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Israel has plans for nuclear attack on Iran
By Peter Symonds
8 January 2007
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A report in yesterdays London-based Sunday Times
revealed that the Israeli military has been training to use tactical
nuclear weapons against Irans uranium enrichment plant at
Natanz and other nuclear facilities. Based on several Israeli
military sources, the article said two air force squadrons were
involved, with the preparations being overseen by air force commander
Major General Eliezer Shkedi.
Israeli officials were quick to disparage the report. Foreign
ministry spokesman Mark Regev formally denied the
claim and restated the official stance that Israeli was committed
to a diplomatic solution and supported last months UN Security
Council resolution imposing sanctions on Iran. Top government
and military figures have repeatedly warned, however, that Israel
would not allow Tehran to develop nuclear weapons.
Last month, Prime Minister Ehud Olmert pointedly included Israel
among his list of responsible nuclear powers, in contrast to Iran.
Previously Israel always refused to acknowledge its nuclear arsenal,
which various analysts estimate at between 80 to 200 warheads.
Olmerts comment was not so much a slip but a
calculated warning to Iran in particular that Israel had nuclear
weapons and was prepared to use them to maintain its military
predominance in the Middle East.
The Sunday Times report indicated that military preparations
are well advanced. Under the plans, conventional laser-guided
bombs would open tunnels into the targets. Mini-nukes
would then immediately be fired into a plant at Natanz, exploding
deep underground to reduce the risk of radioactive fallout,
the newspaper stated. Several routes had been mapped out and in
recent weeks pilots had flown to Gibraltar to train for the 3,200-kilometre
round trip to Iranian targets.
As soon as the green light is given, it will be one mission,
one strike and the Iranian nuclear project will be demolished,
one source told the Sunday Times. According to the newspaper,
the targets include Irans uranium conversion plant near
Isfahan and its heavy water reactor under construction at Arak,
both of which would be hit with conventional bombs. There
is no 99 percent success in this mission. It must be 100 percent
or better not at all, one of the pilots explained.
In making what was almost certainly a deliberate leak, the
Israeli regime has a number of motives. Following the Israeli
militarys humiliating withdrawal from Lebanon last year,
the Olmert government is determined to take a tough stance. The
Sunday Times article is in part designed to send a message
to the Middle East and the world that Israel is willing to use
all means at its disposal to crush any potential rival in the
region.
According to the Sunday Times, Israel justifies the
choice of tactical nuclear weapons by the fact that Irans
uranium enrichment plant at Natanz are protected by an estimated
20 metres of rock and concrete. However, any use of atomic bombsfor
the first time since the US incineration of Hiroshima and Nagasaki
in 1945would above all be a political, rather than a military,
decision aimed at reasserting Israels strategic superiority
as the only nuclear-armed power in the Middle East.
Anyone who thinks that an Israeli nuclear attack on Iran is
impossible needs to consider Israels long record of carrying
out the unthinkable. Over the past year, it has waged a criminal
war of attrition against the population of the Palestinian territories.
Last July, on the pretext of rescuing two captured soldiers, Israel
launched a full-scale invasion of Lebanon, killing hundreds of
civilians and reducing much of the country to rubble, as the first
stage of an operation directed primarily at Iran and Syria. It
should also be recalled that Israeli warplanes carried out an
unprovoked attack on Iraqs small research reactor at Osirak
in 1981.
Neither the Olmert government nor the Bush administration has
offered any conclusive proof that Tehran has a nuclear weapons
program. The Iranian regime has consistently maintained that it
is entitled under the Nuclear Non-proliferation Treaty (NPT) to
engage in uranium enrichment and that its Natanz plant is to provide
fuel for nuclear power reactors, the first of which is nearing
completion at Bushehr. Israel has openly flouted the international
non-proliferation efforts, refusing to sign the NPT or allow inspection
of any of its nuclear facilities.
In this context, the openly anti-Semitic statements of Iranian
President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, who sponsored an international
conference of Nazi Holocaust deniers in Tehran last month, have
played directly into the hands of the most right-wing, militarist
sections of the Israeli ruling elite. Israeli leaders have exploited
Ahmadinejads calls for the destruction of Israel to whip
up fears of a second holocaust of Jews.
