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TEHRAN, Iran (CNN) — Iran has test fired nine missiles in response to what it says are threats from Israel and the United States, according to state-run Iranian media and a U.S. military source.

The new version of the Shahab-3 missile is capable of reaching its main regional enemy Israel, Iran says.

The Islamic Republic News Agency and Press TV reported that the naval forces of Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps Wednesday test-fired a Shahab-3 missile during war games in the Persian Gulf.

The exercise comes a month after Israel conducted a military drill in the eastern Mediterranean involving dozens of warplanes, and the latest Iranian activities prompted concern from Israel and condemnation from the United States.

Iran occasionally tests missiles, but this firing comes amid international tensions over its nuclear aspirations.

“The war game was aimed at improving the combat readiness of Iran’s armed forces. The 2,000-kilometers-range Shahab-3 missiles were tested to demonstrate Iran’s capability in hitting its enemies accurately at the early stages of their probable attacks against the Islamic Republic.

“Domestic and foreign political and military analysts believe that Shahab-3 is able to reach targets in the occupied lands in case of the Zionist regime’s probable attacks against Iran’s nuclear sites,” the Islamic Republic News Agency said.

Iran’s Press TV said the Iranian forces “successfully test-fired new long and mid-range missiles.” It mentioned the Shahab 3, “which can hit any target within a range of 2,000km.” It said the Shahab 3 “is equipped with a one-ton conventional warhead.”

“Nine highly advanced missiles with improved accuracy were simultaneously tested including the Zelzal and Fateh missiles with ranges of 400km and 170km respectively.”

Press TV said ground forces were also involved in the maneuvers in the Persian Gulf and Strait of Hormuz areas.

A U.S. military official with knowledge of the latest information on the testing counted the firing of seven missiles, one Shahab-3 and six shorter-range ballistic missiles. The testing took place over land, the official said.

The official, who noted that these kinds of tests have occurred before and that they were not unexpected, said the tests were tracked by U.S. intelligence.

World powers, who suspect Iran is intent on building nuclear weapons, have offered economic and other incentives in exchange for the suspension of its enrichment program.

Iran, which says its nuclear program is strictly to produce energy, defends its right to proceed with enrichment.

There are worldwide worries that Israel, which is concerned Iran wants to attack, is pondering a unilateral strike against the Islamic Republic.

Israel’s aerial military exercise over the eastern Mediterranean Sea in June was in part an effort to send a message that it has the capability to attack Iran’s nuclear program.

The exercise involved dozens of Israeli warplanes, including F-15s, F-16s and refueling aircraft, an official said.

The distance involved in the exercise was roughly the same as would be involved in a possible strike on the Iranian nuclear fuel plant at Natanz, a U.S. military official said.

In 1981, Israel attacked a nuclear facility in Iraq. Israel also struck a site in Syria that some say was a nuclear reactor under construction.

One Israeli Cabinet member, Shaul Mofaz, recently said it “will attack” Iran if the nuclear program was not halted.

Last week, the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps commander, Gen. Mohammed Ali-Jaafari, said any strike against Iran’s nuclear facilities would be regarded a the beginning of war.

At the same time, Iranian leaders are discounting the possibility of war. Ahmadinejad, in Malaysia this week for a conference, told reporters Iran is trying to prevent but not foment confrontation.

“We are making all-out efforts to expand peace and security in the world. You should not be concerned about a new war,” he said on Tuesday.

Mark Regev, spokesman for Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert, said it did not want conflict with Iran.

“But the Iranian nuclear program and the Iranian ballistic missile program must be of concern for the entire International community.”

The White House reacted strongly to the Iranian test-firing.

“Iran’s development of ballistic missiles is a violation of United Nations Security Council resolutions and completely inconsistent with Iran’s obligations to the world,” said National Security Council spokesman Gordon Johndroe.

Johndroe mentioned that the United States, Britain, France, Russia, China and Germany “are committed to a diplomatic path, and have offered Iran a generous package of incentives if they will suspend their uranium enrichment activities.”

“They should also refrain from further missile tests if they truly seek to gain the trust of the world. The Iranians should stop the development of ballistic missiles, which could be used as a delivery vehicle for a potential nuclear weapon, immediately.”

U.S. Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz., the Republican presidential candidate, said the tests “demonstrate again the dangers it [Iran] poses to its neighbors and to the wider region, especially Israel.”

