US Considers
Use of Nuclear Weapons Against Iran
HOW MANY MOSLEMS & OTHER ARABS MIGHT BE AGREEING WITH
The Iranian president's call for Israel to be 'wiped off the map' has
received a sympathetic ear in some Arabic papers, which say it was a
justified device to focus attention on the Palestinians' plight...
-
The 'elimination of Israel' stems from the same frame of mind as the
Israeli strategic aim of 'eliminating Palestine'... which Israel
accomplishes on a daily basis through organized killings... Whatever people
think about the Iranian stance, the fact remains that highlighting
'indifference to Zionist crimes' is legitimate & true.
Whenever there is any initiative to condemn the Zionist entity,
the big
powers of the world move to protect this criminal country whose tanks,
planes and aggression claim victims on a daily basis...
-
Last week, Israel launched
more than 30 air raids on Gaza alone, where many were martyred - not
enough for Security Council members to consult on the continued
massacres. The council
did not however hesitate when Iran called for Israel to be wiped off the
world map.
Editorial in Egypt's Al-Jumhuriyah
Khaleej Times, (AFP) 8 April 2006
WASHINGTON - The administration of
President George W. Bush is planning a massive bombing campaign against
Iran, including use of bunker-buster nuclear bombs to destroy a key Iranian
suspected nuclear weapons facility, The New Yorker magazine reported in its
April 17 issue.
The article by investigative
journalist Seymour Hersh said that Bush and others in the White House have
come to view Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad as a potential Adolf
Hitler.
"That's the name they're using," the
report quoted a former senior intelligence official as saying.
A senior unnamed Pentagon adviser is
quoted in the article as saying that "this White House believes that the
only way to solve the problem is to change the power structure in Iran, and
that means war."
The former intelligence officials
depicts planning as "enormous," "hectic" and "operational,"
Hersh writes.
One former defense official said the
military planning was premised on a belief that "a sustained bombing
campaign in Iran will humiliate the religious leadership and lead the public
to rise up and overthrow the government," The New Yorker pointed out.
In recent weeks, the president has
quietly initiated a series of talks on plans for Iran with a few key
senators and members of the House of Representatives, including at least one
Democrat, the report said.
One of the options under consideration
involves the possible use of a bunker-buster tactical nuclear weapon, such
as the B61-11, to insure the destruction of Iran's main centrifuge plant at
Natanz, Hersh writes.
But the former senior intelligence
official said the attention given to the nuclear option has created serious
misgivings inside the military, and some officers have talked about
resigning after an attempt to remove the nuclear option from the evolving
war plans in Iran failed, according to the report.
"There are very strong sentiments
within the military against brandishing nuclear weapons against other
countries,"
the magazine quotes the Pentagon adviser as saying. The adviser warned
that bombing Iran could provoke "a chain reaction" of attacks on American
facilities and citizens throughout the world and might also reignite
Hezbollah.
"If we go, the southern half of Iraq
will light up like a candle," the adviser is quoted as telling The New
Yorker.
Al-Jazeerah Comment on the News:
This could be a real story leaked by
the administration to intimidate Iran to submission. The objective is
keeping Israel as the only nuclear power in the Middle East, in order to
maintain its hegemony in the oil-rich region, and achieve the Zionist dream
of a greater Israel from the Nile to the Euphrates.
The Bush administration have used
journalists before, like Judith Miller, of the New York Times, in
preparation for its war on Iraq. It could be part of a psychological warfare
on Iran to give up its nuclear program without a fight, also in order to
keep Israel as the only nuclear power in the Middle East.
Again, and again, successive US
administrations have demonstrated that they are willing to do everything
they can to serve Israeli interests, even if this threatens US interests,
creates enemies for the US around the world, and sinks the US deeper into
debt to the verge of collapse.
If the Israeli nuclear arsenal is put
in the negotiation table, there will be no problem. Iran and Arab states
will welcome it and pledge to keep the Middle East as a nuclear-free
region.
So far, it's been a taboo for US
politicians and journalists to mention the Israeli nuclear arsenal.
Iran's Ahmadinejad hits back at
nuclear pressure Khaleej Times, 1 February 2006
TEHRAN/WASHINGTON - President
Mahmoud Ahmadinejad on Wednesday
angrily rejected international
pressure on Iran over its nuclear
ambitions hours after US President
George W. Bush vowed to prevent it
making an atomic bomb.
The United States won agreement this
week from a reluctant China and
Russia at a meeting of the UN
Security Council's five permanent
members to back taking the Iranian
nuclear issue to the council, a step
that could ultimately lead to
sanctions.
Ahmadinejad, addressing a crowd of
thousands in the Gulf port city of
Bushehr, lost no time in hitting
back:
"I am telling those fake superpowers
that the Iranian nation became
independent 27 years ago and ... on
the nuclear case it will resist
until fully achieving its rights,"
he said.
A decision on whether to report Iran
to the council will be taken by a
meeting of the board of governors of
the International Atomic Energy
Agency (IAEA) on Thursday in Vienna.
Iran says its nuclear plants will be
used only for peaceful applications
such as electricity generation.
