Evelyn Gordon points out that if Iran has to be hit in order to destroy its nuclear program, this is
the best time the US and Israel have yet had to do it.
One of the biggest concerns that opponents of military action in both
Israel and America have always raised is the havoc Iran could wreak in
response an attack. For Israelis, the main fear is massive missile
attacks by both Iran and its allies; for Washington, the main concern is
Iran’s ability to disrupt oil trade from the Gulf and attack American
allies in that region.
But thanks to the Syrian civil war, the threat of Iranian retaliation
has been dramatically reduced. Partly, of course, that’s because two of
Iran’s principal allies, Syria and Hezbollah, are too preoccupied with
that war to be able to mount serious reprisals against anyone. But even
more importantly, the tremendous importance Iran attaches to Syria gives
both Israel and America a powerful lever with which to restrain any
Iranian reprisals.
Iran has poured billions
of dollars and thousands of crack fighters–from Hezbollah,
Iranian-backed militias in Iraq, and its own Revolutionary Guards
Corps–into propping up Bashar Assad’s regime in Syria, because it deems
Assad’s survival strategically vital. As one senior Iranian cleric explained
in February, “Syria is the 35th province [of Iran] and a strategic
province for us. If the enemy attacks us and wants to take either Syria
or Khuzestan [in western Iran], the priority for us is to keep Syria….If
we keep Syria, we can get Khuzestan back too, but if we lose Syria, we
cannot keep Tehran.”
...
But there are two players who have thus far chosen to sit out the
game who are definitely capable of swinging the war in the rebels’
favor: America and Israel. Both have the capacity to mount airstrikes
that would destroy Assad’s air force and tanks, which have hitherto
given him a huge advantage over the rebels. And both could make it clear
to Iran that they would do so if its reprisals crossed any red lines.
Though America has the military might to threaten Iran directly,
Syria is a much easier target, with the added bonus that any such
operation would be immensely popular with its Arab allies. Hence for
Washington, the ability to threaten Syria lowers the cost of deterring
Iran. Israel, in contrast, lacks the military capacity to threaten Iran
directly with anything bigger than a targeted operation against its
military facilities. Thus for Jerusalem, the ability to threaten Syria
is the difference between having almost no deterrence against Iranian
reprisals and having very substantial deterrence.
Heh.
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