On Iran, the only thing we have to fear is fear itself
I got this by email from its author, Evelyn Gordon, and since it's behind a paywall at JPost, I'm going to post most of it.
Consider, for
instance, the difference between today’s situation and 1967. Back then,
America refused to sell most types of weaponry to Israel; today, Israel
is generously supplied with top-of-the-line American arms. Back then,
Egypt fought in alliance with Syria and Jordan, both of which fielded
powerful armies of their own; Iran’s likely allies boil down to
Hezbollah, Hamas and Islamic Jihad, whose capabilities, while
non-negligible, pale beside those of Syria and Jordan. Back then, Egypt
and Syria were both clients of a superpower (the Soviet Union), whereas
Israel lacked superpower backing; today, it’s Israel that has superpower
backing, while Iran makes do with lukewarm support from lesser military
powers like Russia and China. Finally, Israel today has three times the
population and twice the GDP that it did in 1967, giving it far more
men to put under arms and money with which to equip them.
In
short, back in 1967, a smaller, poorer, worse-armed Israel with no
superpower backing could nevertheless defeat a regional power with
formidable allies and superpower backing all by itself. But today,
according to [Home Front Defense Minister Avi] Dichter, a much bigger, richer, better-armed Israel with
superpower backing is incapable of fighting unaided against a regional
power with no state allies and no superpower backing. Objectively
speaking, it sounds ridiculous; hence my outrage at hearing a top
defense official spout it.
But it didn’t take long for fear to
set in – because regardless of the objective balance of power, an army
that believes itself incapable of winning almost certainly will be. And
while it’s possible that Dichter doesn’t represent the defense
establishment’s consensus view, judging by his record, he is one of this
establishment’s least defeatist senior officials: As Shin Bet security
service director from 2000-2005, not only was he a major architect of
the counterterrorism strategy that defeated the second intifada, but he pushed
this strategy in the teeth of objections from Israel Defense Forces
officers who insisted – wrongly – that “there is no military solution to
terror.”
In contrast, many senior IDF officers argued against a
major military operation in West Bank refugee camps (where terrorist
groups were largely based), issuing panicked warnings that it would
result in hundreds of dead soldiers. In reality, Israel lost 30 soldiers
in Operation Defensive Shield in 2002 – less than a quarter of the 132
Israelis killed by Palestinian terrorists in a single month before the operation.
Senior
army officers similarly warned that a major military operation against
Hamas in Gaza would result in hundreds of dead soldiers; in reality,
Israel lost exactly 10 soldiers in Operation Cast Lead in 2009, four of
them to friendly fire. And today, senior IDF officers still insist
there is “no military solution” to terror from Gaza, even though the
IDF itself decisively disproved this theory in the West Bank just a few
years ago.
I’m all in favor of senior defense officials
eschewing reckless overconfidence; the Second Lebanon War of 2006 amply
showed how dangerous that can be. Even against a third-rate opponent
like Hezbollah, victory is impossible if defense officials neglect the
basics: a sound battle plan, proper training and good logistics.
But
at the same time, there’s no point in having an army at all if you’re
afraid to use it when truly necessary. And it’s hard to think of a
greater necessity than stopping Iran’s nuclear program: Defense Minister
Ehud Barak exaggerated only slightly when he said
“The [Iranian] sword hanging over our neck today is a lot sharper than
the sword that hung over our neck before the [1967] Six-Day War.”
The
danger posed by defeatism is a recurring theme in Jewish history
(though in fairness, so is the danger of overconfidence). The first
example, as Israel Harel noted
in Haaretz a few weeks ago, dates back to right after the exodus from
Egypt: Spies sent to Canaan in advance of a planned Israelite conquest
returned to say the Jews couldn’t possibly win, because the people of
the land were “giants; and we were in our own sight as grasshoppers, and
so we were in their sight.” God finally solved that problem by making
the Israelites wander in the desert for 40 years until the entire
generation had died, after which a new, less defeatist generation
accomplished the conquest fairly easily.
Today, however, Israel
can’t afford to wait 40 years. Barring unforeseen developments, Iran’s
nuclear program could hit the point of no return as early as this
spring, requiring Israel to choose between military action and a nuclear
Iran. And as I explained
in this column three weeks ago, should military action be necessary,
Israel will almost certainly have to do it without American help.
From
a strictly military standpoint, Israel probably has the capacity to do
the job. The question is whether our political and military leaders can
find the courage to use this capacity if necessary. For if the
grasshopper mentality prevails instead, the result is liable to be a
nuclear Iran.
And however intimidating Iran is as a nonnuclear regional power today, it will be far more dangerous as a nuclear one.
Indeed.
Labels: Iranian nuclear threat, Israeli attack on Iran
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