Iran's parliament issued a statement
on Wednesday reminding the
government that, under a law
approved last year, it must halt
snap UN inspections of its atomic
facilities and resume uranium
enrichment - a process that can yield
bomb-grade material - if its case is
referred to the Council.
Bush said the world must act
together to prevent Iran joining the
list of nuclear-armed nations.
"The Iranian government is defying
the world with its nuclear
ambitions - and the nations of the
world must not permit the Iranian
regime to gain nuclear weapons,"
Bush said in his annual State of the
Union address.
"America will continue to rally the
world to confront these threats."
Oil price fear Oil ministers from
the OPEC cartel warned on Tuesday
that sending Iran's case to the
Security Council could cause a spike
in already sizzling oil prices.
But Iran eased concerns it could use
its status as the world's fourth
biggest crude oil producer as a
weapon in the dispute by curtailing
its exports.
The IAEA said in a confidential
report on Tuesday that Iran had
already begun preparing for uranium
enrichment and continued to hinder
the UN watchdog's inquiries into its
atomic activities.
The big UN powers said a crisis
meeting of the 35-member IAEA board
on Thursday should "report to the
Security Council on the steps
required from Iran"
But they said the council should
wait until IAEA chief Mohamed
ElBaradei reports on Iran's nuclear
programme at a scheduled IAEA
meeting on March 6 before deciding
on any action.
French Foreign Minister Philippe
Douste-Blazy said in a newspaper
interview on Wednesday that the UN
Security Council could decide to
impose sanctions.
"In March, the Security Council will
be able to act, if necessary. The
complete range of sanctions is
conceivable," he told the French
daily Le Parisien.
Little sign of compromise The wait
until March will give Tehran a few
more weeks to try to negotiate a way
out of the crisis, though it showed
little sign of compromise.
"Our nation cannot step back because
of the bullying policies of some
countries in the world," Ahmadinejad
said in his speech, parts of which
were broadcast on state television.
The large crowd responded with
shouts of "Death to America!" and "Death to Israel!"
Deputy foreign ministers from Russia
and China headed to Iran on
Wednesday to inform it of "the
concerns of the international
community" about the removal of UN
seals this month at a uranium
enrichment facility, the Russian
Itar-Tass news agency reported.
Four years ago Bush used his State
of the Union address to name Iran
with North Korea & Iraq as nations
that "constitute an axis of evil,
arming to threaten the peace of the
world"
With all sides engaged in
high-stakes negotiations, he avoided
such language on Tuesday, although
he described Iran as "a nation now
held hostage by a small clerical
elite that is isolating and
repressing its people".
Ahmadinejad fired back that Bush
himself was a criminal. "Those whose arms are stained up to
the elbow with the blood of other
nations are now accusing us of
violating human rights & freedoms.
God willing, we shall drag you to
trial," he said.
The Nuclear War: Who is Threatening Who?
28/01/2006
When the 35-member Board of Governors of the International
Atomic Energy Agency meets next week to consider the case of Iran's nuclear
program, it will convene against the background of rather alarming
statements made by two Presidents of nuclear-weapons States:
-
Chirac, who
threatened to launch a nuclear strike against any country that sponsors a
terrorist attack against French interests
-
& Bush who stated that "the
world cannot be put in a position where we can be blackmailed by a nuclear
weapon" in reference to what he asserts to be Tehran's ambition to develop
nuclear weapons.
-
& when the Israeli Minister of Defense Shaul Mofaz states
that "Israel will not be able to accept in any way an Iranian nuclear
capability", there is ample reasons for Iran to get jittery even if it
boasts a serene confidence in the face of direct treats of military action
against its nuclear facilities --however well protected these may be.
Truth is that a concerted missile attack on Iran's nuclear
infrastructure will reverberate throughout the Moslem world,
& boost the
nuclear ambitions of states that will come to the conclusion that the only
credible deterrent against nuclear
& conventional strikes (with the yield
of tactical nuclear weapons however) is…a nuclear arsenal. So whether the
Board of Governors refers Iran to the Security Council next week – the odds
are against it as the Director General of the IAEA Mohammed El Baradei has
resisted pressure to issue an incriminating interim report -
or later in the
year, does not appear to be a decision that will alter the course of events.
In the short term, it may simply shape the legality, or lack thereof, of the
framework in which major powers will seek to control Iran's nuclear program.
In the event of a referral of Iran's nuclear program to the Security
Council, it would seem unlikely that veto-wielding China and Russia will be
persuaded by Washington, London and Paris to authorize the use of force
against Iran. Short of an outright Council mandate to threaten the use of
force against Iran, the Council may find itself yet again in an Iraq-type
situation: imposition of sanctions and intrusive inspections. But unlike the
case of Iraq in 1991 in the aftermath of its invasion of Kuwait when it was
brought to its knees by a glaring military defeat, sanctions and intrusive
inspections will be rejected outright by the Iranian leadership.
Having drawn lessons from the protracted cat
& mouse game
with Saddam Hussein's regime, Washington's goal to bring Iran before the
Security Council must thus derive from a different objective: it must hope
that by stepping up international pressure on the regime, it would not
coerce it into abandoning an alleged nuclear weapons programme but rather
foment widespread internal dissent that would bring about the regime's
downfall.
