ALERT US speeds up its own and Gulf allies' preparations for clash with Iran

PCViking

Lutefisk Survivor
US speeds up its own and Gulf allies' preparations for clash with Iran
DEBKAfile Special Report January 31, 2010, 12:27 AM (GMT+02:00)

The Obama administration took the unusual step Saturday night, Jan. 30, of leaking word to major US media that the United States, Saudi Arabia and Gulf allies - the United Arab Emirates, Kuwait and Bahrain - have accelerated the deployment of new defenses against possible Iranian missile attacks. They are preparing for Iran, or its surrogate Hizballah, to hit back for a possible US or strikes on Tehran's nuclear facilities.

debkafile's US military sources confirm that Washington plans to treble the 10,000-strong US troop contingent, already present in Saudi Arabia for guarding its oil fields and port facilities against medium or short-range Iranian missile attack, or sabotage by Hizballah marine units trained for their mission by Iran's Revolutionary Guards Corps.

Additional US Aegis missile interceptor cruisers with advanced radar and anti-missile systems were also reported to be heading for round-the-clock patrol around Iranian shores, with more Patriot anti-missile missiles to reinforce the eight batteries already deployed in the four emirates.

The Obama administration set these exceptional steps in motion, debkafile reports, in anticipation of nuclear provocations from Tehran while the regime celebrates the 31st anniversary of the Islamic revolution from Feb.1-11.
President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad has promised to announce Iran's attainment of a 20 percent uranium enrichment capability, a short step to weapons grade material.

Some high-ranking Revolutionary Guards officers have also said that Iran will parade a new type of surface missile during the celebrations, without revealing its features, while Iranian space scientists predicted the launch of a new spy satellite of the Toloo series.

All this was taken in Washington as a challenge that could not be left without an appropriate response. Administration officials also feared that Israel might be goaded into going forward with a military operation against Iran's nuclear facilities. The Gulf Arab states were in need of reassurance too.

The White House's decision to deploy additional defenses in the Gulf came only a day after National Security Adviser James Jones warned that Iran was liable to react to pressure by having its proxies Hizballah and Hamas attack Israel. The abruptness of this step pointed to the administration having woken up to the realization that its diplomatic and military position in the region was in grave jeopardy and in dire need of shoring up without delay.

http://www.debka.com/article/8573/

:vik:
 

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
Posted for fair use.....
http://www.haaretz.com/hasen/spages/1146427.html

Last update - 20:20 31/01/2010
Obama adviser: U.S. and Israel working very closely on Iran
By Reuters

Israel and the United States are closely conferring about the Iranian nuclear program, U.S. National Security Adviser Jim Jones said in an interview published on Sunday, calling Israel's conduct "responsible".

Western governments fear that Iran wants to produce nuclear weapons but Tehran says the program is for peaceful purposes. Iran has vowed to respond to any unilateral Israeli strike over the nuclear progam.

The five permanent Security Council members - the United States, Britain, France, Russia and China - along with Germany have been negotiating with Iran, but U.S. officials say drafts of possible sanctions should circulate among the group soon.

Jones said the United States and Israel are in close coordination over how to handle Iran. "We have very good dialogue with Israel, continual dialogue," he told The Jerusalem Post. "We're working very closely with them."

Asked whether Washington was concerned about Israel trying to take on its arch-foe alone, Jones said: "Our Israeli partners are very responsible."

Michael Oren, Israel's envoy to the United States, said last month the military option "was not a subject of discussion".

The Obama administration is eyeing the possibility of a fourth round of UN Security Council sanctions against Iran - despite the past misgivings of Russia and China.

Iran rejects Western charges that its nuclear program has military designs, and has vowed to retaliate with ballistic missiles for any strikes on its facilities by Israel, which is assumed to have the Middle East's only atomic arsenal.

Israel says a nuclear-armed Iran would be a threat to its existence and points to Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad's calls for the Jewish state to be wiped off the map.

Addressing a Washington think-tank on Friday, Jones envisaged Iran trying to distract from the diplomatic pressure by ordering proxy attacks from its Islamist guerrilla allies on Israel's borders.

"When regimes are feeling pressure, as Iran is internally and will externally in the near future, it often lashes out through its surrogates, including, in Iran's case, Hezbollah in Lebanon and Hamas in Gaza," Jones told the Center for Strategic and International Studies.

"As pressure on the regime in Tehran builds over its nuclear program, there is a heightened risk of further attacks against Israel," he added.

Israel went to war against Hezbollah in 2006 and against Palestinian Hamas a year ago, and considers both groups to have been cowed by its super firepower.

But Israeli officials agree that Hezbollah, and to a lesser degree Hamas, would launch cross-border rocket salvoes on Iran's behalf should it come under attack.

Such a scenario featured in an Israeli-U.S. air defence exercise last year. Israel is this week hosting the deputy commander of the U.S. European Command, who will inspect anti-missile facilities, an Israeli military spokeswoman said.
 

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
Posted for fair use.....
http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2010/jan/31/israel-iran-nuclear-ambitions


Israel's view on Iran: Diplomacy not the answer for wary nuclear neighbour
Israel has been pushing for tougher sanctions against Iran and would welcome a hardening of US policy

o Rory McCarthy in Jerusalem
o guardian.co.uk, Sunday 31 January 2010 19.14 GMT
o Article history

Israel's government has long tried to raise international concern about Iran's nuclear ambitions and is likely to welcome the new US deployments in the Gulf if it signals a hardening of policy.

