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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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1 posted on 02/22/2007 9:20:20 AM PST by Ernest_at_the_Beach
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To: All
Related thread:

BBC: Iran 'failed to meet UN deadline' ~ a report by the nuclear watchdog , IAEA has said.

2 posted on 02/22/2007 9:25:48 AM PST by Ernest_at_the_Beach (The DemonicRATS believe ....that the best decisions are always made after the fact.)
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To: AdmSmith; TexKat; jhp; Dog; Coop; jeffers; nuconvert; Arizona Carolyn; BurbankKarl; SE Mom; ...

Ernest_at_the_Beach posted:

"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. "


Though only a single source for this info exists at present, this BBC article, it fits well with all I have seen and heard, and with the opinions of respected colleagues.

Bush himself said last week that he "does not have the authority to attack Iran" and that he would need to go through Congress to get such authority.

From the quantity and breadth of combat power deployed to the Gulf region since January 07, there is a consensus that combat power is likely to be necessary, you don't send that much firepower, especially integrated firepower, halfway around the globe otherwise, it is too expensive and there are much less expensive methods of "sending a message".

The most likely scenarios are outlined above. Either US Command Authority expects Iran to attack us, as a result of something we have planned inside Iraq, slightly inside Iran as an extension of plans for Iraq or Lebanon or both, or US Command Authority expects Iran to provoke us, non-militarily, to the point where Congressional authority for an attack on Iranian nuclear facilities is an expected given.

Iran may decide to play possum, ignoring our "provocations" and hoping that Liberal influence grows with time and ends up pulling us out of the region militarily.

National Command Authority has almost certainly considered this possibility and yet we still made the expensive choice to deploy integrated combat power to the region.

Therefore, whatever we have planned is more likely than not to provoke an Iranian response whether they wish it or not.

We are going to make them an offer they can't refuse, and the result will likely be war.

Though our "provocation" may be one single event, I and others think this unlikely. The most likely scenario is that we escalate pressure on Iraq, and Iran by extension, a series of events trending towards more impact, towards two objectives, until Iran concedes the game, or comes out swinging.

Those objectives are:

1. Victory in Iraq, under our terms.

2. The end of Iranian nuclear weapon ambitions.

Bush knows he only has so much time. Summertime in the Gulf is hot enough to reduce US troop effectiveness while wearing MOPP Level 4 NBC protective suits. The Democrats are organizing, and finding new ways to exert pressure for a pullout. Large scale US casualties in Iraq may swing the narrowly supportive US public support for the surge (53% for, 46 percent against by the latest polls) towards support for a pullout. Iran is progressing towards a nuclear fait accompli. Current funding for operations in Iraq is being spent, advancing the time when Bush will have to ask Congress for more money, at which point Bush may be forced into giving consessions in return for funding approval.

Right now I see us in a consolidation phase. New troops and combat systems arriving in theater, small gains in terrain and objectives, but mostly settling in and spreading out, getting adjusted.

When the settling in process is complete, expecct offensive operations to escalate rapidly. We may not even realize the escalation is in progress before open war breaks out or provocations reach the point where Congress is involved.

Involving Congress is not necessarily a given. Bush's comments of last week aside, if Iran does something so blatant as to clearly and obviously invoke Presidential discretion, the Spirits could begin arriving on target overnight while we sleep.

My gut says Congressional involvement in a decision process towards war is more likely than not, but the lesser probability of independant Presidential authority for an attack is not out of the question.

Stay tuned, midgame is ending, and endgame is approaching.


3 posted on 02/22/2007 10:48:14 AM PST by jeffers
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To: Ernest_at_the_Beach
The influence of Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice seems to be growing at the expense of Vice-President Cheney.

And this reporter got this either form his wet dreams or from a source that was told by another source who in turn heard it from a third source that is close to the daughter of a third tier secretary that works in the White House.

4 posted on 02/22/2007 11:00:06 AM PST by jveritas (Support The Commander in Chief in Times of War)
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To: Ernest_at_the_Beach; jeffers; Coop

BUMP.


Thank you for posting and keeping an eye on the ball, Ernest.

And Jeffers, as always, thank you for your assessments ( #3 below)
http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/1789267/posts?page=3#3


5 posted on 02/22/2007 11:19:04 AM PST by bwteim (bwteim = begin with the end in mind)
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To: jveritas

ROFL....sounds about right!


