28.9.09

There Are Only Two Choices Left on Iran

In a WSJ op-ed Eliot Cohen, who teaches at Johns Hopkins University's School of Advanced International Studies and served as counselor of the State Department from 2007 to 2009, says there are only two choices left on Iran: an Israeli or U.S. military strike now, or a nuclear Tehran soon.

Unless you are a connoisseur of small pictures of bearded, brooding fanatical clerics there is not much reason to collect Iranian currency. But I kept one bill on my desk at the State Department because of its watermark—an atom superimposed on the part of that country that harbors the Natanz nuclear site. Only the terminally innocent should have been surprised to learn that there is at least one other covert site, whose only purpose could be the production of highly enriched uranium for atom bombs.

Pressure, be it gentle or severe, will not erase that nuclear program. The choices are now what they ever were: an American or an Israeli strike, which would probably cause a substantial war, or living in a world with Iranian nuclear weapons, which may also result in war, perhaps nuclear, over a longer period of time.

Understandably, the U.S. government has hoped for a middle course of sanctions, negotiations and bargaining that would remove the problem without the ugly consequences. This is self-delusion. Yes, British Prime Minister Gordon Brown and French President Nicolas Sarkozy stood side by side with President Barack Obama in Pittsburgh and talked sternly about lines in the sand; and yes, Russian President Dimitry Medvedev hinted that some kind of sanctions might, conceivably, be needed. They said the same things to, and with, President George W. Bush.

Though you would not know it to listen to Sunday talk shows, a large sanctions effort against Iran has been underway for some time. It has not worked to curb Tehran's nuclear appetite, and it will not. Sooner or later the administration, whose main diplomatic initiatives thus far have been a program of apologies and a few sharp kicks to small allies' shins, will have to recognize that fact.

The Iranian regime wants nuclear weapons and has invested vast sums to get both the devices and the means to deliver them. The Russians and Chinese have made soothing murmurs of disapproval but have repeatedly made it clear that they will not go along with measures that would cripple the Iranian economy (and deprive them of markets). German and Swiss businessmen will happily sell Iran whatever goods their not very exacting governments will permit, and our terrified Arab allies have nothing like the military capability to match their own understandable fears. So let's be serious about the choice, because we have less than a year to make it.

An Israeli strike may set back the Iranian program by some short period of time. What the Israelis can do is unclear: They play their tactical cards close to their vest, and they would take different approaches, and accept different risks, than the U.S. Air Force would. No surprise there, given that they believe, with reason, that the looming issues are existential.

But even if they achieved temporary success, it would be just that, because the Iranian program is very different from the Iraqi Osirak reactor that the Israelis nailed so precisely in 1981. It is far more dispersed and protected, and is based on thousands of centrifuges rather than a single nuclear reactor. Moreover, the chances are that it would evoke outrage throughout the Middle East (although Arab governments would privately rejoice at the event), and probably provoke an Iranian reaction that could involve a very large war as the Israelis are attacked by, and retaliate against, Iran's proxies in the Levant and throughout the world.

An American attack would be more effective, but it would take longer and probably lead to real warfare in the Persian Gulf, disrupting oil supplies and producing global responses. More to the point, it is difficult to believe that the Obama administration has the stomach for war. Its appalling public case of nerves over the war in Afghanistan—a "war of necessity," as of only a few months ago—is indicative of its true temper. And if President Obama does not have the courage to accept hazards and ugly surprises, and if he cannot bring himself to deploy his rhetorical skills to the mobilization of opinion at home and abroad, he should not start a shooting war, even if the Iranians are already waging one against us.

That leaves living with an Iranian bomb. But this too has enormous hazards. It will engender—it has already quietly engendered—a nuclear arms race in the region. It will embolden the Iranian regime to make much more lethal mischief than it has even now. In a region that respects strength, it will enhance, not diminish, Iranian prestige. And it may yield the first nuclear attack since 1945 some time down the road.

At the heart of the problem is not simply the nuclear program. It is the Iranian regime, a regime that has, since 1979, relentlessly waged war against the U.S. and its allies. From Buenos Aires to Herat, from Beirut to Cairo, from Baghdad to, now, Caracas, Iranian agents have done their best to disrupt and kill. Iran is militarily weak, but it is masterful at subversive war, and at the kind of high-tech guerrilla, roadside-bomb and rocket fight that Hezbollah conducted in 2006. American military cemeteries contain the bodies of hundreds, maybe thousands, of American servicemen and servicewomen slain by Iranian technology, Iranian tactics, and in some cases, Iranian operatives.

The brutality without is more than matched by the brutality within—the rape, torture and summary execution of civilians by the tens of thousands, down, quite literally, to the present day. This is a corrupt, fanatical, ruthless and unprincipled regime—unpopular, to be sure, but willing to do whatever it takes to stay in power. With such a regime, no real negotiation, based on understandings of mutual interest and respect for undertakings is possible.

It is, therefore, in the American interest to break with past policy and actively seek the overthrow of the Islamic Republic. Not by invasion, which this administration would not contemplate and could not execute, but through every instrument of U.S. power, soft more than hard. And if, as is most likely, President Obama presides over the emergence of a nuclear Iran, he had best prepare for storms that will make the squawks of protest against his health-care plans look like the merest showers on a sunny day.


Beware of Iranians Bearing Talks

Ahead of the worldly awaited talks on Oct 1 between Iran and P5+1 representatives, Ray Takeyh draws the US administration's attention to the fact that the main challenge it would face is not a a "belligerent Iran, but a disingenuous one".

The Western world knows Mahmoud Ahmadinejad the rabble-rouser, the Holocaust denier and the election-rigger. The Iranian president did nothing to dispel this image during his United Nations speech last week, with his anti-Semitic allusions and rambling indictment of capitalism. However, as the United States and other leading powers prepare to sit at the negotiating table with Iran this week, they'll come to know another version of Ahmadinejad -- a leader propelled by weakness at home, who will say he is willing to talk but may offer only tantalizing, unconvincing proposals.

For the Obama administration, which has made engaging with adversarial states a principle of its foreign policy, one of the biggest challenges will not be a belligerent Iran, but a disingenuous one.

On Oct. 1, American diplomats will finally meet their Iranian counterparts. The Americans insist that they will focus on Iran's nuclear transgressions, while Iran claims that the basis of the dialogue is its own belated proposal, issued Sept. 9, containing platitudes on global justice and the abolition of nuclear weapons. The urgency of dealing with Iran's nuclear program has only intensified with the recent revelation that Tehran was constructing yet another clandestine facility. Even so, Washington's dilemma remains the same: how to maintain a united international front while avoiding being trapped in inconclusive talks.

Ahmadinejad is savvy enough to recognize that his fraudulent election has eroded not just the Islamic republic's legitimacy but his own standing in Iran and in the larger Muslim community. Since the June 12 vote, his public speeches have diverged subtly from those of his nation's theocratic leadership. While supreme leader Ali Khamenei and other members of the conservative elite obsess over a "velvet revolution" and Western plots against the republic, Ahmadinejad often emphasizes his so-called electoral triumph and the significance of the election in Iran's allegedly unfolding democracy.

