Iran warns of "painful" response if Israel attacks!
TEHERAN, Iran - June 10, 2008 -
Iran's defense minister was quoted on Tuesday as warning Israel of a "very
painful" response if it launched a military strike over the Islamic
Republic's legitimate civilian nuclear program.
On Friday, Israeli Transport
Minister Shaul Mofaz told an Israeli newspaper an attack on Iran looked
"unavoidable" given the apparent failure of United Nations sanctions
to deny Teheran technology with bomb-making potential.
"Our armed forces are at the
height of their readiness and if anyone should want to undertake such a foolish
job the response would be very painful," the state Iran daily quoted
Iranian Defense Minister Mostafa Mohammad Najjar as saying.
Some Israeli political commentators
have accused Mofaz, whose comments helped drive up oil prices to a record $139
a barrel on Friday, of making them to advance his personal political ambitions.
In Jerusalem, Israeli Prime
Minister Ehud Olmert asked ministers at the weekly cabinet meeting on Tuesday
to refrain from discussing sensitive matters publicly, officials said.
Israel, widely believed to have the
Middle East's only atomic arsenal, has described Iran's nuclear program as a
threat to its existence. Olmert last week said it must be stopped by "all
possible means."
Iran does not recognize Israel and
Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad is regularly predicting its demise.
The United States, which is leading
efforts to isolate Teheran over nuclear work the West fears is aimed at making
bombs, says it wants a diplomatic solution to the dispute but has not ruled out
military action if that were to fail.
Israel bombed an Iraqi reactor in
1981 and an Israeli air raid on Syria last September razed what the United
States said was a nascent nuclear reactor built with North Korean help. Syria
denied having any such facility.
But many analysts say Iran's
nuclear sites are too numerous, distant and fortified for Israel to take on
alone.
"Israel cannot do it on its
own," London-based defense analyst Andrew Brookes told Reuters. "It
is beyond the capability of the Israeli air force to do it because of the
distance involved and the dispersed nature of all the sites."
"The only way it can be done
is with the full assistance of the United States," said Brookes of the
International Institute for Strategic Studies (IISS) think-tank.
Iran, which says its nuclear work
is solely for generating electricity, has threatened to retaliate if it is
attacked.
Its Shahab-3 missile, with a range
of 2,000 km (1,250 miles), is capable of hitting Israel and U.S. bases in the
Gulf, Iranian officials say.