EFTA02006023.pdf
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To: jeevacation©gmail.com[jeevacation©gmail.com]
From: Office of Terje Rod-Larsen
Sent: Wed 3/21/2012 10:13:39 PM
Subject: March 20 update
20 March, 2012
Article 1.
NYT
U.S. War Game Sees Perils of Israeli Strike
Against Iran
Mark Mazzetti and Thom Shanker
Article 2.
The Washington Post
Playing for time through a strike on Iran
Richard Cohen
TIME
Five Tips For on Nuclear Negotiations With Iran
Tony Karon
Article 4.
13loomberg
Israelis Grow Confident Strike on Iran's Nukes
Can Work
Jeffrey Goldberg
Article 5.
The Moscow Times
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Beautiful Friendships
Richard Lourie
Article 6.
NOW Lebanon
Adieu, Hezbollah
Hanin Ghaddar
Article 7.
The New Republic
What Are Our Military Options in Syria?
Michael O'Hanlon
Arid,' I
NYT
U.S. War Game Sees Perils of Israeli
Strike Against Iran
Mark Mazzetti and Thom Shanker
March 19, 2012 — A classified war simulation held this month
to assess the repercussions of an Israeli attack on Iran forecasts
that the strike would lead to a wider regional war, which could
draw in the United States and leave hundreds of Americans
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dead, according to American officials.
The officials said the so-called war game was not designed as a
rehearsal for American military action — and they emphasized
that the exercise's results were not the only possible outcome of
a real-world conflict.
But the game has raised fears among top American planners that
it may be impossible to preclude American involvement in any
escalating confrontation with Iran, the officials said. In the
debate among policy makers over the consequences of any
Israeli attack, that reaction may give stronger voice to those in
the White House, Pentagon and intelligence community who
have warned that a strike could prove perilous for the United
States.
The results of the war game were particularly troubling to Gen.
James N. Mattis, who commands all American forces in the
Middle East, Persian Gulf and Southwest Asia, according to
officials who either participated in the Central Command
exercise or who were briefed on the results and spoke on
condition of anonymity because of its classified nature. When
the exercise had concluded earlier this month, according to the
officials, General Mattis told aides that an Israeli first strike
would be likely to have dire consequences across the region and
for United States forces there.
The two-week war game, called Internal Look, played out a
narrative in which the United States found it was pulled into the
conflict after Iranian missiles struck a Navy warship in the
Persian Gulf, killing about 200 Americans, according to officials
with knowledge of the exercise. The United States then
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retaliated by carrying out its own strikes on Iranian nuclear
facilities.
The initial Israeli attack was assessed to have set back the
Iranian nuclear program by roughly a year, and the subsequent
American strikes did not slow the Iranian nuclear program by
more than an additional two years. However, other Pentagon
planners have said that America's arsenal of long-range
bombers, refueling aircraft and precision missiles could do far
more damage to the Iranian nuclear program — if President
Obama were to decide on a full-scale retaliation.
The exercise was designed specifically to test internal military
communications and coordination among battle staffs in the
Pentagon, Tampa, Fla., where the headquarters of the Central
Command is located, and in the Persian Gulf in the aftermath of
an Israeli strike. But the exercise was written to assess a
pressing, potential, real-world situation.
In the end, the war game reinforced to military officials the
unpredictable and uncontrollable nature of a strike by Israel, and
a counterstrike by Iran, the officials said.
American and Israeli intelligence services broadly agree on the
progress Iran has made to enrich uranium. But they disagree on
how much time there would be to prevent Iran from building a
weapon if leaders in Tehran decided to go ahead with one.
With the Israelis saying publicly that the window to prevent Iran
from building a nuclear bomb is closing, American officials see
an Israeli attack on Iran within the next year as a possibility.
They have said privately that they believe that Israel would
probably give the United States little or no warning should
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Israeli officials make the decision to strike Iranian nuclear sites.
Officials said that, under the chain of events in the war game,
Iran believed that Israel and the United States were partners in
any strike against Iranian nuclear sites and therefore considered
American military forces in the Persian Gulf as complicit in the
attack. Iranian jets chased Israeli warplanes after the attack, and
Iranians launched missiles at an American warship in the
Persian Gulf, viewed as an act of war that allowed an American
retaliation.
Internal Look has long been one of Central Command's most
significant planning exercises, and is carried out about twice a
year to assess how the headquarters, its staff and command posts
in the region would respond to various real-world situations.
Over the years, it has been used to prepare for various wars in
the Middle East. According to the defense Web site
GlobalSecuritv.org, military planners during the cold war used
Internal Look to prepare for a move by the Soviet Union to seize
Iranian oil fields. The American war plan at the time called for
the Pentagon to march nearly six Army divisions north from the
Persian Gulf to the Zagros Mountains of Iran to blunt a Soviet
attack.
