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Mon

27

Oct

2008

Israel Gets Real on Iran
Monday, 27 October 2008 14:03
by Trita Parsi

The distinction between the apocalyptic rhetoric Israeli leaders use publicly in relation to Iran, and the more pragmatic view they hold among themselves on how to deal with Tehran and its nuclear program, has long been clear to anyone paying very close attention. In short, it’s clear that many of Israel’s key leaders don’t believe Iran is a suicidal ideologically-crazed regime that would risk destroying itself in order to destroy Israel, and therefore that even a nuclear-armed Iran would not be an “existential threat” to Israel, although clearly it would present a major strategic challenge by fundamentally reordering the balance of military force in the region. And of late, some of them have begun a gingerly but very clear retreat from the idea that Israel will have to bomb Iran’s nuclear facilities if no one else does — President Shimon Peres has said as much, publicly, and outgoing Prime Minister Ehud Olmert has echoed that position. I asked Rootless Cosmopolitan’s favorite Iran expert, Dr. Trita Parsi, to weigh in on the basis of his extensive research and interviews with many of the key decision-makers on the Israeli and Iranian sides. Trita’s book Treacherous Alliance — The Secret Dealings of Israel, Iran and the U.S. is a must-read for anyone seeking to understand the Israeli-Iranian relationship, and why there’s plenty of room for pragmatic coexistence.

On the eve of his departure from political life, outgoing Israeli Prime Minister Olmert delivered a stinging parting shot – putting under question not only the wisdom of holding on to Palestinian land, but also the feasibility of an Israeli military strike against Iran’s nuclear facilities.

“We have to make a decision, one that goes against all our instincts, against our collective memory,” he told the Israeli daily Yedioth Ahronoth. Recognizing that no other Israeli leader ever had uttered these words publicly, Olmert went on to declare that “Israel must withdraw from almost all, if not all” of the West Bank to achieve peace.

On Iran, Olmert argued that Israel had lost its “sense of proportion” when stating that it would deal with Iran militarily. “What we can do with the Palestinians, the Syrians and the Lebanese, we cannot do with the Iranians,” Olmert said, in stark contradiction to his own earlier warnings on Iran as well as the rhetoric of many of his hawkish cabinet members. “Let’s be more modest, and act within the bounds of our realistic capabilities,” he cautioned.

Olmert’s interview dashed the hopes of neoconservatives in Washington hoping for an Israeli post-November surprise through the bombing of Iran’s nuclear facilities. With the U.S. facing a financial crisis and Israel’s lacking the “proportions” to take on Iran, the risk for military confrontation with Iran in the last months of the Bush Administration has decreased significantly, according to most analysts.

Olmert’s statement may signal a long-overdue shift towards Israel’s Plan B on Iran. Israel’s first preference had been to pressure the U.S. to exercise its own military option on Iran, and to prevent any diplomatic breakthrough that might cause Washington to accept some level of Iranian uranium-enrichment capability. In this regard, Israeli warnings of its readiness to attack Iran if the U.S. declined to do so served primarily to pressure Washington to launch a military strike. Talk about the Israeli military option was aimed at keeping the American military option on the table.

Since the mid-1990s, a key tenet of Israel’s foreign policy has been to sound alarm bells on Tehran. Originally, the aim was to prevent any thaw between the U.S. and Iran out of a fear that Israeli security interests would be sacrificed in a potential U.S.-Iran deal. Plan A was to nip this in the bud by undermining efforts to pursue diplomacy in the first place.

This policy did not lack critics, however. An internal Israeli Iran-committee in the early 1990s led by former commander of the Israeli air force, David Ivry, concluded that the aggressive Israeli rhetoric had prompted Iran to turn its focus towards Israel. Iran has enough problems in the region, the committee argued, there was no need to make Israel shine any brighter on Iran’s radar.

As Iran’s power grew in the region, Israeli concerns grew accordingly. The more Iran could present itself as an indispensible actor in the region, the greater the risk of a U.S.-Iran accommodation. Left with few good options, and an unwillingness to consider how a U.S.-Iran deal could change Iran’s behavior towards Israel, the inclination in Israel was to intensify the very policy its Iran-committee had warned against.

But while Israel’s Iran hawks argued against U.S.-Iran diplomacy, they had a hard time digesting the Bush Administration’s opposition to Israeli-Syrian diplomacy. The contradiction in the Israeli position was evident during AIPAC’s conference earlier this summer. Ephraim Sneh – a leading Iran hawk of Israel’s Labor Party – argued passionately against U.S.-Iran diplomacy while making an equally passionate case for diplomacy Syria. His justification was that in case of war, the Israeli public must know that every stone had been turned before their young men and women were sent to battle. On Iran, however, Sneh did not acknowledge the same justification.

Olmert’s valedictory interview may be the first small steps towards a Plan B on Iran – one that takes as its point of departure the new regional realities: A balance of power that has shifted away from Israel, and an Iran that is unlikely to unlearn the technology of enriching uranium. Israel now needs a way out of the prison of its own rhetoric. Repeating statements that a nuclear Iran is “unacceptable” and using a rhetoric that creates an air of inevitability of war has left the Jewish State with no real options. A more nuanced rhetoric on Iran may have the down-side of reducing pressure on the U.S. to act - “If we don’t talk about Iran, the world will forget about Iran,” as Israeli Iran expert David Menashri put it – but has the up-side of enabling new options to emerge for the Jewish state.