But that may be a process that Washington and Tel Aviv are not
ready to wait for. Hence, the military option -with, or more realistically
without Security Council mandate. Because even if Tehran were to give in on
all demands an&d subject itself to an UNSCOM-like regime, Washington and Tel
Aviv will remain convinced that somewhere in a bunker in Iran, a nuclear
bomb is being made.
Back in 1981 when the Israeli air force destroyed the Osirak
reactor, the Security Council condemned the attack which it viewed as a
serious threat to the entire IAEA safeguards regime and the foundation of
the non-proliferation Treaty. And it indeed shook the NPT regime, as the
destruction of Osirak only shaped, or strengthened Saddam Hussein's nuclear
weapons aspirations – and probably also the proven nuclear ambitions of
Pakistan and the DPRK.
Today however, in the event of a unilateral strike against
Iran's nuclear facilities, the Council would not even agree on whether to
condemn, or as some may like to have it, condone a so-called pre-emptive
strike against Iran's nuclear "ambitions". And whether Iran is pursuing, or
would like to pursue a nuclear weapons programme, this question remains,
short of hard evidence, the matter of speculations. Even if the evidence
were to be laid before the IAEA's Board of Governors or the Security
Council, we will all think back and ask ourselves the question "didn't
Secretary of State Powell dangle a tube and display 'the evidence' of Saddam
Hussein's weapons of mass destructions in front of the entire world a few
years ago? And where are we today?
"So when leaders of the United States, France
& Israel - who
all have the power today to launch nuclear weapons - make public threats
&
step up a dangerous rhetoric aimed at an already volatile region, I am
afraid that President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad's absurd
& politically
gratuitous statement to "wipe Israel off the map", which is unbecoming of a
Head of State, seems far less threatening.
& at any rate, even if the new
Iranian President were to truly seek the physical end of the State of
Israel, he well knows,
&
so do Bush, Chirac
& Mofaz, that given the
landmass of the Jewish State, it's physical destruction in a nuclear
mushroom that would obliterate the Holy Land is not an option. At the end of
the day, who is threatening who?
Khaleej Times, (DPA)
22 January 2006
To Maintain its Monopoly
on Nuclear Weapons in the Middle East,
Israel Hints at
Preparation for Military Action to Stop Iran's Nuclear Program
Israeli Hints at Preparation to
Stop Iran By JOSEF
FEDERMAN Associated Press Writer Jan 22, 2006, 1:22 AM EST
JERUSALEM (AP) -- Israel's defense
minister hinted Saturday that the his government is preparing for military
action to stop Iran's nuclear program, but said international diplomacy must
be the first course of action. (All this is to maintain the Israeli monopoly
on nuclear weapons in the Middle East -- Al-Jazeerah).
"Israel will not be able to accept
an Iranian nuclear capability and it must have the capability to defend
itself, with all that that implies, and this we are preparing," Shaul Mofaz
said.
His comments at an academic
conference stopped short of overtly threatening a military strike but were
likely to add to growing tensions with Iran.
Germany's defense minister said in
an interview published Saturday that he is hopeful of a diplomatic solution
to the impasse over Iran's nuclear program, but argued that "all options"
should remain open.
Asked by the Bild am Sonntag weekly
whether the threat of a military solution should remain in place, Franz
Josef Jung was quoted as responding: "Yes, we need all options."
French President Jacques Chirac
said Thursday that France could respond with nuclear weapons against any
state-sponsored terrorist attack. (This statement could mean that
France may be preparing to
participate in an all NATO attack on Iran, after imposing UN
sanctions, which may trigger Iranian attacks in France -- Al-Jazeerah).
Iranian Foreign Ministry spokesman
Hamid Reza Asefi said Saturday that Chirac's threats reflect the true
intentions of nuclear nations, the official Islamic Republic News Agency
reported.
"The French president uncovered the
covert intentions of nuclear powers in using this lever (nuclear weapons) to
determine political games," IRNA quoted Asefi as saying.
Israel long has identified Iran as
its biggest threat and accuses Tehran of pursuing nuclear weapons. Iran says
its atomic program is peaceful.
Iran broke U.N. seals at a uranium
enrichment plant Jan. 10 and said it was resuming nuclear research after a 2
1/2-year freeze. Germany, France and Britain said two days later that talks
aimed at halting Iran's nuclear progress were at a dead end and called for
Iran's referral to the U.N. Security Council.
The International Atomic Energy
Agency, the U.N. nuclear watchdog, will meet Feb. 2 to discuss possible
referral.
Israel's Mofaz said sanctions and
international oversight of Iran's nuclear program stood as the "correct
policy at this time."
In Germany, Jung called himself
"confident that there will be a diplomatic solution in the case of Iran."
Israeli leaders have also
repeatedly said they hope the crisis can be resolved through diplomacy, and
they said any military action would have to be part of an international
effort. They have denied having plans for a unilateral preventive strike.
