Israel, U.S. sign deal to upgrade Arrow missile shield

(Reuters) – Israel and the United States have signed an agreement to make the Arrow II ballistic shield capable of shooting down missiles at a higher altitude, the Israeli Defense Ministry said on Sunday.

The Arrow III will allow Israel “to deal with the threat of ballistic missiles with long range” and will give it “the ability to shoot down weapons of mass destruction outside the atmosphere,” the ministry said in a statement.

Israel, which describes its Arrow system as a defense against Iran, says the upgraded version will cap off its multi-tier air defenses.

The Arrow is jointly produced by state-owned Israel Aerospace Industries and the American firm Boeing Co. and has absorbed close to $1 billion in direct U.S. funds since its 1988 inception.

The Israeli air force said last year that the Arrow III would take more than four years to complete and that would depend on what resources were made available for the project.

The United States, Western powers and Israel suspect Iran’s civilian nuclear program is designed to produce a nuclear bomb. Tehran denies this.

Israel, which is assumed to have the Middle East’s only atomic arsenal, has hinted it could resort to force to prevent Iran attaining the nuclear means to threaten its existence.

Iran has threatened to retaliate for any attack on its nuclear facilities by firing medium-range missiles at Israel.

(Reporting by Dan Williams; Writing by Joseph Nasr, Editing by Alison Williams)

Iran arrests 13 terrorist group members: report

(Reuters) – Iran said on Sunday it had arrested 13 members of a terrorist group that authorities in the Islamic state say carried out attacks on minority Sunnis, state television reported.

World

The armed group was linked to the Islamic state’s “foreign enemies,” state television said, using a phrase that usually refers to the United States and Israel.

“The group was directly involved in last year’s assassination of a Sunni Friday prayer leader … a Sunni member of an influential clerical body … and a Sunni religious leader,” an Intelligence Ministry statement said, television reported.

The ministry did not identify the group nor say whether those detained were Sunni rebels in southern Iran or Kurdish separatists based in mountainous areas close to the borders with Iraq and Turkey.

According to state television, Intelligence Ministry agents who detained the 13 suspects at locations around the country, also seized 10 bombs and 500 kg of explosives from the group, which had planned more attacks.

Sectarian violence is relatively rare in Iran, whose Shi’ite leaders reject allegations by Western rights groups that it discriminates against ethnic and religious minorities.

Many Sunnis live in southeastern Iran, which has seen an increase in bombings and clashes between security forces, ethnic Baluch Sunni insurgents and drug traffickers.

Iranian officials often accuse the United States and Israel of supporting terrorists. The both dismiss such allegations.

Washington and its European allies accuse Iran of trying to build a nuclear bomb under cover of a civilian programme. Iran denies any such intention.

(Reporting by Hossein Jaseb, Writing by Parisa Hafezi; Editing by Jon Boyle)

Iran arrests 13 terrorist group members-state TV

June 13 (Reuters) – Iran said on Sunday it had arrested 13 members of a terrorist group that authorities in the Islamic state say carried out attacks on minority Sunnis, state television reported.

The armed group was linked to the Islamic state’s “foreign enemies”, state television said, using a phrase that usually refers to the United States and Israel.

“The group was directly involved in last year’s assassination of a Sunni Friday prayer leader … a Sunni member of an influential clerical body … and a Sunni religious leader,” an Intelligence Ministry statement said, television reported.

The ministry did not identify the group nor say whether those detained were Sunni rebels in southern Iran or Kurdish separatists based in mountainous areas close to the borders with Iraq and Turkey.

According to state television, Intelligence Ministry agents who detained the 13 suspects at locations around the country, also seized 10 bombs and 500 kg of explosives from the group, which had planned more attacks.

Sectarian violence is relatively rare in Iran, whose Shi’ite leaders reject allegations by Western rights groups that it discriminates against ethnic and religious minorities.

Many Sunnis live in southeastern Iran, which has seen an increase in bombings and clashes between security forces, ethnic Baluch Sunni insurgents and drug traffickers.

Iranian officials often accuse the United States and Israel of supporting terrorists. The both dismiss such allegations.

Washington and its European allies accuse Iran of trying to build a nuclear bomb under cover of a civilian programme. Iran denies any such intention. (Reporting by Hossein Jaseb, Writing by Parisa Hafezi; Editing by Jon Boyle)

Iran aims to become gasoline exporter – official

Iran seeks to become self-sufficient in gasoline in two years’ time and then to start exporting the fuel, an official said on Sunday, as some traders and international oil firms cease sales to the Islamic state.

The world’s fifth-largest crude exporter imports at least 30 percent of its gasoline needs but says the construction of new refineries will boost domestic output and make it less vulnerable to any future sanctions targeting such trade.

“By building new refineries we will become a gasoline exporter,” ISNA news agency quoted Ali Reza Zeighami, managing director of the National Iranian Refining and Oil Products Distribution Company, as saying.

“The plan is to become self-sufficient in two years’ time … by implementing the scheme to increase gasoline production in refineries,” Zeighami said.

Officials also hope a plan to phase out energy subsidies will slow gasoline demand from Iranians now enjoying some of the world’s cheapest fuel, at 1,000 rials (10 U.S. cents) a litre.

In the 2009-10 year, Iran produced 44.6 million litres of gasoline every day but consumed 64.9 million litres, forcing it to import the difference, according to official figures.

U.S. politicians are working on legislation to penalise fuel suppliers to Iran in an effort to pressure Tehran to stop uranium enrichment.

