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Kudos
to my friend George Friedman and his crew at Stratfor. If you didn't see the
article in this week's Barron's about Stratfor's analysis of the geopolitical
risk premium built into oil prices, you missed a really good piece of work.
You've probably heard Napoleon's quote that "Amateurs discuss strategy, and
professionals discuss logistics." If you want a perfect example of how that
quote plays out for the markets, take a look at Stratfor's article below. It's
precisely the kind of sober, fundamental research that makes Stratfor my invaluable
source for geopolitical intelligence.
No matter where you're looking at putting your money today, the impact of
energy prices simply can't be overstated. The commodities trade, US and foreign
equities, debt and interest rates, everything is being driven by energy prices
right now. Whether you're trying to factor energy as a direct input into the
price and consumption of manufactured goods or dealing with monetary policy's
impact on the dollar and debt markets, you're implicitly making an energy trade.
I've said it before and I'll say it again, if you're trying to trade today's
markets without geopolitical intelligence, it's like trying to trade the juice
futures market without a weather forecast. You can do it, but good luck to
you.
George has kindly passed me the article that was the basis of the Barron's story.
You'll notice right away that unlike many of the so-called experts out there,
Stratfor doesn't airily dismiss underlying logistics in favor of handwaving.
But better than taking my word for it, <click
here to get your own Stratfor Membership at the discounted rate for my
readers. Every day you'll receive the same forecasts and intelligence guidance
that I use to shape my thinking on where the world is going - and especially
on energy prices.
John Mauldin, Editor
Outside the Box

Mediterranean Flyover: Telegraphing an Israeli Punch?
By George Friedman
On June 20, The New York Times published a report saying that more than 100
Israeli aircraft carried out an
exercise in early June over the eastern Mediterranean Sea and Greece. The
article pointed out that the distances covered were roughly the distances from
Israel to Iranian nuclear sites and that the exercise was a trial run for a
large-scale air strike against Iran. On June 21, the British newspaper The
Times quoted Israeli military sources as saying that the exercise was a dress
rehearsal for an attack on Iran. The Jerusalem Post, in covering these events,
pointedly referred to an article it had published in May saying that Israeli
intelligence had changed its forecast for Iran passing a nuclear threshold
-- whether this was simply the ability to cause an explosion under controlled
conditions or the ability to produce an
actual weapon was unclear -- to 2008 rather than 2009.
The New York Times article, positioned on the front page, captured the attention
of everyone from oil traders to Iran, which claimed that this was entirely
psychological warfare on the part of the Israelis and that Israel could not
carry out such an attack. It was not clear why the Iranians thought an attack
was impossible, but they were surely right in saying that the exercise was
psychological warfare. The Israelis did everything they could to publicize
the exercise, and American officials, who obviously knew about the exercise
but had not publicized it, backed them up. What is important to note is that
the fact that this was psychological warfare -- and fairly effective, given
the Iranian response -- does not mean that Israel is not going to attack. One
has nothing to do with the other. So the question of whether there is going
to be an attack must be analyzed carefully.
The first issue, of course, is what might be called the "red line." It has
always been expected that once the Iranians came close to a line at which they
would become a capable nuclear power, the Americans or the Israelis would act
to stop them, neither being prepared to tolerate a nuclear Iran. What has never
been clear is what constitutes that red line. It could simply be having produced
sufficient fissionable material to build a bomb, having achieved a nuclear
explosion under test conditions in Iran or having approached the point of producing
a deliverable nuclear weapon.
Early this month, reports circulated that A.Q. Khan, the former head of Pakistan's
nuclear program who is accused of selling nuclear technology to such countries
as Libya, North Korea and Iran, had also possessed detailed design specifications
and blueprints for constructing a nuclear weapon small enough to be mounted
on missiles available to North Korea and Iran. The blueprints were found on
a computer owned by a Swiss businessman, but the reports pointedly said that
it was not known whether these documents had been transferred to Iran or any
other country. It was interesting that the existence of the blueprints in Switzerland
was known to the United States -- and, we assume, Israel -- in 2006 but that,
at this point, there was no claim that they had been transferred.
Clearly, the existence of these documents -- if Iran had a copy of them --
would have helped the Iranians clear some hurdles. However, as we have pointed
out, there is a huge gap between having enriched uranium and having a deliverable
weapon, the creation of which requires technologies totally unrelated to each
other. Ruggedizing and miniaturizing a nuclear device requires specializations
from materials science to advanced electronics. Therefore, having enriched
uranium or even triggering an underground nuclear device still leaves you a
long way from having a weapon.
