Barak: A nuclear Iran is taking shape before us. Time for decisions is short

DEBKAfile Special Report August 9, 2012, 2:15 PM (GMT+02:00)

Defense Minister Ehud Barak
Defense Minister Ehud Barak

Stout refutation of reported disagreements over the military option against Iran’s nuclear program between the US and Israel, and himself and Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu, took up most of a long radio interview given by Defense Minister Ehud Barak Thursday, Aug. 9. He explained that US and Israeli intelligence essentially see eye to eye on this matter and so do he and the prime minister.
Barak referred to the new US National Intelligence Estimate (NIE) on Iran as confirming that both capitals understand that not much time is left for making decision on whether or not to go on the offensive against Iran’s nuclear facilities and when, because, he said, “a nuclear Iran is taking shape right before our eyes.”
Defense Minister Barak’s key remark was this: “I am aware of an American intelligence finding (not the new National Intelligence Estimate) that brings American intelligence assessments [of the current state of the Iranian nuclear program] very close to ours. This makes the Iranian question [i.e., the issue of the Iranian nuclear program and a possible military operation against it] extremely urgent,” he said without further explanation.

Barak disclosed that the US and Israel have been essentially of one mind for many months in their estimates of Iranian nuclear progress and the factors holding Tehran back from starting to build a nuclear bomb. All options therefore remain on the table, he stressed.
DEBKAfile’s military and intelligence sources add:  American-Israeli talks about a military operation against Iran wound up months ago in early 2012. The administration was made aware that notwithstanding President Barack Obama’s objections, Israel would soon go into action against Iran’s nuclear facilities.
This presumption has been adopted as their working hypothesis by the top US command echelons, from Defense Secretary Leon Panetta to Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff Gen. Martin Dempsey and down to the head of the US Central Command, Gen. James Mattis, who has both Israel and Iran in his jurisdiction.
Barak stressed that he and the prime minister are in total harmony on this issue.  ”What we (the prime minister and I, and the Americans) understand is that there is not much time left for deciding [about an attack on Iran]“

He referred in answer to a question to the comment by former Mossad chief Ephraim Halevy made last week: “if I were an Iranian, I would be very worried in the next twelve weeks.”
To this, Barak said “There is some basis to what Halevy said.” He added: “We will soon have to make some difficult decisions.”

As to the public disputes over the media on the wisdom of attacking Iran, the defense minister said some of the debates and public disclosures not only harm Israel’s security but actually aid Tehran.

The price of allowing Iran to attain a nuclear weapon will be much greater than the cost of an attack.  It is already happening, said the Israeli minister. “And we must take into account the dangers and the very steep price in human life and in resources, if Iran goes nuclear. First, we must consider the outcome of first Saudi Arabia, then Turkey, and then the New Egypt becoming nuclear powers in their turn.”
Asked about an unattributed report Thursday that Saudi Arabia had sent a message to the Obama administration threatening to intercept any Israeli bomber planes using its air space to strike Iran, Barak replied he was not familiar with any such message. But, he said, Saudi Arabia is a sovereign state and makes its own decisions like any other country.

He went on to warn that another consequence of Iran’s nuclearization would be the strengthening of terrorist elements in the region, such as Tehran’s proxy, the Lebanese Hizballah.
At the same time, Barak also said: It’s quite possible that we may have to deal with Hizballah anyway.”
This was taken by DEBKAfile’s sources as suggesting that Hizballah is a rising menace – both because of its support for Bashar Assad in the civil war and for performing Iranian-sponsored terrorist attacks on Israelis in different parts of the world.
In discussing the situation in Egypt and Sinai-based jihadist terror, Defense Minister Barak asserted his confidence that Egypt is capable of dealing with it. “But I can’t say whether it has the will to do so,” he added.

For more than a year since Mubarak’s overthrow, “Israel has been readjusting its military and intelligence resources in the areas abutting Egypt and Sinai,” he said. “We have deployed an Iron Dome missile interceptor battery near Eilat in case it becomes necessary in that sector.”
Barak did not elaborate upon what he expects to happen in the Eilat sector, which is the southernmost point on the Israeli map, or against whom the missile defense system was deployed.
He did offer a prediction on Syria, estimating that quite soon “we would see Syrian President Bashar Assad hunkering down with his army in a fortified Alawite enclave” encompassing the Syrian coast and the Alawite Mountains.
“The longer the war in Syria drags on,” he said, “the greater the prospects of total chaos.”