"The vigilant, free and strong presence of the people in the scene of the election was so glorious and meaningful that it surprised everyone and displayed a new record of republicanism," declared Ahmadinejad in his inaugural address in August. Of course, the president has indulged in his share of conspiracies, and his henchmen have been behind the grotesque show trials in which an array of the regime's loyalists are made to confess to fantastic plots. Yet in his plaintive exhortations, Ahmadinejad seems desperate to convince his audience that his election was genuine and that he is the true representative of the Iranian people.

To reclaim his lost luster, he will be tempted to reach out to the Western powers, searching abroad for the validation that he is so lacking at home. At this week's talks, Iran's representatives are likely to subtly hint of cooperation to come -- but only if the talks continue. However, such gestures do not mean Iran is prepared to offer meaningful concessions and impose any restraints on its nuclear ambitions. Ahmadinejad, who has fused the nuclear program with Iranian nationalism and criticized reformers for being too accommodating to Western demands, will have a tough time compromising on the nuclear front.

Ahmadinejad has presented a quandary for an Obama administration committed to a diplomatic solution on Iran -- a quandary only aggravated by his sham election and the ensuing crackdown on political opponents. During Iran's turbulent summer, I served as an Iran adviser in the State Department, and I saw the challenge of criticizing that country's electoral fraud while preventing the United States from being a pawn in its internal debate.

At that time, many outsiders argued that Obama should respond by calling off any chance of engagement. However, the White House could not afford a moratorium on diplomacy. Having made reduction of the nuclear danger and arms control one of the central pillars of its foreign policy, the administration could not stand by and witness Iran's expanding array of centrifuges.

Now, although the imperative of engagement remains, the challenge for the United States is not just to deny Ahmadinejad a platform for his self-aggrandizement but also to deal with the full sweep of the Iran problem. Given the Islamic republic's bogus election, abuse of its citizens and continued sponsorship of international terrorism, the canvass of any negotiations must go far beyond Iran's nuclear ambitions. Ironically, Tehran has come to Washington's rescue, stipulating in its own proposal that it stands ready to "embark on comprehensive, all-encompassing and constructive negotiations."

How do we do it? A model for negotiating with Iran can be found in the annals of Cold War diplomacy: the Helsinki Accords of 1975. The Soviet Union -- which had amassed as many nuclear weapons as the United States and was even more sensitive to criticisms of its internal order than Iran -- agreed to discuss individual rights and regional affairs in exchange for Western recognition of its sphere of influence in Eastern Europe.

With Iran, the United States should insist on discussing several issues: the nuclear program, of course, but also Iran's sponsorship of terrorism, its interference in the affairs of its neighbors and its human rights record. It is hard to see how Ahmadinejad could use such talks to relegitimize his tainted rule or reclaim the domestic initiative from dissidents challenging him.

U.S. insistence on discussing the full array of Iranian malfeasances has the extra advantage of determining whether Tehran's proposal for comprehensive dialogue is real. If Iran is truly interested in escaping its pariah status, then it will swallow the bitter pill of such discussions. Conversely, if Ahmadinejad sees the negotiations only as a means of rejuvenating his image at home, he will probably reject such an agenda.

The notion that we cannot marry strategic concerns with moral values is belied by America's Cold War experiences. Ahmadinejad should not be afforded the luxury of international forums and dialogue with the great powers without being held accountable for his country's flawed electoral processes and its entanglements in terrorism, as well as its nuclear violations. Why should the Islamic republic expect better treatment than the Soviet Union got at the apex of its power?

Ray Takeyh, who until last month served as a senior adviser to the Obama administration on Iran, is a senior fellow at the Council on Foreign Relations and the author of "Guardians of the Revolution: Iran and the World in the Age of the Ayatollahs."


The Iran Attack Plan

By Anthony H. Cordesman

When the Israeli army's then-Deputy Chief of Staff Dan Halutz was asked in 2004 how far Israel would go to stop Iran's nuclear program, he replied: "2,000 kilometers," roughly the distance been the two countries.

Israel's political and military leaders have long made it clear that they are considering taking decisive military action if Iran continues to develop its nuclear program. Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu warned at the United Nations this week that "the most urgent challenge facing this body is to prevent the tyrants of Tehran from acquiring nuclear weapons."

Reporting by the International Atomic Energy Agency and other sources has made it clear that whether or not Iran ties all of its efforts into a formal nuclear weapons program, it has acquired all of the elements necessary to make and deliver such weapons. Just Friday, Iran confirmed that it has been developing a second uranium-enrichment facility on a military base near Qom, doing little to dispel the long-standing concerns of Britain, China, France, Germany, Russia, and the U.S. that Iran is developing nuclear weapons.


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Iran has acquired North Korean and other nuclear weapons design data through sources like the sales network once led by the former head of Pakistan's nuclear program, A. Q. Khan. Iran has all of the technology and production and manufacturing capabilities needed for fission weapons. It has acquired the technology to make the explosives needed for a gun or implosion device, the triggering components, and the neutron initiator and reflectors. It has experimented with machine uranium and plutonium processing. It has put massive resources into a medium-range missile program that has the range payload to carry nuclear weapons and that makes no sense with conventional warheads. It has also worked on nuclear weapons designs for missile warheads. These capabilities are dispersed in many facilities in many cities and remote areas, and often into many buildings in each facility—each of which would have to be a target in an Israeli military strike.

It is far from certain that such action would be met with success. An Israeli strike on Iran would be far more challenging than the Israeli strike that destroyed Iraq's Osirak reactor in 1981. An effective Israeli nuclear strike may not be possible, yet a regional nuclear arms race is a game that Iran can start, but cannot possibly win. Anyone who meets regularly with senior Israeli officials, officers and experts knows that Israel is considering military options, but considering them carefully and with an understanding that they pose serious problems and risks.

One of the fundamental problems dogging Israel, especially concerning short-ranged fighters and fighter-bombers, is distance. Iran's potential targets are between 950 and 1,400 miles from Israel, the far margin of the ranges Israeli fighters can reach, even with aerial refueling. Israel would be hard-pressed to destroy all of Iran's best-known targets. What's more, Iran has had years in which to build up covert facilities, disperse elements of its nuclear and missile programs, and develop options for recovering from such an attack.


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A sign reading “Atomic Power Plant” points the way to a nuclear power plant that was built in the Persian Gulf city of Bushehr, with Russian help.

At best, such action would delay Iran's nuclear buildup. It is more likely to provoke the country into accelerating its plans. Either way, Israel would have to contend with the fact that it has consistently had a "red light" from both the Bush and Obama administrations opposing such strikes. Any strike that overflew Arab territory or attacked a fellow Islamic state would stir the ire of neighboring Arab states, as well as Russia, China and several European states.

This might not stop Israel. Hardly a week goes by without another warning from senior Israeli officials that a military strike is possible, and that Israel cannot tolerate a nuclear-armed Iran, even though no nation has indicated it would support such action. President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad continues to threaten Israel and to deny its right to exist. At the same time, President Barack Obama is clearly committed to pursuing diplomatic options, his new initiatives and a U.N. resolution on nuclear arms control and counterproliferation, and working with our European allies, China and Russia to impose sanctions as a substitute for the use of force.


