20 Sep 2024
Wednesday 21 November 2012 - 12:49
Story Code : 11328

Does the Gaza crisis make Israeli strikes on Iran more likely?

Does the Gaza crisis make Israeli strikes on Iran more likely?
By The Washington Post

As the Israel Defense Forces continue strikes meant to weaken Hamass rocket-launching capabilities, more analysts are starting to wonder about the country that supplies many of those longer-range rockets: Iran. For at least two years, Mideast watchers have been trying to figure out how seriously to takelong-standing Israeli threatsthat it would launch airstrikes against suspected Iranian nuclear sites. Now, some observers say that the Israel-Gaza fighting, which began Wednesday with a surprise Israeli airstrike on a senior Hamas figure, could make strikes on Iran more likely.

The logic behind this thinking is that Hamas is an Iranian proxy, and Hamass rockets serve as a deterrent to an Israeli strike. HistorianWalter Russell Mead explains: If Israel succeeds in destroying most, if not all, of Hamas arsenal, they could find themselves with a decent window of opportunity during which they will be able to act without having to worry about rockets raining down on their civilian population from Gaza. This window will not stay open forever. The Wall Street Journals Gerald Seib sees asimilar possibility. Foreign Policy blogger Tom Rickssuggeststhat this might portend Israeli strikes against southern Lebanon, where Iran-sanctioned Hezbollah is based, although the memory of Israels disastrous month-long 2006 invasion suggests that Israeli leaders might worry that re-opening their northern front could be too costly and time-consuming.

The apparent successes of Israels Iron Dome missile defense systems would also seem to reduce some of the risks of Iranian, Hamas, or Hezbollah counter-attacks in the case of an Israeli strike. Of course, the cases for and against an Israeli strike are much bigger than just Hamass rocket capability and Israeli missile defense; many analysts believe a strike would set back Iranian nuclear development by perhaps as few as two years, while also potentially strengthening Iranian resolve to secure a nuclear weapon.

Israels Gaza strategy, at least, seems to have accepted the option of repeated short-term solutions mowing the grass, as some analysts call it over a permanent long-term solution. Its possible, though perhaps remotely, that just as Israel seems to have accepted the idea of striking Hamas sites in Gaza every four years, so might its leaders warm to the idea of striking Iranian nuclear sites with some degree of regularity.

One piece of historical context worth considering is that, in 2010, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu andDefense Minister Ehud Barakreportedly attempted to order the Israeli military to prepare for an imminent strike on Iranbut were thwarted by other senior officials. According to Israeli and U.S. news reports on the alleged incident, Netanyahus order did not go forward both over issues of authority and because Israeli military leaders did not believe they were capable of accomplishing the mission. Assuming the reports are accurate, the big question is whether or not the Israeli military still believes its capabilities are not up to the task.

NetanyahusU.N. speechwas seen as his most recent push for the United States to take more aggressive measures with Iran, suggesting that he may believe the United States is better equipped to handle the mission than is Israel. If the Israeli military still does not believe it can successfully strike Iranian nuclear sites, then the debate over whether the Gaza crisis makes those strikes more likely is strictly academic.

 

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