Archive for the ‘Iran’ Category

How to avoid nuclear escalation as a confident Iran and insecure Israel square off – Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists

Iran fires a Shahab-3 medium-range ballistic missile during an undated test. The Shahab-3 has a range of 2,000 km, enough to reach Israel. Missile forces are a key part of Iran's security concept. (Credit: Fars News Agency, via Wikimedia Commons)

Last November, a report by the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) provided insights into the sustained and unprecedented progress of Irans nuclear program, including the alarming update about a speed-up in its uranium enrichment. While the ongoing conflict in the Middle East continues to capture both regional and global attention, the IAEA report serves as a striking reminder that the Iranian nuclear challenge persists, and with it a substantial risk of regional escalation.

Two opposing dynamics are at play in the region: a growing Iranian confidence in its long-term strategy, and the erosion of Israeli confidence in maintaining its national security. These create fertile and perilous ground for a potential direct confrontation, in which the nuclear issue would be central.

It is time to change course, find alternatives to the ineffective current policies, and avoid a strategic mistake that will enable Iran to get closer to a nuclear weapon.

The United States and its allies should present Iran with a final proposal to return to an agreement framework for Tehrans nuclear program; if declined, talks must be halted. This approach must be accompanied by alternative measures to diminish Irans confidence in the efficacy of its current aggressive strategy. Such measures should include clearly communicating a red line to Iran regarding progression toward weaponization of its nuclear programand also communicating, through private back channels, that the United States has developed contingency plans to attack Irans nuclear facilities and other targets important to the Iranian regime should the red line be crossed. It is equally crucial, however, to avoid cornering Iran in a manner that further incentivizes nuclear advancement, recognizing its need to maintain counter-leverage.

At the same time, any plan regarding the Iranian nuclear program must address Israeli concerns to help mitigate the risk of unilateral actions originating from Jerusalem. A provisional solution that sustains rivalry but establishes well-defined rules could prove advantageous for all parties involved and may pave the way for future substantial de-escalation.

Irans growing confidence. Since the Hamas attack on October 7, Iran has affirmed the effectiveness of its national security strategy, including patient and consistent encirclement of its adversaries including Israel, Saudi Arabia, and US forces. The current Middle East war reveals that Irans armed allies in Lebanon, Iraq, Yemen, and Gaza (known as the axis of resistance) showcase an offensive regional capability with growing willingness to challenge opposing countries.

Irans regime has also strengthened its public perception, positioning itself as a regional patron equivalent to the United States. In some Iranian military circles, the conflict is perceived as proof that weakening Israel is an attainable objective within its strategic reach.

In addition, Iran has gleaned that the United States is willing to increase power projection in the Middle East during a crisis and is maintaining strong support for Israel. Nevertheless, some argue that Tehran also perceives the United States as notably cautious, reluctant to engage in unilateral action, and willing to act against Irans proxies within coalitions, to avoid a direct confrontation.

From an operational point of view, Iran has obtained evidence from the Hamas attack that concealing and deceiving Israel on security matters is indeed feasible, even within Jerusalems immediate sphere of influence.

Israel on the other hand has undergone a national trauma due to the unprecedented scale, level of violence, and surprise of the Hamas attack. For many Israelis, the attack intensified the fundamental fear that external risks may evolve into an existential challenge that the countrys current national security strategy is insufficient to deter. Israelis increasingly recognize that the Iranian strategy to encircle Israel with threats is gaining momentum. Some argue that Irans actions serve as evidence of its profound hostile intentions and threat to Israels future.

The United States has now come to realize that the challenges in the Middle East will persist, contrary to what officials hoped until the Hamas attack. The region is highly volatile and will remain so for the foreseeable future, therefore necessitating continuous diplomatic and security attention.

Although neither Israel nor Iran seems to seek a direct confrontation, the recent fighting, the consistent trends toward escalation in recent years, and the evolving geopolitical landscape are all pushing toward a more precarious outcome.

Iran gears up. Irans security concept is shaped by the synergy of its regional proxy strategy, latent nuclear deterrent, and military focus on missiles and droneselements that interconnect.