“Ballistic missile testing coupled with Iran’s continued refusal to cease its nuclear activities should unite the international community in efforts to counter Iran’s dangerous ambitions.”

McCain supports working with Europe and regional allies to deal with Iran, not “unilateral concessions.”

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A senior Iranian presidential advisor has warned the US against introducing a new threat to the world by attacking a sovereign state.

“The forces of any government that would attack Iran will no longer have any security in our region or anywhere else,” special advisor to Iran’s president, Mojtaba Samareh Hashemi said in an interview with the Washington Post.

The harsh rhetoric of Washington against Tehran has raised fears that an attack on Iran is becoming increasingly likely before President George W. Bush leaves office.

Bush and the chairman of the US Joint Chiefs of Staff Admiral Mike Mullen on Wednesday reaffirmed that the use of military force against Iran, either directly by the US or following air strikes by Israel, remained an option.

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As the clash between the US and Israel on the one hand and Iran on the other reaches a critical level, the powers that be have been desperately at work spinning a web of deception that may take the already war-exhausted Americans into the military conflict of the century, a confrontation that could eventually escalate into World War III.

“They will not close it… They will not be allowed to close it,” declared Vice Admiral Kevin J. Cosgriff at a Monday press conference in Bahrain.

The closure by Iranians of the Strait of Hormuz constitutes an “act of war” and would “not be an action against the United States but against the international community”, continued the commander of the US Navy 5th Fleet.

But little did the respected Vice Admiral know that the morally bankrupt echelons in Washington and the siege-mentality-enduring people of means had plans for him and his fleet.

PAX AMERICANA

The scheme gained momentum, perhaps, on May 21, when Haaretz reported that Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert suggested in an over-lunch conversation with US House Speaker Nancy Pelosi in Israel that a naval blockade be imposed on Iran.

“The present economic sanctions on Iran have exhausted themselves,” an under-fire Olmert told the Democratic heavyweight Pelosi, who was joined by 12 bipartisan Members of Congress.

According to the Israeli newspaper, the desperate-to-be-redeemed prime minister proposed two possible courses of action during the meeting: first, the imposition of a naval blockade on Iran using a US fleet, and second to prohibit the entry of Iranian aircraft, businesspeople and top officials at all world airports.

“Iranian businesspeople who would not be able to land anywhere in the world would pressure the regime,” opined the corruption-scandal-implicated politician.

While Nancy Pelosi on May 22 denied having any such conversation in Israel, that same day the notorious Resolution 362 found its way into the US Congress.

Present at the luncheon in Israel, bill sponsor Democrat Gary Ackerman demonstrated his unwavering support for the principles of Zionism, as the bill indirectly puts into play the controversial requests of the Israeli premier.

The bill’s key section “demands” that the president, among other things, make strenuous efforts, “prohibiting the export to Iran of all refined petroleum products; imposing stringent inspection requirements on all persons, vehicles, ships, planes, trains, and cargo entering or departing Iran; and prohibiting the international movement of all Iranian officials not involved in negotiating the suspension of Iran’s nuclear program”.

Considering that Article One, Section Eight of the US Constitution says “Congress shall have power to … declare war” but does not specify how legislation text should be worded to be considered a “Declaration of War”, Resolution 362 can, and probably will, be construed by an already power-abusive President George W. Bush and his team of lawyers as a congressional “demand” for imposing a naval blockade on Iran.

Resolution 362 is, thus, a supposedly innocent way on the part of America of provoking hostility by necessitating the imposition of a blockade on all ships “entering and departing Iran… [and] prohibiting the export to Iran of all refined petroleum products”.

While a naval blockade may be seen as acceptable to US politicians, it constitutes an act of war for Iran and will lawfully justify a response from Tehran.

The Western media will then plaster the headline America under attack! on the front page of all newspapers; Washington will portray Iran’s defense as an act of aggression and will easily manage to convince Americans that a swift victory is achievable by waging all-out war on the country under the pretext of the War on Terror.

But how does Israel ensure that a piece of legislation of such caliber is approved?

Lobbying began! The most powerful Zionist lobby, American Israel Public Affairs Committee (AIPAC), convened on June 2-4 and declared its full-throated support for the bill, the approval of which has become its chief legislative priority. Some 80 Congressmen co-sponsored Resolution 362 in the three-day period.

