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Christians4LessGvt

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Undeclared Covert War Takes Its Toll on Iran
« on: October 21, 2010, 11:15:33 PM »
An Undeclared Covert War Takes Its Toll on Iran

Whose Rockets Knocked out Iran's Ballistic Missile Launchers?


Imam Ali Base

Iran is under enemy attack on four fronts in a war never acknowledged as such by the regime in
Tehran or admitted by the aggressors. The advantage to Iran of this shadow conflict is that it is not
obliged to respond. Its leaders are therefore free to bend all their energies to propping up their Islamic
Revolutionary regime. The advantage to the attackers is that they can keep on battering the Islamic
Republic without risking an open clash and bring their hammers down on one front after another without warning.

In the last three months, four such offensives were launched against Iran, starting in July:

1. The cyber-attack:
The Stuxnet virus planted in Iran's nuclear and military control networks seriously damaged those systems.
This attack is still ongoing, defying all attempts to exorcise the wily worm.

2. Rockets destroy secret missile launchers:
On Tuesday, October 12, the day before Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad flew to Beirut,
three massive explosions blasted through one of Iran's top-secret military installations,
the underground store holding Shihab-3 intermediate-range ballistic missiles which were held r
eady for launching against US targets in Iraq and Israel in the event of war.

An unknown number of missiles, their launchers and warheads, including some tri-conic nosecones,
were destroyed at the site beneath the Iranian Revolutionary Guard's Imam Ali Base near the city
of Khorramabad, in the Lorestan province of southwestern Iran.

The base is also home to IRGC's main missile force, the Al-Hadid Brigade, 18 of whose members were
killed and 14 injured in the blast, according the official communiqu? in Tehran - probably more, according
to our sources. The victims' funerals took place Thursday, October 14 at the same time as Ahmadinejad
stood at the southern Lebanese town of Bint Jbail belting out another prediction of Israel's imminent
"disappearance."

Iran fears Israeli UAV-borne rockets blasted its Shehab-3 store

Our intelligence sources report that Iran began its inquiry into the disaster to the missile armory by looking
for traces of an infiltrator who managed to penetrate one of its most closely-guarded facilities and blow up
the weapons tucked away inside deep tunnels. When they found no sign of a trespasser, they turned to
the theory that American or Israeli unmanned aerial vehicles had flown in from Iraq and somehow found
their way past the twists and turns of the underground passages until they found their pre-programmed
targets - the missiles and their launchers - and blew them up with rockets.

Iranian investigators were pointed in that direction by Syrian military intelligence which gave them data on
Israeli UAV rocket practices against underground targets, including several on the buried command centers
of Ahmed Jibril's Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine (PFLP) in Namma, south of Beirut.

Israeli tacticians to have found a way of using the deep shafts leading straight down from the surface openings
to the command facilities below as testing-ranges for weapons designed to blow up targets sunk deep underground.
Acting on this theory, Iranian investigators began combing through the rubble at the Imam Ali base
in search of fragments of the Israeli guided supersonic missile Jumper which fits the Syrian description.
Military sources describe this missile as powered by a two-pulse rocket motor with low radar and acoustic signatures,
GPS/INS guidance gear and four steering surfaces on the aft section.

It was basically configured for stationary targets designated by geographical coordinates. The Jumper's accuracy is
unaffected by low visibility or weather conditions; its precision may be optimized by an optional laser-guidance unit.
It is 180 cm long and 15 cm in diameter. Each launch unit weighs about 1.5 tons and can be deployed by air or land
and operate in an unattended mode, without requiring the support or presence of operators, on the principle of Dial and Hit.

Sanctions begin to hit the ordinary Iranian

3. Sanctions:

The offensive by sanctions is turning out to be a lot more effective than Tehran is willing to admit.

On Tuesday, October 19, Supreme Leader Ayatollah Seyed Ali Khamenei commented that the Iranian people
had lived under sanctions since the early days of the Islamic Revolution and learned how to confront them.
He said this when he arrived at the holy Iranian city of Qom. But his words made little impression on the ordinary
Iranian. After all, Iranian sources report, since early October, the Iranian currency has dropped one-fifth of its
value against the basket of leading currencies, there is a rush on the banks to withdraw foreign currency,
especially the US dollar, and oil exports have plunged by 13.3 percent - or more than 600,000 barrels a day.
This is the steepest decline since the late 1970s and costs the government about $16 billion in net revenue loss.
Moreover, applications for new building licenses have fallen by 40 percent sending the private construction industry
into a slump. Iran's credit rating is in free fall as a result of pressure from Washington on governments, banks
and businesses to refuse to extend letters of credit for financial enterprises.

