Countdown to Iran

#1

J.Quest

Transform...and roll out!
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Aug 16, 2006
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#1
Guys, I ran across this article to day and thought it was a pretty good read. Personally, I am of the mind that we are on an unavoidable collision course with Iran and will use military strikes including tacticle nukes on them. The stars are beginning to line up and point toward war.

2 carrier groups moving to Gulf to support 24 hr air campaigns
Passing of the UN resolution against Iran w/ Russian & Chinese approval
Ahmadinejad promissing a nuclear surprise by March 2007
Increasing Israeli talk of striking Iran
The US has yet to pull the Nuclear option off the table
Troop buildup (20,000) to Iraq

Impending Iran crisis

By Kenneth R. Timmerman


The nuclear crisis boiling away under the surface for the last three years with Iran has finally erupted. Over the next three to six months, expect things to get much worse, with a very real possibility of a war could spread far beyond the Persian Gulf. How we got here was entirely predictable -- as is the path to a violent future.

Caving in to intense pressure from the CIA and the foreign policy establishment, the White House has refused to do the one thing that could have headed off this crisis: support the rights of the Iranian people and their struggle for freedom against this clerical tyranny. And now, it is almost -- almost -- too late.

The immediate trigger for the crisis occurred just two days before Christmas, when the United Nations Security Council finally passed a binding resolution to impose sanctions on Iran because of its illegal nuclear program.

Many U.N. critics (and I am one), find UNSC Resolution 1737 to be a tepid move. While on the surface it bans nuclear and missile-related trade with Iran, Iran has already received most of the know-how it needs for its programs, and the rogue traders it works with won't be deterred from supplying whatever else Iran needs.

More significant than the U.N. action was the Iranian reaction. "This resolution will not harm Iran and those who backed it will soon regret their superficial act," Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad said with typical bluster on Christmas Eve. "[W]e will celebrate our atomic achievements in February," he added. In earlier statements, he claimed Iran would have a big nuclear "surprise" to unveil to the world by the end of the Persian year, March 20. Now it would appear he is accelerating the tempo.

In early December, Mr. Ahmadinejad announced Iran had completed its uranium enrichment experiments and was preparing to install 3,000 production centrifuges at its now-declared enrichment plant in Natanz, in central Iran.

His announcement fell exactly within the timeline Israeli nuclear experts have derived from Iran's public declarations to the International Atomic Energy Agency and the on-site inspections by IAEA experts in Iran. If this timeline holds, Iran will have the capability to make its first bomb by September 2008 -- just in time for the U.S. presidential elections.

A second reaction to the U.N. Security Council resolution came from Mr. Ahmadinejad's top nuclear adviser, Ali Larijani. On Christmas Eve, he said the regime now planned to accelerate the installation of the production centrifuges. "From Sunday morning [Dec. 24], we will begin activities at Natanz -- the site of 3,000-centrifuge machines -- and we will drive it with full speed. It will be our immediate response to the resolution," Iran's Kayhan paper quoted him as saying.

The United States and Britain have begun a quiet buildup of their naval forces in the Persian Gulf, with the goal of keeping the Strait of Hormuz open to international shipping if a crisis develops.

The spark point of open military confrontation could occur in many different ways. The Iranians, for example, might escalate their current military involvement in Iraq. (A clear sign Iran is contemplating such a move was revealed recently when the U.S. captured four Iranian Revolutionary Guards officers during a raid on the headquarters of an Iraqi Shi'ite leader in Baghdad).

The U.S. could and should respond to this Iranian provocation. One option would be to attack Revolutionary Guards bases near the Iraqi border that are involved in aiding the Iraqi Shi'ite militias.

As further steps, Iran might choose to launch "swarming" attacks against U.S. warships in the Persian gulf, or to attack a foreign-flagged oil tanker carrying Iraqi or Kuwaiti oil, or to increase rocket and missile supplies to Hezbollah in Lebanon to spark another diversionary war against Israel.
There are scores of ways such a scenario could evolve.

But we are heading toward a direct military confrontation with Iran -- an Iran which could be a nuclear power, and certainly will be a suspected nuclear power, in a matter of months, if not weeks.

There is no easy way of walking this back. Even the insane Baker-Hamilton proposal of a direct dialogue with Iran will not get them to abandon their nuclear program, which this regime in Tehran has clearly identified as a strategic asset it is willing to make great sacrifices to develop and protect.

So fasten your seat belts. We are in for a rough ride.