That's why the leak on the nuclear blueprints is so important. From the Israeli
and American point of view, those blueprints give the Iranians the knowledge
of precisely how to ruggedize and miniaturize a nuclear device. But there are
two problems here. First, if we were given blueprints for building a bridge,
they would bring us no closer to building one. We would need experts in multiple
disciplines just to understand the blueprints and thousands of trained engineers
and workers to actually build the bridge. Second, the Israelis and Americans
have known about the blueprints for two years. Even if they were certain that
they had gotten to the Iranians -- which the Israelis or Americans would certainly
have announced in order to show the increased pressure at least one of them
would be under to justify an attack -- it is unclear how much help the blueprints
would have been to the Iranians. The Jerusalem Post story implied that the
Iranians were supposed to be crossing an undefined line in 2009. It is hard
to imagine that they were speeded up to 2008 by a document delivered in 2006,
and that the Israelis only just noticed.
In the end, the Israelis may have intelligence indicating that the blueprints
did speed things up, and that the Iranians might acquire nuclear weapons in
2008. We doubt that. But given the statements Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad
has made over the years, the Israelis have to be planning based on worst-case
scenarios. What the sum total of their leaks adds up to is an attempt to communicate
widely that there is an increased urgency in dealing with Iran, based on intelligence
that the Iranian program is farther along than previously thought.
The problem is the fact that the Israelis are communicating. In fact, they
are going out of their way to communicate. That is extremely odd. If the Israelis
were intending to strike Iran's nuclear facilities, they would want to be absolutely
certain that as much of the equipment in the facilities was destroyed as possible.
But the hard truth is that the heart of Iran's capability, such as it is, does
not reside in its facilities but in its scientists, engineers and technicians
who collectively constitute the knowledge base of Iran's nuclear program. Facilities
can be replaced. It would take at least a generation to replace what we already
regard as an insufficient cadre of expertise.
Therefore, if Israel wanted not simply to take out current facilities but
to take Iran out of the nuclear game for a very long time, killing these people
would have to be a major strategic goal. The Israelis would want to strike
in the middle of the workday, without any warning whatever. If they strike
Iran, they will be condemned widely for their actions. The additional criticism
that would come from killing the workforce would not be a large price to pay
for really destroying the Iranian capabilities. Unlike the Iraqi reactor strike
in 1981, when the Israelis struck at night to minimize casualties, this strike
against a more sophisticated program could not afford to be squeamish.
There are obviously parts of Iran's nuclear capability that cannot be moved.
There is other equipment that can be, with enough warning and with more or
less difficulty, moved to unknown locations. But nothing would be easier to
disperse than the heart of the program -- the people. They could be moved out
of harm's way with only an hour's notice. Therefore, providing warning that
an attack was coming makes very little sense. It runs counter to basic principles
of warfare. The Israelis struck the Osirak reactor in Iraq in 1981 with not
the slightest hint of the attack's imminence. That was one of the reasons it
was successful. Telegraphing your punch is not very smart in these circumstances.
The Israelis have done more than raise the possibility that an attack might
be launched in 2008. They have publicized how they plan to do it. Based on
the number and type of aircraft involved in the exercise -- more than 100 F-15
and F-16 fighter jets -- one Israeli attack scenario could involve a third
of Israel's inventory of fourth-generation strike aircraft, including most
of its latest-model F-15I Ra'am and F-16I Sufa fighter bombers. If Greece were
the target in this exercise, then the equivalent distance would mean that the
Israelis are planning to cross Jordanian airspace, transit through Iraq and
strike Iran from that direction. A strike through Turkey -- and there is no
indication that the Turks would permit it -- would take much longer.
The most complex part of the operation's logistics would be the refueling
of aircraft. They would have to be orbiting in Iraqi airspace. One of the points
discussed about the Mediterranean exercise was the role of Israeli helicopters
in rescuing downed flyers. Rescue helicopters would be involved, but we doubt
very much they would be entering Iranian airspace from Israel. They are a lot
slower than the jets, and they would have to be moving hours ahead of time.
The Iranians might not spot them but the Russians would, and there is no guarantee
that they wouldn't pass it on to the Iranians. That means that the Israeli
helicopters would have to move quietly into Iraq and be based there.
