Sunday, February 20, 2011

Can You Bring Made Up Formula To The Hospital?

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The Jewish state was behind the computer virus Stuxnet and reportedly bombed a Syrian nuclear reactor in 2007.

A video shown during the Farewell to the Chief of Staff of Israel suggests that Israel attacked the nuclear programs of Iran and Syria, reports Wednesday, February 16 Haaretz.

The video presented a summary of service of General Gaby Ashkenazi, who recently retired as Chief of Staff (2007-2011). It evokes a bombing on a secret nuclear reactor in Syria in 2007 and the damage caused by computer virus Stuxnet Iran's nuclear program.

The destruction of suspected Syrian nuclear reactor Al-Kibar in September 2007 and development of computer virus Stuxnet intended to sabotage the Iranian nuclear program, was never claimed by Israel. When asked, a spokesman for the Army declined to comment.

A fifth of arrested Iranian centrifuges

If both operations are presented in this video, no official commentary accompanying images, "says Haaretz.

According to a note published by Wikileaks U.S. diplomatic, Israeli warplanes destroyed the Syrian nuclear reactor September 6, 2007 just weeks before it goes live.

The video also refers to the Israeli Stuxnet virus, which apparently arrested a fifth of Iranian centrifuges in November and has delayed the ability of Iran to produce its first nuclear weapons, according to military experts and intelligence.

"Stuxnet is capable of blowing up a central"

In mid-January, The New York Times said that U.S. intelligence services and Israel have collaborated to develop Stuxnet.

Appearing in late 2009, Siemens Stuxnet infects a software control PLCs are widely used in the sectors of water, oil rigs and power plants. Its function is to modify the management of certain activities to bring about physical destruction of facilities affected, experts said.

Stuxnet would mainly hit Iran, which has suggested that it was designed to sabotage its nuclear facilities, but it seems to have also affected India, Indonesia and Pakistan. The virus from one side sabotages the operation of centrifuges and other "operators to believe that everything happens even if it is not the case," explaining to Nouvelobs.comMarc Blanchard, an expert from the manufacturer to Antivirus BitDefender. "Those behind Stuxnet are able (...) to blow up a central," he warned.

AFP

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