23rd
October 2007
This
is the message Israeli prime minister Ehud Olmert is
carrying urgently to French President Nicolas Sarkozy
Monday and British premier Gordon Brown Tuesday,
according to military and intelligence sources.
Last
week, Olmert placed the Israeli intelligence warning of
an Iranian nuclear breakthrough before Russian president
Vladimir Putin, while Israel’s defense minister Ehud
Barak presented the updated intelligence on the advances
Iran has made towards its goal of a nuclear weapon to
American officials in Washington, including President
Bush.
Olmert
will be telling Sarkozy and Brown that the moment for
diplomacy or even tough sanctions has passed. Iran can
only be stopped now from going all the way to its goal
by direct, military action.
Information of the Iranian breakthrough prompted the
latest spate of hard-hitting US statements. Sunday, Oct.
21, US vice president Cheney said: "Our country, and the
entire international community, cannot stand by as a
terror-supporting state fulfills its grandest
ambitions.''
Friday,
the incoming Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, Adm.
Michael Mullen said US forces are capable of operations
against Iran’s nuclear facilities or other targets. At
his first news conference, he said: “I don’t think we’re
stretched in that regard.”
It is
worth noting that whereas Olmert’s visits are officially
tagged as part of Israel’s campaign for harsher
sanctions against Iran, his trips are devoted to
preaching to the converted, leaders who advocate tough
measures including a military option; he has avoided
government heads who need persuading, like German
Chancellor Angela Merkel or Italian prime minister
Romano Prodi.
The
Israeli prime minister hurried over to Moscow last
Thursday after he was briefed on the hard words
exchanged between Putin and Iran’s supreme ruler
Ayatollah Ali Khamenei in Tehran Tuesday, Oct. 16.
According to sources, the Russian leader warned the
ayatollah that the latest development in Iran’s nuclear
program prevented him from protecting Tehran from
international penalties any longer; the clerical
regime’s options were now reduced, he said, to halting
its clandestine nuclear activities or else facing tough
sanctions, or even military action.
The
Russian ruler’s private tone of speech was in flat
contrast to his public denial of knowledge of Iranian
work on a nuclear weapon. It convinced Olmert to include
Moscow in his European itinerary.
Sources
in Iran and Moscow report that Putin’s dressing-down of
Khamenei followed by his three-hour conversation with
the Israeli prime minister acted as catalysts for
Iranian hardliners’s abrupt action in sweeping aside
senior nuclear negotiator Ali Larijani Saturday, Oct. 20
and the Revolutionary Guards General Mahmoud
Chaharbaghi’s threat to fire 11,000 rockets and mortars
at enemy targets the minute after Iran comes under
attack.
Military
sources say Tehran could not manage to shoot off this
number of projectiles on its own. Iran would have to
co-opt allies and surrogates, Syria, Hizballah, Hamas
and pro-Tehran militias in Iraq to the assault.
US
military sources disclosed previously that if, as widely
reported, Syria is in the process of building a small
reactor capable of producing plutonium on the North
Korean model, Iran must certainly have acquired one of
these reactors before Syria, and would then be in a more
advanced stage of plutonium production at a secret
underground location.