THE WORLD FROM WASHINGTON
Michael Hirsh
What Will Israel Do?
A unilateral military strike against Iran is much more likely following the latest intel report about Tehran's nuke program.
Ehud Olmert, like George W. Bush, is trying hard to make it seem that nothing has changed, and that the international diplomatic coalition against Iran is still intact. "The state of Israel is not the main flag-bearer against the quirks of the regime in Tehran," the Israeli prime minister declared testily last week, after officials in his own government seemed to suggest that Israel had been left on its own by Washington. Olmert said that the recent U.S. National Intelligence Estimate (NIE) on Iran--which stunned leaders around the world by concluding, after years of bellicose rhetoric from Bush officials about Iran's nuclear ambitions, that Tehran had halted its weapons program in 2003--has "generated an exaggerated debate" in Israel. "Some of us even interpreted the report as an American retreat from its support of Israel," Olmert said. "This is groundless … I trust and am confident that the United States will continue to lead the international campaign to stop the development of a nuclear Iran."
But Olmert is not Moses; he can't hold back elemental forces all by himself. And a rising tide of opinion in Israel's intelligence and national-security circles believes that the NIE does signal American retreat--and, more profoundly, renewed Israeli isolation over what is deemed an existential threat out of Tehran. Gen. Ephraim Sneh, a former deputy defense minister who has warned for years that Israel would eventually have to confront Iran alone, told me that "today we are closer to this situation than we were three weeks ago ... we have to be prepared to forestall this threat on our own." Some prominent American experts think that the NIE all but assures Israeli military action at some point. "I came back from a trip to Israel in November convinced that Israel would attack Iran," Bruce Riedel, a former career CIA official and senior adviser to three U.S. presidents--including Bush--on Middle East and South Asian issues, told me Thursday, citing conversations he had with Mossad and defense officials. "And that was before the NIE. This makes it even more likely. Israel is not going to allow its nuclear monopoly to be threatened."
Riedel said the Bush administration compounded the problem by failing to signal to the Israelis that the NIE assessment was coming. "Something like this should have been presented to the Israelis through professional intelligence channels," he said. Yuval Steinitz, a member of the right-wing Likud Party, told me that he had led a delegation of Knesset members to Washington a few weeks before the NIE was made public Dec. 3. Steinitz said he met with Vice President Dick Cheney, national-security adviser Stephen Hadley and other administration officials, but not even they seemed aware that their 2005 estimate that Iran was definitely pursuing nuclear weapons was about to be repudiated. Even though Iran was discussed, he said, "no one seemed to have any sign this was forthcoming," he says.
Many Israeli experts are appalled by the tone of the report, which concludes with "high confidence" that Iran halted its "nuclear weapons program." The NIE arrived at this finding even though it also asserted that Washington now had concrete evidence of that program, and despite Tehran's brazen pursuit of uranium enrichment. Even formerly moderate European and Russian officials suggest that the report went too far, especially in concluding that the U.S. intel community still has "moderate confidence" that the suspension of the program continues. Uzi Arad, a former Mossad official and adviser to Benjamin Netanyahu, the former Likud prime minister, said that on a recent trip he made to Moscow, a Russian general poked fun at the naiveté of the NIE, commenting that if the Iranians had halted weapons development in 2003 it was partly because they were satisfied with progress there and wanted to devote investment to harder parts of the nuclear equation, like enrichment. In the end, these critics say, Iran is likely to be further emboldened by the report (Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad lost no time in boasting of America's "surrender"). "The irony is that the effect of this report may be self-negating--by itself it will accelerate Iranian acquisition of nuclear weapons," Arad said.
Some experts question whether the Israelis have the capability to seriously damage Iran's nuclear program, which is secured in secret, hardened facilities around the country. But others point out that the new NIE gives evidence of far better intelligence on Iran--possibly including the whereabouts of its facilities. "It did state for first time that a military nuclear program was in motion until 2003," said Sneh. "That was a major revelation that should have been picked up, and it was very damaging incriminating evidence, justifying much harsher action against Iran."
A few experts, such as David Albright of the Institute for Science and International Security in Washington, say the intel still seems scant on the location of Iran's secret centrifuge development and manufacturing complex. Still, Albright points out that the Israelis are likely encouraged by the nonreaction to their September airstrike on what is reported to have been a Syrian nuclear facility, which may have been a test run for Iran, or at least a warning directed at Tehran. "Israel has gotten away with it in a sense," says Albright. He suggests that any Israeli pre-emptive action might not be a "traditional strike" but could involve more "sabotage of equipment." The Israelis also know that the Arab states are terrified of an Iranian nuclear power, possibly to the point of looking the other way at another such strike.
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Member Comments
Posted By: new_york_loner @ 01/13/2008 10:11:38 AM
Comment: Mike Hirsh wrote, "The Israelis also know that the Arab states are terrified of an Iranian nuclear power, possibly to the point of looking the other way at another such strike."
How can Mike, or anyone else, reach that conclusion? Where's the hard evidence supporting that dangerous assumption? Justification for an Israeli strike on Iran is a shaky argument based on faulty or dubious premises, wishful thinking and pro-Israeli emotion.
We Americans have heard rosy, pre-war predictions before, from the same pro-war crowd. The Israel lobby helped push us into an ill-concieved war in Iraq.
Now, the Israel Lobby, through highly-silled shills like Mike Hirsh, is orchestrating American sympathy for any future, unilateral, Israeli aggression against Iran.
If Iran should respond to an Israeli airstrike or misslile attack, by launching a counter-attack on the Jewish State, this pro-Israel sympathy would grease the skids for US military action against Iran, as Israel would then be facing another "existential threat".
China and Russia would not sit back quietly while Uncle Sam delivers "shock and awe" destruction upon Iran. All hell could break loose quickly.
Under such dire circumstances, Israel might have the last word, by way of the Samson Option; the ensuing "Armageddon" would be a self-fulfilling prophecy.
Mike, someone needs to inform you, what's good for Israel is not always good for the USA, or for mankind. .
Posted By: Door to Perception @ 01/12/2008 1:47:45 PM
Comment: Also.... air attacks on Iran are not enough; history has proved this time and time again. Only a massive land invasion could accomplish the mission. ................... actually at this point in history we don't want Iran to go nuclear and be a dominant player because we see them as the enemy... but in fact history has shown us that we often make the wrong assessments. In the 70's we were supporting the Taliban against the Communists in Afghanistan when it turns out that the people that were closest to us (the West) were not the Taliban but the Communists. What a better place Afghanistan would be today if we had supported the Communists. And how much weaker the global Jihad movement would be!!! Similarly, in the long term the Iranians will prove to be better friends for the West than the Arabs. We should support friendship and mutual beneficial relationships between the West and Iran....
Posted By: Door to Perception @ 01/12/2008 1:42:36 PM
Comment: The NIE was a political document, drafted at the behest of the White House in order to let Bush back down from his hawkish rhetoric on Iran and his promise not to let them get the Bomb. Now he can leave office without launching a war and if the Iranians get nuclear weapons later it can be someone else's fault. Even his team of lunatics are rational enough to know that an attack on Iran by the USA would cause havoc in the Persian Gulf, the world and here at home., not to mention in Iraq. So they just don't have the stomach for it... thus they ordered a new NIE. I am surprised so few commentators point this out.