Missile Attack Survivor: This Was a Miracle

“This was a miracle,” said a Grad missile attack survivor, who was saved by an early-warning siren and a quick escape from his bedroom.

By Tzvi Ben Gedalyahu

First Publish: 9/9/2012, 10:38 AM
A 'miracle' no one was seriously hurt

A ‘miracle’ no one was seriously hurt
Israel news photo: Flash 90

“This was a miracle,” said Grad missile attack survivor Pinny Azoulai, who was saved by an early-warning siren and a quick escape from his bedroom. The rocket slammed into one home and damaged a neighboring house.

Azoulai told Army Radio Sunday he was sleeping at the time of the attack.

“I heard the siren and jumped out of bed and then ran to the entrance of the house,” He then decided he would be better protected in the bathroom, a move which may have saved his life.

“Just as I entered the bathroom, there was a loud explosion. My heart still is beating fast,” he said. He was surrounded by the debris of the collapsed house, which was a total loss. Azoulai still suffers from ringing in his ears.

His brother Yuval said, “His escape was a miracle. We have lived in this reality for a long time,” he added. “This was a direct hit on the house, and we will not be living here for a long time.”

Ten people were treated for shock and physical injuries in the missile strikes on Netivot and later on Be’er Sheva, where the rocket fell in an open area.

Three people in Be’er Sheva suffered injuries when they fell while running to bomb shelters. Seven people, four in Be’er Sheva and three in Netivot, were treated for shock, and three people were evacuated to Soroka Medical Center in Be’er Sheva, according to Magen David Adom.

SOURCE

Iran Just Unveiled A Brand New Missile To Deter Possibility Of Israeli Attack

 

Iran Missiles

AP

Iran just announced six weapons upgrades, including a domestically-made short range missilewith accuracy unheard of until now. 

Reuters is reporting that the Iranian Defense minister — joined by President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad himself — presented the weapons at a ceremony to the world.

The President insisted that the new missiles — a new generation of Fateh-110 missiles, with a range of around 180 miles — were exclusively for defensive possibilities.

Since the missile is land-to-land, it can’t be mounted on a plane or submarine to close in on distance. And since Tel Aviv is 980 miles from Tehran, this kind of missile can’t be used offensively against Israel.

Instead, it’s likely a hedge against the possibility of an internal land war. It could, with a stretch, hit populated areas of Iraq or Afghanistan. Still, though, a short range missile with excellent accuracy isn’t a huge threat to U.S. interests in the area, unless those interests enter Iran.

The claims of advanced accuracy are disputed by some experts, though — a senior fellow at the International Institute for Strategies Studies told Reuters that the guidance system is “crude” and only operates during the first phase of the missile’s flight.

Either way: If anyone was planning a quick and simple destruction of Iranian nuclear facilities, some of that plan might have to go back to the drawing board.

Read more: http://www.businessinsider.com/iran-just-unveiled-a-brand-new-missile-that-could-ruin-israels-plans-2012-8#ixzz24M4GfAtf

Obama to Assad: Using Chemical Weapons is a Red Line

Obama warns Assad to heed warnings to neither use nor move chemical or biological weapons or face consequences.

By Elad Benari

First Publish: 8/21/2012, 5:13 AM
Barack Obama

Barack Obama
Reuters

U.S. President Barack Obama issued a direct warning to Syrian President Bashar al-Assad on Monday, saying he should heed U.S. warnings to neither use nor move chemical or biological weapons, CNN reported.

“We cannot have a situation where chemical or biological weapons are falling into the hands of the wrong people,” Obama told reporters at the White House. “We have been very clear to the Assad regime — but also to other players on the ground — that a red line for us is we start seeing a whole bunch of chemical weapons moving around or being utilized.”

He added, “That would change my calculus; that would change my equation.”

Obama said that U.S. officials are monitoring the situation “very carefully” and have put together a number of contingency plans.

“We have communicated in no uncertain terms with every player in the region that that’s a red line for us and that there would be enormous consequences if we start seeing movement on the chemical weapons front or the use of chemical weapons,”CNN quoted him as having said.

Obama’s remarks come after he said last month that the Syrian leadership “will be held accountable by the international community and the United States should they make the tragic mistake of using those weapons.”

Israel has expressed concerns that Assad’s chemical weapons will end up in the hands of the Hizbullah terror group if his regime falls.

Syria has admitted it has chemical weapons and has threatened to use them if attacked by external forces. It claimed it will not use these weapons on rebels fighting to oust Assad.