Israel, itself a major but undeclared nuclear power, has been pushing for tougher sanctions against Iran and is wary of those who argue in favour of dialogue and negotiations.

On Saturday the Israeli president, Shimon Peres, held a rare meeting with the head of the International Atomic Energy Agency in Davos, Switzerland, and asked him to work "in a serious and steadfast manner against Iran's nuclear armament". Peres told him: "A nuclear weapon in the hands of a fanatical regime such as the one in Iran poses a threat not only to Israel but also to the entire world."

The Israeli administration seems so far unconvinced by Washington's approach. Shlomo Brom, a retired general and senior research fellow at the Institute for National Strategic Studies in Tel Aviv, said the current Israeli government was unlikely to be completely satisfied with the Obama administration's policies and said he too believed a stronger line was necessary.

"If the idea is to engage the Iranians and have dialogue and reach a diplomatic solution, I don't think it is possible if the Iranians don't feel some pressure," he said.

It is not clear yet whether the new US deployments might change Israel's thinking about the possibility of a military strike against Iran, perhaps discouraging it from taking any action – which may, in part, be Washington's intention. Although Israeli pilots managed to bomb an Iraqi nuclear site in 1981, it is far less certain that any such Israeli strike on Iran today could hit its targets and far more of a concern that there would be heavy retaliation through militant groups like Hezbollah and Hamas.

Last month, the Israeli prime minister, Binyamin Netanyahu, listed the Iranian threat as Israel's greatest security challenge and said he wanted the international community to take action immediately before Tehran developed the capability to build nuclear warheads. "The time for tough sanctions is now," he said. "If this moment is allowed to pass, what good will sanctions do afterwards?"
 

Caplock50

I am the Winter Warrior
Is that Israeli military traing exercise still going on? Things are looking very hot over there...Israeli military 'training', all of the armament we've prepositioned in Israel, all the armament we are now sending to the Persian Gulf.


Here is something I've been considering...isn't one of the 'fly-ways' Israel could use to bomb Iran over Turkey? If both Israel and Turkey wanted to 'protect' Turkey from any Iranian retaliation, couldn't/wouldn't they fake a 'falling out' between them?


I believe we are on a countdown now.
 

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
Posted for fair use.....
http://www.irishtimes.com/newspaper/world/2010/0201/1224263501752.html

The Irish Times - Monday, February 1, 2010
America deploying missiles to protect Gulf allies
CHRIS McGREAL in Washington

TENSION BETWEEN the US and Iran has heightened dramatically with the disclosure that Barack Obama is deploying a missile shield to protect US allies in the Gulf from attack by Tehran.

The US is dispatching Patriot defensive missiles to Qatar, United Arab Emirates, Bahrain and Kuwait and is keeping two ships in the Gulf capable of shooting down Iranian missiles. Washington is also helping Saudi Arabia to develop a force to protect its oil installations.

US officials say the move is aimed at deterring an attack by Iran and reassuring Gulf states fearful that Tehran might react to sanctions by striking at US allies in the region. Washington is also seeking to discourage Israel from a strike against Iran by demonstrating that the US is prepared to contain any threat.

The deployment comes after Mr Obama’s attempts to emphasise diplomacy over confrontation in dealing with Iran – in contrast to the Bush administration’s approach – failed to persuade Tehran to open its nuclear installations to international controls.

The White House is now trying to engineer agreement for sanctions focused on Iran’s Revolutionary Guard, believed to be in charge of the atomic programme.

Washington has not formally announced deployment of the Patriots and other anti-missile systems but, by leaking it to US newspapers, the administration is evidently seeking to alert Tehran to a hardening of its position.

The administration is deploying two Patriot batteries, capable of shooting down incoming missiles, in each of the four Gulf countries. Kuwait already has an older version of the missile, deployed after Iraq’s invasion. Saudi Arabia has long had the missiles, as has Israel.

An unnamed senior administration official told yesterday’s New York Times: “Our first goal is to deter the Iranians. A second is to reassure the Arab states, so they don’t feel they have to go nuclear themselves, but there is certainly an element of calming the Israelis as well.”

The chief of the US central command, Gen David Petraeus, said in a speech 10 days ago that countries in the region were concerned about Tehran’s military ambitions and the prospect of Iran becoming a dominant power in the Gulf. “Iran is clearly seen as a very serious threat by those on the other side of the Gulf front.”

Gen Petraeus said the US was keeping cruisers equipped with advanced anti-missile systems in the Gulf at all times to act as a buffer between Iran and the Gulf states.

Washington is also concerned at the threat of action by Israel, which is predicting that Iran will be able to build a nuclear missile within a year, a much faster timetable than assessed by the US, and is warning that it will not let Tehran come close to completion if diplomacy fails.

CIA director Leon Panetta last week met Israeli prime minister Binyamin Netanyahu and other senior officials in Jerusalem to discuss Iran.

– (Guardian service)
 

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
Posted for fair use......
http://www.reuters.com/article/idUSTRE60U18R20100201?type=politicsNews

U.S. expanding missile defenses in Gulf

WASHINGTON
Sun Jan 31, 2010 7:22pm EST

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The United States has expanded land- and sea-based missile defense systems in and around the Gulf to counter what it sees as Iran's growing missile threat, U.S. officials said.