Warning about being “boxed into the corner,” a recent Haaretz editorial offered a clear break from Israel’s Plan A: “The best chance of calming the atmosphere and reducing the threat lies in starting negotiations between the United States and Iran… [I]t is the only route not yet tried and is likely to help moderate Iranian policy. Israel must encourage an American rapprochement with Iran, with the understanding that this will serve the Israeli interest as well.” And in a video by the Jewish Council for Education and Research, several high-ranking Israeli generals throw their weight behind U.S.-Iran diplomacy as a path towards advancing Israeli security.

Still, in spite of the many rising voices against Israel’s losing approach on Iran, the Jewish state is a long way from discarding its Plan A.

Unlike Olmert who recognized the unfeasibility of Plan A while leaving office, Israel’s new Prime Minister, Tzipi Livni, may enter office with Plan B in sight. She rejects the idea that Israel “will not be able to live” with a nuclear Iran and says Israel must deal with the challenges it faces. Though Livni won’t go as far as Barack Obama in promising direct diplomacy with Tehran, she may help Israel find a few more options on Iran.

Trita Parsi is the author of "Treacherous Alliance — The Secret Dealings of Israel, Iran and the U.S.", a Silver Medal Recipient of the Council on Foreign Relations' Arthur Ross Book Award, the most significant award for a book on foreign affairs.
 
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Comments (6)add comment

James Narayan said:

0
...
Israel has yet to justify it's own existence. They are not in a position to determine someone else's.
 
October 27, 2008
Votes: +0

Israel Supporter said:

0
You don't Justify your existance. You just do. You guys are always blaming other people for your own problems. Israel has blossemed like a rose meanwhile "Palistinians" have lamemted that they are not
You don't Justify your existence. You just do. Palestinians always blaming other people for your own problems. Israel has blossemed like a rose meanwhile "Palistinians" have lamemted that they are not a prosperous as the Jews.
 
October 27, 2008
Votes: +0

Mark Montgomery said:

0
citizen
I believe that Iran will use the first bomb it develops to give to Hezbollah for use against northern Israel. Anyone who thinks Iran can be negotiated with is dreaming and is destined to a Neville Chamberlain-like future.
 
October 27, 2008
Votes: +0

Frank said:

0
No Body
It is funny how the international community made up of 6-10 countries out of 200 countries are against Iran's Technological advances. Iran is a signatory of NPT, Isreal is not and also has around 200 nuclear warheads. this hypocracy is becoming quite clear, and nations won't accept this. the biggest threat to Isreal is Isreal's Zionist Ideologies....
Iranian nation has survived for centuries, and they well get through this victorious as well.
 
October 27, 2008
Votes: +0

Gio said:

0
Plan B
I'd like to think Israel will take up a plan B and talk about ending the rhetoric about Iran. Unfortunately, it will probably just fade away only to resurface again when Israel feels threatened. America has no business being involved in this conflict. If Israel decides to leave the West Bank, that might not be such a bad thing.

Besides that, it really is sad that Americans are afraid of Iran yet have no idea why. Iran is not a threat to America.
 
October 27, 2008
Votes: +0

Michael G said:

0
Parisi- All Mixed Up on the Middle East
Ms. Parisi makes herself as the know it all on Israeli-Iranian-USA moves in the Middle East. What She fails to mention in the article are some of the following points
Iran has been at War with Israel thru its proxy State Hezbollah in Lebanon and its involvement with Hamas in the Gaza Strip. Since 1982 at least Iran has trierd to build up its proxy State on the Northern Border of Israel creating Havoc and bloodshed. The Second Lebanon war was therefore in reality a War with Iran because the weaponry and training came directly from Iran with Iranian Training and Personel in Lebanon teaching Hezbollah the use of these very sophisticated armaments, and Iran calling all the shots not Hezbollah. The arms came by way of Damascus Syria. with its tight alliance with Iran
b)= In Gaza Iranian Agents have helped Hamas fight and defeat Fatah and aim its hatred in so many ways against Israel) Hamas has declared only its intent to "destroy" Israel, never to make Peace. The Iranians have internsified the fire, and helped Hamas in so many ways.
c) Israel does beleive Iran's leadership and its President wish to see Israel destroyed and in every opportunity He expresses such sentiments in front of hundreds of thousands of Iranians in Teheran and all over Iran.
d) Israel faces a Hitler similar to 1938 When Chamberlain and Daladier of France signed the Munich Pact giving away the Czheckoslovakian Sudentenland "For Peace in our time-Chamberlain"Their was then No Peace and No Honor only War. If Hitler were stopped then , He might not have been able to carry out the annihilation of 50 million people plus in Europe.Jews, Russians Poles, Christians and People from every Country under the Nazi Tyranny. We unfortunately have the same problem with Iran. Achimidajad means what He says and the stupid World looks away similar to World War 11. What are You waiting for Ms Parisi? for Iran to attempt to destroy Israel then all of You will cry crocadile tears.
Ephrahim Sneh is basically a Dove. If He beleives Iran should be stopped it comes from a dovish Man.
Olmert has been repudiated in so many ways for corruption and going agaist the electoral platform of Kadima. He represents only himself and a few unfortunate followers.Livni contrary to Ms. Parisi is NOT trhe New Prime Minister. The Israeli's have had it with Kadima. A stronger government will be elected to confront the threats facing Israel. A Nuclear Iran, Heaven Forbid will be one of them,Iran's nuclearization will threaten Not only Israel but Europeand the Entire World including the US.It is time for the World to wake up to this threat!!
 
October 28, 2008
Votes: +0

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