The Pentagon is looking into the possibility
of Israel launching a strike against Iran's nuclear facilities. In the past
months there were several working-level discussions trying to map out the
possible scenarios for such an attack, according to administration sources who
were briefed on these meetings.

IAF F-15I's stand ready.
The discussions, which were describes as
intelligence-oriented and not policy-oriented, examined the likelihood of an
Israeli pre-emptive attack against Iran and the method in which such an attack
could be carried out. One of the main questions presented in these discussions
was whether Israel would inform the US in advance in case such an attack is to
take place and when would such an advance notice be given.
The sources pointed out that it is clear
that Israel would have to coordinate with the US forces air control any attempt
to fly over Iraq on the way to Iran, if Israel chooses to attack using the
shortest route.
Last week, former Israeli Chief of Staff
Moshe Ya'alon said in Washington that the West does have a military option
against Iran and that a joint US-NATO-Israeli air strike against dozens of
nuclear facilities in Iran could set back Teheran's nuclear programs for
several years
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Israel, Iran, and the US: Nuclear War, Here We Come |
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The stage is set for a chain of events that could
lead to nuclear war over chemical weapons in the immediate future. If these events
unfold, the trigger will be Israel, the target Iran, the nuclear aggressor
the U.S. These are the reasons:
Conclusion: according to Israel, the U.S.
administration, and 99.2 percent of the U.S. House of Representatives, Iran
will not be allowed to have access to any nuclear technology. No diplomatic
options to achieve that goal will remain when Russia and China veto Security
Council sanctions, or if the IAEA refuses on Nov. 24 to refer Iran to the
Security Council. Military action will occur before Russia ships uranium fuel
to Iran, and will inevitably lead to the use of nuclear weapons by the U.S.
against Iran. How will it all get started? No matter how
much Bush and Cheney want it, the U.S. Senate is unlikely to authorize the
bombing of Iranian installations out of the blue. Unless there is some major
disturbance in Iraq that can be blamed on Iran, Israel is likely to pull the
trigger. It
knows how to and has every motivation to do so. Once Israel drops the first bomb on an
Iranian nuclear facility, as it did with Iraq's
Osirak reactor in 1981, there is no return. Bushehr is likely to be the
first target; other installations will follow. Iran will respond – how can it not? At a
minimum, it will shoot
missiles at Israel. It may or may not shoot at U.S. forces in Iraq
initially, but given the U.S.-Israel "special
relationship," there is no way the U.S. will stay out of the
conflict. Many of Iran's targeted
facilities are underground, and U.S. bombs will be needed to destroy them
all. Once the U.S. enters the conflict, 150,000
U.S. troops in Iraq will be at risk of Iranian missiles with chemical
warheads, or of being overrun by Iran's conventional forces streaming into
Iraq. According to the Pentagon
planning [.pdf], nuclear weapons will be used:
That makes six independent reasons
for nuking Iran. The first nuclear bomb used in an act of
war after "Little Boy"
and "Fat Man"
should be code-named "Demo" – for "demonstration" that we
can do it, don't mess with us, for "democracy"
on the rise in the Middle East, and for the "Democrats" in
Congress who will go along with the program. As with Hiroshima and Nagasaki,
we will be told it saved lives, ours and theirs. You know the script. The upshot: a nuclear superpower will
have nuked a non-nuclear state that is an NPT signatory and is cooperating
with the IAEA, at the instigation of a state that is not an NPT signatory,
that reportedly has over
100 nuclear bombs of its own, and that initiated hostilities with an
unprovoked act of military aggression. Given these prospects, the U.S. government
should be doing its utmost to restrain Israel, yet it is doing exactly
the opposite.
It should be trying to achieve a diplomatic solution, but it refuses to even
talk to Iran. The ongoing diplomatic effort by the EU is simply designed to
provide cover for the planned military action, just as in the case of Iraq.
How many times must Bush play the same game before the EU finally learns it
is being used? And how many times will it take for the
U.S. citizenry to learn? The U.S. public and its representatives in Congress,
preoccupied with the deception and subsequent disaster of the Iraq invasion,
are blind to the enormously bigger deception and disaster unfolding just
before their eyes. Do the majority of American citizens, from whom the
authority of the administration is derived, really want to be drawn by Israel
into a nuclear conflict? Is this really in the United States' best interest? The sane world needs to tell the U.S. and
Israeli governments to back off. And the United States needs to tell Israel,
in no uncertain terms, that it will not allow (American-supplied)
Israeli bombers carrying (American supplied)
bunker-busting bombs over Iraqi airspace, and that it will not aid,
abet, or condone such an attack. By not demanding this of the Bush
administration, the U.S. Congress is complicit in what is about to happen and
is betraying the trust of the people it represents. There is a rational way to avoid
this disaster.
Otherwise? Welcome to the new world order,
where the U.S. can nuke any non-nuclear country at will. Refrain from having
a nuclear deterrent at your own risk. All nations that can will become
nuclear, others on their way will be nuked, and all-out nuclear war will
become an absolute certainty. Bye-bye, world. Israelis
urge U.S. to stop Iran's nuke goals
The United States and its allies must act to stop
Iran's nuclear programs -- by force if necessary -- because conventional
diplomacy will not work, three senior Israeli lawmakers from across the
political spectrum warned yesterday. As a last resort, they said, Israel itself would act
unilaterally to prevent Iran from acquiring nuclear arms. Iran will not be deterred "by anything short of a
threat of force," said Arieh Eldad, a member of Israel's right-wing
National Union Party, part of a delegation of Knesset members visiting
Washington this week. "They won't be stopped unless they are convinced
their programs will be destroyed if they continue," he said. Yuval Steinitz, chairman of the Knesset Foreign Affairs
and Defense Committee, said the best hope was for the United States and other
major powers to make it clear to Iranian leaders now there was "no
chance they will ever see the fruits of a nuclear program." "Threats of sanctions and isolation alone will not
do it," said Mr. Steinitz. Yosef Lapid, head of the centrist opposition Shinui
Party in the Knesset, added that Israel "will not live under the threat
of an Iranian nuclear bomb." "We feel we are obliged to warn our friends that
Israel should not be pushed into a situation where we see no other solution
but to act unilaterally" against Iran, he said. Mr. Steinitz, a member of Prime Minister Ariel Sharon's
ruling Likud Party, stopped just short of a direct threat to bomb suspect
Iranian nuclear sites. Mr. Steinitz said Israeli officials estimate that
Tehran is only two to three years away from developing a nuclear bomb and
that time was running out for the world to act. |