On June 4, Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert was pressing for his cause in America, attempting to drum up further US support for “the need to vanquish the Iranian threat”.

“We reached agreement on the need to take care of the Iranian threat,” said Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert after his 90-minute meeting with President Bush in the White House.

Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert (L), US President George W. Bush

“I left with a lot less questions… regarding the means, the timetable restrictions and American resoluteness to deal with the problem. George Bush understands the severity of the Iranian threat and the need to vanquish it and intends to act on the matter before the end of his term in the White House,” heralded he whose mission had been accomplished.

A member of Olmert’s delegation said the same day that Tel Aviv and Washington had agreed to cooperate in case of an attack by Iran, asserting that “the meetings focused on ‘operational matters’ pertaining to the Iranian threat.”

The annual AIPAC policy conference and Olmert’s trip to the White House had, indeed, gone well. Congress once again capitulated to the humiliation of falling in line with the demands of the Israeli lobby.

As of July 1, House Resolution 362 (and the Senate version Resolution 580), known as the ‘Iran War Resolution’, enjoys 220 co-sponsors in the House and 32 in the Senate and will be put to vote in the coming days.

ISRAEL PAVES THE WAY FOR WAR

In early June, perhaps coinciding with Olmert’s trip to the US, Israel conducted a military maneuver over the eastern Mediterranean and Greece in what Pentagon officials have suggested to be in preparation for a war with Iran.

Israeli jets

Over 100 Israeli F-16s and F-15s partook in the exercise, which spanned some 900 miles, roughly the distance between their airfields and a nuclear enrichment facility in the central Iranian city of Natanz.

An Israeli politician familiar with the Air Force initiative said that Iranians should “read the writing on the wall . . . This was a dress rehearsal, and the Iranians should read the script before they continue with their program for nuclear weapons.”

On June 6, reportedly a day after the unpublicized exercise ended, Israeli Deputy Prime Minister Shaul Mofaz, who hopes to succeed Olmert as the next prime minister, described a war with Iran as “unavoidable” and threatened to wage war on Iran if the country fails to halt its nuclear activities.

His tactless remarks, while tacitly justified by the media as an attempt to win approval for future elections, have sparked a war of words between Tehran and Tel Aviv and have somewhat benefited Israel in its portrayal of Iran as a threat before the docile US Congress to secure the approval of Resolution 362.

Iran almost instantly urged UN Security Council action against Israel, saying the inaction of the United Nations over Israeli atrocities has emboldened Tel Aviv to such an extent that it now publicly threatens Iran in flagrant violation of the UN Charter.

“Iran’s Armed Forces have reached a pinnacle of their military might and if anyone is to take such measures (attacks Iran), the response will be excruciating,” responded Iranian Defense Minister Brigadier General Mostafa Mohammad-Najjar.

Israel later played down the threats but fired back by using a harsher rhetoric suggestive of a nuke attack on Iran. “We must tell them: If you so much as dream of attacking Israel, before you even finish dreaming there won’t be an Iran anymore,” Israeli Infrastructure Minister Benjamin Ben-Eliezer told the Israeli public radio June 7 without elaborating on why he believed Tehran would ever attack Tel Aviv.

“Iran should know the price it will have to pay when it begins to think concretely about attacking Israel,” he continued in a direct attempt to represent Tehran as the aggressor.

Israel later ramped up its anti-Iran “operational” activities. On June 10, Israeli sources revealed that Tel Aviv had set up an ‘Iran Command’ within its Air Force as part of preparations for a war on the Islamic Republic.

The Command was said to be directed at improving coordination among Israeli ballistic missiles and air and missile brigades that deploy the Arrow and Patriot missile systems. That very day, Congress threw more of its weight behind Israel.

Iranian Foreign Minister Manouchehr Mottaki commented on the issue. He argued that Israel “lacks legitimacy” and has already been defeated not by “a modernized army” but by “a resistance group” in its 33-day war against Lebanon, suggesting that Tel Aviv should not be taken seriously.

REPAIRING THE BUSH IMAGE

Exposed to fierce criticism because of his feckless attitude before 9/11 as well as his deplorable performance in handling the unconstitutional invasion of Iraq, a frowned-upon George W. Bush admitted to The Times on June 11 that his gun-slinging rhetoric had made the world believe that he was a “guy really anxious for war”.

