The decision point for applying a military option, before too late, is getting nearer. Ehud Barak, Israel’s minister of defense, implied that this critical point would be reached in less than a year, in a recent CNN interview. U.S has changed radically its earlier position, now both the U.S. and Israel say also officially that they have not ruled out military action against Iran. This in case if diplomacy fails to resolve a dispute over the nuclear program, which Tehran says is peaceful but the West believes is a cover for trying to build atomic bombs. The use of military option is now well on the way.
Latest developments
Thousands of US troops began descending on Israel this week as part of the US-IDF deployment in readiness for a military engagement with Iran and its possible escalation into a regional conflict. The 9,000 US servicemen gathering in Israel in the coming weeks are mostly airmen, missile interceptor teams, marines, seamen, technicians and intelligence officers. Officially this maneuver is part in sc Austere Challenge 12, the biggest joint US-Israeli war game ever held. The joint US-Israeli drill will test multiple Israeli and US air defense systems against incoming missiles and rockets, according to the official communique; they will also practice intercepting missiles and rockets coming in from Syria, Hizbollah in Lebanon and Hamas in the Gaza Strip. In fact the joint force will now be in place ready for a decision to attack Iran's nuclear installations or any war emergency. Washington and Jerusalem are doing their utmost to present a perfectly synchronized military front against Iran: American officers are stationed at IDF command centers and Israeli officers posted at the US European Command-EUCOM.
Washington and Jerusalem are doing their utmost to present a perfectly synchronized military front against Iran: American officers are stationed at IDF command centers and Israeli officers posted at the US European Command-EUCOM. British Defense Minister Phillip Hammond, on a visit to Washington, affirmed unofficially that Britain stands ready to strike Iran if the Strait of Hormuz is closed. Officially this was not said as the Obama administration tries keep a low profile on plans for attacking Iran.
Tehran is staging military's maneuvers every few days to assuring the Iranian people that its leaders are fully prepared to defend the country against an American or Israeli strike on its national nuclear program. By this strategy, Iran's ground, sea and air forces are maintained constantly at top war readiness to thwart any surprise attack. The next Iranian naval exercise at the Strait of Hormuz to take place in February, although its 10-day drill in the same arena only ended Monday, 2. Jan. 2012. Iranian marine commandos were preparing to sow mines in the strategic Strait of Hormuz. Other – last week tested – possibility was using Shahab-3 ballistic missiles which have a range of 1,600 kilometers and other missiles, such as the Nasr1 cruise marine missile, are capable of reaching Hormuz from central Iran. Tehran has also redistributed the Shahab missiles to secret sites ready to launch retaliatory strikes.
Iran itself has reported that the new Fordow nuclear enrichment plant will be operational in the near future to refine uranium to a fissile purity of 20% - far more than the 3.5% level usually required to power nuclear energy plants. 20 % uranium can be turned more easily into fissile warhead material. Based to information of the International Atomic Energy Agency inspection 348 machines are operating at Fordow. Operations at the bunker-like Fordow facility south of Tehran are small in comparison to Iran’s main enrichment site in Natanz in central Iran, where nearly 8,000 centrifuges are operating. The centrifuges at the underground labs are considered more efficient than others and are shielded from aerial surveillance and protected against airstrikes by up to 300 feet (90 meters) of mountain rock. Iran has also announced that it had succeeded in producing and testing its own uranium fuel rods for use in its nuclear power plants. If true, this claim would constitute a significant advance in Iran’s efforts to attain the capability of powering its nuclear reactors without international assistance.
Military option on the table
The starting point with today's tensions could be the interview in a CBS Tuesday, Dec. 20 where US Secretary of Defense Leon Panetta said following: "Despite the efforts to disrupt the Iranian nuclear program, they have reached a point where they can assemble a bomb in a year or potentially less". This is a radical change in US administration policy. "That's a red line for us and that's a red line, obviously, for the Israelis," Panetta noted. Instead of warning Israel against striking Iran, he said: "If we have to do it we will deal with it."A nuclear weapon in Iran is unacceptable”.
From Tehran's standpoint, the American military departure from Iraq has removed a formidable obstacle in Israel's path to an attack on its nuclear installations: the shield of the US Air Force's control of Iraqi skies.
Gen. Martin Dempsey, Chairman of the Joint US Chiefs of Staff, issued a warning: "Iran is playing a dangerous game that could ensnare the Middle East, the Middle East and others into conflict and a renewed arms race.Don't push it." He was described as quietly leading the ongoing military planning for an attack against Iran's nuclear weapons if the president gives the order to do so. Gen. Dempsey went on to say: "My biggest worry is they (Iran) will miscalculate our resolve. One factor is also Israel which destroyed Syria's nuclear plant in Osirak on 1981 without warning US beforehand. ”There is no guarantee that Israel will give the United States warning if it decides to attack Iran,” Dempsey said. "We are trying to establish some confidence on the part of the Israelis that we recognize their concerns and are collaborating with them on addressing them."
Covert activities
Covert activities against Iran have included the use of computer worms to attack Iran's nuclear installations, including the Stuxnet virus that in 2010 was thought to have destroyed more than a thousand of Iran's uranium-enriching centrifuges by causing them to spin out of control. Several Iranian nuclear scientists have been assassinated, and in November explosions ripped through the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps' ballistic missile base near Tehran. Seventeen people were killed, including one of the IRGC's top officers in the missile development program.
The covert activity is designed to slow Iran's nuclear progress but they are not stopping Iran's enrichment activity permanently. Iran is thought to have many more nuclear scientists and missile designers than Western intelligence services could ever eliminate.
In October, the Obama administration accused Iran of plotting to assassinate the Saudi ambassador to Washington, an alleged plot that some Iran analysts see as an Iranian effort to hit back. The storming of Britain's Embassy in Tehran in late November and a December explosion outside Britain's Embassy in Bahrain may be other signals of Iran's intention to respond to covert fire.
The Strike
According to reports in Haaretz and Ynetnews
29.12.11, Israel and the United States have recently been discussing
‘red lines’ which would necessitate a military strike on Iran’s nuclear
facilities. US administration is keen to avoid Israel surprising the US
by taking unexpected military action against Iran in the coming year.
Scenarios, in which Washington might find a military strike against
Iranian nuclear facilities necessary, include e.g. if Iran were to expel
IAEA observers, if it were to enrich uranium to weapons grade, and if
it were to install advanced centrifuges in its newly constructed
underground uranium enrichment facility in Qom or Iran making progress
on new secret enrichment facilities.
Counter acts?
In
response to mounting Western pressure over its nuclear ambitions, Iran
started a naval drill in the Gulf last week , responded with belligerent
rhetoric, spooking oil markets by warning that it could shut the Strait
of Hormuz if sanctions were imposed on its oil exports, the country's
main revenue source. However if Hormuz will be closed by mines, the U.S
using mine countermeasures can reopen Hormuz within 24-48 hours.
The
Strait of Hormuz is one of the world’s most important waterways. Some
40% of all seaborne oil passes through this narrow passageway, which is
equivalent to about 20% of total oil traded worldwide. This amounts to
16.5 to 17 million barrels per day (other significant choke-points for
the transit of oil include the Suez Canal - 4.5 million barrels per day
and the Strait of Malacca - 15 million barrels per day).
Israel
has no influence over internal events in Syria or Lebanon. Its interest
is in a quiet northern border. For as long as Hezbollah is able to
maintain its independent military infrastructure in Lebanon, the threat
of an attack on Israel remains. Hezbollah has extensively rearmed after
the losses it incurred in the 2006 Second Lebanon War. It is now
estimated to have an arsenal of 40,000 rockets, including precision
guided missiles that can reach all parts of Israel. It has also
deliberately deployed its weapons in villages to make them harder for
Israel to target in any future conflict due civilian/collateral damages
which would damage Israel's image even more if possible.On 7 July, Israel Defense Forces revealed, in unprecedented detail, previously classified information about Hezbollah’s deployment in south Lebanon. The information released focused on El Khiam, a Shia town in south east Lebanon a few miles from the border with Israel. El Khiam was the scene of fighting during the 2006 war; the surrounding area was used by Hezbollah to launch Katyusha rockets at Israel. The IDF material included maps and a 3D simulated video of the village, showing that weaponry and rockets were being stored close to schools, hospitals and residential buildings.
A military strike can have serious strategic consequences too. Iran will surely respond violently, both directly and through proxies such as Hezbollah. Iran has long-range missile systems including the Shahab-3, which could reach Israel and U.S. bases in the Middle East. The conflict could escalate into a regional war. Iran may take aggressive action in the straits of Hormuz, leading to a spike in oil prices, even though disrupting the flow of oil would be self-defeating.
Preparations for counter strike
War games are a puzzle not only with tactical alternatives, timing, more or less accurate intelligence and means available but also with known and un-known risks. One event on 4th Dec 2011 brought one new piece to this puzzle.
There is also some other risks than Iran's counter strike such as
- Air strike would not eliminate the knowledge about how to build a nuclear weapon that Iran already has.
- Bombing would pass those nuclear sites that foreign intelligence services do not know about.
