http://news.monstersandcritics.com/middleeast/features/article_1237671.php/I
srael%60s_options_vs.Iran%60s_bomb

 

Israel`s options vs.Iran`s bomb

TEL AVIV, Israel (UPI) -- At a recent conference in Tehran Iranian President
Mahmoud Ahmadinejad predicted Israel`s days are numbered.

The Zionist regime will 'vanish,' he declared. Last year he said Israel
should be 'wiped out.' 

Analysts maintain Iran needs a year or more to produce 25 kilos of enriched
uranium for a first nuclear bomb. That bomb might be ready by the end of the
decade.

Israel has been trying to mobilize the world to block Iran. 'We hope... the
world will pull itself together and act firmly to block the danger in time,'
Prime Minister Ehud Olmert said Thursday. The United Nations` Security
Council has taken 'an important step in the right direction,' he added. 

There is another venue. Former minister Dan Meridor headed a
government-appointed committee that recently recommended a defense policy
for the next decade. It devoted 50 of its 250-page report to an examination
of ways to deal with the nuclear threat. 

Meridor discussed it with the prime minister, the defense minister and the
Mossad intelligence service. Parts of it are so secret that even the
military`s General Staff was not apprised of it. 

Maj. Gen. in the reserves Yaakov Amidror, who dealt with the threat during
his military career, said at a recent discussion in Tel Aviv that Israel has
two options. 'None are good, each one is difficult and each one is
dangerous,' he said. 

One is to stop the Iranians by force. It would be a much more difficult task
than Israel`s attack on the Iraqi nuclear reactor in 1981. The Iranian
facilities are farther away. Israel would need 'very, very accurate
intelligence' to hit the 'network of installations' spread over a wide area.
Some installations are located in underground tunnels, he added.

Attacking Iran is tantamount to signing an open check because the minute
Teheran will have a bomb, it will retaliate, he warned. 

The alternative is to accept the fact Iran will be a nuclear power and focus
on defense.

Israel would need an 'active defense system' including missiles that could
intercept Iranian attacks. It already has the Arrow ballistic missile
interceptor and might want the United States to provide more weapons and
deploy naval systems off its coast. It would have to invest energy and funds
in preparations for subsequent, more advanced Iranian missiles.

'There is no human possibility of building a system that is 100 percent
safe,' Amidror stressed. 

Israel is very small, most of its population is near Tel Aviv, so every
nuclear attack could cause terrible damage. 

Israel would therefore need a deterrent that the Iranians would know that if
they attack, Israel will retaliate so forcefully that, 'There won`t be any
Iranians left to count their dead,' Amidror said. 

However, some experts doubt Israel can deter what they described as the
ideology that Ahmadinejad and other Iranians espouse. 

Deterrence worked during the Cold War because the U.S. and Soviet leaders
were rational, but Shiite-Muslims might be different. Some Iranians,
including Ahmadinejad, believe that the imam who disappeared 1,000 years ago
is about to return. Bloodshed will speed his coming and then the Muslims
will rule the world. 

Should Israel then try to join NATO? 

Meridor`s committee considered the idea. It would limit Israel`s options, he
said. 

'I don`t think that in any military alliance one side (in this case, Israel)
can take action without the other side (its partners) agreeing, or else you
(Israel) will not be protected by the results,' he maintained.

'Israel`s deterrence is. ...built on our capabilities that I think are quite
impressive .... and on the readiness and ability to take an action based on
this capability,' he added. 

The country`s enemies believe the United States is committed to defend it.
'Is a formal alliance such an important addition? ... The enemy should know
that I am the man, or the government, that is going to defend my people even
at this or that cost and I don`t think that an official alliance will add
much to that,' he said. 

Professor Uzi Arad who was responsible for research in the Mossad and later
top adviser to the then Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu, advocated
'maximum deterrence.' 

Israel should threaten to strike 'everything and anything of value,' he
said.

Should Israel threaten to hit their leadership? Yes. Their holiest sites?
Yes. Everything together? Yes, Arad recommended.

However Isaac Ben-Israel, a retired major general who heads Tel Aviv
University`s Security Studies Program doubted deterrence would succeed.

A nuclear bomb that would explode on board a ship at Haifa port would kill
some 5,000 people, he said. 'What rational Israeli leader would drop a bomb
on Teheran knowing that another (Iranian) missile would come?'

Would Prime Minister Ehud Olmert 'Do something in which tens of thousands of
people would be killed in addition (to those 5,000)? .... Deterrence doesn`t
exist for long unless (antagonists) ... can totally destroy each other,' he
added. 

An effective preemptive strike is possible, Ben-Israel continued. Building a
nuclear bomb is a process of many stages, one leading to another. There is
no need to attack all the installations involved. It is enough to hit one of
the links, and if Iran has two nuclear programs underway, then two spots, he
said.

Underground tunnels are not bomb proof. Ben-Israel, who planned the bombing
of the Iraqi reactor, said its core was surrounded by 2X2X2 meters of
reinforced concrete at a depth of 36 meters. It was destroyed a quarter of a
century ago, he noted.



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