WND:
General: Country's army has finger on the trigger
Iran ratcheted up its vitriol against Israel and the United States
over the weekend, warning that an attack on the Islamic regime’s nuclear
facilities could lead to global war.
The rhetoric eerily matched that currently coming out of North Korea against its perceived enemies.
“Iran will not stand by in the face of such aggression,” Ali Ahani, Iran’s ambassador to France, said Sunday, according to the Islamic regime’s PressTV.
“This can entail a chain of violence that may lead to World war III. A
potential Israeli attack against Iran with an objective of destroying
its scientific and nuclear facilities is sheer madness. Its consequences
are disastrous and uncontrollable.”
The deputy chief of staff of Iran’s armed forces, Brig. Gen Masoud
Jazayeri, warned the United States on Saturday that Iran would continue
its nuclear program.
“We would not trade off our rights,” he said, adding that Iran would stand with North Korea in its faceoff with America. According to Mehr News, Jazayeri blamed the tension on the Korean Peninsula on the U.S. presence in the region.
“Whenever necessary, we would stop the U.S. excessive demands,” he
said. “The Islamic Revolution will never leave its past and present
friends. The U.S. and its allies will suffer great losses if a war
breaks out in this region.”
The commander of the Islamic regime’s ground forces, Brig. Gen. Ahmad Reza Poordastan, in his speech at Friday Prayers,
also warned “the enemies” that the country’s army has its finger on the
trigger and that any attack on the country will make the “enemy” regret
its actions.
All enemy activities at Iran’s borders and in the region are being
monitored by the country’s intelligence analysts, and Iran’s armed
forces are prepared for any scenario, he said.
The regime’s PressTV ran an op-ed analysis on Saturday
with a headline “Iran deals deathblow to U.S. global hegemony.” The
analysis, by Finian Cunningham, an Irishman whom the outlet calls “a
prominent expert in international affairs,” blames America for much of
the world’s problems and warns of its decline.
“Iran, however, presents a greater and more problematic challenge to
U.S. global hegemony,” Cunningham wrote. “The U.S. in 2013 is a very
different animal from what it was in 1945. Now it resembles more a
lumbering giant. Gone is its former economic prowess and its arteries
are sclerotic with its internal social decay and malaise. … Iran exerts a
controlling influence over the vital drug that keeps the American
economic system alive – the world’s supply of oil and gas. Any war with
Iran, if the U.S. were so foolish to embark on it, would result in a
deathblow to the waning American and global economy.”
Cunningham said the story will not end there: “The attainment of
world peace, justice and sustainability does not only necessitate the
collapse of American hegemony. We need to overthrow the underlying
capitalist economic system that gives rise to such destructive hegemonic
powers. Iran represents a deathblow to the American empire, but the
people of the world will need to build on the ruins.”
The world powers once again failed at Almaty, Kazakhstan, to get Iran
to stop its uranium enrichment program and allow further inspections of
its nuclear facilities by the International Atomic Energy Agency. The
talks, which lasted two days, were held last week between Iran and the
5-plus-1 powers: the United States, Britain France, Russia, China, plus
Germany.
As reported exclusively on WND on March 20 and in a follow-up in The Washington Times
the next day, information provided by a high-ranking intelligence
officer in the regime’s ministry of defense revealed yet another secret
site where Iran is engaged in completing its nuclear bomb program and
arming its ballistic missiles with nuclear warheads.
The source added that not only does the regime have enough plutonium
for several bombs, but it also has enriched uranium to weapons grade.
The new site, 15 miles from another previously secret site exposed in
2009 (the Fordow nuclear facility), is approximately 14 miles long and
7.5 miles wide, consisting of two facilities built deep into a mountain
along with a nearby missile facility with over 380 missile garages and
silos, surrounded by barbed wire, 45 security towers and several
security posts.
American experts who viewed satellite imagery of the new site are
concerned that Iran may be much further along in its nuclear bomb
program than perceived and that the images of the site are a clear
indication that the regime’s strategy is to put together an “objective
force” and not just one or two nuclear bombs. An objective force is
defined as the level of military forces needed within a finite time
frame and resource level to accomplish approved military objectives,
missions or tasks.
Last week, the head of Iran’s Atomic Energy Organization, in a hasty and unusual press conference,
denied the existence of this site, dubbed “Quds,” at which the rogue
nation is making great progress in creating nuclear warheads for an
array of long-range missiles stored underground nearby. He did not
elaborate as to what the site is and what work is being done out of the
facilities.
The satellite images clearly show this vast site is visible to the
naked eye and that it is a high-priority site with secret work conducted
deep within the mountain.