power    station in Bushehr. Where is the logic?  
Actually, the logic is very simple: Russia is concerned about Iran’s  nuclear    programme. It has no sympathy for Islamist fundamentalism  but, considering    Iran is right next to Russia’s border and to the  borders of Azerbaijan, a    former Soviet republic with a several  million-strong Azeri minority in Iran,    it is extremely keen to avoid a  war breaking out on its doorstep. It is not    too difficult to guess  in which direction the Azeri minority would flee from    Iran in the  event of it being turned into a war zone. Azeris are already the     biggest Muslim minority in Russia.  
Hence Russia’s strong desire to see Iran at peace with other countries  and to    have a peaceful nuclear programme. Incidentally, the Nuclear     Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT), of which Iran is a signatory, obliges     nuclear powers to help non-nuclear countries to develop the peaceful  use of    atomic energy. The balancing act between Iran and the West,  which Russia has    to perform, however, is becoming more and more  difficult. 
It should be said that Iran has shown remarkable restraint in its  reaction to    a number of regional wars in which Russia has been a  party in recent years.    Unlike certain Western circles, Iran never  provided help to anti-Russian    mudjaheddin in Afghanistan or to the  Chechen rebels, and it stayed largely    neutral in the conflict between  Armenia and Azerbaijan, despite an obvious    temptation to show  solidarity with its 
Muslim brothers.  
Tehran’s restraint in Russia- related issues is ever more laudable,  since Iran    historically has had little positive sentiment about  Russia. Modern    Azerbaijan had for centuries been a part of the  Iranian empire, and Georgia    was in its zone of influence until the  Russian tsars wrestled the    territories away from Iran in the early  19th century. In his childhood,    Ayatollah Khomeini was a witness to  the joint Soviet-British occupation of    Iran in 1941. But despite the  troubled history, Iran’s rhetoric on Russia is    in most cases less  critical than that of some members of the EU .  
The recent Western interventions in Iraq, and even more recently in  Libya,    make Russia suspicious of what lies behind Western hostility  towards Iran. Iranian restraint in Afghanistan and the Caucasus makes  Russians somewhat    sceptical about the information on Iran’s support  for extremists in the    Middle East – a region which is becoming more  and more distanced and    estranged from Russia. Hence Russia’s  unwillingness to see Iran condemned    and punished by the West  according to the Iraqi or Libyan scenario.
Source: http://www.telegraph.co.uk/sponsored/russianow/opinion/8931014/Iran-Russia 
'Removing Saddam Strengthened Iran'

 
Political  Islam expert Vali Nasr says the removal of Saddam Hussein  from power  in Iraq by the US during the invasion of the country in 2003   strengthened Iran's strategic viability and increased its regional   popularity, especially among Iraq's Shia majority. Nasr, author of the   recently published book The Shia Revival, says despite its defiant   rhetoric Iran is really seeking open and wide-ranging normalisation   talks with Washington. Professor of Middle East and South Asia Politics   at the Naval Postgraduate School in California, Nasr was one several   Middle East experts recently invited by George Bush, the US president,   to brief him on internal Iraqi religious and political dynamics.
Aljazeera.net:  Saudi Arabia, Egypt and Jordan have voiced fears of a  Shia revival in  the wake of the invasion of Iraq. Will a sectarian war  engulf this  "new" Middle East?
Vali Nasr: I think in individual countries  they do fear the Shia revival  because, unfortunately, Iraq, which is  the very first stage of transfer  of power from Sunnis to Shia, has gone  very badly for a variety of  reasons. There was an enormous amount of  blood shed in Iraqi politics for a very  long time ... Iraq after 1991  became far more of a sectarian state than  it was before, and the  Americans mishandled many things - they weren't  as prepared, which  aggravated the situation. As did also the influx of  foreign fighters  with their own agenda who may have thought the best way  to get the  Americans out of Iraq was to provoke a civil war by  generating  sectarian violence, hitting the shrines … Secondly, the Shia  want to  avoid what happened in Iraq as do the Sunnis. So we are in a  period of  calm where the sectarian violence in Iraq is impacting all the  debates  about political transition, democracy, opening, and power  sharing in  the region.
Many have blamed Washington's policies for putting a defiant Iran in command of the Islamic street. Do you agree?
Yes  and no. Saddam Hussein was definitely a bulwark against Iran because   the Baathist government in Iraq was extremely anti-Iranian. It goes   back to the days of the Shah ever since 1958. But now Iran will   definitely have a greater say in any Iraqi government that comes to   power and is friendlier to Iran - especially if that government is a   Shia government.
Secondly, the US has become bogged down in Iraq  in a major way  militarily and that takes away from its capability to  contain Iran. And  Iran knows that. Part of Iran's power comes from the  fact that it's very  difficult to effectively contain it. The public  mood in America is not  in favour of military activity abroad ... when  Israel was not able to  beat Hezbollah in a country of only 3.5 million  people, when 130,000 US  troops are bogged down in Iraq, obviously Iran  feels it has a lot more  room to manoeuvre and say "no" to the  international community and to the  nuclear issue.
Also, while  the Iranian power was on the rise in the 1990s, nobody was  watching,  the economy was growing and the price of oil went up, it  became very  wealthy. It's a country of 70 million people. There were  many  indicators that Iran was on the move during the [former Iranian   President Mohammed] Khatami years. But the military edge of this, the   more regional military edge of this, has only become evident now. Iran's   reading of the Arab street has been fairly good. At the time when the   Palestinian-Israeli conflict was in a stalemate, there was frustration   and anger on the streets because of the fact that the peace process was   not going anywhere.
There was increasing difficulty between  Palestinians and Israelis and  then Iraq was producing so much  unhappiness in the region. The Iranians  did not focus on winning  support among the palaces of the Arab world.  They went directly for the  kind of things that make them very unpopular  in the West and very  popular on the Arab streets. So Iranian President  [Mahmoud] Ahmadinejad  started to attack Israel and question the  Holocaust. That has damaged  Iran greatly in terms of its diplomacy with  the West. But these  pictures were sold on the streets in Damascus and  Beirut before the war  between Israel and Hezbollah.
The recent conflict in Lebanon  has boosted Hezbollah's popularity to  an unprecedented level and has  given the mullahs - Hezbollah's backers -  greater leverage to use at  the international bargaining table. What  does Tehran really want?
There  are big things that Tehran wants and there are little things that   Tehran wants.  Iran wants to be recognised as a great power in the   region. It wants to be like India is in South Asia. They basically want   their position to be accepted and acknowledged. And the nuclear issue  is  part of that. Iran wants to sit as an equal with the US and not be   talked down to.
That should be an outcome of negotiations rather  than a pre-condition  for negotiations. Also, you are right, as time has  passed particularly  after the Lebanon war, Iran feels increasingly  more confident not that  the overall goal has changed but that they  would like to make any kind  of negotiation from a position of strength.  I personally think they want  to talk. That's why President Ahmadinejad  gave an interview to CBS's  Mike Wallace. That's why in his interview  he complained about the fact that President  Bush did not answer his  letter, it's the reason why again he called for a  public debate with  Bush a few days ago. And they do condescendingly say  they want to talk  but not the way in which the West wants to talk.
Why won't the US talk to them?
There  are multiple reasons. This Bush administration began by putting  Iran  in the axis of evil. There are domestic considerations for engaging  in  talks, for both countries. You become ultimately a prisoner of your  own  rhetoric.
Secondly, the US believes that Iran is not serious.  And the US has not  really made up its mind yet about normalising  relations with Iran. Or  what that means. What the US wants is for Iran  to stop doing specific  things that the US is bothered by: namely their  support for Hezbollah,  support for terrorism, stop meddling in Iraq,  and above all suspension  of uranium enrichment and ending the nuclear  programme in Iran. But you  know these are specific issues that the US  would like Iran to deal with  but it doesn't change the overall relation  between the US and Iran. The Iranians argue that if they were to do  these things, they would  still be in a position of difficulty. Once  Ahmadinejad said in his own  usual crude way, "If we gave up the nuclear  programme, they will ask for  human rights. If we gave up human rights  they will ask for animal  rights."
The US is refusing to engage directly with Iran, but will oil interests force US–Iran reconciliation?
I  don't know if it will impose reconciliation but it is definitely a   pressure factor. First of all, it's very difficult even if everybody at   the UN agreed to punish Iran economically by imposing sanctions on Iran   because ultimately those sanctions will include the oil sector.
If  you include oil sanctions on Iran, then the price of oil is going to   go up dramatically in such a way that will impact Western economies and   Japan far more quickly than it will impact Iran itself. So oil is a   limiting factor on the United Nations and the US. Secondly, the easiest   way in which Iran can always threaten any kind of counteraction is to   attack oil tankers or to close off the Straits of Hormuz in the Persian   Gulf. And you know Iran does not even have to succeed there, just the   threat of it will already send the prices up. As a result, Iran has the   ability to impact oil markets in ways that would constrict US   policymaking. I don't think it's necessarily a path to reconciliation so   much as it is a path to preventing further escalation of tension.
With  Iran remaining defiant and ignoring a deadline set by the UN  Security  Council to suspend enrichment of uranium, do you think it's  more likely  Israel will attack Iran before the US does?
I don't think it  would be too likely for two reasons. One, Iran is not  anywhere close  to having a nuclear bomb. In fact, the very fact that the  IAEA just  said Iran has been going rather slow on the uranium  enrichment  indicated that they are having technical problems. Before  Iran gets to a  bomb it has to master many technologies, not just  enrichment. They  have to master bomb making and many other things before  they can  actually be a threat.
Many estimates, including US intelligence  agencies, have put a  time-frame anywhere from five to eight years away  if all is well. So  there is no imminent threat that would require a  sort of military  pre-emptive strike. We might actually be at a  time-frame right now -  despite the hard talk from both sides - that the  cost of a military  attack on Iran may be higher than the benefit. In  other words, an attack  won't achieve much; it will only push the  nuclear programme back. But  the political, military and security cost  of attacking Iran will be  higher than the gains you are going to get.
What is the key to breaking up Iran's hegemony in the region?
There  is no easy solution to this. In other words, there could always be  a  military solution, but I don't think there is a good military  solution,  and if there is a war, it's not going to even change the  regime. Like  we saw in Lebanon, an attack will only stabilise the regime  further, it  will cause anger on the streets, and if Iran is attacked it  won't have  any incentives to play by the rules either. This will be  tremendously  destabilising to the Persian Gulf and to the whole region.  Secondly,  the countries in the region don't have the capability to  contain Iran  because they don't have the military capability to do so.  Once upon a  time Iraq and Iran balanced one another out. Saudi Arabia  doesn't have  that capability so they are going to look at the US to  provide that  military capability.
The question is, to what extent is the US  committed to staying in the  Persian Gulf. But ultimately I think for  the Arab countries,  particularly the Persian Gulf countries and the US,  the best way is to  find a way to engage Iran, give Iran an interest in  stability and order  in the region. When you keep a power like Iran out  in the cold, you give  it an incentive to try to show that it exists  and matters. And that is  something the Arab countries in the Persian  Gulf are better positioned  to do with support from the West than the  West on its own.
Source: http://english.aljazeera.net/NR/exer...9CC9BFBF63.htm 
 
Iran Strengthens Ties With Afghanistan
From  cheap ice cream to 24-hour electricity, Iran  is strengthening economic  ties with western Afghanistan that could  undermine support for U.S.  and NATO forces. Western Afghanistan has a  newly paved 75-mile stretch  of highway between the Iranian border and  its main city, Herat,  courtesy of the Islamic republic. Iran is also  considering building a  rail line on the busy route, and has pledged  another $560 million to  help rebuild Afghan infrastructure and  businesses.
"Iran is not  going away from here," a Herat-based Western diplomat said.  "The  question is whether we can coexist in this region together and  realize  that some of our aims might even be the same when it comes to   Afghanistan."
Tehran has built 10 schools and built several  clinics in western  Afghanistan, and paid for the equipment to provide  electricity 24 hours a  day in Herat, unlike in most other parts of the  country, including the  capital, Kabul. Iranian influence here dates  back to ancient times and,  while dependent on U.S. military and  financial support, the Afghan  government tries not to antagonize Iran,  which currently houses about 2  million Afghan refugees.
"Our  hope is for Afghanistan to be peaceful and stable because that  would be  good for the region," said an Iranian diplomat in Kabul,  speaking on  condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to  speak with the  media. "Everyone wants a stable neighbor." If Iran and the United States  are at odds, Defense Ministry spokesman Gen. Zahir Azimi said, "we will  stay out of it."
Source: http://www.thestate.com/mld/thestate...printstory.jsp 
Iran 'is ready for war': Tehran vows to retaliate if Israel and the West attack nuclear plants

 
Iran   ratcheted up tensions in the Middle East yesterday when its foreign   minister declared the country was ‘ready for war’ with Israel and the   West. In inflammatory remarks certain to fuel uncertainty in the   volatile region, Ali Akbar Salehi warned that Tehran would ‘not   hesitate’ to retaliate if attacked. His posturing came as Foreign   Secretary William Hague urged Israel’s defence minister not to fan the   flames during top-level talks in London.
Iran has come sharply   back into focus following the end of the Libya conflict. Mr Hague made   it ‘very clear’ to Ehud Barak – who reportedly favours a pre-emptive   strike against the rogue Islamic state – to pursue a diplomatic   solution. Iran’s hardliners, led by president Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, have   been increasingly aggressive in recent weeks sparking fears that the   belligerent regime is close to producing a nuclear bomb. Israel reacted   on Wednesday by test-firing a new long-range missile. Downing Street  has  also been warned that Iran is concealing technology to enrich  uranium –  used in atomic weapons – in a mountain base beneath the city  of Qom to  protect it from air strikes.
Britain is now developing  plans for  military action against Iran amid mounting alarm about the  nuclear  threat from Ahmadinejad, who has vowed to ‘wipe Israel off the  face of  the earth’. Submarines armed with Tomahawk cruise missiles and  Royal  Navy warships could be deployed within range of Iran and RAF  planes  could carry out reconnaissance, surveillance and air-to-air  refuelling.  Diplomats in Whitehall are keen to rein in Iran using a  diplomatic  solution but admit that ‘all options should be kept on the  table’.
However, the UK would take part only if the U.S. launched an attack.
Barack   Obama is unlikely to strike before seeking re-election in a year, but   the president is aware that action is needed before Iran acquires a   nuclear bomb. Last night, Mr Salehi, Iran’s foreign minister, said the   regime was ‘ready for war’ while on a visit to Libya. He said: ‘We have   been hearing threats from Israel for eight years. Our nation is a  united  nation. Such threats are not new to us. 'We are very sure of  ourselves.  We can defend our country.’ He warned of retaliation a day  after Iran’s  chief of staff said Israel and the West would be  ‘punished’ for any  attack on its nuclear sites.
General Hassan  Firouzabadi said: ‘We  take every threat, however distant and  improbable, as very real, and  are fully prepared to use suitable  equipment to punish any kind of  mistake. ‘The United States is fully  aware that a military attack by the  Zionist regime on Iran will not  only cause tremendous damage to that  regime, but it will also inflict  serious damage to the U.S.’ Iran  insists it has a nuclear programme  only to produce energy. But a report  by the International Atomic Energy  Association, the United Nations’  nuclear watchdog, to be published  next week, will conclude that Iran is  attempting to produce nuclear  weapons in defiance of UN sanctions.  Yesterday Mr Hague said it was  vital to continue tackling ‘shared  concerns such as ... the threat  posed by Iran’s nuclear programme’.
Jim  Murphy, Labour defence  spokesman, said: ‘Iran’s efforts to acquire and  weaponise nuclear  capabilities are well known. 'The international  community has a  responsibility to prevent this from happening through a  combination of  economic sanctions and diplomatic efforts. ‘Should the  Government be  thinking of going beyond that, this would be a very  serious development  indeed.’ Meanwhile, Israel’s prime minister Benjamin  Netanyahu has  ordered a probe into alleged leaks of plans to attack  Iran’s nuclear  facilities. Ministers in Tel Aviv believe that domestic  opponents who  authorised the leaks were undermining the government and  ‘gambling with  Israel’s national interest’.
In other  developments, Mr Hague  accused Israel of undermining peace efforts by  accelerating settlement  building in the West Bank and East Jerusalem. He  condemned the decision  to build at least 2,000 apartments in  Jewish-held areas in retaliation  for Palestinian efforts to secure  recognition as a state at the United  Nations. Speaking after yesterday’s  talks, Mr Hague insisted the UK  remained ‘fully committed to Israel’s  security’. But he said: ‘I urged  Israel to revoke the plan for new  settlements and to avoid further  provocative steps which only make more  difficult the attempt to  facilitate a return to talks.
'These  steps undermine efforts to  achieve peace, and increase Israel’s  isolation.’ 'The U.S. has  unfortunately lost its wisdom and prudence in  dealing with  international issues. It only depends on power,' he said on  a visit to  the Libyan city of Benghazi. 'Of course we are prepared for  the worst,  but we hope they think twice before they put themselves on a  collision  course with Iran.' In an interview published in Turkish  newspaper  Hurriyet, Mr Salehi had said that 'Iran was always ready for  war'.
Work  to develop nuclear facilities began in the 1990s, with  the Russian  Federation providing experts, although the U.S. blocked the  trade of  equipment or construction of technology for Iran.  International  attention was drawn to its developing nuclear potential in  2002 after  an Iranian dissident revealed the existence of two sites  that were  under construction - a uranium enrichment facility in Natanz  and a  heavy water facility in Arak.
The International Atomic  Energy  Agency (IAEA) sought access to these facilities, but it wasn't  until  2003 that Iran agreed to cooperate with it and suspend enrichment   activities. The investigation revealed Iran had failed to meet several   obligations, including divulging the importation of uranium from China.   The following year, work began on the construction of a heavy water   reactor, but again Iran announced a suspension of uranium enrichment   under the terms of the Paris Agreement.
After Mahmoud   Ahmadinejad's election as president in August 2005, Iran removed the   seals on its enrichment equipment and effectively rejected the Paris   Agreement. President Ahmadinejad announced that Iran had successfully   enriched uranium in a televised address in 2006, where he announced the   country had joined those with nuclear technology.
Then U.S.   Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice had urged the UN Security Council to   consider 'strong steps' to force Tehran to shelve its nuclear   ambitions. Subsequently the UN Security Council has passed seven   resolutions on Iran insisting it ends its enrichment activities. These   have included freezing the assets of people and organisations linked to   its nuclear and missile programmes.Three nuclear scientists working on   the programme have been killed in the last two years and a computer   virus also affected enrichment at the Natanz plant in 2010.
Source: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2057210/Iran-ready-war-Tehran-retaliate-Israel-West-attack-nuclear-plants.html?ito=feeds-newsxml# 
Russia, China Warn US Against Attacking Iran
 
 
Iran Will Hit Israel First if US attacks
Rear Admiral says Iran is capable of responding to American long-range heavy bomber aircraft
A  senior Iranian military official warned Tuesday that the  Islamic  republic would target Israel if it came under US attack over its   nuclear programme. "We have announced that if America gets up to   mischief, Israel will be our first target to hit," said the spokesman   for the Iranian war games held in April, Rear Admiral Mohammad Ebrahim   Dehqani, quoted by the student news agency ISNA.
When asked about  Iran's ability to respond to American long-range heavy  bomber  aircraft, Dehqani said: "We will definitely resist against the US   B-52." In early April, Iran, whose hardline President Mahmoud   Ahmadinejad has called for Israel to be wiped off the map, launched a   military manoeuvre used as much to rally support on the domestic front   as to send a message to critics of its controversial nuclear programme.
It  unveiled a wide range of weaponry such as multiple-head missiles,   high-speed torpedoes and radar-evading anti-ship missiles, in a week of   military exercises in the strategic Gulf waters. Tehran has been under   international pressure to suspend its nuclear activities, which it   insists is for civilian energy purposes but which some Western countries   fear is aimed at manufacturing an atomic bomb.
US and European  officials are pushing for a tough, binding UN resolution  for Iran to  suspend uranium enrichment, which makes the fuel for  civilian reactors  but what can also be the explosive core of bombs. "The  Security Council  has no option but to proceed with the Chapter 7," US  State Department  number three Nicholas Burns said Tuesday, referring to  an article in  the UN charter that could lead to sanctions or even  military action.
Source: http://www.middle-east-online.com/english/?id=16366
A Chinese link to Middle East conflict