Mr. Ahmadinejad keeps denying that Iran is seeking nuclear weapons, and tries to defend Iran from both support for sanctions and any form of attack by saying that Iran will negotiate over its peaceful use of nuclear power. He offered some form of dialogue with the U.S. during his visit to the U.N. this week. While French President Nicolas Sarkozy denounced Iran's continued lack of response to the Security Council this week, and said its statements would "wipe a U.N. member state off the map," no nation has yet indicated it would support Israeli military action.

Most analyses of a possible Israeli attack focus on only three of Iran's most visible facilities: its centrifuge facilities at Natanz, its light water nuclear power reactor near Bushehr, and a heavy water reactor at Arak it could use to produce plutonium. They are all some 950 to 1,000 miles from Israel. Each of these three targets differs sharply in terms of the near-term risk it poses to Israel and its vulnerability.

The Arak facility is partially sheltered, but it does not yet have a reactor vessel and evidently will not have one until 2011. Arak will not pose a tangible threat for at least several years. The key problem Israel would face is that it would virtually have to strike it as part of any strike on the other targets, because it cannot risk waiting and being unable to carry out another set of strikes for political reasons. It also could then face an Iran with much better air defenses, much better long-range missile forces, and at least some uranium weapons.

Bushehr is a nuclear power reactor along Iran's southwestern coast in the Gulf. It is not yet operational, although it may be fueled late this year. It would take some time before it could be used to produce plutonium, and any Iranian effort to use its fuel rods for such a purpose would be easy to detect and lead Iran into an immediate political confrontation with the United Nations and other states. Bushehr also is being built and fueled by Russia—which so far has been anything but supportive of an Israeli strike and which might react to any attack by making major new arms shipments to Iran.

The centrifuge facility at Natanz is a different story. It is underground and deeply sheltered, and is defended by modern short-range Russian TOR-M surface-to-air missiles. It also, however, is the most important target Israel can fully characterize. Both Israeli and outside experts estimate that it will produce enough low enriched uranium for Iran to be able to be used in building two fission nuclear weapons by some point in 2010—although such material would have to be enriched far more to provide weapons-grade U-235.

Israel has fighters, refueling tankers and precision-guided air-to-ground weapons to strike at all of these targets—even if it flies the long-distance routes needed to avoid the most critical air defenses in neighboring Arab states. It is also far from clear that any Arab air force would risk engaging Israeli fighters. Syria, after all, did not attempt to engage Israeli fighters when they attacked the reactor being built in Syria.

In August 2003, the Israeli Air Force demonstrated the strategic capability to strike far-off targets such as Iran by flying three F-15 jets to Poland, 1,600 nautical miles away. Israel can launch and refuel two to three full squadrons of combat aircraft for a single set of strikes against Iran, and provide suitable refueling. Israel could also provide fighter escorts and has considerable electronic-warfare capability to suppress Iran's aging air defenses. It might take losses to Iran's fighters and surface-to-air missiles, but such losses would probably be limited.

Israel would, however, still face two critical problems. The first would be whether it can destroy a hardened underground facility like Natanz. The second is that a truly successful strike might have to hit far more targets over a much larger area than the three best-known sites. Iran has had years to build up covert and dispersed facilities, and is known to have dozens of other facilities associated with some aspect of its nuclear programs. Moreover, Israel would have to successfully strike at dozens of additional targets to do substantial damage to another key Iranian threat: its long-range missiles.

Experts sharply disagree as to whether the Israeli air force could do more than limited damage to the key Iranian facility at Natanz. Some feel it is too deeply underground and too hardened for Israel to have much impact. Others believe that it is more vulnerable than conventional wisdom has it, and Israel could use weapons like the GBU-28 earth-penetrating bombs it has received from the U.S. or its own penetrators, which may include a nuclear-armed variant, to permanently collapse the underground chambers.

No one knows what specialized weapons Israel may have developed on its own, but Israeli intelligence has probably given Israel good access to U.S., European, and Russian designs for more advanced weapons than the GBU-28. Therefore, the odds are that Israel can have a serious impact on Iran's three most visible nuclear targets and possibly delay Iran's efforts for several years.

The story is very different, however, when it comes to destroying the full range of Iranian capabilities. There are no meaningful unclassified estimates of Iran's total mix of nuclear facilities, but known unclassified research, reactor, and centrifuge facilities number in the dozens. It became clear just this week that Iran managed to conceal the fact it was building a second underground facility for uranium enrichment near Qom, 100 miles southwest of Tehran, and that was designed to hold 3,000 centrifuges. Iran is developing at least four variants of its centrifuges, and the more recent designs have far more capacity than most of the ones installed at Natanz.

This makes it easier to conceal chains of centrifuges in a number of small, dispersed facilities and move material from one facility to another. Iran's known centrifuge production facilities are scattered over large areas of Iran, and at least some are in Mashad in the far northeast of the country—far harder to reach than Arak, Bushehr and Natanz.

Many of Iran's known facilities present the added problem that they are located among civilian facilities and peaceful nuclear-research activities—although Israel's precision-strike capabilities may well be good enough to allow it to limit damage to nearby civilian facilities.

It is not clear that Israel can win this kind of "shell game." It is doubtful that even the U.S. knows all the potential targets, and even more doubtful that any outside power can know what each detected Iranian facility currently does—and the extent to which each can hold dispersed centrifuge facilities that Iran could use instead of Natanz to produce weapons-grade uranium. As for the other elements of Iran's nuclear programs, it has scattered throughout the country the technical and industrial facilities it could use to make the rest of fission nuclear weapons. The facilities can now be in too many places for an Israeli strike to destroy Iran's capabilities.

Israel also faces limits on its military capabilities. Strong as Israeli forces are, they lack the scale, range and other capabilities to carry out the kind of massive strike the U.S. could launch. Israel does not have the density and quality of intelligence assets necessary to reliably assess the damage done to a wide range of small and disperse targets and to detect new Iranian efforts.

Israel has enough strike-attack aircraft and fighters in inventory to carry out a series of restrikes if Iran persisted in rebuilding, but it could not refuel a large-enough force, or provide enough intelligence and electronic warfare capabilities, to keep striking Iran at anything like the necessary scale. Moreover, Israel does not have enough forces to carry out a series of restrikes if Iran persisted in creating and rebuilding new facilities, and Arab states could not repeatedly standby and let Israel penetrate their air space. Israel might also have to deal with a Russia that would be far more willing to sell Iran advanced fighters and surface-to-air missiles if Israel attacked the Russian-built reactor at Bushehr.

These problems are why a number of senior Israeli intelligence experts and military officers feel that Israel should not strike Iran, although few would recommend that Israel avoid using the threat of such strikes to help U.S. and other diplomatic efforts to persuade Iran to halt. For example, retired Brigadier General Shlomo Brom advocates, like a number of other Israeli experts, reliance on deterrence and Israel's steadily improving missile defenses.

