As things look,
Israel may well
attack Iran soon
By Joschka
Fischer
31/05/08 "Daily
Star"
-- - As a
result of
misguided
American policy,
the threat of
another military
confrontation
hangs like a
dark cloud over
the Middle East.
The United
States' enemies
have been
strengthened,
and Iran -
despite being
branded as a
member of the
so-called "axis
of evil" - has
been catapulted
into regional
hegemony. Iran
could never have
achieved this on
its own,
certainly not in
such a short
time.
A hitherto
latent rivalry
between Iran and
Israel thus has
been transformed
into an open
struggle for
dominance in the
Middle East. The
result has been
the emergence of
some surprising,
if not bizarre,
alliances: Iran,
Syria, Hizbullah,
Hamas and the
American-backed,
Shiite-dominated
Iraq are facing
Israel, Saudi
Arabia, and most
of the other
Sunni Arab
states, all of
which feel
existentially
threatened by
Iran's
ascendance.
The danger of a
major
confrontation
has been
heightened
further by a
series of
factors:
persistently
high oil prices,
which have
created new
financial and
political
opportunities
for Iran; the
possible defeat
of the West and
its regional
allies in proxy
wars in Gaza and
Lebanon; and the
United Nations
Security
Council's
failure to
induce Iran to
accept even a
temporary freeze
of its nuclear
program.
Iran's nuclear
program is the
decisive factor
in this
equation, for it
threatens
irreversibly the
region's
strategic
balance. That
Iran - a country
whose president
never tires of
calling for
Israel's
annihilation and
that threatens
Israel's
northern and
southern borders
through its
massive support
of proxy wars
waged by
Hizbullah and
Hamas - might
one day have
missiles with
nuclear warheads
is Israel's
worst security
nightmare.
Politics is not
just about
facts, but also
about
perceptions.
Whether or not a
perception is
accurate is
beside the
point, because
it nonetheless
leads to
decisions.
This applies in
particular when
the perception
concerns what
the parties
consider to be
threats to their
very existence.
Iranian
President
Mahmoud
Ahmadinejad's
threats of
annihilation are
taken seriously
in Israel
because of the
trauma of the
Holocaust. And
most Arab
governments
share the fear
of a nuclear
Iran. Earlier
this month,
Israel
celebrated its
60th birthday,
and US President
George W. Bush
went to
Jerusalem to
play a leading
part in the
commemoration.
But those who
had expected
that his visit
would mainly be
about the
stalled
negotiations
between Israel
and the
Palestinians
were bitterly
disappointed.
Bush's central
topic, including
his speech to
Israel's
Knesset, was
Iran. Bush had
promised to
bring the Middle
East conflict
closer to a
resolution
before the end
of his term this
year. But his
final visit to
Israel seemed to
indicate that
his objective
was different:
he seemed to be
planning,
together with
Israel, to end
the Iranian
nuclear program
- and to do so
by military,
rather than by
diplomatic,
means.
Anyone following
the press in
Israel during
the anniversary
celebrations and
listening
closely to what
was said in
Jerusalem did
not have to be a
prophet to
understand that
matters are
coming to a
head. Consider
the following:
First, "stop the
appeasement!" is
a demand raised
across the
political
spectrum in
Israel - and
what is meant is
the nuclear
threat emanating
from Iran.
Second, while
Israel
celebrated,
Defense Minister
Ehud Barak was
quoted as saying
that a
life-and-death
military
confrontation
was a distinct
possibility.
Third, the
outgoing
commander of the
Israeli Air
Force declared
that the air
force was
capable of any
mission, no
matter how
difficult, to
protect the
country's
security. The
destruction of a
Syrian nuclear
facility last
year, and the
lack of any
international
reaction to it,
were viewed as
an example for
the coming
action against
Iran.
Fourth, the
Israeli wish
list for US arms
deliveries,
discussed with
the American
president,
focused mainly
on the
improvement of
the attack
capabilities and
precision of the
Israeli Air
Force.
Fifth,
diplomatic
initiatives and
UN sanctions
when it comes to
Iran are seen as
hopelessly
ineffective.
And sixth, with
the approaching
end of the Bush
presidency and
uncertainty
about his
successor's
policy, the
window of
opportunity for
Israeli action
is seen as
potentially
closing.
The last two
factors carry
special weight.
While Israeli
military
intelligence is
on record as
saying that Iran
is expected to
cross the red
line on the path
to nuclear power
between 2010 and
2015 at the
earliest, the
feeling in
Israel is that
the political
window of
opportunity to
attack is now,
during the last
months of Bush's
presidency.
Although it is
acknowledged in
Israel that an
attack on Iran's
nuclear
facilities would
involve grave
and
hard-to-assess
risks, the
choice between
acceptance of an
Iranian bomb and
an attempt at
its military
destruction,
with all the
attendant
consequences, is
clear. Israel
won't stand by
and wait for
matters to take
their course.
The Middle East
is drifting
toward a new
great
confrontation in
2008. Iran must
understand that
without a
diplomatic
solution in the
coming months, a
dangerous
military
conflict is very
likely to erupt.
It is high time
for serious
negotiations to
begin.
The most recent
offer by the six
powers - the UN
Security
Council's five
permanent
members plus
Germany - is on
the table, and
it goes very far
in accommodating
Iran's
interests. The
decisive
question,
however, will be
whether it will
be possible to
freeze the
Iranian nuclear
program for the
duration of the
negotiations to
avoid a military
confrontation
before these
negotiations are
completed.
Should this
newest attempt
fail, things
will soon get
serious. Deadly
serious.
Joschka
Fischer,
Germany's
foreign minister
and vice
chancellor from
1998 to 2005,
led
Germany's
Green Party for
nearly 20 years.
THE
DAILY STAR
publishes this
commentary in
collaboration
with Project
Syndicate-Institute
for Human
Sciences (c) (www.project-syndicate.org).
