Thwarted Terror Attack Reveals Iranian Desperation (FrontPageMagazine.com) by Rick Moran 07/03/12)
Source: http://frontpagemag.com/2012/rick-moran/thwarted-terror-attack-reveals-iranian-desperation/
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Two Iranian nationals arrested in Kenya in June with 33 pounds of
explosives are alleged to have targeted American, Israeli, British,
and Saudi interests in the African country, according to an exclusive
AP report quoting Kenyan officials. The news comes following the
imposition of strict sanctions by the EU and America that appear —
finally — to be severely impacting the Iranian people and economy. In
response, Iranians are ratcheting up tension in the Persian Gulf by
carrying out military exercises where they promise to test fire
several dozen missiles, using replicas of foreign army bases as
targets. The message the mullahs are sending is clear; if America
attacks, they can strike one of several US military bases in the
region.
The sanctions are relatively stiff to be sure. The Europeans have
banned the importation of all Iranian oil and forbidden nations
belonging to the EU from insuring oil tankers carrying Iranian crude.
The United States, for its part, slapped severe currency and banking
restrictions on Iran that have reportedly caused confusion and worry
among the Iranian people.
Meanwhile, the Iranians continue to enrich uranium while stringing
along the P5+1 (Russia, China, Britain, Germany, France, and the US)
nations who continue fruitless negotiations with Tehran about halting
their uranium enrichment activities. Israeli Prime Minister Netanyahu
told the Knesset, “Iran is showing contempt for the whole world, and
plans to enrich beyond 20%,” — a reference to a level of enrichment
for which there is little commercial value and would be far easier to
continue on to bomb grade levels of enrichment of 90%. Low-level
technical talks with the Iranian regime are to resume on Tuesday in
Istanbul with little hope that a breakthrough of any kind can be
achieved.
Some experts believe that the arrest of the Iranians in Kenya and the
targeting of US and Western interests is a sign that Iran will fight
the battle over its nuclear program by resorting to terrorism. The AP
report contains some disturbing information. Kenyan officials say
that the Iranians belonged to the Quds Force — the elite unit of the
Revolutionary Guards tasked with assassination and terror attacks
outside of Iranian territory. The Iranians were arrested in the
coastal city of Mombassa where there are several Israeli-owned
hotels. Kenyan officials told AP that “the plot appears to fit into a
global pattern of attacks or attempted attacks by Iranian agents,
mostly against Israeli interests.”
Jonathan Evans, the head of MI5, Britain’s security service, in a
rare public statement, said last week that “in parallel with rising
concern about Iran’s nuclear intentions, we have seen in recent
months a series of attempted terrorist plots against Israeli
interests in India, Azerbaijan and elsewhere.” He added that “a
return to state-sponsored terrorism by Iran or its associates, such
as Hezbollah, cannot be ruled out as pressure on the Iranian
leadership increases.” In short, the more the West pushes, the more
desperate Iran becomes.
This is borne out by the effect on Iran of this last round of
sanctions. The ban on Iranian oil sales by the EU is a huge blow to
the Iranian economy. The EU accounted for about 18% of Iranian oil
exports. Iran relies on oil to generate about 80% of its public
revenues, and almost all of its hard currency. US Secretary of State
Hillary Clinton said last week that Iranian exports had dropped from
2.5 million bbl to 1.5 million bbl in less than a year. The heavy
subsidies that the Iranian government doles out for basic foodstuffs
and fuel to ordinary Iranians have already been cut once, and may be
cut again. Inflation is running rampant with the prices of bread,
milk and meat having risen around 20 percent, while the price of
chicken has jumped 80 percent.
After years of claiming the sanctions were ineffective, the hardship
has been recognized by the Iranian government. “Today, we are facing
the heaviest of sanctions, and we ask people to help officials in
this battle,” Vice President Mohammad Reza Rahimi was quoted as
saying on the state television’s website. So far, the people appear
to be swallowing the Iranian government’s line about “dastardly
sanctions,” but Iran’s recent election saw many allies of President
Mahmoud Ahmadinejad defeated because of his government’s inability to
deal with the economic problems of the country.
Faced with the prospect of additional sanctions, and a possible US or
Israeli military strike, Iran has escalated both its rhetoric and
actions. “If they [Israel] take any action, they will hand us an
excuse to wipe them off the face of the earth,” said General Amir Ali
Hajizadeh of the Revolutionary Guards. Hajizadeh said that the
military exercises by the Guards over the next several days will send
a message “that the Islamic Republic of Iran is resolute in standing
up to … bullying, and will respond to any possible evil decisively
and strongly.”
Most worrisome is the plan by the Guards to fire dozens of surface-to-
surface missiles — including the medium-range Shabab 3 ballistic
missile that has a reported range of 1,200 miles — at replica targets
of foreign military bases. It is a highly provocative act, but the
message the mullahs are sending cannot be misinterpreted: Any attack
on its soil will be met with a missile barrage — if not at Israel
then at the several US bases that are in range of Iranian weapons.
The centrifuges at Nantanz continue to whir away, enriching uranium
to levels that are unnecessarily high for commercial reactors. Other
sites that are undeclared by Iran that could be carrying out nuclear
research, may or may not be churning out weapons-grade uranium
suitable for bomb making. US intelligence dismisses that possibility,
although the Israeli Mossad does not. And even though the sanctions
are finally beginning to undermine the Iranian leadership and the
people grow restless, the process of forcing the Iranians to give in
and make a deal on their nuclear program still appears too slow to
prevent Iran from constructing an actual weapon if they desire. Both
the US and Israel claim the military option is still “on the table”
but President Obama has all but said he wouldn’t stop the Iranians
until we see the mushroom cloud of a nuclear test.
For his part, Prime Minister Netanyahu may also be backing off the
idea of a military strike. There is a faction in Israel’s defense
establishment that, according to this article in the Atlantic,
doesn’t believe bombing would have the desired effect of setting back
Iran’s nuclear program very far, and the risks of Iranian retaliation
wouldn’t make it worth Israel’s while. Netanyahu himself has argued
persuasively against this, but the risk of general war in the Middle
East with Israel in range of thousands of rockets from Hezballah,
Hamas, and Iran should make any responsible leader hesitate.
The question of whether the threat of a military attack is credible
with the Iranians, given President Obama’s statements and Israel’s
growing reluctance, becomes more pressing by the month. With Iran
poised to acquire the capability to build a weapon, while perhaps
stopping short of actually constructing one, sanctions are still a
vital part of the strategy to rein in Tehran’s nuclear ambitions.
Whether they will be enough is unknown. (Copyright © 2012
FrontPageMagazine.com 07/03/12)
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