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Iranian missile strike scrambles Gaza debate

- MARK LANDLER

Two weeks ago, Prime Minister Rishi Sunak of Britain was facing a chorus of calls to cut off arms shipments to Israel because of its devastatin­g war in Gaza. On Monday, Sunak saluted the British warplanes that had shot down several Iranian drones as part of a successful campaign to thwart Iran’s attack on Israel. It was a telling example of how the clash between Israel and Iran has scrambled the equation in the Middle East. Faced with a barrage of Iranian missiles, Britain, the United States, France and others rushed to Israel’s aid. They set aside their anger over Gaza to defend it from a country they view as an arch-nemesis, even as they pleaded for restraint in Israel’s response to the Iranian assault.

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, whose approval of a deadly airstrike on a meeting of Iranian generals in Damascus on April 1 provoked Iran’s retaliatio­n, has managed to change the narrative, according to British and American diplomats and analysts. But it could prove to be a fleeting change, they said, if Netanyahu orders a counter strike damaging enough to pitch the region into wider war. “We would urge them to take the win at this point,” Sunak said in Parliament, borrowing a phrase that President Biden used in a phone call with Netanyahu on Sunday after Iran’s attack had been mostly repelled.

Sunak was expected to have his own call with Netanyahu on Tuesday, part of a full-court press by European leaders to urge him not to allow the clash with Iran to spiral uncontroll­ably. President Emmanuel Macron of France, which played a supporting role in the military operation, told a French news channel, “We will do everything to avoid a conflagrat­ion — that is to say, an escalation.” The German foreign minister, Annalena Baerbock, signalled the limits of support for an Israeli counteratt­ack. “The right to self-defense means fending off an attack,” she said. “Retaliatio­n is not a category in internatio­nal law.”

Analysts said the Western pressure on Netanyahu over Iran would be even more intense than over Gaza because a full-blown war between Israel and Iran would be far more destabilis­ing — geopolitic­ally and economical­ly — than the Israeli campaign to root out Hamas militants in Gaza. It would force a series of hard decisions on Israel’s allies in quick succession, requiring them to rethink their entire strategies for the region.

While the ferocity of Israel’s assault in Gaza has galvanised much of world opinion against it, particular­ly after the Israeli strike that killed seven staff members of World Central Kitchen, it has not convulsed financial markets or turbocharg­ed oil prices, as a war between Iran and Israel almost certainly would.

Such a war would likely draw in the United States and possibly Britain, which played its traditiona­l role of wingman in the American-led effort to shoot down Iranian drones and missiles. That could have volatile political effects in both countries, where voters are going to the polls later this year.

“If every time Israel decides to punish Iran, it creates a massive tumult in Washington and London, these countries are going to pressure Israel,” said Vali R. Nasr, a professor at the Johns Hopkins School of Advanced Internatio­nal Studies who served in the Obama administra­tion. “There’s going to be a major internatio­nal effort to build cordons around Israel’s behavior toward Iran.”

Mark Landler is the London bureau chief of The Times The New York Times

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