An ongoing, medium-intensity conflict between Israel
and Iran strengthens Netanyahu's argument that he is
best-positioned to protect his country's interests
By Richard Silverstein
July 08, 2020 "Information
Clearing House" -
Over the past week, mysterious
explosions and fires have wracked key
infrastructure connected to Iran’s nuclear programme at
Natanz and Parchin, key facilities engaged in uranium
enrichment and the production of rocket fuel for
ballistic missiles.
The US and Israel have accused Iran of violating UN
resolutions and the nuclear deal in testing new
ballistic-missile technology. Although Iranian Supreme
Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei has repeatedly denied any
intent to create nuclear
weapons, even going so far as to issue a
fatwa against it, Iran’s enemies are convinced it plans
to “go nuclear”.
The recent attacks appear to be an attempt by a hostile
state to degrade that programme and delay Iran’s ability
to potentially send such weapons to targets outside of
Iran. Tehran has said that a cyberattack could
be behind the explosion at Natanz, which destroyed a
building that allegedly housed an advanced centrifuge
system that could increase the speed of enrichment by up
to 50
times.
Risky undertaking
According to the New
York Times, a “Middle Eastern intelligence
official with knowledge of the episode” said that Israel
was responsible for the Natanz attack. “The blast was
caused by an explosive device planted inside the
facility,” the Times reported,
citing information from an intelligence source. The
explosion “destroyed much of the aboveground parts of
the facility where new centrifuges - delicate devices
that spin at supersonic speeds - are balanced before
they are put into operation”.
Avigdor Lieberman, a rival of Israeli Prime Minister
Benjamin Netanyahu, has accused
Mossad chief Yossi Cohen of being the source.
In a radio interview, he said the leak was a deliberate
attempt to embellish Cohen’s resume at the expense of
Israeli national security, as he prepared to transition
from the Mossad to a political
career as Netanyahu’s possible successor as
Likud leader.
According to the Times, “while investigators have
considered the possibility that Natanz was hit … by a
cruise missile or a drone, they view it as more likely
that someone carried a bomb into the building”. An
unidentified Revolutionary Guard member told
the Times that while it was unclear how the
explosives were snuck in, “the attack clearly
demonstrated a hole in the facility’s security”.
This, together with the fact that a hitherto unknown
anti-regime group, the Homeland Cheetahs, contacted BBC
Persian hours before the bombing was made public to
claim responsibility, points to the possible involvement
of the anti-regime Mujahideen-e
Khalq (MEK). Israel is known to have executed
joint assassination operations with MEK killers on the
ground in the past.
According to the Kuwaiti media outlet al-Jarida, an Israeli
F-35 stealth jet was used to bomb the Parchin
complex. While this is possible, flying an aircraft from
Israel to Iran for such an attack would be a technically
complex and risky undertaking. Al-Jarida further
reported that the fire at Natanz was the result of a
cyberattack aimed at gas compression controls.
Stuxnet attack
A decade ago, joint US-Israeli efforts resulted in the
development of the Stuxnet
worm, which infected Natanz and was
inadvertently sent around the world. Stuxnet was
reportedly delivered via a USB
stick. It’s unclear what method might have
been used this time, but presumably the attackers would
have been looking to exploit any similar lapses of
Iranian cybersecurity.
A possible motivator could have been a thwarted
cyberattack on six Israeli water plants in
April, intended to cause systems to malfunction.
According to a report in the Times of Israel, which
cited Channel 13 news, the attack “was viewed as a
significant escalation by Iran and a crossing of a red
line because it targeted civilian infrastructure”.
As such, the latest attacks against Iran could be, at
least in part, Israeli retaliation and a warning of the
price Iran will pay for such mischief. Yet, the sheer
scale of the attacks indicates a massive escalation in
hostilities. Iran would also assume, likely correctly,
that Israel informed its closest military ally of its
mission, and therefore view these acts as joint
US-Israeli operations.
That could explain the latest
missile attack on US diplomatic and military
installations in Iraq. In an unprecedented move, Iraqi
troops last month arrested a group of Iran-backed
fighters allegedly plotting a new attack against the
Green Zone in Baghdad. Washington has blamed
pro-Iranian militias for rocket attacks
targeting US troops across Iraq in recent months.
Israel and Iran have played out their rivalry in Iraq
before. Iran will undoubtedly seek to exact revenge on
Israeli or US assets wherever it can find them. This is
no longer a game of cat-and-mouse; it is only a matter
of time before one or more of the parties accidentally
or intentionally tips the situation into an outbreak of
massive, unrestrained conflict.
Netanyahu's corruption trial
The timing of these developments could prove extremely
useful for Netanyahu, coming in the midst of his
corruption trial. If convicted, Netanyahu could be
forced to resign,
possibly ending his political career. One of the wiliest
of Israeli politicians, Netanyahu would not be above
mounting attacks to buttress the notion that he is an
indispensable leader protecting Israel’s security by
eliminating grave threats, such as those posed by Iran.
Furthermore, Netanyahu’s grand plan to annex
30 percent of the occupied West Bank has
incited a firestorm of opposition around the globe.
Denunciations and warnings have come from political
leaders, international diplomats and human rights
groups. The Trump administration, thought to have
offered full support for the plan, seems now at
cross-purposes, with hardliners such as Ambassador David
Friedman backing
annexation and adviser Jared Kushner urging
caution.
Former Israeli Knesset Speaker Avraham Burg even told
an Italian newspaper that the US was
responsible for halting annexation (for now). If he is
correct, then the explosions in Iran would be just the
ticket to distract public attention from yet another
failure by Netanyahu to implement policies favoured by
his ultra-nationalist constituency.
These attacks are also characteristic of Israel’s
strategy to avoid comprehensive solutions to intractable
issues and instead engage in half-measures, aptly known
in Israeli idiom as “mowing
the grass”.
Iran analysts and nuclear experts say these attacks do
not fundamentally alter Iran’s trajectory if it is
seeking nuclear capabilities; at best, they delay
progress by a few months or a year. There is no way,
short of regime change or armed invasion, that countries
can deter rivals determined to obtain nuclear weapons.
Informed Israeli sources have repeatedly said Netanyahu
never intended to attack Iran on the scale necessary to
deal a massive blow to its nuclear programme. At best,
these operations only delay the inevitable - and this
may be exactly what Netanyahu wants. An ongoing,
medium-intensity conflict between Israel and Iran
strengthens his argument that he is the only figure who
can protect Israeli interests.
Richard Silverstein writes the
Tikun Olam blog, devoted to exposing the excesses of
the Israeli national security state. His work has
appeared in Haaretz, the Forward, the Seattle Times
and the Los Angeles Times. He contributed to the
essay collection devoted to the 2006 Lebanon war, A
Time to Speak Out (Verso) and has another essay in
the collection, Israel and Palestine: Alternate
Perspectives on Statehood (Rowman & Littlefield)
Photo of RS by: (Erika Schultz/Seattle Times)
No Advertising - No Government Grants - This Is Independent Media
|
Post your comment below
The
views expressed in this article are solely those
of the author and do not necessarily reflect the
opinions of Information Clearing House.