6 posted on 02/22/2007 12:49:05 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: bwteim; jeffers; Coop
Now Iran has the neighbors upset:

In Attempt to Create Sunni Alliance Against Shi’ites and Iran, Pakistan Calls Meeting of FMs .....

Syria not invited either....

7 posted on 02/22/2007 2:05:36 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: jeffers; Southack
Take a look at this tidbit.

Kuwait preparing for war

As I have been pointing out for almost a year, everybody is getting ready for war in the Gulf. Latest sign: Kuwaiti daily newspaper Al Watan believes that Kuwait and NATO will sign a bilateral agreement in March. This agreement will include only Kuwait and will not concern the other monarchies in the Gulf. It will basically allow NATO to use Kuwait as “a point of safe passage made for the armies of the Alliance”. In December 2006, the two parties had already signed an agreement on intelligence sharing. Kuwait thus reinforces the Western umbrella which should protect it in the event of a regional conflict involving Iran.

Opinions?

8 posted on 02/22/2007 2:14:41 PM PST by Dog
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To: Dog

bookmark


9 posted on 02/22/2007 6:22:04 PM PST by irish guard
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To: AdmSmith; TexKat; jhp; Dog; Coop; jeffers; nuconvert; Arizona Carolyn; BurbankKarl; SE Mom; ...

Dog, Kuwait senses war, as you note.

Russia senses war and warns us against attacking Iran.

France senses war and makes secret deals with Khameinei, directly against their public position.

I may well be wrong that war is brewing, but if so, I am not wrong alone. Countries that spend a whole lot of money on intelligence gathering are preparing for the same eventualities I am.



10 posted on 02/22/2007 11:08:58 PM PST by jeffers
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To: jeffers

Very good analysis, jeffers. I agree, everybody with any sense of prognostication is preparing for war. And if we run out of reasons for taking it up with Iran, I'm sure that Ahmadinejad will politely offer us more. He is a Twelver that believes it is his duty to incite a global jihad against the West. Therefore, he's looking for ways to instigate a war, but only in a way in which the West will look like the aggressor.

But here's my forecast for how it will play out. At the peak of the surge, both Syria and Iran will step up cross-border infiltrations of insurgents and weaponry. Patreus will not stand idly by, and will cross the border into Syria first, to take out insurgent training and staging areas.

While he's doing that, Iran will declare that the US is expanding the war and plans to attack Iran next, and that it won't wait around for it. It will then flood the border with semi-regular "volunteer insurgents", armed with the latest in anti-armor and AA weapons to take on US forces directly.

The US will dismiss the "volunteer" facade outright - and declare that Iran has officially attacked the US in Iraq. We will then launch major air attacks on nuclear development facilities around the country, and Iran will respond by attacking US naval forces in the Gulf, as well as tanker traffic - effectively closing off the Strait of Hormuz to one quarter of the world's exported oil supplies.

Simultaneously, Iran and Syria will activate their terrorist units worldwide to undertake extensive large-scale terrorist attacks against US and UK interests, and this will spread to Europe and Asia as well. And then - we will have global jihad.

In the interests of giving credit where credit is due, the important particulars of this scenario were actually forecast in May 2005, by a guy who's been hitting bigtime with his documented predictions ever since that spring when he gushed them all out. All I've done is take the developing situation and "interpretize" what seemed like a completely unlikely scenario 2 years ago - into the particular players and events that are moving into position today.


11 posted on 02/22/2007 11:50:50 PM PST by guitfiddlist (When the 'Rats break out switchblades, it's no time to invoke Robert's Rules.)
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To: jeffers

The drumbeat is there, isn't it..

Nearly inevitable.


12 posted on 02/23/2007 2:19:08 AM PST by SE Mom (Proud mom of an Iraq war combat vet)
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To: jeffers

Only a few months more before the weather makes things even more difficult.


13 posted on 02/23/2007 2:25:48 AM PST by expatguy (http://laotze.blogspot.com/)
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To: guitfiddlist

In the interests of giving credit where credit is due, the important particulars of this scenario were actually forecast in May 2005, by a guy who's been hitting bigtime with his documented predictions ever since that spring when he gushed them all out. .......


