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Long-Planned and Bigger Than Thought: Strike on Iran’s Nuclear Program

F-22Raptor

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As Iran’s center for advanced nuclear centrifuges lies in charred ruins after an explosion, apparently engineered by Israel, the long-simmering conflict between the United States and Tehran appears to be escalating into a potentially dangerous phase likely to play out during the American presidential election campaign.

New satellite photographs over the stricken facility at Natanz show far more extensive damage than was clear last week. Two intelligence officials, updated with the damage assessment for the Natanz site recently compiled by the United States and Israel, said it could take the Iranians up to two years to return their nuclear program to the place it was just before the explosion. An authoritative public study estimates it will be a year or more until Iran’s centrifuge production capacity recovers.

Another major explosion hit the country early Friday morning, lighting up the sky in a wealthy area of Tehran. It was still unexplained — but appeared to come from the direction of a missile base. If it proves to have been another attack, it will further shake the Iranians by demonstrating, yet again, that even their best-guarded nuclear and missile facilities have been infiltrated.

Although Iran has said little of substance about the explosions, Western officials anticipate some type of retaliation, perhaps against American or allied forces in Iraq, perhaps a renewal of cyberattacks. In the past, those have been directed against American financial institutions, a major Las Vegas casino and a dam in the New York suburbs or, more recently, the water supply system in Israel, which its government considers “critical infrastructure.”


Officials familiar with the explosion at Natanz compared its complexity to the sophisticated Stuxnet cyberattack on Iranian nuclear facilities a decade ago, which had been planned for more than a year. In the case of last week’s episode, the primary theory is that an explosive device was planted in the heavily-guarded facility, perhaps near a gas line. But some experts have also floated the possibility that a cyberattack was used to trigger the gas supply.

Some officials said that a joint American-Israeli strategy was evolving — some might argue regressing — to a series of short-of-war clandestine strikes, aimed at taking out the most prominent generals of the Islamic Revolutionary Guards Corps and setting back Iran’s nuclear facilities.

The closest the administration has come to describing its strategy of more aggressive pushback came in comments last month from Brian H. Hook, the State Department’s special envoy for Iran. “We have seen historically,” he concluded, “that timidity and weakness invites more Iranian aggression.”


The next move may be a confrontation over four tankers, now making their way to Venezuela, which the United States has vowed will not be allowed to deliver their cargo of Iranian oil in violation of United States sanctions.


The emerging approach is risky, analysts warn, one that over the long term may largely serve to drive Iran’s nuclear program further underground, and thus make it harder to detect.

But in the short term, American and Israeli officials are betting that Iran will limit its retaliation, as it did after an American drone in January
killed Maj. Gen. Qassim Suleimani, one of Iran’s most important commanders.

While some American officials expressed fears that the killing of General Suleimani would lead Iran to initiate a war against the United States, the C.I.A. director, Gina Haspel, reassured them that the Iranians
would settle on limited missile attacksagainst American targets in Iraq — which so far has turned out to be correct. Iran’s limited response could be an incentive for further operations against it.

In addition, some American and Israeli officials, and international security analysts, say that Iran may believe that President Trump will lose the November election and that his presumptive Democratic rival, Joseph R. Biden Jr., will want to resurrect some form of
the negotiated settlement that the Obama administration reached with Tehran five years ago next week.


“Today, if you are Iran, why compromise with an administration which may only have a few months left?’’ asked Karim Sadjadpour, a senior fellow at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace.

But in the short term, he noted, the new offensive has put Iran under “extreme internal and external pressure,” as its oil exports continue to be squeezed and its efforts to revive the nuclear program, retribution for Mr. Trump’s
decision in May 2018 to abandon the 2015 accord, falter amid sabotage.

“Think about it,’’ he said. “Geographically, Iran is greater in size than Germany, France and the United Kingdom combined. But they have never managed to pursue a clandestine nuclear program without getting caught, or protected their program from sabotage. Are there defectors or traitors inside the system?”


When the Mossad raided a warehouse in Tehran in January 2018, and
emerged with tens of thousands of pages of nuclear-weapons planning documentsdating back nearly two decades, it clearly had the help of insiders. The killing of General Suleimani, the mastermind of Iran’s actions in Iraq and attacks on Americans — which was also based on intelligence, much of it given by live agents — was perhaps Mr. Trump’s most aggressive military move as president.