The West says Iran is using its atomic programme to develop a nuclear bomb, while Iran insists it is for electricity.

Asia-based industry sources said earlier this month that Iran’s gasoline imports in May were expected to drop by about 20 percent versus the previous month.

In April, senior management at Russia’s No.2 oil company, LUKOIL, verbally instructed traders involved in gasoline sales to Iran to cease business activity with Tehran.

Malaysia’s state oil company also said it had ceased sales to Iran.

But last month state-run ChinaOil sold two gasoline cargoes to Iran, the first known direct sales to the OPEC member. Previously sales from China were mostly done via third parties.

Separately on Sunday, Iran’s ILNA news agency said an Iranian state energy firm would on June 3 launch a new 250 million euro bond offering to help finance development of the giant South Pars natural gas field in the Gulf.

Part of a one-billion euro bond sale, the first two tranches were offered in March and early May, Iranian media reported. It represents a rare bid by Iran, under U.N. and U.S. sanctions over its nuclear work, to raise capital in this way.

(Reporting by Ramin Mostafavi and Hashem Kalantari; writing by Fredrik Dahl; editing by Louise Heavens)

Q+A – How serious is the crisis on the Korean peninsula?

North Korea said on Friday the peninsula was heading towards war after Seoul accused the reclusive state of torpedoing a navy ship near their disputed border, driving tensions to their highest levels in years.

Following are some questions about how serious the crisis is and what may be behind North Korean leader Kim Jong-il’s provocative moves.

WILL THERE BE WAR?

Most analysts believe there will not be war on the peninsula as long as South Korea holds its fire.

North Korea’s obsolete conventional armed forces and military equipment mean quick and near certain defeat if it wages full-scale war, and Pyongyang is well aware of its limits.

Even though it has exploded nuclear devices, North Korea has not shown it has a working nuclear bomb. Experts say they do not believe the North has the ability to miniaturise an atomic weapon to place on a missile, but the secretive state has been trying to develop such a warhead.

North Korea’s ageing fleet of Soviet-era bombers would also have difficulty evading the technologically advanced air forces of regional powers the United States, South Korea and Japan to deliver a nuclear bomb outside the country.

Moreover, South Korea has made clear it will not retaliate after findings showed it was a torpedo fired by a North Korean submarine that sunk the Cheonan corvette, killing 46 sailors.

The greatest risk that could fuel armed confrontation lies in small-scale skirmishes that might develop into larger conflict.

Another risk could be the buildup of U.S. military forces on the peninsula that will be seen by the North as a sign of imminent invasion, something that leaders in Pyongyang are said to be genuinely frightened of.

WHAT IS KIM JONG-IL TRYING TO DO?

The torpedo attack was almost certainly ordered directly by Kim Jong-il. The most likely explanation for the attack is that it was in retaliation for a naval skirmish last November that severely damaged a North Korean vessel. That ship had intruded into the South’s waters and was pounded with thousands of rounds of gunfire.

North Korea had a particularly rough start to the year in terms of economic difficulties after pledging on New Year’s Day to make it a top priority to improve the lives of the people. A botched currency reform in November nearly crippled what little market functions there were, reportedly inciting public unrest in some parts of the country and prompting authorities to ease restrictions on free market activities.

The suspension of aid from the South under President Lee Myung-bak since 2008 has deepened its economic woes. U.N. sanctions imposed after last year’s nuclear test have also cut into the North’s key source of hard cash — the trade in arms.

Analysts say the North’s leaders often resort to raising regional tensions to divert attention from troubles at home.

Kim, whose own health is in question, is trying to promote his youngest son as heir.

There is concern in the South that Kim may be inclined to more lethal provocations because the routine sabre-rattling of recent years no longer seems to work to force concessions out of the South and regional powers.

WHAT ARE THE RISKS TO INVESTORS?

President Lee’s government has hinted at taking the issue to the international community, mostly likely the U.N. Security Council, rather than taking the law into its own hands.

Market players do not expect the issue to escalate into armed conflict because they believe Seoul will not risk the damage to its own economy and the region as a whole, which accounts for about a sixth of the world’s economic output.

Last year’s nuclear test barely impacted financial markets which have become largely inured to the North’s behaviour.

But South Korean stocks took a dip and the won posted its biggest daily fall in more than 10 months on Thursday following the South’s formal announcement of blame for the ship sinking. Hawkish comments from both sides weighed on investor sentiment, already fragile after lingering concerns over euro zone debt problems.

Financial markets were closed for a holiday in South Korea on Friday but further comments from Lee next week on how Seoul would respond could weigh on sentiment, reflecting the highest levels of tensions in recent years.

On Thursday, five-year South Korean CDS was 10 bps wider at 130/135, the highest since September 2009. [EMRG/DBT] Three-year treasury June contracts ended up 7 ticks at 111.14.

(Editing by Jonathan Thatcher and Jeremy Laurence)

Ewan McGregor replaces Johnny Depp in Don Quixote film

London, May 19 (ANI): Ewan McGregor has replaced Johnny Depp in Terry Gilliam’s eccentric movie about Spanish literary hero Don Quixote.

The film was titled ‘The Man Who Killed Don Quixote’ a decade ago and Gilliam casted Depp as time travelling advertising executive Tony Grisoni.

The Pirates of the Caribbean star, however, has been forced to quit because of scheduling conflicts.

Gilliam has now announced that McGregor will star as Grisoni, opposite Robert Duvall as Quixote, reports the Daily Express.

He said, “There”s a lot of colours to Ewan that he”s not been showing recently and it”s time for him to show them again.

