Will US Use Iran Military Option?



 Science > Prophecies-Of-Nostradamus > Will US Use Iran Military Option?

LINK TO THIS PAGE  


rating :  0   |  0


  Page 1 of 1

1

 
Topic: Science > Prophecies-Of-Nostradamus
User: "EOD"
Date: 30 Mar 2006 12:09:40 PM
Object: Will US Use Iran Military Option?
Last Updated: Thursday, 30 March 2006, 11:38 GMT 12:38 UK
Will US use Iran military option?
By Paul Reynolds
World Affairs correspondent, BBC News website
The US has the military capability to attack Iran's nuclear facilities
If the current diplomatic efforts to get Iran to suspend its nuclear
fuel enrichment activities do not work, it is inevitable that at some
stage, attention will be turned to discussion of a military option.
That means, in practice, an air attack against Iran's nuclear
facilities by the United States and/or Israel.
The US could certainly carry out such an attack, with cruise missiles
and with B-2, other Stealth bombers and B-52 bombers armed with
satellite guided bombs.
However Iran's nuclear plants are widely spread out and one is buried
deep underground, so an attack would need to be sustained and
wide-ranging.
Israel might also be able to do it. Not long ago it bought some
bunker-busting bombs from the US, but it would be much more of a
challenge.
'Civilian programme'
Nobody involved in the diplomatic round says this is an active
proposition at the moment.
However, President Bush has stated that the US will not accept Iran as
a nuclear-armed state.
Hawk John Bolton has said the US will use all tools at its disposal
It is possible that he will interpret Iran's programme as a threat,
even though Iran says it will not build a bomb but wants the technology
only to make fuel for civil nuclear power. It is allowed to do make its
own fuel under the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT).
Vice-President Cheney said last year that Israel might act first and
"let the rest of the world worry about picking up the diplomatic pieces
afterwards".
And one of the administration's leading hawks, John Bolton, the US
ambassador to the UN, warned Iran recently of "painful consequences"
and of using "all tools at our disposal" if its nuclear programme was
not stopped.
It was perhaps significant that Mr Bolton was speaking at a meeting of
Aipac, the American Israel Public Affairs Committee. This is a powerful
lobbying group and its priorities are closely watched to see their
effect on US policies. At the moment, one of Aipac's priorities is
Iran.
In the final analysis, the US might face what is being called the
McCain moment. This is what Senator John McCain said: "There is only
one thing worse than the United States exercising a military option.
That is a nuclear-armed Iran."
Red lines
However, the dilemma might be more difficult than that because Iran
might not became "nuclear-armed". It might simply become
nuclear-capable.
If Iran chose to do so, and it says it will not so choose, it could
be in a position to build a bomb by 2009 or 2010.
The technology in question can be used for both civilian and military
purposes.
If Iran does not go down the military road, and it says it will not,
there will be many governments around the world who will argue that it
should be allowed to enrich fuel, under inspection by the International
Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA).
The timetable is uncertain but an assessment by the Institute for
Science and International Security (ISIS) in Washington says that Iran
might be able to assemble enough centrifuges by 2007, and enrich
significant amounts of fuel by 2008.
Those could be the red lines for the US and Israel. If Iran chose to do
so, and it says it will not so choose, it could be in a position to
build a bomb by 2009 or 2010, according to this assessment.
Iraqi reactor raid
So would the US agree to enrichment or would it attack? Or would it
concentrate on encouraging a change of government and policy in Iran
and marshalling its allies into imposing sanctions?
The UN Security Council as things stand is unlikely to do much in the
way of sanctions, given Russian and Chinese opposition.
Both the US and Israel have probably made contingency plans for an
attack. That would be no surprise. It is what the military does in many
situations.
In June 1981, the Israeli air force bombed the Iraqi nuclear reactor at
Osirak, south of Baghdad, and that raid is often used as the example of
what might happen this time.
However, the raid illustrates both the feasibility of such a raid and
its longer-term drawbacks.
The raid did indeed destroy the plant but it also spurred Iraq to
develop a nuclear capability in secrecy - and it nearly succeeded.
'War declared'
The Israelis can argue that they achieved a delay that proved crucial.
But history might not repeat itself.
Iran might, for example, simply leave the NPT, as it has the right to
do, and go ahead with nuclear development anyway. That could set the
scene for further attacks over a long period of time.
The United States has the capability to come out of the clear blue
sky and destroy the Iranian military infrastructure
Analyst Dan Plesch
Iran might also retaliate, against US interests in Iraq and the Gulf,
and might use the militant group Hezbollah in southern Lebanon to
attack Israel. The region could be in uproar.
For all these reasons, and no doubt also because of the pressing US
preoccupation in Iraq, the military option has not come to the fore.
There is a small group of experts and analysts, however, who think that
it will come.
An article by veteran military watcher Seymour Hersh in The New Yorker
in January 2005 helped lead the way.
He quoted a "former high level intelligence official" as saying: "Next,
we're going to have the Iranian campaign. We've declared war and the
bad guys, wherever they are, are the enemy."
Iran has a number of nuclear installations in operation
The "war" would not be an invasion of Iran but subversion leading, it
would be hoped, to regime-change and an air attack if necessary. Mr
Hersh indicated he felt such a subversion effort had already begun.
On this side of the Atlantic, Dan Plesch, Research Associate at the
London School of Oriental and African Studies, is proclaiming the same
message.
He gave a speech analysing the options recently and told the BBC News
website: "The United States has the capability to come out of the clear
blue sky and destroy the Iranian military infrastructure."
He went on: "You can say we are being hysterical and are a band of
doom-mongers. But I fear the US has lost confidence in the UN or the EU
to solve this. And it could do it militarily.
"It has reorganised its strategic forces in a doctrine known as Global
Strike, meaning that from a standing start it can strike anywhere in
the world in a short time. That gives it the capability."
All this does not mean it will happen. It does mean it is being
debated.
Of course, the legality of any attack would be hard to justify. The
British Foreign Secretary Jack Straw told reporters this week: "I don't
happen to believe that military action has a role to play in any event.
We could not justify it under Article 51 of the UN charter which
permits self defence."
In the absence of Security Council approval, the US might argue that
its interests in the Gulf were at stake and that its ally Israel was at
risk.
Paul.Reynolds-INTERNET@bbc.co.uk
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/middle_east/4860492.stm
.

