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White House played key role in 'deception operation' to smash Iran's nuclear program, expert says

White House played key role in 'deception operation' to smash Iran's nuclear program, expert says

Daily Mail​8 hours ago

The surprise attack on Iran was part of a highly coordinated plan orchestrated by President Donald Trump and Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu.
That's according to Mark Dubowitz, chief executive of the Foundation for Defense of Democracies.
Here he describes how it all unfolded.
620 days ago, Tehran's theocratic genocidal regime was beating its chest.
Their terrorist proxy Hamas had recently murdered 1,200 people in Israel and taken over 450 hostages. Iranian-backed Houthi terrorists attacked from the south. The Islamic Republic's most deadly terrorists army in Hezbollah struck from the north in Lebanon in a growing Middle East war. And Tehran's ally
in Syria, dictator Bashar al-Assad, looked on.
All the while President Joe Biden offered Israel his condolences and material support even as he urged Netanyahu to be restrained in his response.
Today, it's a much different picture. Iran 's terrorist armies have been decimated and President Donald Trump is in the White House.
In the early hours of June 13, Israel launched Operation Rising Lion, a meticulously planned military strike on Iran's top leaders and nuclear and military infrastructure.
And sources in Israeli and U.S. security tell me that the surprise attacks were part of a well-coordinated and highly effective deception operation orchestrated by President Trump and Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu.
In May, it was reported that President Trump had waved off Israeli plans to pre-emptively strike Iran's clandestine nuclear weapons program, opting for diplomacy instead. The president, however, repeatedly warned the Iranians – both in public and private – that if they didn't agree to his terms, they'd be vulnerable to attack.
Trump also gave Tehran a 60-day deadline to agree to full dismantlement of their nuclear program and zero enrichment of any uranium.
'I gave them 60 days and they didn't meet it,' President Trump said Friday, following the Israeli attacks. 'Today's 61.'
Yet, as recently as Thursday, the White House was still giving the impression that the president was pursuing a diplomatic deal with Tehran with talks scheduled to resume on Sunday in Oman.
'I am pleased to confirm the 6th round of Iran US talks will be held in Muscat this Sunday the 15th,' the country's foreign minister announced on social media just about two days ago.
That was a feint, part of an elaborate strategy.
Many – most notably, key figures in the Iranian regime – have been operating on the assumption that the Israelis wouldn't strike before the Sunday talks in Oman or that they wouldn't defy Trump and move against Iran at all.
The result was that Iran's senior leadership, military and Iranian Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) commanders and nuclear weapons scientists were all asleep in their beds, literally, and asleep on the job, figuratively, when Israel hit them.
The unprecedented attack took out dozens of top commanders and at least 10 of 12 nuclear scientists who were at the top of the Israeli kill list.
The IDF destroyed the above-ground nuclear facility at Natanz and did significant damage to other leadership, military, and nuclear assets.
Indeed, the U.S. absolutely knew this strike was coming, even though some commentators are pointing to Secretary of State Marco Rubio's statement on Friday referring to the Israeli strikes as 'unilateral.'
Technically, the secretary is right. There were no US pilots or military personnel involved in this action.
But my sources, both inside Israel and the US, say there was close co-ordination between the United States Central Command (Centcom) and the IDF and certainly co-operation between the prime minister and the president.
What happens next will truly determine the future of the Middle East and global security.
As Netanyahu warned, Israel has continued to strike inside Iran, hitting nuclear facilities northwest of Tehran on Friday.
Israel has also said that they've created a corridor from west to east across the Islamic Republic that the Israel Air Force can traverse unimpeded after they systematically destroyed Iran's anticraft defenses in the region.
This will limit Tehran's ability to fight back but already Iran has shown its capability to retaliate by launching a barrage of at least 150 missiles at Israeli cities from its arsenal of more than 2,000 ballistic missiles as well as an inventory of thousands of cruise missiles and drones.
On Friday, several of these projectiles penetrated the Israel's air defense systems striking targets throughput the country and inside Tel Aviv with a direct strike to IDF headquarters. As of this writing, there have been at least three death and dozens of causalities.
Iran may also active terrorist sleeper cells in Israel and across the world to go after Israeli and Jewish targets. Vulnerable locations should be on even more heightened alert than before.
It is now critically important that President Trump issue a credible threat to Iran warning them not to retaliate in a way that invites a direct US military response, like attacks on US personnel and assets in the region and beyond.
The Israelis are already threatening Iran's economic assets - oil refineries, the electrical grid and transportation system - if the Iranian response escalates. If Israel does take out these national assets it would further destabilize an Iranian regime that is at its weakest point in decades – a fact not lost on Israel or the US.
The Israeli operation was labelled 'Rising Lion,' a clear biblical reference.
On Thursday, Prime Minister Netanyahu reportedly placed a note in Jerusalem's Western Wall that contained a verse from the Book of Numbers 23:24, reading: 'Behold, the people shall rise up as a great lion.'
However, I believe this operation has a double meaning.
The flag of the pre-Islamic republic featured emblems of the sun and a lion. Israel's message to the long-oppressed Iranian people is that this is an opportunity for them to take back their country from Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei and his totalitarian regime. Indeed, Netanyahu addressed the long-suffering Iranian people in his first remarks announcing the operation.
Iranian opposition groups have been active in the country since 2009 and have looked to the United States for support.
This coordinated US-Israeli effort should be followed by a campaign of maximum support to the Iranian people.
Most years have seen protests. In 2022 and 2023, hundreds of thousands of Iranian women marched against forced hijab laws in protests that reportedly reached hundreds of cities, the largest such action in recent years. In recent months, thousands of truckers walked off the job.
Finally, Tehran's nuclear weapons program has been badly damaged, but it has not been destroyed.
The facility at Fordow, where Iran's most advanced centrifuges are buried deep underground, remains. This site holds thousands of centrifuges and enriched material shielded from Israeli weapons.
The regime's remaining nuclear weapons scientists may be capable of taking this material, enriching it to weapons grade, and then using it to construct a crude nuclear device or a nuclear warhead affixed to a ballistic missile.
It's also worth remembering that Iran has an active intercontinental missile program designed to threaten the American homeland and Europe. These are only designed to carry nuclear warheads.
This is now the American moment, after Israel did so much damage to Iran, for the U.S. Air Force to go in and finish the job and destroy Fordow.
We have 30,000lb massive ordnance penetrators flown from B2 strategic bombers that Israel lacks. That would set back the Iranian nuke program, not by months or even years, but potentially by a decade or greater.
President Trump himself can do what he has committed to do - never allow Iran to develop a nuclear weapon, not on his watch or on the watch of his successors. He is in a unique historical position to end this nuclear threat from an anti-American genocidal regime.