“He”s got a great sense of humour and he”s a wonderful actor. He”s wonderfully boyish and can be charming – when he flashes a smile, everybody melts. He wields it like a nuclear bomb!” Gilliam added. (ANI)

ANALYSIS – Leaders of Turkey, Brazil pin hopes on Iran deal

By getting Iran to agree to swap stocks of low enriched uranium that could have been used for making a nuclear bomb, Brazil and Turkey have thrust themselves into the unfamiliar centre of a global dispute.

They could have delivered a diplomatic coup with the deal struck in Tehran on Monday.

Or the deal could be dismissed by world powers as too little and too late for failing to address core concerns over Iran’s nuclear programme.

Brazil’s President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva and Turkish Prime Minister Tayyip Erdogan have staked their international standing on Iran honouring the commitments it made to them.

Brazil and Turkey have rotating seats on the U.N. Security Council and covet a bigger role in the international arena. But critics say Lula and Erdogan could have overreached themselves over Iran.

“Turkey has taken a big risk because this can turn out to be very embarrassing,” Faruk Logoglu, a former Turkish ambassador to Washington, said. “Iran is a very astute player in this game.”

The United States sees Iran playing on uncertainties and divisions between the Western powers, Russia and China over sanctions. The sceptic in Washington might see the fuel deal as just another ploy, with Turkey and Brazil unwitting instruments.

Erdogan’s desperation to break the stalemate between the West and Iran, and stop more U.N. sanctions being imposed on his country’s neighbour is, however, understandable.

“The experience of Iraq is very fresh in the memory of Turkey,” Logoglu said. “More than the prevention of sanctions, Turkey does not want to see another war in the region.”

FRONT LINE

Turkey is rebounding strongly from recession, and Erdogan, a moderate Muslim leader, albeit with an Islamist past, is banking on the economic recovery helping him win a third term when the country votes next year.

Sanctions on Iran would hit Turkey hard. It has an $11-billion trade with neighbouring Iran and buys nearly 30 percent of its gas from the Islamic Republic.

Should it come to a vote, the only Muslim nation with NATO membership could risk Washington’s ire by abstaining.

Erdogan and Foreign Minister Ahmet Davutoglu have risked irritating their U.S. ally by speaking out against sanctions.

“Davutoglu and Erdogan decided to carry out a high risk, high reward strategy towards Iran, and it has seemingly paid off,” Sinan Ulgen, chairman of the Centre for Economics and Policy Studies in Istanbul, told Reuters.

Having seen the turmoil caused by the Iraq war, Turkey has pushed itself as a stabilising force in the region, mediating between Israel and Syria and the West and Iran.

Western facing in its foreign policy since the days of the Cold War, Turkey has sought to rebalance relations by strengthening ties with Russia and fellow Muslim states in the Middle East.

Condemnation of Israeli actions in Gaza, and readiness to risk past friendship with the Jewish state, has made Erdogan possibly the most popular leader among Muslims in the region.

Late last year, he dismissed talk of Iran having a nuclear weapons programme as mere “gossip”, just one of several comments that made critics wonder whether NATO-member Turkey was in danger of slipping out of the Western camp.

But he won the confidence of the Iranian leadership and the agreement reached in Tehran demonstrated Turkey’s clout.

“It shows the changing role of Turkey as a regional power with something to say on global issues,” Soli Ozel, professor of international relations at Istanbul Bilgi University said.

Historic rivalry between Iran and Turkey would have made Tehran wary about giving Erdogan sole credit for any deal, but Lula’s involvement removed those reservations.

LULA’S AGENDA

As the leader of a far-off country, economically cushioned from the fall-out from the Iran crisis, and at the end of his presidency, Lula has far less at stake than Erdogan.

Lula’s government is often criticized for timid foreign policy that avoids confrontation on issues such as human rights.

In 2009, he described the tumult over Iran’s presidential vote as a routine electoral dispute, in contrast to broad criticism heaped on Tehran by international powers.

But brokering a deal with Iran could help Brazil show it has the diplomatic muscle as a leader of the developing world and help Lula carry out plans to become a global campaigner against poverty once he steps down as president this year.

But Lula also risks alienating himself from U.S. leadership that is already unhappy with his stance on Iran, and if this gambit fails he could be criticised as an unseasoned novice out of his depth.

Lethal “electronic Pearl Harbour” cyber-attack could cripple US in 15 minutes: Experts

London, May 8 (ANI): A former White House counter-terrorism adviser has warned that a possible cyber attack could bring the US to its knees causing death and destruction in less than 15 minutes, challenging America’s notion of its own invulnerability.

Reputed anti-terrorism expert Richard Clarke, who has served the Clinton and the Bush administrations, has warned of dire consequences as a result of a lethal cyber-attack. He portends that terrorists might be able to pull of an “electronic Pearl Harbour”, the Daily Telegraph reports.

He says that first the terrorists would seize control of the Pentagon and engineer its collapse.

Thereafter pandemonium would ensue, with lethal clouds of chlorine being ejected by malfunctioning chemical plants in Philadelphia and Houston.

Air-traffic controllers would report mid-air collisions, while subway trains crash in New York, Washington and Los Angeles. More than 150 cities would suddenly be blacked out. Tens of thousands of Americans would die in an attack comparable to a nuclear bomb in its devastation.

He warns that the US must take concrete measures in the area of cyber-security in order to avert such a situation. He ascribes the Government’s inability to crack down on cyber crime to the rampant rise of the Internet, which is seen by Americans as a mouthpiece to air their views and is largely unregulated.

