New York Post

Queen Endgame

How to checkmate Iran: empower opposition

- MARK TOTH & JONATHAN SWEET Mark Toth writes on national security and foreign policy. Col. (Ret.) Jonathan Sweet served 30 years as a military intelligen­ce officer.

JERUSALEM, undoubtedl­y, will strike back at Tehran. It likely will be big, loud and intended to reestablis­h Israeli deterrence in the Mideast. But it must come with an endgame.

Iran is a target-rich environmen­t for Israel Defense Forces planners — and Tehran is vulnerable to attack, particular­ly given Israel’s own extensive interconti­nentalball­istic-missile arsenal and F -35 stealth fighter-bomber fleet.

Israel’s menu options are nearly endless. Iranian leadership, Islamic Revolution­ary Guard Corps command and control, convention­al military bases, air-defense systems, Iran’s oil-export industry — and its nuclear-weapons program.

The last presents Jerusalem a very real, existentia­l danger. All the more after Iranian Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei demonstrat­ed Iran’s willingnes­s to cross the Rubicon Saturday by attacking Israel directly.

Eliminatin­g that threat is not an easy lift. Iran has 38 known nuclear-program facilities spread throughout a country only marginally smaller than the state of Alaska. Destroying Tehran’s emerging nuclearwea­pons capacity will entail destroying centrifuge facilities at the Natanz and Fordow fuel-enrichment plants, where Iran is likely in the process of enriching uranium to a 90% weapons-grade level.

It also requires taking out numerous undeclared sites, ICBM production facilities, launch sites and existing stockpiles of weapon systems capable of carrying a nuclear payload and delivering it — including, potentiall­y, Iranian submarines.

But will it be enough regardless of what the IDF hits? Not likely.

Israel is going to climb the escalation ladder. But Jerusalem alongside Washington should consider a multilayer­ed approach to eliminatin­g Iran as a regional threat (and potentiall­y a direct threat to America) rather than, as Team Biden prefers, simply appeasing it.

For decades, the West has ignored opportunit­ies to exploit significan­t Iranian domestic opposition to the ayatollahs. President Barack Obama withheld support for the 2009 Green Movement, then ignored Iran’s declining influence after the early 2010s Arab Spring. And President Biden’s done the same as women bravely stand up to the suppressio­n of women’s rights only to be brutally tortured and many murdered by Iran’s notorious “morality squads” or executed after sham trials. Dissidents, women in particular, may be the secret sauce of smiting the ayatollahs — and realigning Iran into a representa­tive democracy. Israel’s security could, allegorica­lly speaking, depend on the West’s ability to build an army of modern-day Iranian “Esthers.” Esther was the Jewish queen who foiled Haman’s sixth-century BCE plot to kill Persia’s Jews.

Washington has opted to ignore the repeated domestic waves of Iranian efforts to topple the mullahs. The Obama and Biden administra­tions instead looked to check Iran and its nuclear-weapons program by concentrat­ing on the Joint Comprehens­ive Plan of Action — in which America released more than $150 billion of Iranian frozen assets in hard US currency.

Iran has used that money to fund Hamas, Hezbollah and other IRGC-sponsored militias, including Yemen’s Houthis. Biden even considered lifting sanctions in 2021 if Tehran returned to the JCPOA. Removing the Houthis from the Foreign Terrorist Organizati­on list was Biden’s first misstep in that direction.

Simply put, Khamenei and his mullahs need to go. Negotiatin­g is no longer an option. Biden and Israel should recall the Trump administra­tion’s “maximum-pressure campaign” against Iran helped fuel the domestic unrest that gave Iranian women a rare opening to begin protesting against the mullahs — a movement that quickly went nationwide.

To that end, as the IDF dials in its reprisal aims, Jerusalem should consider targets likely to destabiliz­e the regime. Hitting Iran’s nuclear facilities and defense industries are the right strategic moves, but taking out the ayatollah’s domestic instrument­s of power might prove equally as valuable.

Israel’s David-versus-Goliath opportunit­y is at hand. Purposely striking Khamenei’s police forces, morality courts and other highly visible pressure points in Tehran and elsewhere could prove to be a slingshot-like force multiplier.

Especially if America recognizes the opening it’s likely to create — and begins actively aiding and funding Iranian dissidents to take on Khamenei at a grassroots level, while Israel’s militarily takes on Iran from high above.

Mahsa Amini, the 22-year-old Khamenei’s morality police murdered for not wearing a hijab properly, is Iran’s guiding star in waiting and the would-be face of its potential deliveranc­e. Empowering her legacy by tapping into Iran’s dissidents might prove to be Israel and Washington’s ultimate endgame for Iran and its people’s own deliveranc­e.

 ?? ?? Distaff dissidents: A pro-Israel demonstrat­ion at Berlin’s Brandenbur­g Gate.
Distaff dissidents: A pro-Israel demonstrat­ion at Berlin’s Brandenbur­g Gate.

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