They have been caught in bed with the International Bank Gangsters over and over again without whom there would be no wars! The leading culprits are the ROTHSCHILDS, Lord Levy and other Jewish financiers!
I was campaigning against the Vietnamese Holocaust in 1967 right inside the USSR!
BAFS
American Jews with President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad.
It's no secret that the Jews who live in Iran for thousands of years live there quite happily without any discrimination.
In a hotel in New York ..?
During UN General Assembly Conference.
IDF chief: I do not believe Iran will decide to develop nuclear weapons
“If Iran goes nuclear it will
have negative dimensions for the world, for the region, for the freedom
of action Iran will permit itself,” Chief of Staff Lt. Gen. Benny Gantz
told Haaretz in an Independence Day interview.
That freedom of action might be
expressed “against us, via the force Iran will project toward its
clients: Hezbollah in Lebanon, Islamic Jihad in Gaza. And there’s also
the potential for an existential threat. If they have a bomb, we are the
only country in the world that someone calls for its destruction and
also builds devices with which to bomb us. But despair not. We are a
temperate state. The State of Israel is the strongest in the region and
will remain so. Decisions can and must be made carefully, out of
historic responsibility but without hysteria,” Gantz said.
Both 2012 and 2013 are seen as
critical with regard to Iran’s nuclear program. At his rare public
appearances Gantz has taken a cautious approach to the issue –
mentioning the military option, whose development and preparation he
oversees, while leaving the door open to international negotiations with
Iran. His language is far from the dramatic rhetoric of Prime Minister
Benjamin Netanyahu, and is usually free of the Holocaust comparisons of
which Israeli politicians are so fond.
Asked whether 2012 is also
decisive for Iran, Gantz shies from the term. “Clearly, the more the
Iranians progress the worse the situation is. This is a critical year,
but not necessarily ‘go, no-go.’ The problem doesn’t necessarily stop on
December 31, 2012. We’re in a period when something must happen: Either
Iran takes its nuclear program to a civilian footing only or the world,
perhaps we too, will have to do something. We’re closer to the end of
the discussions than the middle.”
Gantz says the international
pressure on Iran, in the form of diplomatic and economic sanctions, is
beginning to bear fruit. “I also expect that someone is building
operational tools of some sort, just in case. The military option is the
last chronologically but the first in terms of its credibility. If it’s
not credible it has no meaning. We are preparing for it in a credible
manner. That’s my job, as a military man.”
Iran, Gantz says, “is going step
by step to the place where it will be able to decide whether to
manufacture a nuclear bomb. It hasn’t yet decided whether to go the
extra mile.”
As long as its facilities are not
bomb-proof, “the program is too vulnerable, in Iran’s view. If the
supreme religious leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei wants, he will advance
it to the acquisition of a nuclear bomb, but the decision must first be
taken. It will happen if Khamenei judges that he is invulnerable to a
response. I believe he would be making an enormous mistake, and I don’t
think he will want to go the extra mile. I think the Iranian leadership
is composed of very rational people. But I agree that such a capability,
in the hands of Islamic fundamentalists who at particular moments could
make different calculations, is dangerous.”
About three months ago Gantz’s
U.S. counterpart, Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff Gen. Martin E.
Dempsey, visited Israel as his guest. “We speak a great deal with the
Americans. It’s not on the level of a discussion, where I want something
concrete and he forbids it. We are partners. We and the United States
have a large common alignment of interests and relations, but America
looks at America and Israel [looks at] Israel. We aren’t two oceans away
from the problem – we live here with our civilians, our women and our
children, so we interpret the extent of the urgency differently. America
says its piece openly, and what it says in the media is also said
behind closed doors. It cannot be translated into lights, red or green,
because no one is asking them anything in that regard.”
Critical decisions
Gantz knows that in the event of
another war he will face time pressures as a result of enemy operations
against the home front. The IDF will have to bring massive force to
bear from the outset, employing most of the means at its disposal
quickly and without hesitation or delay.