Tuesday, Oct 19, Tehran confirmed that some European airports are refusing to sell its carriers fuel; its flagship
carrier has stopped making unscheduled stops en route to Tehran because London refuses to extend refueling services.
All this means that the basket of penalties wielded by US Treasury Undersecretary for Terrorism and Financial Intelligence
Stuart Levey is beginning to bite painfully all the way down to the Iranian in the street. It consists of UN sanctions,
beefed up by unilateral US measures and steps taken by European governments and firms to cut off trade with the Islamic
Republic. Levey was in Ankara this week on a mission to persuade Turkish businesses and companies to join the sanctions
regime against Iran. They would have to undercut their prime minister, Tayyep Recip Erdogan, who voted against sanctions,
defends Iran's nuclear program and is proud of their warm bilateral friendship. Their trade ties are expanding fast, Erdogan boasts,
and will be boosted from $10 billion to $30 billion in five years.

The USS Abraham Lincoln docks at Manama 

The Saudi and Egyptian armies, navies and air forces secretly launched their first ever joint military maneuvers this week
under the codename Tabuk-2. It ended Wednesday, Oct. 20.

Acting Defense and Aviation Minister Prince Khaled Bin-Sultan, who commanded the exercise, said the two military forces
had agreed on doctrinal unification. Our military sources interpret this as meaning that the two armies are getting set for
joint action in a war contingency with Iran.


4.
Military muscle:

This week the US applied more military pressure on Tehran when Sunday, Oct. 17, the USS Abraham Lincoln docked at
the Fifth Fleet headquarters at Manama, Bahrain, thereby raising the number of US carriers in the Persian Gulf to two,
for the first time in as many years.
Until now, the Obama administration kept the number of carriers opposite Iran
down to one inline with his policy of engaging Iran in diplomacy to halt its progress toward building a nuclear weapon.
Adding a second carrier to the USS Harry S. Truman and its marine air force might already present raises the number
of warplanes facing Iran to 120 and is therefore a game changer.


Washington sources say this move relays two administration messages to Tehran:

First: The Six Power talks due to open with Iran in early November will be backed by American military leverage.
To date, Washington has not invoked the UN Security Council's permission to search Iranian or other vessels suspected
of carrying banned cargoes to the Islamic Republic. Tehran has threatened to resort to force if its vessels are intercepted
for searches.

Wednesday, Oct. 20, Brig. Gen. Hussein Salami, commander of Iran's Revolutionary Guards issued a warning:
"The enemies of Iran should know the Islamic establishment's red lines and not trespass them."

Second: If diplomatic engagement fails once again, the US reserves the freedom and capability for military
action against Iran's nuclear facilities.

Last minute: Thursday night, Oct. 21, the Obama administration padded the $60 billion weapons package
for Saudi Arabia submitted to congress with several additional items including 1,000 2,000-pound guided bombs,
described by our military sources as the most advanced bunker busters. They add a sharp new edge to US and
Saudi intentions towards Iran and its nuclear program.

Might not the four war offensives buffeting the Islamic republic which he heads have weakened Ahmadinejad
and been the cause of his bumbling performance in Lebanon on Oct. 14-15? And that would be without taking
into accord the discord preying on the ruling echelon?

Mid East Radicals Nurse Their Setbacks

Ahmadinejad's Lebanon Fiasco Retilted the Middle East Power Balance

Just a week ago, four radical Middle East leaders were looking forward to Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadienjad's
forthcoming visit to Lebanon on Oct. 13-14 as their ladder to the glittering pinnacle of Middle East power.
To gain this boost to their personal and national prestige, they were even willing to set aside their differences
for that defining moment.

Ahmadinejad himself was certain he had only to set foot on Lebanese soil for Iran's sway over that country to
be accepted unquestioningly by all its diverse political and religious groupings which would henceforth toe the Iranian line.

