by Caroline Glick
Something  is happening in Iran. Forces are in motion. But what is happening? And  who are the forces that are on the move? Since this week's bombing in  Isfahan, the world media is rife with speculation that the war with Iran  over its nuclear weapons program has begun. But if the war has begun,  who is fighting it? What are their aims? And what are their methods and  means of attack? 
On Wednesday the Times of  London published a much-cited article about this week's blast in  Isfahan. The article referred to the bombed installation as a "uranium  enrichment facility."
But there is no uranium enrichment facility at Isfahan. Rather there is a uranium conversion facility.
As the news analysis website The Missing Peace explained,  a UCF is an installation where yellowcake is converted into uranium  hexafluoride, or UF6. In Iran, the UF6 from Isfahan is sent to Natanz,  where it is enriched.
While  Isfahan's UCF may be a reasonable target in an all-out attack on Iran's  nuclear program, it is not a vital installation. According to American  military analyst J.E. Dyer, it would not be a priority target for  Western governments whose primary goal is to neutralize Iran's nuclear  weapons program.
As Dyer put it in a blog post at Hot Air,  "Western governments make their targeting decisions based on criteria  that would put the Isfahan UCF several notches down the list of things  that need to be struck in November 2011. It's a workhorse facility in  the fissile-material production network, and it's already done what  needs to be done to assemble an arsenal of multiple weapons. Uranium  conversion is also 'mastered technology'; Iran can reconstitute it  relatively quickly."
Dyer concludes that due to  the site's low value to Western governments, "It is extremely unlikely  that a Western government" perpetrated the attack.
If  Dyer is right, and the Isfahan site is not critical to Iran's nuclear  project and was therefore not attacked by a Western government, who  attacked it and why? Dr. Michael Ledeen, an Iran expert from the  Washington-based Foundation for Defense of Democracies wrote Monday at PJ Media  that the attack at Isfahan, like the attacks two weeks ago at the  Bidganeh Air Force base and two other Revolutionary Guards bases were  conducted by members of Iran's anti-regime Green Movement. In those  attacks, Revolutionary Guards Maj.-Gen. Hasan Tehrani Moghaddam was  killed and some 180 Shahab 3 ballistic missiles were destroyed.
Speaking  to The Missing Peace, Daniel Ashrafi, an Iranian anti-regime activist  living in Canada, claimed that Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei was scheduled  to visit the Bidganeh base at the time of the explosion, but he was  delayed.
If true, this would mark the second  time that a facility was bombed when one of Iran's senior leaders was  scheduled to visit the site. In May, the Abadan oil refinery was bombed  during a site visit by Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad.
Given  the shroud of secrecy that covers all operations in Iran, any attempt  to assess what is happening on the ground is necessarily  speculative. But speculation can be useful if it is grounded in a  reasoned assessment of the differing goals of various actors and the  probability of their willingness to act alone or in concert with others  to achieve their goals.
In the case of the  Green Movement, what began as a protest movement after the regime stole  the 2009 presidential elections, morphed in the ensuing months of  protests and regime repression into a full-blown revolutionary movement.
No  longer content to demand that Ahmadinejad step down and fair elections  take place, the Green Movement began calling for and working towards the  overthrow of the regime as a whole. And since last year, regime  installations as well as key members of the Revolutionary Guards have  been targeted on a regular basis. As The Washington Post reported  last week, since 2010 there has been a fivefold increase in the number  of explosions at Iranian oil pipelines and refineries. Whoever is behind  the blasts is clearly targeting Iran's high value economic assets.
And now they have moved on to military installations and nuclear sites.
THIS  ESCALATION in the war of sabotage against the Iranian regime provides  two important lessons for Western policy-makers assessing Western  options for preventing Iran from acquiring nuclear weapons.
It  tells us the popular Western belief that a US or Israeli or coalition  strike on Iran's nuclear installations would provoke the Iranian public  to rally around the regime is utter nonsense. In the case of the Isfahan  bombing, for instance, there are two possible scenarios for who is  responsible.
First, it is possible, as Ledeen  argues and Dyer infers, that the attack was the work of regime opponents  acting on their own. Second, it is possible as Israeli officials quoted  by the media have hinted that it was a collaborative effort between  local regime opponents and foreign forces.
In  either case, what is clear is that at least some Iranians are willing to  target their country's nuclear installations if doing so will harm the  regime.
At the height of the 2009 Green  Movement protests against the regime, US President Barack Obama  justified his decision not to side with the anti-regime protesters by  claiming that if the US were to support them, they would lose popular  credibility. In his words, it would be counterproductive for the US "to  be seen as meddling" in Iran's domestic affairs, "given the history of  US-Iranian relations."