Any Israeli attack on an Iranian nuclear target would be a very complex operation in which a relatively large number of attack aircraft and support aircraft would participate. The conclusion is that Israel could attack only a few Iranian targets—not as part of a sustainable operation over time, but as a one-time surprise operation.

The alternatives, however, are not good for Israel, the U.S., Iran's neighbors or Arab neighbors. Of course being attacked is not good for Iran. Israel could still strike, if only to try to buy a few added years of time. Iranian persistence in developing nuclear weapons could push the U.S. into launching its own strike on Iran—although either an Israeli or U.S. strike might be used by Iran's hardliners to justify an all-out nuclear arms race. Further, it is far from clear that friendly Arab Gulf states would allow the U.S. to use bases on their soil for the kind of massive strike and follow-on restrikes that the U.S. would need to suppress Iran's efforts on a lasting basis.

Iran_Isfahan

Isfahan Uranium Conversion Facility is seen behind Imam Ali mosque just outside the city of Isfahan. This picture was taken on April 9, Iran’s recently created National Nuclear Technology Day.

The broader problem for Iran, however, is that Israel will not wait passively as Iran develops a nuclear capability. Like several Arab states, Israel already is developing better missile and air defenses, and more-advanced forms of its Arrow ballistic missile defenses. There are reports that Israel is increasing the range-payload of its nuclear-armed missiles and is developing sea-based nuclear-armed cruise missiles for its submarines.

While Iran is larger than Israel, its population centers are so vulnerable to Israeli thermonuclear weapons that Israel already is a major "existential" threat to Iran. Moreover, provoking its Arab neighbors and Turkey into developing their nuclear capabilities, or the U.S. into offering them a nuclear umbrella targeted on Iran, could create additional threats, as well as make Iran's neighbors even more dependent on the U.S. for their security. Iran's search for nuclear-armed missiles may well unite its neighbors against it as well as create a major new nuclear threat to its survival.

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26.9.09

Obama Issues Ultimatum to Iran After Second Uranium Enrichment Plant Revealed

US President Barack Obama said on Saturday the discovery of a secret nuclear plant in Iran showed a "disturbing pattern" of evasion by Tehran, issuing an ultimatum to it on nukes.

"My offer of a serious, meaningful dialogue to resolve this issue remains open," Obama said. "But Iran must now cooperate fully with the International Atomic Energy Agency and take action to demonstrate its peaceful intentions."

Iran acknowledged the existence of the uranium enrichment facility near Qom for the first time on Monday in a letter to the International Atomic Energy Agency. U.S. officials said the disclosure was aimed at preempting an announcement by Western governments, which were aware of the site.

"This is a serious challenge to the global nonproliferation regime and continues a disturbing pattern of Iranian evasion," Obama said in his weekly radio and Internet address.

"That is why international negotiations with Iran scheduled for October 1 now take on added urgency," he said of the talks between Iran, the United States and five other powers due to occur next week in Geneva.

Israel considered Iran's disclosure of its second nuclear enrichment facility a proof of the country's seek to acquire nuclear weapons and demanded an "unequivocal" Western response.

"The revelations of this second nuclear enrichment site in Iran prove beyond any doubt that this country wants to equip itself with nuclear weapons," Foreign Minister Avigdor Lieberman told public radio.

Feeling the growing international pressure on its government and the strengthened resolve to
deny it nuclear military status, Iran must have thought of the disclosure as a preemptive step to hit two birds with one stone. On one hand it gives Tehran more leverage in the Oct meetings and on the other it render the effects of any attack on its facilities indecisively minor.

The head of Tehran's nuclear programme, Ali Akbar Salehi, said the second plant had been built to ensure Iran could continue to refine uranium even in the event of foreign air raids on its other sites.

24.9.09

It is the curvy mannequins turn in Iran!!

(AP) TEHRAN, Iran —

Iranian police warned shop owners Wednesday against displaying female mannequins wearing underwear or showing off their curves as part of a government campaign against Western influence.
In a letter published in the state-owned IRAN daily, the authorities also stated that men should not sell women's underwear, and advised shopkeepers against showing models with neckties and bow-ties, which are considered Western and un-Islamic.
Iranian officials have issued similar warnings in the past, but have ramped up their campaign against Western influence since President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad came to power in 2005.
Wednesday's warning also reiterated the government's ban on displaying immoral pictures. The letter did not provide specifics, but such statements usually refer to photos of Western celebrities, music bands or words in English.
The police urged the union of dress shop owners to confront stores that violate the ban in the aim of "safeguarding religious values and the Islamic revolution."
Many, however, fear that the ban on Western clothes could be used by hard-liners in the government to crack down on supporters of the country's more liberal, pro-reform opposition which has challenged Ahmadinejad's re-election victory in June as fraudulent.
The opposition and its supporters led street protests against the election results, presenting the cleric-led regime with its biggest challenge since the 1979 Islamic Revolution.
After the 1979 revolution that brought Iran's clerics to power, women were required to cover their hair and urged to wear a bulky garment known as a chador, a traditional head to toe robe.

22.9.09

Iran Flexes Muscles Ahead of Int. Negotiations



The Islamic Republic of Iran displayed its first homemade ballistic missile in a military parade, staged as show of strength, on Tuesday, local Fars news agency reported.
According to he report, the ballistic missile of Sejil with the far-reaching rage of 2,000 km. was publicized near the holy shrine of late Imam Khomeini, near Tehran, in the parades of Iran's military forces. The show at the beginning of the country's Week of Holy Defense marks Iranian sacrifices during the eight years of Iraqi war on Iran in the 1980s. However, coming days before the start of the P5+1 negotiations on Oct. 1st, it emphasizes the already evident gulf between the two parties.
U.S. and Iran Heading Into Talks Worlds Apart the Washington Post reports.
In another show of defiance, Head of the Atomic Energy Organization of Iran (AEOI) Ali Akbar Salehi announced that Iranian experts are building a new generation of centrifuges.
He explained that the centrifuge machines currently used in Iran's nuclear installations has a separation power of 2.1, while the new generation of Iran-made centrifuges enjoys a separation power of 5.
In the meantime, while the United States and Israel have consistently refused to rule out the possibility of military strikes against Iran over its refusal to halt its nuclear program, Iran's president Mahmoud Ahmadinejad warned that his country retaliate against any possible military strike.

Q+A-Could Israel strike Iran over nuclear concerns?

Mon Sep 21, 2009 6:27am EDT
Sept 21 (Reuters) -

Israel has not given up the option of a military response to Tehran's nuclear programme, Israel's deputy foreign minister said on Monday, after Russia had said Israel's president gave an assurance Israel would not attack [nLL693597].

Many analysts believe the risks of a strike by Israel, even one not endorsed by its ally the United States, are significant.

Here's where matters stand:



COULD ISRAEL LAUNCH A STRIKE AGAINST IRAN?

It's a poker game with high stakes and a degree of bluff. Israeli leaders refuse to rule out any option [ID:nLD462373]. They do not believe Iran's assurances it wants only nuclear energy. Noting President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad's repeated assertions that Israel has no future [ID:nLI166069], Israel has said an Iranian bomb would be a threat to its very existence that it simply would not tolerate.

