Summary of DEBKAfile Exclusives in Week Ending Feb. 26, 2009 | |
Iran stocks enough enriched uranium for one nuclear bomb DEBKAfile Special Report 20 Feb.: The White House expressed concern Friday, Feb. 20 about a new International Atomic Energy Agency report that said Iran recently understated how much uranium it had enriched. The UN’s nuclear watchdog reported Thursday Iran has stocked more than one tonne of low enriched uranium hexafluoride at Natanz alone. If enriched, it could produce more than 20 kilos of fissile material – enough for a bomb. French foreign minister Bernard Kouchner spoke Friday of a new enrichment plant capable of housing thousands of centrifuges the Iranians had built at a secret site, confirming long-held suspicions of sites hidden from the UN inspectors. This week Dr Mohammed ElBaradei, the international nuclear agency’s director said: “Iran right now is not providing any access, any clarification with regard to the whole area of the possible military dimension.” All these developments mean that Iran has reached a “breakout capacity” – a stage that would allow it to produce enough fissile material for a bomb. This crosses a “red line” that for years Israel has said it would not accept. British Muslims suspected of sending Taliban roadside bombs gadgets 21 Feb.: British troops told British foreign secretary David Miliband during visit to Helmand, Afghanistan, that British Muslims were smuggling devices which enable Taliban fighters to detonate roadside bombs by remote control to Afghanistan. They were either sent to sympathizers in the region or carried by volunteers who fly to Pakistan and then make their way across the border. Three Israelis injured in Katyusha rocket attack on Maalot 21 Feb.: One rocket fired from Lebanon early Saturday, Feb. 21, hit a building in the West Galilee town of Arab Christian town of Mailiyeh, a second fell on the Lebanese side of the border. Three civilians hit by shrapnel, two suffered shock. Hizballah has denied responsibility for the attack. Israeli artillery returned the fire emanating, according to Lebanese sources, from al-Qulaila and al-Mansouri, near the Lebanese border town of Naqoura. New pro-Saudi terrorist group suspected of Katyusha attack from Lebanon This ragtag group of Palestinian, Syrian, Lebanese and Iraqi terrorists is headed jointly by Jamail Hamad, a Palestinian Sunni Moslem, and Gandi Suhmurani, a Lebanese Shiite, with funding from Saudi intelligence to buy recruits, weapons, explosives and rockets. Saudi intelligence is investing in the new group to create a militia for challenging Hizballah’s sole grip on South Lebanon and Iran’s inroads on Lebanon. To win recognition and legitimacy, the Jihad Movement for Gaza is trying to seize the war initiative against Israel and show Hizballah up as all talk and no action. Iran’s first nuclear reactor starts “pilot stage” at Bushehr Wednesday Iranian and Western nuclear experts say this stage is a vital step forward to making the Bushehr reactor operational. Barring hitches, it will be ready for full operation by August 2009. It was hoped in Washington and Jerusalem that after 10 years of Russian delays, the reactor would never be finished – at least until the US and Russian presidents Barack Obama and Dmitry Medvedev met for the first time on April 2, at the G-20 summit. Feb. 23 Briefs
Livni blocks unity government on pro-Palestinian pretext, Abbas frees Hamas terrorists Abbas did not consult Israel before freeing the first batch of 21 prisoners or the second batch of 41. Our sources reveal that, under pressure from Washington, prime minister Ehud Olmert and foreign minister Tzipi Livni agreed to their transfer to the West Bank in the face of warnings from the military against reopening the Gaza-West Bank corridor for the movement of terrorists. The Palestinian Fatah and Hamas are on a fast-moving secret track towards a power-sharing accord with Hamas is pinning Abbas down to giving up his security ties with the United States and Israel. Nonetheless, Kadima’s leader Tzipi Lilvni tried to force Binyamin Netanyahu to endorse her two-state approach to negotiations with the Palestinians. The prime minister-designate countered that the Olmert-Livni talks with Abbas over many months got nowhere, while the perils posed by Iran and its advance on Israel’s borders were existential and much more immediate. Netanyahu and Livni agreed to meet again although prospects for a unity government have receded. |
Ahmadinejad in Djibout extends Iranian foothold to E. Africa
