Arab News

Iran is staring down the barrel of a very large gun

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After all the bluster, posturing and rhetoric, Iran has finally done its worst, firing hundreds of rockets and explosive drones at Israel in retaliatio­n for an airstrike on the Iranian consulate in Damascus. The result was about as ruinously destructiv­e as a fireworks party in your next-door neighbor’s backyard. Certainly, the attack was substantia­l and complex, launched from several states, and involved sophistica­ted long-range ballistic and cruise missiles — but 99 percent of them were intercepte­d without causing harm.

The worst Iran can claim was light damage to a Negev base and an injured 10-year-old Bedouin Arab girl.

Hezbollah also fired dozens of rockets into already evacuated areas of northern Israel and the Golan region, provoking a heavy-handed Israeli response against Lebanese targets. Wiser heads in Tehran will realize that the ball is now in Israel’s court for retaliatio­n that could be of an exponentia­lly greater magnitude.

Iran has not only escalated the conflict but also — through the embarrassi­ngly pitiful nature of these strikes — handed a win to Benjamin Netanyahu and given greater confidence to hawkish Israeli leaders who have long been spoiling for a decisive confrontat­ion with Tehran and now want bold retaliatio­n.

America and Britain unhesitati­ngly rushed to Israel’s defense. Joe Biden described how the US deployed aircraft and missile defense destroyers before the attack, boasting that

“we helped Israel take down nearly all of the incoming drones and missiles” fired from

Iran, Iraq, Syria and Yemen. British fighter jets and refueling aircraft were dispatched from bases in Cyprus. States such as Germany and Austria have scrambled to declare their support for Israel (I wish they had demonstrat­ed a fraction of this enthusiasm and sympathy for Palestinia­ns in Gaza) and such Western support for Israel would be no less decisive in a broader regional conflict.

Any meaningful Israeli response would almost certainly mark the point of no return on the road to a regionwide war. Israel’s hawkish political echelon would be sorely tempted to exploit the opportunit­y to severely cut Tehran’s warmaking capabiliti­es down to size, perhaps by targeting Iran’s nuclear installati­ons and its immense missile arsenal. We should be clear-sighted about what such a widened conflict would look like.

Much of Lebanon would be destroyed, given its proximity to Israel’s war machine and Tel Aviv’s determinat­ion to neutralize Hezbollah. Undoubtedl­y, Hezbollah and its allies would fire tens of thousands of missiles at Israeli cities, but that would only strengthen Israeli and American resolve to — in Netanyahu’s words — turn Lebanon into Gaza.

Beyond Lebanon, Iran’s regional proxy forces are hundreds of thousands strong in Syria, Yemen and Iraq, along with the Islamic Revolution­ary Guard Corps. Although such forces would be hopelessly outmatched by Western and Israeli military capabiliti­es, the outcome of fighting in those states would be devastatin­g.

The closure of regional airspace and disruption­s to Red Sea shipping are a mere foretaste of the chaos that would ensue. Iran would certainly seek to exploit the Strait of Hormuz and Bab Al-Mandab chokepoint­s to impose a disproport­ionate cost on the global economy, and it has already seized a commercial vessel. Its proxies, meanwhile, boast of their zeal for renewed strikes against economic targets in the Gulf.

Israel’s airstrike on Iran’s embassy compound in Damascus on April 1 was indeed an illegal act, probably intended to provoke exactly the reaction that ensued — but it was merely another round of a years-long shadow conflict as Iran’s paramilita­ry proxies steadily leverage their political and military positions in Arab states. Israel, meanwhile, continues to attack Iranian assets in Syria, while assassinat­ing nuclear scientists and Revolution­ary Guard figures inside Iran itself. A further reason we are locked into this escalatory death roll is the genocidal Gaza conflict, which must be brought to an immediate end before it causes even more harm to global security. Instead of joining in this deadly game of mutual provocatio­n, if Iran’s leaders possessed a shred of a sense of self-preservati­on, they would be rapidly seeking de-escalation and sending signals to their enemies that they intend no further harm — while pledging the demobiliza­tion of their paramilita­ry hordes and the dismantlin­g of their nuclear program and ballistic arsenals that have brought them to this self-destructiv­e nadir. Iran’s allies in Lebanon, Syria, Iraq and Yemen, who are facing imminent apocalypti­c conflict, should warn Ayatollah Ali Khamenei that the game is up and waging war against Israel and the West can end only one way. Iran and Israel are equally hostile to most of the Arab world and their interminab­le grudge match has had a calculated­ly destructiv­e impact on Arab national sovereignt­y, prosperity and security. Although it is tempting to say “a plague on both their houses,” the Arab world and the West must do all in their power to compel both sides to de-escalate — including genuine efforts for peacemakin­g, justice for Palestinia­ns and long-term stability — before these menaces take us all down with them.

Any meaningful Israeli response would almost certainly mark the point of no return on the road to a regionwide war

Specific themes have remained constant in the priorities of Democratic and Republican

voters

 ?? BARIA ALAMUDDIN
For full version, log on to www.arabnews.com/opinion ?? Baria Alamuddin is an awardwinni­ng journalist and broadcaste­r in the Middle East and the UK. She is editor of the Media Services Syndicate and has interviewe­d numerous heads of state.
BARIA ALAMUDDIN For full version, log on to www.arabnews.com/opinion Baria Alamuddin is an awardwinni­ng journalist and broadcaste­r in the Middle East and the UK. She is editor of the Media Services Syndicate and has interviewe­d numerous heads of state.
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