So who is "that guy"?
AND you left Israel out. Israel can be attacked by Iranian proxies and it's retaliation can be on Iran. Then the USA steps in and wastes Iranian nukes in a way that is beyond Israel's ability


14 posted on 02/23/2007 2:27:48 AM PST by dennisw (What one man can do another can do -- "The Edge")
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To: dennisw; jeffers
So who is "that guy"? AND you left Israel out. Israel can be attacked by Iranian proxies and it's retaliation can be on Iran. Then the USA steps in and wastes Iranian nukes in a way that is beyond Israel's ability

Well, I left Israel out of the above scenario, but "that guy" didn't. Regarding Israel, in Mid-2005 he predicted that Sharon would be felled by bad health, that a peacenik would replace him, that Hamas and Al Fatah would have a civil war, that explosions would hit all over Israel, that Israeli planes would counter-attack as everybody worried that it would come to nukes - which he emphatically said would not happen. And finally, he said that Romans would arrive to help Israel defend against its enemies.

Again, this was way back two years ago, leaving many of us readers wondering what he was smoking - since "Land for Peace" was well underway with Sharon at the time. And none of us could figure out who these "Romans" were - until the French crapped out of their own UN Lebanon/Israel buffer force initiative and the Italians had to contribute the bulk of the forces for this UN operation.

Be forewarned: I found this guy when googling for Strategic Forecasting Companies online, and the site he posts on popped up. It's a real "woo-woo wacko" site - but his predictions have been hitting like clockwork, leaving the respectable strategic research firms staring into their cloudy balls, all sorts of puns intended.

I've posted some of his predictions here before, and had various readers tell me he's working for the devil and all, what with his otherwordly powers of prognostication. Well, whatever - I'll go with the results, and if somebody else can predict like he can, using massive paralleling of computers, or webbots that cruise the internet looking for pre-manifestation concepts ready to materialize in the Real World (which even some of the "respectable" firms attempt with laughable results) or just by staring into their bellybutton - I'll listen to them too.

And it's in that same spirit that I hope readers here will take the below links - too wacko, never mind - if useful, then...have at it. I myself dismiss most of his more supernatural predictions, but just sit back in utter amazement at how he has absolutely nailed important events and geopolitical alignments that are forming up right as we speak.

Two links - the first link is to the very first page of 223 pages to date - each post marked with a date/time stamp - and the posts historically recorded with no retroactive changes possible (the guy doesn't own or control the forum he posts on).

The second link is to a consolidated PDF document with all of his posts to date. Verification of original content can be made by going online to the forum page where he made a particular date/time stamped post.

15 posted on 02/23/2007 5:45:25 AM PST by guitfiddlist (When the 'Rats break out switchblades, it's no time to invoke Robert's Rules.)
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To: guitfiddlist

I have no problem handling any of what you posted. Just to be sure --- Gaia man is the one making the predictions? Thanks

I can filter out New Age static from the real stuff


16 posted on 02/23/2007 6:06:39 AM PST by dennisw (What one man can do another can do -- "The Edge")
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To: Dog; jeffers

I think a blockade is coming soon. The response to it will determine what happens afterward. But everyone in the neighborhood knows there's going to be trouble.


17 posted on 02/23/2007 6:09:50 AM PST by nuconvert ([there are bad people in the pistachio business] (...but his head is so tiny...))
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To: dennisw
I have no problem handling any of what you posted. Just to be sure --- Gaia man is the one making the predictions? Thanks I can filter out New Age static from the real stuff

Yes, Gaiaman is the one. Later on - around page 200 - a bunch of imposters try to steal his identity - but they are readily spotted and spanked by the other readers who know Gaiaman's post Id number and moniker.

The easiest way to read all thru those 223 pages is via the PDF document, which cuts out a lot of the chaff from other readers - and allows one to quickly read his consolidated predictions.

He misses quite a few of the isolated event predictions, but is the first to admit he can't do dates very well, and that his visions might relate to a flexible future. However, on the big events and movements of countries into certain camps - he's getting more spot-on each day.

18 posted on 02/23/2007 6:22:31 AM PST by guitfiddlist (When the 'Rats break out switchblades, it's no time to invoke Robert's Rules.)
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To: nuconvert; jeffers; Valin; Cap Huff
I respectfully disagree...a smackdown is coming....no half ass moves.... Bush doesn't have the time. He said Iran will not get nukes he means it....would you bet against him meaning it?

I wouldn't.

19 posted on 02/23/2007 9:43:50 AM PST by Dog
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To: Dog

I think he means it, I just think he's going to try a blockade first.


20 posted on 02/23/2007 11:33:25 AM PST by nuconvert ([there are bad people in the pistachio business] (...but his head is so tiny...))
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