While defending his decision to invade Iraq, the man infamous for his use of such phrases as “bring them on” and “dead or alive” said, “Look, I think that in retrospect, you know, I could have used a different tone.”

His confession that people saw him as “you know, not a man of peace” signaled a shift in the Bush administration policy on Iran.

Comments were made less often about the option of launching a military strike on Iranian nuclear sites and, when mentioned, the word “diplomacy” was almost always integrated into the same sentence in one form or another.

“All options remain on the table if diplomacy fails to get Iran President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad to abandon Iran’s uranium-enrichment program,” said Bush in a June 15 interview with the Observer.

However, the president’s rhetoric grew more intense as he became more inclined to associate Iran to the War on Terror.

“My message would be: Stop fooling around with the Iranians and stop harboring terrorists,” said Bush on June 14.

“I would like to say one thing about the Iranian demand for civilian nuclear power, it is a justifiable demand… Iranians must understand all options are on the table however,” said Bush on June 16 in London in clarification of the price of “civilian nuclear power”.

Israel and the White House have even lent a helping hand in improving the Bush image. A June 13 report published by DEBKAfile, a website believed to have links with the Israeli military and intelligence agency, stated that Bush is clearly bidding farewell to the option of a military strike on Iranian nuclear facilities.

“They can either face isolation or they can have better relations with us all. No third option, of a punishing military strike, was mentioned,” the website reported.

White House spokeswoman Dana Perino also touched on the issue.

“President Bush believes that we can solve this issue (Iran’s nuclear program) diplomatically, and that everyone’s preference is to solve it diplomatically, not just here in the United States but with our allies and certainly with Israel,” she claimed June 25.

But why would an outgoing neocon president with nothing to lose suddenly shift policy and claim to push for diplomacy with Iran? Is there any other way to make an Iranian retaliation against the peace-loving American forces blockading the Persian Gulf look more innocent? Could it be that an apparently unknowing Bush will one day justify a possible provocation by saying we tried diplomacy but to no avail?

Vice Admiral Kevin Cosgriff

ALL HELL BREAKS LOOSE

“We will not allow Iran to close it,” threatens Vice-Admiral Kevin J. Cosgriff of the 5th Fleet. “The US Navy has been in the region for 60 years and will be here for decades to come.”

He was responding to remarks made by commander of the Islamic Revolution Guards Corps (IRGC), Major General Mohammad-Ali Jafari, who was asked whether Tehran would consider closing the strategically vital Strait of Hormuz waterway if it were attacked.

Top IRGC commander, Mohammad-Ali Jafari

“When a country comes under attack, it naturally uses all its capacities to confront the enemy,” said the Iranian commander.

It does seem silly, however, and somewhat insane that despite the cavernous archives of Washington acts of aggression against sovereign nations, their countless years of meddling in Iran, their coup d’état against Mossadeq, their support for the oppressive Shah, their unapologetic downing of passenger flight 655, their long-time support for and funding of terrorist groups such as the Mojaheddin Khalq Organization (MKO) and Jundullah in hopes of destabilizing the country and their cruel efforts to arm late Iraqi dictator Saddam Hussein with weapons of mass destruction to use against Iranian and Iraqi civilians, an American Vice Admiral even has the gall to say that an Iranian attempt to protect their sovereignty against a gang of aggressor countries attacking them in violation of the UN Charter would be considered by the world as an act of holding 40 percent of world oil “hostage” by “a single country”.

Yes, indeed, America does have a 60-year history of brazen imperialism in the Middle East and “will be here for decades to come”. That must be why Bush says the Iranian threat must be dealt with.

A military strike on Iran will not be the easy hit-and-run job Americans expect it to be, though. According to US Vice-Admiral Cosgriff, it will be “pretty disastrous,” with “echoes and aftershocks” reverberating throughout the region.

As waves of US and Israeli fighter jets scream over the country, Iranian missile defense systems will load the skies, downing an overwhelming number of high-tech aircraft. According to Western media outlets, while the violators will be able to accomplish parts of their mission, there is the prospect of retaliatory attacks on US military bases and American forces stationed in Iraq and Afghanistan. If correct, scores of US soldiers may be vanquished in a relatively short time.

