President
Bush Backs
Israeli Plan
for Strike
on Iran
As Tehran
tests new
missiles,
America
believes
only a show
of force can
deter
President
Ahmadinejad
By Uzi
Mahnaimi in
Washington
13/07/08
"The Times"
--
-President
George W
Bush has
told the
Israeli
government
that he may
be prepared
to approve a
future
military
strike on
Iranian
nuclear
facilities
if
negotiations
with Tehran
break down,
according to
a senior
Pentagon
official.
Despite the
opposition
of his own
generals and
widespread
scepticism
that America
is ready to
risk the
military,
political
and economic
consequences
of an
airborne
strike on
Iran, the
president
has given an
“amber
light” to an
Israeli plan
to attack
Iran’s main
nuclear
sites with
long-range
bombing
sorties, the
official
told The
Sunday
Times.
“Amber means
get on with
your
preparations,
stand by for
immediate
attack and
tell us when
you’re
ready,” the
official
said. But
the Israelis
have also
been told
that they
can expect
no help from
American
forces and
will not be
able to use
US military
bases in
Iraq for
logistical
support.
Nor is it
certain that
Bush’s amber
light would
ever turn to
green
without
irrefutable
evidence of
lethal
Iranian
hostility.
Tehran’s
test
launches of
medium-range
ballistic
missiles
last week
were seen in
Washington
as
provocative
and poorly
judged, but
both the
Pentagon and
the CIA
concluded
that they
did not
represent an
immediate
threat of
attack
against
Israeli or
US targets.
“It’s really
all down to
the
Israelis,”
the Pentagon
official
added. “This
administration
will not
attack Iran.
This has
already been
decided. But
the
president is
really
preoccupied
with the
nuclear
threat
against
Israel and I
know he
doesn’t
believe that
anything but
force will
deter Iran.”
The official
added that
Israel had
not so far
presented
Bush with a
convincing
military
proposal.
“If there is
no solid
plan, the
amber will
never turn
to green,”
he said.
There was
also
resistance
inside the
Pentagon
from
officers
concerned
about
Iranian
retaliation.
“The uniform
people are
opposed to
the attack
plans,
mainly
because they
think it
will
endanger our
soldiers in
Iraq and
Afghanistan,”
the source
said.
Complicating
the
calculations
in both
Washington
and Tel Aviv
is the
prospect of
an incoming
Democratic
president
who has
already made
it clear
that he
prefers
negotiation
to the use
of force.
Senator
Barack
Obama’s
previous
opposition
to the war
in Iraq, and
his apparent
doubts about
the urgency
of the
Iranian
threat, have
intensified
pressure on
the Israeli
hawks to act
before
November’s
US
presidential
election.
“If I were
an Israeli I
wouldn’t
wait,” the
Pentagon
official
added.
The latest
round of
regional
tension was
sparked by
the Iranian
Revolutionary
Guard, which
fired nine
long and
medium-range
missiles in
war game
manoeuvres
in the Gulf
last
Wednesday.
Iran’s
state-run
media
reported
that one of
them was a
modified
Shahab-3
ballistic
missile,
which has a
claimed
range of
1,250 miles
and could
theoretically
deliver a
one-ton
nuclear
warhead over
Israeli
cities. Tel
Aviv is
about 650
miles from
western
Iran.
General
Hossein
Salami, a
senior
Revolutionary
Guard
commander,
boasted that
“our hands
are always
on the
trigger and
our missiles
are ready
for launch”.
Condoleezza
Rice, the US
secretary of
state, said
she saw the
launches as
“evidence
that the
missile
threat is
not an
imaginary
one”,
although the
impact of
the Iranian
stunt was
diminished
on Thursday
when it
became clear
that a
photograph
purporting
to show the
missiles
being
launched had
been faked.
The one
thing that
all sides
agree on is
that any
strike by
either Iran
or Israel
would
trigger a
catastrophic
round of
retaliation
that would
rock global
oil markets,
send the
price of
petrol
soaring and
wreck the
progress of
the US
military
effort in
Iraq.