Last year, however, it emerged officials were making plans for how Israel might live with a nuclear Iran in a state of mutual deterrence. And a June poll [ID:nLE668763] showed Israelis would not expect a nuclear Iran to attack. Last week, Defence Minister Ehud Barak said even a nuclear Iran could not destroy Israel, stating: "Israel can lay waste to Iran." [ID:nLH395080]

Since becoming prime minister in March, Benjamin Netanyahu has, aides say, made ending threats from Iran a defining element of what he sees as his personal role in Jewish history. A 1981 Israeli air strike that destroyed Iraq's only nuclear reactor, as well as a strike in Syria in 2007 that is cloaked in mystery, set precedents. Despite a policy of silence, few doubt Israel has nuclear weapons and missiles that can hit Iran.



WHAT MIGHT HOLD ISRAEL BACK?

It is not clear how Israel would define achieving its goal of preventing Iran from acquiring nuclear weapons. But a pledge from Iran to forswear such arms, backed by some form of supervision and intelligence data, might be a minimum. Much will depend on Iran's actions and on U.S. President Barack Obama and others, who are pressing Iran through sanctions and diplomacy.

While many analysts doubt Iran's denials of military intent, some say Iran may be content with showing it has the potential to go nuclear quickly, without actually arming itself. Israel, however, might not accept that level of potential threat.

In the meantime, were Israel to consider a unilateral strike on it Iran it would have to weigh several major risks:

-- of retaliation, not just from Iran but its allied guerrilla groups, Lebanon's Hezbollah and the Palestinian Hamas

-- of economic and diplomatic backlash from U.S. and allies

-- of a failed attack still triggering the above reactions



WHAT ARE THE KEY ELEMENTS IN TIMETABLE?

First, Iran's technology: Israel's national security adviser said in July it had passed a "red line" in terms of being able to make its own nuclear explosive but could not make significant amounts nor yet put viable nuclear warheads on its missiles.

Mossad chief Meir Dagan, seen as a key figure in Israel's Iran policy who has just had his mandate unusually extended to 2010, said in June Iran could have a viable warhead in 2014.

Second, diplomacy: Iran is to meet on Oct. 1 with six major powers concerned about its nuclear plans. In May, Obama told Netanyahu that "by the end of the year" he expected to judge whether diplomacy was succeeding. Last week, a former senior official said that if the West did not agree crippling sanctions by the end of the year, Israel would have to strike [ID:nLG58054].

Russia, a veto-holding member of the Security Council and potential arms supplier to Iran, has a major role [ID:nLK555856].



WOULD ISRAEL GO IT ALONE, WITHOUT U.S. BACKING?

Obama, at odds with Netanyahu over Jewish settlement in the West Bank and peace moves with the Palestinians [ID:nLK558138], said in July he had "absolutely not" given Israel a green light to attack. He was responding to his vice-president saying that Israel had a right to act if it felt "existentially threatened". Israel would be reluctant to anger its key ally. It would not wish Washington to be surprised, might even want U.S. help. But many analysts believe Israel might yet go it alone [nL3237769].

Some question whether Israel's U.S.-armed military has the range and firepower to destroy Iran's nuclear facilities without U.S. help. Analysts say Israel might be content with slowing any nuclear arms programme, hoping for political change to end it.

Talk of an Israeli unilateral strike may also be part of a tactic of deterrence, or a bid to ensure U.S. cooperation.



HOW MIGHT ISRAEL ATTACK IRAN?

Overt or covert? Israel has been developing "cyber-war" capabilities that could disrupt Iranian industrial and military control systems. Few doubt that covert action, by Mossad agents on the ground, also features in tactics against Iran [ID:nLV83872]. An advantage of sabotage over an air strike may be deniability.

Militarily Israel can also deploy the following forces:

AIR -- 500 combat aircraft, including F-15s and F-16s able to bomb Iran's west, and further with aerial refuelling, a technique for which the air force has been training. Planes can overfly hostile Arab states using stealth technology. Armed with "bunker buster" bombs that can be released with accuracy outside Iran's airspace. Israel is also assumed to have dozens of Jericho missiles designed to carry conventional or nuclear warheads to the Gulf. An Israeli nuclear strike is unlikely.

LAND -- Special forces could be deployed on the ground, to spot targets, and also possibly destroy them with sabotage.

SEA -- Israel sailed one of its three German-made Dolphin submarines into the Red Sea through Suez in June, opening a way to the Gulf. The submarines are believed to be capable of firing nuclear and conventional cruise missiles.

MISSILE DEFENCE - Israel is upgrading its Arrow missile interceptor, which is underwritten by Washington, and can also expect to avail itself of American Aegis anti-missile ships deployed in the Mediterranean. X-band, a U.S. strategic radar stationed in Israel, further cements the alliance [ID:nLH667845]. (Writing by Alastair Macdonald) (For blogs and links on Israeli politics and other Israeli and Palestinian news, go to blogs.reuters.com/axismundi)

18.9.09

No to Gaza No to Lebanon, I die for Iran

From 17 Sept 2009 protest in Tehran. Men and women are chanting "No to Gaza No to Lebanon, I die for Iran"



And in Shiraz as well



And In Isfahan

U.S. Missile Shield Move Came Amid New Reports About Iran's Nuclear Program

From ABC News:

By JAKE TAPPER and HUMA KHAN
Sept. 18, 2009—

President Barack Obama's domestic agenda has met with hurdles on Capitol Hill, but his plans to shift the missile-defense system in Europe are also meeting with increasing apprehension, as reports emerged that Iran has the capability to make a nuclear bomb.
Hours after the president announced a dramatically different focus for missile defense, one of his top allies, Sen. Claire McCaskill, D-Mo., expressed concern about what she called an "abrupt decision" and noted that in July, the Senate unanimously stated that the U.S. missile defense system in Europe should be capable of protecting the United States as well as Europe.
The president's announcement came at the same time The Associated Press reported that a study drafted by the International Atomic Energy Agency concluded that Tehran has sufficient information to develop a bomb and is likely to overcome problems it's facing in creating a delivery system. Officials at the world's top nuclear watchdog believe, according to the AP, that Iran is on its way to developing a missile system able to carry an atomic warhead.
The agency said in a statement that it has no concrete proof of a nuclear weapons program in Iran, and that "continuing allegations that the IAEA was withholding information on Iran are politically motivated and totally baseless."
But the report is in line with what Obama and Defense Secretary Robert Gates say the United States knows about Iran's nuclear capabilities.
"Iran is developing nuclear capacity at a fairly rapid clip; they have been doing so for quite some time," the president said in June at a joint news conference with German Chancellor Angela Merkel.
"Iran's possession of nuclear weapons would trigger an arms race in the Middle East that would be bad not just for U.S. security, it would be bad for the security of the entire region, including, by the way, Iranian security."
Obama said Thursday one of the reasons for the change in the Eastern European missile-defense program is new intelligence about Iran's missile programs, which shows that the country is more capable of short- and medium-range missiles that are capable of reaching Europe than long-range missiles.
"This new ballistic missile defense program will best address the threat posed by Iran's ongoing ballistic missile defense program," Obama told reporters in a hastily arranged news conference, as the news of the shift took many by surprise.
Iranian leadership says it is only working on an enriched uranium program for peaceful reasons, but has failed to divulge any more details. In an interview with NBC this week, President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad said "we don't need such a weapon," adding that the uranium enrichment program will never be closed down here in Iran."
A Shift in Missile Defense Policy
Thursday's announcement is a dramatic departure from the Bush administration's proposal for permanent land-based interceptors in Poland and a radar system in the Czech Republic. Instead President Obama, acting on what he said was the "unanimous" advice of Defense Secretary Gates and the entire Joint Chiefs of Staff, said the new system will be replaced by more mobile missiles on ships in the sea and around Europe.
The White House says new technology supports such a shift, and it will be more cost-effective and provide more security to U.S. interests and allies.
The second reason for this change is Iran. The Pentagon said the decision was based on intelligence indicating Iran was struggling in its intercontinental missile program, but building many more short- and medium-range missiles.
The changes will slowly be phased in -- with the first phase being implemented by 2011. Gates said Thursday that one king of smaller missiles have already been equipped on 20 Aegis cruisers and destroyers. The land-based missiles won't be dependent on location, and they can be placed anywhere on the continent. The vice chairmain of the Joint Chiefs, Marine Gen. James "Hoss" Cartwright, says they could be placed in Northern/Central Europe, Southern Europe, and in the vicinity of the Black Sea and Caucuses.
"I believe this new approach provides a better missile defense capability for our forces in Europe, for our European allies and, eventually, for our homeland than the program I recommended almost three years ago," Gates told reporters. "It is more adapted to the threat we see developing and takes advantage of new technical capabilities available to us today. As long as the Iranian threat persists, we will pursue proven and cost-effective missile defenses."
The administration insists this is a better way to protect their allies, but critics are skeptical.
Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz., the leading Republican on the Senate Armed Services Committee, said lawmakers were not properly informed of the change and that it will hurt U.S. allies in the region.
"How many times have the intelligence estimates been wrong? As many times as they have been right," the former presidential candidate said on the Senate floor Thursday. "This is not the way to do business. I think it sends the wrong signal, to the Russians, and our friends and allies."
Others called the decision ill-advised.
"I think it shows willful determination to continue ignoring the threat posed by some of the most dangerous regimes in the world while taking one of the most important defenses against Iran off the table," House Minority Leader John Boehner, R-Ohio, said Thursday. "The president should reconsider this decision and stand with our allies and do what's right for the safety of the American people."
The issue is likely to stay in the headlines next week as Obama heads to New York to chair a Security Council Summit on non-proliferation. Meanwhile, the State Department has sent a high-level delegation to Europe to brief allies on the change in the missile-defense shield policy.
Russians may be happy about the change -- Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin today praised the decision as correct and brave -- but U.S. delegates will have their work cut out for them when they face their European counterparts.
In some quarters, the Obama administration's move received a harsh response.
"Betrayal! The U.S. sold us to Russia and stabbed us in the back," the Polish tabloid Fakt declared on its front page, according to the AP. An editorial in Czech newspaper Hospodarske Novine said: "An ally we rely on has betrayed us, and exchanged us for its own, better relations with Russia, of which we are rightly afraid."
The AP also reported that Polish President Lech Kaczynski expressed concern that the new strategy leaves Poland in a dangerous "gray zone" between Western Europe and the old Soviet sphere.

15.9.09

Russia U-Turns on Iran

Russia's president has left open the possibility that world powers could impose additional sanctions on Iran for its controversial nuclear program. Speaking in Moscow, Dmitri Medvedev said that while sanctions are not very effective, they are necessary in some situations.
London Times concluded that Medvedev is hinting at being prepared to perform a major policy U-turn and support US moves for sanctions against Iran.
His remarks contradicted his own Foreign Minister, Sergei Lavrov, who only last week ruled out sanctions.
While this comes as a huge relief to Western diplomats, especially Americans, who had largely given up on Russia supporting them, it highlights the increasingly complex relation between Mosccow and Washington.
The 2009 National Intelligence Agency Strategy (NIS), a US report which lays out the priorities for the US intelligence community for the next four years, listed Russia along with the emerging superpower China, Iran and North Korea as the four main nations challenging American interests.

"Russia is a US partner in important initiatives such as securing fissile material and combating nuclear terrorism, but it may continue to seek avenues for reasserting power and influence in ways that complicate US interests," said the report.


During the same meeting that witnessed Mevedev's hint at a possible policy U-turn on Iran, Russian president President, due to visit the United States shortly, slammed Washington for holding back Russia's long-running bid to join the World Trade Organisation (WTO).
If it weren't for the highly cautious US policy on Russia's WTO accession, and bluntly speaking, if it weren't for the blocking by the United States, we would have been there long ago," Medvedev said.

14.9.09

P5+1 powers expected at Iran talks

The EU says the P5+1 satets, U.S., Britain, France, Russia, China and Germany are expected to meet with Iran's nuclear negotiator on Oct. 1.
Spokeswoman Cristina Gallach says EU foreign policy chief Javier Solana will meet with Iranian nuclear negotiator Saeed Jalili. It's not yet clear where.
The announcement of the upcoming meeting came after the United States and its partner nations accepted a proposal made last week by Iran for broader talks.
The Guardia described the meeting as last-ditch attempt to reach an understanding with Iran over its nuclear programme. It wrote:

The meeting will be the first substantial one between Barack Obama's administration and the Iranian government since Obama offered talks without preconditions on coming to office in January. It is likely to represent a final attempt to salvage gains from the US policy of engagement with Tehran before Washington shifts its focus to new sanctions, most probably targeting Iran's oil and gas industry.


However analysts doubt that the talks will be able to bridge the gap in the row about Tehran's nuclear work. Here is Paul Reynold's take on the upcoming meetings:


There is a risk that these talks with Iran might simply confirm differences over Iran's nuclear programme not narrow them. It is not even clear whether Iran's nuclear programme will even be discussed.
The US had said it would raise the issue in any discussions but Iran has said the question is closed. Iran wants the talks to concentrate on a letter it sent the countries negotiating with it - the US, Russia, China, Britain, France and Germany - in which it offered talks on global issues. Obviously these countries have felt they must respond.
This is in line with President Obama's offer of an "extended hand" to Iran. The fear among Western diplomats, though, is that Iran is playing for time and trying to put off the possibility of further economic sanctions. The only potentially hopeful sign is that Iran is sending its chief nuclear negotiator.


Playing for time has alway been an Iranian objective. It is no coincidence that one major issue on which Iran markedly differs from the US is the time table of the negotiations. Time's Tony Koran sums up the conditions of succeful process between the two rivals:

Ultimately the fate of diplomacy rests on three factors:

Iran's willingness to compromise; the West's willingness to compromise; and, perhaps most important, the timeframe allowed for negotiations. President Obama is under considerable pressure to show that engagement with Iran produces results — but there may not be any by this fall, the unofficial deadline set by the Obama Administration. If that prompts Obama to seek further sanctions via the U.N. or impose them unilaterally, however, the resultant divide between the West and Russia and China will work to Iran's advantage. New sanctions would also end immediate prospects for a diplomatic solution, because Iran has long declared that it won't negotiate in response to ultimatums. And a continuing stalemate would leave Obama facing either the possibility of an Israeli air strike on Iran's nuclear facilities, or being forced into escalating U.S. pressure until Tehran cries uncle. Both options could greatly destabilize the Middle East.


