Tehrans Planned Nuclear Capacity in Venezuela Has All the Makings of a New Cuban Missile CrisisPanama, December 3, 2010
The Simon Wiesenthal Center has alerted the Organization of American States (OAS) to an Iranian missile base planned for Venezuela.
In a letter to the OAS Secretary for Multidimensional Security, Adam Blackwell, Dr. Shimon Samuels (Wiesenthal Center Director for International Relations) and Sergio Widder (Director for Latin America), noted that the German daily Die Welt of November 25, 2010 reported on an agreement between Iran and Venezuela, signed by President Hugo Chavez in Tehran on October 16 (
www.welt.de/politik/ausland/article11219574/Iran-plant-Bau-einer-Raketenstellung-in-Venezuela.html).
The article indicates that facilities will include the deployment of platforms for storage of Shahab 3 missiles (range 1300 1500 km.), together with Scud-Bs (range 285 330 km.) and Scud Cs (range 300, 500 y 700 km.), plus four mobile platforms, which will be operated by the Iranian Revolutionary Guard. The agreement grants permission to Iran to open fire in case of emergency, and will train Venezuelan missile launch officers at Tehran Sharif University in coming months. These installations are scheduled for activation by the end of 2011.
Die Welt also points to Venezuelas uranium supplies, its own nuclear development program, and attempts to purchase missiles from Russia that were destined for sale to Iran, which was cancelled due to the sanctions regime.
All warning measures to counter the Iranian nuclear threat to the Near East and Western Europe, can now be compromised. Tehran will control a new capacity with all the makings of the 1962 Cuban missile crisis. This time, however, the target kill-box potentially covers the southern United States, Central America, the Caribbean, and Venezuelas neighbors, stated Dr. Shimon Samuels, Director for International Relations of the Wiesenthal Center.
In view of Irans patronage of international terrorism, its direct involvement in the AMIA Jewish Center atrocity in Buenos Aires -an aggression on hemispheric soil- we urge the OAS to take immediate countermeasures to confront this new threat to the security of the Americas, stressed Widder.
The time for action is now, concluded the Center.