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US
prepares military blitz against Iran's nuclear sites
By Philip Sherwell in Washington
(Filed: 12/02/2006)
Strategists at the Pentagon are drawing up plans
for devastating bombing raids backed by submarine-launched ballistic
missile attacks against Iran's nuclear sites as a "last resort" to
block Teheran's efforts to develop an atomic bomb.
Central Command and Strategic Command planners are
identifying targets, assessing weapon-loads and working on logistics
for an operation, the Sunday Telegraph has learnt.
They are reporting to the office of Donald Rumsfeld,
the defence secretary, as America updates plans for action if the
diplomatic offensive fails to thwart the Islamic republic's nuclear
bomb ambitions. Teheran claims that it is developing only a civilian
energy programme.
"This is more than just the standard military
contingency assessment," said a senior Pentagon adviser. "This has
taken on much greater urgency in recent months."
The prospect of military action could put
Washington at odds with Britain which fears that an attack would
spark violence across the Middle East, reprisals in the West and may
not cripple Teheran's nuclear programme. But the steady flow of
disclosures about Iran's secret nuclear operations and the virulent
anti-Israeli threats of President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad has prompted
the fresh assessment of military options by Washington. The most
likely strategy would involve aerial bombardment by long-distance B2
bombers, each armed with up to 40,000lb of precision weapons,
including the latest bunker-busting devices. They would fly from
bases in Missouri with mid-air refuelling.
The Bush administration has recently announced
plans to add conventional ballistic missiles to the armoury of its
nuclear Trident submarines within the next two years. If ready in
time, they would also form part of the plan of attack.
Teheran has dispersed its nuclear plants, burying
some deep underground, and has recently increased its air defences,
but Pentagon planners believe that the raids could seriously set
back Iran's nuclear programme.
Iran was last weekend reported to the United
Nations Security Council by the International Atomic Energy Agency
for its banned nuclear activities. Teheran reacted by announcing
that it
would resume full-scale uranium enrichment - producing material
that could arm nuclear devices.
The White House says that it wants a diplomatic
solution to the stand-off, but President George W Bush has refused
to rule out military action and reaffirmed last weekend that Iran's
nuclear ambitions "will not be tolerated".
Sen John McCain, the Republican front-runner to
succeed Mr Bush in 2008, has advocated military strikes as a last
resort. He said recently: "There is only only one thing worse than
the United States exercising a military option and that is a
nuclear-armed Iran."
Senator Joe Lieberman, a Democrat, has made the
same case and Mr Bush is expected to be faced by the decision within
two years.
By then, Iran will be close to acquiring the
knowledge to make an atomic bomb, although the construction will
take longer. The President will not want to be seen as leaving the
White House having allowed Iran's ayatollahs to go atomic.
In Teheran yesterday, crowds celebrating the
anniversary of the 1979 Islamic revolution chanted "Nuclear
technology is our inalienable right" and cheered Mr Ahmadinejad when
he said that Iran may reconsider membership of the nuclear
Non-Proliferation Treaty.
He was defiant over possible economic sanctions.

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The
United States has been conducting
secret reconnaissance missions inside Iran
to help identify potential
nuclear, chemical and missile targets, The New Yorker magazine
reported Sunday.
The article, by
award-winning reporter Seymour Hersh, said the secret missions have
been going on at least since last summer with the goal of identifying
target information for three dozen or more suspected sites.
Hersh quotes one
government consultant with close ties to the Pentagon as saying, "The
civilians in the Pentagon want to go into Iran and destroy as much of
the military infrastructure as possible."
One former high-level
intelligence official told The New Yorker, "This is a war against
terrorism, and Iraq is just one campaign. The Bush administration is
looking at this as a huge war zone. Next, we're going to have the
Iranian campaign."
The White House said
Iran is a concern and a threat that needs to be taken seriously. But
it disputed the report by Hersh, who last year exposed the extent of
prisoner abuse at the Abu Ghraib prison in Iraq.
"We obviously have a
concern about Iran. The whole world has a concern about Iran," Dan
Bartlett, a top aide to President Bush, told CNN's "Late Edition."
Of The New Yorker
report, he said: "I think it's riddled with inaccuracies, and I don't
believe that some of the conclusions he's drawing are based on fact."
Bartlett said the
administration "will continue to work through the diplomatic
initiatives" to convince Iran -- which Bush once called part of an
"axis of evil" -- not to pursue nuclear weapons.
"No president, at any
juncture in history, has ever taken military options off the table,"
Bartlett added. "But what President Bush has shown is that he believes
we can emphasize the diplomatic initiatives that are underway right
now."
COMMANDO TASK FORCE
Bush has warned Iran in
recent weeks against meddling in Iraqi elections.
The former intelligence
official told Hersh that an American commando task force in South Asia
is working closely with a group of Pakistani scientists who had dealt
with their Iranian counterparts.
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New Yorker reports that this task force, aided by information from
Pakistan, has been penetrating into eastern Iran in a hunt for
underground nuclear-weapons installations.
In exchange for
this cooperation, the official told Hersh, Pakistani President
Pervez Musharraf has received assurances that his government will
not have to turn over Abdul Qadeer Khan, the father of Pakistan's
atomic bomb, to face questioning about his role in selling nuclear
secrets to Iran, Libya and North Korea.
Hersh reported that
Bush has already "signed a series of top-secret findings and
executive orders authorizing secret commando groups and other
Special Forces units to conduct covert operations against
suspected terrorist targets in as many as 10 nations in the Middle
East and South Asia."
Defining these as
military rather than intelligence operations, Hersh reported, will
enable the Bush administration to evade legal restrictions imposed
on the CIA's covert activities overseas.
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