The deployments include expanded land-based Patriot defensive missile installations in Kuwait, Qatar, UAE and Bahrain, as well as Navy ships with missile defense systems in and around the Mediterranean, officials said.

General David Petraeus, who as head of U.S. Central Command is responsible for military operations across the Middle East, said this month that the United States has stationed eight Patriot missile batteries in four Gulf countries, which he did not identify.

The buildup began under the Bush administration, but has expanded under President Barack Obama, who is pushing for a new round of sanctions against Iran over its nuclear program.

Officials said the expansion was meant to increase protection for U.S. forces and key allies in the Gulf.

The chairman of the U.S. military's Joint Chiefs of Staff, Admiral Mike Mullen, said last month the Pentagon must have military options ready to counter Iran should Obama call for them.

"The chairman has made it clear many times that he remains concerned about the ballistic missile threat posed by Iran, but it would be inappropriate to discuss any mitigation or defense measures we might have in place to deter/defeat that threat," a spokesman for Mullen said.

Obama announced a revised missile defense system last year that included the deployment of Aegis ships equipped with missile interceptors to help defend Europe and U.S. forces against Iranian rockets.

The Pentagon said it envisioned keeping three ships at any given time in and around the Mediterranean and the North Sea to protect areas of interest, with the possibility of sending additional ships to the region as needed.

The Obama administration said the decision to change plans was based mainly on technological developments and a shift in intelligence assessments to meet short- and medium-range missile threats posed by Iran.

Pentagon officials said deploying ships with SM-3 interceptors, made by Raytheon Co., would provide the flexibility to move U.S. missile defense capabilities as may be needed.

Ships with Aegis interceptor systems are capable of blowing up ballistic missiles above the atmosphere. The system can track over 100 targets, military officials said.

U.S. arms sales to Gulf allies have risen sharply in recent years, underscoring concerns about Iran.

In fiscal 2009, UAE bought $7.9 billion in U.S. arms, topping Saudi Arabia, which bought $3.3 billion, the Pentagon said. In 2008, UAE made $8.9 billion in arms deals while the Saudis had $7.8 billion, according to the Congressional Research Service.

(Reporting by Adam Entous; Editing by Doina Chiacu)
 

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
Posted for fair use....
http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052748703762504575037211319803050.html?mod=googlenews_wsj

* MIDDLE EAST NEWS
* JANUARY 31, 2010, 6:43 P.M. ET

Iran's Defiance Spurs U.S. and Gulf Allies to Boost Defenses

By PETER SPIEGEL
Comments

WASHINGTON—The U.S. and its allies in the Persian Gulf have stepped up their military defenses in recent months in response to Iranian missile tests and Tehran's continued defiance of international efforts to curtail its nuclear program, according to U.S. officials.

The moves, which have included upgrades, new purchases of American-made Patriot antimissile batteries and the addition of advanced air- and missile-defense radars, illustrate both growing concern with the Iranian moves and a new willingness by Arab allies in the region to more publicly tie their defenses to the U.S.

"President [Mahmoud] Ahmadinejad has been the best recruiting officer for U.S. Central Command in the Gulf region," said a senior U.S. military official.

Although some of the buildup has been going on for years—the Bush administration repeatedly sent envoys to the region in a bid to persuade Gulf allies like Kuwait, the United Arab Emirates, Bahrain and Qatar to link their air and missile defenses in response to Iranian saber-rattling—the heightened profile of the moves comes as the Obama administration has toughened its rhetoric against Tehran.

After months of attempting to engage Iran in nuclear diplomacy, the administration has been working in recent weeks to win an international consensus for a new round of sanctions against Iran. Another U.S. official said the willingness of Gulf allies to work more closely with the U.S. on their defenses is a sign of shifting attitudes toward Iran.

"Clearly the opportunity cost of working with the U.S. in the region has come down," said the official.

Some of the new initiatives were described publicly by Gen. David Petraeus, head of U.S. Central Command, in a January address to the Institute for the Study of War in Washington.

In the address, Gen. Petraeus said countries in the region were improving their shared early-warning air- and missile-defense systems by signing bilateral deals with the U.S. to share radar data, which can then be pulled together into a more sophisticated regional system.

Gen. Petraeus also said that Gulf allies have increased purchases of weapons, including advanced fighter planes and that four countries have acquired new Patriot batteries. In addition, he said, the U.S. has deployed two Navy cruisers armed with sophisticated Aegis radar and ballistic-missile defenses to the Gulf to provide further defenses.

Beyond Iran's missile tests and nuclear program, he said, the U.S. and its Gulf allies also have grown increasingly concerned about Iran's army of proxy extremists in Iraq, Gaza and elsewhere in the region.

In a speech at the Center for Strategic and International Studies on Friday, retired Gen. James Jones, the White House national-security adviser, said the U.S. believes increased pressure on Iran from both international sanctions and domestic unrest could lead it to use proxies to stoke violence.

"History shows that when regimes are feeling pressure, as Iran is internally and will externally in the near future, it often lashes out through its surrogates," he said.