The recent success of the axis of resistance strategy may amplify Iranian confidence in its efficacy. It could reinforce the belief that Tehran can navigate and mitigate the risks associated with an increasingly aggressive approach in the region. The absence of direct consequences for supporting belligerent allies may further solidify the perception of the righteousness of its strategic trajectory. This, in turn, might indirectly embolden assertiveness within other facets of the Iranian security concept, including the nuclear program, albeit not in the short term.

While Iran currently faces no immediate need to enhance its deterrence capacity, there is a looming concern that over time, the regime may succumb to a growing temptation to advance further in the nuclear field. Considering the limited response to its nuclear progress in recent years, Iran might seize the opportunity to gain experience and gradually normalize advanced capabilities, such as uranium metal production and uranium enrichment that produces bomb-grade fissile material.

The international communitys focus on other issues, coupled with Israels intelligence failure to foresee the October 7 attack, may inadvertently increase voices in Tehran advocating further advancement in Irans nuclear creep. This incentive might increase if both the United States and Israel keep their focus on severe challenges of domestic politics, and after regional tension relief that allows international attention to return to other arenas. The future expiration of limitations on Irans nuclear program, as agreed upon in the 2015 Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA), also known as the Iran nuclear deal, may further enhance this trend.

In addition, a perceived failure in another component of its security apparatus could also motivate Iran to pursue advancements in its nuclear capabilities. This could be triggered, for instance, by an Israeli offensive action that significantly undermines the success of the axis of resistance. In such a scenario, hawkish elements within the Iranian regime might determine that nuclear capabilitiesas opposed to the proxy strategyoffer a more sustainable and effective deterrent against adversaries.

A dramatic change in domestic or geopolitical conditions such as the risk-averse supreme leaders death or a normalization between Israel and Saudi Arabia that allows Riyadh to possess a civilian nuclear program, might push Iran closer to such a shift.

Israels anxiousness. Israels heightened sense of threat compels it to reconsider the status quo, especially in Gaza and possibly in Lebanon. The demonstration of Israels weakness on October 7 may amplify calls in Jerusalem for more independent actions against what Israel sees as the octopus head in Tehran.

Current Israeli officials have been wary not to engage in unilateral moves that could endanger US interests. Although this cautious strategy may prevail, especially given the US support during the current Middle East fighting and considering the upcoming presidential elections in the United States, the trajectory may eventually change.

A shift in US policy vis a vis Iran, which includes a de facto abandonment of the fuel cycle limitations toward a focus on preventing weaponization, might raise concerns in Israel about a threat perception gap between the two nations.

A widening distrust between President Joe Biden and Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahus right-wing government could potentially further prompt Israel to rely more on its own capabilities and consider unilateral action against Iran.

If Irans nuclear progress continues and approaches a threatening red line, the Israeli government, influenced by a heightened public threat perception, may feel compelled to implement its well-known preventive strategy, akin to past actions against nuclear facilities in Iraq in 1981 and Syria in 2007. If Netanyahus right-wing government stays in power, and former President Donald Trump reenters office next year, the chances for such a move might increase.

Changing course. Adverting escalation dynamics between Israel and Iran in the nuclear realm will be one of the most central and complex challenges to the Middle East in the years to come.

The primary objective should remain the pursuit of an agreement that diminishes Irans current fuel cycle capabilities and addresses the military dimensions of its nuclear program. Nevertheless, at present, the prospect of Iran and the United States reestablishing a sustainable agreement on the nuclear realm appears dim.

In the diplomatic realm, the United States and its allies should present Iran with a definitive and time-bound sincere offer to re-engage within an agreement framework, even if on a partial basis. Should Iran not accept this proposal, negotiations must be postponed until circumstances change, for example, after the presidential elections. Prolonged, inconclusive talks without tangible outcomes create ambiguity, undermine the credibility of alternative options, and allow Iran to exploit the absence of clear rules and consequencesas it showed in recent years.

In the event of failure to reach a long-lasting agreement, the US and its allies must implement alternative measures to impede Irans progress, with the prevention of nuclearization as the main priority. Simultaneously, addressing Israeli concerns regarding the nuclear program can help mitigate the risk of unilateral moves originating from Jerusalem.