In December 2002, Gen. Tommy R. Franks, who was the top
officer at Central Command, used Internal Look to test the
readiness of his units for the coming invasion of Iraq.
Many experts have predicted that Iran would try to carefully
manage the escalation after an Israeli first strike in order to
avoid giving the United States a rationale for attacking with its
far superior forces. Thus, it might use proxies to set off car
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bombs in world capitals or funnel high explosives to insurgents
in Afghanistan to attack American and NATO troops.
While using surrogates might, in the end, not be enough to hide
Iran's instigation of these attacks, the government in Tehran
could at least publicly deny all responsibility.
Some military specialists in the United States and in Israel who
have assessed the potential ramifications of an Israeli attack
believe that the last thing Iran would want is a full-scale war on
its territory. Thus, they argue that Iran would not directly strike
American military targets, whether warships in the Persian Gulf
or bases in the region.
Their analysis, however, also includes the broad caveat that it is
impossible to know the internal thinking of the senior Iranian
leadership, and is informed by the awareness that even the most
detailed war games cannot predict how nations and their leaders
will react in the heat of conflict.
Yet these specialists continue their work, saying that any insight
on how the Iranians will react to an attack will help determine
whether the Israelis carry out a strike — and what the American
position will be if they do.
Israeli intelligence estimates, backed by academic studies, have
cast doubt on the widespread assumption that a military strike
on Iranian nuclear facilities would set off a catastrophic set of
events like a regional conflagration, widespread acts of terrorism
and sky-high oil prices.
"A war is no picnic," Defense Minister Ehud Barak told Israel
Radio in November. But if Israel feels itself forced into action,
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the retaliation would be bearable, he said. "There will not be
100,000 dead or 10,000 dead or 1,000 dead. The state of Israel
will not be destroyed."
Article 2
The Washington Post
Playinv. for time through a strike on
Iran
Richard Cohen
March 20 -- Nations have doctrines. The Soviet Union had the
Brezh-nev Doctrine and the United States had the Monroe
Doctrine, among others. Even little Israel has one. I call it the
Maybe the Dog Will Talk Doctrine, and it is based on a folk tale
of the rabbi who makes a preposterous deal with a tyrant: If the
tyrant spares the lives of local Jews, the rabbi will teach the
tyrant's dog to talk. When the rabbi tells his wife what he has
done, she calls him a fool. But, he says, "A year is a long time.
In a year, the tyrant could die or I could die" — and here he
gives her a sly, wise-rabbi smile — "or maybe the dog will talk."
All sorts of people — defense intellectuals, military officers and
even the president of the United States — either have not heard
of the Maybe the Dog Will Talk Doctrine or do not recognize its
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importance. (It was cited to me by an Israeli official.) Both
Barack Obama and Gen. Martin Dempsey, the chairman of the
Joint Chiefs of Staff, have characterized any Israeli attempt to
disrupt Iran's nuclear program as a short-term affair. An Israeli
raid "wouldn't achieve their long-term objectives," Dempsey
said on CNN — and he is surely right.
But Israel also has a short-term objective — and that is to play
for time. Israel notes that its 1981 bombing of a nuclear reactor
in Iraq set back Saddam Hussein's program — and did not result
in some sort of massive retaliation. Something similar happened
with the 2007 bombing of a Syrian installation. Neither
operation was conceived as a long-term solution, but both
accomplished short-term goals. In a year or two, much could
change in the Middle East. The region's in turmoil. Dogs are
talking all over the place.
A note of exasperation can be detected in much of what is
written about Israel: Why can't it just hang on? What's wrong
with containment? It worked with the Soviet Union. It has
worked with North Korea. Pakistan has bombs galore, but no
one is taking shelter in the basement. How is Iran different?
Iran is different because it has explicitly threatened Israel. It is
different because it supports Hezbollah in Lebanon and Hamas
in the Gaza Strip, both terrorist groups with a penchant for
lobbing the occasional rocket into Israel. Iran is different
because it acts irresponsibly, plotting just recently to assassinate
the Saudi ambassador to the United States. This is just plain nuts
— and very, very scary.
To understand Israel's predicament, the book to read is "Start-up
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Nation" by Dan Senor and Saul Singer. Both are on the political
right, but their book is not about politics or settlements and
such. It is about economics. Israel has a humming economy with
a marvelously vibrant high-tech sector. The statistics are
astounding. Until recently, Israel, with fewer than 8 million
people, was second only to America when it came to companies
listed on the Nasdaq — ahead of India, South Korea and even
China. Israel's preeminent natural resource is brain power.
Talent, though, is fungible. It can get on an airplane and move.
