Netanyahu, Iran, and Iranian-backed groups walk tightly spun tripwire
Israeli Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu and Iranian
Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei walk a tripwire
By James M.
Dorsey
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Iran and its Arab allies may not want
an out Middle East war, but that has not stopped them from increasingly engaging
Israel on multiple fronts.
The
Iranian-backed strategy aims to pressure Israel to agree to a Gaza ceasefire by
sapping its military strength and fueling mounting domestic pressure on Prime
Minister Binyamin Netanyahu.
The strategy
is also geared towards enhancing the Islamic Republic’s regional influence at a
time of mounting widespread anger at Israel and the United States, the Jewish
state’s main military and political supporter.
This month,
Iraq quietly allowed Hezbollah and Yemen’s Houthi rebels to
open offices in Baghdad
as the United States and Iraq finalised plans for the withdrawal of most US troops from the
country over the next
two years, leaving only a small residual force in the northern Kurdistan region.
Iran’s strategy
is proving effective militarily and politically, even though it builds as much
on bluster as on kinetic action and threatens to undermine newly elected
President Masoud Pezeshkian’s efforts to reengage with the West.
“What Israel
has done in the region and what Israel tried with the assassination of (Hamas
political leader) Ismail Haniyeh in Iran was to drag us into a regional war. We
have exercised restraint so far but we reserve the right to defend ourselves at
a specific time and place with specific methods. However, we are preserving everything
to achieve a ceasefire in Gaza,” Mr. Pezeshkian said at his first news
conference since taking office on July 31.
Mr. Haniyeh
was killed while in Tehran for Mr. Pezeshkian’s inauguration.
Maintaining
thinly veiled plausible deniability as a way of constraining a potential
Iranian response, Israel has not confirmed or denied responsibility for the
killing.
US Secretary
of State Antony Blinken warned Iran that it could not have it
both ways.
“Iran’s new
president and foreign minister have repeatedly said that they want to restore
engagement with Europe; they want to receive sanctions relief. Destabilizing actions like these will achieve
exactly the opposite,” Mr. Blinken said.
The secretary
was referring to Iran allegedly supplying ballistic missiles to Russia for its
war against Ukraine. The United States imposed new sanctions in response to the
missile shipment.
The US
Treasury said Iran and Russia had agreed on the missile supply long before Mr.
Pezeshkian came to office.
Iran has
denied the US assertion as a “vile propaganda ploy and a blatant lie.”
Even so, Mr.
Blinken could just as well have been referring to Iranian support for its
non-state partners’ attacks on Israel.
Last week,
Iranian allies pushed their strategy with stepped-up drone and missile attacks
by Hezbollah, the Lebanese Shiite militia, and a Yemeni Houthi missile strike
aimed at Tel Aviv.
In his
response to the Houthi attack, Mr. Netanyahu acknowledged the Iranian
strategy. “We are in
a multi-front campaign against Iran's evil axis that strives to destroy us,”
Mr. Netanyahu said.
Hezbollah and
the Houthis reject Israel’s right to exist but insist they will stop attacking
Israel once it agrees to a Gaza ceasefire.
The latest
Houthi attack, despite Israel’s denial of the Yemenis’ assertion that they
fired a hypersonic missile, raised the spectre of the group’s potential to
disrupt Israeli commercial air traffic. The Houthi missile exploded near Tel
Aviv’s main Ben Gurion International Airport.
The attack
also sparked questions about Israel’s air defence
capabilities. Israel
intercepted the missile but failed to destroy it. Fragments fell near the settlement
of Kfar Daniel, wounding nine people.
It was the
second time the Houthis succeeded in breaching Israel's defences. In July, the
group launched a drone that hit a Tel Aviv building, killing one person.
Credit: New9 Live
Mr.
Pezeshkian denied allegations that Iran had supplied hypersonic missiles to the
Houthis but asserted Iran had such weapons in its arsenal.
Mr.
Pezeshkian’s comments and the Houthi and Hezbollah attacks highlight missiles
as ‘the poor man’s’ weapon of choice, given that Iran and its non-state allies
lack a robust air force or navy.
