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GAZETTE ARTICLE ONLINE
October 13,
2007
Go Back to Articles Online
Editorial
Note
that I
said
survey
and not
Ballot.
I think
that
this an
excellent
move by
our
Board
and one
that is
well
thought
out. As
you can
guess I
will be
choosing
the $20
Food
Credit
and
expect
that
most
reasonable
“Ranchers”
will do
likewise.
Thank
you
Board
Members
for a
quick
response
to this
dire
situation.
Do I
have to
be in
costume
for the
Halloween
event?
(see B 4
for ad)
Sounds
like
fun. W.C.
Don’t
miss the
Vineyard
Story
from R.L.
Winters
(see
pages 10
& 11 in
the A
section)
This
should
be be
fun to
watch as
it
develops
and I
can’t
wait
until
the
first
Harvest/Crush
in
November
2008.
Congrats.
to R.L.
I don’t
have a
clue who
this Dr.
Wheeler
is,
but——-
SILENCE
IN
SYRIA,
PANIC IN
IRAN
Written
by Dr.
Jack
Wheeler
Wednesday,
19
September
2007
One of
India’s
top
ranking
generals
assigned
to
liaise
with the
Iranian
military
recently
returned
to New
Delhi
from
several
days in
Tehran -
in a
state of
complete
amazement.
“Everyone
in the
government
and
military
can only
talk of
one
thing,”
he
reports.
“No
matter
who I
talked
to, all
they
could do
was ask
me, over
and over
again,
‘Do you
think
the
Americans
will
attack
us?’
‘When
will the
Americans
attack
us?’
‘Will
the
Americans
attack
us in a
joint
operation
with the
Israelis?’
How
massive
will the
attack
be?’ on
and on,
endlessly.
The
Iranians
are in a
state of
total
panic.”
And
that was
before
September
6. Since
then,
it’s
panic-squared
in
Tehran.
The
mullahs
are
freaking
out in
fear.
Why?
Because
of the
silence
in
Syria.
On
September
6,
Israeli
Air
Force
F-15 and
F-16s
conducted
a
devastating
attack
on
targets
deep
inside
Syria
near the
city of
Dayr
az-Zawr.
Israel’s
military
censors
have
muzzled
the
Israeli
media,
enforcing
an
extraordinary
silence
about
the
identity
of the
targets.
Massive
speculation
in the
world
press
has
followed,
such as
Brett
Stephens’
Osirak
II? in
yesterday’s
(9/18)
Wall St.
Journal.
Stephens
and most
everyone
else
have
missed
the real
story.
It is
not
Israel’s
silence
that
“speaks
volumes”
as he
claims,
but
Syria’s.
Why
would
the
Syrian
government
be so
tight-lipped
about an
act of
war
perpetrated
on their
soil?
The
first
half of
the
answer
lies in
this
story
that
appeared
in the
Israeli
media
last
month
(8/13):
Syria’s
Antiaircraft
System
Most
Advanced
In
World.
Syria
has gone
on a
profligate
buying
spree,
spending
vast
sums on
Russian
systems,
“considered
the
cutting
edge in
aircraft
interception
technology.”
Syria
now
“possesses
the most
crowded
antiaircraft
system
in the
world,”
with
“more
than 200
antiaircraft
batteries
of
different
types,”
some of
which
are so
new that
they
have
been
installed
in Syria
“before
being
introduced
into
Russian
operation
service.”
While
you’re
digesting
that,
take a
look at
the map
of
Syria:
Notice
how far
away
Dayr
az-Zawr
is from
Israel.
An
F15/16
attack
there is
not a
tiptoe
across
the
border,
but a
deep,
deep
penetration
of
Syrian
airspace.
And
guess
what
happened
with the
Russian
super-hyper-sophisticated
cutting
edge
antiaircraft
missile
batteries
when
that
penetration
took
place on
September
6th.
Nothing.
El
blanko.
Silence.
The
systems
didn’t
even
light
up, gave
no
indication
whatever
of any
detection
of enemy
aircraft
invading
Syrian
airspace,
zip,
zero,
nada.
The
Israelis
(with a
little
techie
assistance
from us)
blinded
the
Russkie
antiaircraft
systems
so
completely
the
Syrians
didn’t
even
know
they
were
blinded.
Now you
see why
the
Syrians
have
been
scared
speechless.
They
thought
they
were
protected
- at
enormous
expense
- only
to
discover
they are
defenseless.
As in
naked.
Thus
the
Great
Iranian
Freak-Out
- for
this
means
Iran is
just as
nakedly
defenseless
as
Syria. I
can tell
you that
there
are a
lot of
folks in
the
Kirya (IDF
headquarters
in Tel
Aviv)
and the
Pentagon
right
now who
are
really
enjoying
the
mullahs’
predicament.
Let’s
face it:
scaring
the
terror
masters
in
Tehran
out of
their
wits is
fun.
It’s so
much
fun, in
fact,
that an
attack
destroying
Iran’s
nuclear
facilities
and the
Revolutionary
Guard
command/control
centers
has been
delayed,
so that
France
(under
new
management)
can get
in on
the fun
too.
On
Sunday
(9/16),
Sarkozy’s
foreign
minister
Bernard
Kouchner
announced
that
“France
should
prepare
for the
possibility
of war
over
Iran’s
nuclear
program.”
All of
this has
caused
Tehran
to
respond
with
maniacal
threats.
On
Monday
(9/17),
a
government
website
proclaimed
that
“600
Shihab-3
missiles”
will be
fired at
targets
in
Israel
in
response
to an
attack
upon
Iran by
the
US/Israel.
This was
followed
by
Iranian
deputy
air
force
chief
Gen.
Mohammad
Alavi
announcing
today
(9/19)
that “we
will
attack
their
(Israeli)
territory
with our
fighter
bombers
as a
response
to any
attack.”
A sure
sign of
panic is
to make
a threat
that
everyone
knows is
a bluff.
So our
and Tel
Aviv’s
response
to
Iranian
bluster
is a
thank-you-for-sharing
yawn and
a laugh.
Few
things
rattle
the
mullahs’
cages
more
than a
yawn and
a laugh.
Yet no
matter
how much
fun this
sport
with the
mullahs
is, it
is also
deadly
serious.
The
pressure
build-up
on Iran
is
getting
enormous.
Something
is going
to blow
and
soon.
The hope
is that
the
blow-up
will be
internal,
that the
regime
will
implode
from
within.
But
make no
mistake:
an
all-out
full
regime
take-out
air
assault
upon
Iran is
coming
if that
hope
doesn’t
materialize
within
the next
60 to 90
days.
The
Sept. 6
attack
on Syria
was the
shot
across
Iran’s
bow.
So -
what was
attacked
near
Dayr
az-Zawr?
It’s
possible
it was
North
Korean
“nuclear
material”
recently
shipped
to
Syria,
i.e.,
stuff to
make
radioactively
“dirty”
warheads,
but
nothing
to make
a real
nuke
with as
the
Norks
don’t
have
real
nukes
(see Why
North
Korea’s
Nuke
Test Is
Such
Good
News,
October
2006).
Another
possibility
is it
was to
take out
a
stockpile
of
long-range
Zilzal
surface-to-surface
missiles
recently
shipped
from
Iran for
an
attack
on
Israel.
A third
is it
was a
hit on
the
stockpile
of
Saddam’s
chemical/bio
weapons
snuck
out of
Iraq and
into
Syria
for
safekeeping
before
the US
invasion
of April
2003.
But the
identity
of the
target
is not
the
story -
for the
primary
point of
the
attack
was not
to
destroy
that
target.
It was
to shut
down
Syria’s
Russian
air
defense
system
during
the
attack.
Doing so
made the
attack
an
incredible
success.
Syria is
shamed
and
silent.
Iran is
freaking
out in
panic.
Forwarded
to
Gazette
by
Marine
Pilot
Don
Hadden,
Allen,
TX. W.C.
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