According to the paper, these problems are also spelt out in Robert Knake’s new book, ‘Cyber War: The Next National Security Threat’.

Knake is a senior fellow at the Council on Foreign Relations and is a well-known homeland and cyber-security expert.

“The biggest secret about cyber war may be that at the very same time the US prepares for offensive cyber war, it is continuing policies that make it impossible to defend effectively from cyber attack,” says the book.

“We must have the ability to turn off our connection to the internet and still be able to continue to operate,” Knake, told the Daily Telegraph.

“Relying on a system as precarious as the Internet is a big mistake. It is a fundamentally insecure ecosystem that is ripe for conflict and gives countries with disadvantages in conventional weapons an asymmetrical advantage,” he warns.

(ANI)

Obama: al Qaeda bid to go nuclear is top threat

(Reuters) – President Barack Obama said on Sunday that efforts by al Qaeda to acquire atomic weapons posed the biggest threat to global security, and world leaders meeting this week must act with urgency to combat this danger.

Barack Obama

Obama, speaking on the eve of an unprecedented 47-nation summit in Washington aimed at thwarting nuclear terrorism, said he expected “enormous progress” at the conference toward the goal of locking down loose nuclear material worldwide.

“The central focus of this nuclear summit is the fact that the single biggest threat to U.S. security — both short-term, medium-term and long-term — would be the possibility of a terrorist organization obtaining a nuclear weapon,” Obama told reporters.

“We know that organizations like al Qaeda are in the process of trying to secure a nuclear weapon — a weapon of mass destruction that they have no compunction at using,” Obama said before talks with South African President Jacob Zuma.

Nuclear non-proliferation experts say there are no known instances of terrorist groups obtaining highly enriched uranium or plutonium that could be used to make a crude nuclear bomb but note there have been 18 cases of nuclear material being stolen or going missing since the early 1990s.

“This is something that could change the security landscape of this country and around the world for years to come,” Obama said, warning of the potential consequences if a nuclear bomb were detonated.

Obama’s goal at the two-day summit is to get nations to agree to secure vulnerable nuclear material within four years and to take specific steps to crack down on nuclear smuggling.

WIDE-RANGING TALKS

The president held talks on Sunday with the prime ministers of nuclear-armed foes India and Pakistan, Kazakh President Nursultan Nazarbayev and South Africa’s Zuma. He will see Chinese President Hu Jintao, Jordan’s King Abdullah and the leaders of Malaysia, Ukraine and Armenia on Monday.

Signaling the U.S.-led push for new sanctions on Iran is on leaders’ minds even if not on the summit agenda, the White House said Obama told Zuma a “strong and unified international response” is required over Tehran’s nuclear program.

The West wants further sanctions to deter Iran from what is seen as a covert nuclear weapons development drive, while Tehran says it has only peaceful nuclear ambitions.

Prime Minister Yusuf Raza Gilani “indicated his assurance that Pakistan takes nuclear security seriously and has appropriate safeguards in place,” the White House said. It said Obama reasserted to Gilani “the importance of nuclear security, a priority he has reiterated for all countries.”

Nuclear non-proliferation experts say Pakistan’s nuclear arsenal and stockpile of weapons-grade nuclear material is heavily guarded but the threat from al Qaeda and the Taliban make the country one of the areas of greatest concern.

Pakistan is still trying to move out from the shadow cast by scientist Abdul Qadeer Khan, who was at the center of the world’s biggest nuclear proliferation scandal in 2004. He has confessed to selling secrets to Iran, North Korea and Libya.

In his 50-minute meeting with Indian Prime Minister Manmohan Singh, Obama heard a litany of concerns about India’s neighbor Pakistan, according to Indian Foreign Secretary Nirupama Rao, who briefed reporters.

Singh talked to Obama about the activities of Lashkar-e-Taiba, the Pakistan-based militant group responsible for the 2008 Mumbai attacks, “and also the fact that unfortunately there was no will on the part of the government of Pakistan to punish those responsible for the terrorist crimes in Mumbai,” Rao said.

India and Pakistan have fought three wars since 1947 and several smaller conflicts, including one in 1999. Both nations conducted nuclear tests in 1998 and are not signatories to the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty.

KAZAKHSTAN AS MODEL?

White House officials said Obama praised Kazakhstan’s Nazarbayev as a model leader in their meeting for the steps he has taken to denuclearize his central Asian nation.

The former Soviet Union carried out nearly 500 atmospheric and underground nuclear test explosions in Kazakhstan between 1949 and 1989. Nazarbayev closed the testing site in 1991 and has disposed of more than 100 nuclear warheads.

The Kazakh government has erected posters around Washington ahead of the summit highlighting the country’s decision to get rid of its nuclear arsenal, once the world’s fourth largest.

White House officials said Obama would also meet Turkish Prime Minister Tayyip Erdogan on the sidelines of the summit. A U.S. congressional committee last month voted to label the World War One-era massacres of Armenians by Turkish forces as genocide, angering Ankara and prompting it to recall its ambassador from Washington.

(Additional reporting by Matt Spetalnick and Susan Cornwell; editing by Eric Walsh and Todd Eastham)

Obama: al Qaeda bid to go nuclear is top threat

(Reuters) – President Barack Obama said on Sunday that efforts by al Qaeda to acquire atomic weapons posed the biggest security threat, and world leaders meeting this week must act with urgency to combat this danger.

Barack Obama

Obama, speaking on the eve of an unprecedented 47-nation summit in Washington aimed at thwarting nuclear terrorism, said he expected “enormous progress” at the conference toward the goal of locking down loose nuclear material worldwide.