Earlier this month it was reported that Assad has transferred a battery of advanced missiles to the al-Masna border crossing, which is the central route used to transfer equipment and weapons to Hizbullah. Members of the Syrian opposition said that one of two major chemical arsenals of the Syrian regime is located near that border crossing.

This facility is located just 24 kilometers from a missile base belonging to Hizbullah and was first exposed by the London Times newspaper in May of 2010.

Michael Eisenstadt, senior fellow and director of the military and security studies program at the Washington Institute for Near East Policy, told CNN that the Syrian regime “probably has the largest and most advanced chemical warfare program in the Arab world.”

Eisenstadt said Assad’s arsenal includes “thousands of tube and rocket artillery rounds filled with mustard-type blister agents, thousands of bombs filled with the nerve agents sarin and possibly VX, and binary-type and cluster CW warheads filled with nerve agents for all its major missile systems.

“Its CW infrastructure is believed to include several production facilities and numerous storage sites, mostly dispersed throughout the western half of the country,” Eisenstadt said.

Meanwhile, at least 122 people were killed in Syria Monday, including two children and their mother in Daraa, the Local Coordination Committees of Syria opposition group told CNN.

Among them were 10 bodies discovered splayed on the ground in the Damascus suburb of Qaboun. Video posted by activists showed at least one of the victims lying on his back, blindfolded, his arms stretched above his head. Others showed victims with bruised flesh and dark red splotches on their clothes.

Reports surfaced on Monday that Assad’s brother Maher al-Assad has died.

Syria rejected the reports, which were published by Russian media, as “baseless” and said they constituted “desperate psychological warfare to undermine the determination of the Syrian people.”

Iron Dome Defends Eilat after Grad Fragments Found

The Iron Dome defense system has been placed in the southernmost city of Eilat, two days after two rockets were fired from Egypt.

By Tzvi Ben Gedalyahu

First Publish: 8/20/2012, 10:00 AM
Eilat

Eilat

The Iron Dome defense system has been placed in the southernmost city of Eilat, two days after two rockets were fired from Egypt.

Missile attacks or even the threat of rocket strikes could have a catastrophic effect on the localeconomy, almost totally dependent on tourism.

“An Iron Dome battery has been deployed in the town of Eilat as part of tests, momentarily modifying the sites where these systems are deployed,” an IDF spokeswoman said.

An Islamic terrorist group that calls itself  Ansar Jerusalem claimed responsibility for firing two Grad rockets on Eilat last week. The explosions were heard, but there was no evidence of rocket firing until a mountain hiker found the remains of a 122m rocket on Saturday.

The Ansar terrorist group blamed “the Jews” for claiming there were no deaths orinjuries. Its statement claimed that the terrorists tried to make sure the missiles would hit populated areas, “but as usual, the Jews are hiding their losses, and in their reports and releases they claimed that the rockets fell in open, unpopulated areas.”

It added, “You know, Jews, that nothing can stop us with Allah’s help, from fighting you and torturing you…

“Everyone knows that our weapons, our readiness and our jihad have a fixed target and are fighting those who cursed Allah, stole our communities, our holy places and hurt our dignity.”

However, another unknown organization calling itself the “Salafi Sinai Front” also claimed responsibility for firing the missiles.

Eilat has been the target of missile attacks from Sinai in the recent past, and eight people were killed in a multi-pronged terrorist attack last year.

If This Document Is Correct Israel’s Attack On Iran Would Be Like Nothing Seen Before

Israel Warship

Wikimedia Commons

A Super Dvora Mk III class patrol boat

American blogger Richard Silverstein claims to have acquired an “Israeli briefing document” that outlines an Israeli attack on Iranand its nuclear facilities. 

While the validity of the report is seriously in question, it does outline a rather spectacular 21st century attack.

Arutz Sheva translated the document from its original Hebrew and writes:

“The Israeli attack on Iran “will begin with a coordinated strike, including an unprecedented cyber-attack which will totally paralyze the Iranian regime and its ability to know what is happening within its borders. The internet, telephones, radio and television, communications satellites, and fiber optic cables leading to and from critical installations will be taken out of action. The electrical grid throughout Iran will be paralyzed and transformer stations will absorb severe damage from carbon fiber munitions which are finer than a human hair, causing electrical short circuits whose repair requires their complete removal.”