Sharp-shooting pilots will dice with death to repel US warships and kamikaze missions may commence against US naval forces in the Persian Gulf. The military will respond to Israeli airstrikes with missile attacks never seen before in Israel.

Harking back to the eight-year war imposed upon Iran by a US-backed Saddam (1980-88), the spirit of the sovereign nation that has never accepted foreign domination will be revitalized. The American strategists will be thoroughly bewildered by the courageous missions carried out by those who love Iran despite its hardships.

As with the US-led siege on Iraq and Afghanistan, demonstrators will take to the streets all around the world; Washington will be the scene of violence as the White House justifies the move under the guise of the War on Terror.

Opposition to the war will be evident in Arab countries throughout the already volatile Middle East and some nations may intervene, wreaking further havoc. The ensuing battles could easily close the 21-mile Strait of Hormuz chokepoint, cutting crude exports from the oil-rich Persian Gulf.

As the war of attrition continues, it has been suggested by international analysts that Latin American countries that have long suffered because of US interference may halt oil exports to the US in condemnation of the aggression, thus triggering massive oil spikes.

According to predictions by Rice University economists, oil prices may surge to $200 a barrel in the next year which would mean Americans will have to pay $6.64 per gallon for gasoline. Pundits, however, say a war on Iran will double or triple crude prices.

The already weak US economy could, if the war persists, assume the burden of $10-a-gallon gasoline and could plunge into an unprecedented depression. The fuel shortage will prompt an increase in biofuel farming. Hundreds of millions worldwide could have nothing to eat; high fuel prices would lead to a surge in farming costs and may further deepen the food crisis. Riots could ensue. The world will never be the same.

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Russia’s Foreign Ministry says the use of force on Iran over its nuclear program would have a ‘catastrophic’ outcome in the Middle East.

A Russian Foreign Ministry official speaking on condition of anonymity said the Islamic Republic’s attitude is a ‘positive signal’ as Iranian officials are ‘ready to look seriously at proposals’ presented by the group of six regarding the country’s nuclear issue.

The official went on to warn of the regional repercussions of a military strike on Iran.

“All this is very dangerous. If force is used it will be catastrophic for the whole Middle East,” he told journalists on Wednesday.

The comments by the Russian official came amid recent reports revealing that the Israeli air force had conducted in early June a long-range military drill in preparation for a possible attack on Iran.

In response to the reports, Commander of the Islamic Revolution Guards Corps (IRGC) Major General Mohammad-Ali Jafari said Israel was within ‘the range of Iran’s missiles’, warning that Tehran would use all possible means to repel any attack on its soil.

CS/HGH
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The top Islamic Revolution Guards Corps commander warns that any attack on Iran’s nuclear facilities would lead to the outbreak of war.

“Any action against Iran will be interpreted as the start of a war,” Major General Mohammad-Ali Jafari told reporters Thursday.

He made the remarks when asked about increasing rumors of a potential US or Israeli attack on Iran, IRNA reported.

The IRGC commander warned that Iran’s response to any act of aggression would make the invaders ‘regret’ their decision.

Washington has never ruled out the possibility of resorting to the use of force against Iran over its nuclear program and reports suggest that the Israeli regime is preparing for a unilateral strike on Iran’s nuclear sites.

This is while Washington and Tel Aviv, which accuse Tehran of seeking a military nuclear program, claim they favor a diplomatic solution to the standoff.

Refusing to give up its nuclear drive, Iran insists as a signatory to the Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT) the country is entitled to a civilian nuclear program.

In its most recent report, the UN nuclear watchdog conceded that there is no link between the use of nuclear material and the ‘alleged studies’ of weaponization in Iran’s nuclear facilities.

MD/HGH

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JERUSALEM – The Israeli Cabinet overwhelmingly agreed Sunday to a deal with Hezbollah to swap a notorious Lebanese prisoner for the bodies of two captured soldiers, the prime minister’s spokesman said.

The proposed deal would also needs the approval of the Lebanese militant’s group secretive, decision-making Shura Council.

The agreement had sparked a fierce public debate over whether Israel would be giving up too much or carrying out its highest commitment to its soldiers to do everything possible to bring them home if they fell into enemy hands.

The deal would have Hezbollah return two soldiers it captured in a July 2006 cross-border raid that sparked a 34-day war. Israel would release Samir Kantar, imprisoned for a 1979 attack etched in the Israeli psyche as one of the cruelest in the nation’s history.