Russian President Vladimir Putin
has said Tehran might still agree to Moscow's offer to move its uranium
enrichment program to Russia, a step backed by the United States and
Europeans as a way to resolve the deadlock.
On Friday, Iran's Students News
Agency reported Friday that Central Bank governor Ebrahim Sheibani said Iran
had begun moving its foreign currency reserves from European banks and
transferring them to an undisclosed location as protection against possible
U.N. sanctions.
Sheibani backed away Saturday from
his statement that the transfers were already underway, and Iran's Central
Bank said there had been no change in its currency policy.
Estimates put Iranian funds in
Europe at as much as $50 billion.
Associated Press writers Nasser
Karimi and Ali Akbar Dareini in Tehran and Geir Moulson in Berlin
contributed to this report.
Iran calls Israeli
military threats 'childish behaviour'
TEHERAN - Iran on Sunday ignored
Israeli military threats and termed them "childish behaviour.""These kind of efforts to put
pressure on Iran are childish behaviour from the Israeli side," Foreign
Ministry spokesman Hamid-Reza Assefi told reporters in Teheran.
Israel's Defence Minister Shaul
Mofaz hinted Saturday that his country was even prepared for military action
to stop Iran's controversial nuclear programme.
"Israel knows quite well what
severe consequences such a mistake (military action) would have," the
Iranian spokesman said.
In the summer of 2K2, long before Bush's & Blair's declared war date against Iraq, the USA government did have knowledge of IRAN'S very possible WEAPONS OF MASS DESTRUCTION.
Yet Iran was totally ignored in favor of going after Israel's indirect enemy, Iraq, who were supposedly supporting the Israel's enemy, Palestine. Afghanistan was an easy target for the US government; perhaps US officials thought that Iraq would be as easy, at least a lot easier than Iran would have been.
Bush & the US government should have been more concerned with Iran's building a nuclear facility in secret. But if he did go after Iran instead, obviously he would have bought the wrath of China, Russia, & a host of others
-
The International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA), discovered a secret nuclear site at Natanz near Kashan, which is a uranium enrichment plant, as at that time then uncompleted. The Natanz site was unknown to the IAEA
until the summer of 2002 when an Iranian opposition group revealed its existence.
- The existence of another site at Arak containing a heavy water plant is nearing completion. Even if the plant was built to make only low enriched uranium for reactor fuel, it could be rapidly converted to the production of weapon
-grade uranium for nuclear weapons - operation or building uranium mines, uranium concentration & conversion facilities, plus fuel fabrication plants
- Several of the buildings at Natanz being constructed underground
-
- Where is the reactor that would use this material?
-
Fact is, head of the Russian Federation's Atomic Energy Agency Alexander Rumyantsev said on Dec 18/04 that Russia may construct 7 other nuclear power plants in Iran.
- Iranian officials are currently studying the issue with Russia as well as some other countries. He said,
'We believe that Iran needs such nuclear capabilities for peaceful
application of nuclear technology & Russian nuclear technicians are
now preparing themselves for the implementation of the project in
Iran. Russia is now constructing the first phase of the Bushehr
nuclear power plant. The Bushehr nuclear power plant is to become
operational by 2006'
Without US intervention, the euro is going to establish a stronghold in the international oil trade & will be disastrous for US economy. The Tehran government has developed a plan to begin competing with New York's NYMEX & London's IPE with respect to international oil trades
- using a euro -denominated international oil -trading mechanism.
-
Iran, just as was the case with Iraq, is being pushed into a confrontation by the US Government, using deceptive reasoning for going towards war.
-
a challenge is being created; the U.S. dollar supremacy against the euro
- oil transaction currency
-
obviously this is what 'Star Wars' is about, not defensive, but offensive if or when the Arab countries retaliate
-
- [at this time there is no obvious enemy worth spending billions of dollars in defense against
- rather, there is the likelihood that one might be created thru Bush]
-
China, France & Russia denounce the US -led action
- CHINA & RUSSIA WILL BECOME A PROBLEM FOR THE USA IN SHORT TIME, AS THEY AIDE IRAN
-
DEC 19/04 THE NEW IRANIAN AMBASSADOR, HOSSEIN SADEQI, ARRIVED IN RIYADH TO BEGIN HIS DIPLOMATIC MISSION IN THE SAUDI KINGDOM. WHAT WAS STRESSED WAS THAT THE LEVEL OF COOPERATION, CAPABILITIES & POTENTIALS BETWEEN
IRAN & SAUDI ARABIA WAS GOOD, & WOULD GET EVEN BETTER
- THERE LIES THE POSSIBILITY THAT SAUDI ARABIA INVESTORS MIGHT INVEST IN IRAN, RATHER THAN THE TRADITIONAL WESTERN MARKETS
-
As suggested, the US Government needs total control of Iraq & its military position
-
Iran is in the position to become the start of the destruction of the greatest Imperial Power the earth has ever known
-
Iran has committed a fortune to its nuclear projects
- without a doubt, an attack by Israel or the United States would result in immediate retaliation [the true reason for an immediate Star Wars program
- not defensive, but offensive - that is a lot of Arabs for a few Americans to fight; the reason the US Brass, congressmen, senators, & the likes of the US President are protecting their children from military enlistment, yet digging deep into the ghettos for innocent recruits to die in their place]
ARAB FORM WORDS OF WAR IN RETALIATION TO
OCCUPYING INVADERS
- HOW WRONG ARE THEY, SHOULD THE REVERSE HAD
BEEN THE SITUATION
Iranian
leaders hit out at US and Israel
Friday 14
April 2006, 22:41 Makka Time, 19:41 GMT
Iranian leaders have accused the US of trying
to place the Middle East under Israeli control and predicted the
"elimination" of the Jewish state.
Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, the country's supreme leader, also used a
pro-Palestinian conference in Tehran to rally support from Islamic nations
for the cash-strapped, Hamas-led Palestinian government.
Mahmoud
Ahmadinejad, the Iranian president, dismissed remarks by Condoleezza Rice,
the American secretary of state, who said the United Nations must consider
strong action to press Iran to comply with demands over its nuclear plans.
"What
she said is not important. She is free to speak out," Ahmadinejad said on
the sidelines of a conference in Tehran, the official Islamic Republic
News Agency reported on Friday.
Ahmadinejad drew condemnation from the US and other world powers by
announcing on Tuesday that Iran had enriched uranium to a level used in
power stations, defying UN demands for it to halt enrichment.
Israeli
threat
The president also told a gathering of Iranian officials, visiting
Palestinian leaders and foreign supporters that "the Zionist regime is an
injustice and by its very nature a permanent threat".
"Whether you like it or not, the
Zionist regime is on the road to being eliminated," added Ahmadinejad, who
drew international condemnation last year when he said Israel should be
"wiped off the map".
But unfazed by his critics in Europe and Washington - who are also piling
the pressure on Iran over its disputed nuclear drive - he went on to repeat
his controversial stance on the Holocaust.
"If
there is serious doubt over the Holocaust, there is no doubt over the
catastrophe and holocaust being faced by the Palestinians," said the
president, who had previously dismissed as a "myth" the killing of an
estimated six million Jews by the Nazis and their allies during the second
world war.
"I tell
the governments who support Zionism to ... let the migrants (Jews) return
to their countries of origin. If you think you owe them something, give them
some of your land," he said.
The
Iranian government does not recognise Israel.
US
plots
In his speech on Friday, Ayatollah Khamenei accused the United States of
conspiring to place the entire Middle East under Israeli control.
"The
plots by the American government against Iran, Iraq, Syria and Lebanon aimed
at governing the Middle East with the control of the Zionist regime will not
succeed," he said.
"If, by
accident, the American government saw reason, it would respect the wish of
the Iraqi people to form its government, respect the Palestinian government,
free the prisoners of Guantanamo and Abu Ghraib, cease the conspiracy and
not create tension in the Persian Gulf region," he said.
He also called on Muslim countries to help the Hamas-led Palestinian
government following a decision by the US and EU to suspend aid.
"The
Islamic world cannot remain indifferent and silent to tyranny," he asserted.
"Your
martyrs are our martyrs. Your pain is our pain," he said of the
Palestinians, adding that "Islamic nations have the duty to help you
in every possible way".
PA aid
EU foreign ministers on Monday formally backed plans for a temporary
aid suspension to the Palestinian government, having called on Hamas to
renounce violence, recognise Israel and abide by previous Palestinian
Authority commitments.
Speaking to reporters in Tehran, Khalid Meshaal, the Syria-based Hamas
leader, said: "It is immoral and inhumane to collectively punish a nation
which practises democracy.
"But
the Palestinian nation will not give in."
He added that he was talking with Iran as well as Arab countries in a bid to
fill Palestinian Authority coffers.
"We are
waiting for the Iranian government's support and answer to our request, but
we haven't received anything yet."
Iran to retaliate if US attacks
Thursday 27
April 2006, 4:23 Makka Time, 1:23 GMT
Iran has threatened to retaliate to any
US attack by attacking American interests
worldwide.
The Iranian supreme
leader, Ayatollah Ali Khameni was quoted by state television on Wednesday as
saying: "The Americans should know that if they assault
Iran,
their interests will be harmed anywhere in the world that is possible. The
Iranian nation will respond to any blow with double the intensity."
The threat came two days before the IAEA reports on whether
Iran is meeting UN Security Council demands
to halt uranium enrichment.
If, as is widely
expected, the IAEA reports that
Iran
has ignored the UN demands, then
Washington,
backed by
Britain and
France, will push for sanctions.
But the Security
Council's other two veto-holding permanent members,
Russia and
China, oppose any embargo.
Punitive measures
As a result, the Western powers are working on a resolution that would make
previous demands, contained in a March council statement, legally binding.
A council diplomat
said that the
US and its
allies will try to introduce punitive measures in a subsequent resolution if
Iran does not comply after a reasonable
period of time.
Iran's
nuclear energy chief, Gholamreza Aghazadeh, held talks with the head of the
IAEA, Mohamed ElBaradei, in
Vienna
on Wednesday.
"The talks were
encouraging," Mohammad Saeedi, deputy head of
Iran's Atomic Energy Organization, told
Reuters, saying the two sides discussed ways to resolve outstanding issues
with the IAEA.