24 Feb.: Iranian president Mahmoud Ahmadinejad signed a series of accords with Djibouti president Ismail Omar Guelle Tuesday, Feb. 24, establishing technical and vocational centers in the East African state and supporting development projects. A new protocol opened an Iranian credit line for Djibouti, whose president commended the cooperation between two nations belonging to the “great Islamic Ummah.” DEBKAfile: Tehran continues its expansionist drive beyond the Middle East to the Horn of Africa, including Somalia and Eritrea. Feb. 14 Briefs
Netanyahu weighs Nathan Sharansky for foreign minister Sharansky, a respected world figure whom the Soviet government sentenced to hard labor as a human rights activist and founder of the Jewish Refusenik movement in Moscow, was released in East Germany in 1986 and settled in Israel. He served in various cabinet posts until 2006. Sharanksy has won several bipartisan US honors. A new Israel killer drone can take out S-300 anti-air missile acquired by Iran 25 Feb.: The Israeli air industries first unveiled its new Harop “loiter drone” for taking out ground-to-air missiles before it enters attack mode at the annual Aero-India 2009 air show in Bangalore. DEBKAfile’s military sources report that while Iran has contracted to buy from Russia five S-300 batteries worth $800 m, classified as a game-changer, to defend its nuclear sites against potential aerial attack, India and Turkey are interested in Israel’s Harop killer-drone. Once it penetrates Iranian airspace, the Harop can silence surface-to-air batteries and open the skies to aerial and missile attack. It can travel 1,000 km to patrol an assigned area until a hostile target is exposed. Its 23-kilo warhead then strikes the target before it is activated. The Russian S-300 missile is one such target. The expendable Harop can sustain a mission of several hours over an assigned area. Operated by electro-optical sensors, the drone can detect weapons systems in inert mode, weapons on the move and radar installations switched off to avoid detection. Obama avoids naming presidential envoy for Iran 25 Feb.: Contrary to widespread speculation, veteran diplomat Dennis Ross has been named special adviser to secretary of state Hillary Clinton for counsel on the broad area between Afghanistan and Egypt, according to Washington officials. President Barack Obama has decided not to appoint a special presidential envoy for Iran, a post which Ross had been expected to fill. For now, he will not be involved personally in the Iranian issue. DEBKAfile’s Washington sources report that Obama is signaling that for the time being the direct open talks with Tehran promised in his campaign are not about to take off. Feb. 25 briefs: • Since Israel’s Jan. 18 ceasefire Hamas managed to smuggle into Gaza anti-air missiles, quantities of Grad rockets, C-4 explosives for missiles. Netanyahu’s three candidates for defense 25 Feb.: Sources close to prime minister-designate Binyamin Netanyahu’ reported Wednesday night, Feb. 25, that his three candidates for defense are in descending order the incumbent Ehud Barak, head of the Labor party, or two former chiefs of staff, Shaul Mofaz of Kadima or Moshe Yaalon of Likud. The final choice depends on the coalition accords still in the making with other parties. The sources stressed that those three were the only candidates and ruled out the candidacy of Dan Meridor. Netanyahu’s Likud began formal negotiations for a coalition Wednesday with right-of-center Israeli Beitenu and ultra-religious Shas after he was rebuffed by Kadima’s Tzipi Livni and Labor. Damascus may heat up Syrian-Lebanese-Israel borders over Hariri tribunal UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon has engineered a delay by insisting on tight security measures for the court. But Washington has refused to postpone its hearings which Syrian president Bashar Assad sees as a ticking bomb for his regime. He may therefore retaliate. DEBKAfile’s military sources report that Israel’s armed forces, the four Syrian divisions arrayed along Lebanese and Israeli borders, the Lebanese army, the United Nations peace force and Hizballah are all in a high state of suspense for trouble. On the surface, hectic US diplomatic activity presages a thaw in relations with Damascus. But when it comes down to brass tacks, Barack Obama is not letting the Syrian president off the hook on longstanding bones of contention: Damascus’ support for terrorist groups, its acquisition of nuclear and nonconventional weaponry, interference in Lebanon, ties with Iran and worsening human rights. |