Hezbollah had offered no sign that Ehud Goldwasser and Eldad Regev were alive and the Red Cross was never allowed to see them.

For the first time, Prime Minister Ehud Olmert declared on Sunday that the soldiers were dead. Before the vote, Olmert told his Cabinet that Israel has concluded that the two soldiers killed during the raid or shortly after.

“We know what happened to them,” Olmert said, according to a prepared statement given to the Cabinet and released by his office. “As far as we know, the soldiers Regev and Goldwasser are not alive.”

Goldwasser’s father, Shlomo, said he was not surprised by the declaration, but wanted proof the soldiers were dead.

“There have been assessments for a long time,” he said. “But none of this matters because it is not fact. … They were alive when they (were) kidnapped and no one has provided us with evidence to the contrary.”

The Mossad intelligence agency and the Shin Bet security service opposed the deal, officials said. Germany has been trying to mediate a prisoner exchange since Israel’s war with Lebanon ended in August 2006.

Kantar is serving multiple life terms in the infiltration attack on a northern Israeli town. Witnesses said Kantar — then 16 — shot Danny Haran in front of his 4-year-old daughter, then smashed her skull against a rock with his rifle butt, killing her, too.

During the attack, Haran’s wife accidentally smothered their 2-year-old daughter in a frantic attempt to keep her quiet so Kantar and his comrades wouldn’t find them. Two Israeli policemen also were killed. Kantar denies killing the 4-year-old.

Critics have argued that swapping bodies for Kantar would offer militant groups an even greater incentive to capture soldiers and less of a reason to keep captives alive.

The debate over the deal taps into a military ethos that runs deep within Israeli society, where most young men and many young women perform compulsory service. Soldiers go out to battle with the understanding they won’t be left behind in the field.

The controversy also has weighed the immediacy of the Regev and Goldwasser families’ anguish against the pain suffered by a family attacked nearly 30 years ago. The woman whose family was killed by Kantar, Smadar Haran Kaiser, has in the past opposed his release.

An aide to Public Security Minister Avi Dichter said Haran Kaiser gave Dichter a letter approving the deal.

Israeli newspapers splashed pictures of the soldiers, their families and military comrades on their front pages.

“Bring them home,” ran the headline of the Yediot Ahronot mass-circulation daily. “Look us in our teary eyes,” ran the headline in Maariv, under a picture of Goldwasser’s parents and Regev’s father.

A recent poll by Israel’s Dahaf Research Institute showed that 65 percent of those questioned said Kantar should be released in exchange for the two soldiers held by Hezbollah, even if it was not known whether they are dead or alive.

The survey of 500 people had a margin of error of 4.4 percentage points.

The soldiers’ families have mounted a concerted public campaign to get the government to approve the deal. Family and friends demonstrated outside Olmert’s office while the ministers were deliberating.

Goldwasser’s wife, who has traveled the globe meeting with world leaders in an effort to bring her husband home, said troops would be less willing to fight for their country if they sensed their country had wavered in its commitment to its soldiers.

“If they won’t bring (the soldiers) back, I believe the message is to the people here is that the country is not going to stand for them, and this is why people in this country are not going to stand for this country,” Karnit Goldwasser told Associated Press Television News.

Some Cabinet ministers took the same view. “I believe in this deal with all my heart. There’s no room for hesitation, not to agree to the deal is to erase our obligation to bring back every soldier,” Cabinet Minister Meir Sheetrit said ahead of the meeting.

Other politicians were afraid the emotional appeals of the soldiers’ families could lead the government to bend sacred principles.

“If they are dead, I certainly oppose this deal,” dovish lawmaker Yossi Beilin told Israel Radio. “The principle must be releasing live prisoners for live hostages, and releasing bodies in return for the fallen.”

In addition to the two captured soldiers held in Lebanon, Israel is trying to win back a third soldier captured by Palestinian militants in a June 2006 cross-border raid from the Gaza Strip.

Sgt. Gilad Schalit has sent letters and an audio tape to his parents and is believed to be alive, though he has not been seen since his capture and the Red Cross has not been permitted to visit him.

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Iran’s Foreign Minister Manouchehr Mottaki says the Israeli regime is not in a position to embark on another ‘adventure’ in the region.