Jack Straw,
Britain's foreign minister, sought to enlist
China's backing on Wednesday, saying
Beijing should use its growing diplomatic muscle to
solve disputes with international partners.
NPT threat
"China's
support for this goal, as a permanent member of the Security Council, has
been valuable already and will be increasingly crucial in securing
international consensus in the face of
Iran's
intransigence," Straw said in
London.
Iran
has said it would suspend relations with the IAEA if sanctions were imposed.
Diplomats said this could mean withdrawing from the nuclear
Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT).
Mahmoud Ahmadinejad,
the Iranian president, reiterated his view on Wednesday that
Iran could review its NPT and IAEA
commitments if it saw no dividends from abiding by international protocols.
"We hope they
fulfill their duties and make it unnecessary for the Islamic Republic of
Iran to reconsider its relations with them," Ahmadinejad said.
The IAEA has said
that after three years of investigation it still cannot confirm that
Iran's aims are entirely peaceful, although
it has found no hard proof of a military programme.
The agency points
to gaps in its information, such as the status of
Iran's research into P-2 centrifuges that
can enrich uranium faster than the P-1 units it now operates.
--------------------
US should be aware of the risks of
Bush's war talk
by Zafar Bangash (Thursday May 11 2006)
"US foreign policy is currently dictated by
the neocons, the same group that peddled blatant lies about Iraq's
supposed weapons of mass destruction to hoodwink the American public into
supporting the disastrous war. As long as Rumsfeld remains boss at the
Pentagon, the pro-zionist neocons will continue to push their war agenda;
they are widely believed to want Bush to attack Iran before he leaves
office, not least because of the profits that wars make for the arms &
military services industries. They do not care how many Americans are
killed, much less how many Muslim lives are lost, provided their own
interests are served."
Why is US President George Bush threatening
to go to war against Iran over its civilian nuclear program at a time when
American forces are bogged down in Iraq & US defence secretary Donald
Rumsfeld is facing a virtual insurrection against his disastrous handling
of the war by retired American military generals? Considering another
adventure under such circumstances appears grossly irrational, but
Washington is not run by rational beings. At a time when several US
officials have been forced to resign either on corruption charges - Jack
Abramoff & Lewis "Scooter" Libby - or for lying to Congress & others, such as White House chief of
staff Andrew Card & press secretary Scott MacClellan, have resigned,
ostensibly because Bush needs to bring in fresh faces, it is clear that
his administration is crumbling.
But the odor of something rotten in
Washington cannot be cleared by such resignations; the problems are much
deeper: Bush's approval ratings are hitting record lows & calls for his
impeachment for lying & launching an illegal war are getting louder. But
it is precisely at such a time that he may strike elsewhere to divert
attention from his crimes. The threats against Iran are also seen as
psychological warfare to force Iran to submit to the US's demands. Such
threats have been heard before, but it was not until Seymour Hersh's
article in the New Yorker on April 17 that the threat of war was made
explicit. The US's threats to use nuclear weapons to prevent Iran from
acquiring nuclear technology for peaceful purposes, as is its right under
the nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT), are unbelievably hypocritical.
Neither Russia nor China supports UN
sanctions against Iran, as proposed by Washington. The International
Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) reported back to Security Council on April 28
that Iran was enriching uranium, something Iran itself had confirmed
earlier in the month. Contrary to US propaganda, the Security Council's
statement on March 29 did not—and could not - demand that Iran halt its
enrichment program, since Tehran is in full compliance with its NPT
obligations. It only appealed for a voluntary suspension. On April 24,
President Mahmoud Ahmedinejad warned that any UN action against Iran would
force it to reconsider its membership of the NPT and its cooperation with
the IAEA; if Iran is threatened despite adhering to its treaty
obligations, there is no point allowing IAEA inspectors to snoop on its
facilities, especially when many of them are known to work for the US. In
any case, the IAEA statements regarding Iran are routinely distorted by
the US to advance their own agenda.
US foreign policy is currently dictated by
the neocons, the same group that peddled blatant lies about Iraq's
supposed weapons of mass destruction to hoodwink the American public into
supporting the disastrous war. As long as Rumsfeld remains boss at the
Pentagon, the pro-Zionist neocons will continue to push their war agenda;
they are widely believed to want Bush to attack Iran before he leaves
office, not least because of the profits that wars make for the arms &
military services industries. They do not care how many Americans are
killed, much less how many Muslim lives are lost, provided their own
interests are served.
Fortunately, however, influential voices are
being raised in the US against such madness, especially against the use of
nuclear weapons & indeed a war against another Muslim country. Among other
things, such prominent figures as Zbigniew Brzezinski, former National
Security Advisor to President Jimmy Carter & a large number of American
scientists fear that such a war might provoke a massive backlash across
the Muslim world. Senior generals have also expressed grave misgivings.
