Missile Defense Briefing Report: No. 285
Russia eyes space defense...;
...And throws down the gauntlet on European BMD;
More fuel for iron dome;
Japan considers easing barriers to BMD export;
Moscow versus American missile defense
Russia eyes space defense...;
...And throws down the gauntlet on European BMD;
More fuel for iron dome;
Japan considers easing barriers to BMD export;
Moscow versus American missile defense
With the drama of the Arab Spring and the death of Osama bin Laden dominating the headlines, you might have missed the most important development in months surrounding Iran's nuclear program: Zimbabwe's emergence as a key enabler of the Islamic Republic's march toward the atomic bomb.
In recent days, officials in Harare have confirmed that the government of Robert Mugabe is finalizing a massive resources deal with Tehran, in defiance of United Nations sanctions aimed at derailing Iran's nuclear push. That agreement, in the works since Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad visited the African state in April 2010, would provide the Iranian regime with preferential access to the country's estimated 455,000 tons of raw uranium over the next five years.
The deal sheds light on what amounts to a major chink in the Islamic Republic's nuclear armor. For all of its atomic bluster, the Iranian regime lacks enough of the critical raw material necessary to independently acquire a nuclear capability. According to nonproliferation experts, Iran's known uranium ore reserves are limited and generally of poor quality. It desperately needs steady supplies of uranium ore from abroad, and without those supplies the Islamic Republic's nuclear plans would, quite simply, grind to a halt.
Quietly, the UAE builds a "
mercenary army"
A speed bump in U.S.-Saudi ties;
Pledging loyalty in Bahrain...;
... as Saudi-Iranian Cold War simmers
Skype, Gmail get a reprieve... for now;
Clipping Sechin's (and Putin's) wings
Is a new Cold War brewing in the Middle East? That’s the conventional wisdom surrounding the so-called “Arab Spring,” which has further corroded the already poor relations between the region’s Saudi-led bloc on the one hand, and Iran and its allies on the other. Yet the two competing sides have found common ground on at least one strategic issue: Syria. Each desperately wants the regime of Syrian dictator Bashar al-Assad to survive.