Syrian President Bashar Assad believed that the visit would teach the Iranian leader to appreciate his value as the key
to controlling Beirut and would henceforth defer to Syria's dominant influence and presence in the Lebanese capital.
Hizballah's Hassan Nasrallah counted on the Iranian president to show the world that Iran was the invincible boss of
Lebanon and Hizballah its trusty right hand for running the show of government, including national security and foreign affairs.
Turkish Prime Minister Tayyip Recep Erdogan saw the visit as a leap toward solidifying the bloc of nations made up of Turkey,
Iran, Syria, Iraq, Lebanon and the Palestinians that was destined to rule the Middle East. He put his contest with Tehran over
the top slot on hold under the axis was up and running.

None of them imagined the brutally aggressive, attention-grabbing Iranian president could fall on his face, least off
on the tiny Lebanese platform. But that is exactly what happened. Bowled over, all four found their apple carts tipped over,
their strategic plans thrown off course and their personal prestige dented.

Lebanese president turns down defense treaty with Iran

All of the Middle East sources agree that the widely-hailed Iranian president's visit to Lebanon missed out. They are not entirely
clear why this should have happened when Iran, Hizballah and Syria put in three months of painstaking efforts to make it a smash
hit.

They advance four possible causes:

1. It went wrong on the first day when Ahmadinejad failed to persuade Lebanese President Michel Suleiman and Prime
Minister Sa'ad Hariri to sign a defense treaty with Tehran and apply for Iranian weapons for the Lebanese Army.
This contretemps was his first eye-opener. It meant that if Tehran wanted to gain a strong military foothold in Lebanon
and the eastern Mediterranean seaboard, it was not immediately for sale. For now the Iranians would have to be content
with its proxy, Hizballah.

2. He was also brought up short by the limits drawn to Iran's ability to parlay its power and influence among Shiites
into political clout in the Sunni-dominated Arab Middle East. This barrier loomed at the worst possible time for Tehran,
engaged as it is in a campaign for influence in Baghdad and the last word on the Iraqi government's makeup.
The Lebanon venture starkly exposed the hidden interplay between Iran's machinations in Baghdad and Beirut,
so compromising Iran as leading Middle East mover and shaker.

Lebanese prime minister won't give up Hariri trial

3. Ahmadinejad was frustrated again when Lebanese Prime Minister Sa'ad Hariri flatly refused to come to terms
with Hizballah and Syria on doing away with the Special UN Tribunal for Lebanon-STL to save Hizballah leaders from
indictment in the 2005 Rafiq Hariri assassination.

He had been certain of succeeding after picking up hints from Washington and Paris that neither would mind if the
tribunal gradually faded into self-dissolution in the interests of Lebanon's fragile stability. He also talked it over
with Saudi King Abdullah before setting out for Beirut. But Hariri adamantly refused to revoke the tribunal's mandate
or funding, resolved more than ever to bring his father's assassins to justice, "whoever they may be."

That phrase has become a ticking bomb in Beirut for Hizballah to carry out its threat of military action against
the Hariri government and/or across the Israeli border to save his security and intelligence officers from standing
trial before the STL.

Ahmanijad's failure to talk Hariri and Hizballah round to an accommodation confronts Tehran with a quandary
because letting Hizballah off the leash could have unpredictable and ungovernable consequences: A military challenge
to the government in Beirut could quickly ignite internecine war in Lebanon and heating up the border with Israel carried the
risk of a general conflagration. On the other hand, by holding Nasrallah back, Tehran would appear to be abandoning its
foremost Middle East ally to its fate.

Last minute: Hariri informed Saudi Arabia and Egypt Thursday night, sources disclose, that he would prefer to
resign as prime minister rather than make the slightest concession to Hizballah with regard to the probe into his father's
murder. Saudi diplomats are engaged in frantic efforts to arrange a meeting between Hariri and the Hizballah's leader to
avert the outbreak of fighting in Lebanon.

Nasrallah publicly humiliated, Assad snubbed in Riyadh

4. On the second day of the visit, Thursday, October 14, things went from bad to worse.
The plan was for Ahmadinejad, with Nasrallah beside him, to drive in a triumphal cavalcade down the Lebanese coastal
highway to the South. The Hizballah leader stage-managed the event to present himself as its co-star. Smart Hizballah
units and Iranian Revolutionary Guardsmen were to accompany the cavalcade as its security escort after pushing Lebanese
soldiers out of the way.