Write to Peter Spiegel at peter.spiegel@wsj.com
 

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
Posted for fair use......
http://www.arabmonitor.info/news/dettaglio.php?idnews=29620&lang=en

US administration says it will deploy enhanced antimssile systems in Persian Gulf and four GCC countries

Washington DC, 31 January – Stepping up the media-war against Iran the US launched as news a decision taken over a year ago, to deploy an antimissile-defence shield in at least four Gulf Cooperation Council countries as well as on its own warships in the Persian Gulf. According to some Western media commentators the public discussion of the planned war-force deployment is also intended to placate Israel and keep it from further escalating its threats to attack either directly Iran or its presumed proxies in the Middle East.”The (US) administration is trying to show Israel that there is no immediate need for military strikes against Iranian nuclear and missile facilities” the New York Times wrote today.

According to the US daily, Qatar, Kuwait, Bahrain and the UAE are willing to accept the deployment of the US antimissile system. According to a senior military officer, the talk in public about the enhanced deployment of US antimissile systems in the Gulf region is also meant as a response to Russia and China as well as to other countries who have shown an increased weariness to support tightening sanctions against Iran.

As for the content of the message, it is hardly a news, given that, as the New York Times writes, for the past two years Saudi Arabia and the UAE have been buying more than 15 billion worth in US arms and military equipment, including missile defence systems. Moreover, US plans to boost Saudi Arabian armed forces and upgrade its military defence systems at its military bases, ports, airports, oil facilities and water-desalinization plants have never been a secret, as they have more than once been discussed with Israeli officials and reported by Israeli media.
 

Kent

Inactive
I'm suprised that Iran was not glowing in the dark a year ago. I guess they figured the "uprising" in Iran that we planned for years would shake things up more than it did. By the way, what ever happened to that uprising?
 

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
I'm suprised that Iran was not glowing in the dark a year ago. I guess they figured the "uprising" in Iran that we planned for years would shake things up more than it did. By the way, what ever happened to that uprising?

The "Green Movement" is calling for more street protests for February 11th and the IRGC is already saying they're not going to let that go unopposed.
 

Caplock50

I am the Winter Warrior
But this time, I'm betting, the 'green movement' will be armed and better able to fight back. Yep, that Fat Lady ain't singin' yet, not by a long shot.
 

denfoote

Inactive
Obama ain't gonna do squat!!
Just like Vladimir Klintonov of old, he's gonna lob a couple of missiles, then order a stand down in the interests of "peace".
 

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
Posted for fair use.....free offering from Stratfor....for links in text see source....
http://www.stratfor.com/weekly/20100201_defensive_buildup_gulf

Also titled......http://www.speroforum.com/a/26568/Obama-prepares-to-accept-a-nuclear-Iran

Obama prepares to accept a nuclear Iran
Like the Bush administration, the Obama administration is not confident in its ability to remove the Iranian program surgically

A Defensive Buildup in the Gulf

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February 1, 2010 | 1757 GMT

Graphic for Geopolitical Intelligence Report

By George Friedman

This weekend’s newspapers were filled with stories about how the United States is providing ballistic missile defense (BMD) to four countries on the Arabian Peninsula. The New York Times carried a front-page story on the United States providing anti-missile defenses to Kuwait, the United Arab Emirates, Qatar and Oman, as well as stationing BMD-capable, Aegis-equipped warships in the Persian Gulf. Meanwhile, the front page of The Washington Post carried a story saying that “the Obama administration is quietly working with Saudi Arabia and other Persian Gulf allies to speed up arms sales and rapidly upgrade defenses for oil terminals and other key infrastructure in a bid to thwart future attacks by Iran, according to former and current U.S. and Middle Eastern government officials.”

Obviously, the work is no longer “quiet.” In fact, Washington has been publicly engaged in upgrading defensive systems in the area for some time. Central Command head Gen. David Petraeus recently said the four countries named by the Times were receiving BMD-capable Patriot Advanced Capability-3 (PAC-3) batteries, and at the end of October the United States carried out its largest-ever military exercises with Israel, known as Juniper Cobra.

More interesting than the stories themselves was the Obama administration’s decision to launch a major public relations campaign this weekend regarding these moves. And the most intriguing question out of all this is why the administration decided to call everyone’s attention to these defensive measures while not mentioning any offensive options.

The Iranian Nuclear Question

U.S. President Barack Obama spent little time on foreign policy in his Jan. 27 State of the Union message, though he did make a short, sharp reference to Iran. He promised a strong response to Tehran if it continued its present course; though this could have been pro forma, it seemed quite pointed. Early in his administration, Obama had said he would give the Iranians until the end of 2009 to change their policy on nuclear weapons development. But the end of 2009 came, and the Iranians continued their policy.

All along, Obama has focused on diplomacy on the Iran question. To be more precise, he has focused on bringing together a coalition prepared to impose “crippling sanctions” on the Iranians. The most crippling sanction would be stopping Iran’s gasoline imports, as Tehran imports about 35 percent of its gasoline. Such sanctions are now unlikely, as China has made clear that it is not prepared to participate — and that was before the most recent round of U.S. weapon sales to Taiwan. Similarly, while the Russians have indicated that their participation in sanctions is not completely out of the question, they also have made clear that time for sanctions is not near. We suspect that the Russian time frame for sanctions will keep getting pushed back.