And that means that this would have to be a joint American-Israeli operation.
The United States controls Iraqi airspace, meaning that the Americans would
have to permit Israeli tankers to orbit in Iraqi airspace. The search-and-rescue
helicopters would have to be based there. And we strongly suspect that rescued
pilots would not be ferried back to Israel by helicopter but would either be
sent to U.S. hospitals in Iraq or transferred to Israeli aircraft in Iraq.
The point here is that, given the exercise the Israelis carried out and the
distances involved, there is no way Israel could do this without the direct
cooperation of the United States. From a political standpoint in the region,
it is actually easier for the United States to take out Iran's facilities than
for it to help the Israelis do so. There are many Sunni states that might formally
protest but be quite pleased to see the United States do the job. But if the
Israelis were to do it, Sunni states would have to be much more serious in
their protestations. In having the United States play the role of handmaiden
in the Israeli operation, it would appear that the basic charge against the
United States -- that it is the handmaiden of the Israelis -- is quite true.
If the Americans are going to be involved in a strike against Iran's nuclear
program, they are far better off doing it themselves than playing a supporting
role to Israel.
There is something not quite right in this whole story. The sudden urgency
-- replete with tales of complete blueprints that might be in Iranian hands
-- doesn't make sense. We may be wrong, but we have no indication that Iran
is that close to producing nuclear weapons. Second, the extreme publicity given
the exercise in the Mediterranean, coming from both Israel and the United States,
runs counter to the logic of the mission. Third, an attack on Iran through
Iraqi airspace would create a political nightmare for the United States. If
this is the Israeli attack plan, the Americans would appear to be far better
off doing it themselves.
There are a number of possible explanations. On the question of urgency, the
Israelis might have two things in mind. One is the rumored transfer of S-300
surface-to-air missiles from Russia to Iran. This transfer has been rumored
for quite a while, but by all accounts has yet to happen. The S-300 is a very
capable system, depending on the variety (and it is unclear which variety is
being transferred), and it would increase the cost and complexity of any airstrike
against Iran. Israel may have heard that the Russians are planning to begin
transferring the missiles sometime in 2008.
Second, there is obviously the U.S. presidential election. George W. Bush
will be out of office in early 2009, and it is possible that Barack Obama will
be replacing him. The Israelis have made no secret of their discomfort with
an Obama presidency. Obviously, Israel cannot attack Iran without U.S. cooperation.
The Israelis' timetable may be moved up because they are not certain that Obama
will permit an attack later on.
There are also explanations for the extreme publicity surrounding the exercise.
The first might be that the Israelis have absolutely no intention of trying
to stage long-range attacks but are planning some other type of attack altogether.
The possibilities range from commando raids to cruise missiles fired from Israeli
submarines in the Arabian Sea -- or something else entirely. The Mediterranean
exercise might have been designed to divert attention.
Alternatively, the Israelis could be engaged in exhausting Iranian defenders.
During the first Gulf War, U.S. aircraft rushed toward the Iraqi border night
after night for weeks, pulling away and landing each time. The purpose was
to get the Iraqis to see these feints as routine and slow down their reactions
when U.S. aircraft finally attacked. The Israelis could be engaged in a version
of this, tiring out the Iranians with a series of "emergencies" so they are
less responsive in the event of a real strike.
Finally, the Israelis and Americans might not be intending an attack at all.
Rather, they are -- as the Iranians have said -- engaged in psychological warfare
for political reasons. The Iranians appear to be split now between those who
think that Ahmadinejad has led Iran into an extremely dangerous situation and
those who think Ahmadinejad has done a fine job. The prospect of an imminent
and massive attack on Iran could give his opponents ammunition against him.
This would explain the Iranian government response to the reports of a possible
attack -- which was that such an attack was just psychological warfare and
could not happen. That clearly was directed more for internal consumption than
it was for the Israelis or Americans.
We tend toward this latter theory. Frankly, the Bush administration has been
talking about an attack on Iran for years. It is hard for us to see that the
situation has changed materially over the past months. But if it has, then
either Israel or the United States would have attacked -- and not with front-page
spreads in The New York Times before the attack was launched. In the end, we
tend toward the view that this is psychological warfare for the simple reason
that you don't launch a surprise attack of the kind necessary to take out Iran's
nuclear program with a media blitz beforehand. It just doesn't work that way.
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