Loveland Reporter-Herald

Israel stays quiet on next steps

Country gets support from military coalition led by U.S., others

- By Tia Goldenberg and Josef Federman

TEL AVIV, ISRAEL>> Israeli leaders on Sunday credited an internatio­nal military coalition with helping thwart a direct Iranian attack involving hundreds of drones and missiles, calling the coordinate­d response a starting point for a “strategic alliance” of regional opposition to Tehran.

But Israel’s War Cabinet met without making a decision on next steps, an official said, as a nervous world waited for any sign of further escalation of the former shadow war.

The military coalition, led by the United States, Britain and France and appearing to include a number of Middle Eastern countries, gave Israel support at a time when it finds itself isolated over its war against Hamas in Gaza.

The coalition also could serve as a model for regional relations when that war ends.

“This was the first time that such a coalition worked together against the threat of Iran and its proxies in the Middle East,” said the Israeli military spokesman, Rear Adm. Daniel Hagari.

One unknown is which of Israel’s neighbors participat­ed in the shooting down of the vast majority of about 350 drones and missiles Iran launched. Israeli military officials and a key War Cabinet member noted additional “partners” without naming them.

When pressed, White House national security spokesman John Kirby would not name them either.

But one appeared to be Jordan, which described its action as selfdefens­e.

“There was an assessment that there was a real danger of Iranian marches and missiles falling on Jordan, and the armed forces dealt with this danger.

And if this danger came from Israel, Jordan would take the same action,” Jordanian Foreign Minister Ayman al-safadi said in an interview on Al-mamlaka state television. U.S. President Joe Biden spoke with Jordan’s King Abdullah on Sunday.

The U.S. has long tried to forge a regionwide alliance against Iran as a way of integratin­g Israel and boosting ties with the Arab world. The effort has included the 2020 Abraham Accords, which establishe­d diplomatic relations between Israel and four Arab countries, and having Israel in the U.S. military’s Central Command, which oversees operations in the Middle East and works closely with the armies of moderate Arab states.

The U.S. had been working to establish full relations between Israel and regional heavyweigh­t Saudi Arabia before the Oct. 7 Hamas attack sparked Israel’s war in Gaza. The war, which has claimed more than 33,700 Palestinia­n lives, has frozen those efforts due to widespread outrage across the Arab world. But it appears that some behindthe-scenes cooperatio­n has continued, and the White House has held out hopes of forging Israel-saudi ties as part of a postwar plan.

Just ahead of Iran’s attack, the commander of CENTCOM, Gen. Erik Kurilla, visited Israel to map out a strategy.

Israel’s military chief, Lt. Gen. Herzi Halevi, on Sunday thanked CENTCOM for the joint defensive effort. Both Jordan and Saudi Arabia are under the CENTCOM umbrella. While neither acknowledg­ed involvemen­t in intercepti­ng Iran’s launches, the Israeli military released a map showing missiles traveling through the airspace of both nations.

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