Abdalla
Salem El-Badri,
secretary-general
of Opec, the
oil
producers’
consortium,
said last
week that a
military
conflict
involving
Iran would
see an
“unlimited”
rise in
prices
because any
loss of
Iranian
production —
or
constriction
of shipments
through the
Strait of
Hormuz —
could not be
replaced.
Iran is
Opec’s
second-largest
producer
after Saudi
Arabia.
Equally
worrying for
Bush would
be the
impact on
the US
mission in
Iraq, which
after years
of turmoil
has seen
gains from
the military
“surge” of
the past few
months, and
on American
operations
in the wider
region. A
senior
Iranian
official
said
yesterday
that Iran
would
destroy
Israel and
32 American
military
bases in the
Middle East
in response
to any
attack.
Yet US
officials
acknowledge
that no
American
president
can afford
to remain
idle if
Israel is
threatened.
How genuine
the Iranian
threat is
was the
subject of
intense
debate last
week, with
some
analysts
arguing that
Iran might
have a
useable
nuclear
weapon by
next spring
and others
convinced
that
President
Mahmoud
Ahmadinejad
is engaged
in a
dangerous
game of
bluffing —
mainly to
impress a
domestic
Iranian
audience
that is
struggling
with
economic
setbacks and
beginning to
question his
leadership.
Among the
sceptics is
Kenneth
Katzman, a
former CIA
analyst and
author of a
book on the
Revolutionary
Guard. “I
don’t
subscribe to
the view
that Iran is
in a
position to
inflict
devastating
damage on
anyone,”
said Katzman,
who is best
known for
warning
shortly
before 9/11
that
terrorists
were
planning to
attack
America.
“The
Revolutionary
Guards have
always
underperformed
militarily,”
he said.
“Their
equipment is
quite
inaccurate
if not
outright
inoperable.
Those
missile
launches
were more
like putting
up a ‘beware
of the dog’
sign. They
want
everyone to
think that
if you mess
with them,
you will get
bitten.”
A former
adviser to
Rice noted
that
Ahmadinejad’s
confrontational
attitude had
earned him
powerful
enemies
among Iran’s
religious
leadership.
Professor
Shai
Feldman,
director of
Middle East
studies at
Brandeis
University,
said the
Iranian
government
was getting
“clobbered”
because of
global
economic
strains.
“His [Ahmadinejad's]
failed
policies
have made
Iran more
vulnerable
to sanctions
and people
close to the
mullahs have
decided he’s
a
liability,”
he said.
In Israel,
Ehud Olmert,
the prime
minister,
has his own
domestic
problems
with a
corruption
scandal that
threatens to
unseat him
and the
media have
been rife
with
speculation
that he
might order
an attack on
Iran to
distract
attention
from his
difficulties.
According to
one of his
closest
friends,
Olmert
recently
warned him
that “in
three
months’ time
it will be a
different
Middle
East”.
Yet even the
most hawkish
officials
acknowledge
that Israel
would face
what would
arguably be
the most
challenging
military
mission of
its 60-year
existence.
“No one here
is talking
about more
than
delaying the
[nuclear]
programme,”
said the
Pentagon
source. He
added that
Israel would
need to set
back the
Iranians by
at least
five years
for an
attack to be
considered a
success.
Even that
may be
beyond
Israel’s
competence
if it has to
act alone.
Obvious
targets
would
include
Iran’s
Isfahan
plant, where
uranium ore
is converted
into gas,
the Natanz
complex
where this
gas is used
to enrich
uranium in
centrifuges
and the
plutonium-producing
Arak heavy
water plant.
But Iran is
known to
have
scattered
other
elements of
its nuclear
programme in
underground
facilities
around the
country.
Neither US
nor Israeli
intelligence
is certain
that it
knows where
everything
is.
“Maybe the
Israelis
could start
off the
attack and
have us
finish it
off,”
Katzman
added. “And
maybe that
has been
their
intention
all along.
But in terms
of the
long-term
military
campaign
that would
be needed to
permanently
suppress
Iran’s
nuclear
programme,
only the US
is perceived
as having
that
capability
right now.”
Additional
reporting:
Tony
Allen-Mills
in New York
© Copyright
2008 Times
Newspapers
Ltd.
http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/news/world/middle_east/article4322508.ece