A viable preventive strategy could base itself on eroding Irans confidence in the effectiveness of its aggressive approach while bolstering deterrent measures without triggering escalation. Accordingly, there should be an updated US contingency plan to target nuclear infrastructure and official regime targets, and its extent should be clearly but privately conveyed to the Iranian leadership, to establish a potential clear and substantial cost for regime stability.

By seeking a more risk-prone approach, the United States can reduce Irans confidence in advancing its nuclear program. Until 2015, such a muscular approach, combined with diplomacy, was used to prompt Iran to compromise, recalibrate its course on nuclear progress, and re-engage within an agreement framework.

The current crisis and US power projection in the Middle East can be leveraged as an opportunity to bolster the credibility of a new approach toward Iran. Maintaining a threatening presence in the region, even if intermittent, challenges Irans assumption of its ability to manage and mitigate the risks of its long-term strategy, especially if portrayed as a consequence of the violence originated by the axis of resistance.

It is crucial to reduce the risk of unilateral actions by Jerusalem against Iran, especially if an interim arrangement leaves Iran in an advanced technological state and places Israel in a passive position. The upcoming year should therefore be used to bolster Israels confidence in the existence of a future substantial Plan B against Irans nuclear program.

Given the profound mistrust between Iran and the West, and the challenges in reaching a lasting agreement, a provisional solution that maintains the status of conflict while establishing well-defined rules to prevent weaponization could prove advantageous for all parties involved. This approach would allow Iran to uphold an image of assertiveness and external rivalry, which can be attributed to domestic challenges. Simultaneously, Israel can gain security assurances from the United States on a matter of existential importance while keeping some maneuvering room, whereas the United States can project power, focus attention on other rivals, and avoid intense criticism at home.

This delicate equilibrium has the potential to establish a new status quo and, in the long term, may serve as a foundation for future de-escalation initiatives.

In conjunction with the proactive measures needed to counter the Iranian nuclear threat, it may be prudent for those addressing this challenge to incorporate, to some extent, the strategic patience observed by the Iranian regime itself.

The ongoing internal processes indicating public disaffection with the Iranian regime are anticipated to persist and potentially intensify in the coming years. Whether this takes three, five, or 15 years, the most significant potential for a sustainable alteration in the trajectory of Irans nuclear advancement lies in a natural change within the current hawkish regime.

After several years of attempts failed to yield the desired results and the risks of escalation intensify, current policies can no longer be relied upon uncritically. To avoid a strategic mistake in the Israel-Iran relations, it is time to consider alternatives.

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How to avoid nuclear escalation as a confident Iran and insecure Israel square off - Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists

Man Extradited to U.S. in Suspected Iranian Plot to Kill Activist – The New York Times

A man charged with participating in a plot hatched in Iran to assassinate Masih Alinejad, an Iranian American human rights activist and a sharp critic of Irans repression of women, has been extradited to the United States, American authorities said on Wednesday.

The man, Polad Omarov, 39, was turned over to representatives of the U.S. government at Vaclav Havel Airport in Prague on Wednesday morning, Reuters reported, citing a statement from the Czech Justice Ministry. He was arrested in the Czech Republic in January 2023.

A federal indictment unsealed in New York last year said Mr. Omarov and three co-conspirators were part of an Eastern European criminal organization known by its members as Thieves-in-Law, which has ties to Iran and in 2022 was given the assignment to kill Ms. Alinejad, a journalist in Brooklyn.

Federal prosecutors in Manhattan have said that Mr. Omarov, a citizen of Georgia, held a leadership role in the organization and resided in Eastern Europe.

This matter is going to be over today, brother, Mr. Omarov said in a message to one of his co-conspirators in July 2022, shortly before another plotter, Khalid Mehdiyev, an Azerbaijani man living in Yonkers, N.Y., was found with a loaded AK-47-style assault rifle outside Ms. Alinejads house, the indictment charged. I told them to make a birthday present for me, Mr. Omarov wrote.

At the time, Mr. Mehdiyev, at the direction of Mr. Omarov and another man, Rafat Amirov, was preparing imminently to execute the attack on Ms. Alinejad, the indictment said.

