Ehud Barak and Rahm Emanuel in Chicago Ill-assorted figures this week
cited 2013 as the year in which the United States was expected to go to
war on Iran.
Among them was Iran’s atomic commission director Fereydoun
Abbasi-Davani, former US ambassador to Israel Martin Indyk, and players
in the US-Iranian war game staged at the Saban Center for Middle East
Policy in Washington, whose heads are close to US President Obama and
Secretary of State Hillary Clinton.
This apparent US-Iranian concord was unusual but not fortuitous, say DEBKAfile analysts.
On the part of Washington, it had a distinct purpose, which was to
demonstrate to Israeli Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu that an Israeli
attack before the US presidential election would be superfluous.
The message was played out in the Saban institute’s war game: The
player representing Iran’s supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei said
the Americans are tired of the fight and they are led by a weak man with
no stomach for the struggle.
The script then proves him wrong: On July 6, 2013, Iranian agents
coming in from Venezuela blow up a hotel on the Caribbean island of
Aruba killing 137 people, many of them American holidaymakers including
nuclear physicists. It was clearly a revenge attack for the
assassination of Iranian nuclear scientists.
The next chapter of this scenario had President Obama, portrayed as
reelected in November, ordering Iranian Revolutionary Guards
headquarters in eastern Iran to be bombed, 40 Iranian security
installations shut down by cyber warfare and Tehran warned that US
intelligence had the names of Iranian agents in 38 countries and their
lives were at risk.
Full story here.
No comments:
Post a Comment