Following the coordinated strike, according to the document, “A barrage of tens of ballistic missiles would be launched from Israel toward Iran. 300km ballistic missiles would be launched from Israeli submarines in the vicinity of the Persian Gulf. The missiles would not be armed with unconventional warheads [WMD], but rather with high-explosive ordnance equipped with reinforced tips designed specially to penetrate hardened targets.

“The missiles will strike their targets—some exploding above ground like those striking the nuclear reactor at Arak–which is intended to produce plutonium and tritium—and the nearby heavy water production facility; the nuclear fuel production facilities at Isfahan and facilities for enriching uranium-hexaflouride.  Others would explode under-ground, as at the Fordo facility.

“A barrage of hundreds of cruise missiles will pound command and control systems, research and development facilities, and the residences of senior personnel in the nuclear and missile development apparatus,” continues the document exposed by Silverstein. “Intelligence gathered over years will be utilized to completely decapitate Iran’s professional and command ranks in these fields.”

The “document” goes on to say that after the initial attacks, Israeli satellites will pass over Iran to gauge the damage. Then:

“Only after rapidly decrypting the satellite’s data, will the information be transferred directly to war planes making their way covertly toward Iran. These IAF planes will be armed with electronic warfare gear previously unknown to the wider public, not even revealed to our U.S. ally. This equipment will render Israeli aircraft invisible. Those Israeli war planes which participate in the attack will damage a short-list of targets which require further assault.”

The news of the “leak” is blossoming around the Web, but David Cenciotti at The Aviationist brings his experience to bear on the subject and offers some of the most unique insights that concludes with the likelihood it’s all nothing more than speculation.

Regardless, his evaluation is worth checking out here >

Read more: http://www.businessinsider.com/if-this-document-is-correct-israels-attack-on-iran-would-be-like-nothing-ever-seen-before-2012-8#ixzz23yBLnokJ

Israel tests SMS missile alerts as Iran chatter grows

August 13, 2012 – TEL AVIV – Israel yesterday began testing an SMS system for warning the public of an imminent missile attack as chatter over a possible strike on Iran dominated the Israeli press headlines. As testing began, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said Israel had chalked up ‘a significant improvement’ in its home front defense capabilities, mentioning its highly-vaunted anti-missile systems such as Iron Dome and Arrow 2. “There has been a significant improvement in our level of defense capacity on the home front: with Iron Dome, with the Arrow, in terms of protection and shelters, in advanced warning systems and in other areas,” he said at the start of the weekly cabinet meeting. “But all the threats which are directed towards the Israeli home front are dwarved by another threat — different in both its scope and its essence. And so I repeat: Iran must never be allowed to get nuclear weapons.” With front page stories in two papers suggesting Tehran had made progress towards the manufacture and assembly of a nuclear warhead, Israel’s Home Front Command began final tests of the SMS warning system which is expected to be operational by September. “The Home Front Command will today start conducting nationwide testing of the ‘Personal Message’ alert system, which will end on Thursday,” said a statement indicating that SMS texts in Hebrew, Arabic, English and Russian would be sent to subscribers on Israel’s three main networks: Cellcom, Pelephone and Orange. The idea is that the SMS system could be used to warn the population of an imminent missile attack by Iran or Lebanon’s Hezbollah militia if Israel strikes Tehran’s nuclear facilities which it believes is a front for developing a bomb. In recent days, talk of a possible strike on Iran has dominated the headlines, largely coming from unsourced officials quoting intelligence reports, none of which it was possible to verify. “Iran has made progress toward nuclear warhead,” was the headline in the Haaretz newspaper. “The Iranians greatest progress recently is in the manufacture and assembly of a nuclear warhead,” the paper said, quoting the official who was drawing his information from an intelligence report which an Israeli newspaper said was recently presented to U.S. President Barack Obama. Although US officials declined to comment on the report, Israeli Defence Minister Ehud Barak referred to it directly last week, saying it “brings the American assessment much closer to ours” and makes the Iranian issue “a bit more urgent.” Not prepared for war was the headline in Yediot Aharonot, which questioned Israel’s readiness to both mount a decisive military strike and to cope back home with the expected fallout. It quoted statistics saying 700,000 civilians did not have bomb shelters, only half of Israel’s population of 7.8 million people had gas masks, and that work to fortify 70 percent of the country’s hospitals would not be completed until 2015. –AFP

24-48 Hours to Open Tel Aviv Bomb Shelters

It will take 24 hours to get all the bomb shelters in Tel Aviv open in the event of a missile strike, according to a city official.