 
There is no doubt that Iran is the source of Hezbollah's arsenal of   missiles, which have recently been used against Israel. But the   controversial issue is whether these missiles are genuine Iranian   products. Military and intelligence reports have long confirmed that   they are one of the fruits of the strategic alliance between Tehran and   Beijing. Sino-Iranian ties, initiated in 1971 during the reign of Shah   Mohammad Reza Pahlavi, have strengthened after Iran's Islamic  revolution  in 1979. In recent years, however, cooperation between the  two  countries has grown exponentially, primarily because of China's   insatiable energy needs and Iran's hunger for technology and consumer   goods, as the economies of both states continue to expand.
One of  the aspects of the relationship is cooperation in the energy and   construction sectors. China is now Iran's third-largest export market   for crude oil. Its state-owned oil company Sinopec has a 50 per cent   stake in the development of Yadavaran, Iran's largest undeveloped oil   field. In April 2005, the two countries decided to set up a   joint-venture to build huge tankers capable of ensuring deliveries of   Iran's liquefied gas to China. And one month later, China agreed to buy   some 110 million metric tons of Iranian gas over 25 years in a contract   which may be worth $20 billion. China is also involved in the   construction of Iranian dams, airports, steel mills, and roads,   including Tehran's metro and a new highway linking Tehran with the   Caspian Sea coast. Bilateral trade, on the other hand, hit a new record   of $9.5 billion last year, compared with $7.5 billion in 2004.
The  most important aspect of the alliance, however, is Tehran's access  to  the technology being developed by the Chinese People's Army,   particularly in the area of cruise and ballistic missiles. This has long   been an issue of great concern for the Americans. Washington has   repeatedly expressed its dissatisfaction on the grounds that promoting   the military capability of Iran's Islamic regime could raise tensions in   the Gulf and threaten US interests in the region and the safe passage   of oil tankers.
Beijing first began exporting Chinese-made  missiles to Tehran in 1985,  during the Iran-Iraq war, when it supplied  weapons to both sides. At the  time, Chinese missile exports were purely  driven by commercial  considerations. The decline in the domestic  military orders in the  1980s, owing to declining defence budgets had  forced defence industrial  sectors to make up the shortfalls by trying  to market military products  abroad, particularly in the Third World.  But commercial considerations  have soon changed to strategic ones under  the pressure of a number of  developments.
Beijing has realised  since the 1990s that it could use the export of  missiles and related  technology to Iran as a bargaining card with the  west regarding issues  concerning its own security, such as Taiwan, US  military sales to the  Taipei regime, US military presence in the  neighbouring central Asian  republics, and the west's repeated criticism  of human rights violation  in China. Tehran realised too that Beijing's  hunger for energy  represented a golden opportunity to connect its oil  supplies and  concessions to China with the latter's military exports to  Iran.
As  a result, China continued throughout the 1990s to provide Iran not   only with missiles but also with production technology, equipment,   training and testing facilities for the indigenous Iranian manufacture   of Chinese and North Korean designed missiles. Following US-China   summits in 1997 and 1998, however, Beijing decided, under US pressure,   to halt its sales of missiles to Iran and pledged not to provide Tehran   with missile production technology. This was a significant development   as Chinese officials had never before admitted their country's   involvement in promoting Iran's missile programme. They had always   denied reports on the issue, accusing the west of spreading rumours   about China.
But this did not last long. New tensions in US-China  relations in 2000  and 2001 in the backdrop of events such as the Nato  bombing of the  Chinese embassy in Belgrade, the growing tension in the  Taiwan Strait  and the EP-3 spy plane incident led Beijing to resume its  missile  cooperation with Tehran. Despite the improvement in US-China  relations  in the aftermath of the September 11, 2001 attacks in  Washington and New  York and the release by Beijing in 2002 of a set of  measures aimed at  controlling exports of missile related technology and  assistance,  Sino-Iranian missile cooperation has continued according  to many  reliable reports.
Based on these reports and other  intelligence information, Washington  imposed sanctions on three  different occasions between 2002 and 2005 on  tens of Chinese  state-owned firms for the transfer to Iran of dual-use  missile-related  items. The Iranians have always asserted that their  missiles are  indigenous and fully designed and manufactured at missile  facilities  near Tehran and Esfahan by local scientists and experts.
But the  aforementioned evidence and many other indicate otherwise.  Iranian  missiles such as Zilzal, Raad, Oghab, Nour and Mushak are said  to be  copies of Chinese missiles, particularly the Silkworm, with the   fuselage being lengthened and the engine's place being changed. China,   therefore, is indirectly responsible for encouraging Hezbollah to act as   a state within the state and drag Lebanon into war.
Source: http://www.gulfnews.com/opinion/colu.../10061326.html 
China Must Protect Iran Even With WWIII
 
A  professor from the  Chinese National Defense University says if Iran is attacked, China will  not hesitate to protect the Islamic Republic even by launching the  Third World War. Major General Zhang Zhaozhong said, "China will not hesitate to protect Iran even with a third World War." The United States and Israel have repeatedly threatened Tehran  with  the "option" of a military strike, based on the allegation that  Iran's  nuclear program may consist of a covert military agenda. 
Iran  has refuted the allegations, saying that as a signatory to the  nuclear  Non-Proliferation Treaty and a member of the IAEA, it has the  right to  develop and acquire nuclear technology for peaceful purposes. Over  the past weeks, Israel has renewed its aggressive rhetoric  against  Iran. On November 21, Israeli Defense Minister Ehud Barak warned  that  "time has come" to deal with Iran. Israeli President Shimon Peres also threatened on November 6 that an attack against Iran is becoming "more and more likely."
Iranian  officials have promised a crushing response to any military  strike  against the country, warning that any such measure could result  in a  war that would spread beyond the Middle East.
Source: http://presstv.com/detail/213760.html 
China Backs Iran Against The Great Satan
  
Combine  China's recent Iranian energy mega-deal with Vladimir Putin's  new  strategic coalition, which includes nuclear-capable Brazil, and it   rapidly becomes clear that New York's "Fortress Americas" fallback   initiative is already dead in the water. Twenty years ago 'The Great   Satan' referred only to a collection of murderous Zionist Jews who   illegally invaded Palestine in the 1940s, to butcher the residents and   steal their land for Ben Gurion's "Yisrael". But as Zionists later took   firm control of the United States, and forced the use of American   soldiers in the 1990 Gulf War against Iraq, a subtle change slowly took   place. In the minds of about 70 percent of the global population,   America had simply become Zionist Headquarters, and was thus itself   anointed 'The Great Satan'.  Nowadays the contempt and hatred of the   civilized world is being directed against ordinary American citizens,   who in the future will pay a heavy price for failing to remove a handful   of Zionist madmen from Wall Street while they still had the chance to   do so. The rest of the world will no longer tolerate the megalomanic   'New Zion', and is now taking active steps to destroy it.
Back  in November 1962 when President Kennedy forced the removal of  Russian  missiles from Cuba, very few Americans stopped to ponder  whether, at  some point in the distant future, the tiny island of Cuba  would decide  to exact revenge on the United States for this very public  humiliation.  Forty years ago it all seemed most unlikely, but today the  wheel has  turned full circle, and a little Fidel Castro payback appears  to be  just over the horizon. Based on received intelligence, it seems  likely  that the Island of Cuba will soon be used as 'point man' in a  grand  plan to deny American warships and other vessels safe transit  through  the Gulf of Mexico. Quite apart from thoroughly humiliating New  York  and Washington, such a move will have a far more devastating effect  if  tankers are denied access to the southern American oil terminals.   Without oil imported through its critical southern oil terminals, and   also possibly facing denial of access to underwater oil reserves in the   Gulf of Mexico, America will collapse in less than six months.
How  this will be brought about is a long and sometimes complicated  story,  but bear with me and I will try to make the multi faceted  components of  this truly multinational operation as clear as I can, in a  report  normally limited to a mere 3,000 words. To do this we must first  circle  the globe, picking up seemingly random pieces of the operational   jigsaw on the way, until the last piece slips neatly into place less   than 200 miles south of Florida Keys. As you may expect, there is really   nothing random about the process at all - merely the understandable   caution and strategic camouflage of a multinational coalition closing in   on the most dangerous and brutal nation on Planet Earth since early in   the 20th Century. During the last thirty years alone, America's  Zionist  controllers have ordered the calculated murder of more than six  million  innocents around the world, and the world is not prepared to  tolerate  another six million innocents being murdered by Zion during  the next  thirty years.
Much has happened during the past few  months, so now we have to slip  back in time in order to discover the  intriguing answers to why Middle  East LNG (Liquefied Natural Gas) is  now heading east rather than west;  why Russia has forged an ironclad  coalition with China, India and  Brazil, and why the Zionists really  want the UN's International Atomic  Energy Agency chief Mohamed El  Baradei removed from office. Finally we  will have to show the  connections between these events and future mayhem  in the Gulf of  Mexico.
On 10 November 2004, the India Daily reported that,  "Russian President  Putin is taking a lead role in the most powerful  coalition of regional  and superpowers in the world. The coalition  consists of India, China,  Russia and Brazil. This will challenge the  superpower supremacy of  America." … "He [Putin] wants to establish a  long-term Russian footprint  in Latin America in order to expand  Moscow's geopolitical influence in  the region. Brazil is very open to  the coalition concept where these  large countries support each other in  term of trade, economics,  international politics and defense." Just  this single strategic move  means that the new coalition embraces just  over three quarters of the  world's total population, eighty percent of  its natural resources, and a  majority of technical and scientific  experts. Nor does it end there,  because the coalition automatically  includes the Shanghai Cooperation  Organization (SCO), which is  presently comprised of China, Russia,  Tajikistan, Kazakhstan,  Kyrgyzstan and Uzbekistan. Dangerously for  America, the coalition will  soon have another important member, Iran,  currently due to enter  informally in a few months time through the SCO  "back door" because of a  mammoth energy deal. We will return to Iran  shortly.
Obviously  from the Zionist perspective, the most disturbing new member  of the  coalition is Brazil, because New York has long believed and  insisted  that the whole of Central and South America is under its  personal  "protection", which is just another way of claiming that  Zionists can  pillage the place whenever they want to, proved by  countless CIA  atrocities in almost every American country south of  Puerto Rica.  Now  then, what would happen to this cozy pillaging  arrangement if  Russia-friendly coalition partner Brazil decided to  develop nuclear  weapons? On 16 November 2004, just six days after  Vladimir Putin  formally introduced Brazil as a member of the new  coalition, IAEA  inspectors from Geneva visited Rio de Janeiro. Just  eight days later on  24 November 2004, Brazilian Energy Minister Eduardo  Campos announced  that the IAEA had issued Brazil with a permit to  commence the  experimental stage of uranium enrichment.
Paranoia immediately  swept down Wall Street at the speed of light, and  within hours the  White House was pathetically whining that IAEA chief  Mohamed El Baradei  should be removed from office. Dark hints by the New  York Times that  El Baradei had "not been doing enough in Iran", were  just a hasty smoke  screen. For many years the Zionists had a fallback  plan in case global  conquest became impossible. Code-named "Fortress  Americas", the plan  relied on the USA being able to conquer both Canada  and South America,  thereby building themselves an impregnable redoubt in  the Western  Hemisphere, to provide cover while rebuilding their  strength.  I wrote  two long reports on this top-secret plan, which are  linked at the  bottom of this page for those who wish to study the  details. With  Brazil now a full coalition partner with Russia and China,  "Fortress  Americas" was already doomed to failure, especially because  Vladimir  Putin had been economical with the truth when he named the  coalition  members. Venezuela had already signed up in secret, but this  was kept  under wraps for fear of alerting the CIA to what was to come  next. As  most readers know, Venezuela has massive oil reserves that  America  relies on heavily, and premature exposure might have led to rash   military action against the country, in order to seize the Venezuelan   oilfields in the sacred name of "American National Security".
In  its normal crude way, the CIA had already given advance warning of   this intent by planning to shoot down Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez's   aircraft in late September, when he was en route to address the United   Nations in New York. Fortunately for Chavez and his country,  Venezuelan  Intelligence received advance warning and blocked the  President's  flight. The CIA shoot-down was to be followed 14 hours  later by "phase  2", an attack on the Presidential barracks while the  country was still  in shock about President Chavez's 'accidental death',  thus capturing  Venezuelan oil and handing it to America on a plate. Of  course the CIA  should have cancelled "Phase 2" the minute it knew that  the Presidential  aircraft had not taken off from Caracas for New York,  but sadly the CIA  planners forgot, and the Presidential barracks  attack force was swiftly  overwhelmed by a very alert Venezuelan  military. Needless to say,  "Phase 2" proved that "Phase 1" was very  real and accurate intelligence,  in turn proving that the Zionists had  yet again ordered the murder of a  head of state for monetary gain, a  long standing tradition on Wall  Street.
Within days Russia  'agreed' to provide Venezuela with fifty Mig 29  fighters, because it  was obvious that Wall Street would try again later  if a deterrent was  not put in place, and Chavez could hardly rely on  America to send spare  parts for his fleet of aging F-16s. New York was  furious of course,  but could hardly do anything about it. And besides,  what harm could 50  Mig interceptors a thousand miles away do to America?  New York had made  the fatal error of assuming that the Migs in question  were being  delivered exclusively to protect Venezuela against American  bombers or  troop transports. In fact, all fifty aircraft are Mig 29  SMTs, the very  latest in Russian technology with enhanced attack payload  capacity and  a Plasma Stealth System. Hardly the aircraft one would  choose for a  Red Baron dogfight at 15,000 feet, now is it?  All  Venezuelan Mig 29  SMTs are painted dark blue, which may be part of the  stealth system,  but more commonly denotes that the aircraft will be used  for low level  attacks over water. When nosey European diplomatic  officials asked  Venezuelan Air Force generals why they needed such  sophisticated  aircraft, the generals responded "To protect the Panama  Canal". When  asked against whom, the air chiefs wouldn't specify.
What  absolutely no one outside Russia and Venezuela knew until two  weeks  ago, is that 20 of the fifty Mig 29 SMTs are fully equipped to  carry  and fire the devastating SS-N-25 [and now SS-N-26] "Onyx", a   devastating and completely unstoppable Mach 2.9 ramjet anti-ship cruise   missile which skims the waves at twenty feet, before delivering a knock   out blow to its maritime target more than 200 kilometers away. So  great  is the kinetic energy at the point of impact on the target, that  Onyx  can sink an American aircraft carrier or supertanker using only a   conventional penetrating warhead. Those scientists who might doubt this   should calculate the impact energy of 5,500 pounds of missile striking  a  carrier or tanker at a terminal velocity of 2,460 feet per second.  It  is understood that Russia is providing Venezuela with a stockpile of   forty anti-ship Onyx missiles.
Source: http://www.vialls.com/myahudi/greatsatan.html
US Generals ‘Will Quit’ if Bush Orders Iran Attack
SOME of America’s most senior military commanders are prepared to resign  if the White House orders a military strike against Iran, according to  highly placed defence and intelligence sources. Tension in the Gulf  region has raised fears that an attack on Iran is becoming increasingly  likely before President George Bush leaves office. The Sunday Times has  learnt that up to five generals and admirals are willing to resign  rather than approve what they consider would be a reckless attack.
“There are four or five generals and admirals we know of who would  resign if Bush ordered an attack on Iran,” a source with close ties to  British intelligence said. “There is simply no stomach for it in the  Pentagon, and a lot of people question whether such an attack would be  effective or even possible.”
A British defence source confirmed that there were deep misgivings  inside the Pentagon about a military strike. “All the generals are  perfectly clear that they don’t have the military capacity to take Iran  on in any meaningful fashion. Nobody wants to do it and it would be a  matter of conscience for them.
“There are enough people who feel this would be an error of judgment too far for there to be resignations.”
A generals’ revolt on such a scale would be unprecedented. “American  generals usually stay and fight until they get fired,” said a Pentagon  source. Robert Gates, the defence secretary, has repeatedly warned  against striking Iran and is believed to represent the view of his  senior commanders.
The threat of a wave of resignations coincided with a warning by  Vice-President xxxx Cheney that all options, including military action,  remained on the table. He was responding to a comment by Tony Blair that  it would not “be right to take military action against Iran”.
Iran ignored a United Nations deadline to suspend its uranium enrichment  programme last week. President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad insisted that his  country “will not withdraw from its nuclear stances even one single  step”.
The International Atomic Energy Agency reported that Iran could soon  produce enough enriched uranium for two nuclear bombs a year, although  Tehran claims its programme is purely for civilian energy purposes.  Nicholas Burns, the top US negotiator, is to meet British, French,  German, Chinese and Russian officials in London tomorrow to discuss  additional penalties against Iran. But UN diplomats cautioned that  further measures would take weeks to agree and would be mild at best.
A second US navy aircraft carrier strike group led by the USS John C  Stennis arrived in the Gulf last week, doubling the US presence there.  Vice Admiral Patrick Walsh, the commander of the US Fifth Fleet, warned:  “The US will take military action if ships are attacked or if countries  in the region are targeted or US troops come under direct attack.”
But General Peter Pace, chairman of the joint chiefs of staff, said  recently there was “zero chance” of a war with Iran. He played down  claims by US intelligence that the Iranian government was responsible  for supplying insurgents in Iraq, forcing Bush on the defensive. Pace’s  view was backed up by British intelligence officials who said the extent  of the Iranian government’s involvement in activities inside Iraq by a  small number of Revolutionary Guards was “far from clear”.
Hillary Mann, the National Security Council’s main Iran expert until  2004, said Pace’s repudiation of the administration’s claims was a sign  of grave discontent at the top.
“He is a very serious and a very loyal soldier,” she said. “It is  extraordinary for him to have made these comments publicly, and it  suggests there are serious problems between the White House, the  National Security Council and the Pentagon.”
Mann fears the administration is seeking to provoke Iran into a reaction  that could be used as an excuse for an attack. A British official said  the US navy was well aware of the risks of confrontation and was being  “seriously careful” in the Gulf. The US air force is regarded as being  more willing to attack Iran. General Michael Moseley, the head of the  air force, cited Iran as the main likely target for American aircraft at  a military conference earlier this month.
According to a report in The New Yorker magazine, the Pentagon has  already set up a working group to plan airstrikes on Iran. The panel  initially focused on destroying Iran’s nuclear facilities and on regime  change but has more recently been instructed to identify targets in Iran  that may be involved in supplying or aiding militants in Iraq. However,  army chiefs fear an attack on Iran would backfire on American troops in  Iraq and lead to more terrorist attacks, a rise in oil prices and the  threat of a regional war.
Britain is concerned that its own troops in Iraq might be drawn into any  American conflict with Iran, regardless of whether the government takes  part in the attack. One retired general who participated in the  “generals’ revolt” against Donald Rumsfeld’s handling of the Iraq war  said he hoped his former colleagues would resign in the event of an  order to attack. “We don’t want to take another initiative unless we’ve  really thought through the consequences of our strategy,” he warned.
Source: http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/new...cle1434540.ece
Time to Attack Iran
 
 

