Friday, January 27, 2012

Israel Continues to Act Like the World's Brat Little Brother (Ya, I went there...)


This week's NY Times Magazine features the provocatively titled article "Will Israel Attack Iran?" that outlines the thoughts and feelings of those intimately related to the decision making process (**SPOILER ALERT**: Author Ronen Bergman, as well as everyone else in the world, thinks that they will. Further, and somewhat more boldly, he thinks that it will happen this year). The interesting bits, to me, were when officials not named Benjamin Netanyahu were discussing the possibility of an attack on Iran and, especially, when talking about the United States. In discussing the Defense Minister, Ehud Barak, the article points out that he:
dislikes this kind of criticism of the United States [about their unwillingness to attack Iran], and in a rather testy tone in a phone conversation with me on Jan. 18 said: “Our discourse with the United States is based on listening and mutual respect, together with an understanding that it is our primary ally. The U.S. is what helps us to preserve the military advantage of Israel, more than ever before. This administration contributes to the security of Israel in an extraordinary way and does a lot to prevent a nuclear Iran. We’re not in confrontation with America. We’re not in agreement on every detail, we can have differences — and not unimportant ones — but we should not talk as if we are speaking about a hostile entity."
This is almost directly contra to the view of the Obama administrations Israel policy being espoused on the right. A view that Mr. Netanyahu seems to carefully, and never quite explicitly, encourage among certain sectors of the American body-politic. Further, the GOP candidates seem pretty cavalier with American foreign policy asserting that Israel and American priorities are one in the same and virtually assuring that an attack on Iran would happen in a GOP administration. This is problematic for a number of reasons. Firstly, clearly the priorities of Israel and the United States are not one in the same. If you replace Israel with any country in the world and you can see how it is a priori false (or even simpler make the statement that my priorities are the same as x). Secondly, although a certain sect of Israeli officials, led by Mr. Netanyahu, believe that there would be a muted response by Iran, most of the rest of the world thinks that Iran retaliate with both barrels blazing and would recommit, to an even greater degree, to developing a nuke. It seems like the hawkish, Likud, portion of the Israeli government are stacking the deck for an Iranian strike with favorable intelligence estimates. Thirdly, and most importantly in my view, many, many people believe that an attack would be ineffectual. Former head of Mossad (Israel's intelligence agency), Meir Dagan, stated:

“The use of state violence has intolerable costs,” he said. “The working assumption that it is possible to totally halt the Iranian nuclear project by means of a military attack is incorrect. There is no such military capability. It is possible to cause a delay, but even that would only be for a limited period of time.” 
He warned that attacking Iran would start an unwanted war with Hezbollah and Hamas: “I am not convinced that Syria will not be drawn into the war. While the Syrians won’t charge at us in tanks, we will see a massive offensive of missiles against our home front. Civilians will be on the front lines. What is Israel’s defensive capability against such an offensive? I know of no solution that we have for this problem.”
This is a huge problem. Dagan is out and out saying that the current leadership of Israel is looking to provoke a war with Iran that will not even accomplish it's goal of stopping the Iran nuclear program. It will only slow it down. Minorly. Starting a was to create hiccup is not good policy, in MHO, and definitely not a policy that the U.S. should co-opt.

Listen, I totally get Israel's position (seen here: “Take every scenario of confrontation and attack by Iran and its proxies and then ask yourself, ‘How would it look if they had a nuclear weapon?’ ” a senior official said. “In nearly every scenario, the situation looks worse.”). It is eminently reasonable to worry about a nuclear Iran if you are Israel (or anyone else in the world for that matter). But what exactly is the point if your attack is just going to piss of Iran rather than stop them and create an anti-Israel, anti-US upheaval in a Middle East in transition in the process?

I'm going to have to go with the old hand Rafi Eitan's assessment on this one...
Asked if it was possible to stop a determined Iran from becoming a nuclear power, Eitan replied: “No. In the end they’ll get their bomb. The way to fight it is by changing the regime there. This is where we have really failed. We should encourage the opposition groups who turn to us over and over to ask for our help, and instead, we send them away empty-handed.”
It's the Arab Spring Summer Fall and Winter y'all... Israel should take a long look at encouraging that route instead.

(Image From: http://joshuapundit.blogspot.com/2011_05_01_archive.html via Google Images [as always])

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