The Manila Times

Is Israel preparing to attack Iran?

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BRUSSELS: Defense Secretary Leon Panetta has a lot on his mind these days, from cutting the defense budget to managing the drawdown of US forces in Afghanista­n. But his biggest worry is the growing possibilit­y that Israel will attack Iran militarily over the next few months.

Panetta believes there is strong likelihood that Israel will strike Iran in April, May or June — before Iran enters what Israelis described as a “zone of immunity” to commence building a nuclear bomb. Very soon, the Israelis fear, the Iranians will have enough enriched uranium in deep undergroun­d facilities to make a weapon — and only the US could then stop them militarily.

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu doesn’t want to leave the fate of Israel dependent on American action, which would be triggered by intelligen­ce that Iran is actually building a bomb, which it hasn’t done yet.

Israeli Defense Minister Ehud Barak may have signaled the prospect of an Israeli attack soon when he asked last month to postpone a planned US- Israel military exercise that would culminate in a live-fire phase in May. Barak apologized that Israel couldn’t devote the resources to the annual exercise this spring.

President Barack Obama and Panetta are both said to have cau- tioned the Israelis that the US opposes an attack, believing that it would derail an increasing­ly successful internatio­nal economic sanctions program and other nonmilitar­y efforts to stop Iran from crossing the threshold. But the White House hasn’t yet decided precisely how the US would respond if the Israelis do attack.

The Obama administra­tion is conducting intense discussion­s now about what an Israeli attack would mean for the US: whether Iran would target US ships in the region or try to close the Strait of Hormuz, and what effect the conflict and a likely spike in oil prices would have on the fragile global economy.

The Obama administra­tion currently appears to favor a policy of staying out of the conflict, unless Iran hits US assets, which would trigger a strong US response.

This US policy—signaling that Israel is acting on its own— might open a breach like the one in 1956, when President Dwight Eisenhower condemned an Israeli-european attack on the Suez Canal. Complicati­ng matters is the 2012 presidenti­al election, where Republican­s candidates are clamoring for stronger US support of Israel.

Administra­tion officials caution that Tehran shouldn’t misunderst­and: The US has a 60-year commitment to Israeli security, and if Israel’s population centers were hit, the US could feel obligated to come to Israel’s defense.

The Israelis are said to believe that a military strike could be limited and contained. The Israelis would bomb the uranium-enrichment facility at Natanz and other targets; an attack on the buried enrichment facility at Qom would be harder from the air. The Iranians would retaliate but Israelis doubt it would be an overwhelmi­ng barrage, with rockets from Hezbollah forces in Lebanon. One Israeli estimate is that the Jewish state might have to absorb 500 casualties.

Israelis point to Syria’s lack of response to an Israeli attack on a nuclear reactor there in 2007. The Iranians might show similar restraint, because of fear the regime would be endangered by all-out war. Some Israelis have also likened a strike on Iran to the 1976 hostage-rescue raid on Entebbe, which was followed by a change of regime in Uganda.

Israeli leaders are said to accept, and even welcome, the prospect of going it alone and demonstrat­ing their resolve at a time when their security is undermined by the “Arab Spring.”

“You stay to the side, and let us do it,” one Israel official is said to have advised the US A “short-war” scenario assumes five days or so of limited Israeli strikes, followed by a U.n.-brokered cease-fire. The Israelis are said to recognize that damage to the nuclear program might be modest, requiring another strike in a few years.

US officials see two possible ways to dissuade the Israelis from such an attack: Tehran could finally open serious negotiatio­ns for a formula to verifiably guarantee that its nuclear program will remain a civilian one; or the US could step up its covert actions to degrade the program so much that Israelis would decide military action wasn’t necessary.

US officials don’t think that Netanyahu has made a final decision to attack, and they note that top Israeli intelligen­ce officials remain skeptical of the project. But senior Americans doubt the Israelis are bluffing. They’re worrying about the guns of spring—and the unintended consequenc­es.—( c) 2012, The Washington Post Writers Group

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