The Natanz explosion occurred inside the Iran Centrifuge Assembly Center, where the country was building its most advanced machines, designed to produce far more nuclear fuel, far faster, than the old machines used until Iran dismantled most of its facilities in the 2015 accord.


While research on those machines was permitted under the agreement, they could not be deployed for years — and Iran’s crash effort to mass produce them was an ambitious effort to show that it could respond to Mr. Trump’s rejection of the deal by speeding up.

A study by the Institute for Science and International Security published Wednesday concluded that while the explosion “does not eliminate Iran’s ability to deploy advanced centrifuges,” it was “a major setback” that would cost Iran years of development.


Secretary of State Mike Pompeo, who always leaps at any opportunity to denounce the Iranian government, twice declined on Wednesday to discuss the issue at a news conference.

But it is hardly a secret inside the State Department that Mr. Pompeo, who served as Mr. Trump’s first C.I.A. director, developed a close relationship with Yossi Cohen, the director of the Mossad, Israel’s external spy service. The two men talk often, making it difficult to believe that Mr. Pompeo had no idea about what was coming, if indeed it was an Israeli operation.

Just as the strike was happening, Mr. Cohen’s term was extended for six months by Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, interpreted by many as a sign of things to come, since Mr. Cohen is a veteran of Iran operations. He was a key player in the sophisticated series of cyberstrikes known as Olympic Games that took out
nearly 1,000 operating centrifuges at Natanz — near the site of last week’s explosion and fire — a decade ago. And as chief of Mossad, he directed the covert seizure of the secret nuclear archive.

In some way it feels a bit like a decade ago, when the George W. Bush administration handed off the cyberoperations to the Obama administration, part of a broad covert effort to cripple Iran’s nuclear program. At the same time, the Israelis were killing Iranian scientists. The idea was not only to slow the program, but also to turn the Iranians against one another, constantly suspecting that there were spies in their midst.


This time, there are several new elements.

Mr. Trump is an unpredictable player, who has often threatened Iran — and just as often pulled back from striking it. And the Iranian leaders who negotiated the 2015 nuclear deal with President Barack Obama are on the ropes in Tehran, assailed for having given away too much, only to discover that Washington was reimposing sanctions.

At the White House, Mr. Trump’s top national security advisers are hardly of one mind over when and how to confront Iran.

Military leaders, including Defense Secretary Mark T. Esper and Gen. Mark A. Milley, the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, have been wary of a sharp military escalation, warning it could further destabilize the Middle East when Mr. Trump has said he hopes to reduce the number of American troops in the region.

Pentagon officials nervously cited at least two potential flash points that could drag American forces into a military clash with Iran or Iranian-backed proxies in the Persian Gulf region.

One focuses on those oil tankers. Justice Department and F.B.I. officials
announced last week that they had used a counterterrorism statute to obtain a warrant to seize Iranian oil products aboard the four tankers bound for Venezuela in violation of American sanctions. Investigators determined that the fuel cargo aboard the Greek-owned ships were assets of Iran’s Guards Corps, which the Trump administration last year designated as a terrorist organization. General Suleimani was commander of the Quds Force of the Islamic Revolutionary Guards Corps.

Administration officials said this week that the State, Justice and Treasury Departments were seeking to work with the Greek government to halt the shipments, and have the fuel be offloaded. Iran’s mission to the United Nations immediately declared any such seizure would amount to “piracy.”

Two of the ships are believed to be in the Aegean Sea. But the two others are steaming in the Gulf of Oman, off the coast of Iran, and are under close surveillance, an American military official said.


Some American officials worry that if the two tankers comply with the U.S. court order to give up the fuel, Iranian naval forces could challenge the transfer to another ship. It is not entirely clear what United States Navy warships in the area would do if that happened.

Another potential flash point is in Iraq, where Iranian-backed militia are believed to be responsible for a steadily increasing series of rocket attacks at the American Embassy in Baghdad and on American and coalition forces near Baghdad’s international airport.

After General Suleimani’s death, Tehran and Washington traded modest strikes in March. But then, tensions appeared to ease — until early June.