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Israeli security forces inspect destroyed buildings near Tel Aviv that were hit by a missile fired from Iran (Ohad Zwigenberg/AP) The country's main international airport and airspace remained closed for a third day. Israeli strikes targeted Iran's Defence Ministry early on Sunday after hitting air defences, military bases and sites associated with its nuclear programme. The killing of several top generals and nuclear scientists in targeted strikes indicated that Israeli intelligence has penetrated Iran at the highest levels. In a sign that Iran expects the Israeli strikes to continue, state television reported that metro stations and mosques would be made available as bomb shelters for the public beginning on Sunday night. In Israel, at least six people, including a 10-year-old and a nine-year-old, were killed when a missile hit an apartment building in Bat Yam, near Tel Aviv. Daniel Hadad, a local police commander, said 180 people were wounded and seven are still missing. An Associated Press (AP) reporter saw streets lined with damaged and destroyed buildings, bombed out cars and shards of glass. Responders used a drone at points to look for survivors. Some people could be seen leaving the area with suitcases. The Israeli Iron Dome air defence system fires to intercept missiles over Tel Aviv, Israel (Ohad Zwigenberg/AP) Another four people, including a 13-year-old, were killed and 24 wounded when a missile struck a building in the Arab town of Tamra in northern Israel. A strike on the central city of Rehovot wounded 42. The Weizmann Institute of Science, an important centre for research in Rehovot, said 'there were a number of hits to buildings on the campus'. It said no-one was harmed. Israel has sophisticated multi-tiered air defences that are able to detect and intercept missiles fired at populated areas or key infrastructure, but officials acknowledge it is imperfect. World leaders made urgent calls to de-escalate. The attack on nuclear sites sets a 'dangerous precedent', China's foreign minister said. The region is already on edge as Israel seeks to annihilate Hamas, an Iranian ally, in the Gaza Strip, where the war is still raging after Hamas's October 7 2023 attack. Flames rise from an oil storage facility in Tehran, Iran, after it appeared to have been hit by an Israeli strike (Vahid Salemi/AP) Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu brushed off such calls, saying Israel's strikes so far are 'nothing compared to what they will feel under the sway of our forces in the coming days'. Israel, the sole though undeclared nuclear-armed state in the Middle East – said it launched the attack to prevent Iran from developing a nuclear weapon. The two countries have been regional adversaries for decades. Iran has always said its nuclear programme was peaceful, and the US and others have assessed it has not pursued a weapon since 2003. But it has enriched ever larger stockpiles of uranium to near weapons-grade levels in recent years and was believed to have been able to develop multiple weapons within months if it chose to do so. The UN's atomic watchdog censured Iran last week for not complying with its obligations. Mr Araghchi said Israel had targeted an oil refinery near Tehran and another in the country's Bushehr province on the Persian Gulf. Smoke rises up from an oil facility after a Saturday explosion in southern Tehran, Iran (Vahid Salemi/AP) He said Iran had also targeted 'economic' sites in Israel, without elaborating. Mr Araghchi was speaking to diplomats in his first public appearance since the initial Israeli strikes. Semi-official Iranian news agencies reported that an Israeli drone strike had caused a 'strong explosion' at an Iranian natural-gas processing plant. Israel's military did not immediately comment. The extent of damage at the South Pars natural gas field was not immediately clear. Such sites have air defence systems around them, which Israel has been targeting. An oil refinery was also damaged in the northern Israeli city of Haifa, according to the firm operating it. Bazan Group said pipelines and transmission lines between facilities were damaged, forcing some downstream facilities to be shut down. It said no-one was wounded. The Arab Gulf country of Oman, which has been mediating indirect talks between the US and Iran over Tehran's nuclear programme, said a sixth round planned for Sunday would not take place. 'We remain committed to talks and hope the Iranians will come to the table soon,' a senior US official said. Mr Araghchi said on Saturday that the nuclear talks were 'unjustifiable' after Israel's strikes, which he said were the 'result of the direct support by Washington'. In a post on his Truth Social account early on Sunday, Mr Trump reiterated that the US was not involved in the attacks on Iran and warned that any retaliation directed against it would bring an American response 'at levels never seen before'. 'However, we can easily get a deal done between Iran and Israel, and end this bloody conflict!!!' he wrote.

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