 
In early October, U.S. officials accused Iranian operatives of  planning to assassinate Saudi Arabia’s ambassador to the United States  on American soil. Iran denied the charges, but the episode has already  managed to increase tensions between Washington and Tehran. Although the  Obama administration has not publicly threatened to retaliate with  military force, the allegations have underscored the real and growing  risk that the two sides could go to war sometime soon -- particularly  over Iran’s advancing nuclear program. 
For several years now, starting long before this episode, American  pundits and policymakers have been debating whether the United States  should attack Iran and attempt to eliminate its nuclear facilities.  Proponents of a strike have argued that the only thing worse than  military action against Iran would be an Iran armed with nuclear  weapons. Critics, meanwhile, have warned that such a raid would likely  fail and, even if it succeeded, would spark a full-fledged war and a  global economic crisis. They have urged the United States to rely on  nonmilitary options, such as diplomacy, sanctions, and covert  operations, to prevent Iran from acquiring a bomb. Fearing the costs of a  bombing campaign, most critics maintain that if these other tactics  fail to impede Tehran’s progress, the United States should simply learn  to live with a nuclear Iran. 
But skeptics of military action fail to appreciate the true danger  that a nuclear-armed Iran would pose to U.S. interests in the Middle  East and beyond. And their grim forecasts assume that the cure would be  worse than the disease -- that is, that the consequences of a U.S.  assault on Iran would be as bad as or worse than those of Iran achieving  its nuclear ambitions. But that is a faulty assumption. The truth is  that a military strike intended to destroy Iran’s nuclear program, if  managed carefully, could spare the region and the world a very real  threat and dramatically improve the long-term national security of the  United States. 
DANGERS OF DETERRENCE 
Years of international pressure have failed to halt Iran’s attempt to  build a nuclear program. The Stuxnet computer worm, which attacked  control systems in Iranian nuclear facilities, temporarily disrupted  Tehran’s enrichment effort, but a report by the International Atomic  Energy Agency this past May revealed that the targeted plants have fully  recovered from the assault. And the latest IAEA findings on Iran,  released in November, provided the most compelling evidence yet that the  Islamic Republic has weathered sanctions and sabotage, allegedly  testing nuclear triggering devices and redesigning its missiles to carry  nuclear payloads. The Institute for Science and International Security,  a nonprofit research institution, estimates that Iran could now produce  its first nuclear weapon within six months of deciding to do so.  Tehran’s plans to move sensitive nuclear operations into more secure  facilities over the course of the coming year could reduce the window  for effective military action even further. If Iran expels IAEA  inspectors, begins enriching its stockpiles of uranium to weapons-grade  levels of 90 percent, or installs advanced centrifuges at its  uranium-enrichment facility in Qom, the United States must strike  immediately or forfeit its last opportunity to prevent Iran from joining  the nuclear club. 
Some states in the region are doubting U.S. resolve to stop the  program and are shifting their allegiances to Tehran. Others have begun  to discuss launching their own nuclear initiatives to counter a possible  Iranian bomb. For those nations and the United States itself, the  threat will only continue to grow as Tehran moves closer to its goal. A  nuclear-armed Iran would immediately limit U.S. freedom of action in the  Middle East. With atomic power behind it, Iran could threaten any U.S.  political or military initiative in the Middle East with nuclear war,  forcing Washington to think twice before acting in the region. Iran’s  regional rivals, such as Saudi Arabia, would likely decide to acquire  their own nuclear arsenals, sparking an arms race. To constrain its  geopolitical rivals, Iran could choose to spur proliferation by  transferring nuclear technology to its allies -- other countries and  terrorist groups alike. Having the bomb would give Iran greater cover  for conventional aggression and coercive diplomacy, and the battles  between its terrorist proxies and Israel, for example, could escalate.  And Iran and Israel lack nearly all the safeguards that helped the  United States and the Soviet Union avoid a nuclear exchange during the  Cold War -- secure second-strike capabilities, clear lines of  communication, long flight times for ballistic missiles from one country  to the other, and experience managing nuclear arsenals. To be sure, a  nuclear-armed Iran would not intentionally launch a suicidal nuclear  war. But the volatile nuclear balance between Iran and Israel could  easily spiral out of control as a crisis unfolds, resulting in a nuclear  exchange between the two countries that could draw the United States  in, as well. 
These security threats would require Washington to contain Tehran.  Yet deterrence would come at a heavy price. To keep the Iranian threat  at bay, the United States would need to deploy naval and ground units  and potentially nuclear weapons across the Middle East, keeping a large  force in the area for decades to come. Alongside those troops, the  United States would have to permanently deploy significant intelligence  assets to monitor any attempts by Iran to transfer its nuclear  technology. And it would also need to devote perhaps billions of dollars  to improving its allies’ capability to defend themselves. This might  include helping Israel construct submarine-launched ballistic missiles  and hardened ballistic missile silos to ensure that it can maintain a  secure second-strike capability. Most of all, to make containment  credible, the United States would need to extend its nuclear umbrella to  its partners in the region, pledging to defend them with military force  should Iran launch an attack. 
In other words, to contain a nuclear Iran, the United States would need  to make a substantial investment of political and military capital to  the Middle East in the midst of an economic crisis and at a time when it  is attempting to shift its forces out of the region. Deterrence would  come with enormous economic and geopolitical costs and would have to  remain in place as long as Iran remained hostile to U.S. interests,  which could mean decades or longer. Given the instability of the region,  this effort might still fail, resulting in a war far more costly and  destructive than the one that critics of a preemptive strike on Iran now  hope to avoid. 
A FEASIBLE TARGET 
A nuclear Iran would impose a huge burden on the United States. But  that does not necessarily mean that Washington should resort to military  means. In deciding whether it should, the first question to answer is  if an attack on Iran’s nuclear program could even work. Doubters point  out that the United States might not know the location of Iran’s key  facilities. Given Tehran’s previous attempts to hide the construction of  such stations, most notably the uranium-enrichment facilities in Natanz  and Qom, it is possible that the regime already possesses nuclear  assets that a bombing campaign might miss, which would leave Iran’s  program damaged but alive. 
This scenario is possible, but not likely; indeed, such fears are  probably overblown. U.S. intelligence agencies, the IAEA, and opposition  groups within Iran have provided timely warning of Tehran’s nuclear  activities in the past -- exposing, for example, Iran’s secret  construction at Natanz and Qom before those facilities ever became  operational. Thus, although Tehran might again attempt to build  clandestine facilities, Washington has a very good chance of catching it  before they go online. And given the amount of time it takes to  construct and activate a nuclear facility, the scarcity of Iran’s  resources, and its failure to hide the facilities in Natanz and Qom  successfully, it is unlikely that Tehran has any significant operational  nuclear facilities still unknown to Western intelligence agencies. 
Even if the United States managed to identify all of Iran’s nuclear  plants, however, actually destroying them could prove enormously  difficult. Critics of a U.S. assault argue that Iran’s nuclear  facilities are dispersed across the country, buried deep underground and  hardened against attack, and ringed with air defenses, making a raid  complex and dangerous. In addition, they claim that Iran has  purposefully placed its nuclear facilities near civilian populations,  which would almost certainly come under fire in a U.S. raid, potentially  leading to hundreds, if not thousands, of deaths. 
These obstacles, however, would not prevent the United States from  disabling or demolishing Iran’s known nuclear facilities. A preventive  operation would need to target the uranium-conversion plant at Isfahan,  the heavy-water reactor at Arak, and various centrifuge-manufacturing  sites near Natanz and Tehran, all of which are located aboveground and  are highly vulnerable to air strikes. It would also have to hit the  Natanz facility, which, although it is buried under reinforced concrete  and ringed by air defenses, would not survive an attack from the U.S.  military’s new bunker-busting bomb, the 30,000-pound Massive Ordnance  Penetrator, capable of penetrating up to 200 feet of reinforced  concrete. The plant in Qom is built into the side of a mountain and thus  represents a more challenging target. But the facility is not yet  operational and still contains little nuclear equipment, so if the  United States acted quickly, it would not need to destroy it. 
Washington would also be able to limit civilian casualties in any  campaign. Iran built its most critical nuclear plants, such as the one  in Natanz, away from heavily populated areas. For those less important  facilities that exist near civilian centers, such as the  centrifuge-manufacturing sites, U.S. precision-guided missiles could  pinpoint specific buildings while leaving their surroundings unscathed.  The United States could reduce the collateral damage even further by  striking at night or simply leaving those less important plants off its  target list at little cost to the overall success of the mission.  Although Iran would undoubtedly publicize any human suffering in the  wake of a military action, the majority of the victims would be the  military personnel, engineers, scientists, and technicians working at  the facilities. 
SETTING THE RIGHT REDLINES 
The fact that the United States can likely set back or destroy Iran’s  nuclear program does not necessarily mean that it should. Such an  attack could have potentially devastating consequences -- for  international security, the global economy, and Iranian domestic  politics -- all of which need to be accounted for. 
To begin with, critics note, U.S. military action could easily spark a  full-blown war. Iran might retaliate against U.S. troops or allies,  launching missiles at military installations or civilian populations in  the Gulf or perhaps even Europe. It could activate its proxies abroad,  stirring sectarian tensions in Iraq, disrupting the Arab Spring, and  ordering terrorist attacks against Israel and the United States. This  could draw Israel or other states into the fighting and compel the  United States to escalate the conflict in response. Powerful allies of  Iran, including China and Russia, may attempt to economically and  diplomatically isolate the United States. In the midst of such spiraling  violence, neither side may see a clear path out of the battle,  resulting in a long-lasting, devastating war, whose impact may  critically damage the United States’ standing in the Muslim world. 
Those wary of a U.S. strike also point out that Iran could retaliate  by attempting to close the Strait of Hormuz, the narrow access point to  the Persian Gulf through which roughly 20 percent of the world’s oil  supply travels. And even if Iran did not threaten the strait,  speculators, fearing possible supply disruptions, would bid up the price  of oil, possibly triggering a wider economic crisis at an already  fragile moment. 
None of these outcomes is predetermined, however; indeed, the United  States could do much to mitigate them. Tehran would certainly feel like  it needed to respond to a U.S. attack, in order to reestablish  deterrence and save face domestically. But it would also likely seek to  calibrate its actions to avoid starting a conflict that could lead to  the destruction of its military or the regime itself. In all likelihood,  the Iranian leadership would resort to its worst forms of retaliation,  such as closing the Strait of Hormuz or launching missiles at southern  Europe, only if it felt that its very existence was threatened. A  targeted U.S. operation need not threaten Tehran in such a fundamental  way. 
To make sure it doesn’t and to reassure the Iranian regime, the  United States could first make clear that it is interested only in  destroying Iran’s nuclear program, not in overthrowing the government.  It could then identify certain forms of retaliation to which it would  respond with devastating military action, such as attempting to close  the Strait of Hormuz, conducting massive and sustained attacks on Gulf  states and U.S. troops or ships, or launching terrorist attacks in the  United States itself. Washington would then need to clearly articulate  these “redlines” to Tehran during and after the attack to ensure that  the message was not lost in battle. And it would need to accept the fact  that it would have to absorb Iranian responses that fell short of these  redlines without escalating the conflict. This might include accepting  token missile strikes against U.S. bases and ships in the region --  several salvos over the course of a few days that soon taper off -- or  the harassment of commercial and U.S. naval vessels. To avoid the kind  of casualties that could compel the White House to escalate the  struggle, the United States would need to evacuate nonessential  personnel from U.S. bases within range of Iranian missiles and ensure  that its troops were safely in bunkers before Iran launched its  response. Washington might also need to allow for stepped-up support to  Iran’s proxies in Afghanistan and Iraq and missile and terrorist attacks  against Israel. In doing so, it could induce Iran to follow the path of  Iraq and Syria, both of which refrained from starting a war after  Israel struck their nuclear reactors in 1981 and 2007, respectively. 
Even if Tehran did cross Washington’s redlines, the United States  could still manage the confrontation. At the outset of any such  violation, it could target the Iranian weapons that it finds most  threatening to prevent Tehran from deploying them. To de-escalate the  situation quickly and prevent a wider regional war, the United States  could also secure the agreement of its allies to avoid responding to an  Iranian attack. This would keep other armies, particularly the Israel  Defense Forces, out of the fray. Israel should prove willing to accept  such an arrangement in exchange for a U.S. promise to eliminate the  Iranian nuclear threat. Indeed, it struck a similar agreement with the  United States during the Gulf War, when it refrained from responding to  the launching of Scud missiles by Saddam Hussein. 
Finally, the U.S. government could blunt the economic consequences of  a strike. For example, it could offset any disruption of oil supplies  by opening its Strategic Petroleum Reserve and quietly encouraging some  Gulf states to increase their production in the run-up to the attack.  Given that many oil-producing nations in the region, especially Saudi  Arabia, have urged the United States to attack Iran, they would likely  cooperate. 
Washington could also reduce the political fallout of military action  by building global support for it in advance. Many countries may still  criticize the United States for using force, but some -- the Arab states  in particular -- would privately thank Washington for eliminating the  Iranian threat. By building such a consensus in the lead-up to an attack  and taking the outlined steps to mitigate it once it began, the United  States could avoid an international crisis and limit the scope of the  conflict. 
ANY TIME IS GOOD TIME 
Critics have another objection: even if the United States managed to  eliminate Iran’s nuclear facilities and mitigate the consequences, the  effects might not last long. Sure enough, there is no guarantee that an  assault would deter Iran from attempting to rebuild its plants; it may  even harden Iran’s resolve to acquire nuclear technology as a means of  retaliating or protecting itself in the future. The United States might  not have the wherewithal or the political capital to launch another  raid, forcing it to rely on the same ineffective tools that it now uses  to restrain Iran’s nuclear drive. If that happens, U.S. action will have  only delayed the inevitable.
Yet according to the IAEA, Iran already appears fully committed to  developing a nuclear weapons program and needs no further motivation  from the United States. And it will not be able to simply resume its  progress after its entire nuclear infrastructure is reduced to rubble.  Indeed, such a devastating offensive could well force Iran to quit the  nuclear game altogether, as Iraq did after its nuclear program was  destroyed in the Gulf War and as Syria did after the 2007 Israeli  strike. And even if Iran did try to reconstitute its nuclear program, it  would be forced to contend with continued international pressure,  greater difficulty in securing necessary nuclear materials on the  international market, and the lurking possibility of subsequent attacks.  Military action could, therefore, delay Iran’s nuclear program by  anywhere from a few years to a decade, and perhaps even indefinitely. 
Skeptics might still counter that at best a strike would only buy  time. But time is a valuable commodity. Countries often hope to delay  worst-case scenarios as far into the future as possible in the hope that  this might eliminate the threat altogether. Those countries whose  nuclear facilities have been attacked -- most recently Iraq and Syria --  have proved unwilling or unable to restart their programs. Thus, what  appears to be only a temporary setback to Iran could eventually become a  game changer. 
Yet another argument against military action against Iran is that it  would embolden the hard-liners within Iran’s government, helping them  rally the population around the regime and eliminate any remaining  reformists. This critique ignores the fact that the hard-liners are  already firmly in control. The ruling regime has become so extreme that  it has sidelined even those leaders once considered to be right-wingers,  such as former President Ali Akbar Hashemi Rafsanjani, for their  perceived softness. And Rafsanjani or the former presidential candidate  Mir Hossein Mousavi would likely continue the nuclear program if he  assumed power. An attack might actually create more openings for  dissidents in the long term (after temporarily uniting Iran behind  Ayatollah Ali Khamenei), giving them grounds for criticizing a  government that invited disaster. Even if a strike would strengthen  Iran’s hard-liners, the United States must not prioritize the outcomes  of Iran’s domestic political tussles over its vital national security  interest in preventing Tehran from developing nuclear weapons. 
STRIKE NOW OR SUFFER LATER 
Attacking Iran is hardly an attractive prospect. But the United  States can anticipate and reduce many of the feared consequences of such  an attack. If it does so successfully, it can remove the incentive for  other nations in the region to start their own atomic programs and, more  broadly, strengthen global nonproliferation by demonstrating that it  will use military force to prevent the spread of nuclear weapons. It can  also head off a possible Israeli operation against Iran, which, given  Israel’s limited capability to mitigate a potential battle and inflict  lasting damage, would likely result in far more devastating consequences  and carry a far lower probability of success than a U.S. attack.  Finally, a carefully managed U.S. attack would prove less risky than the  prospect of containing a nuclear-armed Islamic Republic -- a costly,  decades-long proposition that would likely still result in grave  national security threats. Indeed, attempting to manage a nuclear-armed  Iran is not only a terrible option but the worst.
With the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq winding down and the United States  facing economic hardship at home, Americans have little appetite for  further strife. Yet Iran’s rapid nuclear development will ultimately  force the United States to choose between a conventional conflict and a  possible nuclear war. Faced with that decision, the United States should  conduct a surgical strike on Iran’s nuclear facilities, absorb an  inevitable round of retaliation, and then seek to quickly de-escalate  the crisis. Addressing the threat now will spare the United States from  confronting a far more dangerous situation in the future.
Source: http://www.foreignaffairs.com/articles/136917/matthew-kroenig/time-to-attack-iran
U.S. Planning Troop Buildup in Gulf After Exit From Iraq
The Obama administration plans to bolster the American military  presence in the Persian Gulf after it withdraws the remaining troops  from Iraq this year, according to officials and diplomats. That repositioning could include new combat forces in Kuwait able to respond to a collapse of security in Iraq or a military confrontation with Iran.
The plans, under discussion for months, gained new urgency after President Obama’s announcement  this month that the last American soldiers would be brought home from  Iraq by the end of December. Ending the eight-year war was a central  pledge of his presidential campaign, but American military officers and  diplomats, as well as officials of several countries in the region,  worry that the withdrawal could leave instability or worse in its wake. 
After unsuccessfully pressing both the Obama administration and the  Iraqi government to permit as many as 20,000 American troops to remain  in Iraq beyond 2011, the Pentagon is now drawing up an alternative. In  addition to negotiations over maintaining a ground combat presence in  Kuwait, the United States is considering sending more naval warships  through international waters in the region.        
With an eye on the threat of a belligerent Iran, the administration is  also seeking to expand military ties with the six nations in the Gulf Cooperation Council  — Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, Bahrain, Qatar, the United Arab Emirates and  Oman. While the United States has close bilateral military relationships  with each, the administration and the military are trying to foster a  new “security architecture” for the Persian Gulf that would integrate  air and naval patrols and missile defense. 
The size of the standby American combat force to be based in Kuwait  remains the subject of negotiations, with an answer expected in coming  days. Officers at the Central Command  headquarters here declined to discuss specifics of the proposals, but  it was clear that successful deployment plans from past decades could be  incorporated into plans for a post-Iraq footprint in the region. For  example, in the time between the Persian Gulf war in 1991 and the  invasion of Iraq in 2003, the United States Army kept at least a  combat battalion — and sometimes a full combat brigade —  in Kuwait  year-round, along with an enormous arsenal ready to be unpacked should  even more troops have been called to the region. 
“Back to the future” is how Maj. Gen. Karl R. Horst, Central Command’s  chief of staff, described planning for a new posture in the Gulf. He  said the command was focusing on smaller but highly capable deployments  and training partnerships with regional militaries. “We are kind of  thinking of going back to the way it was before we had a big ‘boots on  the ground’ presence,” General Horst said. “I think it is healthy. I  think it is efficient. I think it is practical.”
Mr. Obama and his senior national security advisers have sought to  reassure allies and answer critics, including many Republicans, that the  United States will not abandon its commitments in the Persian Gulf even  as it winds down the war in Iraq and looks ahead to doing the same in  Afghanistan by the end of 2014. “We will have a robust continuing presence throughout the region, which  is proof of our ongoing commitment to Iraq and to the future of that  region, which holds such promise and should be freed from outside  interference to continue on a pathway to democracy,” Secretary of State  Hillary Rodham Clinton said in Tajikistan after the president’s  announcement.        
During town-hall-style meetings with military personnel in Asia last week, the secretary of defense, Leon E. Panetta,  noted that the United States had 40,000 troops in the region, including  23,000 in Kuwait, though the bulk of those serve as logistical support  for the forces in Iraq. As they undertake this effort, the Pentagon and its Central Command,  which oversees operations in the region, have begun a significant  rearrangement of American forces, acutely aware of the political and  budgetary constraints facing the United States, including at least $450  billion of cuts in military spending over the next decade as part of the  agreement to reduce the budget deficit. 
Officers at Central Command said that the post-Iraq era required them to  seek more efficient ways to deploy forces and maximize cooperation with  regional partners. One significant outcome of the coming cuts,  officials said, could be a steep decrease in the number of intelligence  analysts assigned to the region. At the same time, officers hope to  expand security relationships in the region. General Horst said that  training exercises were “a sign of commitment to presence, a sign of  commitment of resources, and a sign of commitment in building partner  capability and partner capacity.”
Col. John G. Worman, Central Command’s chief for exercises, noted a  Persian Gulf milestone: For the first time, he said, the military of  Iraq had been invited to participate in a regional exercise in Jordan  next year, called Eager Lion 12, built around the threat of guerrilla  warfare and terrorism. Another part of the administration’s post-Iraq planning involves the  Gulf Cooperation Council, dominated by Saudi Arabia. It has increasingly  sought to exert its diplomatic and military influence in the region and  beyond. Qatar and the United Arab Emirates, for example, sent combat  aircraft to the Mediterranean as part of the NATO-led intervention in  Libya, while Bahrain and the United Arab Emirates each have forces in  Afghanistan.
At the same time, however, the council sent a mostly Saudi ground force  into Bahrain to support that government’s suppression of demonstrations  this year, despite international criticism. Despite such concerns, the administration has proposed establishing a  stronger, multilateral security alliance with the six nations and the  United States. Mr. Panetta and Mrs. Clinton outlined the proposal in an  unusual joint meeting with the council on the sidelines of the United  Nations in New York last month.        
The proposal still requires the approval of the council, whose leaders  will meet again in December in the Saudi capital, Riyadh, and the kind  of multilateral collaboration that the administration envisions must  overcome rivalries among the six nations. “It’s not going to be a NATO tomorrow,” said a senior administration  official, who spoke on the condition of anonymity to discuss diplomatic  negotiations still under way, “but the idea is to move to a more  integrated effort.”        
Iran, as it has been for more than three decades, remains the most  worrisome threat to many of those nations, as well as to Iraq itself,  where it has re-established political, cultural and economic ties, even  as it provided covert support for Shiite insurgents who have battled  American forces. “They’re worried that the American withdrawal will leave a vacuum, that  their being close by will always make anyone think twice before taking  any action,” Bahrain’s foreign minister, Sheik Khalid bin Ahmed  al-Khalifa, said in an interview, referring to officials in the Persian  Gulf region.
Sheik Khalid was in Washington last week for meetings with the  administration and Congress. “There’s no doubt it will create a vacuum,”  he said, “and it may invite regional powers to exert more overt action  in Iraq.” He added that the administration’s proposal to expand its security  relationship with the Persian Gulf nations would not “replace what’s  going on in Iraq” but was required in the wake of the withdrawal to  demonstrate a unified defense in a dangerous region. “Now the game is  different,” he said. “We’ll have to be partners in operations, in issues  and in many ways that we should work together.”
At home, Iraq has long been a matter of intense dispute. Some foreign  policy analysts and Democrats — and a few Republicans — say the United  States has remained in Iraq for too long. Others, including many  Republicans and military analysts, have criticized Mr. Obama’s  announcement of a final withdrawal, expressing fear that Iraq remained  too weak and unstable. “The U.S. will have to come to terms with an Iraq that is unable to  defend itself for at least a decade,” Adam Mausner and Anthony H.  Cordesman of the Center for Strategic and International Studies wrote  after the withdrawal announcement.
Twelve Republican Senators demanded hearings on the administration’s  ending of negotiations with the Iraqis — for now at least — on the  continuation of American training and on counterterrorism efforts in  Iraq. “As you know, the complete withdrawal of our forces from Iraq is likely  to be viewed as a strategic victory by our enemies in the Middle East,  especially the Iranian regime,” the senators wrote Wednesday in a letter  to the chairman of the Senate’s Armed Services Committee.        
Source: http://www.nytimes.com/2011/10/30/world/middleeast/united-states-plans-post-iraq-troop-increase-in-persian-gulf.html?src=me&ref=world
ABC News Exclusive: The Secret War Against Iran