It can come to the United States where Israelis, as it happens,
swarm all over Silicon Valley. Everyone has a different figure,
but at least 250,000 Israelis live in the United States, an Israeli
official tells me.. That's a significant slice of the country's
population. These Israelis are in America for a variety of reasons
— education, jobs, etc. — but some of them may like the fact
that nowhere in America do rockets rain down or terrorists run
amok. If Israel is to keep its talent, it must provide a safe and
secure environment.
As long as Iran supports anti-Israel terrorist groups, Israel
remains — to one degree or another — a dangerous place. An
Iran with nuclear weapons becomes a more potent protector of
its client terrorist groups — maybe bolder and more reckless as
well. Life becomes less secure. Earlier this month, rockets hit
cities in the south of Israel. Had this happened in the United
States, we would be at war. Why Israel is expected to live under
such conditions is beyond me.
Sanctions may cause Iran to abandon its nuclear weapons
program, if indeed that's where it is now heading. But critics of
Israel's approach have to understand that Iran's program looks
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different from Tel Aviv than it does from Washington. In the
long run, an Israeli attack on Iran will accomplish nothing. In
the short run, it could accomplish quite a lot.
Article 3.
TIME
Five Tips For President Obama on
Nuclear Negotiations With Iran
Tony Karon
March 20, 2012 -- President Barack Obama is rolling the dice
again: He's desperate to avoid getting dragged into a war over
Iran's nuclear program, and appears to have restrained Israel —
at least for now — from starting one by promising he'd do it
himself if Tehran tried to build a nuclear weapon. And that
means he really needs to make a success of the renewed
diplomatic process he and Western allies are about to undertake
with Iran. That reason alone should place by the president's
bedside, Trita Parsi's A Single Roll of the Dice: Obama's
Diplomacy With Iran, even if its critique would make
uncomfortable reading for a President who may genuinely
believe he has tried serious diplomacy with Iran. Based on
interviews with dozens of top decision makers in the U.S., Iran,
Israel, and and other stakeholder countries, Parsi concludes that
the Obama Administration's efforts were fatally flawed due to
the domestic political limitations and time constraints imposed
on diplomacy, and Iran's domestic political turmoil. I asked
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Parsi, who is also the president of the National Iranian American
Council what five pointers he'd offer if asked by the White
House for tips on improving the prospects for successful
diplomacy with Iran. Herewith, Parsi's answers:
Lesson 1: Don't Allow the Domestic Politics to Define Your
Strategy
The conflict between U.S. and the Islamic Republic of Iran is
three decades old, and has been created, perpetuated and
reinforced at different points by the domestic political dynamics
on both sides. Today, rather than negotiating with Iran itself,
much of the Obama Administration's Iran effort is actually
negotiation with various power centers in Washington and
abroad over how to deal with Iran. And that tends to anchor his
strategy to the existing political landscape in ways that don't
bode well for diplomatic success. The Iranians face a similar
problem.
As I point out on in the book, one of President Obama's key
mistakes was his failure to create political space for himself to
engage with Iran. He didn't use the political capital generated by
his election to broaden his room for maneuver on Iran issues,
because he didn't want to make Iran a matter of domestic
political debate in the way that we see it occurring now on the
presidential campaign trail. But that meant that those negotiation
efforts he did undertake were self limiting, in that the agenda
was narrow — confined to the question of Iran's willingness to
accept Western and U.N. demands on its nuclear program —
and that the time-frame for such negotiations was deliberately
limited, so as to avoid charges from more hawkish quarters that
Iran was being allowed to play for time. Hence the "single roll
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of the dice" of my title, which was a phrase that an
Administration official had used to define the limited
negotiation efforts pursued by the Obama White House.
A single roll of the diplomatic dice with Iran is unlikely to work
any more effectively this time than it did in 2009. The best-case
outcome is going to require a process that will take time and will
require a willingness on both sides to make concessions in
search of a solution that both can live with. And in order to
achieve that, President Obama is going to have to create the
political space for himself at home that sustains that process.
The same problem exists on the Iranian side, of course, where
the system's fratricidal political conflicts have long bedeviled
attempts at engagement with the West. All the more reason for a
sustained process rather than a single roll of the dice. And we're
not going to get anywhere if we allow the crippling domestic
political environment to drive the process.
Lesson 2: Broaden the Agenda Beyond the Nuclear Program
The decades-old enmity and tensions with Iran are hard enough
in themselves; to confine diplomatic engagement with Iran to a
single variable — the nuclear issue — which also happens to be
the most intractable issue between the different sides right now,
doesn't enhance the prospects for success. In 2009, the Obama
Administration effectively made confidence-building measures
on the nuclear front the precondition for any wider conversation;
until they were ready to do what we asked on that front, we
refused to talk to them about anything else — even Afghanistan,
on which the Bush Administration had actually engaged fairly
productively with Tehran for a time, or on the issue of human
rights.
