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Iran plans to knock out U.S. with 1 nuclear bomb
JOSEPH FARAH'S G2 BULLETIN ^ | April 25, 2005 | Joseph Farah

Posted on 04/25/2005 6:19:49 AM PDT by DJ Taylor

WASHINGTON -- Iran is not only covertly developing nuclear weapons, it is already testing ballistic missiles specifically designed to destroy America's technical infrastructure, effectively neutralizing the world's lone superpower, say U.S. intelligence sources, top scientists and western missile industry experts.

The radical Shiite regime has conducted successful tests to determine if its Shahab-3 ballistic missiles, capable of carrying a nuclear warhead, can be detonated by a remote-control device while still in high-altitude flight.

Scientists, including President Reagan's top science adviser, William R. Graham, say there is no other explanation for such tests than preparation for the deployment of Electromagnetic Pulse weapons – even one of which could knock out America's critical electrical and technological infrastructure, effectively sending the continental U.S. back to the 19th century with a recovery time of months or years.

Iran will have that capability – at least theoretically – as soon as it has one nuclear bomb ready to arm such a missile. North Korea, a strategic ally of Iran, already boasts such capability.

The stunning report was first published over the weekend in Joseph Farah's G2 Bulletin, the premium, online intelligence newsletter published by WND's founder.

Just last month, Congress heard testimony about the use of such weapons and the threat they pose from rogue regimes.

Iran has surprised intelligence analysts by describing the mid-flight detonations of missiles fired from ships on the Caspian Sea as "successful" tests. Even primitive Scud missiles could be used for this purpose. And top U.S. intelligence officials reminded members of Congress that there is a glut of these missiles on the world market. They are currently being bought and sold for about $100,000 apiece.

"A terrorist organization might have trouble putting a nuclear warhead 'on target' with a Scud, but it would be much easier to simply launch and detonate in the atmosphere," wrote Sen. John Kyl, R-Ariz., in the Washington Post a week ago. "No need for the risk and difficulty of trying to smuggle a nuclear weapon over the border or hit a particular city. Just launch a cheap missile from a freighter in international waters – al-Qaida is believed to own about 80 such vessels – and make sure to get it a few miles in the air."

The Iranian missile tests were more sophisticated and capable of detonation at higher elevations – making them more dangerous.

Detonated at a height of 60 to 500 kilometers above the continental U.S., one nuclear warhead could cripple the country – knocking out electrical power and circuit boards and rendering the U.S. domestic communications impotent.

While Iran still insists officially in talks currently underway with the European Union that it is only developing nuclear power for peaceful civilian purposes, the mid-flight detonation missile tests persuade U.S. military planners and intelligence agencies that Tehran can only be planning such an attack, which depends on the availability of at least one nuclear warhead.

Some analysts believe the stage of Iranian missile developments suggests Iranian scientists will move toward the production of weapons-grade nuclear material shortly as soon as its nuclear reactor in Busher is operative.

Jerome Corsi, author of "Atomic Iran," told WorldNetDaily the new findings about Iran's Electromagnetic Pulse experiments significantly raise the stakes of the mullah regime's bid to become a nuclear power.

"Up until now, I believed the nuclear threat to the U.S. from Iran was limited to the ability of terrorists to penetrate the borders or port security to deliver a device to a major city," he said. "While that threat should continue to be a grave concern for every American, these tests by Iran demonstrate just how devious the fanatical mullahs in Tehran are. We are facing a clever and unscrupulous adversary in Iran that could bring America to its knees."

Earlier this week, Iran's top nuclear official said Europe must heed an Iranian proposal on uranium enrichment or risk a collapse of the talks.

The warning by Hassan Rowhani, head of the Supreme National Security Council, came as diplomats from Britain, France and Germany began talks with their Iranian counterparts in Geneva, ahead of a more senior-level meeting in London set for April 29. Enrichment produces fuel for nuclear reactors, which can also be used in the explosive core of nuclear bombs.

"The Europeans should tell us whether these ideas can work as the basis for continued negotiations or not," Rowhani said, referring to the Iranian proposal put forward last month that would allow some uranium enrichment. "If yes, fine. If not, then the negotiations cannot continue," he said.

