Israel Might Not Be Able to Destroy Iran's Nukes
NewsMax.com Wires
Monday, Sept. 27, 2004
JERUSALEM Israel would not be able to destroy Iran's
nuclear installations with a single air strike as it did in Iraq in
1981 because they are scattered or hidden and intelligence is weak,
Israeli and foreign analysts say.
Israeli leaders have implied they might use force against Iran
if international diplomatic efforts or the threat of sanctions fail
to stop Iran from producing nuclear weapons.
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Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon said this month Israel is
"taking measures to defend itself," a comment that raised
concern Israel is considering a pre-emptive strike along the lines
of its 1981 bombing of an unfinished Iraqi nuclear reactor at
Osirak near Baghdad.
Speculation has also been fueled by recent Israeli weapons
acquisitions, including bunker-buster bombs and long-range
fighter-bombers.
Israel's national security adviser, Giora Eiland, was quoted
Monday by the Maariv daily as saying Iran would reach the "point of
no return" in its nuclear weapons program by November rather than
next year as Israeli military officials said earlier.
Concern about Tehran's nuclear development intensified last week
when Iran's Vice President Reza Aghazadeh said Iran has started
converting raw uranium into the gas needed for enrichment, an
important step in making a nuclear bomb.
The declaration came in defiance of a resolution passed three
days earlier by the Vienna-based International Atomic Energy
Agency, the U.N. nuclear watchdog, demanding Iran freeze all
uranium enrichment, including conversion. The group's 35-nation
board of governors warned that Iran risked being taken before the
U.N. Security Council, which could impose sanctions.
Iran denies it is developing nuclear weapons and says its nuclear
development program is aimed at generating electricity. Israel and
other countries, including the United States, doubt that.
Recent Israeli weapons purchases could be crucial in a possible
strike.
In February, Israel received the first of 102 American-built
F-16I warplanes, the largest weapons deal in its history. Military
sources say the planes were specially designed with extra fuel
tanks to allow them to reach Iran.
In June, it signed a $319 million deal to acquire nearly 5,000
U.S.-made smart bombs, including 500 "bunker busters" that can
destroy six-foot concrete walls, such as those that might be found
in Iranian nuclear facilities.
Military and strategic analysts in Israel and abroad say even
with the new weaponry, Israel lacks the ability to carry out a
successful strike against Iran's nuclear installations.
"You have to have solid intelligence, you have to know what to
hit ... The intelligence on Iran is very weak," said Alex Vatanka,
an expert on Iranian security issues at Jane's Sentinel Security
Assessments in London.
Israeli strategic analyst Reuven Pedatzur pointed to a claim
last year by Iranian opposition figures that foreign intelligence
services have been unaware of two of the Iranian nuclear
facilities.
"There is no good intelligence on Iran, and this is the
proof," he said. "Any Israeli attack on Iran would cause huge
political damage, and in the end, the program would proceed."
Other difficulties in attacking Iran's nuclear facilities
include their dispersal throughout the country, their sophisticated
defense systems and the likelihood that some of the installations
have been replicated, said Cliff Kupchan, vice president of the
Nixon Center in Washington, a former Clinton administration Iranian
expert who met with Iranian officials during a visit there last
year.
Kupchan said IAEA threats to impose sanctions on Iraq are
unrealistic, because U.N members, including those with fledging
nuclear programs, such as Brazil, would be reluctant to back them.
Sanctions against Iranian oil production are also unlikely when
world demand is about 80 million barrels a day, prices are
sky-high, and the only surplus capacity, about 2 million barrels
a day from Saudi Arabia, is heavy oil the market usually shuns.
Iran exports about 2.6 million barrels a day.
Kupchan said if diplomacy fails, there might be no choice but for
the United States to lead a concerted military campaign against
Iran. "If the U.S. moves aggressively, it won't be sanctions, it
will be a coalition of the willing," he said.
Speaking at the United Nations last week, Israeli Foreign
Minister Silvan Shalom appeared to back him up.
"The time has come to move the Iranian case to the Security
Council in order to put an end to this nightmare," Shalom said.
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