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BBC: New tensions over Iran's nuclear plans ~ Analysis By Paul Reynolds
Thursday, 22 February 2007, 16:13 GMT ^ | By Paul Reynolds World affairs correspondent, BBC News website

Posted on 02/22/2007 9:20:14 AM PST by Ernest_at_the_Beach

New tensions over Iran's nuclear plans

Analysis
By Paul Reynolds


World affairs correspondent, BBC News website


USS John C Stennis
The aircraft carrier USS Stennis adds to US power in the Gulf

The tension over Iran's nuclear programme is increasing, with its failure to comply with a Security Council deadline to suspend uranium enrichment.

The UN's nuclear agency, the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA), reported on Thursday that the deadline of 21 February had passed with no Iranian action.

"Iran has not suspended its enrichment-related activities," the IAEA stated.

The council had given Iran 60 days from the passage of resolution 1737 on 23 December to suspend all enrichment activities and also work on heavy water projects. The latter could give Iran a supply of plutonium, an alternative source to enriched uranium for a nuclear explosion.

Resolution 1737 imposed economic sanctions on Iran, aimed at stopping the transfer of technology to its nuclear and missile industries. It also said that if there was no compliance after the 60-day deadline, further sanctions would be considered.

The resolution supported an offer from Western countries to help Iran develop civilian nuclear power -- but it had to suspend enrichment as a condition for any talks.

The IAEA finding came as no surprise as the Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad says that there can be no pre-conditions for talks. Indeed, he has proposed that Western governments suspend enrichment themselves before any talks

More sanctions?

The issue now is whether the council will follow up on its threat to impose more sanctions.

The resolution is clear that these would have to be economic in nature and that there will have to be a new decision by the council as a whole to impose them.

The United States is already calling for such measures. However getting Russian and Chinese agreement is likely to be a slow process.

Mutual freeze?

The head of the IAEA, Mohamed ElBaradei, is suggesting a mutual freeze - by Iran on its nuclear development and by the Security Council on sanctions. No freeze is likely.

The issue now is whether the council will follow up on its threat to impose more sanctions

Mr ElBaradei told the Financial Times this week that Iran might be five or 10 years away from developing a nuclear bomb. He warned against "hype" over Iran's nuclear activities.

Plans

At the same time, the BBC has reported that the United States has drawn up plans for an attack on Iran to cover two contingencies - the confirmed development of nuclear weapons by Iran, or backing by Iran for a major attack on US troops in Iraq.

The first contingency is full of uncertainties. Iran says it is simply exercising its right to provide fuel to make nuclear energy and that it has no intention of building a bomb.

The problem is that the same technology used to make fuel for nuclear power can then be developed to make fuel for a nuclear explosion.

The US continues to apply pressure on Iran and is expected to move a second aircraft carrier battle group into the Gulf region soon.

The IAEA head Mohamed ElBaradei warned against 'hype' over Iran's nuclear abilities

US Vice-President Dick Cheney said in Newsweek magazine that American allies in the region "want us to have a major presence there" and that the carriers would send " a strong signal" that the US would "work with friends and allies to oppose the Iranian threat".

Iraq linkage

A new element emerging over the last couple of weeks is the linkage the US is making between Iran and events inside Iraq. It has publicised its contention that Iran is behind sophisticated technology that is being used by some Shia groups against US and British forces in Iraq.

Timing

The timing of this claim, rejected by Iran, is significant, because it ties in with the expiry of the Security Council demand on 21 February. It adds a new component to the equation.

The US can now claim a casus belli if there is a major attack on US forces in Iraq that can be linked to Iran. Such linkage of course is not easy to prove, and even the evidence that the US has produced so far has been challenged.

But the legality of any attack against Iran will be hard to establish, to say the least, without clear evidence, especially as the evidence against Iraq proved unreliable.

Danger

All this makes for an extremely delicate and dangerous period ahead.

It does not mean that a US attack on Iran is imminent. The BBC information is that the US has chosen targets in Iran and has considered two scenarios for an attack.

The targets include not only Iranian nuclear sites but Iranian missile sites and other major military infrastructure.

This would be in line with US doctrine that, in a conflict, an attack has to cover a range of military targets. This happened in the two Gulf wars and Israel adopted similar tactics in its attacks on Hezbollah last year.

But it is not an either-or situation.

Diplomacy

There is a diplomatic effort at play here as well.

Washington hopes that its pressure will trigger not necessarily a war but a debate inside Iran that will either lead to a change of policy (maybe through a change in government) or a much slower and more cautious Iranian approach.

It is also not clear that within the Bush administration these days there is total support for any attack on Iran. The influence of Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice seems to be growing at the expense of Vice-President Cheney.

We have seen the US entering negotiations over North Korea, leading to an interim agreement under which the North's claimed nuclear weapon is being left to one side.

Paul.Reynolds-INTERNET@bbc.co.uk




TOPICS: Extended News; Foreign Affairs; News/Current Events; War on Terror
KEYWORDS: iran; nukes; unsanctions
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To: AdmSmith; TexKat; jhp; Dog; Coop; jeffers; nuconvert; Arizona Carolyn; BurbankKarl; SE Mom; ...

I think Ahmadinejad thinks he IS number 12. He put 20 mill of his own money into improving "The Well". At the very least, the escort. Playing to the gallery? Hard call. He's cynical enough, but he really seems to believe.

Petraeus won't cross the border, either of them, on his own recognizance. Depending on exactly how you interpret certain Bush statements, he may already have permission, depending on operational necessity. Remember his last billet.