“We do not see the Israeli regime in a position to commit a new act of adventurism by attacking Iran, considering that it is still suffering from the consequences of its heavy defeat during its 33-day aggression against Lebanon two years ago. Another defeat of the Israeli regime will be further proof of its illegitimacy,” Mottaki told reporters in a joint press conference with his Pakistani counterpart Syed Naveed Qamar after the opening ceremony of the 17th session of the Joint Iran-Pakistan Economic Commission in Tehran Sunday.

“Iran’s mission to the UN will file documents and statements by the Zionist regime’s authorities because their speeches at various times are a clear admission of the regime’s aggressive attitude, its moves against international regulations and its possession of nuclear weapons,” he said.

He pointed to the package of incentives prepared by the six main powers on Iran’s nuclear case, saying, “Iran is studying the 5+1Group’s proposed package carefully and in a constructive spirit. The respectful attitude of the group’s representatives prepared the ground for Iran’s decision to study the package.”

On June 14, the EU Foreign Policy Chief Javier Solana presented a package of incentives to the Iranian Foreign Minister. The package was drawn up by the five permanent members of the UN Security Council plus Germany (5+1 Group) and requires Iran to renounce its right to uranium enrichment in exchange for a set of political, economic and security incentives.

Iranian officials insist that as a member of the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) and a signatory to the Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT), the Islamic Republic is entitled to acquire nuclear technology for electricity generation and peaceful applications in such important areas as medicine, agriculture and manufacturing.

Iran’s top diplomatic official added that the G5+1 had taken a constructive view of Tehran’s proposed package, which was submitted to a number of countries and international organizations. The package is aimed at tackling a range of issues the world is facing in connection with terrorism, nuclear proliferation, drug trafficking and other criminal activities that threaten peace and security across the world.

He recommended the Group of Eight industrialized countries should take a constructive stance on Iran based on the new circumstances and avoid politically-motivated measures. “This will be beneficial to all.”

In a statement issued on Friday, the Group of Eight urged Iran to accept the West’s new incentive package and suspend its uranium enrichment program.

SF/GM

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A senior Iranian commander says the armed forces are prepared to deliver an ‘awe-inspiring’ response to any attack against the country.

During a Tuesday speech at the Islamic Revolution Guards Corps headquarters, Major General Mohammad-Ali Jafari said no ’strategic mistake’ by Israel or the US would be overlooked by Iran.

Washington and Tel Aviv’s inability to face Iran’s defensive capabilities has caused them to resort to psychological warfare, the IRGC commander suggested.

“The enemy knows that the IRGC is prepared to defend the country and the Islamic Revolution. This is why no one is able to launch any attack against Iran,” he added.

Maj. Gen. Jafari made the remarks following a New York Times report quoted Pentagon officials as saying that Israel recently carried out a large-scale military maneuver, which appeared to be a rehearsal for an attack on Iran.

According to the report, over 100 Israeli F-16s and F-15s flew more than 900 miles off the southern Mediterranean island of Crete, roughly the distance from Israeli airfields to Iranian nuclear enrichment facilities.

Israel accuses Iran of ‘producing bomb-grade uranium’ and has repeatedly threatened to wage war on the country if Tehran continues with its nuclear plans.

Iran, which according to the most recent UN nuclear watchdog report has conducted a civilian program, insists nuclear weapons have no place in its defensive doctrine.

MD/HGH/DT

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Israeli prime minister has rejected speculation that the release this week of a Lebanese prisoner is part of a swap with Hezbollah.

Ehud Olmert denies that Sunday’s release of Nasim Nisr heralds was an exchange that would see Israel release Lebanese prisoners for two Israeli soldiers captured in 2006, APTN reported.

At the time of Nisr’s return to Lebanon, Hezbollah transferred to Israel a box containing the body parts of Israeli soldiers. Nisr said his return was part of a larger deal.

But Olmert says Nisr was released only because his sentence was up and the Zionist regime was surprised to get the body parts.

Speaking to reporters Wednesday in Washington, Olmert has said there was no deal or coordination ahead of time.

On June 1, Lebanese prisoner Nasim Nisr, imprisoned by Israel for six years, was released from the Nitzan Prison in Ramallah.

Following the release of Nisr, Hezbollah returned the bodies of Israeli troops to the International Committee of the Red Cross. The Israeli troops were killed during the Israeli 33-day war against Lebanon in 2006.

MSH/MMN

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