However, Lebanese President Michel Suleiman supported by Lebanese Chief of Staff Gen. Jean Qahwaj stamped hard on
the plan, insisting that no force other than the Lebanese army - certainly not Hizballah - secure all parts of the Iranian
president's visit.

After arguing for four hours, Ahmadinejad bowed to his hosts' decision and informed them he accepted the
protection of the Lebanese army for the remainder of his visit.

So mortified was Nasrallah by this public humiliation, the most painful since Tehran ostracized him in July 2006
for going to war with Israel without permission, that he retired to his bunker. He tried not to hear the murmured
question running through the Middle East: is this how Iran treats its staunchest allies?

The Syrian president was next to feel the backlash from the Iranian president's Lebanon fiasco.
He arrived in Riyadh for talks with King Abdullah Sunday, Oct. 17 on working together in Lebanon
and Iraq and finding a way to prevent the Hariri tribunal's case from exploding into civil war in Lebanon.
But Persian Gulf sources disclose he was stunned by the cool reception he met with. He found Abdullah
had hardened his position on all the issues on which they had planned to cooperate.

Instead of being invited to sit down for a formal dinner at the royal palace in Riyadh,
Assad was fobbed off with a scratch meal at the Saudi Air Force base to which their
meeting had been moved.

The Lebanese prime minister was supposed to wait in the wings until he was sent for
to join the Syrian and Saudi rulers. Abdullah would have then told him how to cooperate
with Assad. But Hariri was not present at the Saudi air base and when Assad asked why
he was not about Abdullah replied brusquely that he was not needed at this stage.

Assad attempts damage control

According to our sources, when the Syrian ruler tried to impress the king with the important ground
covered by Ahmadinejad in Lebanon, Abdullah raised his hand impatiently and cut him short:
"That was not the impression we received," he said, "We followed the visit and were not particularly impressed."

Assad went on to stress the significance of the Iranian president's tour of southern Lebanon and the Israeli border,
to which Abdullah remarked drily: "So what? Ahmadinejad went to the south and returned after a short time.
Has anything changed?" Assad cut the interview short and returned to Damascus empty-handed.

Beirut sources report that the Syrian president pretends to be mystified and goes about saying the Saudi king's
change of heart is incomprehensible, while scrabbling to gain some of the control and influence which has begun
to seep away in the fallout from Ahmadinejad's unfortunate trip to Lebanon.

Assad's first move was to press Lebanese President Michel Suleiman to come over to Damascus very soon for talks,
hoping he can achieve more from this encounter than the Iranian president managed in his two days in Lebanon.

As for the Turkish prime minister, he has had to swallow a major setback to the radical Middle East bloc he had set
his heart on and wait for another chance to fulfill his ambitions. Middle East sources reveal that Erdogan in particular
had hoped the Arab League would accept Turkey and Iran as new members despite being non-Arab in recognition
of their regional power status. He had been encouraged in this expectation by Arab League Secretary Amr Moussa.
That hope, too, lost traction as a result of the Iranian president's poor performance in Lebanon. Shortly after Saudi
King Abdullah saw Assad off his premises, he notified Moussa that the two applications would be vetoed.

All this left big questions hanging over the visit, such as, what happened to make the over-assertive,
fire-eating Ahmadinejad appear so hesitant and confused in Lebanon? How did he come to act in a way
that fumbled Tehran's strong image and miss striking the right note for carrying Arab and Muslim public
opinion before him? Was he thrown off by current happenings in Tehran?

 ;)


"Mr. Gorbachev, tear down this wall!" - Ronald Reagan - June 12, 1987

Plane

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Re: Undeclared Covert War Takes Its Toll on Iran
« Reply #1 on: October 21, 2010, 11:37:39 PM »
Every now and then Ammunition dumps and assembly facilitys catch fire by ordinary accident.

Xavier_Onassis

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Re: Undeclared Covert War Takes Its Toll on Iran
« Reply #2 on: October 22, 2010, 12:40:35 PM »
This is true, it COULD BE an accident, but Really good espionage should always look more like an accident than an attack, though.

If Iran can be prevented from getting nukes by this sort of thing, that is vastly better than any sort of war or overt attacks.

One hopes that if the stuxnet virus is a CIA product, they will have invented a way of removing it prior to spreading it.
"Time flies like an arrow; fruit flies like a banana."