“Iran, of cause, is a sore spot. Some kind of decision should be taken, probably nearer to summer,” Makarov told RIA Novosti. He added that Russia has created a new crisis center that receives information regarding Iran in real time.
Discord between the Obama administration and Israeli
leaders over the timing of a planned strike on Iran’s nuclear facilities
has characterized the build-up to war.
Newsweek reported yesterday that Mossad boss Tamir Pardo made a secret visit to officials in the United States
earlier this month to determine what the consequences would be if
Israel bombed Iran’s nuclear facilities without first receiving the
green light from Washington.
Pardo had a number of questions, including: “What is our
posture on Iran? Are we ready to bomb? Would we [do so later]? What
does it mean if [Israel] does it anyway?”
Meanwhile, the ratings agency Standard & Poor’s has issued three reports
that predict Iran will engage in “low-level provocation” in response to
sanctions by disrupting shipping in the Strait of Hormuz, a critical
oil choke point that Tehran has repeatedly threatened to close.
“Iranian authorities could disrupt supplies of oil from
the Persian Gulf by imposing tanker inspections or boarding merchant
ships in its territorial waters, supporting oil prices because markets
would increasingly view armed conflict as “a real, if remote,
possibility,” the report stated.
This would be beneficial for oil-producing states in the
region such as Saudi Arabia, U.A.E., Qatar, Kuwait, Oman, and Bahrain,
notes the report, because such tension would push the price of oil to
$150 a barrel.
Israel blamed Iran for two attacks yesterday targeting
cars belonging to the Israeli embassies in New Delhi, India and Tbilisi,
Georgia. Iran has denied having any involvement in the attempted
bombings in which the wife of Israel’s defense attache was injured,
saying they were false flag attacks launched by Israel itself to “tarnish Iran’s friendly ties with the host countries.”
A man thought to be an Iranian national was also maimed by his own bomb
today after throwing a grenade at a taxi in Bangkok. When police
attempted to apprehend him, he then threw another grenade which bounced
off a tree and blew both of his legs off.
A “senior Israeli official says Thai police believe incident was botched terror attack,” reports Haaretz,
though why the man chose an unknown Bangkok taxi driver as the target
of his “terror attack” and what this has to do with Israel has not been
properly explained.
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