The defense minister underlined the importance of attempts to renew peace negotiations with the Palestinians as quickly as possible. He cited the growing strength of Hamas and its ties with the Muslim Brotherhood in Egypt and in other Arab countries as lending urgency to the revival of the peace process.
“On this issue, time is not on our side,” he said. “But if progress proves evasive, both of us [Israel and the Palestinians] may be faced with having to perform certain mutually-agreed unilateral measures.”

Muslim Brotherhood Blames Israel for Terror Attack

The Muslim Brotherhood says that the Israeli Mossad was behind the terror attack along the Egypt-Israel border on Sunday night.

By Elad Benari

First Publish: 8/7/2012, 3:16 AM
Remains of terrorists' stolen AOC bombed by IAF

Remains of terrorists’ stolen AOC bombed by IAF
Israel news photo: IDF

The Islamist Muslim Brotherhood, which clinched power in Egypt after the fall of former president Hosni Mubarak, claimed on Monday that Israel was behind the terror attackalong the Egypt-Israel border on Sunday night.

Terrorists attacked two Egyptian army posts in the Egyptian part of Rafiah with anti-tank rockets and gunfire, killing 16 Egyptian officers and soldiers. The terrorists then tried to infiltrate into Israel using two stolen Egyptian military vehicles, but were foiled by the IDF.

The Muslim Brotherhood said in a statement quoted by the Egyptian daily Al-Masry Al-Youm that the attack “could be attributed to the Mossad, which has been seeking to abort the Egyptian revolution, especially as it had several days ago instructed Israeli citizens who were in Sinai to leave immediately.”

The statement also said that the incident “aims to add problems at the border to those already plaguing the country internally following the collapse of a corrupt system, and attempts to claim the failure of the new Egyptian government that was formed only three days ago.”

“The incident is also an attempt to disrupt the president’s reform project and drive a wedge between the Egyptian administration and its people, and the Palestiniangovernment and the people of Gaza,” the statement concluded.

Dr. Hilmi al-Gazar, a member of the Supreme Council of the Brotherhood’s Freedom and Justice party, told a local network that the Israeli Mossad was able to penetrate into the organization which carried out the attack and direct its activities.

He claimed that the timing of the attack, which took place during the meal which marks the end of the Ramadan fast day, and the lack of preparedness on the part of the Egyptian soldiers who were killed, proved that the Israeli intelligence service was behind the terrorist act.

Meanwhile, an organization identified with the Salafi movement in Egypt condemned the IDF for destroying the two Egyptian armored vehicles stolen by the terrorists, and argued that Israel should have taken over the vehicles, refrained from attacking them and detained the terrorists so they could be questioned.

The organization claimed that perhaps Israel’s intention by attacking the armored vehicles was to destroy evidence of its involvement in the attack.

An IDF investigation of the terror attack indicates that the terrorists were able to blow open a fence on the Gaza border by blowing up 500 kilograms of explosives, that were stored inside a truck.

The operation, top IDF officials said, presents a “worrying picture of the intentions of terrorist groups to attack Israel.”

A previously unknown group, the Shura Mujahadeen Council, took responsibility for the attack. The group posted a Facebook message praising the attack, and saying that “there is no place in the Arab and Muslim world for liberal and secular democratic values,” and that they were “dedicated to the struggle against Zionism.” The perpetrators are suspected to be Sinai Bedouin.

An ill wind blows between US and Israeli intelligence over attack on Iran

DEBKAfile Special Report July 29, 2012, 11:44 AM (GMT+02:00)

Tags:  US-Israel   Iran nuclear   CIA   Mossad 
Duel over Iran attack
Duel over Iran attack

The acrimony reached a nadir with an unusually detailed Association Press report on July 28 quoting anonymous sources as stating, “The CIA considers Israel its No. 1 counterintelligence threat in the agency’s New East Division,” – the group that oversees spying across he Middle East.
Prime Minister Binyamin’s Office reviled its content, including allegations of Mossad intrusions of US officials’ homes, as “a lying report.”

This leak had two objectives, says DEBKAfile:
1. To deter US presidential candidate Mitt Romney from using his visit to Israel Sunday and Monday July 29-30 to promise, if elected in November,  to review Jonathan Pollard’s life sentence for spying for Israel, which all previous US presidents have refused to do at the CIA’s behest. It has been suggested that he may be considering going on record with this pledge to win Jewish votes.
2.  To hit back at the Israel watchers dogging the footsteps of CIA agents planted in a widely-flung undercover network for picking up any clues that  Israeli preparations for a unilateral attack on Iran’s nuclear program are moving into operational phase.