 
A  Pakistani tribal militant group responsible for a series of deadly   guerrilla raids inside Iran has been secretly encouraged and advised by   American officials since 2005, U.S. and Pakistani intelligence sources   tell ABC News. The group, called Jundullah, is made up of members  of the Baluchi tribe  and operates out of the Baluchistan province in  Pakistan, just across  the border from Iran. It has taken responsibility  for the deaths and  kidnappings of more than a dozen Iranian soldiers  and officials. U.S.  officials say the U.S. relationship with Jundullah  is arranged so that  the U.S. provides no funding to the group, which  would require an  official presidential order or "finding" as well as  congressional  oversight.
Tribal sources tell ABC News that money  for Jundullah is funneled to its  youthful leader, Abd el Malik Regi,  through Iranian exiles who have  connections with European and Gulf  states. Jundullah has produced its  own videos showing Iranian soldiers  and border guards it says it has  captured and brought back to Pakistan.  The leader, Regi, claims to have  personally executed some of the  Iranians. "He used to fight with the Taliban. He's part drug smuggler,  part  Taliban, part Sunni activist," said Alexis Debat, a senior fellow  on  counterterrorism at the Nixon Center and an ABC News consultant who   recently met with Pakistani officials and tribal members.
"Regi  is essentially commanding a force of several hundred guerrilla  fighters  that stage attacks across the border into Iran on Iranian  military  officers, Iranian intelligence officers, kidnapping them,  executing  them on camera," Debat said.
Most recently, Jundullah took credit  for an attack in February that  killed at least 11 members of the  Iranian Revolutionary Guard riding on a  bus in the Iranian city of  Zahedan. Last month, Iranian state  television broadcast what it said  were confessions by those responsible  for the bus attack. They  reportedly admitted to being members of  Jundullah and said they had  been trained for the mission at a secret  location in Pakistan.
The  Iranian TV broadcast is interspersed with the logo of the CIA, which   the broadcast blamed for the plot. A CIA spokesperson said "the account   of alleged CIA action is false" and reiterated that the U.S. provides   no funding of the Jundullah group. Pakistani government sources say the   secret campaign against Iran by Jundullah was on the agenda when Vice   President Dick Cheney met with Pakistani President Pervez Musharraf in   February.
A senior U.S. government official said groups such as  Jundullah have  been helpful in tracking al Qaeda figures and that it  was appropriate  for the U.S. to deal with such groups in that context.  Some former CIA  officers say the arrangement is reminiscent of how the  U.S. government  used proxy armies, funded by other countries including  Saudi Arabia, to  destabilize the government of Nicaragua in the 1980s.
News source: http://blogs.abcnews.com/theblotter/...own_in_th.html
Iran to Build Permanent Naval Base in Syria 
 
Just two days after two Iranian warships reached the Syrian port of      Latakia via the Suez Canal, Friday, Feb. 25, an Iranian-Syrian naval      cooperation accord was signed providing for Iran to build its first      Mediterranean naval base at the Syrian port, debkafile's military  and     Iranian sources reveal. The base will include a large Iranian     Revolutionary Guards weapons depot  stocked with hardware chosen by the     IRGC subject to prior notification  to Damascus. Latakia harbor will   be   deepened, widened and provided with  new "coastal installations"  to    accommodate the large warships and  submarines destined to use  these    facilities.
Iran has much to celebrate, debkafile's  military    sources report. It has  acquired its first military foothold  on a    Mediterranean shore and its  first permanent military presence  on Syrian    soil. Tehran will be setting  in place the logistical  infrastructure    for accommodating incoming  Iranian troops to fight in  a potential    Middle East war. According to our sources, the "cadets"  the Kharg    cruiser, one of the two  Iranian warships allowed to  transit the Suez    Canal, was said to be  carrying were in fact the  first construction    crews for building the new  port facilities. Two  more events were    carefully synchronized to take place in the same  week.
On Feb.    24, as the Iranian warships headed from the Suez  Canal to Syria,  Hamas    fired long-range made-in-Iran Grade missiles  from the Gaza Strip  into    Israel, one hitting the main Negev city of  Beersheba for the first    time  since Israel's Gaza campaign two years  ago - as debkafile reported    on  that day. Tehran was using its  Palestinian surrogate to flaunt  its    success in getting its first  warships through the Suez Canal in  the  face   of Israeli protests. The  Iranians were also parading their   offensive   agenda in deploying  warships on the Mediterranean just 287   kilometers   north of Israel's  northernmost coastal town of Nahariya.
The    second occurrence  was a contract announced by Russian Defense    Minister  Anatoly  Serdyukov for the sale of advanced Russian   shore-to-sea  cruise   missiles to Syria. The Yakhont missile system has a   range of 300    kilometers and skims the waves low enough to be   undetected by radar.    debkafile's military sources take this sale as   representing Moscow's  nod   in favor of the new Iranian base at Latakia,   72 kilometers from  the   permanent naval base Russia is building at  the  Syrian port of  Tartous.
The  Russians are willing to   contribute towards the  Iranian port's  defenses  and looking forward to   cooperation between  the Russian, Iranian  and  Syrian fleets in the   eastern Mediterranean  opposite the US Sixth   Fleet's regular beat.
This    unfolding proximity presents the  United States with a serious     strategic challenge and Israel with a new  peril, which was nonetheless     dismissed out of hand by Israel's defense  minister Ehud Barak. In a     radio interview Monday, Feb. 28, he brushed  aside the Iranian   warships'   passage through the Suez as "an outing for  cadets" which   did not  require  an Israeli response. He added, "For now,  there is no    operational threat  to Israel."
According to  Barak, the  Suez   Canal is open to all of the world's  warships and the  two  Iranian   vessels' transit could not have been  prevented. He omitted   to explain   how Egypt did prevent it for 30 years  and why it was   permitted now.   The defense minister went on to speak of  "fresh signs   that President   Bashar Assad is willing to resume peace  talks with   Israel."
Both   Barak's assessments were knocked down by   Damascus on the same day.   Syrian Defense Minister Lt. Gen. Ali  Mohammad  Habib soon put him right    on the "cadets' outing." At a  ceremony in  honor of the Iranian Navy    Commander Admiral Habibollah  Sayyari, Habib  said: "Iranian warships'    presence in the  Mediterranean Sea for the  first time after 32 years is  a   great move  that is going to cripple  Israel."
Source: http://www.virtualjerusalem.com/news.php?Itemid=2799
Iran's covert war with Israel in Caspian

 
A     senior Iranian general has  warned zerbaijan about getting too close   to    Israel, underlining fears  in Tehran that the Jewish state could   use    Iran's northern neighbor  to launch pre-emptive strikes against   Iran's    nuclear program. Israel  has been quietly building   intelligence and   military links with  oil  rich Azerbaijan, a largely   secular Muslim   state, since the collapse   of the Soviet Union two   decades ago.
The   Israelis sell significant amounts of weapons   and unmanned  aerial    vehicles to the government in Baku, on the   Caspian Sea, as its     intelligence services dig in along the border   with Iran. That gives     Israel a forward operating base to monitor   Iran, particularly  its    contentious nuclear program, which Jerusalem   views as a major     existential threat.
Over the last two  years,  tensions have   escalated as Azerbaijan has   become part of the   shadowy intelligence war   between Iran and Israel.  It  has become  even  more important to Israel   since its May 2010 rift  with  former  ally  Turkey, which also borders   Iran. Even so, the  unusually  aggressive  outburst by Gen. Hassan   Firouzabadi,  chief of  Iran's  armed forces  Joint Staff Command, Aug. 9   struck a  particularly   jarring note and  brought into sharp focus a   little-known  aspect of   Israel's deepening  intelligence war with Iran.
It   also  reflected Tehran's growing  alarm at Israel's penetration  of    Iran's  northern neighbor. In what  was perceived as thinly veiled  threat,     Firouzabadi accused Baku  of  mistreating religious Shiites in    southern  Azerbaijan who lean toward   the Islamic Republic and   allowing   "Zionists" access to Azerbaijani   territory right on Iran's   doorstep.   "If this policy continues, it  will end in darkness and it   will not be    possible to suppress a  revolt by the people of Aran,"  or  Azerbaijan, the    general declared  in an interview with Iran's   semi-official Mehr news    agency.
Relations  between Iran and  Azerbaijan have been under   strain in  recent  years,  largely through  Iranian covert operations. In   2007,  Azerbaijan   convicted 15  Iranians and Azeris for spying on    Israeli,  U.S. and  British  interests, including oil facilities, for    Tehran and  plotting  to  seize power.
In 2008, Azeri authorities,   aided by Israel's   Mossad spy agency,   thwarted a plot involving   operatives of   Hezbollah, Iran's powerful   Lebanese proxy, to blow up the   Israeli   Embassy in Baku. That plot was  intended to avenge the   assassination   of Hezbollah's iconic  security  chief, Imad Mughniyeh, in   Damascus   earlier that year. Tehran  blamed  Mossad for that killing.     Firouzabadi's statement jolted the Iranian  leadership as much as it did      the Azeri government. Senior Iranian  figures publicly chastised  the     general and sought to distance Tehran  from his remarks.
"It   is   important to note that the ongoing power struggle in Iran"     between   President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad and the clerical establishment    led  by   Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, "has been having the     unintended   effect of creating more political space for the military     leadership to   assert its views," the U.S. global security  consultancy    Stratfor   observed.
It said "the tense exchange  between Tehran  and Baku Â…   underscores  the  growing conflict of  interests between  the two  neighbors  as  Azerbaijan  works on  strengthening its  relationship with  the West."   Around 85 percent of  the population of  Azerbaijan, ringed by  key    regional players Iran,  Turkey and Russia,  is Shiite. That gives  Tehran    the opportunity to  make sectarian  mischief in the Caucasus and  the    energy-rich Caspian  Basin.
However,  Azerbaijan is  overwhelmingly  secular, except  for the  religious   conservatives on its  southern flank.  The  government of  President  Ilham  Aliyev suspects  Tehran is them to   bolster its claims  to  Azerbaijan's  Caspian energy  reserves. Iran  fears  Aliyev, backed by   Israel and even the United  States, could   support a  revolt by its   Azeris, who comprise about  one-quarter of  the  population.
So   it supports Azerbaijan's  regional rival,  Armenia, in its  deadlocked    dispute with Baku over  Nagorno-Karabakh,  currently held by  Armenia.    "Given that Azerbaijan's  relations with  Iran have long been  fraught,  the   Azerbaijani government  has not  had any qualms in  developing a   strategic  relationship with  Israel,"  Stratfor noted.  Expanding that   military and  intelligence   relationship to upgrade   Azerbaijan's   capabilities and develop a   military industrial complex   there is one  of  Tehran's greatest   concerns.
Aliyev is looking toward Israel  and  NATO to help   modernize its  forces,  despite a U.S. arms embargo  in place  since  1992.  Israel is  Azerbaijan's  fourth largest trading  partner. The   Jewish  state  has  also been making inroads into the  former Soviet   republics of    Turkmenistan and Kyrgyzstan. It's  negotiating with   Kazakhstan to   upgrade  its military.
Source: http://www.spacewar.com/reports/Iran...spian_999.html
The Pipeline Paradox
        
Despite    the harsh sanctions imposed on it by the United States and  United    Nations, Iran continues to steadily accumulate geopolitical  clout. Many    commentators point to the fact that the cascading series of     revolutions in the Middle East has given the region's Shiite     communities, which are allied with Iran, greater influence. But even     more important is Tehran's recent success in strengthening its role as     an indispensable international energy supplier. By focusing on   financial   sanctions rather than the Islamic Republic's plans to become   a global   energy superpower, Washington policymakers have enabled   Iran's rise.  
Hundreds of millions of people are dependent on Iran for their  energy.    But while the West tends to associate Iran with oil, of which  it is  the   world's fourth-largest     producer, Iran's real power derives from its vast natural gas    reserves,  which are second only to Russia's. Driven by technological     breakthroughs in the United States and demand in China and elsewhere,     natural gas is already ascendant as a source of energy for power     generation that is substantially cleaner than the old standby coal; in a     post-Fukushima world, it is likely to be second to none.   
The international natural gas trade is different from those in oil  and    coal in that natural gas is for the most part delivered by an   expensive   pipeline infrastructure, rather than by more malleable sea   routes or   rail lines. This means that once an importer enters a   long-term contract   with an exporter, the relationship becomes all but   unbreakable -- if   Western Europe gets sick of dealing with Russia,  for  instance, it can't   just pick up its pipeline and drag it over to   North Africa. This is a   big advantage for politically unpopular   exporters, which explains why in   recent months Iran inked gas deals   with all of its seven neighbors,   except Afghanistan. In doing so, it   hopes not only to become a critical   transit country for Central Asia's   energy, but also to ensure that   Europe and South Asia are beholden  to  its gas for many years to come.  
In June 2010, Iran and Pakistan signed the final deal for a  connecting    pipeline that would carry 21.5 million cubic meters per  day of  natural   gas. Both countries hope to extend the pipeline into  either  India or   China, enticed by the prospect of millions of dollars  in  transit fees.   If this happens, Iran would gain an economic  lifeline --  and enjoy   diplomatic protection from three Asian giants.  If New Delhi  refuses to   extend the Iran-Pakistan pipeline into its  territory,  Tehran has a   backup passage to India, via Oman. In 2008,  Iran and Oman  agreed to   develop jointly Iran's offshore Kish field.  Meanwhile, Oman  and India   are negotiating a deep-water pipeline that  would bring  Persian Gulf gas   to India across the Arabian Sea. Should  this project  come to fruition,   Iran's gas will undoubtedly provide  the lion's share  of the piped   product.  
No less important for Iran is the European market. Here, Iran is   trying   to position itself as an alternative to Russia -- which   supplies a   quarter of Europe's natural gas -- as a major exporter to   the European   Union. Europeans have been acutely aware of their   vulnerability: Five   years ago, a spat between Russia and Ukraine --   through which 80 percent   of Russia's natural gas exports to Europe   travel -- disrupted     supplies to Hungary and Poland. Ever since, they have tried to     establish a range of Plan Bs for gas delivery. Chief among them is     Nabucco, a pipeline that aims to bring gas from the Caspian Sea to the     heart of Europe by way of Turkey, Bulgaria, Romania, and Hungary. Iran     wants to ensure that no matter which new corridor to Europe is  chosen,    its gas will be fed into it. For this, Iran needs to be fully   integrated   into the gas pipelines of its relevant neighbors:   Azerbaijan, Syria,   Turkey, and Turkmenistan. 
This is exactly what Tehran is doing. In January, Iran and Syria signed an agreement to build the so-called Islamic pipeline, which would carry gas from Iran to Europe via Iraq, Syria, Lebanon, and the Mediterranean basin. That same month, Iran signed     a long-term contract with Azerbaijan to import Azerbaijani gas to   Iran   in exchange for exporting Iranian gas to the Nakhchivan   Autonomous   Republic, the Azerbaijani exclave between Iran and Armenia.   Iran has   also built     a pipeline to Armenia itself, which opened in 2008. In February,  Iran    and Turkey announced that they are planning to increase the  amount of    gas flowing through the Tabriz-Ankara pipeline from 18  million to 23    million cubic meters per day. Last November, Iran  inaugurated a new    pipeline with Turkmenistan, the world's  fourth-largest gas reserve.   
These deals will determine the contours of the new geopolitics of    energy  -- and it is Iran, not the United States or its allies, that is    drawing  them. In fact, U.S. President Barack Obama's administration,    like  George W. Bush's before him, is holding the easel for Tehran.  
For example, Washington has long believed that for the sake of European energy     security, Europe needs an alternative to Russian gas, and  accordingly    it has been extremely supportive of the idea of a  southern natural  gas   corridor. U.S. policymakers have reassured  themselves that such a    corridor would exclude Iranian gas and were  gratified by  Turkmenistan's announcement     in November that the country would commit 40 billion cubic meters of     gas annually to Europe through the pipeline. But this wishful  thinking    ignores market realities. Once Nabucco, or any other  southern  corridor,   is constructed, who will prevent Iranian gas from  flowing  into Europe?    
Fortunately, there is a regional alternative. U.S. interests would be     better served if Turkmenistan's gas were instead directed south to  the  Turkmenistan-Afghanistan-Pakistan-India pipeline     (TAPI) which would -- if built -- extend from Turkmenistan, through     Herat and Kandahar in Afghanistan, to Quetta in Pakistan, and on to     India. TAPI, which is also supported by the United States, would     contribute to the economies of all four countries, particularly     Afghanistan's, which desperately needs it. More importantly, TAPI would     effectively kill the Iran-Pakistan-India pipeline as it would allow     India to meet its energy needs without Iran. But the pipeline faces  many    challenges, mostly to do with lack of security in Afghanistan.  If    Washington is serious in its support for TAPI, it should help  secure the    funding for the pipeline and work with the Afghan  government on    creating a safe environment for the project -- as the  U.S. military did    in recent years in Iraq and Colombia, two similarly  war-torn  countries.   It should also encourage Turkmenistan to direct  its gas  southward  rather  than westward.   
Instead, by supporting Nabucco and by giving a nod to Turkmenistan to     divert its gas to Europe, the United States is not only facilitating   the   creation of two new economic lifelines for Iran, but also   compromising   its relations with Russia -- outcomes that run contrary   to  Washington's  declared positions toward both Tehran and Moscow.    Alternatively, by  joining forces with Russia, which has expressed    interest in financing  TAPI, the United States can help shape the    geopolitics of energy in  South and Central Asia in a way that helps the    economic development of  its allies in the region while undermining    Iran. Washington's current  course, however, will only make Tehran    richer and more geopolitically  indispensable.
Source: http://www.foreignpolicy.com/articles/2011/04/12/the_pipeline_paradox?page=0,0
Iran’s First Great Satan Was England
IF  there is one country on earth where the cry “Death to England” still   carries weight — where people still harbor the white-hot hatred of   British colonialism that once inflamed millions from South Africa to   China — that country would be Iran. And that is what the leaders of Iran   must have been counting on when screaming militiamen, unhindered by  the  police, poured into the British Embassy in Tehran to vandalize it  on  Tuesday.        
 
