Marysville Appeal-Democrat

Israel bracing for unpreceden­ted direct Iran attack in days

- By Donato Paolo Mancini, Jennifer Jacobs and Alex Wickham Bloomberg News

Israel is bracing for a direct and unpreceden­ted attack by Iran on government targets as soon as Saturday, according to people familiar with western intelligen­ce assessment­s, a move that has the potential to trigger an all-out regional war.

An assault from Iranian soil has emerged as one of the main scenarios expected by the Jewish state and its allies, said the people, who asked not to be identified as they aren’t authorized to discuss the matter publicly. A bombardmen­t with drones and precision missiles could come within the next 48 hours, they said.

Oil jumped to the highest level since October on the news, rallying as much as 2.6% to top $92 a barrel. Futures have surged 19% this year with the war adding risk premium to the market.

The U.S. is preparing defenses and moved additional military assets to the region, while intensifyi­ng diplomatic efforts to rein in hostilitie­s, the people said. The attack still hasn’t been approved by Tehran’s highestran­king officials, they said.

An Iranian missile and drone barrage would represent a retaliatio­n for a deadly strike on its diplomatic compound in

Syria last week, which the Islamic Republic blames on Israel. Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei has repeatedly said Israel will be “punished” for the assault, though stopped short of saying what form such a counter move would take.

One of the people said it’s possible that the increasing­ly inflammato­ry rhetoric between Israel, Iran, and the U.S. could be grandstand­ing, but said the working assumption for Israel and allies is that an attack is imminent. Diplomatic back-channels are in overdrive, the people said.

U.S. officials including Jake Sullivan and Brett Mcgurk have been working to send messages to Iran, including through an establishe­d Swiss channel, one of the people said, while talking to Israel, Saudi Arabia, Qatar and other government­s.

White House spokeswoma­n Karine Jeanpierre said Thursday the U.S. has warned Iran not to use Israel’s attack on Syria as a pretext to escalate hostilitie­s further.

“We’ve seen the threats coming from Iran and so we have made ourselves very clear where we stand in supporting Israel’s security,” she said. “That is ironclad.”

Any Iranian attack on Israel would likely be a combinatio­n of missiles and drones, based on current capabiliti­es outlined in a new Defense Intelligen­ce Agency Worldwide Threat assessment released late Thursday.

The regime “has a substantia­l inventory of ballistic and cruise missiles capable of striking targets as far as 2,000 kilometers from its borders,” the agency said.

Bloomberg News reported on Wednesday the U.S. and allies were expecting a major escalation of hostilitie­s, with targeted attacks on Israeli government and military sites. The Jewish State hasn’t claimed or denied responsibi­lity for the Damascus attack, in keeping with a decadeslon­g policy of ambiguity on operations in Syria, Lebanon and elsewhere.

A direct Israel-iran conflict would significan­tly rachet up hostilitie­s in the Middle East, where tensions have been rising since Israel began its war against Hamas in Gaza in October, after the Iranbacked militant group invaded the country and killed about 1,200 people. Hamas is designated a terrorist organizati­on by the U.S. and European Union.

Other members of the Islamic Republic’s so-called Axis of Resistance, chiefly Hezbollah in Lebanon and the Yemen-based Houthis, have stepped up their aggression in recent months.

The escalating hostilitie­s have drawn direct interventi­on from senior diplomats. U.K. Foreign Secretary David Cameron warned Iran Thursday that an attack would escalate and drag in a wider array of actors.

Western officials said intelligen­ce showed Iran is preparing an attack on Israel any day after Eid al-fitr, the Muslim holiday celebrated on April 10, adding the next 48 hours were critical to see if the message to diffuse tensions had successful­ly reached Tehran.

 ?? Menahem Kahana/afp ?? Israeli soldiers work on their tanks in a army camp near Israel’s border with the Gaza Strip on April 8, 2024, amid the ongoing conflict between Israel and the militant group Hamas.
Menahem Kahana/afp Israeli soldiers work on their tanks in a army camp near Israel’s border with the Gaza Strip on April 8, 2024, amid the ongoing conflict between Israel and the militant group Hamas.

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