Whether Bush & the neocons will heed such warnings appears unlikely. One
thing, however, is clear: attacking Iran will not be easy, & the US would
suffer huge losses; if Iraq was difficult, Iran would be much worse. Iran
has the ability to defend itself, & to hit back hard. Oil supplies would
be disrupted, forcing prices to over $100 per barrel, or even towards $200
per barrel, threatening recession in the US, Europe & Japan. The
much-touted American way of life would end, resulting in massive
suffering. Perhaps the Christian fundamentalist president wants an
Armageddon.
Bush has also started talking about "regime change" in Tehran. Hersh suggested that US Special Forces are already operating
inside Iran, agitating tribes & ethnic minorities to undermine the Islamic
Republic. The US is quite capable of such interference in another country;
it has a long record of illegal activities against other peoples, without
any constraint from international legal bodies. If such activities are
confirmed – Iran has said it has no evidence of them – Iran should know
that there would be no point in complaining to the UN or the International
Court of Justice. The US has never been constrained by legal niceties,
only by the threat of an effective political or military response. It only
ever learns the hard way.
The neocons' wish for "regime change" in Tehran will never materialize; Islamic Iran has nothing in common with
Saddam's Iraq. Their plans can achieve nothing more than massive conflict
in the world, &
regime change in Washington as US casualties mount
&
the American public realizes the consequences of the megalomaniac
fantasies of the neocon warlords. If Washington does not change course,
the US is heading for a meltdown. Few in the world would shed any tears if
this were to happen
-----------------------------
Britain Unveils a
50-Year Energy Plan
By DAVID STRINGER Associated Press Writer
Jul 11, 2006, 12:43 PM EDT
LONDON (AP) --
Britain unveiled its energy plan for the
next 50 years Tuesday, saying nuclear power could make a "significant
contribution" to the country's needs as it seeks to reduce dependence on
imported fuel and cut the pollutants blamed for global warming.
Trade Secretary Alistair Darling said
increasing energy efficiency and boosting the use of renewable power sources
would be central, and nuclear energy could also make a "significant
contribution." (But Iran and Arab states are denied
that access to nuclear energy!).
"A mix of energy supply remains essential
and we should not be over-dependent on one source if we're going to maintain
security of supply in the future," he told Parliament.
Prime Minister Tony Blair, who once
opposed nuclear power, said Tuesday that "what's changed my thinking is not
just climate change, but the fact that we're going to move from being
self-sufficient in basic energy to a big importer."
Blair argues Britain needs nuclear power
to keep it from becoming overly dependent on fuel imports from the Middle
East, Central Asia and Russia as its North Sea oil reserves diminish.
He says that despite environmental
concerns about the safety of nuclear plants, they are necessary if Britain
wants to cut its emissions of the gases like carbon dioxide that are blamed
for global warming. Nuclear plants do not produce such gases.
Britain's 23 nuclear power stations
supply about 20 percent of the country's electricity - but all but one are
due to be closed down by 2023.
Alan Duncan, energy spokesman for the
opposition Conservative Party, said the new energy plan lacked substance and
avoided tough decisions. It failed to make a real commitment to nuclear
power despite Blair's support for it, he said.
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Blair has claimed that without new
nuclear power plants, Britain will rely on gas for 55 percent of its energy
needs by 2020 - up from 38 percent currently. As much as 90 percent of that
gas would be imported, he has said, leaving Britain dangerously dependent on
the Middle East, Central Asia and Russia.
But government advisers on sustainable
energy, lawmakers and many environmentalists challenge Blair's view,
claiming he has failed to secure support for a new nuclear program and has
dismissed potential alternatives. They, like Blair, are worried about
tackling climate change.
"The government is going to have to stop
looking for an easy fix to our climate change and energy crises - there
simply isn't one," said Jonathon Porritt, chairman of the Sustainable
Development Commission, an independent advisory body to the government.
Britain has lagged behind other European
nations in boosting its use of renewable energy such as wind and solar
power. Germany, the world's largest producer of wind power, will shut down
all its nuclear plants by about 2021.
Tony Juniper, British director of Friends
of the Earth, said that while the new report's proposals to boost use of
renewables and increase efficiency would be welcome, far more is needed if
Britain is to begin cutting the pollutants blamed for global warming.
"We need more than this review, we need a
legal framework that's going to send a consistent sign to the economy that
we have to reduce carbon dioxide emissions," he said.
-----------------
Iranian President,
Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, Warns Israel of a Crushing Response If It Dares to
Attack Syria
AP Headline: Iranian President Warns
Israel About Syria
By NASSER KARIMI Associated Press Writer
Jul 13, 2006, 10:00 PM EDT
TEHRAN, Iran (AP) --
Iran's president, Mahmoud Ahmadinejad,
warned Israel against extending its offensive in Lebanon to neighboring
Syria, saying such a move would be regarded as an attack on the whole
Islamic world and be met with a "crushing response," the official Iranian
news agency said Friday.
Israel has intensified its attacks on
Lebanon to put pressure on the government and force Hezbollah to free the
two Israeli soldiers it captured Wednesday. Syria and Iran are the top
backers of the Lebanese Islamic Resistance Movement, Hezbollah.
"If the occupying regime of Jerusalem
attacks Syria, it will be equivalent to an attack on the whole Islamic world
and the regime (Israel) will face a crushing response" Iranian President
Mahmoud Ahmadinejad was quoted as saying by IRNA.
