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Iran: A Threat to Israel and the World
The world can no longer ignore the threat posed by Iran.
Although most of the world press has done
an admirable job reporting on the developments of the Iranian nuclear
program, the threat to both Israel and the world that Iran presents cannot be understated.
This special report has been produced as a
resource to use when discussing the
Iran threat. It is currently unclear what actions, diplomatic or military, will eventually
be used to stop the Iranian nuclear program. Nonetheless, everyone should be aware of
the threat and Iran's pursuit of nuclear weapons capability.
IRANIAN POLICY -- NO MORE ISRAEL
Time
and time again, Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad has stated
that Israel should not exist. Moreover, he has done so with no significant domestic dissent. When the
leader of a sovereign nation makes unequivocal statements without domestic
opposition, those statements serve as the basis of national policy. It is critical
to note that Ahmadinejad's statements go beyond opposition to Israeli policies, he is
speaking of Israel's very existence.
In 2005, much of the media reported his call for Israel (actually the
"Zionist regime" since Iran refuses to use the word "Israel") to be "wiped off
the face of the map" in a
keynote address to the Iranian-government sponsored
"World without Zionism" conference. Such sponsorship is, in
itself, incitement to genocide. Neither the United States, Israel, or any other nation has ever
sponsored a conference themed on the destruction of another country.
There are those who say that Ahmadinejad was misquoted. Yet in a June 11,
2006 analysis, New York Times deputy foreign editor
Ethan Bronner concluded
that:
translators in Tehran who work for the president's office and the (Iranian)
foreign ministry disagree with (those who say he was misquoted). All official
translations of Mr. Ahmadinejad's statement refer to wiping Israel away.
At other times,
Ahmadinejad has said:
- "The real cure for the conflict is elimination of the Zionist regime."
- "The way to peace in the Middle East is the destruction of Israel."
- "Like it or not, the Zionist regime is heading toward annihilation."
- "The Zionist regime is a rotten, dried tree that will be eliminated by one
storm." (For sources of these quotes and more, see The Israel Project,
Iran's Leaders: In their own words.")
In addition, almost all senior leaders of Iran have made similar statements.
What is especially alarming is that these statements are not aimed at Israeli
policies, but rather at the nation of Israel as a whole. As the Jerusalem Center
for Public Affairs has pointed out in its
"Referral of
Iranian President Ahmadinejad on the Charge of Incitement to Commit Genocide"
(worth reading in it's entirety):
It is essential to distinguish between freedom
to oppose a government and incitement to genocide. Verbal barrages (against a
government) pose no existential threat to ordinary people in the street.
Ahmadinejad's reckless anti-Semitic tirades that "the Jews are very filthy
people,""[the Jews have] inflicted the most damage on the human race," "[the
Jews are] a bunch of bloodthirsty barbarians," "they should know that they are
nearing the last days of their lives," and "as the Imam said, Israel must be
wiped off the map" should have aroused trepidation. His apocalyptic utterances
are not mere rhetoric. Ahmadinejad's declaration that the Holocaust was a
"fairy tale," and his enabling of Hamas and Hizbullah, demonstrate that
there is simply no way for his ambitions to be realized without perpetrating a
new genocide.
IRAN'S POLICY -- DEVELOPMENT OF LONG RANGE MISSILES
Years
before the current controversy involving Iran's attempts to develop nuclear
power and (according to almost all experts) nuclear weapons, Iran invested
heavily in the acquisition of long range missile systems. When coupled with nuclear
warheads, these missiles would give Iran the ability to threaten countries far
from its borders. According to
Uzi Rubin, a prominent military analyst:
The Iranians are pursuing the most intensive missile program in the Third
World, with constantly increasing ranges.