And yet, what we see is  that no one is rallying around the regime. The attacks on Isfahan and  Bidganeh, which the regime was quick to simultaneously deny and blame on  foreign governments, did not cause the people to rally to the side of  the mullahs. So, too, the repeated bombings of petroleum facilities are  not fomenting an upsurge in public support for the regime. To the  contrary; domestic disgruntlement with the regime continues to rise as  the standard of living for the average Iranian plummets.
And  this brings us to the "students" who raided the British Embassy on  Tuesday. On Thursday the regime released from jail all the "students"  arrested for raiding and torching the embassy and briefly holding  British personnel hostage.
Their release is yet  further proof that the embassy attackers were neither students nor  angry at Britain. Rather, as British Foreign Minister William Hague and  others have alleged, they were regime goons who belong to the same Basij  force that massacred, tortured and raped the anti-regime protesters  from the Green Movement in 2009.
According to  the official Iranian press agencies, the "students" raided the British  Embassy because they were furious that Britain announced it was cutting  its ties with Iran's Central Bank. If Obama were right, and Western  anti-regime actions were counterproductive, then we could have expected  real students, like the ones who called for the overthrow of the regime  in 2009 to protest outside the British Embassy. But the fact that they  stayed home while their attackers turned their truncheons on the British  is clear proof that Obama simply didn't know what he was talking about.
AND  AS Obama's statements in the wake of the assault on the British Embassy  made clear, he still fundamentally misunderstands the situation in  Iran. Responding to the attack, Obama said, "I strongly urge the Iranian  government to hold those who are responsible to task."
That is, the US president opted to pretend that "those responsible," were separate from the regime, which they are not.
Obama's  response is of a piece with his non-response to Iran's plan to bomb  targets in Washington. It is also in line with his refusal to  contemplate sanctions against Iran's Central Bank and its oil sector.  Moreover, Obama's continued insistence on working through the UN  Security Council to ratchet up sanctions on Iran despite the fact that  Russian and Chinese support for Iran has blocked that venue make clear  that he is not at all serious about using US power to prevent Iran from  acquiring nuclear weapons.
Thankfully, Obama's  abandonment of the traditional US role as the leader of the free world  has not prevented Western governments and regional forces for freedom  from acting in their common interests. Britain and France have responded  to the regime assault on the British Embassy by rallying Western  European nations to escalate the EU's campaign to prevent Iran from  acquiring nuclear weapons. Unlike the Obama administration, which  continues to falsely characterize Iran's nuclear program as a threat to  Israel alone, the Europeans are increasingly willing to acknowledge that  the program and the regime constitute a grave threat to European  security and to global security as a whole.
Whereas  the Obama administration peevishly argues that an embargo on Iranian  oil will raise world oil prices, this week the British openly called for  an embargo on Iranian oil. In truth such an embargo would harm Iran far  more than it would harm the global economy. Europe buys 20 to 25  percent of Iran's oil exports, but Iranian oil makes up only 5% of  European oil imports. At least in the short run, Saudi Arabia could pick  up the slack, thus ensuring stability in global oil prices.
In  the absence of US leadership, a coalition and a strategy for preventing  Iran from acquiring nuclear weapons and continuing to terrorize the  West has emerged. First, we have the Iranian opposition which is  apparently actively involved in sabotaging with the aim of overthrowing  the regime. Second, we have Israel which is completely committed to  preventing Iran from acquiring nuclear weapons. And finally we have  leading European states that are increasingly determined to take  practical steps to prevent Iran from acquiring nuclear weapons.
There are many opportunities for collaboration between these forces. In an interview with The New York Times  following the UN's International Atomic Energy Agency's report exposing  Iran's nuclear weapons program last month, Jean-Jaques Guillet, who  published a report on Iran for the French National Assembly, said the  goal of these forces should be to overthrow the regime. In his words,  "If we press the regime strongly, there could be an implosion. The real  objective these days should be the regime's implosion, not more talk."
Guillet  suggested that France could cut off satellite service to Iran. Iran's  television networks are broadcast through the French-owned Eutelsat.
Cutting  off regime broadcasts, placing an embargo on Iranian oil exports, and  actively assisting anti-regime forces in sabotaging regime  installations, including nuclear installations, have the potential of  achieving the goals of preventing Iran from acquiring nuclear weapons  and facilitating the empowerment of pro-Western democrats in that  country.
Clearly, US participation in such a  collaborative strategy would be helpful. But between the explosions in  Isfahan and Bidganeh, and the surge in attacks on other regime targets;  and Europe's notably robust response to Iran's attack on the British  Embassy, it is possible that these goals can be accomplished even with  the US following far behind.
Originally published in The Jerusalem Post.
Caroline Glick
Source: http://www.carolineglick.com/e/2011/12/the-real-war-in-iran.php
Copyright - Original materials copyright (c) by the authors.

 
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