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TEL AVIV: Military action would not stop Iran’s nuclear programme but could
be a last resort to delay any quest for an atomic bomb, the mastermind of Israel’s
1981 air strike on the Iraqi reactor at Osiraq said on Monday.
While Israel and its US ally have not excluded the option of attacking Iran
if all diplomatic efforts to curb its nuclear capability fail, independent experts
believe the Islamic republic’s facilities are too dispersed and fortified
to be eliminated militarily.
But David Ivry, who planned the Osiraq raid as then chief of the Israeli air
force, argued against thinking in all-out terms.
“You cannot eliminate an idea, a national will. But you can delay progress
on a nuclear programme with the appropriate military action,” Ivry told
Reuters. “That is a valuable objective in itself.” Eight Israeli
F-16 jets, using detachable fuel containers and relatively light bombs to extend
their range, destroyed Osiraq on June 7, 1981. The Iraqi quest for atomic weapons
was driven underground until UN inspectors uncovered it in 1991.
“When Israel struck Osiraq, the intention was never to get rid of Saddam
Hussein’s nuclear plans. We wanted to buy time, and we succeeded in doing
that,” Ivry said.
Iran has denied seeking an atomic bomb, saying its nuclear programme is for
energy needs only.
It has suspended uranium enrichment, a process that can produce bombs, at the
behest of France, Britain and Germany. But Washington wants Tehran referred
to the UN Security Council for possible sanctions if it does not scrap the programme.
Israel, believed to be the Middle East’s only nuclear power, has made
no secret of seeking means to confront Iran militarily. But it denies planning
to attack its arch-foe unilaterally.
However, Israeli officials say they have assessed that Iran will obtain the
know-how to make atomic weapons within months. That is a more pressing prognosis
than Washington’s, suggesting Israel could yet go it alone.
“A country decides when to act against the enemy based on its assessment
of when the threat has become insufferable. You set a deadline beyond which
you believe you will lose the option of acting,” Ivry said. “With
Osiraq, it was the fact that the Iraqis were about to bring uranium into the
reactor.”
Although a fleet of advanced F-16i jets has extended the Jewish state’s
reach into the Gulf, analysts doubt an Israeli strike could deal with the dozens
of nuclear facilities in Iran, a state much bigger than Iraq and with formidable
air defences.
“Israel’s best option would be a simultaneous multi-pronged strike
using different routes, for example through Jordan and Iraq as well as the Mediterranean
route through Turkey and or Azerbaijan,” Kaveh Afrasiabi, a political
analyst at Tehran University, said in a recent published article.
“Yet at present neither option is available to Israel ... given Iran’s
cordial relations with its neighbors and the fears and concerns of those neighbours
of a severe Iranian backlash in case they permit their air space for an Israeli
attack on Iran.” The warplanes that bombed Osiraq overflew Jordan and
Saudi Arabia, which were then formally at war with Israel. But Ivry said seeking
permission would not be necessary.
“I do not know of any country that would ask permission of another (to
use its air space). Doing so would compromise the secrecy of the mission, and
approval would not be forthcoming anyway. When dealing with a mission seen as
crucial for national security, such issues are irrelevant,” said Ivry.
The retired general also disputed the assumption that all or most of Iran’s
facilities would have to be tackled in a strike.
“It is enough to hit the key component of the production cycle to put
the whole operation out of action,” he said. “Given the sensitivity
of the technologies in question, a strike that simply shakes the structure housing
them is usually sufficient to cause irreparable damage. Total destruction of
the target is not necessary or even desirable.”
And although an “Osiraq option” against Iran is a matter of widespread
speculation, Ivry suggested that Israel could still have tricks in store if
it decided to proceed with a strike. “The Iranians attacked Osiraq twice
before we did (in the Iran-Iraq war). Each time, the Iraqis bolstered their
defences at the site. So even then, we did not really have the element of surprise
in terms of the overall concept of a strike,” he said.
“If and when Iran is attacked, I think I can assure you it will come
as a surprise to everyone.” reuters