Although American and Israeli officials habitually stress the commonalty of the two government’s decisions on Iran – and top US officials are again turning up in Israel every few days – President Barack Obama still can’t be sure that Netanyahu and Defense Minister Ehud Barak won’t take him off-guard by springing an attack at a date earlier than the one under discussion between them.
DEBKAfile’s Washington sources report that October is often mentioned these days in the White House, the Pentagon and top military command as the month to watch. Persian Gulf capitals are also on guard for an October attack although they prefer an American to an Israeli strike.
High-ranking Saudi princes have been telling Western officials on recent visits to the kingdom that they received Washington’s assurance that the Israelis would strike first and the Americans join in later.

Riyadh has tried to persuade the Obama administration that the US must go first and do its utmost to keep the Israelis out of it altogether. The Saudis were told that Washington is doing what it can to hold Israel back but can’t be sure of succeeding.
Obama’s National Security Adviser Tom Donilon discussed Iran and Syria with the Israeli prime minister when he visited Jerusalem on July 14. He did indeed share with him the US contingency plan for an operation against Iran, as reported – except for one salient piece of information: He could not say whether or not the US President had decided to execute it.
The information he received from Netanyahu was that Israel is on the point of a decision to attack Iran but has not yet settled on a date.

July 26, twelve days later, Barak was more outspoken: Israel, he said, faced “tough and crucial decisions” about its security and future. “I am well aware of the difficulties involved in thwarting Iran’s attempts to acquire a nuclear weapon. However, it is clear to me without a doubt that dealing with the threat itself will be far more complicated, far more dangerous and far more costly in resources and human life than thwarting it.”

This was a broad hint that Israel no longer regarded action for preempting Iran’s nuclear program to be optional.  It came in response to the Islamic Republic’s steady advance towards weapons-grade uranium enrichment – up to 30 percent grade in recent months in parallel with nuclear negotiations with the world powers – and its published plans for producing Highly-Enriched Uranium (HEU) usable for propelling ships engines, but also for fueling nuclear bombs.
Defense Secretary Leon Panetta is the latest high-powered American official due to visit Israel. Wednesday, Aug. 1, he will sit down with Israeli leaders. They will no doubt continue talking about the date of an attack on Iran and try to pull US and Israeli timelines and plans together onto a single, agreed track.
But none of the discussions between the two governments has so far tied Israel down to an agreed date or plan of action. Netanyahu is holding tight to the option of a surprise attack – hence the dense network of CIA agents lurking behind every official and military corner in Israel. They are pouncing and reporting on the slightest clue to the IDF switching to operational mode for a strike on Iran.
DEBKAfile’s Western intelligence sources, who don’t recall ever seeing so extensive an undercover CIA presence in Israel, report that Israeli security agencies have gone to extraordinary lengths to counter their access to classified information about IDF activities.
As a result of this duel, US and Israel spy agencies are at daggers drawn, as evinced in the AP report.

Mossad Assassins in Iran are Israelis, Says New Book

The assassins of top Iranian scientists were not Iranian agents for the Mossad but Israelis, according to a new book.

By Tzv Ben gedalyahu

First Publish: 7/9/2012, 8:07 AM
Former Mossad director Meir Dagan

Former Mossad director Meir Dagan
Israel news photo: Flash 90

The agents who carried out assassinations of top Iranian nuclear scientists were not Iranians working for the Mossad but Israelis, according to a book written by an Israeli journalist

In “Spies Against Armageddon: Inside Israel’s Secret Wars,” (Levant Books),CBS News national correspondent Dan Raviv and Israeli journalist Yossi Melman wrote that the Mossad operates  a special secret unit in called Kidon, Hebrew for bayonet.

The Israeli agents are from families from Arabic countries or from Iran, a Persian nation, and travel freely with fake documents within Iran .

The journalists cited a 10-year-old novel called “Duet in Beirut,” written by a former Mossad intelligence agent involved with Kidon, which offered insights into the workings of the unit. It operates outside Mossad headquarters, and the agents interrelate with phony names even with Mossad agents outside the unit.

However, the Mossad is being careful not to assume that its past successes will continue, and the journalists wrote that the intelligence agency is holding back from trying to carry out more assassinations, which have put Iranian authorities on high alert.

The assassinations have been part of Israel’s “secret war” against Iran’sdevelopment of nuclear facilities. The focus has shifted the past year to cyber attacks as part of a camping to slow down nuclear development without resorting to a military attack, whose success is far from guaranteed.

Senior Hamas Official Murdered in Damascus

A senior member of Hamas was murdered in Damascus, the group says, vowing to investigate the murder.

By Elad Benari

First Publish: 6/28/2012, 1:14 AM
Terrorists

Terrorists
Flash 90

A senior member of Hamas was murdered in Damascus on Wednesday, Hamas politburomember Izzat al-Rishq announced.