Therefore, the diplomatic option appears to have dissolved. The Israelis have said they regard February as the decisive month for sanctions, which they have indicated is based on an agreement with the United States. While previous deadlines of various sorts regarding Iran have come and gone, there is really no room after February. If no progress is made on sanctions and no action follows, then the decision has been made by default that a nuclear-armed Iran is acceptable.

The Americans and the Israelis have somewhat different views of this based on different geopolitical realities. The Americans have seen a number of apparently extreme and dangerous countries develop nuclear weapons. The most important example was Maoist China. Mao Zedong had argued that a nuclear war was not particularly dangerous to China, as it could lose several hundred million people and still win the war. But once China developed nuclear weapons, the wild talk subsided and China behaved quite cautiously. From this experience, the United States developed a two-stage strategy.

First, the United States believed that while the spread of nuclear weapons is a danger, countries tend to be circumspect after acquiring nuclear weapons. Therefore, overreaction by United States to the acquisition of nuclear weapons by other countries is unnecessary and unwise.

Second, since the United States is a big country with widely dispersed population and a massive nuclear arsenal, a reckless country that launched some weapons at the United States would do minimal harm to the United States while the other country would face annihilation. And the United States has emphasized BMD to further mitigate — if not eliminate — the threat of such a limited strike to the United States.

Israel’s geography forces it to see things differently. Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad has said Israel should be wiped off the face of the Earth while simultaneously working to attain nuclear weapons. While the Americans take comfort in the view that the acquisition of nuclear weapons has a sobering effect on a new nuclear power, the Israelis don’t think the Chinese case necessarily can be generalized. Moreover, the United States is outside the range of the Iranians’ current ballistic missile arsenal while Israel is not. And a nuclear strike would have a particularly devastating effect on Israel. Unlike the United States, Israel is small country with a highly concentrated population. A strike with just one or two weapons could destroy Israel.

Therefore, Israel has a very different threshold for risk as far as Iran is concerned. For Israel, a nuclear strike from Iran is improbable, but would be catastrophic if it happened. For the United States, the risk of an Iranian strike is far more remote, and would be painful but not catastrophic if it happened. The two countries thus approach the situation very differently.

How close the Iranians are to having a deliverable nuclear weapon is, of course, a significant consideration in all this. Iran has not yet achieved a testable nuclear device. Logic tells us they are quite far from a deliverable nuclear weapon. But the ability to trust logic varies as the risk grows. The United States (and this is true for both the Bush and Obama administrations) has been much more willing to play for time than Israel can afford to be. For Israel, all intelligence must be read in the context of worst-case scenarios.

Diverging Interests and Grand Strategy

It is also important to remember that Israel is much less dependent on the United States than it was in 1973. Though U.S. aid to Israel continues, it is now a much smaller percentage of Israeli gross domestic product. Moreover, the threat of sudden conventional attack by Israel’s immediate neighbors has disappeared. Egypt is at peace with Israel, and in any case, its military is too weak to mount an attack. Jordan is effectively an Israeli ally. Only Syria is hostile, but it presents no conventional military threat. Israel previously has relied on guarantees that the United States would rush aid to Israel in the event of war. But it has been a generation since this has been a major consideration for Israel. In the minds of many, the Israeli-U.S. relationship is stuck in the past. Israel is not critical to American interests the way it was during the Cold War. And Israel does not need the United States the way it did during the Cold War. While there is intelligence cooperation in the struggle against jihadists, even here American and Israeli interests diverge.

And this means that the United States no longer has Israeli national security as an overriding consideration — and that the United States cannot compel Israel to pursue policies Israel regards as dangerous.

Given all of this, the Obama administration’s decision to launch a public relations campaign on defensive measures just before February makes perfect sense. If Iran develops a nuclear capability, a defensive capability might shift Iran’s calculus of the risks and rewards of the military option.

Assume, for example, that the Iranians decided to launch a nuclear missile at Israel or Iran’s Arab neighbors with which its relations are not the best. Iran would have only a handful of missiles, and perhaps just one. Launching that one missile only to have it shot down would represent the worst-case scenario for Iran. Tehran would have lost a valuable military asset, it would not have achieved its goal and it would have invited a devastating counterstrike. Anything the United States can do to increase the likelihood of an Iranian failure therefore decreases the likelihood that Iran would strike until they have more delivery systems and more fissile material for manufacturing more weapons.

The U.S. announcement of the defensive measures therefore has three audiences: Iran, Israel and the American public. Israel and Iran obviously know all about American efforts, meaning the key audience is the American public. The administration is trying to deflect American concerns about Iran generated both by reality and Israel by showing that effective steps are being taken.

There are two key weapon systems being deployed, the PAC-3 and the Aegis/Standard Missile-3 (SM-3). The original Patriot, primarily an anti-aircraft system, had a poor record — especially as a BMD system — during the first Gulf War. But that was almost 20 years ago. The new system is regarded as much more effective as a terminal-phase BMD system, such as the medium-range ballistic missiles (MRBMs) developed by Iran, and performed much more impressively in this role during the opening of Operation Iraqi Freedom in March 2003. In addition, Juniper Cobra served to further integrate a series of American and Israeli BMD interceptors and sensors, building a more redundant and layered system. This operation also included the SM-3, which is deployed aboard specially modified Aegis-equipped guided missile cruisers and destroyers. The SM-3 is one of the most successful BMD technologies currently in the field and successfully brought down a wayward U.S. spy satellite in 2008.

