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Israeli Defense
Minster, Ehud Barak to tell U.S. Time is Running Out
on Iran
In a series of consultations
apparently aimed at coordinating policies against the Iranian nuclear
threat, Defense Minister Ehud Barak will head to the US on Monday for
talks at the Pentagon, days after Mossad chief Meir Dagan was in
Washington for meetings with key intelligence officials. Sources say
Israel is urgently trying to convince the US that Iran is closer to
passing the nuclear threshold than Washington believes.
Dagan's visit came as Iran held a second day of military maneuvers on
Thursday and claimed to have test-fired more long-range missiles meant
to show that the country can defend itself against any attack by the US
or Israel.
Barak will spend three days in the US for talks with Defense Secretary
Robert Gates, Vice President Dick Cheney, Secretary of State
Condoleezza Rice, National Security Adviser Stephen Hadley and UN
Secretary General Ban Ki-moon.
Defense officials said he would likely also meet with President George W. Bush.
A week after Barak's visit, IDF Chief of General Staff Lt.-Gen. Gabi
Ashkenazi will head to Washington for his own round of talks with
American defense chiefs, including Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of
Staff Adm. Michael Mullen, who was in Israel two weeks ago.
Barak hinted at Israeli readiness to attack the Islamic Republic on Thursday.
"The Iranian issue is a challenge not just for Israel but for the
entire world," Barak told a meeting of the Labor Party faction. "Israel
is the strongest country in the region and we have proven in the past
that we are not deterred from acting when our vital interests are at
stake."
But he quickly noted that "the reactions of [Israel's] enemies need to be taken into consideration as well."
A senior government official said the Dagan, Barak, Ashkenazi visits to
Washington were part of the "routine, close consultations" held between
Israel and the US.
Another government source said it would be an exaggeration to imagine
that the meetings had to do with drawing up operational plans for any
type of military action against Iran. According to this source, no
decision had been made on the matter, and Israel was extremely unlikely
to take any unilateral action.
A senior US official recently said there was a discrepancy of six to 12
months between the time Israel believed Iran would pass the nuclear
point of no return, and when the US felt Teheran will have mastered the
nuclear cycle.
The source added that the visits of the Israeli officials came as an
intense debate continued to rage inside the US administration between
those who favored military action, led by Cheney, and those opposed,
led by Gates.
"Iran's response to Europe is not ambiguous," the official said. "Iran
rejects the international demand to halt the enrichment of uranium and
the world must respond accordingly - by increasing and intensifying the
sanctions against Iran."
Also on Thursday, Foreign Minister Tzipi Livni told visiting Irish
Foreign Minister Micheál Martin that Teheran posed not only a
nuclear threat, but also a "comprehensive" threat because of its
support for Hizbullah, Hamas and other extremist elements in the region.
Government officials, meanwhile, did not seem overly concerned about
Iran's recent missile tests. One official said both sides were
signaling the other that they could cause significant damage. The
official put the missile tests in the same category as the reportedly
large-scale IAF exercise in the eastern Mediterranean in the first week
of June, and a well publicized visit Prime Minister Ehud Olmert made to
Dimona on July 1.
In response to the missile tests, Olmert's spokesman Mark Regev said
Israel "seeks neither conflict nor does it seek hostilities with Iran.
Nevertheless, Iran's nuclear program together with their ballistic
missile program should be a matter of grave concern for the entire
family of nations."
In the second day of exercises in Iran, the Revolutionary Guards
claimed to have tested new weapons with "special capabilities" that
included missiles launched from naval ships in the Persian Gulf, along
with torpedoes and surface-to-surface missiles. A brief video clip
showed two missiles being fired simultaneously in the darkness,
followed by red plumes of fire and smoke.
On Wednesday, Iran said it tested a new version of the Shihab-3
missile, which officials have said has a range of 2,000 km. and is
armed with a 1-ton conventional warhead. That would put Israel, Turkey,
the Arabian peninsula, Afghanistan and Pakistan all within striking
distance.
In what could be interpreted as an Israeli response to the two-day
Iranian exercise, Israel Aerospace Industries put on display for the
press on Thursday the air force's most-sophisticated airborne
early-warning and control plane, which would likely be used in any
strike against Iranian nuclear installations.
The aircraft's sophisticated radar and intelligence-gathering
technology as well as electronic warfare systems were developed by
IAI's Elta Division and installed aboard a Gulfstream G550 business
jet. The plane arrived in Israel in September 2006 and became operation
this past February. The aircraft will also be shown at the Farnborough
Air Show in England next week.
Source: Jerusalem Post
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