By Chana Ya’ar

First Publish: 8/12/2012, 4:57 PM
Public shelter

Public shelter
Flash 90

It will take 24 hours to get all the bomb shelters in Tel Aviv open in the event of a missile strike, according toan official quoted on an Israeli radio station. But Home Front Command differs on the estimate.

The first statement was made by city councilman Moshe Tiomkin, who was quoted Sunday by Army Radio while discussing what might happen  in the early hours of such an attack. Within a day, he was quoted as saying, all of the city’s 400 public shelters would be open and ready for use. Tiomkin is in charge of defense and emergency management for the city.

However, Home Front Command is not as confident: the closest estimate from the defense agency, in the event of a missile strike on Tel Aviv, is that it may take up to 48 hours to get all the public shelters in the coastal city open.

There are bomb shelters located in every neighborhood in Tel Aviv, but they are widely scattered and it will take some time for officials to get to them to open them up, Home Front Command said. There are 240 bomb shelters in public areas. In addition, there are 60 more shelters in underground parking garages – and another 100 shelters in schools.

Meanwhile, speaking at the start of the weekly cabinet meeting, Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu noted that Sunday was the launch of a week-long trial of the new SMS text missile alert system. The drill begins in the final week before Home Front Minister Matan Vilna’i leaves to take up his new post as Israel’s Ambassador to China, and the prime minister took the time to list Vilnai’s accomplishments during his term.

“We are investing billions in home front defense, in Iron Dome, in the Arrow, and in other systems that are under development. We are investing a lot of money in defending facilities, institutions and homes. We are holding preparedness exercises for various scenarios regarding home front defense; such an exercise is being held today,” Netanyahu pointed out.

“There has been a significant improvement in our Home Front defense capabilities, in Iron Dome, in the Arrow, in structural reinforcements and shelters, in warnings and in other areas,” he added.

Admitting that there are many areas in which improvements are still needed, Netanyahu nevertheless zeroed in on Iran as the number one threat upon which to focus Israel’s concerns.

“One cannot say that there are no problems in this field because there always are — but all of the threats that are currently being directed against the Israeli home front pale against a particular threat, different in scope, different in substance, and thereforeI reiterate that Iran cannot be allowed to have nuclear weapons,”  he said.

Here Is How Israel Would Respond To An All-Out Missile Attack From Iran

arrow missile

US Navy

Iran‘s possible nuclear program is dominating news from the Middle-East because Israel knows if it perfects a thermonuclear device, Tehran likely has the ability to deliver it aboard some of its current missiles. 

Israel thinks this is too great a threat for it to allow.

The Jewish state has worked with the U.S. over the years to develop a pretty comprehensive missile defense system and we’ve outlined a rough version of it here, along with Iran’s biggest threats.

While Israel’s system strives to be fully comprehensive in its defense, if any of Iran’s rockets were strapped with a nuclear device — or if Iran could hand deliver a device into Israel — none of this preparation would mean much at all.

The homemade Qassam rocket has already been sent into Israel

The Qassam rocket is typically manufactured by Palestinian militantsand fired into Israel without advanced guidance capabilities. They cost an estimated $800 each. 

They’re a very, very basic type of missile, propelled by a solid mixture of potassium nitrate fertilizer mixed with sugar. The warhead is typically scavenged TNT or urea nitrate. They have no guidance mechanism beyond aiming, and an estimated 2,048 were fired into Israel in 2008.

Grad missiles have killed 22 people since 2000

Since 2006, Hamas has been lobbing ex-Soviet 122mm Grad missile into Israel. The missiles are likely copies imported from Iran or China, brought into the Gaza strip from tunnels to Egypt

These rockets have a range of 20 kilometers, but are typically fired from a moving launcher, greatly expanding their abilities.

The Grad rockets, with the improvised Qassam rockets, have caused some of the most pain in Israel, claiming the lives of 22 citizens since 2000.

The Sejjil missile is capable of striking Tel Aviv, Israel

Tel Aviv, Israel is roughly 1,600 kilometers from Tehran, Iran. That, for all intent and purposes, is the magic number here; a central point in Iran to a central point in Israel is roughly 1,600 km. These are the ballistic missiles that can allegedly make that trip. 

The Sejjil missile is a solid-fueled Iranian surface-to-surface missile that is roughly 58 feet long and can travel between 2000 and 2500 kilometers, bringing Israel well within its range.

That missile is strikingly similar to the Iranian Ashoura missile, with an alleged range of 2,000 km. That medium ranged ballistic missile has been in service since November 1997.