“The central focus of this nuclear summit is the fact that the single biggest threat to U.S. security — both short-term, medium-term and long-term — would be the possibility of a terrorist organization obtaining a nuclear weapon,” Obama told reporters.

“We know that organizations like al Qaeda are in the process of trying to secure a nuclear weapon — a weapon of mass destruction that they have no compunction at using,” Obama said before talks with South African President Jacob Zuma.

Nuclear non-proliferation experts say there are no known instances of terrorist groups obtaining highly enriched uranium or plutonium that could be used to make a crude nuclear bomb but note there have been 18 cases of nuclear material being stolen or going missing since the early 1990s.

“This is something that could change the security landscape of this country and around the world for years to come,” Obama said, warning of the potential consequences if a nuclear bomb were detonated.

Obama’s goal at the two-day summit is to get nations to agree to secure vulnerable nuclear material within four years and to take specific steps to crack down on nuclear smuggling.

WIDE-RANGING TALKS

The president held a series of wide-ranging talks with foreign leaders on Sunday, including the prime ministers of nuclear-armed foes India and Pakistan, Kazakh President Nursultan Nazarbayev and South Africa’s Zuma.

Nuclear non-proliferation experts say Pakistan’s nuclear arsenal and stockpile of weapons-grade nuclear material is heavily guarded but the threat from al Qaeda and the Taliban make the country one of the areas of greatest concern.

Before leaving for the United States, Pakistan Prime Minister Yusuf Raza Gilani assured the international community that Pakistan’s nuclear program was in “safe hands.”

Pakistan is still trying to move out from the shadow cast by scientist Abdul Qadeer Khan, who was at the center of the world’s biggest nuclear proliferation scandal in 2004. He has confessed to selling secrets to Iran, North Korea and Libya.

In his 50-minute meeting with Indian Prime Minister Manmohan Singh, Obama heard a litany of concerns about India’s neighbor Pakistan, according to Indian Foreign Secretary Nirupama Rao, who briefed reporters.

Singh talked to Obama about the activities of Lashkar-e-Taiba, the Pakistan-based militant group responsible for the 2008 Mumbai attacks, “and also the fact that unfortunately there was no will on the part of the government of Pakistan to punish those responsible for the terrorist crimes in Mumbai,” Rao said.

India and Pakistan have fought three wars since 1947 and several smaller conflicts, including one in 1999. Both nations conducted nuclear tests in 1998 and are not signatories to the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty.

White House officials said Obama praised Kazakhstan’s Nazarbayev as a model leader in their meeting for the steps he has taken to denuclearize his central Asian nation.

The former Soviet Union carried out nearly 500 atmospheric and underground nuclear test explosions in Kazakhstan between 1949 and 1989. Nazarbayev closed the testing site in 1991 and got rid of more than 100 nuclear warheads.

The Kazakh government has erected posters around Washington ahead of the summit highlighting the country’s decision to get rid of its nuclear arsenal, once the world’s fourth-largest.

White House officials also said Obama would meet Turkish Prime Minister Tayyip Erdogan on the sidelines of the summit. A U.S. congressional committee last month voted to label the World War One-era massacres of Armenians by Turkish forces as genocide, angering Ankara and prompting it to recall its ambassador from Washington.

(Additional reporting by Matt Spetalnick and Susan Cornwell; Editing by Eric Walsh)

Pakistan in spotlight at Washington nuclear summit

ISLAMABAD, April 11 (Reuters) – Pakistan will confront its reputation as a proliferator head-on this week when its prime minister addresses a global summit in Washington aimed at keeping nuclear weapons out of the hands of terrorists.

Arch-rival India and other critics could however undercut Pakistan by reminding the world of its nuclear smuggling, highlighting the Taliban insurgency and fanning fears of a Muslim country in chaos where militants could seize atomic material.

“India will demand restrictions imposed on Pakistan’s nuclear programme,” said Shahid-ur-Rehman, a Pakistani journalist and author of “Long Road to Chagai”, a book on Pakistan’s nuclear programme.

“Their main stress will be on securing Pakistan’s nuclear assets by the world,” he told Reuters.

“Pakistan’s efforts will be to counter that and convince them that our National Command Authority, which oversees the country’s strategic assets, is very effective and that our nuclear assets are safe and secure.”

Pakistani Prime Minister Yusuf Raza Gilani will speak at the summit after meeting President Barack Obama on Sunday. There are no plans for Gilani and his Indian counterpart, Prime Minister Manmohan Singh, to meet, although the leaders of the nuclear-armed rivals may have a brief “encounter”.

Obama called the Nuclear Security Summit to reach a common understanding on the threat posed by nuclear terrorism and an agreement on steps to secure all loose nuclear material within four years to stop it falling into the hands of groups such as al Qaeda.

U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton says the April 12-13 gathering of 47 nations is possibly the largest assembly of world leaders in the United States since 1945.

Two countries not on the guest list are Iran and North Korea, both of which are locked in their own nuclear standoffs with the West. And both countries have allegedly benefited from the smuggling network of Abdul Qadeer Khan, the father of Pakistan’s nuclear bomb and a national hero. ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ (For full coverage of Pakistan click on [ID:nAFPAK] ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^

PRESSURE

It is this history — and Pakistan’s uncertain future — that has put the country’s nuclear programme in the spotlight this week. Experts say Pakistan’s arsenal and stockpile of weapons-grade material represent the area of greatest risk, because of huge internal security threats from the Taliban and al Qaeda.