“We’re seeing a beginning of a spike in unprovoked rocket attacks on Iraqi bases that host U.S. forces in Iraq,” Gen. Kenneth F. McKenzie Jr., the head of the military’s Central Command,
said last month.

For now, the latest rocket attacks have been more harassing than harmful.


https://www.nytimes.com/2020/07/10/world/middleeast/iran-nuclear-trump.html
 
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This paragraph depicts how Iran Lost deterrence after Soleimani killing

While some American officials expressed fears that the killing of General Suleimani would lead Iran to initiate a war against the United States, the C.I.A. director, Gina Haspel, reassured them that the Iranians would settle on limited missile attacks against American targets in Iraq — which so far has turned out to be correct. Iran’s limited response could be an incentive for further operations against it.

It's becoming increasingly difficult to argue against this evident observation unfortunately.

We can only hope Iran has a hard-hitting comprehensive set of retaliations in the works to stem these attacks with the plan to enact them sometime in the near future. If deterrence is reestablished then we can breathe a little easier but until then, if it even happens, we must remain vigilant.
 
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Come on stop the bullshit...

This was a assembly and calibration facility...

Important is the centrifuge R&D facility that is still doing its job

2 years... what a nonsense...

Credible New York Times..

It was the machines that they kept inside that facility. Even Iran’s own official said building it is very difficult and that the program was set back. Now it’s possible China or Russia secretly resupplies the said systems to maintain deterrence, but I wouldn’t be surprised if they are secretly happy iran is further away from breakout.

There is moles within the apparatus of Iran. I have said this time and time again. This is the work of an individual on the inside, much like the attempted assassination of Hitler. There are rogue elements inside Iran that do not want IRGC to have nuclear capability because it will solidify their grasp for good.

In modern history no known nuclear power has been toppled from the outside. And the risk of a nuclear power being toppled is more risky then accepting said nuclear power in game theory. That is why Pakistan has been left alone even though it has internal security troubles for ages. The risk of Pakistan’s nuclear stockpile falling into hands of extremists is far more deadly to the West then accepting the current military brass holding power and having nuclear capability.

Whoever did this attack can be sure of one thing, one day they will face a bullet in the head no matter where they are in the world. Iran plays the long game and will find that person that did this and they will be snuffed out. That person will have to look over their shoulder for the rest of their lives.
 
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Come on stop the bullshit...

This was a assembly and calibration facility...

Important is the centrifuge R&D facility that is still doing its job

2 years... what a nonsense...

Credible New York Times..
New York Times is a pretty credible publication
 
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The risk of Pakistan’s nuclear stockpile falling into hands of extremists is far more deadly to the West then accepting the current military brass holding power and having nuclear capability.

Wow! Thats the constant refrain from armchair analysts from the West. On the ground, it has no truth.

While these analysts dread about Pakistan nuclear program falling in the wrong hands, India's nuclear weapons are already in wrong hands.

New York Times is a pretty credible publication

And very sympathetic to Israeli cause and interests.
 
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That is why Pakistan has been left alone even though it has internal security troubles for ages. The risk of Pakistan’s nuclear stockpile falling into hands of extremists is far more deadly to the West then accepting the current military brass holding power and having nuclear capability.

Stop making things from your arse, and spreading one sided indian garbage on this forum. The fact of the matter is that Hindu extremist RSS have control of indian nuclear weapons. So have the extremist Jews of Israel who have control over Israel nuclear weapons. These extremist people are actually RUNNING THE GOVERNMENTS of these countries. On the other hand, Pakistan DOES NOT have religious extremists running the government.
 
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Stop making things from your arse, and spreading one sided indian garbage on this forum. The fact of the matter is that Hindu extremist RSS have control of indian nuclear weapons. So have the extremist Jews of Israel who have control over Israel nuclear weapons. These extremist people are actually RUNNING THE GOVERNMENTS of these countries. On the other hand, Pakistan DOES NOT have religious extremists running the government.

You apparently have reading comprehension issues as I clearly wrote that the West prefers that weapons DO NOT fall into hands of religious extremists (who do exist in Pakistan).

So again learn to read English, if it is not your first language consider picking up some classes. No where did I write that Pakistan is led by religious extremists so your post is largely just drivel. Now go run off and obsess over your rival India some more.
 