Ahmadinejad made the comments in a
telephone conversation with Syrian President Bashar Al-Assad to assure him
of his support, the agency said.
The Iranian leader called on Muslim
countries to create a united front against the Israeli occupation
government.
"The Islamic world, especially countries
in this region, need more unity and integrity, particularly in the context
of Lebanon and Palestine," Ahmadinejad said.
Separately, the spokesman for Iran's
Foreign Ministry, Hamid Reza Asefi, denied Israeli allegations that the
captured Israeli soldiers were being transferred to Iran.
On Thursday, (to justify destruction of
Lebanese infrastructure, particularly roads, bridges, and airports,) the
Israeli occupation government said it had information that Hezbollah
fighters were trying to transfer the soldiers to Iran, apparently to
prevent Israeli occupation troops from rescuing them.
Khaleej Times, (AFP)
8 April 2006
WASHINGTON - The administration of
President George W. Bush is planning a massive bombing campaign against Iran,
including use of bunker-buster nuclear bombs to destroy a key Iranian suspected
nuclear weapons facility, The New Yorker magazine reported in its April 17
issue.
The article by investigative journalist
Seymour Hersh said that Bush and others in the White House have come to view
Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad as a potential Adolf Hitler.
'That's the name they're using,' the
report quoted a former senior intelligence official as saying.
A senior unnamed Pentagon adviser is
quoted in the article as saying that '
this White House believes that the only way to solve the problem is to change
the power structure in Iran, and that means war.'
The former intelligence officials depicts
planning as 'enormous,' 'hectic' & 'operational,'
Hersh writes.
One former defense official said the
military planning was premised on a belief that 'a sustained bombing campaign in
Iran will humiliate the religious leadership & lead the public to rise up &
overthrow the government,' The New Yorker pointed out.
In recent weeks, the president has quietly
initiated a series of talks on plans for Iran with a few key senators and
members of the House of Representatives, including at least one Democrat, the
report said.
One of the options under consideration
involves the possible use of a bunker-buster tactical nuclear weapon, such as
the B61-11, to insure the destruction of Iran's main centrifuge plant at Natanz,
Hersh writes.
But the former senior intelligence
official said the attention given to the nuclear option has created serious
misgivings inside the military, and some officers have talked about resigning
after an attempt to remove the nuclear option from the evolving war plans in
Iran failed, according to the report.
'There are very strong sentiments within
the military against brandishing nuclear weapons against other countries,' the
magazine quotes the Pentagon adviser as saying. The adviser warned that bombing
Iran could provoke 'a chain reaction' of attacks on American facilities &
citizens throughout the world and might also reignite Hezbollah.
'If we go, the southern half of Iraq will
light up like a candle,' the adviser is quoted as telling The New Yorker.
Iran offers to share nuclear technology
Wednesday 26 April
2006, 4:39 Makka Time, 1:39 GMT
Iran has offered to transfer nuclear
technology to other countries, including Sudan, while warning that it will hide
its nuclear programme if the West takes harsh measures.
A UN Security Council deadline for Iran to
suspend uranium enrichment expires this week.
Beyond that, Ali Larijani, the top Iranian
nuclear negotiator, on Tuesday also renewed the country's vow to end
co-operation with the UN nuclear watchdog, the International Atomic Energy
Agency, and said increasing pressure on Iran would only stiffen its resolve.
'If you take harsh measures, we will hide
this programme. If you use the language of force, you should not expect us to
act transparently,' Larijani said, adding that Western countries on the IAEA
board 'have to understand they cannot resolve this issue through force'.
Separately, Iran's supreme leader
Ayatollah Ali Khamenei issued the offer to transfer nuclear technology as he met
with Omar al-Bashir, the Sudanese president.
The US secretary of state, who was
visiting Greece and Turkey, fired back almost immediately.
'Iranians can threaten, but they are
deepening their own isolation,' Condoleezza Rice said.
Defiant stance
Iran's defiant stance appeared to stem in
part from opposition to sanctions by Russia and China, both permanent,
veto-holding members of the Security Council.
'We see no alternative to the negotiations
process,' Sergei Ivanov, the Russian defence minister, was quoted as saying by
the Interfax news agency while in Beijing for a regional anti-terrorism meeting.
Qin Gang, a Chinese Foreign Ministry
spokesman, urged all parties 'to show flexibility', saying the international
community should not abandon efforts for a peaceful settlement.
'Iran's nuclear capability is one example
of various scientific capabilities in the country. ... The Islamic Republic of
Iran is prepared to transfer the experience, knowledge and technology of its
scientists,' Khamenei told al-Bashir.
Al-Bashir said last month that his country
was considering a nuclear programme to generate electrical power.
Such a technology transfer would be legal
as long as it is between signatory-states to the non-proliferation treaty, and
the IAEA was informed.
Word of the transfer offer became public
by the time Rice reached Ankara, Turkey, prompting her to respond yet again.
'We have to be concerned when there are
statements from Iran that Iran would not only have this technology, but would
share it, share technology and expertise,' Rice said.