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There's no way for the parties to avoid the nuclear question, of
course, but that shouldn't preclude discussion on other issues on
which the sides can more easily find common ground and
cooperate. The advantage of a broader agenda is that it
potentially creates a dynamic of cooperation that can possibly
help to create a measure of good faith that helps overcome
obstacles and unblock the impasse to finding a solution to the
nuclear question.
Lesson 3: Bring Mediators into the Conversation
The process the Administration is currently using for talks with
Iran — negotiations between Iran and the P5+1 group [the U.S.,
Britain, France, Germany, Russia and China] is flawed, because
there is no trust between the countries in the P5+1and Iran. The
Obama Administration has worked hard to make the P5+1
present a united front to Iran behind nuclear demands, and
backed by limited U.N. sanctions. The reason for this strategy
was to prevent Iran being able to play off different members of
the P5+1 against one another. But bringing those countries
closer to the U.S. position — albeit with major differences in
their views on the nature of the nuclear issue in Iran, and how it
may be resolved — has limited their ability to reach out to
Tehran. So, these negotiations occur in an atmosphere of little
trust. Prospects for progress will be greatly enhanced with help
from countries that have relations of trust with both sides, such
as Turkey and Brazil. The purpose of drawing them in would not
be to replace the P5+1, but to complement its work by injecting
more mutual confidence into the process. These are countries
that don't have the same domestic political restraints on their
negotiation abilities as does the U.S. and some of the other
Western countries. And President Obama knows from
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experience the role they can play in forging breakthroughs — in
2010, Brazil and Turkey managed to get Iran's agreement to a
fuel-swap deal, which was rejected by the U.S. as insufficient,
even though Brazil and Turkey insist that it followed the terms
laid down in a letter by Obama.
Lesson 4: Get Real on Uranium Enrichment in Iran
The cat is out of the bag when it comes to the question of Iran
enriching uranium for its nuclear program, thanks in no small
part to the efforts of Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu to
force President Obama to declare his red lines. The Bush
Administration had drawn a red line at Iran "mastering the
technology of enrichment" — but Iran crossed that line six years
ago, and once a technology is mastered, it can't be unlearned.
Still, Israel, France and many in Washington had insisted that
Iran could not be allowed to enrich uranium on its own soil,
even in a certifiably peaceful nuclear program, because that
technology gives Iran the mean to build a bomb. The Obama
Administration had been more ambiguous on the issue, at some
points signaling a zero-enrichment policy and at other points
accepting that once Iran had taken the steps necessary to assure
the international community of its peaceful intent, it could
exercise all the rights of a signatory of the Non-Proliferation
Treaty — which would include enriching uranium.
Netanyahu insisted that Obama draw his red line, and the
President did so — at weaponization of nuclear material by Iran.
The zero-enrichment demand was untenable to begin with; now
President Obama needs to convince the French, and the Israelis
and others at home that the best deal that can be achieved with
Iran is one that verifiably contains Iran's nuclear program within
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verifiable limits that prevent weaponization. The advantage of
pressing this goal now is that, as the Bush Administration
learned, a solution that establishes confidence in Iran's intent
remains elusive the more the West clings to the demand for Iran
to abandon all enrichment, while Iran continues to make
progress that creates irreversible facts on the ground.
Lesson 5: Sanctions Only Work If They Can Be Lifted
America's leverage in the standoff with Iran depends not only
on its ability to impose sanctions, but on its ability to lift them.
The confidence-building concessions that the Western powers
are going to demand of Iran — most immediately, it seems, the
suspension of enrichment of uranium to 20% and the removal of
Tehran's stockpile of uranium enriched to that degree — can
only realistically be achieved by offering Iran something that it
needs. And Iran is very likely to demand steps towards lifting of
sanctions, particularly those sanctions that most painfully effect
Iran's economy, i.e. those that impede its ability to sell oil and
use the international banking system to trade on world markets.
There have been reports that what the Western powers will offer
in exchange for ending 20% enrichment will be a promise of no
new U.N. sanctions against Iran, but that's unlikely to impress
Tehran: Right now, the U.S. is unable to win Russian and
Chinese consent for new U.N. sanctions anyway, and those
currently in force are of negligible effect on Iran's economy. The
sanctions that hurt Iran are those unilaterally adopted and
enforced on others by the U.S. and the Europeans. And if some
easing of those sanctions is not on the table from the U.S. side
because of an election-year domestic political environment
militates against making concessions to Iran, then the U.S. will
have to adjust its asks of Iran. Tehran is unlikely to be willing to
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give up something substantial in exchange for something it
might deem insubstantial.
Moreover, by dramatically escalating sanctions - for example,
cutting Iran off from the SWIFT system for processing
international banking transactions last weekend — at the very
same moment that a new round of talks has been scheduled
reinforces an impression in Tehran that the U.S. goal is regime
change, and that no concessions by Iran would be likely to stop
the momentum of sanctions.
