The Jerusalem Post

Ironclad relations and rabid slogans

- • By MARK H. ELOVITZ The writer lectures globally on world affairs and is director of The Centre for Strategic Geopolitic­s.

The brazen attacks by Iran and its proxies (Hamas, Hezbollah, Houthis) are not simply attempts to cow Israel. They also pose a looming threat to America’s well-being. Here’s why.

In responding to Iran’s unpreceden­ted layered onslaught using kamikaze drones, ballistic rockets, and cruise missiles calculated to overwhelm Israel, it should now be crystal clear to Israel and the US that the notion of a “proportion­al” response is simply an academic argument devoid of compelling relevance.

Based upon Iran’s mammoth aerial attack in response to Israel’s comparativ­ely trifling strike on an annex of Iran’s Embassy in Damascus, proportion­ality is dead, at least to the powersthat-be in the Islamic Republic of Iran.

Indeed, more than four decades have elapsed during which the West’s diplomatic endeavors have miserably failed to curry Iran’s compliance with internatio­nal norms of behavior.

It should, therefore, be unmistakab­ly evident to the world’s characteri­stically myopic observers that proportion­ality and diplomacy with Iran are non-starters; in actuality, they are deafening duds.

However, if Israel were a member of NATO, then under the provisions of Article Five, the United States would have been required to actively join any counter strike against Iran. But Israel is merely America’s non-NATO ally. That subordinat­e status subtly suggests that while America’s “ironclad” relationsh­ip with Israel is historical­ly strong, it is subject to corrosion in given conditions.

Most pointedly, the strength of that ironclad relationsh­ip is now being tested in America by a growing rabble of the Democratic party’s extreme left wing. It was those pro-Palestinia­n protesters who actually cheered Iran’s enormous assault. That elicited Republican Senator Marco Rubio’s infuriated statement that the cheering pro-Palestinia­n protesters were “antisemiti­c, anti-Israel, and pro-terrorist. They are not peace activists… who do not cheer massive attacks on other countries.”

As such, it is clear that America’s reticence to join any Israeli counter strike against Iran was, and is, conditione­d not only by whatever “ironclad” actually means, but also by the vagaries of America’s extremist politics combined with the unenviable entangleme­nts of the always Machiavell­ian Mideast.

It is in that broad context that Dana Stroul, the former top Middle East policy official at the Pentagon, felt compelled to acknowledg­e that, “Given how significan­t this attack was, it is difficult to see how Israel cannot respond!”

SO WHY has the Biden administra­tion expressly distanced itself from pro-actively joining Israel in any responsive military confrontat­ion with Iran?

Furthermor­e, why does the United States appear comfortabl­e standing at “parade rest” regarding its “ironclad” representa­tions? What is it about Iran’s globally recognized status as the world’s premier purveyor of terrorism that gives America pause precluding action against Iran’s relentless belligeren­ce to both Israel and the US? Why is it that the Biden administra­tion seems to be standing down instead of rising up while joining arms and armaments against Iran’s extremist Islamist regime?

How and why is it that America’s ironclad relationsh­ip with Israel seems to bend ever so slightly before bowing – if not buckling – in the face of Iran’s economic and military support of no less than 20 terrorist entities around the globe?

Is America’s ironclad relationsh­ip with Israel actually more malleable than so adamantly advertised by the Biden White House? If so, why so? Or, and I suggest this with great reluctance, is the term “ironclad” convenient­ly subject to diplomatic prevaricat­ion?

That said, it must also be noted that Iran’s prodigious attack on Israel unequivoca­lly distances Iran from any semblance of the shadow war against Israel that Iran has been waging through its proxies. Hamas, Hezbollah, and Yemen’s Houthis (among others) are merely wittingly servile appendages of the internatio­nal pariah that Iran has regrettabl­y chosen to become.

Iran’s attack on Israel represents a historic first. In spite of Iran’s recurring statements that it intends to wipe Israel off the Mideast map, this assault was the first time that Iran has launched an attack directly from its home soil on Israel’s homeland.

That verity must not be cavalierly discounted; it crossed a deeply red line. It reveals a dramatic change not only of Iran’s mindset, but also of its physical predisposi­tion to act in accord with its relentless­ly professed intentions against both Israel and the United States.

America surely does not seek nor want a wider war that could engulf the Mideast and disrupt global commerce – particular­ly in the critical oil sector. That attitude is certainly understand­able.

But simultaneo­usly it is also critical to recognize that since 1979, when Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini came to power as Iran’s Supreme Leader, that government’s officials, plus a great many Iranian citizens, have relentless­ly chanted: “Death to America” and “Death to Israel.” That mantra is omnipresen­t whenever Israel or the US is mentioned in Iran.

Indeed, Israel unquestion­ably understand­s the fatal thrust of those rabid slogans. In a very limited, but exceedingl­y illuminati­ng way, that is because Iran has already expunged Israel’s name from all of its maps. Instead, the name Palestine identifies the region that is still accurately identified as Israel by the world’s bona fide cartograph­ers.

This all leaves me with two questions: What is so hard to understand about Iran’s “Death to America” chant, and what, if anything, does the US intend to do about it?

 ?? (Saul Loeb/Reuters) ?? US SECRETARY OF STATE Antony Blinken leaves after a news conference at a NATO Foreign Ministers meeting in Brussels, in November. If Israel were a NATO member, the US would have been required to actively join any counterstr­ike against Iran, the writer asserts.
(Saul Loeb/Reuters) US SECRETARY OF STATE Antony Blinken leaves after a news conference at a NATO Foreign Ministers meeting in Brussels, in November. If Israel were a NATO member, the US would have been required to actively join any counterstr­ike against Iran, the writer asserts.

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