Kenneth R. Timmerman was nominated for the 2006 Nobel Peace Prize along with John Bolton for his work on Iran. He is executive director of the Foundation for Democracy in Iran and author of "Countdown to Crisis: the Coming Nuclear Showdown with Iran" (Crown Forum: 2005).
 
#3
#3
Iran spits in the eye of the world and plans to begin building 3000 centrifuges in Feb '07

Getting closer....this may be related to Iran's nuclear surprise in March 07

2 carrier groups moving to Gulf to support 24 hr air campaigns (In progress)
Passing of the UN resolution against Iran w/ Russian & Chinese approval (done)
Ahmadinejad promissing a nuclear surprise by March 2007 (???)
Increasing Israeli talk of striking Iran
The US has yet to pull the Nuclear option off the table
Troop buildup (20,000) to Iraq
 
#5
#5
Iran in planning stages of nuclear test?

This makes sense...they are planning to modify one of their long range missiles for a "satellite" launch. Nah...this is to give them a true ICBM as a carrier for a warhead. The Korean Nuke test months ago was funded by the Iranians so they could test the goods and study it's effects. Getting 3000 centrifuges is also essential to them being able to home-grow their own fissile material.
 
#6
#6
i think there is a decent chance that Mahmoud Ahmadinejad is overthrown in the very near future, the natives are restless.
 
#9
#9
Foxnews.com 2/12/2007 -

WASHINGTON — The White House stuck to its guns Monday, insisting it had clear evidence that Tehran approved the shipment of weapons — including deadly bomb-making materials — to Shiite militants for use against U.S. forces in Iraq.
At the same time, Press Secretary Tony Snow said critics are using the evidence presentation to try to "whip this up" into a story about the United States being on the verge of armed conflict with Iran.
"This is clearly a case where people are hyping something up. I don't know how much clearer we can be. We're not getting ready for war in Iran but what we are doing is protecting our own people," Snow said.


Hold on! So we have definitive, conclusive evidence that Iran is behind killing US soldiers and we are not preparing to go to war??? What the hell is left to say here? It's evidently ok for Iran to forge themselves into a nuclear power and kill US soldiers in Iraq and not pay for it. What will it take?
 
#10
#10
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Hold on! So we have definitive, conclusive evidence that Iran is behind killing US soldiers and we are not preparing to go to war??? What the hell is left to say here? It's evidently ok for Iran to forge themselves into a nuclear power and kill US soldiers in Iraq and not pay for it. What will it take?

Sounds 100% like Bush to me.
 
#11
#11
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Hold on! So we have definitive, conclusive evidence that Iran is behind killing US soldiers and we are not preparing to go to war??? What the hell is left to say here? It's evidently ok for Iran to forge themselves into a nuclear power and kill US soldiers in Iraq and not pay for it. What will it take?

We have definitive proof that Bin Laden and the Taliban were in cahoots over 9/11 but yet where are we with Omar, Zawahiri, and Bin Laden? Anyone? 5.5 years later.....
 
#13
#13
While running out of gasoline, diverting millions to a nuclear program, and funneling weapons to Iraq, these guys still find time to cure disease....what a country!
 
#14
#14
yeah, but Iran's "cure" for AIDS is to execute homosexuals and drug users. Gotta love that Sharia law.
 
#17
#17
I heard on the morning news that Mutada Al Sauder (sp?) has probably sought refuge in Tehran due to some fratures in his organization. Guess he isn't ready to be a martyr? Anyhow, if that turns out to be true I wonder what effect, if any, it will have on this debate.
 
#20
#20
I heard on the morning news that Mutada Al Sauder (sp?) has probably sought refuge in Tehran due to some fratures in his organization. Guess he isn't ready to be a martyr? Anyhow, if that turns out to be true I wonder what effect, if any, it will have on this debate.


Great news. How many years did it take the US strategy makers to figure out he was the enemy? Ridiculous.
 
#22
#22
We are still trying to figure out the many other enemies in Iraq. Some idiots up top thought it a bright idea to keep these militias intact and armed.
 
#23
#23
Lord have mercy on our souls.....

WMD in Iraq............uh huh.........check

WMD in Iran.......uh huh........check

At this point, I'll take my chances with Israel taking care of Iran.
 
#24
#24
We might as well. They're the only ones who seem to have good luck at going in and taking out their enemies with clean results....oh, wait! I forgot this last Lebanon campaign. Looks like Olmert has the W disease. Can anyone take on the Islamic extremists and win? USSR? Nope. Serbs and Croatians? Nope. US? Nope. Israel? Nope.
 

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