What would be an appealing Westearn compromise? "Diplomacy centered primarily on Iran's nuclear program is unlikely to work" observes Rubin Right.

The regime as well as many protesters view pressure to end uranium enrichment -- a process to provide fuel for peaceful nuclear energy that can be subverted to develop a nuclear weapon -- as a challenge to Iran's sovereignty and a denial of its economic development. Under the current circumstances, the regime is more likely to engage in a process -- largely to get the world off its back -- that would not produce enduring substance or real resolution.

And if that diplomatic tactic doesn't work, simply slapping on more international sanctions (given stonewalling by Russia and China on anything tough) also seems unlikely to alone squeeze Iran into cooperation.

Yet a military strike is also likely to backfire, instead rallying Persian nationalism around the regime, just as Saddam Hussein's 1980 invasion mobilized support for the revolution at a time it was running out of steam.

The Obama administration would be well-advised to step back and recalculate what conditions would lead Iran to feel that the benefits of beginning the transition to a normal state outweigh the costs of sticking to the revolutionary zealotry increasingly rejected by its own people.

Here is a TIMELINE on Iran's nuclear programme

11.9.09

Obama Urged on Iran Sanctions Amid Friction with Russia

Washington Post's editorial urges US President Barak Obama's administration to deliver on the tough sanctions it has been promising.

President Obama's offer of direct diplomacy evidently has produced no change in the stance taken by Iran during the George W. Bush administration, when Tehran proposed discussing everything from stability in the Balkans to the development of Latin America with the United States and its allies -- but refused to consider even a temporary shutdown of its centrifuges.
(...) There's no reason to publicly rule out talks. But the administration has said all along that it would seek tough sanctions against Iran unless it responded meaningfully to an offer of dialogue. The time has come for it to show whether it can deliver on that promise.
In the mean time the State Department rejected Iran's latest proposal for international talks, saying it is "not really responsive to our greatest concern, which is obviously Iran's nuclear program".
While this deadlock should pave the way for "crippling sanctions", Russia has broken ranks sharply with Washington, warning that it will not support the US call for tougher sanctions on the Islamic Republic. Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov disagreed with the U.S. assessment, contending there was “something there to use” in the proposal Tehran sent to the U.S., Russia, China, France, Britain and Germany.

Accordingly sanctions now look increasingly unlikely, reports Reuters:

World powers meeting at the U.N. General Assembly and the G-20 gathering later this month are unlikely to push immediately for tougher sanctions on Iran, an official familiar with preparations for the meetings said on Thursday.

9.9.09

In restive Med, U.S. ship eyes risk of missile war

By Dan Williams, Aboard USS Higgins, Mediterranean Sea (Reuters) - He is trained to hunt submarines or pirates, launch Tomahawk cruise missiles at coastal targets and shoot down attacking planes. He can also enforce naval blockades and rescue vessels in distress.

Yet, on his first Mediterranean tour, Cmdr Carl Meuser may have another mission in mind, the kind the U.S. Navy has long performed off North Korea and Japan -- strategic air defence.


Iran has girded its disputed nuclear project with long-range missiles. Israel and Washington's Arab allies are nervous. The Obama administration wants talks with Tehran, but is quietly shoring up the diplomacy with means for military containment.

So Meuser cites no specific Middle Eastern adversaries when showing a Reuters crew his destroyer, USS Higgins, one of 18 American ships deployed globally with Aegis interceptor systems capable of blowing up ballistic missiles above the atmosphere.

"Regardless of the threat, regardless of the territory that we are trying to defend, based on our national interest, we can cover a large area," he said.

According to a regional map issued last month by the U.S. Missile Defence Agency, a Mediterranean-based Aegis could cover southern Turkey, Lebanon, Israel, the Palestinian territories and north Egypt in the event of a missile war. Another ship, deployed in the Gulf, would similarly protect local Arab states.

"Being ship-based, it also gives us more flexibility and gives our leadership more flexibility in that we can go places a lot more simply and folks at the embassies don't have to spend as much time getting clearance," Meuser said.

"We just kind of show up 19 km off the coast and we're in international waters."

CLOSE ASSET

For Israel, where Higgins docked this week, Aegis is an especially close asset. Israel already hosts a U.S. strategic radar, X-band, and its Arrow II missile interceptor, which is partly underwritten by Washington, is inter-operable with Aegis.

Arrow designer Uzi Rubin said Aegis could be brought into line with Israel's air defences "at the flick of a switch".

"I think it is very important that the United States make Aegis ships available should there be an attack by Iran, with their firepower joining our firepower," he said, echoing fears that Iranian nuclear warheads could one day be used against the Jewish state, although Tehran denies having hostile designs.

But some Israelis have voiced concern at the degree to which their country may grow beholden to American military largesse.

Assumed to have the region's only atomic arsenal, Israel has hinted it might strike Iran preemptively. Any such unilateral action could be circumscribed by the presence of U.S. forces whose ties to Israel would mark them out for Iranian reprisals.

Israel is also reluctant to rely too heavily on Aegis ships, which are unlikely to carry more than two dozen of the costly SM-3 interceptor missiles and could thus, in theory, be stumped by a big salvo from Iran or its ally Syria.

Pointing to Higgins's 90 pre-loaded launch tubes, Meuser said: "Even if you filled them up with the $10 million missiles -- that's a lot of money -- then you're still going to have a limited amount, so you would need to have more ships come in."

PROTRACTED FACE-OFF

Robert Hewson, a combat systems analyst with Jane's Information Group, said such reinforcement would be unfeasible for any protracted face-off between Israel and its arch-foes.

"I don't think the United States can afford to provide the number of ships and assets required to provide 365-day coverage for Israel," he said.

Thrift is one selling point behind the Israeli-U.S. plan to develop an upgraded Arrow III by the middle of next decade, with a projected price of $2.4 million for its interceptor missiles.

Yet the Pentagon has also shown interest in a land-based version of SM-3, which could be offered to Israel either as a stop-gap or an alternative to Arrow, with the added domestic boon of diverting funds to its American manufacturer, Raytheon.

Despite the protectionist instincts on both sides, Rubin said professional considerations would keep Arrow III on track.

"The question is what's easier: to take a foreign-designed missile across the barriers of sovereignty and proprietary rights and somehow integrate it into our system, or to do it in-house? To do it in-house is cheaper and faster," he said.

Raytheon says the "ashore" SM-3, due out in 2013, may also be considered by the Pentagon for Europe, where it could play a role with or without a missile defence deployment that former U.S. President George W. Bush had proposed in Poland and the Czech Republic and which has been fiercely opposed by Russia.

"As Navy guys, we are going to have plenty of work to keep us busy. So if the Army comes up with a better answer for how to do this (missile defence), then that's fine. I can tell you that Aegis is not the answer to everybody's problems," Meuser said.

