[THS] Scott Ritter says attack on Iran virtual guarantee

Peter Webster vignes at wanadoo.fr
Tue May 6 00:02:40 CEST 2008


http://rawstory.com/news/2008/Former_UN_weapons_inspector_says_attac
k_0505.html

Former UN weapons inspector says attack on Iran 'virtual guarantee'
John Byrne
Published: Monday May 5, 2008


US denies again on Monday

Former UN weapons inspector Scott Ritter, who was among the original
experts to question Bush Administration claims that Iraq had weapons of
mass destruction, now says he believes an attack on Iran is a "virtual
guarantee."

"We take a look at the military buildup, we take a look at the rhetoric, we
take a look at the diplomatic posturing, and I would say that it’s a virtual
guarantee that there will be a limited aerial strike against Iran in the not-so-
near future—or not-so-distant future, that focuses on the Iranian
Revolutionary Guard Command," Ritter said last week in a little-noted
interview with Amy Goodman's Democracy Now. "And if this situation spins
further out of control, you would see these aerial strikes expanding to
include Iran’s nuclear infrastructure and some significant command and
control targets."

The Pentagon denied the claim again Monday.

"I actually am very hopeful that we don't get into a position where we have
to get into a conflict," Adm. Michael Mullen, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of
Staff, told Israel's Channel Ten television when asked if he might
recommend that U.S. forces strike Iranian nuclear facilities preemptively.

"It would be a very significant challenge for the United States right now to
get into a third conflict in that part of the world," Mullen added, referring to
the Bush administration's long-running military commitments in Iraq and
Afghanistan.

Ritter, who led the UN mission to inspect Iraqi weapons from 1991 to 1998,
also questions Administration claims that Syria was developing a nuclear
weapon in concert with North Korea. RAW STORY has written in detail
regarding concerns from intelligence officers, who say that satellite
photographs of the alleged site offer no formal proof, and officials are
internally skeptical of such claims.

"We have to be concerned about the evidence," Ritter said. "We have
interior photographs and exterior shots and nothing that links the two. And
so, on the surface, I would say that if you’re bringing this evidence to a
court of law—it’s a strange dimension, the rule of law, when we speak of
American foreign policy lately—you would have trouble having anybody say
yes, this is definitive evidence that links the allegations to this specific site in
question."

"And this notion that the reactor was on the verge of becoming operational,
again, is absurd," he adds. "You know, there would have to be literally
thousands of pounds of pure graphite that would have to be introduced to
this facility, and there’s no evidence in the destruction. You know, there
were a number of reporters who went to the site after it was blown up. If it
had been bombed and there was graphite introduced, you would have a
signature all over the area of destroyed graphite blocks. There would be
graphite lying around, etc. This was not the case."

US intelligence officials told RAW STORY they “found no radiation signatures
after the bombing, so there was no uranium or plutonium present.”

“We don't have any independent intelligence that it was a nuclear facility --
only the assertions by the Israelis and some ambiguous satellite
photography from them that shows a building, which the Syrians admitted
was a military facility.”

The site of the alleged reactor was bombed in 2007. The UN is currently
probing US claims.

"I don’t know what was going on at this site," Ritter said. "If the images are
accurate, it appears that Syria was producing a very, very small research
reactor. But it is not a reactor usable in a nuclear weapons program. Syria
was not violating the law."

The interview was highlighted by a diarist on Daily Kos.
Report fingers new Pentagon planning

Ritter's remark about Iran comes on the heels of a report Sunday in the UK
Sunday Times' which alleges that the Pentagon is drawing up plans for a
"surgical strike" against an alleged insurgent training camp in Iran, and a
CBS report that suggests US forces are prepared to launch small-scale
attacks.

Attributing the assertion to Western intelligence officials, the Times' Michael
Smith asserts that US officials have become increasingly frustrated with
Iran's Republican Guard force -- an elite corps of the country's military --
which the Bush Administration has designated a terrorist group. Western
officials have accused Iran of helping arming rebel militias in Iraq, and have
accused Iran of supplying IEDs.

Smith was the first to reveal the Downing Street Minutes, an account of a
secret 2002 meeting between Bush Administration officials and British
intelligence surrounding Iraq, in which MI6 director Richard Dearlove
remarked that facts around Iraq were being "fixed" around a policy for war.

"US commanders are increasingly concerned by Iranian interference in Iraq
and are determined that recent successes by joint Iraqi and US forces in
the southern port city of Basra should not be reversed by the Quds Force,"
Smith writes."'If the situation in Basra goes back to what it was like before,
America is likely to blame Iran and carry out a surgical strike on a militant
training camp across the border in Khuzestan,'" he quotes a defense official
as saying.
Nuclear facilities 'not targets'

Seymour Hersh in the New Yorker and RAW STORY's Larisa Alexandrovna
revealed internal Pentagon planning in a buildup to a potential Iran conflict.
Since the reports ran, however, rhetoric about Iran has been toned down
and concerns of a potential all-out war have diminished.

American officials are opposed to any attack on Iranian nuclear facilities,
Smith says. They believe, however, that an attack on a militant camp could
send a message to the Republican Guard.

CBS News reported last week about a potential strike on Iran.

"Targets would include everything from the plants where weapons are
made to the headquarters of the organization known as the Quds Force
which directs operations in Iraq," they wrote.

"U.S. officials are also concerned by Iranian harassment of U.S. ships in the
Persian Gulf as well as Iran's still growing nuclear program," CBS adds.
"New pictures of Iran's uranium enrichment plant show the country's
defense minister in the background, as if deliberately mocking a recent
finding by U.S. intelligence that Iran had ceased work on a nuclear
weapon."

Sources told Smith that no attack was planned on Iranian nuclear facilities.
Such attack plans have been criticized, because many of Iran's facilities are
located underground and not all locations might be neutralized by an
airstrike.

"If an attack happens it will be on a training camp to send a clear message
to Iran not to interfere," one intelligence officer said.




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