Israel
Targets Iran's Nuclear Sites?
By B. Raman
Quoting US officials, the "New York
Times" reported as follows on June 20,
2008: " U.S. officials say Israel carried
out a large military exercise this month
that appeared to be a rehearsal for a
potential bombing attack on Iran's nuclear
facilities. More than 100 Israeli F-16 and
F-15 fighters took part in the maneuvers
over the eastern Mediterranean and Greece in
the first week of June. The exercise
appeared to be an effort to focus on
long-range strikes and illustrates the
seriousness with which Israel views Iran's
nuclear program. Israeli officials would not
discuss the exercise. A spokesman for the
Israel Defense Forces would say only that
the country's air force "regularly trains
for various missions in order to confront
and meet the challenges posed by the threats
facing Israel." A Pentagon official,
who was briefed on the exercise, said one
goal was to practice flight tactics, aerial
refueling and other details of a possible
strike against Iran's nuclear installations
and long-range conventional missiles. The
official, who spoke on condition of
anonymity, said a second goal was to send a
clear message that Israel was prepared to
act militarily if other efforts to stop Iran
from producing bomb-grade uranium fail.
"They wanted us to know, they wanted the
Europeans to know, and they wanted the
Iranians to know," the Pentagon official
said. "There's a lot of signaling going on
at different levels." Several U.S. officials
said they did not believe Israel had decided
to attack Iran or think such a strike was
imminent."
2. This could be part of a Psywar tactics
jointly mounted by Israel and the US to
make Iran co-operate with the efforts of the
international community to denuclearise its
military capability without damaging its
capability for civilian nuclear development.
3. Iran has been playing its own
psychological game by sticking to its
refusal to suspend the enrichment of uranium
at its facility in Natanz while at the same
time giving the impression of being willing
to continue its talks on the subject with
its Western interlocutors.
4. In this game, time is important in
different senses for Israel and Iran.
Understandably, Israel is getting impatient
because, in its view, much time has already
been wasted in pointless negotiations with
Iran. This has enabled Iran to commission
its uranium enrichment facility. It is now
trying to expand the capacity of Natanz by
installing more centrifuges for enrichment.
The more the centrifuges and the richer the
level and quantity of enrichment, the
greater the danger of environmental
damage if the Israeli Air Force strikes at
it. If the environmental damage affects the
health of the people of neighbouring Arab
countries, local public opinion could
further turn against the US and Israel.
5. In Iraq in the early 1980s and in
Syria last year, Israel struck at nuclear
facilities under construction. There was no
such danger. Israeli military and
intelligence experts must be telling their
policy-makers that they have already delayed
action too long and that they should at
least now strike at Iranian sites when they
might still be able to prevent adverse
effects on Iran's neighbours.
6. There is another reason why Israel
cannot afford to waste more time. If they
strike when Mr.George Bush is still in
office---particularly before the
Presidential elections in November---
Mr.Bush might hold the ring for them and see
that the international community does not
fall upon Israel. If they wait till next
year, they may not be able to count on
similar support from the next
President---whether it is Mr.Barrack Obama
or Mr.John McCain. The next President will
take at least six months from his
inauguration in January to work out a
coherent policy on Iran.
7. Apart from the risk of environmental
damage, Israel will face another danger the
like of which it did not face from Iraq or
Syria. Iran is a strong military power with
a capability to strike back at Israel
through its Air Force and missiles.
Moreover, Iran is a more ruthless power than
Iraq or Syria. It may not hesitate to itself
carry out or to have carried out through a
surrogate an attack on the Strait of Hormuz
in order to block the flow of oil at a time
when the economies of many countries,
including India, are facing serious
difficulties due to the sky-rocketing oil
prices caused partly by normal market
speculation and partly by nervousness over
the possibility of an Israeli strike on
Iran. Israel would also face the danger of a
retaliation by Hizbollah from its bases in
the Lebanon.
8. Israel will have the following
options: one, strike only at the nuclear
sites and wait to see what is Iran's
response in the hope of being able to
counter that response. Second, neutralise
initially Iran's air and missile
capabilities and then hit at its nuclear
sites. Third, neutralise simultaneously
Iran's nuclear, air and missile
capabilities.
9. The ideal time for an Israeli strike,
if it decides to strike, will be between now
and before the presidential election
campaign picks up momentum in the US. Once
the US is in the midst of the campaign, the
flexibility of response now available to the
Bush administration might be reduced. An
ideal time could be in August when the world
attention will be on the Beijing Olympics
with little attention paid to Iran.
10. Time is equally important for Iran
because if it succeeds in preventing action
by the US or Israel or both till January,
the possibility of action might get reduced
once a new President is in
position----particularly if that President
happens to be Mr. Obama. He is a very
engaging and electrifying personality, but
does not appear to have a stomach for strong
action either against Iran or Pakistan or Al
Qaeda or the Taliban or the Hizbollah. He
may turn out to be another Jimmy
Carter---lovable, but nothing more.
11. The two potential candidates are now
working out their policy options before the
campaign starts officially. One notices that
both the camps are talking in terms of
policy responses in Iraq, Afghanistan,
Pakistan and against Al Qaeda and the its
associates as if each could be dealt
with separately. They don't see a connecting
thread. Instead, the debate should be on
policy options available in response to two
threats which would confront the
international community in the short and
medium terms. These are, firstly, Iran's use
of Hizbollah and the Shia militant groups in
Iraq to achieve its strategic purposes in
the region and the dangers arising from its
nuclear capability and the possibility of
the transfer of this capability to the
Hizbollah. Secondly, Pakistan's use of Al
Qaeda and the Pashtun Taliban to achieve its
strategic objectives in Afghanistan and the
Punjabi Taliban to achieve its strategic
objective relating to Kashmir against India
and the dangers arising from the possibility
of these terrorist groups gaining access to
Pakistan's nuclear expertise.
12. Everybody talks only of the dangers
of Al Qaeda and its Pashtun and Punjabi
associates getting hold of Pakistan's
nuclear expertise. Nobody talks of the
danger of the Hizbollah and the Shia
terrorist groups of Iraq getting hold of
Iran's nuclear expertise.
13. Whether what is going on presently is
only a Psywar or whether there is a real
possibility of an Israeli pre-emptive
action, the effect on the oil market will be
the same---push up prices further. Oil
prices are unlikely to come down till the
present crisis over Iran's nuclear
intentions is resolved in a manner, which
reduces the concerns of Israel. India will
suffer more from the surging oil prices than
China because after 9/11, China has built up
its strategic oil reserves. India has done
very little in this direction. Our economy,
which is already considerably behind the
Chinese economy, will lag further behind.
( The writer is
Additional Secretary (retd), Cabinet
Secretariat, Govt. of India, New Delhi, and
, presently, Director, Institute For Topical
Studies, Chennai. He is also associated with
the Chennai Centre For China Studies.
E-mail:
seventyone2@gmail.com)