US
downgrades anti-missile drills with Israel; sends CIA’s Petraeus
instead to ease tensions
Only
days after the United States announced that it will be scaling down
its role in a joint-missile exercise with Israel scheduled for later
this year, the US has sent CIA Director David Petraeus overseas to
handle damage control.
RT,
4
September, 2012
Petraeus,
the 59-year-old former commander of the International Security
Assistance Force in Afghanistan, arrived in Israel on Monday to deal
with what the Jewish state’s Debka news agency calls the “flames
of discord” that have been fanned feverishly in recent days thanks
to the latest news on a missile drill slated for next month.
The
United States had previously agreed to participate at the beginning
of 2012 in what was expected to be the largest joint missile exercise
ever between the US and Israel, only for the program to be pushed
back to October. Now the US says that they are drastically scaling
back on the degree to which they are taking part, not just revoking
its number of troops involved by more than one-third, but also
calling into question how serious the United States might be about
helping out allies in Israel in the event of a war with Iran, an
outcome some have suggested is all but eventually certain.
“Basically
what the Americans are saying is, ‘We don’t trust you,’” one
senior Israeli military official tells Time Magazine this week on
condition of anonymity.
Previously
the US had agreed to send over around 5,000 troops to test Patriot
missiles as part of the Austere 12 challenge; now they stand to send
as few as 1,200, which effectively means that some of Patriot system
will not be participating in the drills altogether, as a crew
shortage preventing them from being tested . The United States has
not officially announced if it plans on making any changes to its
ship-based Aegis system, which it is slated to test net month
alongside Israel's own Arrow, Patriot and Iron Drone missiles. Debka
adds in their report that it is now uncertain, however, as to whether
or not the US will still dispatch any of its Aegis Ballistic Missile
Defense warships.
Now
as Israeli/Iranian tensions continue to worsen, the US is acting
uncertain about what role it may have in any war plans. Debka reports
that Petraeus has been put in Israel to handle the blowback and
ensure America’s faithful allies that all is well in terms of
America’s intentions.
Only
days earlier, Joint Chiefs of Staff Chairman Gen. Martin Dempsey told
reporters in London that he doesn’t “want to be complicit” if
Israel chooses to unilaterally attack Iran as tensions mount, and
that such a strike would “clearly delay but probably not destroy
Iran’s nuclear program.”
Responding
to what the dispatch of Petraeus could be doing to ease Israeli
minds, Chicago-based reporter Stephen Lendman writes on Indybay.org
this week that any meeting between US and Israeli officials won’t,
at this time, establish a deal.
“Washington
has its own timetable,” Lendman writes. “Netanyahu's bluster
won't change it.”
In
Israel, however, officials seem much more adamant about getting
America on board. Over the weekend, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu
told reporters, "I believe that the truth must be said, the
international community [not the US] is not drawing a clear red line
for Iran, and Iran does not see international determination to stop
its nuclear program.”
"Until
Iran sees this clear red line and this determination, it will not
stop its advancement of the Iranian nuclear program. Iran must not
have a nuclear weapon," the PM said.
According
to remarks made last week by Gen. Dempsey, “Intelligence did not
reveal intentions” that Israel is procuring nukes. US President
Barack Obama has said that, until Iran fully relinquishes their
nuclear warheads, “All options are on the table” in terms of a US
attack. This week’s meeting between Petraeus and Israeli officials
stands to solidify that role.
After
US Rebuke, Israel Scrambles to Climb Down From War Rhetoric
Israeli
Army Shuffle Seen as Evidence Attack Isn't Imminent
4
September, 2012
After
Gen. Martin Dempsey’s comments
last week
laid out an extremely clear
US opposition,
Israeli officials are scrambling to re-frame their incredibly hawkish
statements on attacking Iran.
Immediately
after Gen. Dempsey’s comments Israeli officials were angry.
Within a day they went from angry to puzzled.
At this point they seem to be resigned to the idea that the comments
were a game-changer, and for them a plan-changer.
Israeli
officials had been hinting at launching the attack unilaterally in
the weeks leading up to the US presidential election, but after the
rebuke analysts say
that they are preparing a “climbdown,” and the Obama
Administration is likely to offer some sort of conciliatory effort.
The
first sign of this shift came today, with the announcement of a
shuffling of top Israeli military brass, including the appointment of
a new operations chief, almost certainly not the action of a military
planning a huge war in the next two months.


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