User: "assurancetourix"

Title: Re: Will US Use Iran Military Option? 30 Mar 2006 01:48:54 PM
Of course the US will do so, even if it's a economic suicide:
http://www.truthout.org/docs_2006/010906I.shtml
pro-israeli Neocons want a war wih the entire muslim world, and there
is plenty of attards who believe that they can do it without any
signifiant casualties and without a drop of 90% in the US standards of
living
EOD wrote:

Last Updated: Thursday, 30 March 2006, 11:38 GMT 12:38 UK

Will US use Iran military option?
By Paul Reynolds
World Affairs correspondent, BBC News website

The US has the military capability to attack Iran's nuclear facilities
If the current diplomatic efforts to get Iran to suspend its nuclear
fuel enrichment activities do not work, it is inevitable that at some
stage, attention will be turned to discussion of a military option.

That means, in practice, an air attack against Iran's nuclear
facilities by the United States and/or Israel.

The US could certainly carry out such an attack, with cruise missiles
and with B-2, other Stealth bombers and B-52 bombers armed with
satellite guided bombs.

However Iran's nuclear plants are widely spread out and one is buried
deep underground, so an attack would need to be sustained and
wide-ranging.

Israel might also be able to do it. Not long ago it bought some
bunker-busting bombs from the US, but it would be much more of a
challenge.

'Civilian programme'

Nobody involved in the diplomatic round says this is an active
proposition at the moment.