“Because of Pakistan’s so-called past, that there was proliferation from Pakistan and that Pakistani scientists had met Osama bin Laden … there will be pressure on Pakistan,” said Rehman, referring to reported meetings involving two retired Pakistani nuclear scientists before the Sept. 11 attacks.

“America and the West’s biggest concern is that weapons of mass destruction should not fall into extremists’ hands and, in this case, they seem to be tacitly pointing at Pakistan. India and the anti-Pakistani lobby have always tried to exploit that and they will try to do it again.”

Pakistan dismisses that concern, calling it “speculative”.

“I do not see any possibility, whatsoever, of Pakistani material, or nuclear technology falling into the wrong hands,” a spokesman for the Foreign Ministry, Abdul Basit, told Reuters.

“India knows full well how secure Pakistan’s strategic assets are.”

Obama says he’s confident in the security of Pakistan’s arsenal, but India isn’t so sure.

The neighbours have fought three wars since being carved out of colonial India in 1947 and engaged in several smaller conflicts, including one in 1999 that threatened to go nuclear.

Both nations conducted nuclear tests in 1998.

Currently, they have an agreement to share prior information about new missile tests they plan to carry out, as well as an agreement to share details about each other’s nuclear facilities and their safety on a periodical basis.

But their armies often exchange fire across the border, and peace talks are held only intermittently.

“There is a lot of mistrust as India keeps on receiving reports of secret (nuclear) installations in Pakistan, and it believes that Islamabad is not sharing all its details,” said Naresh Chandra, India’s former envoy to Pakistan.

India is aware, however, of Pakistan’s importance to U.S. and NATO forces in Afghanistan, so it doesn’t expect much American intervention between the two on nuclear issues, Chandra added.

There is more at stake in Washington than nuclear one-upmanship between old enemies. Pakistan’s economy has been hammered by energy shortfalls and high on its wish-list is a civilian nuclear deal with the United States like the one India received under President George W. Bush.

It has been repeatedly rebuffed by the United States — although lately more gently — and media reports in Pakistan suggested China may step up and help with civilian nuclear technology.

That would likely make India even more suspicious because of its own rivalry with China. The two fought a war in 1962.

Washington also would like Pakistan’s help in curtailing Iran’s nuclear programme, although there appears little chance of that.

According to the Stockholm International Peace Research Institute, India has between 60-70 warheads while Pakistan has about 60. Neither India nor Pakistan are party to the Treaty on the Non-Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons that Obama hopes to strengthen. (Additional reporting by Kamran Haider and Augustine Anthony; Editing by Raju Gopalakrishnan) (For more Reuters coverage of Afghanistan and Pakistan, see: here)

How the nuclear bomb can tell if wine vintages are fake or not

Washington, March 22 (ANI): In a new research, scientists have found that radioactive carbon dioxide (CO2) produced from atomic bomb tests in the atmosphere absorbed by grapes can be used to accurately determine if wine vintages are fake or not.

The new technique is similar to radio-carbon dating, used for years to estimate the age of prehistoric objects.

It works by comparing the amount of carbon-14 (C-14), a less common form of atmospheric carbon, to carbon-12 (C-12), which is more stable and abundant.

The ratio of these two carbon forms, or isotopes, has remained constant in the atmosphere for thousands of years.

“Until the late 1940’s all carbon-14 in the Earth’s biosphere was produced by the interaction between cosmic rays and nitrogen in the upper atmosphere,” Jones said.

“This changed in the late 1940”s up to 1963 when atmospheric atomic explosions significantly increased the amount of C-14 in the atmosphere. When the tests stopped in 1963, a clock was set ticking — that of the dilution of this “bomb-pulse” C-14 by CO2 formed by the burning of fossil fuels,” he added.

He explained that traces of radioactive carbon are captured by the grape plants through the absorption of carbon dioxide and eventually transformed into alcohol and other carbon-based components of the wine.

The “bomb-pulse” of the atmosphere is eventually absorbed into the wine.

“The year that the grapes were grown fixes the age or vintage of the wine,” Jones said.

“The carbon-14 isotope ratio of the wine alcohol can therefore be used to determine the vintage of a wine,” he added.

The scientists used a highly-sensitive analytical device called an accelerator mass spectrometer to determine the C-14 levels in the alcohol components of 20 Australian red wines with vintages from 1958 to 1997 and then compared these measurements to the radioactivity levels of known atmospheric samples.

They found that the method could reliably determine the vintage of wines to within the vintage year.

In addition to testing alcohol, measuring the age of other wine components, such as tartaric acid and various phenolic substances, can help improve the reliability of the technique for detecting fraud, according to Jones. (ANI)

Despite IAEA findings, Iran sings its old nuke-for-peaceful-purposes tune

Tehran, Sep. 18 (ANI): Even as a secret IAEA report revealed that Iran is capable of making a nuclear bomb and is developing a missile system to carry an atomic warhead, Iranian officials have reiterated claims that the Islamic nation’s nuclear program is intended for peaceful purposes.

Fox News quoted Iran’s ambassador to the International Atomic Energy Agency, Ali Asghar Soltanieh, as saying that Iran is sincere in wanting to negotiate with the West.

He added that Western countries should “read between the lines” about Iran’s intentions.

Although the prospects of finding anything between the lines were almost nil after the surfacing of the IAEA report, but Soltanieh insisted that discussions with the West would be a “real, new window of opportunity.”