Most Iranians, like most people anywhere, would deplore the idea of   thugs storming into a foreign embassy. Nonetheless, some may have felt a   flicker of satisfaction. Even an outrage like this, they might have   said, is a trifle compared with the generations of torment Britain   inflicted on their country.        
So Iran’s mullahs — they, not President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, are   reported to have been behind the attack — were not gambling in ordering,   or at least tolerating, it. They presumably realized that the world   would denounce their flagrant violation of international law. But they   also knew it would resonate with the narrative Iranians have heard for   so long about their own history.        
The spark for the embassy invasion was Britain’s imposition of new   economic sanctions on Iran. Pressure for those sanctions came not so   much from Britain as from the United States and Israel, but those   countries could not be targets for a similar attack because they do not   have embassies in Tehran. Besides, Iranians these days can be   surprisingly besotted with the United States; in my own visits I am   often surrounded by people who compete to proclaim their love for   America, and whose anger at Israel seems more political than emotional.          
Those Iranians, however, feel quite differently about Britain.        
Britain first cast its imperial eye on Iran in the 19th century. Its   appeal was location; it straddled the land route to India. Once   established in Iran, the British quickly began investing — or looting,   as some Iranians would say. British companies bought exclusive rights to   establish banks, print currency, explore for minerals, run transit   lines and even grow tobacco.        
In 1913, the British government maneuvered its way to a contract under   which all Iranian oil became its property. Six years later it imposed  an  “agreement” that gave it control of Iran’s army and treasury. These   actions set off a wave of anti-British outrage that has barely  subsided. Britain’s occupation of Iran during World War II, when it was a  critical  source of oil and a transit route for supplies to keep Soviet  Russia  fighting, was harsh. Famine and disease spread as the British   requisitioned food for their troops.        
One of the most popular Iranian novels, “Savushun,” is set in this   period. It tells of two brothers who take roles every Iranian can   recognize: The elder is ambitious and panders to the occupiers; the   younger refuses to sell his grain to them and pays a tragic price for   his integrity. During their occupation, the British decided that Reza  Shah Pahlavi,  whom they had helped place in power, was no longer  reliable. They  deposed him and chose his son, Mohammed Reza Pahlavi, as  the new shah.         
Once the war ended, Iran resumed its efforts to install democracy,  under  the leadership of Mohammed Mossadegh. He had campaigned against  the  Anglo-Persian Agreement of 1919 and had written a book denouncing   “capitulation” agreements, under which foreigners were granted immunity   from Iranian law. After he was elected prime minister in 1951, Mr.  Mossadegh asked  Parliament to take the unimaginable step of  nationalizing Iran’s oil  industry. It agreed unanimously. That sparked a  historic confrontation.         
Mr. Mossadegh embodied the anti-British emotion that still roils the   Iranian soul. The special envoy President Harry S. Truman sent to Tehran   to seek a compromise in the oil dispute, W. Averell Harriman, reported   that the British held a “completely 19th-century colonial attitude   toward Iran,” but found Mr. Mossadegh just as intransigent. When Mr.   Harriman assured Mr. Mossadegh that there were good people in Britain,   Mr. Mossadegh gave him a classically Iranian reply.        
“You do not know how crafty they are,” he said. “You do not know how   evil they are. You do not know how they sully everything they touch.”          
Desperate to regain control of Iran’s oil, the British sought to crush   Mr. Mossadegh with measures that included harsh economic sanctions —   sanctions comparable to the ones they are now imposing. When that   failed, they asked President Dwight D. Eisenhower to join in a plot to   overthrow him. He agreed, not because he wished to help the British   recover their oil but because he had been persuaded that otherwise, Iran   might fall to Communism. Iran, after all, was on the southern flank of   the Soviet Union, standing between it and the oil fields and  warm-water  ports of the Persian Gulf.        
The coup, staged in August 1953, ended Iranian democracy and allowed   Mohammed Reza Pahlavi to build a dictatorship that remained a staunch   cold war ally of both Britain and the United States. But the alliance   backfired on both countries when his repression set off the 1979   revolution that brought the mullahs to power. Today, many Iranians who   loathe the mullahs nevertheless look for Britain’s hand behind any dark   plot; some even accuse it of organizing the 1979 revolution, and   imposing Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini.        
More than half a century ago, Secretary of State Dean Acheson wrote  that  Mr. Mossadegh was “inspired by a fanatical hate of the British and  a  desire to expel them and their works from the country regardless of  the  cost.” Many Iranians still feel that way, as their country falls  into  ever deeper isolation. In Iran, the words “anger” and “Britain”  fit  easily together.        
Outside interference is a central fact of modern Iranian history. And   for most of the 20th century, Britain was at the center of most of it.  Nonetheless, a spark of admiration has long been buried within Iranians’   anger, as it was in many other places across the British Empire. Mr.   Harriman noticed it in his talks with Mr. Mossadegh. The old man liked   to tell stories about his favorite grandson, and Mr. Harriman asked   where the boy was attending school.        
“Why, in England, of course,” was the reply. “Where else?”
Source: http://www.nytimes.com/2011/12/04/opinion/sunday/irans-first-great-satan-was-england.html?ref=world
Iran's Act of War
There is still much to learn about the Iranian-directed plot to blow  up the Saudi ambassador in a Washington, D.C., restaurant. But if the  Justice Department's information is correct, the conspiracy confirms a  lethal fact about Iran's regime: It is becoming more dangerous, not  less, as it ages.
Since the 1989 death of Iran's  revolutionary leader, Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini, Western observers  have hunted for signs of the end of the revolution's implacable  hostility toward the United States. Signs have been abundant outside the  ruling elite: Virtually the entire lay and much of the clerical  intellectual class have damned theocracy as illegitimate, and  college-educated youth (Iran has the best-educated public of any big  Middle Eastern state) overwhelmingly threw themselves into the  pro-democracy Green Movement that shook the regime in the summer of  2009.
But at the regime's apex—Supreme  Leader Ali Khamenei, his praetorian Revolutionary Guard Corps, and the  clergy who've remained committed to theocracy—religious ideology and  anti-Americanism have intensified. The planned assassination in Washington was a bold act: The Islamic  Republic's terrorism has struck all over the globe, and repeatedly in  Europe, but it has spared the U.S. homeland because even under Khomeini  Iran feared outraged American power. What did Iran's top officials know about the  Washington assassination plan? Was it just another in a series of  half-baked plots by U.S. radicals led on by the FBI, or a bigger  international incident? Evan Perez has details on The News Hub.
Iran truck-bombed the U.S. Embassy and Marine  barracks in Lebanon during Reagan's presidency, calculating correctly  that the Lebanese operational cover deployed in that attack would be  sufficient to confuse U.S. retaliation. But the accidental shoot-down of  Iran-Air flight 655 in July 1988 by the USS Vincennes unquestionably  contributed to Tehran's determination that the White House had allied  itself with Saddam Hussein and therefore the Iran-Iraq war was lost. The  perception of American power proved decisive. 
One of the unintended benefits of  America being at the center of Iran's conspiracies is that the U.S. is  often depicted as devilishly powerful. Running against that fear,  however, is another theme of the revolution: America's inability to stop  faithful Iranians from liberating their homeland—the entire Muslim  world—from Western hegemony and cultural debasement. American strength  versus American weakness is a dangerous dance that plays out in the  Islamist mind.
Within Iran, this interplay has led to cycles of terrorism of varying  directness against the U.S. Khamenei, who many analysts have depicted  as a cautious man in foreign affairs, has been a party—probably the  decisive party—to every single terrorist operation Iran has conducted  overseas since Khomeini's death. The once-humble, unremarkable Khamenei—who was given the office of  supreme leader in 1989 by the once-great Don Corleone of clerical  politics, Ali Akbar Hashemi Rafsanjani (who assumed Iran's presidency  that same year)—has become the undisputed ruler of Iran.
It was Khamenei who massively  increased the military and economic power of the Revolutionary Guards  Corps while often playing musical chairs with its leadership. The  supreme leader has turned a fairly consensual theocracy into an  autocracy where all fear the Guards and the Intelligence Ministry, which  is also now under the supreme leader's control. He has squashed  Rafsanjani, his vastly more intelligent, erstwhile ally. He has  brutalized the pro-democracy Green Movement into quiescence. And he has  so far outplayed his independent and stubborn president, Mahmoud  Ahmadinejad, whose populist-nationalist-Islamist pretensions annoy the  supreme leader and outrage many religious conservatives. 
Khamenei's growing power and sense of mission have manifested  themselves abroad. He has unleashed the Guards Corps against the U.S.  and its allies in Iraq and Afghanistan. As the Treasury Department  recently revealed, Tehran has ongoing ties to al Qaeda. These date back  at least a decade, as the 9/11 Commission Report depicted Iranian  complicity in the safe travel of al Qaeda operatives and chronicled al  Qaeda contact with the Lebanese Hezbollah and Tehran's éminence grise to  Arab Islamic radicals, the late Imad Mughniyeh.
                 
Matt Kaminski on Iranian plots to bomb the Saudi and Israeli embassies in Washington D.C. Many in Washington and Europe would like to  believe that the assassination plot in Washington came from a "faction"  within the Iranian government—that is, that Khamenei didn't order the  killing and Washington should therefore be cautious in its response. But  neither this analysis nor the policy recommendation is compelling.
 
 
 
 
Lord help Qasim Soleimani—the man who  likely has control over the Revolutionary Guards' elite dark-arts Qods  Force, which apparently orchestrated this assassination scheme—if he  didn't clear the operation with Khamenei. He will lose his job and  perhaps his life. For 20 years, Khamenei has been constructing a  political system that is now more submissive to him than revolutionary  Iran was to Khomeini. 
And for 20 years the U.S. has sent mixed messages to the supreme  leader. Under both Democratic and Republican presidents, the U.S. has  tried to reach out to Iran, to engage it in dialogue that would lead  away from confrontation. For Khamenei such attempts at engagement have  been poisonous, feeding his profound fear of a Western cultural invasion  and the destruction of Islamic values. This deeply offensive message of peace has alternated with  American-led wars against Iraq and Afghanistan. These wars spooked  Tehran, radiating American strength for a time, but such visions ebbed. 
Khamenei probably approved a strike in  Washington because he no longer fears American military might. Iran's  advancing nuclear-weapons program has undoubtedly fortified his spine,  as American presidents have called it "unacceptable" yet done nothing  about it. And neither George W. Bush nor Barack Obama retaliated against  Iran's murderous missions in Iraq and Afghanistan. 
President Obama has clearly shown he wants no part—or any Israeli  part—in a preventive military strike against Iran's nuclear sites. And  Mr. Obama has pulled almost all U.S. troops out of Iraq and clearly  wants to do the same in Afghanistan. Many Americans may view that as a  blessing, but it is also clearly a sign that Washington no longer has  the desire to maintain hegemony in the Middle East. 
That's an invitation to someone like Khamenei to push further, to  attack both America and Iran's most detested Middle Eastern rival, the  virulently anti-Shiite Saudi Arabia. In the Islamic Republic's  conspiracy-laden world, the Saudis are part of the anti-Iranian American  Arab realm, which is currently trying to down Iran's close ally, Bashar  al-Assad's Syria, and squash the Shiites of Bahrain. Blowing up the  Saudi ambassador in Washington would be an appealing counterstroke  against the two foreign forces that Khamenei detests most. 
The Obama administration will be  tempted to respond against Iran with further unilateral and multilateral  sanctions. More sanctions aren't a bad idea—targeted sanctions against  the Revolutionary Guards and the sale of gasoline made from Iranian  crude can hurt Tehran financially. But they will not scare it. The White  House needs to respond militarily to this outrage. If we don't, we are  asking for it.
In the 1980s and '90s, the U.S. failed to take Secretary of State  George Shultz's wise counsel after Khomeini's minions bombed us in  Lebanon. We didn't make terrorism a casus belli, instead treating it as a  crime, only lobbing a few missiles at Afghan rock huts and a Sudanese  pharmaceutical plant. But we should treat it as a casus belli. The price  we will pay now will surely be less than the price we will pay later. 
Mr. Gerecht, a former Central Intelligence Agency officer, is a senior fellow at the Foundation for Defense of Democracies.
Source: http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052970203914304576627160079958084.html?mod=googlenews_wsj
Iran Says Saudi Plot Defendant Belongs to Exile Group
Iran  injected a new twist on Tuesday into the week-old American accusation  of an Iranian plot to assassinate the Saudi ambassador to Washington,  asserting that one of the defendants really belongs to an outlawed and  exiled opposition group. The defendant, Gholam Shakuri, identified by  the Justice Department as an operative of the elite Quds Force of Iran’s  Revolutionary Guards Corps, is actually a “key member” of the Mujahedeen Khalq, Iran’s Mehr News Agency reported. 
The agency did not explain the group’s possible motive but left the  implication that the plot was a bogus scheme meant to frame and  ostracize Iran. It said Mr. Shakuri, who is at large, had last been seen in Washington  and in Camp Ashraf, the group’s enclave in Iraq. “The person in question  has been traveling to different countries under the names of Ali  Shakuri/Gholam Shakuri/Gholam-Hussein Shakuri by using fake passports  including forged Iranian passports,” Mehr said.
American officials did not immediately comment on the Mehr report. Mark  Toner, a State Department spokesman, reiterated the American view in a  daily press briefing in Washington that “this was a serious breach of  international law and that Iran needs to be held accountable.” The  opposition group itself dismissed the Mehr report as nonsense.  Shahin Gobadi, a spokesman, said in an e-mailed response that “this is a  well-known tactic that has been used by the mullahs in the past 30  years where they blame their crimes on their opposition for double  gains.”        
The group, also known as the National Council of Resistance of Iran, is  regarded by Iran as a violent insurgent organization with a history of  assassinations and sabotage aimed at overthrowing the Islamic government  that took power in 1979. While the group claims to have renounced  violence a decade ago, it is still classified as a foreign terrorist  organization by the State Department, but not by Britain or the European  Union. It maintains a headquarters in Paris.        
Mehr said it had learned what it called the new information about Mr.  Shakuri from Interpol but was not more specific. Calls and e-mailed  queries to Interpol headquarters in Lyon, France, were not immediately  returned. If Mr. Shakuri were in fact a member of the opposition group, it would  be an embarrassing turn for the United States, which announced the  suspected plot with some fanfare a week ago in a televised news  conference by Attorney General Eric. H. Holder Jr., who said American  investigators believed high officials in Iran’s government were  responsible.
The Justice Department has accused Mr. Shakuri and Mansour J. Arbabsiar,  a naturalized Iranian-American citizen from Corpus Christi, Tex., of  conspiring to hire assassins from a Mexican drug gang for $1.5 million  to kill Saudi Arabia’s ambassador to the United States. American officials have acknowledged the suspected plot sounds hard to  believe but asserted they have the evidence to back it up. Saudi Arabia,  apparently accepting the accusation as fact, has accused Iran of a  “dastardly” scheme, and other American allies say they regard the  accusation seriously.         
Britain has gone farther than others, announcing on Tuesday it had  ordered British banks to impound any assets of the two defendants as  well as three other Iranian officials in the Quds Force suspected of  running the plot. Since Mr. Holder’s news conference, Iran has sought to counter the  accusation with a mix of verbal counterattacks, accusing the Obama  administration of concocting the plot to divert attention from other  problems, conspiring with Israel to malign Iran and driving a wedge into  Iran’s relationship with Saudi Arabia.
Iran scholars in the United States have said the suspected plot, while sounding far-fetched and amateurish, is not implausible. Ray Takeyh,  a senior fellow for Middle Eastern Studies at the Council on Foreign  Relations in Washington, said it could reflect an attempt by Iran’s  security forces to retaliate for what they view as American-hatched  plots carried out within Iran. “It is suggesting, if true, that they’re trying to meet pressure with  pressure,” he said. “From their perspective, the United States is  involved in Iran’s internal affairs.” 
Source: http://www.nytimes.com/2011/10/19/world/middleeast/iran-says-saudi-plot-defendant-belongs-to-exile-group.html
Court Filings Assert Iran Had Link to 9/11 Attacks
Two defectors from Iran’s  intelligence service have testified that Iranian officials had  “foreknowledge of the 9/11 attacks,” according to a court filing  Thursday in a federal lawsuit in Manhattan that seeks damages for Iran’s  “direct support for, and sponsorship of, the most deadly act of  terrorism in American history.” One of the defectors also claimed that Iran was involved in planning the  attacks, the filing said. The defectors’ identities and testimony were  not revealed in the filing but were being submitted to a judge under  seal, said lawyers who brought the original suit against Iran on behalf  of families of dozens of 9/11 victims. 
The suit’s allegation that Iran had foreknowledge of the attacks is hard  to assess fully, given that the defectors’ testimony is being filed  under seal. The suit contends that Iran and Hezbollah, the Lebanese militant  organization with close ties to Tehran, helped Al Qaeda in planning the  attacks on Sept. 11, 2001, and in facilitating the hijackers’ training  and travel. After the attacks, the suit contends, Iran and Hezbollah  helped Qaeda operatives escape, providing some with a safe haven in  Iran.
The question of an Iranian connection to 9/11 was raised by the national  9/11 commission and has long been debated. Al Qaeda, which adheres to a  radical Sunni theology, routinely denounces the Shiite sect that holds  power in Iran, and the terrorist network’s branch in Iraq has often made  Shiites targets of bombings. But intelligence officials have long  believed there has been limited, wary cooperation between Al Qaeda and  Iran against the United States as a common enemy.
The lawsuit also names as defendants Iranian officials and ministries,  Hezbollah and Al Qaeda, among others. The families’ lawyers have asked  for a default judgment against the defendants, which have not mounted a  defense. Even if there were such a judgment, legal experts say it would  not be easy to collect monetary damages. In their court papers, the lawyers assert that Imad Mugniyah, as the  military chief of Hezbollah, was a terrorist agent for Iran, and that he  traveled to Saudi Arabia in 2000 to help with preparations for the 9/11  attacks.
Mr. Mugniyah, who was killed in 2008, had been accused by American  officials of planning a series of major terrorist attacks and  kidnappings, including the 1983 bombings of the United States Embassy  and Marine barracks in Beirut, Lebanon. The 9/11 commission report  said there was “strong evidence that Iran facilitated the transit of Al  Qaeda members into and out of Afghanistan before 9/11, and that some of  these were future 9/11 hijackers.” The report also said there was  circumstantial evidence that senior Hezbollah operatives were closely  tracking the travel of some of the hijackers into Iran in November 2000. 
But the commission said that it had “found no evidence that Iran or  Hezbollah was aware of the planning for what later became the 9/11  attack,” and that the “topic requires further investigation by the U.S.  government.” Thomas E. Mellon Jr., a lawyer for the families, said the suit, first  brought in Washington in 2002 and later moved to Manhattan, sought to do  that investigation.
Ellen Saracini, whose husband, the United Airlines pilot Victor J.  Saracini, was killed when his plane was hijacked and flown into the  World Trade Center, said she became involved with the suit because she  wanted answers. “We now know,” she said, “who assisted Al Qaeda — Iran  did — and we want our American justice system to find Iran accountable.”         
The lawyers’ filing included reports of 10 specialists on Iran and  terrorism, including former 9/11 commission staff members and ex-C.I.A.  officers. “These experts make it clear that 9/11 depended upon Iranian  assistance to Al Qaeda in acquiring clean passports and visas to enter  the United States,” Mr. Mellon said.        
But the expert reports do not in most cases seem to go as far as the   defectors in contending Iran had foreknowledge of the attacks.The filing  says the defectors worked in Iran’s Ministry of Information  and Security “in positions that gave them access to sensitive  information regarding Iran’s state sponsorship of terrorism.” It says  they have reason to fear for the safety of themselves and their families  “should their identities and the content of their testimony be revealed  publicly.”
Source: http://www.nytimes.com/2011/05/20/world/middleeast/20terror.html?_r=1&ref=world
Tehran’s Foes, Unfairly Maligned
AS the United States tries to halt Iran’s nuclear program and prepares  to withdraw troops from Iraq, American voters should ask why the Obama  administration has bent to the will of Tehran’s mullahs and their Iraqi  allies on a key issue: the fate of 3,400 unarmed members of the exiled  Iranian opposition group, Mujahedeen Khalq, who are living in Camp  Ashraf, north of Baghdad. The government of Prime Minister Nuri Kamal al-Maliki, a Shiite Muslim,  has brazenly murdered members of the Mujahedeen Khalq. Mr. Maliki  justifies his attacks by noting that the group is on the United States’ official list of foreign terrorist organizations. 
In April, Iraqi forces entered Camp Ashraf and fatally shot or ran over  34 residents and wounded hundreds more. Mr. Maliki has now given the  Mujahedeen Khalq until Dec. 31 to close the camp and disperse its  residents throughout Iraq. Without forceful American and United Nations intervention to protect the  camp’s residents and a decision by the State Department to remove  Mujahedeen Khalq’s official designation as a terrorist group, an even  larger attack on the camp or a massacre of its residents elsewhere in  Iraq is likely.
This situation is the direct result of the State Department’s  misconceived attempt to cripple the Mujahedeen Khalq by labeling it a  terrorist organization, beginning in 1997. At the time, I was director  of the Federal Bureau of Investigation. I concluded that this was part  of a fruitless political ploy to encourage a dialogue with Tehran. There  was no credible evidence then, nor has there been since, that the group  poses any threat to the United States. Tragically, the State Department’s unjustified terrorist label makes the  Mujahedeen Khalq’s enemies in Tehran and Baghdad feel as if they have a  license to kill and to trample on the written guarantees of protection  given to the Ashraf residents by the United States. And Tehran’s  kangaroo courts also delight in the terrorist designation as an excuse  to arrest, torture and murder anyone who threatens the mullahs’ regime.
For better or worse, the State Department often makes politically  motivated designations, which is why the Irish Republican Army was never  put on the list (despite the F.B.I.’s recommendation). Similarly,  Moktada al-Sadr’s Mahdi Army in Iraq and the Haqqani terrorist network  in Pakistan — both of which have murdered many Americans — have  successfully avoided being listed. During my tenure as F.B.I. director, I refused to allocate bureau  resources to investigating the Mujahedeen Khalq, because I concluded,  based on the evidence, that the designation was unfounded and that the  group posed no threat to American security.
I did, however, object to the State Department’s politically motivated  insistence that the F.B.I. stop fingerprinting Iranian wrestlers, and  intelligence operatives posing as athletes, when the wrestlers were  first invited to the United States in a good-will gesture. And the  F.B.I. did try, unsuccessfully, to focus the Clinton administration on  the threat posed by the Iranian Revolutionary Guard Corps, which  exported terrorism and committed or orchestrated acts of war against  America, including the 1996 Khobar Towers attack in Saudi Arabia, which  killed 19 American airmen. We learned from prosecutors on Tuesday that a  unit of the corps plotted to murder the Saudi ambassador in Washington.         
Some critics call the Mujahedeen Khalq a dangerous cult. But since  leaving office, I have carefully reviewed the facts and stand by the  conclusion that the Mujahedeen Khalq is not a terrorist organization and  should be removed from the State Department’s list immediately. Many of  the most knowledgeable and respected terrorism experts in the world  have come to the same conclusion. (Though I have on some occasions  received speaker’s fees or travel expenses from sympathizers of the  Mujahedeen Khalq, my objective analysis as a career law enforcement  officer is the only basis for my conclusions.)        
Britain and the European Union have already acted on the  evidence,  removing the Mujahedeen Khalq from their sanctions lists in 2008 and  2009, respectively. The British court reviewing the Mujahedeen Khalq  dossier went so far as to call the terrorist designation “perverse.” The  Mujahedeen Khalq is now led by a charismatic and articulate woman,  Maryam Rajavi, who enjoys significant support in European governments.  In 2001, the Mujahedeen Khalq renounced violence and ceased military  action against the Iranian regime. And in 2003, the group voluntarily  handed over its weapons to American forces in Iraq and has since  provided the United States with valuable intelligence regarding Iran’s  nuclear weapons program. By the State Department’s own guidelines,  Mujahedeen Khalq should be delisted.
Yet Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton and the White House have  balked at delisting the group and protecting its members at Camp Ashraf,  despite bipartisan calls for action. Incredibly, as our duty to protect the camp’s residents reaches a  critical stage, the State Department offers only silence and delay. The  secretary is still “reviewing” the designation nearly 15 months after  the United States Court of Appeals in Washington ruled that the  department had broken the law by failing to accord the Mujahedeen Khalq  due process when listing it as a terrorist group. Mrs. Clinton has not  complied with the court’s order  to indicate “which sources she regards as sufficiently credible” to  justify this life-threatening designation. The reason is clear: there is  no evidence. 
Louis J. Freeh was director of the F.B.I. from 1993 to 2001. 
Source: http://www.nytimes.com/2011/10/13/opinion/tehrans-foes-unfairly-maligned.html
How Iran Acquired A Stealth Drone

