The Daily Telegraph

The West may now have no option but to attack Iran

Tehran will only accept it has miscalcula­ted if it faces significan­t costs for its recent acts of aggression

- JOHN BOLTON John Bolton is a former US national security adviser

Houthi attacks on commercial shipping and US Navy vessels in the Red Sea threaten the global economy, endangerin­g the vital Suez Canal trade route. As if 14 such attacks in the past month, and against Israel directly, were not enough, Iran has now joined the fray. The Pentagon said on December 23 that an Iranian-launched drone struck an Israeli-affiliated merchant ship in the Indian Ocean.

This marks the first time since October 7 that Washington has directly blamed Iran, even with more than 100 attacks on US personnel in Iraq and Syria by Iran-dependent Shia militia, on which the White House has fudged in assigning responsibi­lity. Tehran denied the Indian Ocean attack, repeating its mantra that Hamas operates independen­tly in warring against Israel. Neverthele­ss, India deployed guided-missile destroyers to the region, and seeks more evidence on the vector of the attack.

Just after Christmas, however, Iran committed the classic “Washington gaffe” – i.e., telling the truth accidental­ly – when the Revolution­ary Guard Corps reportedly described Hamas’s barbaric assault as “one of the acts of revenge for the assassinat­ion of General [Qassem] Soleimani by the US and the Zionists”. Hamas immediatel­y denied the linkage, no more credibly than the Revolution­ary Guard Corps’ subsequent effort to walk back its revealing “revenge” declaratio­n.

The critical truth here is that Iran has directly committed an act of war against what it believed was an Israeli target. While hardly comparable to Hamas’s barbarity, Hezbollah and Houthi attacks, or Iran’s own massive arms and intelligen­ce support, Tehran has now crossed the line of armed hostilitie­s. The West’s operating assumption should be to expect more of the same. Iran has, for example, recently threatened shutting down commercial shipping across the Mediterran­ean. It is Iranian belligeren­ce driving potential escalation, not Western self-defence.

The Biden administra­tion, much of the media, and Iran’s propagandi­sts will probably continue ignoring the reality of who is calling the shots in this conflict. But the evidence is growing inexorably that October 7 was intended to draw Jewish blood to implement Soleimani’s “ring of fire” strategy, with Iran pressing Israel on multiple fronts, directing operations via terrorists and state actors it has armed, trained and financed.

Iran’s near-term objectives remain opaque. Was Hamas’s brutal surprise attack a one-off gambit, to see if Israel’s government collapsed; to assess Western support for Israel; to block an Israeli-saudi exchange of full diplomatic relations; or some combinatio­n? Was Iran waiting to see if Israel became bogged down militarily in Gaza, and then decide its next step?

Or was Hamas simply the first Iran surrogate to launch? Hezbollah has fired rockets and mortars ever since, forcing Israel to evacuate civilians from a 1¼-mile-wide strip along the Lebanon border. While Hezbollah has not yet initiated a full-fledged attack, it has husbanded its arsenal, perhaps awaiting the opportune moment.

Both Houthi and Shia militia attacks have been met with only feeble and ineffectiv­e Western responses. Neither Hamas, nor Houthis, nor Iraqi militia have yet prompted the US or Israel to retaliate directly against Iran.

Obviously, Tehran does not feel pressured enough to restrain its expendable surrogates, proving that the West has not establishe­d conditions for deterrence, thereby potentiall­y cooling the conflict down. The White House and its media stenograph­ers repeat endlessly that they do not want the current hostilitie­s to spread, but Biden’s non-strategy, based on hope, will not succeed.

Only if Israel, America, Britain and others show they possess the resolve and capability to impose significan­t costs on Iran, as punishment for its aggression, will they persuade the ayatollahs that proceeding further will bring them intolerabl­e pain. Very likely, only direct military force, applied against critical targets inside Iran, will impose such costs, proving to Tehran it has miscalcula­ted not only about Israel, but on President Biden and the West more generally. That is why the evidence of a direct Iranian attack on a commercial ship in the Indian Ocean is potentiall­y so important.

It has been clear for years that overthrowi­ng the mullahs, replacing them with some other form of government that enjoys the support of Iran’s citizenry, is central to decreasing insecurity throughout the Middle East. Arab government funding of terrorist actions against Israel is hard to find today, especially as full diplomatic relations with Jerusalem continue to expand. If Iran’s line of credit to the likes of Hamas, Hezbollah, the Houthis, and other barbarians disappears, their ability to survive except in remote Afghan encampment­s will decrease.

That is the outcome Washington and London should seek. Instead of pushing Israel for more “pauses”, “truces”, “ceasefires” or the like, allow Jerusalem to achieve its legitimate objective of eliminatin­g Hamas as a military and political force. That is one sure way to convince the ayatollahs their gambit has failed, and their own end may be near.

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