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Man Extradited to U.S. in Suspected Iranian Plot to Kill Activist - The New York Times

Hungarian foreign minister visiting Iran for trade negotiations "forgot" that Tehran supplies Russia with weapons – Yahoo News

Hungarian Foreign Minister Pter Szijjrt visited Tehran on 22 February and met with Iranian Foreign Minister Hossein Amir-Abdollahian, despite the fact that Iran is actively supporting Russia in its war against Ukraine.

Source: European Pravda, citing Hungarian media outlet MTI

Details: Szijjrt, who was taking part in a Hungarian-Iranian business forum in Tehran, said the two countries are interested in developing economic cooperation in areas that are not affected by sanctions, such as pharmaceuticals, healthcare, the food industry, and water management.

He announced on Facebook that he had signed a bilateral agreement that would "open up even greater access to the Iranian market for high-quality Hungarian agricultural technology and food products".

At a joint press conference with his Iranian counterpart, Hossein Amir-Abdollahian, Szijjrt said he had come to Tehran to prevent an escalation of the conflict in the Middle East, which would pose a "huge threat to global security".

Szijjrt made only a passing mention of the 7 October 2023 terrorist attack on Israel by Iran-backed Hamas militants and the attacks on civilian vessels by Yemeni Houthis, who are also sponsored by the Iranian regime.

He made no mention at all of the fact that Tehran is providing military assistance to Russia to wage its war in Ukraine, which contradicts Hungary's position that no one should provide weapons to either side in the "conflict".

Ironically, it was reported just before the Hungarian foreign minister's visit that Iran had sent several hundred ballistic missiles to Russia for strikes against Ukraine.

This is not the first time that Hungary has sought to build relations with countries from the modern-day "axis of evil". In 2022, Szijjrt welcomed the Iranian minister of economy, and in 2023, he travelled to Belarus and shook hands with its self-styled president, Alexander Lukashenko. Senior Hungarian officials are also the only ones in the EU who have continued to travel to Russia since the outbreak of the full-scale war in Ukraine.

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Hungarian foreign minister visiting Iran for trade negotiations "forgot" that Tehran supplies Russia with weapons - Yahoo News

Japanese yakuza accused of trying to sell uranium, plutonium to Iran – The Washington Post

A Japanese yakuza boss sought to sell nuclear material to an undercover U.S. law enforcement agent who was posing as an associate of an Iranian general, U.S. prosecutors said Wednesday. It was part of a broader criminal scheme that involved distributing illegal drugs in New York, according to authorities.

Prosecutors said in an indictment that Takeshi Ebisawa, 60, wanted to sell uranium and plutonium raw material that can be used to build nuclear bombs on behalf of the leader of an insurgent group in Myanmar, a country also known as Burma. Starting in early 2020, Ebisawa contacted the undercover U.S. agent to sell the nuclear raw material for cash, while also trying to obtain military weapons on behalf of the insurgent leader.

During negotiations, Ebisawa asked for $6.85 million at one point for the nuclear material and sought to procure weapons such as surface-to-air missiles, M60 machine guns and AK-47 rifles, according to prosecutors.

In 2021, Ebisawa traveled to Copenhagen and met with an undercover U.S. official and two undercover Danish police officers posing as the U.S. officials associates, to examine the military weapons purportedly on offer, according to U.S. authorities. In February 2022, Ebisawas associates, who were not identified, met with the undercover U.S. agent in a hotel room in Phuket, Thailand, to show samples of the nuclear material. Thai authorities later confiscated the nuclear material and handed it over to U.S. officials.

U.S. officials said they subsequently confirmed that the materials that were in Ebisawas possession were radioactive and included weapons-grade plutonium.

As part of the broader transaction, Ebisawa and Somphop Singhasiri, a co-defendant and a Thai national, also sought to sell hundreds of kilograms of methamphetamine and heroin to an undercover law enforcement officer, with the understanding that those drugs would be distributed to users in New York, according to a previous criminal complaint filed against Ebisawa in January 2022.

Together, Ebisawa and Somphop face eight criminal counts that could result in life sentences. The two were arrested in Manhattan in April 2022.

It is impossible to overstate the seriousness of this conduct, Damian Williams, the U.S. attorney for the Southern District of New York, said in a news release.

Lawyers for Ebisawa and Somphop could not be immediately reached.