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You apparently have reading comprehension issues as I clearly wrote that the West prefers that weapons DO NOT fall into hands of religious extremists (who do exist in Pakistan).

So again learn to read English, if it is not your first language consider picking up some classes. No where did I write that Pakistan is led by religious extremists so your post is largely just drivel. Now go run off and obsess over your rival India some more.

We Aussies know English much better than some indian wannabe 2nd class yank. :lol: So keep your 'English' lesson yourself.
The very fact that you are repeating the same Western propaganda from 2-decades ago highlights your bias and you spreading malicious lies here. It is the same Western propaganda which they used to attack a dozen countries, example lies of weapons of mass destruction in Iraq.You deliberately quoted this nonsense here.
 
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Iranians lost deterrence when throughout the Middle East conflicts they’ve not touched Israel to deliver even a minor strike. After this Israeli nuclear facilities should be considered legitimate targets — support separatists groups to get the job done. Weak hands wouldn’t help Iran in this conflict.
 
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We Aussies know English much better than some indian wannabe 2nd class yank. :lol: So keep your 'English' lesson yourself.
The very fact that you are repeating the same Western propaganda from 2-decades ago highlights your bias and you spreading malicious lies here. It is the same Western propaganda which they used to attack a dozen countries, example lies of weapons of mass destruction in Iraq.You deliberately quoted this nonsense here.

On one hand you identify yourself as “Aussie” and on the other hand you go on a tirade about “Westerns” when you just identified yourself as Westerner in a West established colonial country. Maybe you should take a look at Aussie flag once in a while.

So I got a Pakistani imitating an Aussie calling me an “Indian” even though everyone on this section knows I’m a Iranian. Hilarious how brain dead you are.

But of course everyone to you Pakistanis is a “SECERT agent Indian” if someone says something remotely in the proximity of being critical of Pakistan. Like I said, take your paranoia somewhere else.

Iranians lost deterrence when throughout the Middle East conflicts they’ve not touched Israel to deliver even a minor strike. After this Israeli nuclear facilities should be considered legitimate targets — support separatists groups to get the job done. Weak hands wouldn’t help Iran in this conflict.

I don’t think Pakistani’s should be lecturing Iranians on delivering achievements when in last 40 years Pakistan has yet to reclaim Kashmir and plays footsie with India every few years to keep things interesting. In another 40 years Pakistan will still be fighting to take back Kashmir and by fighting I mean sitting on the border looking angry at the Indians and maybe once in a blue moon firing at each other.

In last 30 years, Iran has:

*Ejected Israel out of South Lebanon
*Ejected US out of Lebanon with the Marine Barracks attack
*Established the most powerful para-military proxy in the world (HZ) on Israel’s northern border that fought a 2006 war
*Ejected US occupation force from Iraq
*Grew proxies and allies in Iraq
*Grew Hamas military arsenal and supplied advance arms
*Established a second proxy on the golan heights and Israel’s eastern Border.
*Grew Houthi’s arsenal and supplied with advance arms including long distance drones, cruise missiles, and BMs.


So yes Iran has truly done nothing.
 
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It was the machines that they kept inside that facility. Even Iran’s own official said building it is very difficult and that the program was set back. Now it’s possible China or Russia secretly resupplies the said systems to maintain deterrence, but I wouldn’t be surprised if they are secretly happy iran is further away from breakout.

There is moles within the apparatus of Iran. I have said this time and time again. This is the work of an individual on the inside, much like the attempted assassination of Hitler. There are rogue elements inside Iran that do not want IRGC to have nuclear capability because it will solidify their grasp for good.

In modern history no known nuclear power has been toppled from the outside. And the risk of a nuclear power being toppled is more risky then accepting said nuclear power in game theory. That is why Pakistan has been left alone even though it has internal security troubles for ages. The risk of Pakistan’s nuclear stockpile falling into hands of extremists is far more deadly to the West then accepting the current military brass holding power and having nuclear capability.

Whoever did this attack can be sure of one thing, one day they will face a bullet in the head no matter where they are in the world. Iran plays the long game and will find that person that did this and they will be snuffed out. That person will have to look over their shoulder for the rest of their lives.

Unless the person has escaped to Tel Aviv with high level security out of reach of that Iranian bullet.
 
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