The Western powers go into the coming talks needing to hear
that Iran is willing to offer complete transparency in its nuclear
work, submit to the Additional Protocols of the Non-
Proliferation Treaty that allow for more intrusive inspections,
and take verifiable steps that strengthen international confidence
in the non-military nature of its nuclear program. But for Iran to
embark on a process, it needs to hear acceptance of its bottom
line of retaining a civilian nuclear program, including the
enrichment of uranium, if it submits to stricter procedures to
verify its intent; and also that if Iran makes concessions, it will
expect concessions from the other side.
And looking at Washington, right now, you have to wonder
whether President Obama can actually ease or lift sanctions,
many of which — the SWIFT system cutoff would be the latest
example — are acts of a far more hawkish Congress rather than
executive orders by a President looking to use sanctions pressure
to improve prospects for a deal. In Tehran's view, Washington
has a credibility when it comes to its carrots, not its sticks. The
balance between pressure and engagement during the Obama
presidency has been radically tilted in favor of pressure —
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diplomacy has been given all of three weeks, sanctions three
years. Sanctions pressure, of course, may seem the politically
least-costly option, but it's not necessary the most effective one.
To get a concession at the talks, and to get a process going, it is
necessary to both demonstrate the willingness and ability to lift
sanctions, granted that the Iranian accept significant limitations
to their nuclear work.
Article 4.
Bloomberg
Israelis Grow Confident Strike on
Iran's Nukes Can Work
Jeffrey Goldberg
Mar 19, 2012 -- In 2005, Benjamin Netanyahu, who was then
Israel's finance minister, made an official visit to Uganda.
For Netanyahu, visits to Uganda are weighted with sadness. It
was at the airport in Entebbe that his older brother, Yonatan
Netanyahu, was shot dead by a Ugandan soldier. Yonatan was
the leader of an Israeli commando team dispatched by Prime
Minister Yitzhak Rabin in July 1976 to rescue Jewish hostages
held by pro-Palestinian terrorists. The terrorists had diverted an
Air France flight to Uganda, where the then-dictator, the
infamous Idi Amin, gave them refuge.
The raid was a near-total success. The hijackers were all killed,
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along with dozens of Ugandan soldiers posted to the airport by
Amin to protect the terrorists. Only three hostages died; 102
were rescued. (A fourth was later murdered in a Ugandan
hospital.) Yonatan was the only Israeli soldier killed.
In his 2005 visit, Benjamin Netanyahu was welcomed by the
current president of Uganda, Yoweri Museveni, who was an anti-
Amin guerilla leader at the time of the Entebbe raid. Museveni
accompanied Netanyahu to the airport, and unveiled a plaque in
his brother's memory. The Ugandan president told him that the
Israeli raid on Entebbe was a turning point in the struggle
against Amin. It bolstered the opposition's spirits and proved to
them that Amin was vulnerable. Amin's government would fall
some two and half years later.
Unclothe the Emperor
A widely held assumption about a pre-emptive strike on Iran's
nuclear facilities is that it would spur Iranian citizens -- many of
whom appear to despise their rulers -- to rally around the
regime. But Netanyahu, I'm told, believes a successful raid
could unclothe the emperor, emboldening Iran's citizens to
overthrow the regime (as they tried to do, unsuccessfully, in
2009).
You might call this the Museveni Paradigm. It's one of several
arguments I've heard in the past week, as I've shuttled between
Tel Aviv and Jerusalem, that have convinced me that Israeli
national-security officials are considering a pre- emptive strike
in the near future.
Last week, I argued that Netanyahu's campaign to convince the
West that Iran's nuclear program represents a threat -- not only
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to his country but also to the entire Middle East and beyond --
has worked so well that it could represent the perfect bluff. After
all, on his recent visit to Washington, Netanyahu managed to
avoid discussing the Palestinian issue with President Barack
Obama, and he heard Obama vow that the U.S. wouldn't be
content to merely contain a nuclear Iran.
After interviewing many people with direct knowledge of
internal government thinking, however, I'm highly confident
that Netanyahu isn't bluffing -- that he is in fact counting down
to the day when he will authorize a strike against a half-dozen or
more Iranian nuclear sites.
One reason I'm now more convinced is that Netanyahu and
Defense Minister Ehud Barak are working hard to convince
other members of the Israeli cabinet that a strike might soon be
necessary.
But I also heard from Israeli national-security officials a number
of best-case scenarios about the consequences of an attack,
which suggested to me that they believe they have thought
through all the risks -- and that they keep coming to the same
conclusions.
All-out War
One conclusion key officials have reached is that a strike on six
or eight Iranian facilities will not lead, as is generally assumed,
to all-out war. This argument holds that the Iranians might
choose to cover up an attack, in the manner of the Syrian
government when its nuclear facility was destroyed by the Israeli
air force in 2007. An Israeli strike wouldn't focus on densely
populated cities, so the Iranian government might be able to
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control, to some degree, the flow of information about it.
