Iran's Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei
Πηγή: Independent
By Donald Macintyre
Feb 4 2012
Iran's supreme leader threatened to attack Israel yesterday in retaliation for Western sanctions against the Islamic Republic, warning that "threatening Iran and attacking Iran will harm America".
Ayatollah Ali Khamenei's declaration came as apprehension of possible conflict was intensified by a report suggesting that the US Defence Secretary, Leon Panetta, believes Israel could strike nuclear targets in Iran before the summer after concluding that military action might be needed before it was "too late" to stop Tehran's nuclear programme.
The Ayatollah used a televised sermon to warn that threats of war -- which would be "10 times against the interests of the US itself" -- would not deter Iran from its "nuclear course". And he declared the Tehran regime's backing for "any nation or group" that wants "to confront and fight" against Israel. He also said that Tehran was seeking to "extract a price" from Israel for the assassination of four nuclear scientists since November 2010.
The threat from Iran is apparently being taken seriously in Israel. Yoram Cohen, the head of the domestic intelligence agency Shin Bet, was reported as having told a closed meeting in Tel Aviv this week that Iran was seeking to strike Israeli targets around the world in an attempt to stem the assassinations of scientists.
Mr Cohen was quoted by the liberal newspaper 'Haaretz' as having cited "three serious attacks" since last summer that had been thwarted as they were "on the verge of being carried out", against the Israeli consul general in Istanbul, in Baku,Azerbaijan, and two weeks ago in Thailand.
The Shin Bet head said that Iran believed Israel was behind the attacks on its scientists, adding: "It doesn't matter if it's true or not that Israel took out the nuclear scientists. A major, serious country like Iran cannot let this go on. They want to deter Israel and extract a price so that decision makers in Israel think twice before they order an attack on an Iranian scientist."
The main media focus in Israel, however, were the fears attributed to Leon Panetta in a report in the 'Washington Post' --which Mr Panetta has not denied -- that Israel might launch a strike on Iran's nuclear plants in April, May or June before Iran enters what his Israeli counterpart, Ehud Barak, this week called the "immunity" zone.
Attack
Mr Barak has coined the term to describe the point from which Iran will have developed sufficient knowledge and material so successfully that an external attack would be unable to derail any ambition it may have to attain a nuclear weapon.
The administration in Tehran has denied that its nuclear programme is for anything other than peaceful energy purposes.
Speaking in Germany yesterday, Mr Panetta said that "all options" remained on the table. But he said "the most important thing" was to maintain unified global support for tough economic sanctions.
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