Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu told an Israeli TV interviewer Monday 
night, Jan. 14 that his government had spent billions of shekels to outfit 
Israel’s Defense Forces with offensive and defensive options which were hitherto 
lacking. He stressed Israel is obliged to be extremely strong – whether to stand 
up to the Iranian nuclear threat and the extremist Islamist wave lashing the 
Arab world – or to make peace.
Earlier Monday, Chief of Staff Lt. Gen. Benny 
Gantz ceremonially installed Maj. Gen. Gady Eisenkott as deputy C.-of-S, after 
the state attorney had approved his taking up the post irregularly in the middle 
of an election campaign in view of Israel’s security situation.
When the AG 
made that decision some days ago, a decision by Syrian President Bashar Assad to 
attack Israel with chemical weapons was taken into account as a possibility. Not 
that the danger is over,  only that it was pushed into a quiet corner by the 
statements made last Friday, Jan. 11 by Defense Secretary Leon Panetta and 
Chairman of the Joint US Chiefs Gen. Martin Dempsey.
They explained at a joint news conference in Washington that if Assad chose 
to use his chemical stockpiles, it would be virtually impossible for US 
intelligence to detect it in advance or to stop him. “You would have to actually 
see it before it happened," said Dempsey.
However, not so longer ago, last August, the same Secretary Panetta and 
Defense Minister Ehud Barak said they were certain that if Iranian leader 
Ayatollah Ali Khamenei gave the order to build a nuclear bomb, “…we will know 
it, we and you and some other intelligence services will know about 
it…”
However, the latest comment on the Syrian chemical threat also lets the 
cat out of the bag on another WMD menace lurking in wait for the region. 
Because, if US intelligence finds itself unable to detect an Assad order for a 
chemical attack, how can they be sure to know when Iran starts building a 
nuclear bomb? The answer is they can’t.
Anticipating this question, the Obama 
administration had its answer ready.
Monday, the Institute for Science and International Security’s president, 
David Albright, a proliferation expert who often represents thinking in US 
security and intelligence agencies, presented a 154-page report in Washington 
titled “Strategy for US Nonproliferation in the Changing Middle East” He was one 
of the co-chairs of this project which once again shifted all the way to 
mid-2014 the key timeline for Iran to be able “to produce enough weapon-grade 
uranium for one or bombs 
without detection by the West.”
President Barack Obama is obviously preparing for his second term in office a 
policy that lines up his Middle East unconventional weapons ducks - Syrian 
chemical and Iranian nuclear – under the same revised estimate. Contrary to 
previous official US statements, Albright now establishes that US intelligence 
is incapable of pinning down the moment when Iran starts assembling a nuclear 
bomb, any more than it can detect the Syrian order to embark on chemical 
warfare.
Therefore, a preemptive operation is out and people must get ready to wake up 
one morning to find Iran has carried out its first nuclear test, in the same way 
as they must expect to be surprised by Bashar Assad’s launch of a chemical 
attack. Only then, may Washington and Jerusalem begin wondering what to 
do.
But to stave off that moment, Obama still hopes the secret negotiations 
he initiated with Iran last month plus stiff sanctions (so for ineffective for 
slowing down Iran’s nuclear progress) will do the trick of holding Tehran back 
from building a bomb. Failing this result, the Albright report provides him – 
and Iran - with another eighteen months’ grace.
debkafile’s military and 
intelligence sources affirm that this new estimate may be convenient for some 
but it is false: Iran already has enough enriched uranium – produced or procured 
- for building at least five nukes. This is no secret. Wednesday, Jan. 9, the 
Financial Times reported that a stock of 5 tonnes of un-enriched 
uranium, enough to produce weapons-grade fuel for five atomic devices, had gone 
missing in Syria and may have passed to Iran. The stock had been prepared for 
the nuclear reactor Bashar Assad was building at Al-Kibar in eastern Syria 
before it was destroyed by Israel in 2007. The information was based on British 
intelligence sources.
The nuances in Netanyahu’s current reference to the 
Iranian nuclear threat suggest that he too is aware of the new winds blowing in 
Washington. In his latest statement, he departed from his standard assertion 
that his government would not permit Iran to acquire a nuclear weapon and said 
instead: “The government which I head has invested billions to prepare the 
country for the Iranian threat.”
 
 
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