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Kim And Mahmoud And ICBM Envy

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    Iran Packs A Bit More ICBM Power
    Iran marked the 30th anniversary of the Islamic Revolution with a successful launch of its first indigenous satellite on Feb. 2. The Omid -- "Hope" in Farsi -- satellite was launched via the Iranian-produced satellite carrier Safir-2 -- translated as Ambassador-2. According to the Iranian Space Agency, the Safir-2 weighs 26 tons, is 22 meters long, 1.25 meters in diameter and can carry a satellite 155 miles into space. Documentation for this can be found here. Defense experts have estimated that if Safir-2 were to carry a small warhead, it could reach targets within a range of roughly 1,550 miles. That's enough to put Israel and most of the Middle East in its sights, as The New York Times reported. History demonstrates that countries that obtain intercontinental ballistic missile capabilities have robust satellite programs. Examples include the United States, the old Soviet Union, France and China. As Iran's ICBM capability advances, it will allow warhead delivery against the United States. A long-range missile fired from Tehran would be able to reach America's Eastern Seaboard in half an hour. Defense experts agree that the technology used for launching a missile capable of orbiting a satellite gives the necessary technological means to reach any target with a warhead. According to the Iranian Space Agency, which is run by the Revolutionary Guards, Omid is a research satellite equipped with a remote-sensing, satellite-telemetry and geo-information system. It is more advanced than the Soviet-era "Sputnik technology." In the past, such technology had laid the foundations for some modern-day reconnaissance satellites. Omid may therefore also be a step in Iran's developing surveillance capability. The Safir-2 space launch vehicle used to launch Omid is even more alarming. Uzi Rubin, a senior Israeli defense expert and former head of Israel's Missile Defense Organization, suggests that Iran's satellite launch demonstrates Tehran's mastery of ballistic missile technologies. There is a "strong synergy between ballistic missiles and space launchers," he wrote in The Wall Street Journal. Rubin warned that the security community must take the satellite launch very seriously. His assessment can be found here. As Iran achieves its own space-launch capability, it improves its long-range ballistic missiles. As we have written previously, such was the case with the Soviet Union's 1957 flight test of the world's first intercontinental ballistic missile, the R-7/SS-6. This success was promptly followed by the world's first orbiting satellite, Sputnik 1, in October 1957. Similarly, the United States used the first intermediate-range ballistic missile, Redstone, to orbit the Explorer 1 satellite in February 1958. In Iran, a similar pattern of interoperability between the civilian-scientific and military-nuclear functions of intercontinental ballistic missiles can be expected. Therefore, the Safir rocket technology is likely to be used for ballistic missiles. (Ariel Cohen, Ph.D., is a senior research fellow in Russian and Eurasian studies and international energy security at the Kathryn and Shelby Cullom Davis Institute at the Heritage Foundation.)

  • by Harlan Ullman
    Washington DC (UPI) Apr 10, 2009
    North Korea's unsuccessful attempt to put a communications satellite in space this week was doubtlessly timed to throw a monkey wrench into U.S. President Barack Obama's visit to Europe. To some degree, focus shifted from NATO's 60th anniversary and Obama's nuclear-weapons speech to North Korea and Iran. And the Sunday morning TV talk shows predictably were filled with empty rhetoric about taking strong action and not letting dear leader Kim Jong Il get away with international blackmail through missile diplomacy.

    A battle-tested U.S. Army general once advised me that it was bad form to "get treed by pissants." We in the United States often fall prey to that syndrome. Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad and North Korea's Kim may not be ants. But they certainly aren't giants either.

    History matters. During the Cold War the United States was understandably paranoid about the Soviet Union and China developing nuclear weapons with ostensibly irrational leaders in charge. Before Stalin tested his first A-bomb in 1949, some Americans called for pre-emption and preventative war to stop Soviet Russia from going nuclear. Similarly, China and Mao Zedong, with whom we had fought a bloody war in Korea in the early 1950s, raised similar fears before the 1964 tests made Beijing a nuclear power.

    But Stalin and his successors were very cautious, far more so than a succession of American presidents believed. And despite the Cultural Revolution of the 1960s, when China seemed to have gone collectively berserk, China believed in a minimum deterrent and pledged not to use nuclear weapons first. Of course, in the heat of the moment, no one knows whether such pledges would be honored.

    Iran is neither Soviet Russia nor China. It is still a relatively open society run by a mullahcracy. That does not make it irrational, despite some of the antics of its president.

    North Korea is perhaps closer to the Soviet Union and China in the periods when both were highly authoritarian long before the Cold War ended and triangular politics had exploited the huge rivalries and animosities that separated the two Communist states. There is also a million-man army that could wreck much of South Korea's prosperity before it in turn was defeated or destroyed. And tensions with Japan persist on both sides of the 38th Parallel.

    North Korea's nuclear tests last year were a fizzle. No doubt Pyongyang has a nuclear device. Whether Kim possesses a real and usable weapon is another matter. And the missile test was a failure. That does not mean North Korea cannot develop usable warheads and launchers. For the time being, however, overreaction on our part is wasted energy.

    Iran meanwhile claims that it has no nuclear-weapons ambitions and that its programs are for the peaceful use of atomic energy. Most Americans are suspicious of that promise, and a good many believe Iran will develop nuclear weapons or at least the capacity to build them if needed, much as is the case with Japan. Israel remains on guard and has warned that a pre-emptive attack on Iran's nuclear facilities is surely not unimaginable. How the Gulf states and Turkey would respond to Iranian nuclear weapons is also an important part of the equation.

    That said, no one will be happy if either or both states develop real nuclear-weapons capabilities. Beyond spending billions on missile defenses yet to be proven, since pre-emption or military action by the United States with or without allies seems entirely unrealistic and sanctions and other international leverage have not worked in the past, what should the Obama administration do?

    First, expand the six-party talks on Korea to include all known nuclear states. The principal purpose of this forum is to prevent the use and spread of nuclear weapons. A second aim is to prevent the spread of nuclear materials that could be used by terrorists and other groups. Pakistan and India should be included as well as Iran and Israel.

    Second, the administration should begin talks with Russia, China, Britain and France on developing an extended deterrent strategy for North Korea and Iran should they develop nuclear weapons. Such a regime would reassure regional states and provide an alternative for them other than building their own nuclear weapons. This could be done through language in the Non-Proliferation Treaty in which the five nuclear powers are obliged to protect other signatories from nuclear threats.

    Third, the administration should follow the advice of my general friend and not get treed by either Kim or Ahmadinejad -- and beyond the current carrots and sticks of diplomacy, wield a big stick in the form of a deterrent regime that will work as it did in the past against truly powerful nuclear-armed states.

    (Harlan Ullman is a senior adviser at the Atlantic Council. His last book was "America's Promise Restored: Preventing Culture, Crusade and Partisanship from Wrecking Our Nation.")

    (United Press International's "Outside View" commentaries are written by outside contributors who specialize in a variety of important issues. The views expressed do not necessarily reflect those of United Press International. In the interests of creating an open forum, original submissions are invited.)

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    US lawmakers: Pakistan must give access to nuclear scientist
    Washington (AFP) March 12, 2009
    US lawmakers on Thursday introduced legislation aiming to cut off military aid to Pakistan unless US officials are able to question alleged nuclear proliferator Abdul Qadeer Khan.







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