 The Iranian Shahab 3 missile (domestically produced within Iran) can threaten either Tel Aviv or Riyadh from the
same launch point. The newer Shahab 3ER, with its 2,000 km range, can reach
Ankara in Turkey, Alexandria in Egypt, or Sanaa in Yemen from one single launch
point deep within Iran. Thus, Iran does not have to move its launchers to
project power, making its missile arsenal more survivable.
Yet even this missile does not appear to be enough for Iran. According to the
Washington
Times:
In January (2006), the German magazine Bild reported that Iran purchased 18
BM-25
land-mobile missiles from North Korea. The BM-25 is a variation of the
SS-N-6, a
Soviet-made submarine-launched ballistic missile, with a range of up to 1,800
miles. The BM-25, according to Mr. Rubin, "is a nuclear missile...There is no
other warhead for this other than a nuclear warhead." The Iranian missile
threat is clearly growing. (See also
Defense News).
Finally, Iran's ultimate goal seems to be the ability to strike anywhere,
including the United States. The
Center
for Strategic and International Studies took a look at Iranian research
plans. They noted that:
...Iran is attempting to create a Shahab-5
and a Shahab-6, with a 3,000-5,000 kilometer range. These missiles would be
three-stage rockets. If
completed, the Shahab-5 and the Shahab-6 would take Iran into the realm of
limited range ICBM's, and enable Iran to target the US eastern seaboard.
IRAN POLICY -- DEVELOPMENT OF NUCLEAR POWER/WEAPONS
Iran's
efforts are clearly aimed at the production of nuclear weapons. Iran's declarations that
its nuclear program is for peaceful
purposes lacks any credibility. In August of 2004, former U.S. Representative to the United Nations
John Bolton testified that:
Cover stories put forward by Iran for the development of a nuclear fuel cycle
and for individual facilities are simply not credible. For example, Iran is
making an enormous investment in facilities to mine, process, and enrich
uranium, and says it needs to make its own reactor fuel because it cannot count
on foreign supplies. But for at least the next decade Iran will have at most a
single nuclear power reactor. In addition, Iran does not have enough indigenous
uranium resources to fuel even one power-generating reactor over its lifetime --
though it has quite enough uranium to make several nuclear bombs. We are
being asked to believe that Iran is building uranium enrichment capacity to make
fuel for reactors that do not exist from uranium Iran does not have.
THINKING THE UNTHINKABLE
While
even the "smallest" nuclear attack anywhere is an unimaginable horror, because
of its size and population, it would be almost impossible for the country of Israel
to survive a single nuclear attack.
The following is an
account of the atomic bomb dropped on Hiroshima, considered primitive and
tiny compared to modern nuclear weapons.
The bomb exploded about 600 meters (2,000 ft) above the city with a blast
equivalent to about 13 kilotons of TNT (the U-235 weapon was considered very
inefficient, with only 1.38% of its material fissioning), instantly killing at
least an estimated 90,000 people. The radius of total destruction was
about 1.6 km (1 mile), with resulting fires across 11.4 square km (4.4 square
miles). Infrastructure damage was estimated at 90% of Hiroshima's buildings
being either damaged or completely destroyed.
Such
an attack, again using one of the smallest and least effective nuclear weapons,
would destroy almost the entire area pictured and could result in the deaths
of most of the 1,190,000 people who live within the Tel Aviv metropolitan district.
Furthermore, radioactive fall-out would spread rapidly not only to all parts of
Israel, but across the Middle East and even
to Europe with certain wind conditions. The world's economies would be
devastated
and millions of people would become instant refugees.
IRAN -- A THREAT TO ISRAEL AND THE WORLD
The destruction of Israel
is a stated goal of the government of Iran. In light of Iran's relentless drive to
acquire nuclear weapons, it is clear that action must be taken to avert the
threat. Since ensuring survival is the prime
obligation of a sovereign state towards its own citizens, diplomatic or other
actions against Iran should be considered legitimate acts of self-defense and
supported by the world community.
We will continue to monitor and update our
subscribers on this subject on the months ahead.
HonestReporting. com
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