East Bay Times

Israel considerin­g how it will retaliate against Iran

- By Julia Frankel and Jack Jeffery

Israel is vowing to retaliate against Iran, risking further expanding the shadow war between the two foes into a direct conflict after an Iranian attack over the weekend sent hundreds of drones and missiles toward Israel.

Israeli officials have not said how or when they might strike. But as countries around the world urge Israel to show restraint and the threat of a multi-front war mounts, it's clear that a direct Israeli attack on Iranian soil would lead to major fallout.

Iran says it carried out the strike to avenge an Israeli airstrike that killed two Iranian generals in Syria on April 1. It has pledged a much tougher response to any Israeli counteratt­ack attack on its soil.

With Israel focused on its war against Hamas in Gaza, and already battling Iranian-backed Hezbollah militants in Lebanon every day, the U.S. has urged Israel to show restraint.

Israel's war cabinet has been debating their next move. Here are some considerat­ions key to their decision.

Israel's successful air defense Saturday night — conducted in tandem with the U.S., Britain, France and Jordan — bought the

INCREASING ISRAELI ISOLATION >>

country a brief moment of internatio­nal support and sympathy after months of mounting internatio­nal isolation over the Gaza war. The six-month offensive has killed nearly 34,000 Palestinia­ns, according to local health officials, and unleashed a humanitari­an catastroph­e.

Israel has been careful not to identify its Arab partners, but an Israeli air force official, speaking on condition of anonymity to discuss the mission, said Israeli warplanes needed to fly “east of Israel” to shoot down missiles.

FEARS OF A MULTI-FRONT WAR >> A major retaliator­y strike on Iranian soil risks sparking a full-scale regional war, so any response must be carefully calculated.

A direct strike on Iranian soil would almost certainly result in a brutal counteratt­ack and risk prompting Hezbollah to launch further attacks. The Iranianbac­ked Lebanese group has a far more powerful arsenal than Hamas, but has so far shown hesitancy about engaging in an all-out war.

MILITARY CAPACITY >> Israel's army is vastly superior to others in the region. It possesses a range of high-tech weaponry, including F35 fighter planes that can launch long-range munitions. Experts say it has the ability to directly strike Iran or its proxies in the region.

 ?? ARIEL SCHALIT — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE ?? A battery of Israel's Iron Dome defense missile system, deployed to intercept rockets, sits in Ashkelon. Israeli leaders are pondering a retaliator­y strike against Iran.
ARIEL SCHALIT — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE A battery of Israel's Iron Dome defense missile system, deployed to intercept rockets, sits in Ashkelon. Israeli leaders are pondering a retaliator­y strike against Iran.

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