Page added on November 5, 2011
Iran is the biggest threat to the United States and its allies in the Middle East, surpassing al Qaeda, which is down but not out, a senior military official said on Friday.
“The biggest threat to the United States and to our interests and to our friends, I might add, has come into focus and it’s Iran,” said the official, addressing a forum in Washington.
Next week, the International Atomic Energy Agency, the United Nations nuclear watchdog, is expected to release a report that includes evidence of Iranian nuclear research which makes little sense if not weapons related, Western diplomats said.
However, the official said he did not believe Iran wanted to provoke a conflict and added he did not know if the Islamic state had decided to build a nuclear weapon.
Iran says its nuclear program is peaceful and that it is enriching uranium to power reactors for electricity generation.
“I don’t know that the Iranians have made the decision to make a nuclear weapon,” the official said.
Reporters were allowed to cover the event on condition that the senior military official not be identified.
“Al Qaeda is not out, but it’s down,” the official said. He added that al Qaeda had also been largely marginalized by Arab Spring uprisings that have shown change is possible without resorting to the group’s “medieval practices.”
The United States, the European Union and others have imposed numerous rounds of economic sanctions on Tehran for refusing to halt its uranium enrichment program.
‘UNPRECEDENTED PRESSURE’
U.S. President Barack Obama on Thursday said he agreed on the need to keep “unprecedented pressure” on Iran. French President Nicolas Sarkozy said on Friday stricter sanctions were the key to reining in Iran’s nuclear program.
But it is far from clear whether China and Russia, members of the U.N. Security Council, would agree to significantly tighten trade and financial sanctions on Tehran.
At the Pentagon, spokesman George Little said the United States remained focused on leveraging diplomatic and economic pressure against Iran.
“We remain very concerned about their intentions with respect to their nuclear program,” Little told reporters.
“But in terms of the instruments of national power that we’re currently employing, the focus is on diplomatic and economic,” Little said.
Last month the United States accused Iran of plotting to assassinate the Saudi ambassador to Washington, an allegation Tehran denied.
There has been a surge of speculation in Israeli media this week that Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu is working to secure Cabinet consensus for an attack on Iranian nuclear installations.
Israel bombed Iraq’s nuclear reactor in 1981 and launched a similar sortie against Syria in 2007, precedents lending weight to its veiled threats to take similar action on Iran if foreign pressure fails to curb its nuclear program.
Iran has warned that it will respond to any attacks by hitting Israel and U.S. interests in the Gulf. Analysts say Tehran could retaliate by closing the Strait of Hormuz, the waterway where about 40 percent of all traded oil passes.
3 Comments on "Iran now top threat to U.S. says military official"
Rick on Sun, 6th Nov 2011 12:52 am
BS! — The US will now say and do anything for oil. This is all about resources. And things aren’t that bad yet, just wait. Then what? The US, the dumbest country ever.
DragonSpawn on Sun, 6th Nov 2011 7:05 am
Actually, this is the endgame in its beginning stages.
Here’s how I see it playing out:
If the US does nothing about Peak Oil, PO hits us like a ton of bricks and can no longer be denied or hidden. Whatever people still have trust in the government lose trust and then the US gov’t is done.
But, if we go to war with Iran, we solve the Peak Oil problem to some extent. How? We know that if Iran is attacked by the US or Isreal, the first thing they will do is stop exporting oil and they will do everything in their power to block the Strait of Hormuz. If either of these happen, and most likely both will, there will immediately be a worldwide shortage of oil. The US government can now blame the oil shortages on the war and Iran’s being noncooperative. The govt can take drastic measures to control the population and most people will follow along without being any the wiser.
That the real reason for the wars is oil, always has been oil, and always will be oil.
If you disagree ask yourself this question: Would the US have disposed a Mideast dictator if there was no reason other then that the dictator is an asshole? All of our actions are explained by the insane and unsustainable thirst for oil.
If the US goes to war with Iran, be prepared for the next half of your life to begin, and I guarantee it won’t be anything like the first.
James on Mon, 7th Nov 2011 4:50 am
Why isn’t China or Russia saying anything about all of this? They will need that oil too, and if they expect to get any of it without a hassle from the U.S., they better start resisting us in these areas.