Some Israeli officials believe that Iran's leaders might choose to
play down the insult of a raid and launch a handful of rockets at
Tel Aviv as an angry gesture, rather than declare all-out war. I'm
not endorsing this view, but I was struck by its optimism. (A war
game held by the U.S. military this month came to the opposite
conclusion, according to the New York Times: A strike would
likely lead to a wider war that could include the U.S.)
Another theory making the rounds was that Obama has so
deeply internalized the argument that Israel has the sovereign
right to defend itself against a threat to its existence that an
Israeli attack, even one launched against U.S. wishes, wouldn't
anger him. In this scenario, Obama would move immediately to
help buttress Israel's defenses against an Iranian counterstrike.
Some Israeli security officials also believe that Iran won't target
American ships or installations in the Middle East in retaliation
for a strike, as many American officials fear, because the
leadership in Tehran understands that American retaliation for
an Iranian attack could be so severe as to threaten the regime
itself.
This contradicts Netanyahu's assertion, first made to me three
years ago, that Iran's rulers are members of a "messianic
apocalyptic cult," unmoved by the calculations of rational self-
interest. It also contradicts the results of the U.S. war game. But
it does make sense if you believe that regime survival is an
important goal of the ayatollahs.
Finally, and even more disquieting, was the contention I heard
repeatedly that an Israeli strike in the next six months - -
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conducted before Iran can further harden its nuclear sites, or
make them redundant -- will set back the ayatollahs' atomic
ambitions at least five years. American military planners tend to
think that Israel could do only a year or two worth of damage.
The arguments I've outlined here -- and those I'll describe in my
next column -- all lead to a single conclusion: The Israeli
political leadership increasingly believes that an attack on Iran
will not be the disaster many American officials, and some ex-
Israeli security officials, fear it will be.
These were vertigo-inducing conversations, to say the least.
Next week, I'll discuss why, from Netanyahu's perspective, a
strike on Iran, even if only marginally successful, might be
worth the risk -- and may be historically inevitable.
Jeffrey Goldberg is a Bloomberg View columnist and a national
correspondentfor the Atlantic.
Arocic 5.
The Moscow Times
Beautiful Friendships
Richard Louric
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19 March 2012 -- The mounting tension over Iran's nuclear
program is also highlighting increased Israeli and U.S.
involvement in the Caucasus. Apart from everything else, this
has to feed President-elect Vladimir Putin's paranoia about U.S.
efforts to become an active player in what Russia considers its
own backyard. But, of course, it's the Iranians who are the most
upset and who in the short run have the most to lose. Tehran
believes that Mossad has established a base in neighboring
Azerbaijan from which the largely successful plots to assassinate
Iranian nuclear physicists were initiated. The border between
Azerbaijan and Iran is quite permeable. The 16 percent
of Iranians born in Azerbaijan can travel visa-free between
the two countries. Not only has Tehran accused Baku
of allowing Israeli intelligence to operate freely in Azerbaijan, it
has launched counterstrikes such as the recent, unsuccessful
assassination plot against the Israeli ambassador to Baku,
Michael Lotem. Upping the ante considerably, in late February
Azerbaijan agreed to buy $1.6 billion in advanced weaponry
from Israel, including drones and anti-aircraft and anti-missile
systems. The official Azeri defense budget for 2012 is $1.7
billion. The sale will be spread out over several years. Arms
sales, both those made and those cancelled, have played
a pivotal role in the development of events connected to Iran.
Russia deserves thanks for not selling the formidable S-300 anti-
missile and anti-aircraft system to Iran even though it had
contracted to in 2007 in a sale worth close to $1 billion.
Needless to say, Russia extracted concessions from that
cancelled sale, including the United States not rearming Georgia
after the Russia-Georgia war of 2008. If the Iranians had
already taken delivery of the S-300s, it would probably be too
late for the Israelis to attack without significant U.S. help. And if
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the Iranians were currently awaiting delivery of the S-300s,
Israel would be in countdown, its window of opportunity
shrinking by the hour. Unless otherwise persuaded by the United
States, Israel would feel compelled to strike. As for Israeli arms
sales, Stratfor wrote in a recent report: "It is difficult to believe
that the United States and Israel are not coordinating their
activities in the Caucasus. ... It can be assumed that the United
States has approved the initiatives." Directly or indirectly,
Russia and the United States have been bumping up against each
other in the Caucasus region where Russia is resurgent. Moscow
got its lease on military facilities in Armenia extended to 2044,
and its lease in the breakaway formerly Georgian republics
of Abkhazia and South Ossetia by 49 years. Russia's $22 million-
a-year lease on the Gabala radar station in Azerbaijan that can
track Iranian missiles runs out in December. Azerbaijan, which
also provides routes for gas and oil that compete with Russia's,
is the one place in the former Soviet Caucasian territories where
Russia has problems exerting its will. Partially that is because
of U.S. influence and presence, with U.S. medical evacuations
from Afghanistan operating out of Azerbaijan. U.S. aid
to Azerbaijan is now exactly equal to that given to its arch foe
Armenia ($2.7 million), despite the fact that the Armenian lobby
is strong in the United States, while the Azeri lobby is nearly
nonexistent. All these complex tensions will lessen only when
the Iranian crisis is resolved one way or another. A former Azeri
counterintelligence officer has likened today's Baku teeming
with spies, arms dealers and assassins to "Casablanca during
World War II." Let's at least hope it has a Rick's Place.
Richard Lourie is the author of "The Autobiography of oseph Stalin" and "Sakharov:
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A Biography."
Avid< 6.
NOW Lebanon
Adieu, Hezbollah
Hanin Ghaddar
March 19, 2012 -- Since its inception, Hezbollah has probably
not experienced such a nightmare. Of course, the Syrian regime
is crumbling, and that is the core of Hezbollah's trouble, but
locally, its aura seems to be fading as well. Without that appeal,
the party cannot hold up. Is the end near? There is no good
reason why Hezbollah leaders should not be panicking. The
winds of change coming from the northern borders are going to
turn everything upside down for the Party of God. Its friends are
either losing credibility or just moving away from the party of
double standards. Meanwhile, the ludicrous stances and hasty
behavior of its leaders are costing the party its main support
base: the Lebanese Shia community. Let's take a closer look. In
his many redundant speeches, Secretary General Hassan
Nasrallah has been adamant about supporting the Assad regime
of Syria. A few years ago, when Nasrallah made a speech,
almost everyone in Lebanon would leave whatever they were
doing to listen to what he had to say. His words made headlines
and caused serious transformations on the Lebanese political
scene. Today, we stopped bothering for two reasons. One, he
says almost nothing new; and two, he does not seem capable of
understanding the real transformations taking place in the
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region. On a more crucial level, reports of Hezbollah fighters'
bodies being returned from doing battle in Syria over the past
few months, although not technically verified till now, have
caused a feeling of bitterness among the supporters of the
"Resistance." Resisting Israel is one thing, but killing innocent
Syrian women and children is something else. But that's not all.
As the Syrian revolution unfolds, Hezbollah's main support
base, the Shia community, keeps being reminded by the party
that it is the most virtuous, most spotless and most righteous in
the region.
The Party of God supports a dictator and his band of murderers.
And recently, according to a number of emails revealed by the
Guardian newspaper, Assad and his gang have outed themselves
as stupid, corrupt and drowning in vanity. Assad, a "supporter of
the resistance," as Hezbollah constantly describes him to justify
its backing of the regime, is spending his time shopping for
extravagant stuff and looking at naked photos online. Hezbollah
members and their families are similarly being accused of
corruption and abusing their power to get richer. Recently,
Hesham and Jihad al-Moussawi — brothers of Hezbollah MP
Hussein Moussawi — went into hiding after they were accused of
producing and distributing drugs, according to Lebanese
channel MTV. At the same time, in South Lebanon, people
started referring to Hezbollah as the Taliban after it banned the
sale of alcohol in many southern towns and cities. On the
political level, when the current cabinet was formed, everyone
perceived it as Hezbollah-controlled. It was thought that the
party controlled the PM and all ministers. Today, Prime
Minister Najib Mikati cannot be considered completely under
Hezbollah's control.
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Mikati's under-the-table support for Syrian refugees in Tripoli
and his recent stances in support of the Special Tribunal for
Lebanon gave him a rather autonomous image, whether or not it
is accurate.
As for Druze leader Walid Jumblatt, it is needless to say that his
recent stances vis-à-vis the Syrian regime have gained him more
credibility among the Syrian and Lebanese who are against both
Assad and Hezbollah. Jumblatt has certainly made a slow but
complete turn against the Syrian regime, which means that, as
one of the main politicians who determines the political majority
in Lebanon, he is stepping outside the orbit of Hezbollah. On
the anniversary of his father's death on Friday, Jumblatt made a
move that won him a surge of support inside Syria and Lebanon.
The act of placing the Syrian Revolution's flag on the grave of
his father, "who was assassinated by the Syrian regime...
[relieved my] conscience," Jumblatt told Al-Arabiya television
station on Sunday. "The [Syrian] regime has come to an end,"
he added.
The recent statement by the al-Qaeda-linked Abdullah al-Azzam
brigade about Jumblatt also does not bode well for Hezbollah.