The secret U.N. watchdog report, titled “Possible Military Dimension of Iran’s Nuclear Program,” concludes:

*Iran worked on developing a chamber inside a ballistic missile capable of housing a warhead payload “that is quite likely to be nuclear.”

*Iran engaged in “probable testing” of explosives commonly used to detonate a nuclear warhead – a method known as a “full-scale hemispherical explosively driven shock system.”

*Iran worked on developing a system “for initiating a hemispherical high explosive charge” of the kind used to help spark a nuclear blast.

“Iran has sufficient information to be able to design and produce a workable implosion nuclear device (an atomic bomb) based on HEU (highly enriched uranium) as the fission fuel,” The agency assessed.

On October 1, Iran is scheduled to meet with the U.S. and five other world powers seeking curbs on its atomic activities for the first time in more than a year.

However, Tehran says it is not prepared to discuss its nuclear activities. (ANI)

Iran has enough fuel to make a nuclear bomb: NYT

Washington, Sep 10 (ANI): Iran has created enough nuclear fuel to make a rapid, but a risky sprint for a nuclear weapon, according to American intelligence agencies.

The new intelligence reports delivered to the White House say that the country has deliberately stopped short of the critical last steps to make a bomb, The New York Times reports.

The American ambassador to the International Atomic Energy Agency declared on Wednesday that Iran now had what he called a “possible breakout capacity” if it decided to enrich its stockpile of uranium, converting it to bomb-grade material.

Ambassador Glyn Davies was intended to put pressure on American allies to move toward far more severe sanctions against Iran this month, if it failed to take up President Barack Obama’s invitation for serious negotiations.

But it could also complicate the Obama administration’s efforts to persuade an increasingly impatient Israeli Government to give diplomacy more time to work, and hold off from a military strike against Iran, the paper reports.

Iran has maintained that its continuing enrichment program is for peaceful purposes, that the uranium is solely for electric power and that its scientists have never researched weapons design. (ANI)

Tehran capable of making nuke bomb within a year, but won’t do so: US, Israel

Jerusalem, July 10 (ANI): Although Iran is capable of building a nuclear bomb within a year, but the Islamic republic is unlikely to take such a decision, both Israel and the US believe.

According to the Israeli assessment, Iran will decide to make a nuclear bomb only in the “worst case scenario,” but both Jerusalem and Washington currently believe that such a scenario is not likely to materialize.

The assessments come in the wake of comments made by the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, US Admiral Mike Mullen, to the effect that Iran could be as little as a year away from completing a nuclear bomb, the Jerusalem Post reports.

However, Mossad head Meir Dagan recently surprised many by saying Iran won’t have a nuclear weapon until 2014

“I would be careful about all the declarations on this matter,” said one senior government official who deals with the issue, adding that a decision by Teheran to go full throttle toward the building of a bomb was dependent on numerous different decisions, which it had simply not yet made.

The paper quoted an official, as saying that the Iranians, meanwhile, have decided to continue to enrich as much low grade uranium as they can, and to also continue development in the field of ballistic missiles at a level that would not make their situation with the international community much worse than it already is.

There have been American and Israeli concerns that Iran may want to gain the potential capacity over a longer period to build an entire nuclear arsenal – and then stay weeks or months away from final bomb-making.

The international community is still keeping its eye on the nuclear issue, with the G-8 leaders giving Iran until late September to accept negotiations over the issue.

French President Nicolas Sarkozy said the situation would be reviewed at a G-20 meeting of developed and developing countries in Pittsburgh on September 24, and that “if there is no progress by then, we will have to take decisions.”

A unilateral attack by Israel on Iran to thwart the Islamic republic’s nuclear ambitions would be an “absolute catastrophe,” Sarkozy said after the G-8 summit in Italy. (ANI)

Israel assured of Saudi support in future Iranian nuke raid

London, July 5 (ANI): Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has been assured by the chief of the country’s intelligence agency Mossad, Meir Dagan, that Saudi Arabia would turn a blind eye to Israeli jets flying over the kingdom during any future raid on Iran’s nuclear sites.

Dagan held secret talks with Saudi officials to discuss the possibility of such a raid earlier this year.

There were unconfirmed reports in Israeli press that high-ranking officials, including former Prime Minister Ehud Olmert held meetings with Saudi colleagues.

“The Saudis have tacitly agreed to the Israeli air force flying through their airspace on a mission which is supposed to be in the common interests of both Israel and Saudi Arabia,” The Times quoted a diplomatic source, as saying.

Although the countries have no formal diplomatic relations, an Israeli defence source confirmed that Mossad maintained “working relations” with the Saudis.

John Bolton, the former US ambassador to the United Nations who recently visited the Gulf, said it was “entirely logical” for the Israelis to use Saudi airspace.

“None of them would say anything about it publicly but they would certainly acquiesce in an overflight if the Israelis didn’t trumpet it as a big success,” Bolton, who has talked to several Arab leaders, said.

Arab states would condemn a raid when they spoke at the UN but would be privately relieved to see the threat of an Iranian bomb removed, he opined.

An Israeli intelligence expert said: “The Saudis are very concerned about an Iranian nuclear bomb, even more than the Israelis.”

The Israeli air force has been training for a possible attack on Iran’s nuclear site at Natanz in the centre of the country and other locations for four years. (ANI)

Israel assured of Saudi support in future Iranian nuke raid

London, July 5 (ANI): Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has been assured by the chief of the country’s intelligence agency Mossad, Meir Dagan, that Saudi Arabia would turn a blind eye to Israeli jets flying over the kingdom during any future raid on Iran’s nuclear sites.
Dagan held secret talks with Saudi officials to discuss the possibility of such a raid earlier this year.

