|
Tehran plans a nuclear weapons test before March 20,
2006 – the Iranian New Year, moves Shahab-3 missiles within striking
range of Israel
January 22, 2006, 9:30 AM (GMT+02:00)
Reporting this, the dissident Foundation for
Democracy in Iran, a US-based watch group, cites sources in the US and
Iran. The FDI adds from Iran: on June 16, the high command of the
Revolutionary Guards Air Force ordered Shahab-3 missile units to move
mobile launchers every 24 hours instead of weekly. This is in view of a
potential pre-emptive strike by the US or Israel.
Advance Shahab-3 units have been positioned in
Kermanshah and Hamad within striking distance of Israel, reserve
launchers moved to Esfahan and Fars.
The missile units were told to change positions
“in a radius of 30-35 kilometers” and only at night.
DEBKAfile’s Iranian sources add:
FDI reporting has a reputation for credibility. Western and Israeli
intelligence have known for more than six months that Iran’s nuclear
program has reached the capability of being able to carry out a nuclear
explosion, albeit underground. It would probably be staged in a desert
or mountain region and activated by a distant control center. Tehran
would aim at confronting the Americans, Europeans and Israelis with an
irreversible situation.
At the same time, an explosion of this sort would
indicate that Iran is not yet able to produce a nuclear bomb that can be
delivered by airplane or a warhead adapted to a missile. The stage Iran
has reached is comparable to Pakistan’s when it conducted its first
nuclear tests in the nineties and North Korea’s in 2001. All the same,
an Iranian underground nuclear blast, which will most probably be
attempted on March 22, would turn around the strategic position of all
the parties concerned and the Middle East as whole.
The question now is: will the United States, Israel
or both deliver a pre-emptive strike ahead of the Iranian underground
test - or later? Or will Washington alternatively use the event to bring
the UN Security Council round to economic sanctions? Tehran is already
organizing to withstand economic penalties. For Israel, the timing is
getting tight in view of its general election on March 28. Acting prime
minister Ehud Olmert must take into account that a ruling party which
allows an Iranian nuclear explosion to take place six days before the
poll would draw painful punishment from the voter.
|