Nevertheless, a series of Iranian Shahab-3s is a different threat than a few Iraqi Scuds, and the PAC-3 and SM-3 have yet to be proven in combat against such MRBMs — something the Israelis are no doubt aware of. War planners must calculate the incalculable; that is what makes good generals pessimists.

The Obama administration does not want to mount an offensive action against Iran. Such an operation would not be a single strike like the 1981 Osirak attack in Iraq. Iran has multiple nuclear sites buried deep and surrounded by air defenses. And assessing the effectiveness of airstrikes would be a nightmare. Many days of combat at a minimum probably would be required, and like the effectiveness of defensive weapons systems, the quality of intelligence about which locations to hit cannot be known until after the battle.

A defensive posture therefore makes perfect sense for the United States. Washington can simply defend its allies, letting them absorb the risk and then the first strike before the United States counterstrikes rather than rely on its intelligence and offensive forces in a pre-emptive strike. This defensive posture on Iran fits American grand strategy, which is always to shift such risk to partners in exchange for technology and long-term guarantees.

The Arabian states can live with this, albeit nervously, since they are not the likely targets. But Israel finds its assigned role in U.S. grand strategy far more difficult to stomach. In the unlikely event that Iran actually does develop a weapon and does strike, Israel is the likely target. If the defensive measures do not convince Iran to abandon its program and if the Patriots allow a missile to leak through, Israel has a national catastrophe. It faces an unlikely event with unacceptable consequences.

Israel’s Options

It has options, although a long-range conventional airstrike against Iran is really not one of them. Carrying out a multiday or even multiweek air campaign with Israel’s available force is too likely to be insufficient and too likely to fail. Israel’s most effective option for taking out Iran’s nuclear activities is itself nuclear. Israel could strike Iran from submarines if it genuinely intended to stop Iran’s program.

The problem with this is that much of the Iranian nuclear program is sited near large cities, including Tehran. Depending on the nuclear weapons used and their precision, any Israeli strikes could thus turn into city-killers. Israel is not able to live in a region where nuclear weapons are used in counterpopulation strikes (regardless of the actual intent behind launching). Mounting such a strike could unravel the careful balance of power Israel has created and threaten relationships it needs. And while Israel may not be as dependent on the United States as it once was, it does not want the United States completely distancing itself from Israel, as Washington doubtless would after an Israeli nuclear strike.

The Israelis want Iran’s nuclear program destroyed, but they do not want to be the ones to try to do it. Only the United States has the force needed to carry out the strike conventionally. But like the Bush administration, the Obama administration is not confident in its ability to remove the Iranian program surgically. Washington is concerned that any air campaign would have an indeterminate outcome and would require extremely difficult ground operations to determine the strikes’ success or failure. Perhaps even more complicated is the U.S. ability to manage the consequences, such as a potential attempt by Iran to close the Strait of Hormuz and Iranian meddling in already extremely delicate situations in Iraq and Afghanistan. As Iran does not threaten the United States, the United States therefore is in no hurry to initiate combat. And so the United States has launched a public relations campaign about defensive measures, hoping to affect Iranian calculations while remaining content to let the game play itself out.

Israel’s option is to respond to the United States with its intent to go nuclear, something Washington does not want in a region where U.S. troops are fighting in countries on either side of Iran. Israel might calculate that its announcement would force the United States to pre-empt an Israeli nuclear strike with conventional strikes. But the American response to Israel cannot be predicted. It is therefore dangerous for a small regional power to try to corner a global power.

With the adoption of a defensive posture, we have now seen the U.S. response to the February deadline. This response closes off no U.S. options (the United States can always shift its strategy when intelligence indicates), it increases the Arabian Peninsula’s dependence on the United States, and it possibly causes Iran to recalculate its position. Israel, meanwhile, finds itself in a box, because the United States calculates that Israel will not chance a conventional strike and fears a nuclear strike on Iran as much as the United States does.

In the end, Obama has followed the Bush strategy on Iran — make vague threats, try to build a coalition, hold Israel off with vague promises, protect the Arabian Peninsula, and wait — to the letter. But along with this announcement, we would expect to begin to see a series of articles on the offensive deployment of U.S. forces, as good defensive posture requires a strong offensive option.

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Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
Posted for fair use.....
http://blog.psaonline.org/2010/02/02/arming-the-gulf-states-pros-and-cons/

Will arming the Gulf solve the Iranian problem?
by Volha Charnysh | February 2nd, 2010

Even as it withdraws from Iraq, the United States is increasing its military presence and arming the states in the Persian Gulf. President Barack Obama has boosted arms sales, stepped up the deployment of anti-missile defenses, and upgraded defenses for the oil infrastructure in the region. This military buildup is intended to deter the Iranian “enemy”, reassure and strengthen the Arab “friends”, and pacify the trigger-happy Israelis, but will it actually bring the intended result?

US commitment to security in the region is a noble goal, and the military buildup in the Gulf seems to be of a purely defensive nature. Hopefully, the American support will reassure the Gulf states and encourage them to form a united front against Iran’s nuclear pursuits. Indeed, engaging the neighbors must be the first step for solving the Iranian problem. However, further militarizing an already volatile region and meddling into the Arab states’ regional rivalry with Tehran could instead exacerbate the situation. The fact remains that – for economic and political reasons – the Gulf states are not ready to unequivocally align themselves with the United States against Iran. And additional weapon sales are hardly going to change that.

