US could bomb Iran nuclear sites
in 2007: analysts
By Agence France-Presse
11/22/06 "AFP" --- -
President George W. Bush could choose
military action over diplomacy and bomb Iran's nuclear
facilities next year, political analysts in Washington
agree.
"I think he is going to do it," John Pike, director of
Globalsecurity.org, a military issues think tank, told AFP.
"They are going to bomb WMD facilities next summer," he
added, referring to nuclear facilities Iran says are for
peaceful uses and Washington insists are really intended to
make nuclear bombs, or weapons of mass destruction (WMD).
"It would be a limited military action to destroy their WMD
capabilities" added the analyst, believing a US military
invasion of Iran is not on the table.
US journalist Seymour Hersh also said at the weekend that
White House hawks led by Vice President Dick Cheney were
intent on attacking Iran with or without the approval of the
US Congress, both houses of which switch from Republican to
Democratic control in January after the November 7
legislative elections.
The New Yorker weekly published an article by Hersh saying
that one month before the elections, Cheney held a meeting
on Iran in which he said the military option would never be
discarded.
The White House promptly issued a statement saying the
article was "riddled with inaccuracies."
Joseph Cirincione, Senior Vice President for National
Security and International Policy at the Center for American
Progress, a Democrat-friendly think tank, also believes the
US government could decide to attack Iran.
"It is not realistic but it does not mean we won't do it,"
he told AFP in an interview. "It is less likely after the
elections but it is still very possible."
"If you look at what the administration is doing, it seems
that it is going to inevitably lead us to a military
conflict," he said, adding that no alternative solution was
being sought, including discussions with Iran on Iraq, which
could lead to talks on Iran's nuclear program and role in
the region.
"Senior members of the (Bush) administration remain seized
with the idea that the regime in Iran must be removed,"
Cirincione said.
"The nuclear program is one reason, but their deeper agenda
is this belief that American military power can be used to
fundamentally transform the regimes in the Middle East," he
added.
With the resignation of Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld,
hardliners in the government have lost one of their leading
advocates, and his replacement, former former Central
Intelligence Agency chief Robert Gates, has in the past
favored direct talks with Iran, said the expert.
"But they remain within the administration at the highest
level, the office of the vice president, the national
security council staff, perhaps the president himself,"
Cirincione added.
He also accused neoconservative circles of promoting the
military option against Tehran.
In a Sunday op-ed piece in the Los Angeles Times, Joshua
Muarvchik, resident scholar at the neoconservative American
Enterprise Institute, called for getting tough with Iran.
"We must bomb Iran," he said. "The path of diplomacy and
sanctions has led nowhere ... Our options therefore are
narrowed to two: we can prepare to live with a nuclear-armed
Iran, or we can use force to prevent it."
Israel has also been pushing Washington to get tough on
Iran.
Israeli Deputy Defense Minister Ephraim Sneh did not rule
out preventive military action to stop Iran from acquiring
nuclear weapons, in a recent interview with the
English-language Jerusalem Post.
However, Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad seems
unperturbed. On Monday he said Israel was incapable of
launching a military attack on Iran's nuclear sites and
called Israeli threats "propaganda."
Copyright © 2006 AFP.
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