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Japanese yakuza accused of trying to sell uranium, plutonium to Iran - The Washington Post

4 charged in transporting suspected Iranian-made weapons on boat intercepted by U.S. – NPR

This image released by the U.S. Department of Justice in an FBI affidavit filed in U.S. District Court, Alexandria, Va., shows what is described as Iranian-made warhead bound for Yemen's Houthi seized off a vessel in the Arabian Sea. Four foreign nationals were charged Thursday, Feb. 22, 2024, with transporting suspected Iranian-made weapons on a vessel intercepted by U.S. naval forces. U.S. Department of Justice via AP hide caption

This image released by the U.S. Department of Justice in an FBI affidavit filed in U.S. District Court, Alexandria, Va., shows what is described as Iranian-made warhead bound for Yemen's Houthi seized off a vessel in the Arabian Sea. Four foreign nationals were charged Thursday, Feb. 22, 2024, with transporting suspected Iranian-made weapons on a vessel intercepted by U.S. naval forces.

RICHMOND, Va. Four foreign nationals were charged Thursday with transporting suspected Iranian-made weapons on a vessel intercepted by U.S. naval forces in the Arabian Sea last month. Two Navy SEALs died during the mission.

The criminal complaint unsealed Thursday in U.S. District Court in Richmond alleges that the four defendants who were all carrying Pakistani identification cards were transporting suspected Iranian-made missile components for the type of weapons used by Houthi rebel forces in recent attacks.

"The flow of missiles and other advanced weaponry from Iran to Houthi rebel forces in Yemen threatens the people and interests of America and our partners in the region," Deputy Attorney General Lisa Monaco said in a news release.

U.S. officials said that Navy Special Warfare Operator 1st Class Christopher J. Chambers was boarding the boat on Jan. 11 and slipped into the gap created by high waves between the vessel and the SEALs' combatant craft. As Chambers fell, Navy Special Warfare Operator 2nd Class Nathan Gage Ingram jumped in to try to save him, according to U.S. officials familiar with what happened.

"Two Navy SEALs tragically lost their lives in the operation that thwarted the defendants charged today from allegedly smuggling Iranian-made weapons that the Houthis could have used to target American forces and threaten freedom of navigation and a vital artery for commerce," Monaco said.

Muhammad Pahlawan is charged with attempting to smuggle advanced missile components, including a warhead he is accused of knowing would be used by the Houthi rebels against commercial and naval vessels in the Red Sea and surrounding waters. He is also charged with providing false information to U.S. Coast Guard officers during the boarding of the vessel.

Pahlawan's co-defendants Mohammad Mazhar, Ghufran Ullah and Izhar Muhammad were also charged with providing false information.

Pahlawan's attorney, Assistant Supervisory Federal Public Defender Amy Austin, said Pahlawan had an initial appearance in U.S. District Court Thursday and is scheduled to be back in court Tuesday for a detention hearing. She declined to comment on the case.

"Right now, he's just charged with two crimes and we're just at the very beginning stages, and so all we know is what's in the complaint," Austin said when reached by phone Thursday.

According to prosecutors, Navy forces boarded a small, unflagged vessel, described as a dhow, and encountered 14 people on the ship on the night of Jan. 11, in the Arabian Sea off the Somali coast.

Navy forces searched the dhow and found what prosecutors say was Iranian-made weapons, including components for medium range ballistic missiles and anti-ship cruise missiles.

All 14 sailors on the dhow were brought onto the USS Lewis B. Puller after Navy forces determined the dhow was not seaworthy. They were then brought back to Virginia, where criminal charges were filed against four and material witness warrants were filed against the other 10.

According to an FBI affidavit, Navy forces were entitled to board the ship because they were conducting an authorized "flag verification" to determine the country where the dhow was registered.

The dhow was determined to be flying without a flag and was therefore deemed a "vessel without nationality" that was subject to U.S. law, the affidavit states.

According to the affidavit, the sailors on the dhow admitted they had departed from Iran, although at least one of the men initially insisted they departed from Pakistan.

The affidavit states that crew members had been in contact multiple times by satellite phone with a member of Iran's Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps.

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4 charged in transporting suspected Iranian-made weapons on boat intercepted by U.S. - NPR