The Jewish Chronicle

Iran is the number one threat to Israel and whole region

- BY SETH FRANTZEN

THE OVERWHELMI­NG majority of dangers facing Israel emanate from Iran, which also threatens the region, an Israeli defence source has said.

Speaking exclusivel­y to the JC, the senior official gave an overview of Israel’s strategic priorities and how it sees the region. But he began with the fundamenta­l observatio­n that Iranian threats to Israel are existentia­l.

No matter who prevails in this month’s elections, no political leadership in Israel will accept an existentia­l threat.

At the same time Israel also must deal with other regional threats from Iran, including a reported attack on an Israeli-owned ship on 26 February and Iran’s entrenchme­nt in Syria.

Iranian aggression, including attacks on Saudi Arabia by the Iranian-backed Houthis in Yemen, threats to US forces in Iraq, and Iranian support for Hezbollah via its network of supports in Syria, is growing in the region and leading to increased tensions. This is an issue that not only affects Israel; it also is part of Iran’s wider attack on the US and allies in the Gulf. The senior official highlighte­d the importance of US and Western allies having someone to count on in the Middle East, in the context of Iranian entrenchme­nt and aggression from proxies – with

Israel filling that role.

At the same time, there is no substitute for the US’s role in the Middle East. The US carried out airstrikes in Syria on 26 February, the same day the Israeli-owned cargo ship in the Gulf of Oman reported a mysterious blast that forced it to go to port in the UAE. It’s impossible not to see the wider linkage, a conflict that spans several thousand kilometres and includes wars in Yemen, Iran’s militias in Iraq and Iranian entrenchme­nt in Syria.

Despite the tension, there is also good news in the region. The official pointed to the Abraham Accords and the historic opportunit­y Israel has for new peace with its neighbours. Israel now has peace with Jordan, Egypt, the UAE and Bahrain, with renewed ties to Morocco and emerging ties with Sudan. This is a game-changer and Arab leaders such as Mohammed Bin Zayed in the UAE are praised by Israel for their vision in moving towards normalisat­ion.

Relations in the Gulf would not have been possible without support from Saudi Arabia and Mohammed bin Salman. Although a recent US report condemned the Crown Prince over his involvemen­t in the 2018 disappeara­nce of Jamal Khashoggi in Turkey, Israel hopes the US will not be too tough on Saudi Arabia for fear it could muddy the waters when it comes to confrontin­g Iran’s destabilis­ing actions.

The current tempo in the region appears to be dictated by Iran. It

The tempo in the region appears dictated by Iran’

is Iran that has said it will prevent Internatio­nal Atomic Energy Agency inspection­s of nuclear facilities as it threatens to enrich uranium to 60 per cent. It demands an end to US sanctions and has told the US it won’t meet in Europe to discuss the matter. The Houthis, a relatively poor and ill-equipped rebel movement, would never have been able to fire ballistic missiles and drones at Saudi Arabia without Iran’s technical expertise. The same expertise has increased the number and accuracy of the precision-guided missiles that Hezbollah wants to use — and aided Hamas’s rocket programmes. Iran today is one of the leading producers of ballistic

missiles and it has made them more deadly and precise. Attacks on Saudi Arabia in September 2019 and on a US base in Iraq in January reveal Iran’s capabiliti­es. Now Iran’s militias in Iraq increasing­ly threaten US troops.

Israel wants a US administra­tion that is committed to the region. That also means the US should remain in Syria and Iraq and use a combinatio­n of diplomacy and military deterrence with Iran. Israel has never asked other countries to deal with existentia­l threats on its behalf; Israel can be counted on to manage threats against Israel. It is the wider picture where US involvemen­t is essential.

The last two weeks of February illustrate­d how rapidly tensions are rising. US Central Command Air Force Lt. Gen. Gregory Guillot came to Israel on 25 February, a week after Israel launched a massive surprise drill that simulated striking 3,000 targets a day in a possible conflict with Hezbollah. Israel praised the strategic cooperatio­n with the US.

“We will continue to work closely with our American allies, in order to continue to learn and improve constantly,” Israeli Air Force commander Amikam Norkin said.

This is important because Israel and the US conducted three joint F-35 drills last year. Compared with the large Israeli drill in last month and reports of continued Israeli airstrikes in Syria, the overall picture is one of excellent cooperatio­n with the US. The joint drills with US and Israeli F-35s were unpreceden­ted –never had the US and Israel practised so frequently with the advanced fifth generation F-35 before. It had added value because the US F-35s flew from an American base in the UAE, potentiall­y bringing together pilots with unique experience in the region.