Ground operations, long-distance fire and in-depth operations as well?
“I don’t pretend to determine
that now. I am preparing for full deployment of our capabilities. The
political leadership will have to take courageous, painful decisions.
There are a certain number of critical decisions in a war. The chief of
staff makes about 10 of these in his sphere of responsibility in
wartime, and the political leadership makes about half this number.”
These decisions, Gantz knows, will be made under a barrage of rockets and missiles against civilian areas.
In light of the Arab Spring,
Israel’s military preparedness must now include a much greater and more
varied range of arenas and possibilities.
“I don’t know what will happen in
Syria, but presumably the Golan Heights won’t be as quiet as before. I
cannot remove Syria from the military equation, nor Lebanon. I assume
that if there are terror threats from the Golan or Lebanon I’ll have to
take action. I cannot do everything by ‘stand-off’ [remote]. The enemy’s
fire capabilities have developed at every distance, four or five times
what they were in the Second Lebanon War and four or five times compared
to the Gaza Strip before Operation Cast Lead, not to mention the new
ground-to-air missile in Syria. I go to sleep with the understanding
that what we did in the recent long and comprehensive exercises could
happen in reality.”
The IDF is also being used as a
battlefield for the cultural and political wars of outside forces. The
latest skirmish followed Gantz’s dismissal of Lt. Col. Shaul Eisner,
deputy commander of the IDF’s Jordan Valley brigade, for hitting a
left-wing activist from Denmark in the face with a rifle. Gantz terms
the political interference in the affair a disaster.
“I don’t see anyone benefiting
from this story. I made my decision, and it’s behind me. I don’t
understand what the right is defending, what the left is attacking. Who
turned it into a political matter? Do you have to be a religious
right-winger with a kippah in order to be resolute? Do you have to be a
leftist in order to be principled? Where did that idiocy come from?
Eisner made a professional error and a specific ethical mistake.”
The interview with Gantz took
place right after additional videos of the incident were made public,
showing Eisner hitting additional left-wing activists.
“I didn’t like even the first
blow I saw. I will not cover for people so that others will say I backed
them up. The lieutenant colonel erred and failed, and it’s done and
dusted. We are an army that uses force, not violence.”
Measured, thoughtful and practical
With regard to another delicate
issue, Gantz says he believes the IDF could draft more ultra-Orthodox
men if an alternative to the Tal Law, recently overturned by the High
Court of Justice, can be found.
“It’s for the politicians to decide. What I’m looking for is equality in service,” he says.
The end of his predecessor’s
assignment was tarnished by the so-called Harpaz affair, in which Lt.
Col. Boaz Harpaz allegedly forged a document in a bid to keep Yoav
Galant from being appointed chief of staff. Gantz received the draft
report of the State Comptroller’s Office on the affair last month. When
the final version is issued Gantz will face career decisions about
several figures connected to the affair, including Col. Erez Weiner,
aide to former Chief of Staff Gabi Ashkenazi.
Gantz believes it is important
that the final version be issued before State Comptroller Micha
Lindenstrauss ends his term, at the beginning of July.
“At every opportunity I say to the comptroller, please, go to it.”
As in our previous conversations,
now too Gantz comes across as a measured, thoughtful and practical
person. Only a few dozen steps separate him from his previous office,
that of the deputy chief of staff, but the distance between them is
unfathomable.
“I enjoy being here but also feel
the gravity of the responsibility. I always said my favorite position
was company commander in the Paratroop Brigade. As a company commander
you have absolute definitions: the mission, the people. The rest we can
manage. Here, I can’t pass on the responsibility to anyone else. The
buck really does stop here. That’s why I say that occasionally I doze
off but I never really sleep.”
AND, THIS IS PERSIA, IRAN AND ISLAM THOSE SAME DEVILS WANT TO ANNIHILATE!
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