A “very beautiful” attack   Iran Israel Natanz 99 Power LinePower Lineby Paul Mirengoff 
  We’re learning more about Israel’s attack on Iran’s  nuclear facility at Natanz. Initially, the event was reported as a cyber  attack and cyber may, in fact, have played a part. However, explosives  were the main component.
     The Jerusalem Post  reports that the attack was carried out through a device smuggled into  the facility and detonated remotely. The explosives reportedly took out  both the primary and backup electrical systems. (At Natanz, the  electrical substation reportedly is 40 to 50 meters below ground.) The  initial explosion is believed to have set off secondary explosions,  causing even greater damage.
   An attack last July was carried out with explosives smuggled into a  centrifuge assembly facility at the site. The explosives reportedly were  embedded in a heavy table that was brought into the facility. An  Iranian official   says that this time a desk was used. 
   Another possibility is that the explosive device was placed in  components before they were installed at Natanz, so that no agent was  needed to smuggle them in. This theory was offered by former Israeli  prime minister Ehud Olmert in an interview.
   Either way — whether the explosives got in through smuggling or  pre-installation — Israel’s accomplishment is stunningly impressive.  Even the Iranians paid tribute. The former head of Iran’s Atomic Energy  Organization   acknowledged that “the design of the enemy was very beautiful.”
   But Iran is reluctant to credit Israel. A government spokesman claims  that the explosion was “not an external attack” and that a “traitor”  has been identified. It may be that Israel used a “traitor” to help  execute the attack. 
   How much damage did the explosions cause? The Iranians say that  “thousands of centrifuges” were damaged. Centrifuges spin a gaseous  uranium compound at high speeds to separate out and concentrate  uranium-235, the fissile isotope of uranium needed for nuclear to fuel a  reactor or nuclear bomb. The head of Iran’s Parliament Research Center  announced on television that the destruction of the centrifuges has  damaged “most of the enrichment facilities” at Natanz.
   Israeli intelligence officials   say  it could take at least nine months to restore production at the  facility. However, Iranian officials counter that the impacted  centrifuges were first-generation machines and will be replaced with  more advanced ones.
   Steve has   noted  the oddity of Israeli sources being so forthcoming about their  country’s role in the attack on the Natanz facility. He attributes the  openness to Israel’s desire to send a signal to the U.S. — a signal, I  assume, that it lacks faith in Joe Biden’s approach to Iran. In this  regard, it might (or might not) be relevant that Israel reportedly did  not inform the U.S. in advance about the attack. 
   Former Israeli intelligence officials are   expressing displeasure with leaks about Israel’s operation. I agree with Steve that even without the leaks, Israel’s role would be clear. 
   It’s not a good idea for Israelis to be talking with any specificity about how  the attack was carried out. However, with the exception of Olmert’s  speculation, that information seems to be coming from Iran. 
   This much is clear. Israel isn’t going to rely on Joe Biden to  protect itself from Iran and the threat posed by the regime’s nuclear  program. That would be foolish.
            
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  • (Paul  Mirengoff) America’s health bureaucracies have been forced by the  pandemic to make dozens of difficult decisions and recommendations. Some  of them have been sound and some have been flawed. In some cases, we  still don’t know for sure whether the decisions/recommendations were  sound or flawed. I don’t blame these bureaucracies for getting stuff  wrong. They were faced with a virus about which 
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