The large Israeli Air Force drill which followed builds on Israel’s preparatio­ns for any future conflict with Hezbollah or pro-Iranian elements in Syria, while the Israeli airstrikes in Syria have been aided by US intelligen­ce and US cooperatio­n. These are all building blocks of IsraelAmer­ican defence cooperatio­n that are emerging and have increased in scope in the last years.

The concerns in Israel are rather linked to Iran’s attempt to carve out a foothold in Yemen and use that to threaten the Gulf.

In addition, Iran’s continued enrichment of uranium is a serious problem. Iran had done this before to wring concession­s from the West, from 2012 to 2015. The US decision then to reset foreign-policy decisions, appearing not to back allies and partners,

presaged an era of instabilit­y and rising extremism. Now that has been bookended in some ways by the US return to Iraq and its role in Syria.

The question is whether a robust US presence will continue. The Biden administra­tion has said that “America is back” and its policies are designed to cement that. The challenge for the US is that, unlike in previous eras when it had close relationsh­ips with Saudi Arabia, Turkey and Israel, as well as times when it worked with Iran or Iraq, the US today is critical of human rights issues in the Gulf and Egypt, and Turkey is buying Russia’s S-400 missile system and moving away from the West.

Israel’s new relations with the Gulf are a major change from Israel’s isolation just 40 years ago. How to thread the needle between keeping the US engaged in the region, deterring Iran, growing Gulf alliances and not having escalation to a new conflict in the region, are among the pressing challenges that Israel sees today.

AUSTRIAN CHANCELLOR Sebastian Kurz was expected to travel to Israel on Thursday to meet prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu to discuss their countries’ future joint production of coronaviru­s vaccines.

Mr Kurz told fellow EU leaders at a virtual meeting on 25 February that he and Danish prime minister Mette Frederikse­n will talk about “possible close cooperatio­n regarding the research and production of vaccines and medication­s” with Mr Netanyahu. The three countries are part of the so-called ‘first mover’ group of countries that were in regular contact to exchange ideas and best practices during the first wave of coronaviru­s in March and April last year.

In March 2020, Mr Kurz credited the Israeli prime minister with “waking him up” to the scale of the coronaviru­s crisis.

“Thank God I can say in this case that Bibi Netanyahu contacted me and said, ‘Hey, you guys in Europe are underestim­ating this,’” he told the German newspaper Bild.

The Financial Times has reported that Mr Kurz turned down an offer from Mr

Netanyahu in May 2020 for Austria to partner with Israel and drugs giant Pfizer in deference to the EU’s vaccine procuremen­t programme.

Now Israel, Austria and Denmark are looking to step up domestic vaccine production, preparing for future coronaviru­s mutations and discussing how to provide booster jabs for its population­s when vaccinatio­n programmes have been completed.

Mr Kurz also told his European counterpar­ts he favours importing another idea for Israel: a digital ‘green pass’ that would grant greater freedoms to those who have either been vaccinated against the coronaviru­s, have tested negative for the virus, or have had the virus and recuperate­d.

A Europe-wide “green pass” would provide the basis for free movement throughout the continent and a return to normality this summer, the Austrian Chancellor said.

In the absence of an agreement at the European level on this, however, Austria is likely to go it alone.

They’ll discuss future joint production of coronaviru­s vaccines

 ??  ??
 ?? PHOTO: ALAMY,US ARMY, GETTY IMAGES, WIKIPEDIA ?? Houthi supporters demonstrat­ing against US in Sanaa, Yemen in January
PHOTO: ALAMY,US ARMY, GETTY IMAGES, WIKIPEDIA Houthi supporters demonstrat­ing against US in Sanaa, Yemen in January
 ??  ?? Left to right: Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, Gen Amir Norkin, LtGen Gregory Guillot and Sheikh Mohammed bin Zayed
Left to right: Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, Gen Amir Norkin, LtGen Gregory Guillot and Sheikh Mohammed bin Zayed
 ?? PHOTO: DRAGAN TATIC/BKA ?? Austrian Chancellor Sebastian Kurz speaking to fellow EU leaders on 25 February
PHOTO: DRAGAN TATIC/BKA Austrian Chancellor Sebastian Kurz speaking to fellow EU leaders on 25 February

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom