By: Richard Silverstein
Source: Global Research
http://www.globalresearch.ca/index.php?context=va&aid=32380
In
the past few days, I received an Israeli briefing document outlining Israel’s
war plans against Iran. The document was passed to me by a high-level Israeli
source who received it from an IDF officer. My source, in fact, wrote to me
that normally he would not leak this sort of document, but:
“These
are not normal times. I’m afraid Bibi and Barak are dead serious.”
The
reason they leaked it is to expose the arguments and plans advanced by the
Bibi-Barak two-headed warrior. Neither the IDF leaker, my source, nor virtually
any senior military or intelligence officer wants this war. While whoever wrote
this briefing paper had use of IDF and intelligence data, I don’t believe the
IDF wrote it. It feels more likely it came from the shop of national security
advisor Yaakov Amidror, a former general, settler true-believer and Bibi
confidant. It could also have been produced by Defense Minister Barak, another
pro-war booster.
Before
laying out the document, I wanted to place it in context. If you’ve been
reading this blog you’ll know that after Bibi’s IDF service he
became the marketing director for a furniture company.
Recent revelations have suggested that he may have also served in some capacity
either formally or informally in the Mossad during that period.
This document is a more sophisticated version of selling
bedroom sets and three-piece sectionals. The only difference is that this
marketing effort could lead to the death of thousands.
This is Bibi’s sales pitch for war. Its purpose is to be
used in meetings with members of the Shminiya , the eight-member security cabinet which
currently finds a 4-3 majority opposed to an Iran strike. Bibi uses this sales
pitch to persuade the recalcitrant ministers of the cool, clean, refreshing
taste of war. My source informs me that it has also been shared in confidence
with selected journalists who are in the trusted inner media circle (who, oh
who, might they be?).
This is Shock
and Awe, Israel-style. It is Bibi’s effort to persuade high-level
Israeli officials that Israel can prosecute a pure technology war that involves
relatively few human beings (Israeli, that is) who may be put in harm’s way,
and will certainly cost few lives of IDF personnel.
Bibi’s sleight of hand here involves no mention whatsoever
of an Iranian counter-attack against Israel. The presumption must be that the
bells and whistles of all those marvelous new weapons systems will decapitate
Iran’s war-making ability and render it paralyzed. The likelihood of this
actually happening is nearly nil.
There will be those who will dispute the authenticity of
this document. I’m convinced it is what my source claims, based on his prior
track record and the level of specificity offered in the document. It
references cities by name and the facilities they contain. It names new weapons
systems including one Israel supposedly hasn’t even shared with the U.S.
No, it’s real. Or I should say that while it’s real, it is
the product of the Israeli dream factory which manufactures threats and then
creates fabulist military strategies to address them. The dream factory always
breaks the hearts of the families of those whose members fall victim to it. It
never produces the result it promises, nor will it do so here.
Remember Bush-era Shock and Awe? Remember those promises of
precision-guided cruise missiles raining death upon Saddam Hussein’s Iraq?
Remember Bush’s “Mission Accomplished” ceremony on the deck of the USS Lincoln,
only six or seven years premature? Remember the promises of decisive victory?
Remember 4,000 U.S. dead, not to mention hundreds of thousands of Iraqis?
Now, think of what an Israeli war against Iran could turn
into. Think about how this sanitized version of 21st century war could turn
into a protracted, bloody conflict closer to the nine-year Iran-Iraq War:
The Israeli attack will open with a coordinated strike,
including an unprecedented cyber-attack which will totally paralyze the Iranian
regime and its ability to know what is happening within its borders. The
internet, telephones, radio and television, communications satellites, and fiber
optic cables leading to and from critical installations—including underground
missile bases at Khorramabad and Isfahan—will be taken out of action. The
electrical grid throughout Iran will be paralyzed and transformer stations will
absorb severe damage from carbon fiber munitions which are finer than a human
hair, causing electrical short circuits whose repair requires their complete
removal. This would be a Sisyphean task in light of cluster munitions which
would be dropped, some time-delayed and some remote-activated through the use
of a satellite signal.
A barrage of tens of ballistic missiles would be launched
from Israel toward Iran. 300km ballistic missiles would be launched from
Israeli submarines in the vicinity of the Persian Gulf. The missiles would not
be armed with unconventional warheads [WMD], but rather with high-explosive
ordnance equipped with reinforced tips designed specially to penetrate hardened
targets.
The missiles will strike their targets—some exploding above
ground like those striking the nuclear reactor at Arak–which is intended to
produce plutonium and tritium—and the nearby heavy water production facility;
the nuclear fuel production facilities at Isfahan and facilities for enriching
uranium-hexaflouride. Others would explode under-ground, as at the Fordo
facility.
A barrage of hundreds of cruise missiles will pound command
and control systems, research and development facilities, and the residences of
senior personnel in the nuclear and missile development apparatus. Intelligence
gathered over years will be utilized to completely decapitate Iran’s
professional and command ranks in these fields.
After the first wave of attacks, which will be timed to the
second, the “Blue and White” radar satellite,
whose systems enable us to perform an evaluation of the level of damage done to
the various targets, will pass over Iran. Only after rapidly decrypting the
satellite’s data, will the information be transferred directly to war planes making
their way covertly toward Iran. These IAF planes will be armed with electronic
warfare gear previously unknown to the wider public, not even revealed to our
U.S. ally. This equipment will render Israeli aircraft invisible. Those Israeli
war planes which participate in the attack will damage a short-list of targets
which require further assault.
Among the targets approved for attack—Shihab
3 and Sejil ballistic missile silos, storage tanks for chemical components
of rocket fuel, industrial facilities for producing missile control systems,
centrifuge production plants and more.
While the level of specificity in this document is, in some
senses, impressive, in one critical aspect it is deficient. Muhammad Sahimi
points out that the current chief of the Revolutionary Guards, when he assumed
his position in 2007, deliberately addressed the issue of over-centralization
of command and control by dividing the nation into 31 districts. Each of these
has its own independent command and control facilities and mechanisms. So
Israel wouldn’t be able to knock out a single facility and paralyze the IRG.
They’d need to knock out 31 separate sets of facilities–a much harder task.
There seems also to be an assumption that Iran’s leaders and
nuclear specialists live nice domestic lives and that Israeli intelligence
knows where they all live and can easily target them. In truth, the most senior
Iranian military and scientific figures live clandestine lives and it’s hard
for me to believe even the Mossad knows where they are and how to target them.
So it appears that Netanyahu believes he’s fighting Saddam
circa 2003. During that war, the Iraqi Revolutionary Guards were centralized and
knocking out one C&C center could decapitate the entire military apparatus. But
Iran has learned from Saddam’s mistakes. It isn’t fighting the last war as Bibi
appears to be. It is preparing for the next one. While Israel may have new
tricks up its sleeve that no one in the world has yet seen, if it doesn’t
understand the nature of the enemy, its defenses, its structure, etc. then it
can’t win.
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