The Shabab-3 missile can also reach deep into Israel from Iran and carries multiple warheads

The Shabab-3 missile can also reach deep into Israel from Iran and carries multiple warheads

(Yes, it’s photoshopped. But still, at least one of these is the Shabab-3

YouTube

The original Shabab-3 missile should only reach 1,280 km, but the upgraded Medium Range Ballistic missile version can allegedly reach up to 1,950 kilometers. 

The Fajr-3 missile is likewise a medium range Ballistic missile, but it has the ability to launch multiple reentry vehicles. What does that mean? A single rocket can release multiple warheads, each aimed at the same target in the hope that the multiple warheads overwhelm the missile defense system.

Essentially, Israel would have to contend with these long and short-range threats

Essentially, Israel would have to contend with these long and short-range threats

Rocket fires from the Gaza strip

paffairs_sanfransisco / flickr

Both a long-range ballistic missile assault and a short range rocket attack. Then, provided the air defense worked, retaliation. 

They’ve been preparing for the long range threat for some time, and that’s one area where the U.S. has been of some assistance. However, the short range rockets were an unexpected development for the Israel Defense Forces, and they had to adapt quickly to protect population centers.

Israel’s existing air defense system is made up of three main parts

The Israel Defense Forces have three main ways to take out an incoming missile 

  • The Iron Dome is the first tier of aerial defense designed to take out mortars and short range rockets incoming from the Gaza territories
  • The Patriot missile system, acquired from the United States, is designed to intercept aircraft and incoming medium range missiles.
  • The Arrow Anti-Ballistic missile defense system is designed to take out incoming long range ballistic missiles. It’s capable of destroying the missiles when they’re outside the atmosphere.

The Iron Dome is the first line of defense

The Iron Dome is made up of a tracking radar, a command console and a missile launcher. It is designed to take out those Qassam improvised rockets. 

The Iron Dome is largely successful because the IDF prioritizes incoming missiles. If a Qassam missile is poised to land in an uninhabited region, the IDF would instead target a missile poised to strike a populated city.

The system has been very effective at minimizing the domestic impact of the Qassam missile. Iron Dome went from conceptualization to reality in four short years, nearly unprecedented for a defense project. The U.S. has provided funding and support, and is getting some systems in the future. 

Even though it was designed in the sixties, the Patriot system is still decades ahead of the incoming missile’s tech

The United States first deployed the Patriot missile defense system in 1984. It’s made up of a stationary launcher that can hold four missiles and a command and control center that implements the missiles. The scanning radar enables the system to identify, target, and take out incoming aircraft or medium range missiles. 

Since the initial deployment, a large number of upgrades have been added into the system to keep it modern.

Still, given that the Patriot systems would be hypothetically aimed for incoming F-14 Tomcats or ex-Soviet ballistic missiles, the Reagan-era tech should be more than capable of overcoming the most devastating parts of the retro-assault.

The Arrow Missile System can take out those long range threats from a hypothetical Iranian bombardment

The Arrow missile system has been operational since 2000. The United States and Israel developed the air defense system together, and it remains Israel’s primary long range air defense system. 

The system has demonstrated that it can take out a ballistic missile when it is outside the atmosphere. While the Iron Dome has mostly seen deployment in the south of Israel to defend from the most consistent short range rocket threat, the Arrow system is being deployed in the center of the country to maximize aerial protection.

It is manufactured by Israel Aerospace Industries and Boeing. 

David’s Sling, when complete, will complement the Iron Dome system by hitting medium sized threats

The David’s Sling missile is being jointly developed by the Israeli contractor Rafael Advanced Defense Systems and American contractor Raytheon. 

The missile is designed to intercept medium to long range rockets and some cruise missiles, and in general to aid the Iron Dome in defending Israeli air space.

The idea is that David’s Sling would take care of rockets and cruise missile that exceed the speed and range of the Iron Dome system but are too small to warrant the use of the Arrow system. It’s currently being tested before full integration.

It’s worth noting that there is a small but important American military presence in Israel

The only foreign troops stationed in Israel are a force of Americans manning a Terminal High Altitude Air Defense (THAAD) X-band radar system on Mt. Keren in the Negev desert. 

What does this mean? Well, the THAAD system is one of the best aerial defense systems in the world. If anything goes into the air in the region, Americans will know about it before anyone else, even the Israelis.