 
It seems that Iran has acquired a U.S. stealth drone which was illegally flying within its airspace. A secret U.S. surveillance drone that went  missing last week in western Afghanistan appears to have crashed in  Iran, in what may be the first case of such an aircraft ending up in the  hands of an adversary. Iran’s news agencies asserted that the  nation’s defense forces brought down the drone, which the Iranian  reports said was an RQ-170 stealth aircraft. It is designed to penetrate  enemy air defenses that could see and possibly shoot down  less-sophisticated Predator and Reaper drones.
U.S.  officials acknowledged Sunday that a drone had been lost near the  Iranian border, but they declined to say what kind of aircraft was  missing. The first reports of the drone crash came from  Iran’s semiofficial Fars News Agency. “Iran’s army has downed an  intruding RQ-170 American drone in eastern Iran,” the Arabic-language  al-Alam state television network quoted an unnamed source as saying.  “The spy drone, which has been downed with little damage, was seized by  the armed forces.” Reuters wrote that U.S. official says no sign Iran shot down drone. Of course Iran never claimed that it shot down the drone so this is a non-denial. Iran just "downed" the drone by some electronic warfare means. 
The question now is "How did they do it?" Here are my speculative ideas on that. As this is a stealth drone detecting it is  the first problem. A usual monostatic radar where the emitter of the  radar beam and the receiver which catches the echo from the airplane are  in the same place would not find the drone. The drone's form and its  echo reducing coating would scatter the beam too much. But by using bistatic radar  where the emitter is separated from the receiver(s) by a distance that  is comparable to the expected target distance even stealthy flying  objects can be detected. 
Detection by electronic means is also be  possible if the drone is receiving and sending information via its  satellite link and not just silently following a preprogrammed  flightpath. While the signal from the drone to the satellite is send in a  highly directional beam a plane equipped with the necessary radios  flying above the drone and near the line of sight between the satellite  and the drone should be able to locate it. If the drone used its own  radar to "look around" Iran the recently delivered Russian Avtobaza "anti-stealth" system will likely have detected it. 
The Iranians says it did not shoot the drone down but "downed" it with little damage. I think they may have actually landed it. This RQ-170 drone type  became known as the "Beast of Kandahar" when it first observed there  four years ago. Flying U.S. stealth drones in Afghanistan is obvioulsy  necessary to escape the Taliban's radars (not). The drone is quite big  with an estimated wingspan of 65 feet (20m) to 90 feet (27m) and a  takeoff weight of some 10,000 lbs. 
When the drone is in the air it is  controlled via a satellite link from a remote operating station. But  during start and landing the drone is piloted via line-of-sight radio by  an operator near the start or landing field. This is necessary because  the remote satellite link has a delay of several hundred milliseconds  which is just too much latency to correct wind sheer and other problems  during takeoff and landing.
What the Iranians seem to have done is to  take over the drone's line-of-sight control. This after electronically  disrupting its satellite link. Disrupting the satellite link alone would  not be enough as the drone would then have followed some preprogrammed  action like simply flying back to where it came from. With the  line-of-sight control active a satellite link disruption would not lead  to a preprogrammed abort.
We can reasonably assume that the Iranians  have some station near Kandahar Airport that is listening to all  military radio traffic there. They had four years to analyze the radio  signaling between the ground operator and such drones. Even if that  control signal is encrypted pattern recognition during many flights over  four years would have given them enough information to break the code.
Iran will take care to hide the drone well  as the U.S. would likely try to destroy it if its location would be  known. When the Chinese collected parts of a stealth F-117 stealth plane  that was downed in Yugoslavia the U.S. bombed their embassy in  Belgrade.
Having acquired an only slightly damaged  state of the art stealth drone Iran will be able to copy a lot of its  technology as well as to find new measures against such drones. There  will also bee a lot of interests from other sides into this technology.  We can bet that the military attaches from the Russian, Chinese, Indian,  Pakistani and other embassies are already queuing up in the Iranian  Defense Ministry and ready to make some very lucrative offers.
China, Russia Want to  Inspect Downed U.S. Drone 
An informed source in the Iranian military has said that Russian  and Chinese officials have asked for permission to inspect the U.S. spy  drone that was recently downed by the Iranian Armed Forces,  Nasimonline.ir reported on Wednesday. On  Sunday, an unidentified Iranian military source said that the Armed  Forces of the Islamic Republic had downed an advanced RQ-170 unmanned  U.S. spy plane, which had violated the country’s airspace along the  eastern border. There are unconfirmed reports that Iran may put the drone on public display.
According  to the Washington Post, the RQ-170 drone has been used by the CIA for  highly sensitive missions into other nations’ airspace, including months  of surveillance of the compound in Pakistan in which Al-Qaeda leader  Osama bin Laden was allegedly hiding before he was killed in an attack  by Special Operations forces on May 1, 2011. On  Monday, U.S. military officials said that they are concerned that  Tehran may now have an opportunity to acquire information about the  classified surveillance drone program, AP reported. 
U.S.  officials considered conducting a covert mission inside Iran to  retrieve or destroy the stealth drone but ultimately concluded such a  secret operation wasn’t worth the risk of provoking a more explosive  clash with Tehran, a U.S. official said, the Wall Street Journal  reported on Wednesday.
Source: http://www.tehrantimes.com/politics/93294-china-russia-want-to-inspect-downed-us-drone
Meet The Russian Avtobaza — Iran's Possible Drone Killer
Speculation is running rampant after Iran claimed to have shot down a  US RQ-170 surveillance drone Sunday, and while Tehran has yet to show  proof, it appears their announcement coincides with the delivery of this  piece of equipment. Stephen Trimble from Flight Global reports Russia delivered the Avtobaza ground-based electronic intelligence and jamming system to Iran six-weeks ago. While  most weapons deliveries to Iran are blocked, a jamming system like the  Avtobaza is allowed because it's a passively defensive machine "designed  to jam side-looking and fire control radars on aircraft and manipulate  the guidance and control systems of incoming enemy missiles." Possibly  what NATO regulators didn't plan on was the jammer's potential as a  communications link allowing UAVs to be controlled remotely. Whether that's how it was used Sunday is another matter. 
Source: http://articles.businessinsider.com/2011-12-05/news/30476929_1_jamming-tehran-iran-six-weeks#ixzz1foT7HHl6
Russia, Iran: Brothers in Arms
 
With the Iran-Iraq War winding down in 1987, Ayatollah Ruhollah   Khomeini  reportedly told a roomful of ambassadors: “Today Iran is so   isolated  that we can count the number of our friends on one hand.” Two   decades  later, with the UN Security Council weighing punitive options   against  it, Iran remains isolated but can count on at least one   supporter among  its neighbors: Russia.
The burgeoning   partnership between Iran and Russia threatens to unravel  UN efforts to   squeeze Tehran to forego its nuclear ambitions. A  veto-wielding member   of the Security Council, Russia has thus far  resisted efforts to  punish  the Iranians for forging ahead with their  enrichment activities  and  ignoring a raft of UN resolutions. Of course,  Moscow is motivated  by  fears of losing lucrative business opportunities,  not to mention  an  important ally in the region. Bilateral trade  eclipsed $2 billion  in  2005, and as this new Backgrounder explains,  Russia now supplies  the  bulk of Iran’s conventional arms. That includes a  proposed  air-defense  system that would give Iran a credible deterrent  against  any American  or Israeli move to strike its nuclear  installations.  Russia also built a  light-water nuclear power plant at  Bushehr, an $8  billion project set  to go online as early as next year   (GlobalSecurity.org).
Brenda  Shaffer of the Washington Institute  for Near East Policy calls  Russia  and Iran “partners in need,”  motivated mainly by three ends:  curbing  U.S. influence, maintaining a  multipolar world, and undermining  U.S.  efforts to sideline both states  (take, for example, the new   Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan pipeline which skirts  both Iran and Russia). Yet   Michael Eisenstadt, writing in Arms  Control Today, says cooperation   between the two countries “is driven  as much by fear and mistrust as it   is by opportunism and shared  interests.” Regardless, closer Russia-Iran   ties pose challenges to  peace in the Middle East, analysts say,   especially if Iran goes  nuclear over the next decade.
Russia  maintains Tehran’s nuclear  program is peaceful and poses no  threat to  Iran’s neighbors (Reuters),  much less to the United States.  Yet Mohamed  ElBaradei, director  general of the International Atomic  Energy Agency,  says his agency is  still “unable to confirm the peaceful  nature of  Iran´s nuclear  program.” Moscow continues to voice its  opposition to  sanctions not  only out of economic interest but also on  the grounds  that, as an  instrument of diplomacy, their track record is  suspect.
The   most recent draft proposal before the Security Council calls for a  ban   on Iranian students of nuclear physics from studying abroad and  denies   visas to Iranian nuclear scientists (IANS). Yet Daniel Pipes,   director  of the Middle East Forum, calls these efforts “feeble”  (NYSun).  Mohsen  Sazegara, a U.S.-based Iranian dissident, suggests  tough talk  and  smart sanctions are in order. “The most important thing  for the   international community is to talk to the regime of Iran  firmly and   strongly,” he told CFR.org. Meanwhile, CFR Senior Fellow  Max Boot says   only sanctions against Iranian exports of crude would  cripple the regime   in Tehran but that “would require a concerted  international effort.   Don’t hold your breath” (LAT). Instead, he  proposes a “soft” approach   that includes, among other things,  reestablishing an American embassy in   Tehran in exchange for a  suspension of Iran’s nuclear program.
Source: http://www.cfr.org/publication/11873/russia_iran.html
Russia and the Development of the Iranian Missile Program

