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UK AND U.S. 'DRAW UP JOINT PLAN TO ATTACK IRAN': EVIDENCE OF NUCLEAR PROGRAMME RAISES TENSION IN MIDDLE EAST

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Whitehall figures say Iran is 'newly aggressive - and we are not sure why'

Iran 'has enough enriched uranium for four nuclear weapons'

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu pushing for invasion

Tel Aviv test-fires rockets capable of carrying nuclear warheads into Iran

Report reveals China continues to supply Tehran with missiles and other conventional weapons

Obama says nuclear programme remains a threat and calls on Iran to reveal its intentions

 

Serious threat: David Cameron and Barack Obama are drawing up plans for an invasion of Iran, as the country's nuclear development spirals out of control

 

The US and UK are drawing up plans to attack Iran amid growing tensions in the Middle East, it was claimed last night. Barack Obama and David Cameron are preparing for war after reports that Iran now has enough enriched uranium for four nuclear weapons. President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad’s hardline regime in Tehran has been linked to three assassination plots on foreign soil, according to senior officials in Whitehall.

 

 

Iran has come sharply back into focus following the end of the Libya conflict. And the unrest has been inflamed by sabre-rattling from top politicians in Israel. President Obama said Iran's nuclear programme continues to pose a threat and that he and French president Nicolas Sarkozy want the international community to maintain pressure on the country to admit its intentions. The International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) is preparing to reveal intelligence on Iran's alleged nuclear arms experiments.

 

Iran has consistently denied that it is trying to build nuclear weapons and insists the programme is for peaceful purposes. The U.S., Britain and France want the IAEA to share its intelligence, but Russia and China are pressing for the report to be delayed or scrapped entirely. Yesterday it was revealed that Tel Aviv had successfully test-fired a rocket capable of carrying a nuclear warhead which could strike Iran. Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and Defence Minister Ehud Barak are reportedly agitating for a pre-emptive attack against the Islamic state.

 

The UK would be likely to agree to any U.S. decision to invade, even though the Ministry of Defence are stretched to breaking point by swingeing budget cuts and wars in Afghanistan and Libya. An MoD spokesman said: ‘The British government believes that a dual track strategy of pressure and engagement is the best approach to address the threat from Iran’s nuclear programme and avoid regional conflict.

 

‘We want a negotiated solution – but all options should be kept on the table.’ A special unit at the MoD has been instructed to work out the UK's strategy if the Army should invade Iran. War planners will look at potential deployments of Royal Navy ships and submarines equipped with Tomahawk cruise missiles and RAF fighter jets armed with precision-guided Paveway IV and Brimstone bombs and missiles, surveillance planes and air-to-air refuelling.

 

Standby: A convoy of mine-resistant U.S. tanks, pictured in Iraq, could now be deployed to Iran

 

Ready for violence: A plume of smoke left by the missile Israel test-fired yesterday (right), thought to be a Jericho missile. Left, another cruise missile. The Israel missile was capable of carrying a nuclear warhead

 

Senior Whitehall figures have expressed alarm that Iran appeared ‘newly aggressive – and we are not quite sure why’. Western intelligence has also suggested that Iran is hiding the material for a covert nuclear weapons programme in fortified bunkers which cannot be reached by conventional missiles.

 

Barack Obama is understood to have no wish to attack Iran in the run-up to the White House elections next year. But Washington may be pressured by Israel if Iran’s nuclear programme is not curtailed. Mr Netanyahu is apparently also lobbying Cabinet members for a military strike, despite the likelihood it would draw a retaliation from Iran. An Israeli defence official said the rocket launched by the military had merely been a long-planned test for a 'propulsion system'.

Further information about the rocket was censored by the military, but foreign reports said it was a long-range Jericho missile - capable of carrying a nuclear warhead and striking Iran.

 

Source

Nov. 3, 2011