Tuesday, February 12, 2008

Gulf States look to Israel to Stop Iran's Bomb

An Advisor from Kuwait believes Israel can and will repeat the 1981 Iraq raid to stop Iran's nuclear program. One thing is it won't be as easy this time around. Iran has learned from Iraq's mistakes. It has buired it's atomic research sites, dispersed them throughout the entire country. Another thing is, Israel would need to cross Jordan's and Iraq's airspace to get to Iran. Then, how will it get back? I doubt it's Jet bombers have a range to go to Iran and back without refueling.

LONDON (Reuters) - Gulf states believe Israel will destroy Iran's nuclear program rather than allow it to acquire an atomic bomb, an adviser to the Kuwaiti government and Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) said on Tuesday.

If Iran did build the bomb, said adviser Sami Alfaraj, then the Jewish state might be one of the countries -- along with the United States and Pakistan -- Gulf Arab nations would ask to provide a "nuclear umbrella" to guarantee their security.
Thats exactly what we need, a nuclearized Middle East
Alfaraj, president of the Kuwait Centre for Strategic Studies, said Israel might bomb Iranian nuclear facilities in the same way it destroyed Iraq's main atomic reactor at Osirak with a military strike in 1981.

"I believe in something on the same Iraqi model...We are assuming in the Gulf that Israel will take it out. We are not saying that, but Israel would," Alfaraj told Reuters at the start of an analyst 'roadshow' organized by Realite-EU, an independent body which tracks Middle East security developments.

Iran denies seeking atomic weapons, saying it wants to develop a civilian nuclear program to generate electricity and enable it to export more oil.

The prospect of a U.S. military strike on Iran receded sharply after a U.S. intelligence report in December said Tehran had apparently halted an active atomic bomb program in 2003.

Israel has continued to take a hawkish stance. "We are certain that the Iranians are engaged in a serious...clandestine operation to build up a non-conventional capacity," Prime Minister Ehud Olmert said on a visit to Germany on Tuesday.

Olmert said "no option is ruled out" in countering the alleged nuclear weapons program.
What else is he going to say?

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