 
Military-technological cooperation between Russia and the Islamic    Republic of Iran constitutes a qualitative leap from the previous    occasional military liaisons between the USSR and Iran during the era of    the Shah, which started at the end of 1967.   Shortly after the   Islamic revolution in Iran (February 1979), the USSR  tried to arrange   military cooperation between the countries. However  Ayatollah Ruhollah   Khomeini undermined these attempts in every possible  way, as they   opposed his concept of an Islamic regime in the country,  which affirmed   the necessity of struggling against "the Big Satan" (the  USA) and  "the  Small Satan" (the USSR).
In the 1980s and 1990s, the  imposition  of an embargo on deliveries of  arms for the Iranian army by  Europe and  America compelled Teheran to  intensively pursue military  purchases from  the Soviet Union, and later  from Russia. In 1988 –  1992, Iran procured  $2.2 billion worth of Russian weapons and  combat  equipment. Iran is  the only state in the Middle East today whose   cooperation in the  military sphere allows Russia both to satisfy its   economic interests  and to strengthen its influence in the region. As  for  Iran's interests -  military cooperation with Russia gives it  access to  modern arms,  outflanking the Western embargo.
 Russian Secrets from Pyongyang
Interaction   in the spheres of the design, creation and delivery of  equipment   related to rocket technology is one of the priorities of the    military-technological cooperation between Russia and Iran. The military    doctrine of the Islamic republic is based on usage of precision    missiles such as the "Shahab" and "Fateh" as vehicles for the delivery    of chemical, biological and - prospectively - nuclear strikes.
Experts   from North Korea, Libya and Russia have cooperated from time to  time   with Iranian missile scientists on the creation of warhead parts.    Creation of the Iranian ballistic missiles began after the start of    batch production of artillery rockets such as the "Ogab" and "Mushak"    (having a small radius - from 50 to 160 km respectively). With    assistance of North Korean experts, in 1988 Iranians started to    modernize "Scud" missiles according to the engineering specifications    provided to Pyongyang by Russia. However, in 1993 Teheran stopped    manufacturing "Scuds" and started creation of its own "Shahab," the main    components of which are based on the Russian analogues.
In Spite of Washington
In   parallel with establishing its own ability to manufacture missiles,    Iran attempted to import missile equipment from Russia. The first    contract for delivery of such Russian equipment to Tehran was signed in    November 1989 (a half year after Khomeini`s death). Iran received two    anti-aircraft S-200VE "Vega" missile systems. The following military    agreements signed in the nineties, which included various kinds of    missile technologies and equipment, were not fulfilled because of    Tehran`s financial difficulties. The next roadblock to the promotion of    the Iran-Russia military cooperation was the signing of the    Russian-American Memorandum of Gore – Chernomirdin in June 1995. Moscow    committed to cease all military deliveries to Teheran by the end of   1999  and also to curtail any cooperation with Islamic Republic in this    sphere.
However, it took Russia less than a year to go back on   its word  and to abandon the Memorandum unilaterally.  "Common Russian   and Iranian  geopolitical interests" – such was the thesis explaining   the Kremlin's  reasoning for the decision. Contracts and agreements on   military  deliveries, including missile technologies, totaling more than   $4  billion, were signed during Russian Minister of Defense Igor   Sergeev`s  visit to Iran in December 2000.
Missiles for Ayatollas
Russia   is considered to be the main partner in the modernization program  of   the Iranian armed forces. Consequently, the Islamic republic is the    world's third largest client of the Russian arms industry, after China    and India. Recently, Iran purchased Russian-made anti-aircraft missile    complexes of a large radius, S-300PMY and S-300PMY-2 (SA-10 Grumble),    and anti-aircraft complexes of a small radius, Tor - Ì1 (SA-15    Gauntlet). Iran has declared readiness to purchase both anti-aircraft    complexes Buk- Ì1 (SA-11 Gadfly) and tactical short-range ballistic    missiles Iskander-E. Representatives of the Islamic Republic have shown    interest also in the surface-to-air gun/missile systems Tunguska-M and    Pantsyr (modifications of SA-19 Grison) produced by the Russian    military-industrial complex.
The "Shahab" Project
According   to the Tehran newspaper "Aftabe Yazd," in May, 2002 Iran began  batch   production of the  "Shahab -3" missile. This missile is capable  of   reaching any target in Israel and in most countries of the Middle  East,   having a range of 1500 km and carrying a warhead of up to one ton.    Since its completion, Iranians have been modernizing it to increase its    range.  The " Shahab -3" was publicly shown for the first time during    the military parade in honor of the Day of the Iranian Army on April  18,   2003.  The fourth generation of "Shahab" entered the final testing    stage in 2000, having a range of 2000-2200 km. This missile already    constitutes a threat to European targets.
In 2001, the Western   military periodical press noted that Iranian  missile developers had   received an order for the fifth -  intercontinental – "Shahab" model,   with a range of up to 10 thousand  km., capable of hitting the American   East Coast.
The sudden unexplained death in July 2003 of the   leading Iranian  engineer behind the "Shahab" missiles, A. M. Mehmand,   hampered the  development of the project. The same year Tehran   officially announced  its suspension of this missile program to   demonstrate its "defensive  character". However, in April, 2005 the   chief of Israeli military  intelligence, Aharon Zeevi Farkash, claimed   that Iran continues  development of the fourth and fifth generations of   the "Shahab" ("Ediot  Ahronot", 29.04.05).
The CIA has  repeatedly  produced reports on the full-scale Russian  assistance in  all stages of  the Iranian missile program. Under US  pressure, Russia  has promised  more than once to minimize its  involvement. Nevertheless,  western and  Israeli sources claim that such  statements are just empty  promises.
Targeting Washington? 
The  Iranian  missile program is considered, first and foremost, to be   threatening  Israel. This opinion is based on Tehran's proclaimed   strategic goal -  destruction of the Jewish state. It was literally   confirmed most  recently by one of the closet colleagues of the religious   leader  Ayatollah Ali Khamenai - his personal representative at the   "Shahids   Fund" – Mohammad Hassan Rahimiyan. He declared that Iranian   Shahids  are ready to continue the struggle for destruction of Israel and    America (Iranian news agency " Fars ", April 20, 2005).
At the   same time, the head of Israeli military intelligence is convinced  that   the USA is the main target of the Iranian missiles., This is  obvious,   in his opinion, because to attack Israel Iran does not need to  develop   missiles with a range of 10 thousand km. since the distance  between  the  two countries is hardly more than 1000 km. Thus, participation  of  Moscow in the Iranian missile program poses the  greatest threat not  to  Israel, but to Russia's traditional geopolitical  opponent - the   United States of America.
The Russian Shield of Tehran
Iran   recently purchased modern anti-aircraft defense complexes in  Russia,   which are intended for protection of the major Iranian nuclear  objects   from the American or Israeli attack. Islamic Republic has  received   several upgraded S-300 complexes and that became a reason for  serious   American diplomatic demarches. To soften the disagreements,  Moscow   refused to sell a large batch of portable anti-aircraft missiles  "Igla -   1Ì" (SA-18 Grouse) to Tehran. Iran had to buy Chinese "Tzianvay"  -   made by the Russian license on the basis of the "Igla".
Iranian Future Purchase List
Tehran mulls the procurement in 2005-2006 of several Russian military products:
-   anti-ship missiles "Mosquito" of ground and air basing,
-     anti-ship missile complexes "Yahont-E" (according to the Russian    laws the export variant of both missiles it is not capable to carry    nuclear warheads),
-   Cruise missiles "Club",
-   anti-radar missiles with extended range,
-     Guided missiles to increase the efficiency of the Russian-made Sy-24    ÌÊ bombers constituting the basis of the Iranian Air Forces,
-   Modern air-to-air missiles for Russian-made MiG-29 delivered to the Iranian Army.
Source: http://www.axisglobe.com/article.asp?article=150
Iran's Sunburn Missile System
 
Iran's Awesome Nuclear Anti-Ship Missile The Weapon That Could Defeat The US In The Gulf
A word to the reader: The following paper is so shocking that, after    preparing the initial draft, I didn't want to believe it myself, and    resolved to disprove it with more research. However, I only succeeded in    turning up more evidence in support of my thesis. And I repeated this    cycle of discovery and denial several more times before finally   deciding  to go with the article. I believe that a serious writer must   follow the  trail of evidence, no matter where it leads, and report   back. So here  is my story. Don't be surprised if it causes you to   squirm. Its purpose  is not to make predictions history makes fools of   those who claim to  know the future but simply to describe the peril   that awaits us in the  Persian Gulf. By awakening to the extent of that   danger, perhaps we can  still find a way to save our nation and the   world from disaster. If we  are very lucky, we might even create an   alternative future that holds  some promise of resolving the monumental   conflicts of our time. --MG
Last July, they dubbed it operation   Summer Pulse: a simultaneous  mustering of US Naval forces, world wide,   that was unprecedented.  According to the Navy, it was the first   exercise of its new Fleet  Response Plan (FRP), the purpose of which was   to enable the Navy to  respond quickly to an international crisis. The   Navy wanted to show its  increased force readiness, that is, its   capacity to rapidly move combat  power to any global hot spot. Never in   the history of the US Navy had so  many carrier battle groups been   involved in a single operation. Even  the US fleet massed in the Gulf   and eastern Mediterranean during  operation Desert Storm in 1991, and in   the recent invasion of Iraq,  never exceeded six battle groups. But   last July and August there were  seven of them on the move, each battle   group consisting of a  Nimitz-class aircraft carrier with its full   complement of 7-8 supporting  ships, and 70 or more assorted aircraft.   Most of the activity,  according to various reports, was in the Pacific,   where the fleet  participated in joint exercises with the Taiwanese   navy.
But why so much naval power underway at the same time? What   potential  world crisis could possibly require more battle groups than   were  deployed during the recent invasion of Iraq? In past years, when   the US  has seen fit to "show the flag" or flex its naval muscle, one  or  two  carrier groups have sufficed. Why this global show of power?  The  news  headlines about the joint-maneuvers in the South China Sea  read:  "Saber  Rattling Unnerves China", and: "Huge Show of Force  Worries  Chinese." But  the reality was quite different, and, as we  shall see,  has grave  ramifications for the continuing US military  presence in the  Persian  Gulf; because operation Summer Pulse reflected  a high-level  Pentagon  decision that an unprecedented show of strength  was needed to  counter  what is viewed as a growing threat in the  particular case of  China,  because of Peking's newest Sovremenny-class  destroyers recently  acquired  from Russia.
"Nonsense!" you are  probably thinking.  That's impossible. How could a  few picayune  destroyers threaten the US  Pacific fleet?" Here is where  the story  thickens: Summer Pulse amounted  to a tacit acknowledgement,  obvious to  anyone paying attention, that  the United States has been  eclipsed in  an important area of military  technology, and that this  qualitative  edge is now being wielded by  others, including the Chinese;  because  those otherwise very ordinary  destroyers were, in fact,  launching  platforms for Russian-made 3M-82  Moskit anti-ship cruise  missiles  (NATO designation: SS-N-22 Sunburn), a  weapon for which the US  Navy  currently has no defense. Here I am not  suggesting that the US  status  of lone world Superpower has been  surpassed. I am simply saying  that a  new global balance of power is  emerging, in which other  individual  states may, on occasion, achieve  "an asymmetric advantage"  over the  US. And this, in my view, explains  the immense scale of Summer  Pulse.  The US show last summer of  overwhelming strength was calculated  to  send a message.
The Sunburn Missile
I  was shocked when I  learned the facts about these Russian-made cruise   missiles. The  problem is that so many of us suffer from two common   misperceptions.  The first follows from our assumption that Russia is   militarily weak,  as a result of the breakup of the old Soviet system.   Actually, this is  accurate, but it does not reflect the complexities.   Although the  Russian navy continues to rust in port, and the Russian   army is in  disarray, in certain key areas Russian technology is actually   superior  to our own. And nowhere is this truer than in the vital area   of  anti-ship cruise missile technology, where the Russians hold at  least  a  ten-year lead over the US. The second misperception has to do  with   our complacency in general about missiles-as-weapons probably    attributable to the pathetic performance of Saddam Hussein's Scuds    during the first Gulf war: a dangerous illusion that I will now attempt    to rectify.
Many years ago, Soviet planners gave up trying to   match the US Navy ship  for ship, gun for gun, and dollar for dollar.   The Soviets simply could  not compete with the high levels of US   spending required to build up and  maintain a huge naval armada. They   shrewdly adopted an alternative  approach based on strategic defense.   They searched for weaknesses, and  sought relatively inexpensive ways to   exploit those weaknesses. The  Soviets succeeded: by developing  several  supersonic anti-ship missiles,  one of which, the SS-N-22  Sunburn, has  been called "the most lethal  missile in the world today."
After   the collapse of the Soviet Union the old military establishment  fell   upon hard times. But in the late1990s Moscow awakened to the    under-utilized potential of its missile technology to generate    desperately needed foreign exchange. A decision was made to resuscitate    selected programs, and, very soon, Russian missile technology became a    hot export commodity. Today, Russian missiles are a growth industry    generating much-needed cash for Russia, with many billions in combined    sales to India, China, Viet Nam, Cuba, and also Iran. In the near  future   this dissemination of advanced technology is likely to present  serious   challenges to the US. Some have even warned that the US Navy's  largest   ships, the massive carriers, have now become floating death  traps, and   should for this reason be mothballed.
   
The  Sunburn missile has never seen use in combat, to my knowledge,  which   probably explains why its fearsome capabilities are not more  widely   recognized. Other cruise missiles have been used, of course, on  several   occasions, and with devastating results. During the Falklands  War,   French-made Exocet missiles, fired from Argentine fighters, sunk  the HMS   Sheffield and another ship. And, in 1987, during the  Iran-Iraq war,  the  USS Stark was nearly cut in half by a pair of  Exocets while on  patrol  in the Persian Gulf. On that occasion US Aegis  radar picked up  the  incoming Iraqi fighter (a French-made Mirage),  and tracked its  approach  to within 50 miles. The radar also "saw" the  Iraqi plane turn  about and  return to its base. But radar never  detected the pilot launch  his  weapons. The sea-skimming Exocets came  smoking in under radar and  were  only sighted by human eyes moments  before they ripped into the  Stark,  crippling the ship and killing 37  US sailors.
   
The 1987 surprise attack on the  Stark exemplifies the dangers posed by   anti-ship cruise missiles. And  the dangers are much more serious in the   case of the Sunburn, whose  specs leave the sub-sonic Exocet in the  dust.  Not only is the Sunburn  much larger and faster, it has far  greater  range and a superior  guidance system. Those who have witnessed  its  performance trials  invariably come away stunned. According to one   report, when the  Iranian Defense Minister Ali Shamkhani visited Moscow   in October 2001  he requested a test firing of the Sunburn, which the   Russians were  only too happy to arrange. So impressed was Ali Shamkhani   that he  placed an order for an undisclosed number of the missiles.
   
The Sunburn can deliver a 200-kiloton nuclear payload, or: a 750-pound    conventional warhead, within a range of 100 miles, more than twice  the   range of the Exocet. The Sunburn combines a Mach 2.1 speed (two  times   the speed of sound) with a flight pattern that hugs the deck and    includes "violent end maneuvers" to elude enemy defenses. The missile    was specifically designed to defeat the US Aegis radar defense  system.   Should a US Navy Phalanx point defense somehow manage to  detect an   incoming Sunburn missile, the system has only seconds to  calculate a   fire solution not enough time to take out the intruding  missile. The US   Phalanx defense employs a six-barreled gun that fires  3,000   depleted-uranium rounds a minute, but the gun must have precise    coordinates to destroy an intruder "just in time."
   
The Sunburn's combined supersonic speed and payload size produce    tremendous kinetic energy on impact, with devastating consequences for    ship and crew. A single one of these missiles can sink a large warship,    yet costs considerably less than a fighter jet. Although the Navy has    been phasing out the older Phalanx defense system, its replacement,    known as the Rolling Action Missile (RAM) has never been tested against    the weapon it seems destined to one day face in combat. Implications   For  US Forces in the Gulf
   
The US Navy's only   plausible defense against a robust weapon like the  Sunburn missile is   to detect the enemy's approach well ahead of time,  whether destroyers,   subs, or fighter-bombers, and defeat them before  they can get in  range  and launch their deadly cargo. For this purpose US  AWACs radar  planes  assigned to each naval battle group are kept aloft  on a  rotating  schedule. The planes "see" everything within two hundred   miles of the  fleet, and are complemented with intelligence from  orbiting  satellites.
   
But US naval commanders  operating in the Persian Gulf face serious   challenges that are unique  to the littoral, i.e., coastal, environment. A   glance at a map shows  why: The Gulf is nothing but a large lake, with   one narrow outlet, and  most of its northern shore, i.e., Iran, consists   of mountainous  terrain that affords a commanding tactical advantage  over  ships  operating in Gulf waters. The rugged northern shore makes  for  easy  concealment of coastal defenses, such as mobile missile  launchers,  and  also makes their detection problematic. Although it was  not widely   reported, the US actually lost the battle of the Scuds in  the first  Gulf  War termed "the great Scud hunt" and for similar  reasons.
Source: http://www.rense.com/general59/theSu...ansawesome.htm
Iran - a Threat to the Petrodollar?
 