There were unconfirmed reports in Israeli press that high-ranking officials, including former Prime Minister Ehud Olmert held meetings with Saudi colleagues.

“The Saudis have tacitly agreed to the Israeli air force flying through their airspace on a mission which is supposed to be in the common interests of both Israel and Saudi Arabia,” The Times quoted a diplomatic source, as saying.

Although the countries have no formal diplomatic relations, an Israeli defence source confirmed that Mossad maintained “working relations” with the Saudis.

John Bolton, the former US ambassador to the United Nations who recently visited the Gulf, said it was “entirely logical” for the Israelis to use Saudi airspace.

“None of them would say anything about it publicly but they would certainly acquiesce in an overflight if the Israelis didn’t trumpet it as a big success,” Bolton, who has talked to several Arab leaders, said.rab states would condemn a raid when they spoke at the UN but would be privately relieved to see the threat of an Iranian bomb removed, he opined.

An Israeli intelligence expert said: “The Saudis are very concerned about an Iranian nuclear bomb, even more than the Israelis.”

The Israeli air force has been training for a possible attack on Iran’s nuclear site at Natanz in the centre of the country and other locations for four years. (ANI)

Spy who triggered the Cold War

LONDON: Secret files have at last revealed the identity of the top spy who transferred Britain’s atomic bomb secrets to the Soviet Union and paved the way for the nuclear standoff with the west, triggering the Cold War for nearly five decades.

Though the MI5 suspected him, trailed him and monitored his every move, they were never able to get the man, codenamed “Eric” by the KGB, whose espionage campaign to steal the Allies nuclear bomb plans was codenamed Enormous.

Declassified MI5 files have confirmed that the master spy, described as the “main source”, was a Soviet mole at the Cavendish Laboratories at the University of Cambridge, the heart of the wartime nuclear research programme.

Today, 70 years later, with the opening of MI5 and KGB files, “Eric” can finally be identified as Engelbert (Bertie) Broda, whose story is a tale of espionage and counter-espionage, elaborate spycraft, love and deception.

Broda was the KGBs prize spy, who fed Britain’s nuclear secrets to Moscow for a decade, including the blueprint for the early nuclear reactor used in the US Manhattan Project, Times online reported on Thursday.

“Erics” secrets enabled the communist state to catch up in the race to build the nuclear bomb and set the stage for nearly five decades of nuclear standoff with the West.

Though the KGB archives of the period are now sealed, a brief window in the mid-1990s provided a KGB officer named Alexander Vassiliev access to the files.

Vassilievs notes form the basis of a new book, published in the US this month, revealing Brodas pivotal role in Soviet atomic espionage.

“Soviet sources in England were the first to provide Moscow with atomic intelligence,” wrote Pavel Fitin, Moscow’s head of Foreign Intelligence (1939 to 1946), in a memo quoted in Spies by Harvey Klehr, John Earl Haynes and Alexander Vassiliev.

According to Fitin, intelligence from Broda and others laid the groundwork for Soviet nuclear scientists, paving the way for the nuclear confrontation of the Cold War.

“The material included valuable and top-secret documents [that] served as a starting point for laying down the groundwork and organising work on the problem of atomic energy in our country,” the memo stated.

Among Brodas information included the blueprint for one of the American Manhattan Projects early nuclear reactors.

Broda, who was being heavily trailed by the security service (MI5), went back to Austria to teach at the University of Vienna in 1948.

Brodas son Paul, who remained with his mother in Britain, is writing a book about his father and stepfather, the British report said.

The most remarkable thing about the scientist-spy was his ability to evade detection.

In 1983, at the age of 73, the celebrated professor was buried in a “grave of honour”. Alongside that epitaph might stand another: “Eric”, the spy who got away.

US Senator favours Israel making its own decisions on attacking Iran

Jerusalem, May 28 (ANI): An American Senator has said that Israel must be allowed to make its own decision on whether to bomb Iran’s nuclear facilities, even if it is taken as a “last resort”.

Senator Frank Lautenberg of New Jersey, who has been a consistent backer of Israel and is a supporter of Obama – said, “Israel didn’t ask us permission to drop bombs twice on Syrian nuclear facilities. I didn’t hear America scolding Israel for what it did then. Hypothetically, if Israel were able to get rid of Iran’s nuclear bomb-making capability, I’m sure that America would not send Israel a chastising e-mail message. We have to give Israel the courtesy of [allowing it to] make its own decisions.”

He added that if Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad failed in his bid for reelection on June 12, “we’ll celebrate – unless there is someone worse in his place… Bombing Iranian nuclear facilities would be a desperate act for Israel. I’m certainly not promoting it. But all free countries are endangered. The battle has to be fought together. Obama is a leader, and he will do what is necessary.”

The senator – one of 13 Jews (not all recognized as such according to Jewish law) in the 100-member Senate – said he disagreed with Obama’s policy of linking US action against Iran with an Israeli limitation of settlement activity.

“I agree that each is a major problem deserving of attention, but one is not dependent on the other,” he said.

The 85-year-old senator said he was sorry that Obama’s image in Israel had been negative so far and that polls had shown that only 31 percent of Israelis considered the president’s views pro-Israel.

Commenting on concerns in Israel that Obama would not take strong action against North Korea for its illegal nuclear testing this week, Lautenberg said that Obama “cannot shoot from the hip. With his strong standing, he will take action.

The senator met with Foreign Minister Avigdor Lieberman during his visit and held meetings in Jericho and Ramallah. (ANI)