However, President Bush has stated that the US will not accept Iran as
a nuclear-armed state.

Hawk John Bolton has said the US will use all tools at its disposal

It is possible that he will interpret Iran's programme as a threat,
even though Iran says it will not build a bomb but wants the technology
only to make fuel for civil nuclear power. It is allowed to do make its
own fuel under the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT).

Vice-President Cheney said last year that Israel might act first and
"let the rest of the world worry about picking up the diplomatic pieces
afterwards".

And one of the administration's leading hawks, John Bolton, the US
ambassador to the UN, warned Iran recently of "painful consequences"
and of using "all tools at our disposal" if its nuclear programme was
not stopped.

It was perhaps significant that Mr Bolton was speaking at a meeting of
Aipac, the American Israel Public Affairs Committee. This is a powerful
lobbying group and its priorities are closely watched to see their
effect on US policies. At the moment, one of Aipac's priorities is
Iran.

In the final analysis, the US might face what is being called the
McCain moment. This is what Senator John McCain said: "There is only
one thing worse than the United States exercising a military option.
That is a nuclear-armed Iran."

Red lines

However, the dilemma might be more difficult than that because Iran
might not became "nuclear-armed". It might simply become
nuclear-capable.

If Iran chose to do so, and it says it will not so choose, it could
be in a position to build a bomb by 2009 or 2010.

The technology in question can be used for both civilian and military
purposes.

If Iran does not go down the military road, and it says it will not,
there will be many governments around the world who will argue that it
should be allowed to enrich fuel, under inspection by the International
Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA).

The timetable is uncertain but an assessment by the Institute for
Science and International Security (ISIS) in Washington says that Iran
might be able to assemble enough centrifuges by 2007, and enrich
significant amounts of fuel by 2008.

Those could be the red lines for the US and Israel. If Iran chose to do
so, and it says it will not so choose, it could be in a position to
build a bomb by 2009 or 2010, according to this assessment.

Iraqi reactor raid

So would the US agree to enrichment or would it attack? Or would it
concentrate on encouraging a change of government and policy in Iran
and marshalling its allies into imposing sanctions?

The UN Security Council as things stand is unlikely to do much in the
way of sanctions, given Russian and Chinese opposition.

Both the US and Israel have probably made contingency plans for an
attack. That would be no surprise. It is what the military does in many
situations.

In June 1981, the Israeli air force bombed the Iraqi nuclear reactor at
Osirak, south of Baghdad, and that raid is often used as the example of
what might happen this time.

However, the raid illustrates both the feasibility of such a raid and
its longer-term drawbacks.

The raid did indeed destroy the plant but it also spurred Iraq to
develop a nuclear capability in secrecy - and it nearly succeeded.

'War declared'

The Israelis can argue that they achieved a delay that proved crucial.
But history might not repeat itself.

Iran might, for example, simply leave the NPT, as it has the right to
do, and go ahead with nuclear development anyway. That could set the
scene for further attacks over a long period of time.

The United States has the capability to come out of the clear blue
sky and destroy the Iranian military infrastructure

Analyst Dan Plesch

Iran might also retaliate, against US interests in Iraq and the Gulf,
and might use the militant group Hezbollah in southern Lebanon to
attack Israel. The region could be in uproar.

For all these reasons, and no doubt also because of the pressing US
preoccupation in Iraq, the military option has not come to the fore.

There is a small group of experts and analysts, however, who think that
it will come.

An article by veteran military watcher Seymour Hersh in The New Yorker
in January 2005 helped lead the way.

He quoted a "former high level intelligence official" as saying: "Next,
we're going to have the Iranian campaign. We've declared war and the
bad guys, wherever they are, are the enemy."


Iran has a number of nuclear installations in operation

The "war" would not be an invasion of Iran but subversion leading, it
would be hoped, to regime-change and an air attack if necessary. Mr
Hersh indicated he felt such a subversion effort had already begun.