Iran's decision to set up an oil and associated derivatives market  next   year has generated a great deal of interest. This is primarily  because   of Iran's reported intention to invoice energy contracts in  euros  rather  than dollars. The contention that this could unseat the  dollar's   dominance as the de facto currency for oil transactions may  be   overstated, but this has not stopped many commentators from linking    America's current political disquiet with Iran to the proposed  Iranian   Oil Bourse (IOB). The proposal to set up the IOB was first put  forward   in Iran's Third Development Plan (2000-2005). Mohammad Javad  Assemipour,   who heads the project, has said that the exchange will  strive to make   Iran the main hub for oil deals in the region and that  it should be   operational by March 2006.
Geographically Iran is  ideally located  as it is in close proximity to  major oil importers  such as China,  Europe and India. It is unlikely, in  the short term at  least, that  large numbers of energy traders will  decamp and set up  shop in Iran; a  country which happens to be  categorised as a member of  the "axis of  evil" by the president of the  world's largest  oil-importing country;  the United States. But over time,  Iran could  take some business away  from the two incumbent energy  exchanges, the  International Petroleum  Exchange and the New York  Mercantile Exchange  who both invoice sales  solely in dollars.
Economic motives
If   successful, the IOB will provide Iran with concrete economic benefits    especially if it invoices at least some of its energy contracts in    euros. Iran has around 126 billion barrels of proven oil reserves about    10% of the world's total, and has the world's second largest proven    natural gas reserves.
From an economic perspective, invoicing oil   in euros would be logical  for Iran as trade with the euro zone   countries accounts for 45% of its  total trade. More than a third of   Iran's oil exports are destined for  Europe, while oil exports to the   United States are non existent. The IOB  could create a new euro   denominated crude oil marker, which in turn  would enable GCC nations to   sell some of their oil for euros. The bourse  should lead to greater   levels of foreign direct investment in Iran's  hydrocarbon sector and if   it facilitates futures trading it will give  regional investors an   alternative to investing in their somewhat  overvalued stock markets.
Euro   zone countries alone account for almost a third of Iran's imports  and   currently Iran must exchange dollars earned from hydrocarbon exports    into euros which involves exchange rate risk and transaction costs. The    decline in the dollar against the euro since 2002 - some 26% to date -    has substantially reduced Iran's purchasing power against its main    importing partner. If the decline continues, more states will increase    the percentage of euros vis-à-vis the dollar they hold in reserve and  in   turn this will increase calls both in Iran and the GCC to invoice  at   least some of their oil exports in euros.
A move away from  the  dollar and a strengthening of the euro would  further benefit Iran  as  according to a member of Iran's Parliament  Development Commission,   Mohammad Abasspour, more than half of the  country's assets in the  Forex  Reserve Fund are now euros. It is  primarily the US which stands  to  lose out from any move away from the  petrodollar status quo, it is  the  world's largest importer of oil and a  move away from invoicing oil  in  dollars to euros will undoubtedly have a  negative effect on its   economy. Fewer nations would be willing to hold  the dollar in reserve   which would cause a significant devaluation and  result in the loss   seigniorage revenues. In addition, US energy-related  companies stand to   lose out as they will be unable to participate in the  bourse due to   the longstanding American trade embargo on Iran.
Political considerations
In   the 1970s, not long after the collapse of the gold standard, the US    agreed with Saudi Arabia that Opec oil should be traded in dollars in    effect replacing the gold standard with the oil standard. Since then,    consecutive US governments have been able to print dollar bills and    treasury bonds in order to paper over huge current account and budgetary    deficits, last year's US current account deficit was $646 billion.
Needless   to say, the current petrodollar system greatly benefits the US;  it   enables it to effectively control the world oil market as the dollar    has become the fiat currency for international trade. In terms of its    own oil imports, the US can print dollar bills without exporting    commodities or manufactured goods as these can be paid for by issuing    yet more dollars and T-bills. George Perkovich, of the Washington based    Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, has argued that Iran's    decision to consider invoicing oil sales in euros is "part of a very    intelligent strategy to go on the offense in every way possible and    mobilise other actors against the US."
This viewpoint however,   ignores Iran's economic motives, just because  the decision, if   eventually taken, displeases the US does not mean that  the rationale is   purely political. In light of such sentiments and the  US's current   insistence that Iran be referred to the UN Security Council  Iran must   consider and weigh carefully the economic benefits against  the   potential political costs. Although a matter of conjecture, some    observers consider Iran's threat to the petrodollar system so great that    it could provoke a US military attack on Iran, most likely under the    cover of a preemptive attack on its nuclear facilities, much like the    cover of WMD America used against Iraq.
In November 2000, Iraq   began selling its oil in euros, its Oil For Food  account at the UN was   also transferred into euros and later it converted  its $10 billion UN   held reserve fund into euros. At the time of the  switch many analysts   were surprised and saw it as nothing more than a  political statement,   which in essence it may have been, but the euro has  gained roughly  17%  over the dollar between then and the 2003 US  invasion of Iraq.  Perhaps  unsurprisingly, since the US led occupation of  Iraq its oil  sales are  once again being invoiced in dollars.
The best policy  choice for  Iran would be to proceed with the IOB as  planned as the  economic  advantages of such a bourse are clear, but in  order to  mitigate against  the potentially greater political "threat"  should  provide customers  with flexibility. It would make it much harder  for  America to object to  the new bourse, overtly or covertly, if Iran   allows customers to  decide for themselves which currency to use when   purchasing oil, such  an approach would facilitate for euro purchases   without explicitly  ruling out the dollar.
Source: http://english.aljazeera.net/NR/exer...CDBA08A6E9.htm
Iran and Syria to Form a New anti-American-Israeli Axis
Iranian   President Mohammad Khatami and his Syrian host Bashar  Asad discussed   best ways and means to form a new anti-American-Israeli  axis to take   off pressures Washington and Tel Aviv are putting on them. The   embattled Iranian President confirmed on Friday that the two  countries   would expand their cooperation in the face of mounting  pressures from   the United States and Israel as well as foster peace in  the troubled   region of Middle East. 
The Iranian embattled President arrived in   Damascus early Thursday  morning at the end of an official visit to the   neighbouring kingdom of  Muscat and Oman, the last leg of a weeklong   trip to African Arab nations  of Algeria and Sudan. The unscheduled   visit came at a time that both countries, staunch  opponents of the   United States and Israel, are under increased  international pressures,   accused of derailing peace efforts by providing  military, logistic and   financial assistance to Palestinian and Arab  radical groups opposed  to  peace with the Jewish State.
A new high command is taking  shape,  formed by the Hezbollah, HAMAS, the  Muslim Brotherhood, the  Islamic  Jihad and the Islamic Republic of Iran.  While the Iranian  ruling  ayatollahs are suspected of leaving no stone  unturned in order  to  become a nuclear power, Syria, for its part, is  under international   pressure because of its “satellisation” of Lebanon. 
"These   pressures have always existed and we have to  neutralize them through   our cooperation", the official news agencies of  both countries reported   Khatami as saying in Damascus at the start of  his visit to Syria.
Both   Tehran and Damascus are also suspected by Washington of being  behind   Iraq’s insurgency by leaving their porous borders open to Arab  and   Muslim fighters, known as “jihadis” the remnants of Osama Ben Laden’s “Al-Qa’eda”   network that masterminded the 11 September 2001 attacks on New York  and  Washington D.C. According to Mr. Patrick Seale, a well-known  British  journalist based  in Paris, under the auspices of the Islamic  Republic  of Iran, a new and  “much dangerous” alliance is taking shape  uniting  for the first time  Sunni and Shi’a Muslims in the one hand and   Iranian-backed Lebanese  Hezbollah with hard line Palestinian groups   assisted by Damascus.
“A new high command is taking   shape, formed by Hezbollah, the  Lebanese Shi’a movement that booted out   Israel from southern Lebanon,  HAMAS, the Palestinian resistance   movement that has overshadowed the  Palestinian Authority of Yaser   Arafat as a spearhead of resistance to  Israel, the Muslim Brotherhood,   represented in the occupied territories  by the Islamic Jihad and last but not least,   the Islamic  Republic of Iran”, Mr. Seale, author of a biography of  the  former Syrian  strongman Hafez Asad wrote in the last edition of  “Jeune   Afrique-L’Intelligent” dated 3 to 9 October 2004.
“The   particularity of this new alliance is that first of all, it  abolishes   the Shi’a-Sunni division among Muslims and also reunites Arab    nationalists and islamists under one common flag. There is no more    differences between resistance and jihadis”, he added, quoting one    western intelligence source. Khatami-Bashar talks also focused on ways   of maintaining stability in  the Middle East in view of escalated   Israeli violence and developments  in neighbouring Iraq, where both   Syria and Iran strongly oppose the  presence of American forces.
"In   our meetings we will try to cooperate toward ensuring calm and    stability in the crisis-ridden Middle East region", Khatami said. "The    situation is getting more perilous because of the inhuman and violent    actions of the Zionist regime", he added.
“The visit took place   at a time when great pressure is being exerted  on Syria, as a   significant regional country, by the US, Zionist regime  and some   Western countries”, the official Iranian news agency IRNA  commented,   referring to a recent UN-based measure, sponsored by  Washington and   Paris, urging Syria to pull its 40.000 strong troops out  of   neighbouring Lebanon.
Khatam-Bashar talks also focused on ways of   maintaining stability in  view of escalated Israeli violence and   developments in neighbouring  Iraq. Bowing to the move, Syria returned   around 10.000 soldiers from around Beirut. Syria's support for   Palestinian and Lebanese militant groups and  allegations Damascus was   pursuing weapons of mass destruction were among  key reasons behind U.S.   economic sanctions in May. 
“Political experts call  Khatami’s  visit to Syria as being  “important”, believing that it would   consolidate Syrian position in this  critical situation”, the agency   added, failing to mention Iran’s  growing troubles with the United   States, European Union’s so-called Big  trio of Britain, France and   Germany and the the International Atomic  Energy Agency over its nuclear   projects as well as Iran’s isolation in  both the international   community and the Arab and Muslim worlds.
In the past   two decades, Iran and Syria have been enjoying close  strategic   relations based on their bilateral interests, as Damascus  ruled by a   rival faction of the Ba'th Party, was the only Arab nation  that sided   with non Arab Iran when the now toppled Saddam Hussein  attacked it on   September 1980.This is Khatami’s fourth trip to Syria. Both presidents   condemned the massacre of innocent Muslims in the  occupied Palestine   and called on the international community to react  against the Zionist   regime’s crimes, IRNA reported, as Mr. Khatami  returned to Tehran on   Friday. This was Khatami's fourth official visit to Syria. The younger   Asad came to Tehran three times.
According to Mr. Seale,   American unilateral and systematic  backing of Israel’s hard line Prime   Minister Ariel Sharon in crushing  the Palestinians in the one hand  and  American-Israeli’s menaces against  the Islamic Republic over its   nuclear ambitions are among major factors  “explaining” the new   mobilisation, “better organised and more  determined.
 
Iran Threatens to Stop Gulf Oil if Sanctions Widened
 
Iran threatened on Tuesday to stop the flow of oil through the Strait of Hormuz  if foreign sanctions were imposed on its crude exports over its nuclear  ambitions, a move that could trigger military conflict with economies  dependent on Gulf oil. Western tensions with Iran  have increased since a November 8 report by the U.N. nuclear watchdog  saying Tehran appears to have worked on designing an atomic bomb and may  still be pursuing research to that end. Iran strongly denies this and  says it is developing nuclear energy for peaceful purposes.
Iran has defiantly  expanded nuclear activity despite four rounds of U.N. sanctions meted  out since 2006 over its refusal to suspend sensitive uranium enrichment  and open up to U.N. nuclear inspectors and investigators. Many diplomats and  analysts believe only sanctions targeting Iran's lifeblood oil sector  might be painful enough to make it change course, but Russia and China -  big trade partners of Tehran - have blocked such a move at the United  Nations. Iran's warning on  Tuesday came three weeks after EU foreign ministers decided to tighten  sanctions over the U.N. watchdog report and laid out plans for a  possible embargo of oil from the world's No. 5 crude exporter. 
"If they (the West) impose sanctions on Iran's oil  exports, then even one drop of oil cannot flow from the Strait of  Hormuz," the official Iranian news agency IRNA quoted Iran's First Vice  President Mohammad Reza Rahimi as saying.
The U.S. State Department said it saw "an  element of  bluster" in the threat but underscored that the United States would  support the free flow of oil. "It's another attempt to distract  attention away from  the real issue, which is their continued non-compliance with their  international nuclear obligations," spokesman Mark Toner said. Rahimi's  remarks coincided with a 10-day Iranian naval  exercise in the Strait and nearby waters, a show of military force that  began on Saturday. "Our enemies will give up on their plots against Iran  only if we give them a firm and strong lesson," Rahimi said.
JANUARY MEETING
Countries in the 27-member European Union take 450,000 barrels per day of Iranian oil,  about 18 percent of the Islamic Republic's exports, much of which go to  China and India. EU officials declined to comment on Tuesday. About a third of all sea-borne oil was shipped through  the Strait of Hormuz in 2009, according to the U.S. Energy Information  Administration (EIA), and U.S. warships patrol the area to ensure safe  passage.
Most of the crude exported from Saudi Arabia,  Iran, the United Arab Emirates, Kuwait and Iraq - together with nearly  all the liquefied natural gas from lead exporter Qatar - must slip  through the Strait of Hormuz, a 4-mile wide shipping channel between  Oman and Iran. Iran has also hinted it could hit Israel and U.S.  interests in the Gulf in response to any military strike on its nuclear  installations - a last resort option hinted at by Washington and the  Jewish state.
However, some analysts say Iran would think hard about  sealing off the Strait since it could suffer just as much economically  as Western crude importers, and could kindle war with militarily  superior big powers. "To me, if Iran did that it would be a suicidal act by  the regime. Even its friends would be its enemies," said Phil Flynn,  analyst at PFG Best Research in Chicago.
SAUDI REPLACEMENT?
Industry sources said on Tuesday No. 1 oil exporter  Saudi Arabia and other Gulf OPEC states were ready to replace Iranian  oil if further sanctions halt Iranian crude exports to Europe. Iranian Oil Minister Rostam Qasemi had said that Saudi  Arabia had promised not to replace Iranian crude if sanctions were  imposed. "No promise was made to Iran, it's very unlikely that  Saudi Arabia would not fill a demand gap if sanctions are placed," an  industry source familiar with the matter said.
Gulf delegates from the Organization of the Petroleum  Exporting Countries (OPEC) said an Iranian threat to close the Strait of  Hormuz would harm Tehran as well as the major regional producers that  also use the world's most vital oil export channel. Oil prices spiked on Tuesday, fuelled by fears of  supply disruptions and Iranian naval exercises in a crucial oil shipping  route, with gains capped by simmering euro zone debt concerns.
Brent crude oil futures jumped more than a dollar to  over $109 a barrel after the Iranian threat, but a Gulf OPEC delegate  said the effect could be temporary. "For now, any move in the oil price  is short-term, as I don't see Iran actually going ahead with the  threat," the delegate told Reuters. The industry source said that in the case of EU  sanctions, Iran would most likely export more of its crude to Asia,  while Gulf states would divert their exports to Europe to fill the gap  until the market is balanced again.
A prominent analyst said that if Iran did manage to  shut down the Strait of Hormuz, the ensuing spike in oil prices could  wreck the global economy, so the United States was likely to intervene  to foil such a blockade in the first place. "First, the U.S. will probably not allow Iran to close  the Strait. That's a major economic thoroughfare and not just for oil.  You shut that Strait and we are talking a major hit on many Middle East  economies," said Carl Larry, president of Oil Outlooks in New York.
"Second, there is no way that the Saudis (alone) have  enough oil or quality of oil to replace Iranian crude. Figure Saudi  spare capacity is 2 to 4 million at best. Of that spare, about 1-2  million is real oil that is comparable out of Iran. Lose Iran, lose 3.5  million barrels per day of imports. No way."
French President Nicolas Sarkozy proposed hitting Iran  with an oil embargo and won support from Britain, but resistance to the  idea persists within and outside the European Union. An import ban might raise global oil prices during hard  economic times and debt-strapped Greece has been relying on  attractively financed Iranian oil. Iran's seaborne  trade is already suffering from existing trade sanctions, with shipping  companies scaling down or pulling out as the Islamic Republic faces more  hurdles in transporting its oil.
Source: http://news.yahoo.com/iran-warns-could-stop-oil-flow-sanctions-irna-144548616.html
U.S. Fifth Fleet Says Won't Allow Hormuz Disruption
The U.S. Fifth Fleet said on Wednesday it would not allow any disruption of traffic in the Strait of Hormuz, after Iran threatened to stop ships moving through the world's most important oil  route. "Anyone who threatens to disrupt freedom of navigation  in an international strait is clearly outside the community of nations;  any disruption will not be tolerated," the Bahrain-based fleet said in  an e-mail.
Iran, at loggerheads with the West over its nuclear program,  said on Tuesday it would stop the flow of oil through the Strait of  Hormuz in the Gulf if sanctions were imposed on its crude exports.  "Closing the Strait of Hormuz for Iran's armed forces  is really easy ... or as Iranians say, it will be easier than drinking a  glass of water," Iran's navy chief Habibollah Sayyari told Iran's  English-language Press TV on Wednesday. "But right now, we don't need to  shut it ...," said Sayyari, who is leading 10 days of exercises in the  Strait.
Analysts say that Iran could potentially cause havoc in  the Strait of Hormuz, a strip of water separating Oman and Iran, which  connects the biggest Gulf oil producers, including Saudi Arabia, with  the Gulf of Oman and the Arabian Sea. At its narrowest point, it is 21  miles across. But its navy would be no match for the firepower of the  Fifth Fleet which consists of 20-plus ships supported by combat  aircraft, with 15,000 people afloat and another 1,000 ashore.
A spokesperson for the Fifth Fleet said in  response to  queries from Reuters that, it "maintains a robust presence in the region  to deter or counter destabilizing activities," without providing  further details. A British Foreign Office spokesman called the Iranian  threat "rhetoric," saying: "Iranian politicians regularly use  this type of rhetoric to distract attention from the real issue, which  is the nature of their nuclear program."
SANCTIONS
Tension has  increased between Iran and the West after EU foreign ministers decided  three weeks ago to tighten sanctions on the world's No. 5 crude  exporter, but left open the idea of an embargo on Iranian oil. The West accuses Iran  of seeking a nuclear bomb; Tehran says its nuclear program is for  peaceful purposes only. The Iranian threat pushed up international oil  prices  on Tuesday although they slipped back on Wednesday in thin trade.
"The threat by Iran to close the Strait of Hormuz  supported the oil market yesterday, but the effect is fading today as it  will probably be empty threats as they cannot stop the flow for a  longer period due to the amount of U.S. hardware in the area," said  Thorbjoern bak Jensen, an oil analyst with Global Risk Management.
The Strait of Hormuz is "the world's most important oil  chokepoint," according to the U.S. Department of Energy. About 40  percent of all traded oil leaves the Gulf region through the strategic  waterway. The State Department said there was an "element of  bluster" in the threat, but underscored that the United States, whose  warships patrol in the area, would support the free flow of oil. France urged Iran on Wednesday to adhere to  international law that allows all ships freedom of transit in the  Strait.
Iran's international isolation over its defiant nuclear  stance is hurting the country's oil-dependent economy, but Iranian  officials have shown no sign of willingness to compromise. Iran dismisses the impact of sanctions,  saying trade and other measures imposed since the 1979 Islamic  revolution toppled the U.S.-backed shah have made the country stronger.
During a public speech in Iran's western province of Ilam on Wednesday, President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad implied Tehran had no intention of changing course. "We will not yield to pressure to abandon our rights  ... The Iranian nation will not withdraw from its right (to nuclear  technology) even one iota because of the pressures," said Ahmadinejad,  whose firm nuclear stance has stoked many ordinary Iranians' sense of  national dignity.
Some Iranian oil officials have admitted that foreign  sanctions were hurting the key energy sector that was in desperate need  of foreign investment. Though four rounds of the U.N. sanctions do not forbid  the purchase of Iranian oil, many international oil firms and trading  companies have stopped trading with Iran.
"SHOWING THEIR TEETH"
The United States and Israel have not ruled  out military action if sanctions fail to rein in Iran's nuclear work. An  Iranian analyst who declined to be named said the  leadership could not reach a compromise with the West over its nuclear  activities as it "would harm its prestige among its core supporters." As  a result, he said, "Iranian officials are showing their teeth to  prevent a military strike."
But he added that closing the Strait of Hormuz would  harm Iran's economy, undermining the Iranian leadership ahead of a  parliamentary election in March. The election will be the first litmus test of the  clerical establishment's popularity since the 2009 disputed presidential  vote, that the opposition says was rigged to secure Ahmadinejad's  re-election. The vote was followed by eight months of  anti-government street protests and created a deepening political rift  among the hardline rulers.
With the opposition leaders under house arrest since  February and the main reformist political parties banned since the vote,  Iranian hardline rulers are concerned a low turnout would question the  establishment's legitimacy. Frustration is  simmering among lower- and middle-class Iranians over Ahmadinejad's  economic policies. Prices of most consumer goods have risen  substantially and many Iranians struggle to make ends meet.
Source: http://news.yahoo.com/iran-navy-chief-says-shutting-off-gulf-very-092339883.html 
 
What a great read! I agree that Russia may use the distraction offered to it by a Western war against Iran to topple the current government in tiflis, I never thought of that, but it would be poetic justice. Kakashvilli used the 2008 Olympic Games as his disguise and that was a much much lower cover than what a war against Iran would be. If Russia were to link up with Armenia, that would be one of the very few, if not only, positive thing to come out of a war against Iran.
ReplyDeleteBut you have to wonder, if Armenia does play a vital role in keeping Iran connected somewhat to the world, and if the West attacks Iran, they too will want to limit the cross border traffic between Iran and Armenia. This is where azerbaijan may come in, it has been speculated that they would attack Armenia during a Western war against Iran. Of course the trump card Armenia has is Russia. There really are many scenarios that may develop in case of war against Iran.
Yes, there really are many scenarios that can develop in case of a military strike against Iran. The great Prussian general Helmuth von Moltke once stated: "No battle plan survives contact with the enemy". Therein lies the grave danger the global community faces today. The West is too blinded by its arrogance and bloodthirst to realize that there are simply too many powerful interests intersecting in Iran. One misstep, one wrong move and the entire region can explode. Needless to say, due to its location Armenia is very vulnerable.
ReplyDeleteGood work with the blog but I don't think they will invade Iran. Maybe they'll do some type of limited air strikes but I just don't think they are stupid enough to invade Iran. Let's at least hope they are not stupid enough.
ReplyDeleteA full-scale land invasion of Iran will only end in a major disaster for the invaders. No Western military planner would take such a risk. When I refer to a war against Iran, I am talking about limited military operations against Iran.
ReplyDeleteLimited military operations can mean - special forces raiding various important sites in the country and/or bombarding various important sites in the country by bombs and missiles.
How Tehran will retaliate to a military strike against it and how Iran's enemies will retaliate to Iran's retaliation is the danger we all face. There are too many variables. Too many things can go horribly wrong.
Having said that, Tehran has not been an easy opponent for the West; which is the primary reason why the preparatory phase to the war against Iran has taken so long. Had military planners in Washington and Tel Aviv been sure of their success, they would have attacked Iran a very long time ago.
Be that as it may, there may come a day (perhaps soon) that the Western alliance may feel forced to attack. That day will come when the West feels confident enough that Tehran is on the verge of building a nuclear bomb.
I am extremely worried because of the latest breaking news from your last few posts! Thank you. Russia, it seemed to me, cannot afford to sit and do nothing. They are under direct attack, election unfairness etc.
ReplyDeleteFrom the geopolitical messages heating up in Washington in regards to Russia, from what is coming out of Washington in regards to Syria ,China must be thinking they are next in line after Russia. May be its just you and me, but it seems to me that Washington is stepping on the gas pedal.
I believe the Chinese U. S. treasury holding are teaching them a complementary lesson. I don't think their ruling political class is dumb, so they must be thinking of their own self-preservation.
It could just be that the elections are coming so Obama and his team want to look tough. Of course this is just temporary time shifting. The big picture is no doubt "Bomb Iran, come hell or high water", for all the long term geostrategic reasons that you have been writing about.
You are right they do want failed states. I argue that this makes Washington accelerate its time table, overall. I think their biggest worry is Iran's threat/capability of blocking up the Persian Gulf. I don't think they are worried about either Russia or China IN THE SHORT TERM. Part of the reason I say this is the market price of oil. With the U. S. and EU economy slowdowns causing demand destruction, the oil market should be a lot lower.
Yes, Armenia is in the middle of this. It is a Tragedy!
They will not attack Iran. They are playing tough. But it is a dangerous situation because like you said one wrong move and BAM!
ReplyDelete