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Israel Unlikely To Strike Iran This Year

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  • Israel Unlikely To Strike Iran This Year

    ISRAEL UNLIKELY TO STRIKE IRAN THIS YEAR

    PanARMENIAN.Net
    03.04.2009 10:59 GMT+04:00

    /PanARMENIAN.Net/ Robert Gates, U.S. Defense Secretary, has said
    Israel is unlikely to attack Iran this year to prevent Tehran from
    developing a nuclear weapon.

    In an interview with the Financial Times, Mr Gates said there was still
    enough time to persuade Iran to abandon what is widely perceived to
    be a nuclear weapons program.

    Mr Gates said he does not expect Israel - which believes the
    U.S. estimate for when Iran could develop a nuclear weapon is too
    sanguine - to take military action this year.

    "I guess I would say I would be surprised...if they did act this year,"
    he said.

    As he was sworn in as the new Israeli prime minister this week,
    Benjamin Netanyahu warned that the greatest danger to Israel was
    Iran's attempt to develop nuclear weapons. But asked whether Iran
    would cross a nuclear "red line" this year, Mr Gates said: "I don't
    know, I would guess probably not".

    "I think we have more time than that. How much more time I don't know,"
    said Mr Gates. "It is a year, two years, three years. It is somewhere
    in that window."

    Israel raised the specter of war last year by conducting a large scale
    military exercise that some experts saw as a practice run for an attack
    on Iran. Admiral Mike Mullen, the chairman of the U.S. joint chiefs,
    later delivered an unusual public warning following a visit to Israel,
    saying "this is a very unstable part of the world, and I don't need
    it to be more unstable".

    Speaking before U.S. President Barack Obama meets NATO leaders in
    France and Germany this weekend, Mr Gates urged Europe to boost its
    commitment to Afghanistan in the wake of the new US strategy.

    Mr Gates, who has made multiple frustrated trips to Europe to get
    more combat troops, said the U.S. would request resources that were
    more politically palatable to the European public. He urged Europe to
    provide money for the expansion of the Afghan army, civilian experts
    in areas such as agriculture, health and clean water, and trainers
    for the Afghan police.

    Extrapolating from analyst assessments that the most advanced Jerichos
    carry 1,650-lb conventional warheads, Abdullah Toukan of the Center for
    Strategic and International Studies said 42 missiles would be enough
    to "severely damage or demolish" Iran's core nuclear sites at Natanz,
    Esfahan and Arak.
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