"But right now we do have a good capability. We are mobile, and we are on-scene ... so at least we can influence events."

3.9.09

Man Indicted in Plot to Ship Jet Parts to Iran


By Spencer S. Hsu

Washington Post Staff Writer
Thursday, September 3, 2009

A Belgian arms dealer who allegedly tried to smuggle fighter-jet engines and parts from the United States to Iran has been indicted, U.S. officials announced Wednesday, days after he was arrested in New York City after stepping off a flight from France.

Jacques Monsieur, 56, was charged Aug. 27 by a federal grand jury with six counts of conspiracy, smuggling, money laundering, and violating weapons-trafficking laws and export controls related to a U.S. trade embargo on Iran.

Co-defendant Dara Fotouhi, 54, an Iranian national who lives in France and allegedly works with the government of Iran, is still at large, the Justice Department said in a statement.

At a brief hearing Wednesday, U.S. Magistrate Judge Katherine Nelson of the U.S. District Court in Mobile, Ala., unsealed the case and a June search warrant at Monsieur's request, court records show.

John Morton, head of U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE), told reporters in a conference call that Monsieur pleaded not guilty, but wire services said that the arraignment was delayed and that Monsieur had not entered a plea.

Reached by telephone, Arthur J. Madden III, Monsieur's attorney, said, "At this point, any comment would be inappropriate."

The case is the latest U.S. effort to counter what authorities describe as Tehran's pursuit of banned weaponry. It comes as the United States and other countries renew efforts to pressure Iran to scale back its nuclear ambitions.

Authorities say Monsieur, nicknamed "The Field Marshal," according to U.S. officials, in February contacted a person he thought could supply him with engines for F-5 fighter or C-130 cargo transport aircraft. That person turned out to be an undercover ICE agent. Monsieur subsequently met with undercover agents in Paris and London, authorities say.

Monsieur shipped arms to Bosnia and Croatia in the 1990s, which he reportedly later said was done with the approval of the CIA and French intelligence, according to a 2002 report by the Center for Public Integrity. The group stated that Monsieur was a participant in the Iran-contra affair, but his relations with Washington deteriorated after his work with Iran, for which he allegedly tried to procure uranium as well.

Morton declined to comment on the center's findings.

2.9.09

Iran unlikely to back down over IAEA's atom bomb probe

VIENNA (Reuters) - The U.N. nuclear watchdog has raised the stakes in a Western standoff with Iran by lending credence to allegations it studied ways to make atom bombs, but Tehran looks unlikely to give ground.

Before big power talks on Wednesday on whether to sharpen sanctions against Iran, the agency released a summary of its probe into whether Tehran linked projects to process uranium, conduct high-altitude explosive tests relevant to detonating atom bombs, and tried to revamp a missile cone to house a nuclear payload.

No "smoking gun" proof of a bomb agenda emerged in the distillation of the five-year-old International Atomic Energy Agency investigation, reflected in an Aug. 28 IAEA report on Iran's contested uranium enrichment programme.

But in unusually forthright language, the IAEA said the intelligence was too consistent, comprehensive and detailed, coming from multiple sources at different times, for Iran to keep dodging scrutiny with blanket denials.

A senior diplomat close to the inquiry said serious "circumstantial suspicions" arose when myriad threads of information were pieced together, including procurement records and a military role in nuclear component production.

Iran denounced the intelligence, obtained from 10 countries, as forged or irrelevant and cut off dialogue about it with the IAEA a year ago. But it has also admitted to some research cited in the dossier, while denying this had any nuclear applications.

Asked what the summary's message was, a senior U.N. official said "there is a real basis" in the allegations and Iran must stop withholding documentation, access to sites and to nuclear officials for interviews needed to establish the truth.

A U.S. intelligence report in late 2007 assessed that Iran shelved nuclear "weaponization" research in 2003. But European and Israeli officials believe it went on after that, and IAEA sleuthing has lent support to that view, diplomats say.

"For the first time, an official IAEA document is tending to treat the intelligence as genuine. This puts Iran in a tighter spot," said David Albright, head of the Institute for Science and International Security, which tracks nuclear proliferation.


IRAN DISTRACTED BY UNREST

But Iran looks even less likely to open its nuclear books than before because its convoluted Islamic power structure, unsuited to making clear decisions changing strategic direction, is now preoccupied with internal splits over alleged vote fraud.

"It was very unlikely before June and the political turmoil ensuing since then makes it impossible for Iran to take such a sensitive, risky step," said Mark Fitzpatrick, non-proliferation scholar at the International Institute for Strategic Studies.

"The only way Iran would fess up to past weapons development work would be if the outcome of a negotiation gave Iran some benefits and the equivalent of a 'get out of jail free' card removing the prospect of further sanctions for past activity."

U.S. President Barack Obama and allied European powers have given Iran until the end of September to accept negotiations on suspending its nuclear work in exchange for major trade benefits or face sanctions targeting its lifeblood oil sector.

Iranian officials have again ruled out a halt to uranium enrichment or even a freeze at current levels mooted discreetly by Western officials as a face-saving conduit into talks.

But on Tuesday, Iran's top nuclear negotiator was quoted by state media as saying it was ready for talks with world powers that would involve arch-foe Washington for the first time.

Iran says it will enrich uranium only to low levels needed for electricity so it can export more oil. The West suspects a covert quest for nuclear weapons capability, noting Iran lacks nuclear power plants that would use low-enriched uranium.


"ALLEGED MILITARY DIMENSIONS"

The declassified IAEA summary hardened some of the concerns about "alleged military dimensions" to Iran's nuclear programme.

It said Iran had conceded the existence of a letter about a shadowy project called Green Salt -- referring to uranium processing -- and this "demonstrates a direct link between the relevant documentation and Iran".

It also said the IAEA had confirmed a stay in Iran by a foreign explosives expert believed to have helped Iran in attempting multiple, simultaneous detonations at high altitude. Diplomats say the expert was from a former Soviet republic.

The IAEA has repeatedly told Iran that it has failed to adequately address "the substance of the issues, having focused instead on the style and form of presentation of the written documents relevant to the alleged studies and providing limited answers or simple denials...," the agency report said.

Key chunks of the intelligence were smuggled out of Iran on a laptop that was slipped to U.S. agents in Turkey in 2004.

A senior European diplomat accredited to the IAEA said the summary would bolster the West's case for more biting sanctions on Iran if it proved unprepared to negotiate seriously.

But he said Russia and China would probably resist anew by seizing on fresh Iranian gestures to the IAEA including a deal permitting closer monitoring of the Natanz enrichment complex.

Fares: Iran replacing envoys who backed "rioters"


Iran is replacing 40 of its ambassadors, including some who voiced support for "rioters" during the unrest that erupted after June's disputed presidential election, semi-official Fars News Agency reported.

The envoys, who were not specified, were given notification that their diplomatic postings had been terminated.

"Some of these people officially took positions during the recent riots in Iran in support of rioters," Fars said.

"It is supposed that the new ambassadors will be selected from committed experts loyal to the basis of the (1979 Islamic) revolution," it said.