The Gulf states will invest over $63 billion toward their armed forces and security in 2010, according to Forecast International. Over the next five years, the greater Middle East defense market is projected to grow by over 11 percent, reaching nearly $120 billion by 2014. These figures foreshadow more than a steady profitable business for the US military-industrial complex, however.

While the possibility of Iranian missile strikes is a recent development, the United States has been arming that very region for decades. And so far the results have been all but positive: they continue to challenge US security and values.

The Gulf states embarked on a costly rearmament drive in the 1980s, in light of the Iraqi-Iranian war, after Washington had to protect the Gulf oil routes and tankers and later defend the region against Iraqi Scuds. As the United States started combining diplomatic isolation, economic pressure and military warnings to contain Iran, its ties with the Gulf states grew stronger. Even though most of the hijackers were from the Gulf region, the US-Arab cooperation withstood 9/11, and the Gulf states joined Washington in its war on terrorism and contributed to the American efforts in Afghanistan and Iraq.

Allying with the United States did not automatically make them Iran’s enemies, however. While the US-Iranian post-1979 enmity has gone from bad to worse, Iran’s relationship with the Gulf states has improved. Facing isolation from the West, Tehran needed good neighbors and trade partners more than ever before.

Iran’s trade with the Gulf states grew fivefold between 2000 and 2007, and even the 2005 election of the Iran-Iraq war veteran Mahmoud Ahmadinejad did not disrupt that trend. Iran remains a much more important export market than the United States for states like the UAE. Iran’s neighbors have large Iranian minorities, thrive on Iranian investments, host thousands of Iranian companies and even several Iranian universities.

A tangled web of political rivalry, economic cooperation, and ethnic and cultural ties, Tehran’s relationship with its neighbors is far more complex than its relationship with the United States. And the Gulf states’ views of regional security and Iran’s place in it are, accordingly, much more nuanced. Among other things, these states do not see economic and diplomatic ties with Tehran as contradictory to arming up against the Islamic Republic and pragmatically avoiding confrontation.

As a result, the Gulf states chose to sit on the fence on what would seem to be the most obvious threat to their security – Iran’s nuclear program. While the Gulf Cooperation Council (UAE, Kuwait, Bahrain, Saudi Arabia, Oman, and Qatar) seems to agree with Washington over the dangers of nuclear proliferation, Qatar provided the sole dissenting vote on the resolution calling on Tehran to “suspend all enrichment related and reprocessing activities, including research and development” when it represented the Arab states on the UN Security Council in 2006-07. Keeping these things in mind, the US government should perhaps demand more loyalty from the states it is fortifying and at least get their unequivocal backing for tougher sanctions against Iran.

Having experienced first hand what Tehran’s Scud attacks feel like, the Gulf states are wary about acknowledging US guardianship, and with good reason. Just as the US battery of interceptors on Polish soil not only strengthened the country’s ties with Washington, but also thrust it into the middle of a dispute with Russia, so the presence of US bases and missiles makes the Gulf states potential targets for Iran. Were Iran to retaliate, it wouldn’t even need to launch a missile attack, against which the region has been busily fortifying. Instead, Tehran might simply cut some trade ties, incite the Shiite communities to rise, or interrupt the oil routes with mines.

Ironically, as the Gulf states’ security dependence on the United States grows, so does their wariness and suspicion of the US influence. Iran has been accusing the GCC states of having invited a hostile power into the region for a long time, and the growth of US military presence in the Gulf (and plans like tripling the size of a 10,000-man protection force in Saudi Arabia) could give some credibility to Tehran’s argument, spurring local opposition. It could also further strengthen Tehran’s determination to develop nuclear weapons as the threat to the Islamic Republic is becoming quite real.

When weighing the pros and cons of further arming the Gulf, one needs to recall the role of US military presence in the Middle East in its conflict with al-Qaeda or the reverberations of Washington’s support for Saddam Hussein’s Iraq. Washington should rethink its policy of arming the unstable region and increasing its military footprint where it has never been welcome. It should realize that its Gulf “allies,” who so easily agreed on the types and cost of weaponry to purchase, will continue having fundamental disagreements with the United States not only in the democratic and cultural realm, but also on the Iranian issue, the very reason cited for the US arms sales to these states. Instead of helping the Gulf states withstand Iran’s bullying, the military support could accelerate the arms race and feed the anti-American sentiments in the Middle East.

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Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
Posted for fair use......
http://www.atimes.com/atimes/Middle_East/LB04Ak02.html

Feb 4, 2010
US ups the ante in Iran nuclear game
By Mohammed A Salih

WASHINGTON - The recent expansion of United States missile defense systems in the Persian Gulf just days after President Barack Obama warned Iran of "growing consequences" if it did not accept the West's conditions over its nuclear program, signals a possible change of approach by Washington even as uncertainty still prevails over how it will eventually deal with Iran.

General David Petraeus, the top US commander in the Middle East and South Asia, said on Monday that his country had expanded land-and-sea-based missile systems in the Gulf and the Mediterranean in response to what the superpower views as Iran's growing missile threat.

Obama's harsh words against Iran and the announcement of upgraded anti-missile systems in the Middle East come after a failure of the US administration's diplomatic initiative to engage Iran. That failure and the missile build-up will likely further increase tensions between Iran and its neighbors on the one hand and Iran and the US on the other.