In a message posted to his Facebook page, al-Rishq said that the murdered member of Hamas is Kamal Ranaja, also known as Nizzar Abu-Mujhad. Al-Rishq said that Hamas will investigate the circumstances that led to Ranaja’s murder.

The Arabic network Al-Mayadeen said that Ranaja was in the past an aide of Hamas member Mahmoud al-Mabhouh, who was assassinated in Dubai in 2010. Mabhouh’s death was widely blamed on Israel’s Mossad spy agency, which never confirmed or denied involvement.

Despite previously being close allies, there has been a rift between Hamas and the Syrian regime ever since the uprising against President Bashar Assad began. Reports surfaced as early as last May that Hamas is moving its headquarters from Damascus to Egypt and the terror group is strengthening itself in the Sinai.

Some reports claimed that the Damascus-based Hamas leadership left Syria after the Syrian government asked the Hamas leaders to leave.

In December, it was reported that dozens of Hamas members have quietly returned to Gaza from Damascus. Later reports said that Hamas leaders attached to the organization’s long-standing Damascus bureau are fleeing Syria with their families as Assad’s regime grows increasingly unstable.

Hamas is hoping that the victory of the Muslim Brotherhood’s Mohammed Morsi in the Egyptian presidential elections could enable it to secure international recognition. The Muslim Brotherhood helped found Hamas in 1987. The group has also been attempting to get closer to Jordan.

Iran: Scientist Killers Linked to Israel Arrested

Iran has arrested a number of chief suspects in the assassinations of two of its nuclear scientists, state media reported Thursday.

By Rachel Hirshfeld

First Publish: 6/15/2012, 4:13 AM

Iran has arrested a number of chief suspects in the assassinations of two of its nuclear scientists, state media reported Thursday.

The reports claim that the suspects have direct ties with Israel, alleging that they were “hired by an Israeli spynetwork,” Islamic Republic News Agency (IRNA) reported.

A statement from the intelligence ministry stated that, “the main elements behind the killings… were arrested and moved to detention.”

It provided no details as to the number of suspects, their identities, nationalities, or when and where they were arrested.

The report stated, however, that further information would be made public once it was declassified.

The ministry said the suspects were believed to be involved in the murders of Majid Shahriari, a key member of Iran’s Atomic Energy Organization (AEOI), who was killed on November 29, 2010, and Mostafa Ahmadi Roshan, a deputy director of the Natanz nuclear enrichment facility, and his bodyguard, killed on January 11, 2012.

Tehran has accused both Israel and the United States of plotting the assassinations in an attempt to obstruct its nuclear program. The U.S. has denied involvement and Israel has declined to comment.

Last month, authorities hanged Jamal Fashi, 24, for the murder of Massoud Ali-Mohammad, in January 2010.

Iran said Fashi confessed to travelling to Tel Aviv to receive training from Israeli intelligence agency Mossad before returning to Iran to plot the assassination of the nuclear scientist.

OH NO YOU DIDN’T: MOSSAD AGENTS CLAIM OBAMA LYING ABOUT STUXNET


Israeli officials who were placed at risk by the Obama administration’s leaks about the Stuxnet virus are disputing American claims that the cyber-weapon was jointly developed by the U.S. and Israel. Rather, they say, Israeli intelligence first started developing cyberspace warfare against Iran, only convincing the U.S.–with some difficulty–to join in. The Israelis allege that President Barack Obama claimed credit for Stuxnet to boost his re-election campaign.

The source for the new claim is Yossi Melman, a journalist for Israel’s left-wingHa’aretz daily (via Israel Matzav):

The Israeli officials actually told me a different version. They said that it was Israeli intelligence that began, a few years earlier, a cyberspace campaign to damage and slow down Iran’s nuclear intentions. And only later they managed to convince the USA to consider a joint operation — which, at the time, was unheard of. Even friendly nations are hesitant to share their technological and intelligence resources against a common enemy…

Yet my Israeli sources understand the sensitivity and the timing of the issue and are not going to be dragged into a battle over taking credit. “We know that it is the presidential election season,” one Israeli added, ”and don’t want to spoil the party for President Obama and his officials, who shared in a twisted and manipulated way some of the behind-the-scenes secrets of the success of cyberwar.”

The Obama administration’s pattern of leaks to mainstream media outlets–of which the Stuxnet virus is only one example–prompted bipartisan outrage from Congress and the appointment of two special prosecutors. While the leaks jeopardized U.S. national security–allegedly for the political purpose of burnishing President Obama’s image as commander-in-chief–they may also have been exaggerated, if the new reports from Israel are accurate.