Azzam said that the brigade, which the government has accused
of forming a terrorist cell within the Lebanese Armed Forces to
carry out attacks against the army, had received an offer by
Hezbollah and the Syrian regime to "assassinate Druze leader
MP Walid Jumblatt in return for the release of a number of
jihadists in Syrian jails."
So there goes Jumblatt, Hezbollah's most precious win since the
May events of 2008. In terms of the upcoming parliamentary
elections of 2013, the future looks grim for the Party of God.
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Hezbollah is less popular today, locally and regionally, than it
was a year ago. It is corrupt and supports a dictator, and its
leader is not as charismatic as he used to be. It is losing its allies
and becoming the subject of jokes by its enemies. No one in
their right mind wants to be close to Hezbollah now; it is like
the bully at school who no one likes but fears. But eventually,
the bully loses his aura and we move on.
Although Hezbollah's own crumbling is going to take some
time, due to its possession of arms and power over state
institutions, there are undoubtedly a number of serious threats to
its power.
Hanin Ghaddar is the managing editor of NOW Lebanon.
Article 7.
The New Republic
What Are Our Military Options in
Syria?
Michael O'Hanlon
March 19, 2012 -- As the violence worsens in Syria, there are no
great options for how to respond. The various Syrian factions
and sectarian groups are far too intermingled for a Libya-like
operation to work. Assad and his army are still too strong for a
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simple and small peacekeeping mission to succeed. And if we
did invade, the specter of an Iraq-style imbroglio would loom,
given Syria's size and the multitude of nefarious actors there.
It's important, though, to think through the available military
options. (Though I do not favor any just yet, and we should only
consider them in the event of strong Arab League and NATO
support and participation.) These are three possible types:
A punitive naval or air operation to encourage a coup against
Assad. These measures would reinforce existing economic
sanctions. The two most viable tactics would be a naval
blockade, to prevent Syria from exporting oil or importing a
number of goods, and a limited air campaign to deprive the
regime of assets that it values (like palaces). The hope would be
that Assad's cronies could be persuaded to depose him and then
forge a power-sharing deal with the opposition, as a
precondition for ending sanctions and ending the associated
punitive military campaign.
A broader Balkans-like campaign to help depose Assad. In
this option, air strikes would also target the heavy weapons that
the Syrian army is using to shell cities; this could be combined
with the creation of a no-fly zone for Syrian military helicopters
and other aircraft over much or even all of the country, which
could require up to a couple hundred aircraft operating in
various bases on land and at sea in the region. This approach
could also involve arming the Syrian opposition—though that
would likely increase, rather than decrease, violence in the short
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term.
Creation of a safe zone for Syrian civilians. Safe zones are
easier to declare than to enforce—and the Syrian army would
surely contest any effort to establish one or more. But they
might be accomplished using airpower and some modest number
of outside ground troops. They could be partly modeled on the
protection we afforded Kurds in Iraq throughout the 1990s, even
while Saddam was still in power. Alas, this task would be harder
here. There is no natural geographic or demographic logic to any
particular possible safe zone in Syria. Populations are too
interspersed, and the killing is happening largely in central
cities, where it would likely be impractical to create such zones
given the size and cohesion and capability of nearby Syrian
army forces. Creating a safe zone in the northeast, near the
Turkish border, would be more practical, but less helpful for the
threatened populations, who predominantly reside in the western
part of the country. This kind of mission would therefore have
only a limited ability to protect innocents. But depending on
how the situation unfolded, it could perhaps be combined with
the above options to create the nucleus of a stronger resistance
that could ultimately challenge Assad's rule using the safe area
as a staging base and sanctuary.
To be sure, all three of these approaches are limited in scale and
scope, and all promise only mediocre results. None of these
ideas look decisive, and all are risky; as such, they should only
be considered if and when things get worse.
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But the alternatives are not pretty. Alas, perhaps the most likely
outcome is that Assad will brutally reestablish control over the
country, in a way that might end the war, or at least prevent it
from becoming an all-out conflagration. But it is also quite
possible that things will continue to get more chaotic on the
battlefield. Meanwhile, some Sunni Arab states are probably
considering arming the opposition themselves—this would
likely not be enough to overturn Assad, but just enough to stoke
the conflict further.
As the death toll from the year-old conflict rapidly approaches
10,000, it may not be too early to raise these types of military
possibilities in public—if for no other reason than to signal the
murderous Syrian regime that we do have options besides just
hoping that Assad will fall of his own weight. Ideally, down the
line the credible possibility of their implementation will
persuade Assad's cronies to demand that he go into exile.
Perhaps it could even convince them to form a new power-
sharing government with the opposition. That may not be a
utopian solution, but, under the current circumstances, it may be
the best we can hope for—even if it requires uncomfortable talk
of military intervention.
Michael 0 'Hanlon is a seniorfellow at Brookings and coauthor
with Martin lndyk and Kenneth Liebe
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