http://www.jpost.com/servlet/Satellite?cid=1157913599814
<http://www.jpost.com/servlet/Satellite?cid=1157913599814&pagename=JPost%2FJ
PArticle%2FPrinter> &pagename=JPost%2FJPArticle%2FPrinter
 
Yadlin: World unlikely to stop Iran
  _____  


Herb Keinon, THE JERUSALEM POST 
Sep. 10, 2006
  _____  

International pressure and UN sanctions will not stop the Iranian march
toward nuclearization, the head of military intelligence told the cabinet
Sunday. 
OC Intelligence Maj.-Gen. Amos Yadlin's words need to be seen within the
context of a debate in Jerusalem regarding how Israel should react to the
international community's slow and so-far ineffectual international response
to the Iranian nuclear threat, and the widespread assessment in Israel that
the US will be unlikely to take military action against Iran any time soon. 
In recent weeks there have been high-level voices in Jerusalem arguing that
it is becoming clear, judging by the world's reaction to Iran's decision to
continue with uranium enrichment, that Israel may have no other choice but
to act alone to slow down the Iranian nuclear program. 
According to Yadlin, the Iranians are playing for time, and the UN Security
Council was acting slower than expected regarding clamping sanctions on
Teheran. He said that Iran's confidence in this matter was growing, and that
this was causing concern in the Sunni World. 
Representatives of an American Jewish Committee delegation that met in Cairo
last week with senior Egyptian officials told The Jerusalem Post that some
of these officials were in favor of UN imposed sanctions on Iran, and that
Cairo had strategic concerns about Iran "remarkably similar" to those in
Jerusalem. 
Yadlin told the cabinet there is less supervision by the International
Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) in Iran than in the past, and that the
supervision that exists is not of the same quality as it was previously. He
also said that Iran's nuclear aspirations were held by both extremists like
President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, and the so-called moderates, such as former
president Muhammad Khatami. 
Turning to Lebanon, Yadlin said that it was too early to judge how the war
has impacted on Israel's deterrence in the region. 
On the one hand he said that the Arab world saw that Israel was very
determined and willing to go to war over the kidnapping of its soldiers and
the firing of Katyusha rockets. On the other hand, he said, Hizbullah was
spinning the war as a victory, and "we are to close to be able to judge the
ramifications." 
Yadlin said that the Lebanese Army was deploying in south Lebanon in an
"effective manner," and it would enable an IDF withdrawal, although he did
not give a timetable. He said that there was an internal struggle in Lebanon
taking place between the camp affiliated with Prime Minister Fuad Saniora,
and the camp affiliated with Hizbullah and Syria. 
He said that the battle over implementation of UN Security Council
resolution 1701 could spill over from a political disagreement to a military
confrontation between these two camps, and that Hizbullah had no intention
of disarming on its own volition, or letting anyone else do it for them. 
According to Yadlin, Hizbullah has - a month after the war - carefully
complied with the cease-fire and does not want a second round of fighting at
this time. 
He said that the organization was busy with the rehabilitation of south
Lebanon. It was also trying to rehabilitate its military capacity, but at a
"very, very low volume," he said. 
Yadlin said that while Hizbullah was not interested in a "second round," it
was interested in encouraging Palestinian terrorism, and in carrying out
actions that would not lead to an all-out Israeli military offensive. 
At the same time, Yadlin said Hizbullah was unlikely to carry out attacks
abroad, because since 9/11 the international community no longer saw these
types of attacks as legitimate. 
He also said that Hizbullah did not want to be identified with Al-Qaida and
world Jihad. 
Yadlin said that Syria was considering encouraging terrorism on the Golan,
but that according to his assessment Damascus would "think 10 times" before
actually employing this policy. 
Yadlin came under criticism inside the cabinet for what is widely perceived
as a major intelligence failure during the war - not knowing the extent of
the bunker system Hizbullah had built in south Lebanon. 
Yadlin said that the bunkers were extremely well camouflaged, often using
fiberglass rocks as cover. He said that the IDF knew about the existence of
the bunkers, but did not know where each bunker was located. He said that
this type of information is difficult to get from the air. 
"When you haven't crossed the border since 2000, you are not going to know
the location of every bunker," he was quoted as telling the cabinet.


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