Prime Monster, False Flag 9/11 Prime Suspect., and Architect of the Fraud called "War on terror"
Both on the diplomatic and military front, Israeli Prime Minister
Benjamin Netanyahu will draw some comfort from his offensive against
Gaza as he switches his gaze once more to his main strategic challenge –
Iran.
Israel views Iran’s nuclear programme as an existential
threat in a totally different league to the problems posed by the
Islamist group Hamas, which runs the Gaza Strip.
Netanyahu fears a nuclear-armed Iran could one day eradicate Israel
and has promised that Tehran will not get the bomb should he win a third
term in office in elections on Jan. 22.
In the meantime, he has just ended an eight-day
offensive against Hamas with the aim of halting rocket fire out of the
coastal Palestinian territory into southern Israel.
Six Israelis and 163 Palestinians died in the fighting
before an Egyptian-brokered ceasefire came into effect on Wednesday,
ending a localised, asymmetric conflict that looked very different to
any potential war with Iran.
“You cannot compare the Gaza Strip to any other
military environment, which makes it unwise to describe what has
happened there as a rehearsal for attacking Iran,” said Uzi Eilam,
senior research fellow at the Institute for National Security Studies.
Nonetheless, the Israeli military inflicted serious
blows to Hamas’s weapons arsenal, much of it sourced from Iran, and
showed the world that it has cutting-edge technology, particularly when
it comes to missile defence.
Israel says its new Iron Dome interceptors knocked out
421 incoming rockets from Gaza, scoring an 84 percent success rate.
Without it, there would have been much more destruction and a
significantly higher death toll.
HEZBOLLAH
Analysts here believe this will worry Iran’s main ally
in the region, the Shi’ite movement Hezbollah, which is based in
neighbouring Lebanon and is estimated to have anywhere up to 60,000
rockets pointing across Israel’s northern border.
Netanyahu has suggested he might attack Iran if
diplomacy and international sanctions fail to halt its nuclear progress.
Iran says its atomic programme is peaceful, and if war breaks out
Israelis fear Hezbollah might leap into the fray.
Politicians say the Iron Dome gives Israel an advantage.
“The Iron Dome has proved itself to be a game changer …
and has undoubtedly lessened the threat of Hezbollah,” said Yohanan
Plesner, an opposition member of parliament who sits on the Knesset’s
foreign affairs and defence committee.
The fact Israel weathered some 1,500 short-to-medium
range rockets from Gaza with relative ease was savoured by the country’s
leaders, who, for once, were not clamouring for an committee of enquiry
following a major military enterprise.
“We have moved light years ahead in recent years, both
in terms of preparation, instructions to the people, the whole way the
municipalities operate,” Plesner told Reuters.
“This explains why almost 1,500 rockets have caused a relatively astounding level of low casualties.”
Defence Minister Ehud Barak predicted that it would
take a “few years and billions of shekels” to build a defensive shield
that covered the whole country, but the groundwork was in place.
“No army has such a system, nor does any state or
civilian population… From this point we look on with optimism,” he said.
“Eventually (it will) protect the entire state of Israel against most
threats, short and medium-range missiles.”
Israel’s answer to the bigger, ballistic missiles of
Iran is Arrow II, an interceptor that works in a similar way to Iron
Dome, but at far higher altitudes. Tehran has vowed to retaliate if it
comes under attack and is estimated to have a few hundred long-range
rockets which could hit the Jewish State.
Developers of the Arrow II, which has so far proved itself only in trials, boast a shoot-down rate of some 90 percent.
IRANIAN ISOLATION
Israeli ministers were not just singing the praises of
their missile technologies in the wake of the Gaza offensive, but also
their intelligence gathering.
The Israeli Defence Forces said it attacked 1,500 sites
in Gaza and “severely impaired” Hamas’s launching capabilities,
suggesting it would take a long time to recover – possibly helping to
sideline it in the event of an Iran conflagration.
“In Iran, I have no doubt, there are fevered
discussions going on as they try to understand how was it that the Jews
managed to crack so many targets,” Civil Defence Minister Avi Dichter
told Israel Radio.
Hamas, which refuses to recognise Israel’s right to
exist, has claimed victory in the fighting and denied that it suffered
any major losses in the round-the-clock bombing raids.
Whatever the result on the ground, there is little doubt in Israel that Iran suffered a diplomatic setback this week.
“It was very important for Iran to see a major rift
between Israel and Egypt,” said Meir Javedanfar, an Iranian expert who
teaches at the Interdisciplinary Center (IDC) in Herzliya.
But by avoiding a potentially bloody ground invasion of
Gaza and welcoming Egyptian mediation in the crisis, Israel managed to
stave off a major split with President Mohamed Mursi and opened a
welcome window of dialogue.
Moreover, the ceasefire brokered by Mursi made clear
that Hamas, once viewed as being under Iranian sway, is very much in the
Egyptian camp and is not taking any orders from Tehran.
“It’s becoming clear that major Palestinian groups have
realized that (Iran) would fight Israel to the last Palestinian, and
this is a price which they are unwilling to pay,” said Javedanfar.
“Hamas has moved away from Iran.”
Few Israelis believe that the ceasefire with Hamas will
last for any great length of time, but it should provide Netanyahu with
time to refocus on the Iranian dossier.
Whereas he had broad support from the military, the
public and politicians for his Gaza offensive, he will rapidly
rediscover that the divisions over a much more difficult assault on
far-away Iran remain as deep as ever.
As such, the perceived achievements of the last eight days are unlikely to inform on final decision-making on Iran.
“This is not going to affect the future possible
confrontation between Israel and Iran,” said Giora Eiland, a former
Israeli National Security Adviser. (Additional reporting by Maayan
Lubell; Editing by Giles Elgood)
http://forward.com/articles/166615/with-eye-on-iran-gaza-conflict-reassures-bibi/

No comments:
Post a Comment