Hartford Courant

US military commander travels to Israel amid fears of Iranian attack

- By Cassandra Vinograd and Eric Schmitt

A top U.S. military commander traveled to Israel on Thursday, officials said, as fears rise that Iran would soon launch a strike to avenge the killings of several senior commanders.

Iran’s leaders have repeatedly vowed to punish Israel for an April 1 strike in Syria that killed several senior Iranian commanders. U.S. officials have said they are bracing for a possible Iranian response, and Israel has put its military on alert.

A day after President Joe Biden warned that Iran was threatenin­g a “significan­t” attack, Defense Department officials said that the top American military commander for the Middle East, Gen. Michael Kurilla, arrived in Israel.

The general went to Israel to coordinate on what is expected to be imminent retaliator­y action by Iran, as well as to discuss the war in the Gaza Strip, Defense Department officials said, speaking on condition of anonymity because of the sensitivit­y of the matter.

The Israeli military’s spokespers­on, Rear Adm. Daniel Hagari, said Kurilla had carried out a situationa­l assessment and reviewed “regional security challenges” with the Israeli military’s chief of staff.

“We are highly alert and ready to face various scenarios,” Hagari said in a televised news briefing, adding that any strike from Iranian territory would be a clear regional escalation.

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu acknowledg­ed Thursday that Israel was facing “challengin­g times,” noting that “in the midst of the war in Gaza” his country was “also prepared for scenarios involving challenges in other sectors.”

“We have determined a simple rule: Whoever harms us, we will harm them,” he said, using language that in recent days has been used to refer to threats from Iran and its proxies.

While Biden has become increasing­ly critical of Netanyahu’s conduct of the war in Gaza — threatenin­g to withhold U.S. assistance unless Israel does more to protect civilians — he emphasized Wednesday that American support for Israel in the face of an Iranian threat was unconditio­nal.

“As I told Prime Minister Netanyahu, our commitment to Israel’s security against these threats from Iran and its proxies is ironclad,” he said at a news conference.

As Iran and Israel have traded fresh threats in recent days, diplomats have been trying to reduce tensions and avert a wider regional war.

The foreign minister of Germany, Annalena Baerbock, spoke to her Iranian counterpar­t “about the tense situation” in the Middle East on Thursday, according to her office.

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