I began running numerical sims for US/Iran warfare in summer 2002. It was clear we were headed to Iraq, and Iran was the next logical step. You can't drive on Tehran with 23 unopposed Iraqi divisions, under Saddam Hussein, on your left flank.

The OIF sims ran in parallel, using 2000 and 2001 Iraqi OOB/TOEs, with variants using Gulf access only, Gulf + Kuwait access, and Gulf+Kuwait+Turkey+ Saudi+Jordan access. I used 6 US divisions, 3 mech, 3 armor, 6 wings, carrier and landbased, and open source, published US capabilities including TLAMs, JSOWs, PAC-3s, and non-networked Aegis specs, which were at least ten years out of date.

Average US attrition ran one brigade when major military operations concluded. The computers were about 2,900 KIA high.

The Iran sims have been updated with 2004 OOB/TOEs, with results remarkably consistent over the five year period, before and after the upgrade. Average US attrition for a full ground op regime change runs right at one US brigade, just like OIF. Not surprising, since Iran and Iraq fought to a draw over 8 long years.

In both datasets, we lost less than a squadron of aircraft. Though variables this time around include Chinese upgrades to Iran's AD net, and Russian + NK upgrades to Iran's SAM, AS and SSM capabilities, counterweighting variables on our side include distribited Aegis networking, and a few other goodies, and I expect attrition rates to closely parallel OIF, assuming we went after the whole nut, not a sure thing by any means.

In the unlikely event of full ground ops, one key element emerges...Iran is set to fight their last war, or was as of mid 2005. I choose not to explore this too deeply in public, but done right, there are exploitable terrain and deployment advantages potentially available. I wouldn't zoom in too tightly with any planning maps, n'est cie pass?

My processors have never been able to close the Gulf to military traffic. Best Iran has done to date is cruiser and/or carrier damage, no total losses. Standards used for Iranian AS capabilities included only Silkworm era variants, but again, Coalition capabilities omitted Aegis and up networking.

AMMV.

It's difficult to model assymetric operations, Iran can and probably will try to close the Strait to takkers. All I have to go on are reflagging ops during the Iran/Iraq war, and the fact that Iranian defense spending has averaged $6 Bill (USD) annually, to our $450.

I expect a spike in oil prices, regardless of outcome. A spike on fears would affect forward markets no more than a week, civilian closure of the Strait, 30 to 90 days.

In addition to terrorism on a global basis, Iran may or may not attack Israel. Big pile-o-curies at Dimona.

If fifth column elements in Iraq risk being overrun, opinion is closely divided as to deployment of Iranian regulars and Pasdaran. Standard response is "....weeeeelllll....."

On paper and digitally, Iran has the muscle to at least attempt a 4-6 div. drive on the Rumayla, Al Wafra, and Ghawar areas, while pushing a 2-3 div. spoiling/blocking force towards Kut. Works everytime in the virtual world. Objective would be to hold long enough to wire wellheads for hostage. Nobody, including me, is willing to call this likely, but smart money always looks at capabilities, not inclinations.

Syria will sit it out, in Iraq at least. Lebanon/Golan? Not so sure. Assad does not strike me as reckless, or as an Iranian patsy. He will honor the mutual defense pact with Iran only so long as Iran has a chance to win and it benefits him. We'd see him coming, a loooooong way, before he crossed the border coming east.

I don't like to make hard predictions concerning war. War is, by definition, chaotic, and that brings in too much randomness to call shots in advance. Probabilities, possibilities, tendencies and trends, yes, predictions, no.

We will see what we will see.

You are on the ping list for this op, as of now. Average volume runs one ping per week, peaks at three pings per day, currently, volume expected to rise if Iran or the US opens. Let me know if you want off, three clicks gets it done.

All for now...



Actual Mileage May Vary.





21 posted on 02/23/2007 11:55:32 AM PST by jeffers
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To: jeffers; Dog; Marine_Uncle
This might be of interest:

Iran: The Countdown

22 posted on 02/23/2007 12:45:18 PM PST by Ernest_at_the_Beach (The DemonicRATS believe ....that the best decisions are always made after the fact.)
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To: Ernest_at_the_Beach

Nothing gets by these Brits. No wonder they've been a global power for so long.


23 posted on 02/23/2007 12:47:34 PM PST by Ieatfrijoles (Incinerate Riyadh Now.)
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To: Ernest_at_the_Beach

Thanks for the link.

It raised something left out of earlier discussions here.

C3I targetting?

How high?

How broad?

How deep?

We got enough trucks to haul that much mail?


24 posted on 02/23/2007 2:49:05 PM PST by jeffers
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To: jeffers; Ernest_at_the_Beach
Nice assesment Jeff. I find no points you stress that seem unsound. With the high level military spending taking place over the past five years, indeed one does not send so many carriers into the gulf unless plans are being put into place to utilize them. We have sufficient numbers of Air Force and Marine Jet fighters and fighter bombers in situ in Iraq, and three carriers along with the contingents of Marines would appear to be overkill just to show a hand of strength over the need to cover the gulf states oil facilities.
Things are being put in place. And Ahmadinejah and his Mullah advisors do not seem to realize we would not go nuclear on them (to create a chaotic state for the 12th Imman to arrive), but to destroy their coastal as well as military complexes and any fighters that might go up to protect their land. Probaby sink all their surface and submarines as well and set them back 40 years.
25 posted on 02/23/2007 6:19:07 PM PST by Marine_Uncle
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