Some analysts believe Iran is using the negotiations merely to buy time for further development of the nuclear program.

The U.S. plans, according to Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice, to allow the EU talks to continue before deciding this summer to push for United Nations sanctions against Iran.

Last month, the Senate Judiciary Subcommittee on Terrorism, Technology and Homeland Security chaired by Kyl, held a hearing on the Electromagnetic Pulse, or EMP, threat.

"An electromagnetic pulse (EMP) attack on the American homeland, said one of the distinguished scientists who testified at the hearing, is one of only a few ways that the United States could be defeated by its enemies – terrorist or otherwise," wrote Kyl "And it is probably the easiest. A single Scud missile, carrying a single nuclear weapon, detonated at the appropriate altitude, would interact with the Earth's atmosphere, producing an electromagnetic pulse radiating down to the surface at the speed of light. Depending on the location and size of the blast, the effect would be to knock out already stressed power grids and other electrical systems across much or even all of the continental United States, for months if not years."

The purpose of an EMP attack, unlike a nuclear attack on land, is not to kill people, but "to kill electrons," as Graham explained. He serves as chairman of the Commission to Assess the Threat to the United States from Electromagnetic Pulse Attack and was director of the White House Office of Science and Technology Policy and science adviser to the president during the Reagan administration.

Graham told WorldNetDaily he could think of no other reason for Iran to be experimenting with mid-air detonation of missiles than for the planning of an EMP-style attack.

"EMP offers a bigger bang for the buck," he said. He also suggested such an attack makes a U.S. nuclear response against a suspected enemy less likely than the detonation of a nuclear bomb in a major U.S. city.

A 2004 report by the commission found "several potential adversaries have or can acquire the capability to attack the United States with a high-altitude nuclear weapons-generated electromagnetic pulse (EMP). A determined adversary can achieve an EMP attack capability without having a high level of sophistication."

"EMP is one of a small number of threats that can hold our society at risk of catastrophic consequences," the report said. "EMP will cover the wide geographic region within line of sight to the nuclear weapon. It has the capability to produce significant damage to critical infrastructures and thus to the very fabric of U.S. society, as well as to the ability of the United States and Western nations to project influence and military power."

The major impact of EMP weapons is on electronics, "so pervasive in all aspects of our society and military, coupled through critical infrastructures," explained the report.

"Their effects on systems and infrastructures dependent on electricity and electronics could be sufficiently ruinous as to qualify as catastrophic to the nation," Lowell Wood, acting chairman of the commission, told members of Congress.

The commission report went so far as to suggest, in its opening sentence, that an EMP attack "might result in the defeat of our military forces."

"Briefly, a single nuclear weapon exploded at high altitude above the United States will interact with the Earth's atmosphere, ionosphere and magnetic field to produce an electromagnetic pulse (EMP) radiation down to the Earth and additionally create electrical currents in the Earth," said the report. "EMP effects are both direct and indirect. The former are due to electrical systems, and the latter arise from the damage that 'shocked' – upset, damaged and destroyed – electronics controls then inflict on the systems in which they are embedded. The indirect effects can be even more severe than the direct effects."

The EMP threat is not a new one considered by U.S. defense planners. The Soviet Union had experimented with the idea as a kind of super-weapon against the U.S.

"What is different now is that some potential sources of EMP threats are difficult to deter – they can be terrorist groups that have no state identity, have only one or a few weapons and are motivated to attack the U.S. without regard for their own safety," explains the commission report. "Rogue states, such as North Korea and Iran, may also be developing the capability to pose an EMP threat to the United States and may also be unpredictable and difficult to deter."

Graham describes the potential "cascading effect" of an EMP attack. If electrical power is knocked out and circuit boards fried, telecommunications are disrupted, energy deliveries are impeded, the financial system breaks down, food, water and gasoline become scarce.

As Kyl put it: "Few if any people would die right away. But the loss of power would have a cascading effect on all aspects of U.S. society. Communication would be largely impossible. Lack of refrigeration would leave food rotting in warehouses, exacerbated by a lack of transportation as those vehicles still working simply ran out of gas (which is pumped with electricity). The inability to sanitize and distribute water would quickly threaten public health, not to mention the safety of anyone in the path of the inevitable fires, which would rage unchecked. And as we have seen in areas of natural and other disasters, such circumstances often result in a fairly rapid breakdown of social order."

"American society has grown so dependent on computer and other electrical systems that we have created our own Achilles' heel of vulnerability, ironically much greater than those of other, less developed nations," the senator wrote. "When deprived of power, we are in many ways helpless, as the New York City blackout made clear. In that case, power was restored quickly because adjacent areas could provide help. But a large-scale burnout caused by a broad EMP attack would create a much more difficult situation. Not only would there be nobody nearby to help, it could take years to replace destroyed equipment."

The commission said hardening key infrastructure systems and procuring vital backup equipment such as transformers is both feasible and – compared with the threat – relatively inexpensive.

"But it will take leadership by the Department of Homeland Security, the Defense Department, and other federal agencies, along with support from Congress, all of which have yet to materialize," wrote Kyl, so far the only elected official blowing the whistle this alarming development.

Kyl concluded in his report: "The Sept. 11 commission report stated that our biggest failure was one of 'imagination.' No one imagined that terrorists would do what they did on Sept. 11. Today few Americans can conceive of the possibility that terrorists could bring our society to its knees by destroying everything we rely on that runs on electricity. But this time we've been warned, and we'd better be prepared to respond."


TOPICS: News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: emp; farah; iran; irannukes; nuclearthreat
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To: MichaelP

But are the Aegis ships carrying SM3???


61 posted on 04/25/2005 7:30:42 AM PDT by 1stFreedom (1)
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To: joesnuffy

in Muslim heaven with their 72 beautiful and eternally young virgins
=======

I'm constructing a plan to kidnap ALL Muzzle-em Pair'o Dice Virgins !!! ;-))


62 posted on 04/25/2005 7:31:53 AM PDT by GeekDejure ( LOL = Liberals Obey Lucifer !!! -- Impeach Greer !!!.)
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To: Flightdeck

It may not have built to do so, but it was built so well it can do so..


But to do so it must use SM3s which are still undergoing trials if I remember..


63 posted on 04/25/2005 7:33:02 AM PDT by 1stFreedom (1)
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To: Cyclops08

I'm guessing that invading Iran is a bigger bite than our military can chew right now, even without being heavily involved in Iraq.

This kind of news definitely justifies deploying SDI weapons at breakneck speed, however. This is exactly the kind of scenario for which DSI was designed - intercept a single or small number of missiles from a rogue state.

Let's be sure to give a vote of thanks to Clinton and the Democrats for delaying development of anti-missile technology for 8 years.


64 posted on 04/25/2005 7:33:19 AM PDT by happyathome
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To: Denver Ditdat

EMP ping..........


65 posted on 04/25/2005 7:34:05 AM PDT by LasVegasMac ("God. Guts. Guns. I don't call 911." (bumper sticker))
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To: DJ Taylor

Silly. If the mad mullahs really wanted to hurt the U.S., they'd simply target the export facilities of China. The sudden halt in the flow of goods to the U.S. would cripple the American economy for years ;)


66 posted on 04/25/2005 7:35:41 AM PDT by reagan_fanatic (It takes all kinds of critters...to make Farmer Vincents fritters)
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To: 1stFreedom
But are the Aegis ships carrying SM3???

Answer here...

Mike

67 posted on 04/25/2005 7:37:46 AM PDT by MichaelP
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To: Rick.Donaldson
Yes, the scenario would be that China or some other country launch a satillite which also has a MIRV in it. They could have done that years ago, waiting for the right moment to launch it from its platform, when the time is right (say when we have troops massed to prevent an invasion of North Korea against S. Korea). One MIRV hits the upper atmosphere of Korea, one the Pacific Command in Hawaii and a couple at the CONUS.

Sounds like a Tom Clancy novel.

68 posted on 04/25/2005 7:43:21 AM PDT by BP2
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To: DJ Taylor
If this happened, why do I think the left would still protest the US from responding with our own nukes?

Picture Richard (gerbil-boy) Gere on stage: "I am speaking for all the World...We must think of Peace right now".

Katie Couric: "What did we do to deserve this?"

Al Franken: "Its Bush's fault".

Democrats: (insert cricket chirps here)

69 posted on 04/25/2005 7:43:34 AM PDT by add925 (The Left = Xenophobes in Denial)
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To: finnman69
I agree NYC is and will remain target #1. The damage to the US economy would be severe in the short term.
Wise companies should be planning on it with duplicate business data storage in another location.
My employer has shifted several major decision making and data hubs to NYC.
They are basically clueless.
70 posted on 04/25/2005 7:43:36 AM PDT by ASA Vet (Those who know don't talk, those who talk don't know.)
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To: Cyclops08
If only one bomb could do all this, why haven't all the other bad guys tried it?

Because the big dogs (Russia, China, etc) know that the EMP would only wreck civilian infrastructure, and the hardened missile silos would soon reply with devastating consequences.

And all the mad islamokazis who care nothing about devastating consequences have no high-altitude delivery vehicle, if they indeed have a bomb at all.

71 posted on 04/25/2005 7:45:23 AM PDT by Sender (Team Infidel USA)
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To: Sender
Correction: the mad islamokazis have ho high-altitude delivery vehicle as long as they are unable to sneak such a warhead onto a commercial aircraft.
72 posted on 04/25/2005 7:48:37 AM PDT by Sender (Team Infidel USA)
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To: DJ Taylor

Corsi was on KSFO yesterday (Sunday 4/20) with David Gold, and he was sounding like he would have been delighted to be wrong about this, but wanted to sound the alarm that it was possible.


73 posted on 04/25/2005 7:48:42 AM PDT by L.N. Smithee (Honestly - would anybody be surprised if it was revealed George Felos is a necrophiliac?)
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To: TommyDale
Our seaborne subs work make short work of Iran and anyone else suspected of collaboration.....
74 posted on 04/25/2005 7:49:50 AM PDT by cbkaty (I may not always post...but I am always here......)
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To: R. Scott
All pf those virgins would look like either Helen Thomas or Madelin (Not at) Albright!
75 posted on 04/25/2005 7:52:48 AM PDT by noname07718
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To: DJ Taylor
If they set off three thermonuclear devices inside the US it would be the end of the US as we know it.

However, it would not be the end of the US.

The US would be forced to mobilize for a couple of internal reasons, and for one external reason. First, the regions hit by the nukes would need a high order of organization to provide relief--food, water, shelter. Second, it might be necessary to mobilize to maintain order in the affected regions. Third, the US would mobilize to eliminate all foreign threat of further such action. They wouldn't want to make us angry. They wouldn't like us when we're angry.

76 posted on 04/25/2005 7:55:47 AM PDT by RightWhale (50 trillion sovereign cells working together in relative harmony)
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To: DJ Taylor
Just keep playing with the mad dog until he bites you. Actually they could take us out now if they were able to hit the Saudi refineries. A reduction of 50% of our oil use would be very crippling and would require a new energy source that we don't have. Any idea of the actions we would take then?
77 posted on 04/25/2005 7:59:26 AM PDT by jec41 (Screaming Eagle)
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To: Rick.Donaldson
There was a Nelson DeMille book in the 80's where the plot was that the Soviets had stashed a nuke in a satellite in order to set off an EMP over the CONUS.
78 posted on 04/25/2005 8:01:22 AM PDT by NYFriend
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To: reagan_fanatic

I don't understand why we don't use our secret weapon. Forget nukes - I say if we really really want to cripple and destroy a country for good we ship over about 10000 liberals and RATS to IRAN. Talk about germ warfare!


79 posted on 04/25/2005 8:04:07 AM PDT by chris1 ("Make the other guy die for his country" - George S. Patton Jr.)
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To: Rick.Donaldson

Re: "the missile will probably NOT make it here."

All they have to do is put it on an Al Qaeda owned ship (there are many) attached to a mobile missile, shoot it up over the East Coast and detonate at high altitude.

The real problem is that we would have a very difficult time pinning it on Iran. We have seen the denial among many about connections between Al Qaeda and Saddam or Iran, etc. etc.


80 posted on 04/25/2005 8:20:20 AM PDT by OK
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