Last November, in an effort to shore up his government, Olmert
brought Avigdor Lieberman, the leader of the far-right Israel
Beitenu (Israel is Our Home) party, into his cabinet as deputy
prime minister. He was given the specially created post of minister
of strategic affairs, dealing with threats against Israel, with
a particular focus on Iran. Lieberman, a right-wing nationalist
and racist, is notorious for his calls for the ethnic cleansing
of Israeli Arabs, the bombing of Palestinian civilians and the
targetting of Egypts Aswan High Dam. In 2001, he openly
advocated the use of nuclear weapons against Iran.
Last week, Lieberman called on the UN to expel Iran and for
the major powers to act against Tehran. The state of Israel
can, and will, stand alone against Iran, but we should not be
asked to, he said. If allowed to achieve nuclear weapons,
the entire free world will pay a heavy priceIsrael will
be the first and will pay the heaviest price, but Iranian aggressiveness
will not stop there.
Lieberman is not alone in complaining that UN sanctions on
Iran are inadequate. In its annual report released last week,
the Institute for National Security Studies (INSS), an Israeli
think-tank, ominously warned: Despite the growing concern
within the international community, the INSS questions whether
effective sanctions will be imposed. Time is working in Irans
favour, and barring military action, Irans possession of
nuclear weapons is only a matter of time.
These comments point to another motive for the leak to the
Sunday Times: to put pressure on the Bush administration
to take action soon against Iran, or, at the very least, to give
backing for Israel to do so. The newspaper cited the comments
of Israeli deputy defence minister Ephraim Sneh last month, saying:
The time is approaching when Israel and the international
community will have to decide whether to take military action
against Iran. The Times also noted that Israeli and
US officials had met several times to consider military options.
In an article in the New Yorker last April, veteran
US journalist Seymour Hersh provided details of high-level planning
in the White House and the Pentagon for a massive air assault
on Iran, including but not limited to its nuclear facilities.
The most chilling aspect of the revelations included a fierce
debate over the use of tactical nuclear weapons against targets
such as the Natanz enrichment plant.
Hershs article quoted a former defence official who revealed
that US warplanes, operating from aircraft carriers in the Arabian
Sea, had been flying simulated nuclear-weapons delivery
missionsrapid ascending manoeuvres known as over the
shoulder bombingsince last summer... within range
of Iranian coastal radars.
The Bush administration has never ruled out a military attack
on Iran and rejected the proposal made by the top-level Iraq Study
Group for negotiations with Iran and Syria to help stabilise Iraq.
The most militarist layer of the US ruling elite openly advocates
war against Iran. In an article late last year laying out a strategy
for neo-conservatives, Joshua Muravchik, from the American Enterprise
Institute, candidly declared: Make no mistake, President
Bush will need to bomb Irans nuclear facilities before leaving
office.
Already there are indications that the Pentagon is preparing
for just such an eventuality. Over the past few months, senior
US officials have been travelling to the Saudi Arabia and other
Gulf states to discuss ways of strengthening defence ties and
military capacities in those countries. One obvious reason for
such discussions is the necessity of defending US military bases
in Kuwait, Qatar and Bahrain from possible Iranian retaliation
in the event of a US attack.
The US and Britain are also bolstering their naval strength
in the region. A second US aircraft carrier groupthe USS
John C. Stennis and escort shipsis due to enter the Persian
Gulf later this month. President Bush has also taken the unusual
step of appointing an admiralWilliam Fallonfor the
first time to take over as head of US Central Command which is
responsible for Middle East operations including Iran and Iraq.
Retired Colonel Sam Gardiner told the Sunday Times that
he believed that a US attack on Iran remained a possibility. He
described the deployment of a second aircraft carrier strike force
to the Gulf region, as well as British minesweepers, as a huge
deal. It is only necessary to do that if you are planning
to strike Iran and deal with the consequences, he said,
which could include Iranian attempts to shut the Strait of Hormuz,
the sea route for much of the worlds oil.
Whatever the precise motives behind all these menacing threats,
the US and Israel are recklessly plunging towards a new conflagration
that includes the possible use of nuclear weapons.
See Also:
US threats against
Iranthe specter of nuclear barbarism
[13 April 2006]
Washington considering
nuclear strikes against Iran
[10 April 2006]
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