The mysterious attack in Lebanon on Tuesday, in which
thousands of pagers in the use of Hezbollah operatives exploded, apparently
killing at least 11 and wounding thousands more, has made that possibility more
likely than ever.
A war with the Iranian-backed militia to Israel’s north
could quickly expand into war with Iran, which has yet to avenge the assassination
of Hamas’s political leader Ismail Haniyeh in Tehran in late July, despite
Islamic Republic leaders vowing a response.
Israel, in turn, stated it would exact a heavy price from
the Iranian regime were it to carry out a significant attack against the Jewish
state.
Maj-Gen.
(res.) Itzhak Brik is adamant that war with Iran now would lead to
Israel’s destruction.
Security
expert Yair Ansbacher is convinced that war with Iran at this point is a must –
to avoid Israel’s destruction.
This is the fork in the road that Israel faces today, 11
months after Hamas initiated the horrific October 07 attack, in which 1,200
Israelis and other nationals were murdered and 250 more were taken hostage.
Additional factors such as the apparent exhaustion of
negotiations between Israel and Hamas for a ceasefire agreement, and the
Israeli government’s decision earlier in the week to make the return of
displaced northern residents an official war goal, have increased the
likelihood of a regional war.
Speaking to The Jerusalem Post on the phone earlier in the
week, Brik warned that Israel is not prepared for a multi-front war.
“Iran
and its proxies have 250,000 missiles, rockets, and drones encircling Israel.
Which means about 4,000 munitions hitting the Israeli home front on a daily
basis, population centers, Haifa Bay, water and electricity facilities, gas
fields [in the Mediterranean Sea], IDF bases, and strategic civilian
infrastructure. A regional war can ruin the State of Israel,” he stressed.
Brik further warned that Israel would enter this all-out war
alone, without the aid of the United States.
“Iran is backed by Russia, China, and North Korea, who don’t
want to lose their [Iranian] asset,” he said, explaining that the US will avoid
getting involved in a war that could develop into a world war.
What
Israel should do, he advised, is build a strategic alliance with Western and
moderate Arab nations that will form a “deterrence balance” against Iran and
its partners. Trying to thwart the Islamic Republic’s nuclear capacity is
futile, he added, which “is a development that can’t be stopped.”
Ansbacher views the situation differently. He is certain
that now is the right time to strike Iran, before it makes its final nuclear
breakthrough.
“If today the West has little success in taming the
ayatollahs, it will have zero success when they obtain nuclear weapons,” he
said via Zoom with the Post last week.
“Iran will provide a nuclear umbrella to terrorists across
the globe. Imagine Hezbollah kidnaps [IDF] soldiers on [Israel’s] northern
border, and before Israel launches a rescue operation, Hezbollah sends a
message that this could result in a nonconventional missile attack. This is a
scenario that we cannot accept,” Ansbacher stipulated.
In addition, the possibility of a hostile US administration
come the November election, along with the inferior position Iran found itself
in after the October 07 attack – exposing its plan to annihilate Israel – means
that Jerusalem must now use this narrow opportunity to strike Iran, he noted.
“Tehran’s original plan was to attack Israel simultaneously
[on all fronts], and that would have brought us to the brink of extinction. But
their plan was disrupted when [Hamas head] Yahya Sinwar jumped the gun. This
puts Iran in a weakened position. If the plan had fully worked, Israel would
have been caught unawares, with all arms of the octopus around its neck. Then
it’s checkmate. But the plan’s disadvantage was its extended period of
implementation where many things could go wrong,” Ansbacher said.
Attacking Iran now is Israel’s last chance before it faces
an existential threat of a nuclear Islamic Republic, he stressed. If Israel
hits Iran in its two centers of power, Tehran and Qom, he added, the Iranian
regime, largely unsupported by the nonreligious population, will very likely
fall.
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