The US has based upgraded Patriot missile systems in the four small Gulf nations of Kuwait, the United Arab Emirates (UAE), Qatar and Bahrain. Iran has strongly criticized the US move, accusing the West of trying to create "rift and insecurity" in the Gulf.

The move has raised questions about US motives for expanding and upgrading its missile defense systems in the region.

"It's hard to say whether it's preparation for military action or essentially part of US policy to further isolate Iran from the regional states and indeed sell more arms to regional states," Nader Entessar, an Iran expert and chair of the Political Science Department at the University of Alabama, told Inter Press Service.

"But any time that you [up the ante] like that, the consequences of what may follow are unpredictable even if the intention is not necessarily to have near-term or medium-term military confrontation," Entessar said.

Although many in the region and the West brand Iran as a "threat", the country has one of the lowest rates of military spending in comparison to other Gulf countries like Saudi Arabia and the UAE, which have spent US$25 billion on weapons over the past two years.

However, Iran has carried out a number of missile tests in the past and possesses missiles that can reach as far as Israel or Eastern Europe.

With all the talk about the "Iranian threat", the question is what type of threat Iran really poses to the countries in the region.

"I don't think Gulf countries generally see Iran as a conventional military threat," said Chas Freeman, a former US ambassador to Saudi Arabia and a former assistant secretary of defense for international security affairs. "The concern about Iran has to do with Iran's political prestige."

Petraeus has reportedly said that now the tiny country of UAE has the military capabilities to take out the Iranian air force.

Iran's political prestige comes from its extensive ties with both state and non-state actors in the region, in particular in places like Lebanon, Iraq and the Palestinian territories.

More than 30 years after the Islamic Revolution, Iran enjoys strong relations with mostly Shi'ite groups in the Middle East, but also Sunni groups such as Palestinian Hamas and Islamic Jihad. That has not only deeply worried Sunni Arab powers in the region like Saudi Arabia, Jordan and Egypt, but also the US and Israel.

Now the traditional powers of the Arab world have added what they allege is Iran's support for Huthi Shi'ite fighters in Yemen to their long list of grievances against the Shi'ite power.

Iran and the US have a history of troubled relations, especially since the Islamic revolution in Iran in 1979 that led to the overthrow of Mohammed Reza Shah Pahlavi, a close US ally in the region. The storming of the US Embassy in Tehran by revolutionary students and the US aid to Saddam Hussein during the eight-year war between Iran and Iraq only exacerbated the tense relations following the revolution.

The Islamic Republic's officials have repeatedly shrugged off accusations that they pose any threat to the region's countries and often accuse the US and Israel of vilifying Iran in the eyes of its neighbors and the larger world.

Despite the public pronouncement of concern with regard to Iran's attitude and policies in the region, the Islamic Republic has no history of aggression against any of its neighbors. The only war post-revolution Iran has fought, the Iran-Iraq War, was initiated by Saddam, who enjoyed Western support throughout the conflict.

In a meeting with Qatar's crown-prince Sheikh Tamin bin Hamad al-Thani on Tuesday, Iran's parliamentary speaker Ali Larijani said, "Iran has no problems with its neighbors and has never had any intention of aggression against any country."

"Imam [Ruhollah] Khomeini's foreign policy theory was one of Islamic union, strengthening unity and cooperation among Muslim countries and this is the strategy of the Islamic Republic of Iran in the Islamic world," said Larijani, referring to the founder of the Islamic Republic.

However, domestic developments in Iran appear to have seriously limited the ability of President Mahmud Ahmadinejad's government to come up with any serious initiative. In the wake of the June 12 presidential elections last year, the country has witnessed widespread protests against perceived fraud in the elections.

While Washington says all the options are on the table, a military attack, some experts say, would be highly costly and it is therefore highly unlikely in the foreseeable future.

"Despite Washington's sabre-rattling, the threat of reverting back into recession makes one thing clear - when it comes to Iran, all options are not on the table," wrote Henry Barkey and Uri Dadush, experts at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace in an analysis for The National Interest, a quarterly journal of international affairs and diplomacy.

They argue that any attack on Iran would cause oil prices to skyrocket to possibly as high as $150 a barrel, sending the global economy into a new round of recession. Iran, Barkey and Dadush contend, would then encourage its Lebanese and Palestinian allies, Hezbollah and Hamas, to attack Israel.

And last but not least, Barkey and Dadush say an attack on Iran would give the "embattled regime in Tehran an occasion to rally" its disgruntled people against foreign aggression.

As Iran and the West fail to reach a deal on the former's controversial nuclear program, uncertainty over how to handle Iran is still prevalent. Although the US has pushed hard for tougher economic sanctions, it has met stiff resistance from China, which has lucrative business deals in Iran, especially in oil and gas sector.

Iran's negative response to Western proposals, on the basis that they were not fair, has left a disappointed US adopting an increasingly aggressive tone and course of action to an extent that some say is reminiscent of president George W Bush's hawkish years.

"We are back to what the Bush administration was trying to do, back to this notion of regime change once more," says Entessar. "Back to the ascendancy of the neo-conservatives again in the administration as well as outside who are putting pressure on Obama. And that does not bode well, in my judgment, for any kind of breakthrough in the future."

(Inter Press Service)
 
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