By Amir Oren,
Tehran will consider any military action against its nuclear facilities
as the beginning of a war, Iran's official news agency IRNA reported
Friday.
The commander of Iran's Revolutionary Guards, General Mohammad Ali
Jafari, was quoted as saying that any country that attacks Iran would
regret doing so.
According to the report, Jafari has warned that such a step would be
the beginning of war.
However, the general was also quoted as saying that he considers it
unlikely Iran's adversaries would attempt an attack.
In a newspaper interview last week, Jafari warned that if attacked,
Iran would barrage Israel with missiles and choke off the strategic
Strait of Hormuz, a narrow outlet for oil tankers leaving the Persian
Gulf.
Israel carried out a large military exercise last month, seen
throughout the media as a rehearsal for an attack on Iran.
U.S. admiral: Iran likely to attack Israel
Meanwhile, a U.S. admiral warned earlier this week that Iran is likely
to launch ballistic missiles against Israel and the United States and
the NATO alliance should prepare for it.
In recent years, the missile boats of the Sixth Fleet practiced
intercepting Shahab-3 missiles from Iran aimed at Israel, along with
the Arrow batteries of the air force and U.S. and Israeli batteries of
Patriot missiles.
In an article entitled "Maritime Strategy in an Age of Blood and
Belief" in the U.S. Naval Institute's monthly Proceedings, fleet
commander Admiral James Winnefeld describes the possibility of an
offensive barrage of ballistic missiles fired from Iran against Israel
as being "by far the most likely employment of ballistic missiles in
the world today, and it demands our immediate attention in the event of
a need for a U.S. or NATO response."
He says Iran is an "unpredictable adversary," which could be provoked
into action "by an isolated, and perhaps seemingly unimportant, event."
Winnefeld's commander, the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff at the
Pentagon, Admiral Michael Mullen, mentioned earlier this week during
his visit in Israel the presence of missile defense vessels of the
Sixth Fleet in the Mediterranean and their role in intercepting Iranian
missiles.
One of Mullen's hosts noted at the end of the visit that even though
Israel Defense Forces Chief of Staff Gabi Ashkenazi and the other
senior officers did not discuss operational coordination, it was
mentioned during discussions that both sides would like to avoid
mistaken confrontations, of the sort that led to the IDF attack against
the U.S. Navy ship, Liberty, in June 1967.
At a briefing to reporters in the Pentagon Wednesday, Mullen discussed
his good relations with Ashkenazi and his impressions of the visits
with the IDF on the northern border and near the Gaza Strip. "Israel
remains a vital and trusted military ally in the Middle East," he said,
which faces "very real security threats" and "the tyranny of what I
call 'close-quarters geography,'" Mullen said.
The chairman of the Joint Chiefs added that "Iran is still working to
develop nuclear weapons" and that the Israeli timetable in relation to
Iran's nuclear program is shorter than the U.S's. However, the admiral
stressed he is opposed to an Israeli or U.S. strike against Iran.
Such a strike could destabilize the region and open a third front for
the U.S. armed forces, while it is preoccupied in Iraq and Afghanistan,
he said.
The Iranian regime remains "a destabilizing factor in the area," Mullen
said, but in his view the preferred way of resolving the issue lies in
international diplomacy and not the use of military force.
Original Source
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Iran: Any attack on our nuclear facility will be beginning of war
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