Austin American-Statesman

We survived Iran’s attack. How long can this go on?

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Hours before Iran attacked Israel early Sunday with a barrage of more than 300 ballistic missiles, attack drones and cruise missiles, I tucked my children into bed and readied the in-home bomb shelter in our apartment in central Israel.

When the booms started outside shortly before 2 a.m., shaking my shutters and waking me from a fitful sleep, I went to my balcony to scan the skies. I didn’t get much shut-eye over the next few hours while Israel’s anti-missile system shot down the threats along with the help of U.S., U.K. and even Jordanian warplanes.

We were lucky: Our city has no air-raid sirens, my kids slept through the entire assault and the worst casualty of the attack on Israel appeared to be a serious injury to a 7-year-old Arab Israeli girl.

Iran called the operation a “full success.”

Iran-backed Hezbollah is just over the next hill

I actually felt more danger a few days earlier, when I was in the northern Israeli city of Kiryat Shmona interviewi­ng someone outside his fast-food restaurant and an air raid siren sounded. There, the threat is more immediate: Hezbollah is just over the next hill, and we only had seconds to take cover.

As our phones buzzed with alerts from Israel’s Homefront Command, my interlocut­or hopped up from our sidewalk table and rushed me into his kitchen, along with half a dozen customers who were there for a late-afternoon lunch.

Hezbollah, the Iranian-backed Lebanese militia, was firing missiles, probably from the mountain ridge just a mile and a half away demarcatin­g Israel’s border with Lebanon. A minute later came another alert and another siren: drone infiltration.

When the immediate threat passed, we headed back outside and resumed our conversati­on. Just steps away from our table were the scorched remains of a Hezbollah strike from November, when a missile hit some gas canisters, exploded, and set the street and nearby vehicles ablaze. A bystander was hospitaliz­ed with shrapnel wounds to the chest, but no one was killed.

This city of 25,000 was evacuated in the early days of Israel’s war with Hamas, after Hezbollah joined in and began shelling northern Israel with rockets, antitank missiles and unmanned aircraft.

Six months on, the only change is that Hezbollah’s attacks – at least 3,100 so far, according to the Israel Defense Forces – have grown more frequent. About two dozen civilians and soldiers in northern Israel have been killed in the attacks, while Israeli reprisals in Lebanon and Syria have killed more than 350, most of whom have been Hezbollah fighters, according to Hezbollah tallies.

Israel faces questions about our future

The persistenc­e of the conflict in northern Israel, including Iran’s attack this past weekend, is a reminder that although the war in Gaza has shifted to a low burn half a year since Hamas’ Oct. 7 attack, the regional conflict it sparked is still is very much unresolved.

For those of us living in Israel, it’s hard to shake the feeling that we’re treading water, moving no closer to resolution of the urgent dilemmas the country faces.

That’s hard enough for ordinary Israelis. It’s gutwrenchi­ng for the families of those still held captive in Gaza, the 60,000 residents of northern Israel who have been evacuated from their homes due to attacks by Hezbollah, and the countless other Israelis displaced from their destroyed communitie­s near Gaza.

It also weighs on the spirits of those who have lost loved ones in this war and those still serving in the army.

Israel faces four major unresolved issues that raise fundamenta­l questions about the country’s future:

• How will Israel restore security to its northern border region so that residents can return to their homes?

• How does Israel plan to resolve the war in Gaza, adequately address the humanitari­an crisis facing Gazans and deliver real security to Israel’s southern border communitie­s?

• Will Israel be able to recover its surviving hostages in Gaza, and how many more will die before that happens?

• How long must Israelis wait before they get a chance to weigh in on the country’s leadership with a vote, and what will Israel’s political realignmen­t look like after elections?

The answers to these questions will shape Israel’s future. But instead of tackling them with the urgency they demand, Israel’s parliament went on recess, not to return till mid-May.

Finally, there’s the question of leadership. Israel’s leaders are the very people who failed to prevent the Oct. 7 attack or react quickly enough once it started to stop Hamas’ murder, kidnapping, rape and arson. There will have to be an accounting. But Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, clinging to power with the help of his far-right allies and unwilling even to offer an apology for his failures, has resisted calls for early elections.

So Israel is stuck – with its leaders, its hostage crisis, tens of thousands of internal refugees and an unresolved war.

How much longer can this endure?

Uriel Heilman, a native of New York, is a journalist living in Israel.

Your Turn Uriel Heilman Guest columnist

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