On this side of the Atlantic, Dan Plesch, Research Associate at the
London School of Oriental and African Studies, is proclaiming the same
message.

He gave a speech analysing the options recently and told the BBC News
website: "The United States has the capability to come out of the clear
blue sky and destroy the Iranian military infrastructure."

He went on: "You can say we are being hysterical and are a band of
doom-mongers. But I fear the US has lost confidence in the UN or the EU
to solve this. And it could do it militarily.

"It has reorganised its strategic forces in a doctrine known as Global
Strike, meaning that from a standing start it can strike anywhere in
the world in a short time. That gives it the capability."

All this does not mean it will happen. It does mean it is being
debated.

Of course, the legality of any attack would be hard to justify. The
British Foreign Secretary Jack Straw told reporters this week: "I don't
happen to believe that military action has a role to play in any event.
We could not justify it under Article 51 of the UN charter which
permits self defence."

In the absence of Security Council approval, the US might argue that
its interests in the Gulf were at stake and that its ally Israel was at
risk.

Paul.Reynolds-INTERNET@bbc.co.uk
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/middle_east/4860492.stm

.

User: "=?utf-8?B?VGhlIExhc3QgMjQ1NiBkYXlz4oSiIOKZpQ==?="

Title: Re: Will US Use Iran Military Option? 30 Mar 2006 08:08:52 PM
HOOROO
UNCLE WALLY
---0---
EOD wrote:

Last Updated: Thursday, 30 March 2006, 11:38 GMT 12:38 UK

Will US use Iran military option?
By Paul Reynolds
World Affairs correspondent, BBC News website

The US has the military capability to attack Iran's nuclear facilities
If the current diplomatic efforts to get Iran to suspend its nuclear
fuel enrichment activities do not work, it is inevitable that at some
stage, attention will be turned to discussion of a military option.

That means, in practice, an air attack against Iran's nuclear
facilities by the United States and/or Israel.

The US could certainly carry out such an attack, with cruise missiles
and with B-2, other Stealth bombers and B-52 bombers armed with
satellite guided bombs.

However Iran's nuclear plants are widely spread out and one is buried
deep underground, so an attack would need to be sustained and
wide-ranging.

Israel might also be able to do it. Not long ago it bought some
bunker-busting bombs from the US, but it would be much more of a
challenge.

'Civilian programme'

Nobody involved in the diplomatic round says this is an active
proposition at the moment.

However, President Bush has stated that the US will not accept Iran as
a nuclear-armed state.

Hawk John Bolton has said the US will use all tools at its disposal

It is possible that he will interpret Iran's programme as a threat,
even though Iran says it will not build a bomb but wants the technology
only to make fuel for civil nuclear power. It is allowed to do make its
own fuel under the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT).

Vice-President Cheney said last year that Israel might act first and
"let the rest of the world worry about picking up the diplomatic pieces
afterwards".

And one of the administration's leading hawks, John Bolton, the US
ambassador to the UN, warned Iran recently of "painful consequences"
and of using "all tools at our disposal" if its nuclear programme was
not stopped.

It was perhaps significant that Mr Bolton was speaking at a meeting of
Aipac, the American Israel Public Affairs Committee. This is a powerful
lobbying group and its priorities are closely watched to see their
effect on US policies. At the moment, one of Aipac's priorities is
Iran.

In the final analysis, the US might face what is being called the
McCain moment. This is what Senator John McCain said: "There is only
one thing worse than the United States exercising a military option.
That is a nuclear-armed Iran."

Red lines

However, the dilemma might be more difficult than that because Iran
might not became "nuclear-armed". It might simply become
nuclear-capable.

If Iran chose to do so, and it says it will not so choose, it could
be in a position to build a bomb by 2009 or 2010.

The technology in question can be used for both civilian and military
purposes.

If Iran does not go down the military road, and it says it will not,
there will be many governments around the world who will argue that it
should be allowed to enrich fuel, under inspection by the International
Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA).

The timetable is uncertain but an assessment by the Institute for
Science and International Security (ISIS) in Washington says that Iran
might be able to assemble enough centrifuges by 2007, and enrich
significant amounts of fuel by 2008.

Those could be the red lines for the US and Israel. If Iran chose to do
so, and it says it will not so choose, it could be in a position to
build a bomb by 2009 or 2010, according to this assessment.

Iraqi reactor raid

So would the US agree to enrichment or would it attack? Or would it
concentrate on encouraging a change of government and policy in Iran
and marshalling its allies into imposing sanctions?

The UN Security Council as things stand is unlikely to do much in the
way of sanctions, given Russian and Chinese opposition.

Both the US and Israel have probably made contingency plans for an
attack. That would be no surprise. It is what the military does in many
situations.

In June 1981, the Israeli air force bombed the Iraqi nuclear reactor at
Osirak, south of Baghdad, and that raid is often used as the example of
what might happen this time.

However, the raid illustrates both the feasibility of such a raid and
its longer-term drawbacks.

The raid did indeed destroy the plant but it also spurred Iraq to
develop a nuclear capability in secrecy - and it nearly succeeded.

'War declared'

The Israelis can argue that they achieved a delay that proved crucial.
But history might not repeat itself.

Iran might, for example, simply leave the NPT, as it has the right to
do, and go ahead with nuclear development anyway. That could set the
scene for further attacks over a long period of time.

The United States has the capability to come out of the clear blue
sky and destroy the Iranian military infrastructure

Analyst Dan Plesch

Iran might also retaliate, against US interests in Iraq and the Gulf,
and might use the militant group Hezbollah in southern Lebanon to
attack Israel. The region could be in uproar.

For all these reasons, and no doubt also because of the pressing US
preoccupation in Iraq, the military option has not come to the fore.

There is a small group of experts and analysts, however, who think that
it will come.

An article by veteran military watcher Seymour Hersh in The New Yorker
in January 2005 helped lead the way.

He quoted a "former high level intelligence official" as saying: "Next,
we're going to have the Iranian campaign. We've declared war and the
bad guys, wherever they are, are the enemy."


Iran has a number of nuclear installations in operation

The "war" would not be an invasion of Iran but subversion leading, it
would be hoped, to regime-change and an air attack if necessary. Mr
Hersh indicated he felt such a subversion effort had already begun.

On this side of the Atlantic, Dan Plesch, Research Associate at the
London School of Oriental and African Studies, is proclaiming the same
message.

He gave a speech analysing the options recently and told the BBC News
website: "The United States has the capability to come out of the clear
blue sky and destroy the Iranian military infrastructure."

He went on: "You can say we are being hysterical and are a band of
doom-mongers. But I fear the US has lost confidence in the UN or the EU
to solve this. And it could do it militarily.

"It has reorganised its strategic forces in a doctrine known as Global
Strike, meaning that from a standing start it can strike anywhere in
the world in a short time. That gives it the capability."

All this does not mean it will happen. It does mean it is being
debated.

Of course, the legality of any attack would be hard to justify. The
British Foreign Secretary Jack Straw told reporters this week: "I don't
happen to believe that military action has a role to play in any event.
We could not justify it under Article 51 of the UN charter which
permits self defence."

In the absence of Security Council approval, the US might argue that
its interests in the Gulf were at stake and that its ally Israel was at
risk.

Paul.Reynolds-INTERNET@bbc.co.uk
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/middle_east/4860492.stm

.


  Page 1 of 1

1

 


Related Articles
 

NEWER

pg.716     pg.544     pg.412     pg.311     pg.234     pg.175     pg.130     pg.96     pg.70     pg.50     pg.35     pg.24     pg.16     pg.10     pg.6     pg.3     pg.1

OLDER