This — as well as multiple aircraft carriers and destroyers already placed in the Persian Gulf and Mediterranean — could give Israel the extra firepower it needs to deter and retaliate against an attack.

Read more: http://www.businessinsider.com/heres-how-israel-would-respond-to-an-all-out-missile-attack-from-iran-2012-8?op=1#ixzz22tmwm83U

Israel Racing against War, Upgrades Missile Shield

Israel is racing against an attack by Iran and Syria and is upgrading its US-backed Arrow missile shield, a defense official said.

By Tzvi Ben Gedalyahu

First Publish: 8/5/2012, 9:30 AM
An experiment on the Arrow

An experiment on the Arrow
Israel news photo: IDF spokesman

Israel is racing against an attack by Iran and Syria and is upgrading its US-backed Arrow missile shield in the wake of a possible a chemical weapon attack from Syria, a defense official told Reuters Sunday.

The new “Block 4″ generation of guided interceptor rockets, radars and technologies for synchronizing Arrow with U.S. systems was being installed in deployed Israeli batteries, a process that would take several weeks, the official told the newsagency.

The Arrow system, operational since 2000, is designed to blow up incoming missiles at altitudes high enough for non-conventional warheads to disintegrate safely.

“It is part of the technological race in the region,” added the official, who insisted on anonymity,

Besides the threat of a nuclear threat for Iran in the next year or two, Israel is now preparing for a possible chemical warfare attack from Syria, where the civil war could spur Syrian President Bashar Assad to turn his missiles on Israel. The same situation could arise if Hizbullah, which is thought to have accessed part of the chemical arsenal, decides to attack Israel from Lebanon.

Israel has threatened to attack preemptively in both countries, a prospect that could trigger a wider war and clash with Washington’s efforts to resolve the crises diplomatically.

The Pentagon and U.S. firm Boeing Co. are partners in Arrow, an investment that the Obama administration hopes will help stay the Israelis’ hand, according to Reuters.

U.S. Secretary of Defense Leon Panetta said last week that Arrow, like a similar Israeli interceptor for short-range guerrilla rockets, Iron Dome, was “designed to prevent wars”.

Israel is developing Arrow III, which is due to be operational in 2014 or 2015, while deploying the current Arrow II. Unlike previous generations of the interceptor, Arrow III will engage incoming missiles in space, using detachable warheads that, turning into “kamikaze” satellites, will seek out and slam into the target.

Israel is also working on a more powerful rocket interceptor than Iron Dome, known as David’s Sling or Magic Wand, which is due out next year. Meshed together and with U.S. counterparts, the three Israeli systems would form a multi-tier shield providing several opportunities to intercept incoming missiles.

Barak Tells Panetta Israel Will Decide on Iran

Defense Minister Ehud Barak has informed US Defense Secy Leon Panetta that Israel will make its own decisions on how to deal with Iran.

By Chana Ya’ar

First Publish: 8/1/2012, 3:12 PM
Leon Panetta, Ehud Barak

Leon Panetta, Ehud Barak
Reuters

 

Defense Minister Ehud Barak has informed US Defense Secy Leon Panetta that Israel will make its own decisions on how to deal with Iran.

The two men discussed the issue at a special reception held at the Defense Ministry’s Kirya military base in Tel Aviv on Wednesday before taking a tour of an Iron Domeinstallation in Ashkelon.

The Iron Dome anti-missile defense system was developed by the Israel-based Rafael military firm and funded by the United States.

Barak told Panetta during their time together that Israel’s government would decide for itself  how it will deal with its own security issues – including the existential threat posed by the Iranian nuclear development program.

Panetta expressed his commitment to Israel’s security, and said the U.S. shares Israel’s struggle for peace in the region and security for Israelis. He added that “this partnership is more important than ever” and said the U.S. would continue to maximize its pressure on Tehran.

But Barak pointed out that while sanctions and diplomatic efforts might have some place in that equation, they are unlikely to have any real impact on preventing the Ayatollahs from continuing that program.

Such a threat cannot be ignored, least of all by Israel.

Despite all international efforts to the contrary – including the entire past three and a half years of diplomatic and other efforts by the Obama Administration – Iran has continued, undeterred, to enrich uranium to a level of 20 percent. At this point, the Islamic Republic has acquired enough enriched uranium to power five primitive atomic weapons.

Barak pointed out the sanctions and diplomacy take time – which allows Iran to continue to enrich more uranium.

“There is much to discuss,” he said, “as there are great and many problems.”

Panetta was scheduled to meet with Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu later in the day.