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Israel is running out of time to use air power to bomb Iran’s
nuclear facilities and delay Iranian efforts to build and deploy nuclear
weapons. The “fighting season” in the eastern portion of the Middle East
runs from March to early October, and then heavy weather sets in. Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu stated
last
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week that Israel could independently attack Iran's nuclear program, but
acknowledged that the attack would only delay, rather than completely destroy
it.
Israel has entered a long-term crisis as a result of the
Arab Spring radicalizing the Middle East.
Under Muslim Brotherhood control, Egypt is re-militarizing the Sinai
Peninsula, while Iran is becoming the most powerful entity in the Middle
East. Israel sees its military position
weakening over the long-run, due to its size, despite its current military
superiority. Evolving events
potentially may undermine that military superiority, and therefore Israel feels
pressured to act now to preserve it.
Israel does not have the United States’ armada of B-2
bombers, equipped with the Massive Ordnance Penetrator that could cause tremendous
damage to the deep and hardened underground Iranian weapons sites. The United States also has positioned the
Enterprise and Dwight D. Eisenhower air craft carriers, and the Iwo Jima, “Big
Deck Amphibious Warfare Ship”, to be within close striking distance of
Iran. But President Obama seems
unwilling to order a strike, unless Iran becomes more aggressive by curtailing
oil shipment through the Straits of Hormuz.
Consequently, Israel will have to rely on its own capability to confront
Iran.
Israel can field a strike force of approximately 100 Lockheed Martin F-16 and 25 Boeing F-15 Boeing F-15 fighter-bombers equipped with long
range conformal fuel tanks, supported by up to ten converted Boeing 707 aerial refueling tankers. Since the lower speed and greater
vulnerability of the tankers would restrict their ability to enter Iranian
airspace, the American built bombers will only have limited time over their
targets.
According to the Stratfor Reports, the Israeli air force
would have to choose one of three potential air corridors to attack Iran. Each route would “pose serious threats to
Israel's aircraft and cause significant diplomatic problems with Iran -- and
potentially the rest of the Islamic world -- if they allowed Israeli jets to
cross unchallenged.” The northern route
would circumvent Syria's air defense network by flying between Cyprus and
Syria, and then proceeding eastward along the Turkey-Syria border into northern
Iraq, and then south into Iran. The
shortest route is to fly directly over Jordan and Iraq and into central Iran,
but it is expected that Iraq would provide intelligence and warning to Iran,
given their close defense relationship.
The third route would fly south over Saudi Arabia and across the Persian
Gulf. But this path would fly directly
into Iran’s premier air defense missile systems and be seen by Iran as
declaration of war by Saudi Arabia.
Iran has been sending troops and supplies to reinforce
Syrian President Bashar al-Assad’s army.
It seems very likely that the Free Syrian Army rebel forces would be willing to coordinate attacks on Syria’s air defense network during air strikes
on Iran. Such cooperation would allow
the Israeli air force’s slow and vulnerable aerial refueling tankers to spend
the maximum time loitering close to Iran. This option would allow Israel a
direct line of attack to their targets and would avoid the operational and
political risks of flying over Saudi Arabia, Jordan or Turkey.
With “clock running out”, there is a high probability that
Israel will wield its full military strength to bomb Iran in the next six
weeks. The Arab Spring that the United
States helped sponsor and funded has created tremendous instability in the
region. As stable tyrants were replaced
by armed tribal and ethnic forces, chaos has ensued. The coming confrontation between Israel and Iran is sure to
heighten this turmoil.
Chriss Street and
Paul Preston Co-Host
“The American Exceptionalism Radio Talk Show”
Streaming Live Monday Through Friday at 7-10 PM
Click Here to Listen: http://www.mysytv.net/kmyclive.html
“The American Exceptionalism Radio Talk Show”
Streaming Live Monday Through Friday at 7-10 PM
Click Here to Listen: http://www.mysytv.net/kmyclive.html
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