- Attack could create unneeded tensions between US and China and Russia, who are needed to successfully resolve this issue via non-military means.
The newest Iranian nuclear facilities are nearly 100 meter deep in hard rock. The consequence is that to destroy this plant the most effective bunker busters are needed maybe even a nuclear bomb some 1 megaton size. Using so heavy methods can have their effect also outside Iran's borders e.g in form of radioactive dust.
Israel is unique in that it perceives a nuclear Iran as a potentially existential threat. The Iranian leadership has continuously threatened to “wipe Israel off the map” and with nuclear weapons they could also implement this aim. Given their collective memory of the Holocaust and the hostile surrounding in which they have had to defend themselves, Israelis take this threat especially seriously. A nuclear Iran would change radically regional or even geopolitical balance. It would increase the danger of miscalculation towards a nuclear crisis. Iran could take bolder position threatening Israel and moderate Arab regimes, undermining any Israeli-Arab peace process and manipulating the energy markets.
Dore Gold hits the core of the problem in his column published in IsraelHayom by asking Is Iran rational? One
of the most difficult questions that the West needs to answer in the
year ahead is whether Iranian behavior will be influenced mostly by
rational considerations or by ideological beliefs. Some analysts say
that the possession of nuclear weapons might encourage moderation in the
Iranian regime ( Reuven Pedatzur in Haaretz on Dec. 20, 2011). The
leading commentator on international affairs in the U.S., Fareed
Zakaria, also believes that a nuclear Iran would act rationally and
could be deterred. He notes that the Revolutionary Guard has become the
center of power in Iranian decision-making taking, displacing the
religious leadership.
Western
intelligence has assessed that if Iran wanted to develop atomic bombs,
it has the scientific, technical and industrial capacity eventually to
do so. There might be not yet a consensus in Tehran that they actually
want build a bomb, it is seen more like an open option for the future.
So far the aim of in fact covert war has been to give Iran’s leaders a
reason not to go nuclear weapons. However Iran might see this current
policy opposite way, it could give Iran a reason to weaponise. So far
the aim of in fact covert war has been to give Iran’s leaders a reason
not to go nuclear weapons. However Iran might see this current policy
opposite way, it could give Iran a reason to weaponise.
The
registration of candidates for the Majles elections slated for March 2,
2012 ended last weekend. Meanwhile, power struggles are still being
waged between the two major bodies affiliated with the conservative
bloc: the United Conservative Front, affiliated with President
Ahmadinejad’s political opponents, and the Stability Front of the
Islamic Revolution (Jebhe-ye Paydari), which consists of activists
considered to be the president’s allies. The Khabar Online website
reported this week that from among more than 1,000 candidates who
registered for the elections in Tehran Province, only about 60 are
well-known political personalities; and that 46% of the candidates are
affiliated with the United Conservative Front, 21% with the Stability
Front, and 7% with the reformist camp.
Will there be anything else than negative and more negative outcomes?An alternative way to military option from my point of view – which might be too optimistic - is to boost of diplomacy and sanctions. After years of measures that had little impact, the new sanctions are the first that could have a serious effect on Iran's oil trade, which is 60 percent of its economy. Sanctions signed into law by U.S. President Barack Obama on New Year's Eve would cut financial institutions that work with Iran's central bank off from the U.S. financial system, blocking the main path for Iran to receive payments for its crude.
Following
the announcement by the European Union that its member states will
cease imports of Iranian crude oil, Japan said yesterday that it would
also consider cutbacks in its purchases of Iranian oil. Also China has
cut its purchases of Iranian oil by half this month, and is set to
extend its cuts into February. The EU, China and Japan account for about
half of the totality of Iranian exports of 2.6 billion barrels of oil
per day. These new sanctions will have some economic effect in Iran but
other sanctions might be needed.
Diplomacy
must be done with various interests in mind. Iran has recently signaled
that it is willing to restart talks with UN lead international
community based 5+1 composition (=UNSC+Germany). The hope is that Iran
will come around and allow IAEA inspectors to resume inspections.
However, there always exists the possibility that Iran may use IAEA
inspections as a way to buy time at sites unknown to the IAEA. If
sanctions and diplomacy fail and proof of a nuclear weapons program is
established, should the military option be seriously considered.
If
all non-military pressures fail there are clearly no “good” options
available. In my opinion it is hard to believe either side wants a war
to start because all sides are aware about risks. Today's preparations
for strike might be aimed to be means of pressure to get non-military
solution. However, when emotions are high, domestic political interests
differ in different key player states and massive destruction weaponery
is on the theatre the situation can escalate anytime.
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