Nevertheless,
more than the Houthi missiles, Hezbollah’s attacks heightened the risk of
expanded military conflict in the Middle East by targeting towns in Galilee,
relatively far from the Lebanese border that, unlike border settlements, have
not been evacuated.
Israel has
threatened to wage a Gaza-style campaign against Hezbollah to significantly
degrade the group’s military capabilities and force it to withdraw to the
Litani River, 30 kilometres north of the Lebanese-Israeli border.
Adam Hochstein meets Binyamin Netanyahu. Credit: Israeli
Prime Minister’s Office
The US is
concerned that recent developments differ from past Israeli and Hezbollah
bluster, with Israel gearing up to match words with deeds.
Even so, it
remained unclear whether Mr. Netanyahu was seeking an all-out confrontation or would
opt for intensified strikes against Hezbollah that stop short of sparking a
regional war.
In
an apparent escalation of hostilities, more than 2,700 people, many of them members
of Hezbollah were injured in southern Lebanon and the southern suburbs of
Beirut when their pagers exploded.
Iran’s
ambassador to Lebanon, Mojtaba Amani, was reportedly among the wounded.
Lebanese Health Minister Firass Abiad said at least eight people, including a
child, were killed.
Although
Israel did not claim responsibility, Hezbollah officials described the incident
as “biggest security breach” by Israel since the group was formed.
Hezbollah’s
pagers exploded hours after Israel’s domestic security agency, said it had
foiled an attempt by the group to kill an
unidentified former Israeli security official.
Notwithstanding
the pager explosions, what is clear is that Mr. Netanyahu feels he can
disregard the Americans’ advice and may not even need to coordinate with the
United States, given the Biden administration’s reluctance to apply more than
verbal pressure on Israel and the fact that the United States is in election
mode. The exploding pagers occurred a day after Mr. Hochstein met Mr.
Netanyahu.
Mr. Blinken
appeared to highlight US-Israeli differences as he embarked on his tenth visit
to the Middle East in 11 months.
Mr. Blinken did
not include Israel in his public schedule for the first time. The State Department said the secretary was visiting Egypt
to finalize a revised US-Egyptian-Qatari Gaza ceasefire proposal and attend the
US-Egypt Strategic Dialogue.
Asked earlier
this month whether Mr. Netanyahu was doing enough to secure a ceasefire, Mr. Biden replied, “No.”
Throughout
the war, Mr. Blinken spearheaded the administration’s coordination with Israel
in the ceasefire talks.
Feisal al-Turki speaks at Chatham House on 13 September
2024. Credit: Chatham House
Mr. Netanyahu
will have been buoyed in his hardline approach towards Iran and its non-state
partners by the fact that Saudi Arabia shares his concerns, even if the kingdom
has condemned Israel’s Gaza war conduct and the prime minister’s apparent
refusal to facilitate a ceasefire.
Last week, Turki
al-Faisal, a former Saudi intelligence chief and diplomat who often reflects
Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman’s thinking, called for stronger international
action to halt Iranian support
for the Houthis.
“We have seen
the deployment of European and US fleets along the Red Sea coast, and more can
be done there to interdict the supply of weaponry that comes to the Houthis
from Iran. Putting pressure on Iran by the world community can have a positive
impact on what the Houthis can do in launching these missiles and drones to hit
international commerce,” Mr. Al-Feisal said.
Mr. Al-Feisal
was referring to US and British strikes against Houthi military positions in
response to the group’s attacks on Red Sea shipping.
He asserted
that Iran’s support for Hezbollah, Hamas, and groups in Iraq and Syria violated
understandings underlying the 2022 China-mediated restoration of diplomatic
relations between Saudi Arabia and the Islamic Republic.
Saudi Arabia
broke relations with Iran in 2016 after Iranian mobs ransacked Saudi diplomatic
missions in protest against the kingdom’s execution of a prominent Shiite
cleric.
“The kingdom
would have expected Iran to be more forthcoming in showing not just to us but
to others that it can be a positive factor in securing stability and removing
differences not just with Saudi Arabia but the rest of us,” Mr. Al-Feisal said.
Dr. James M. Dorsey is an Adjunct
Senior Fellow at Nanyang Technological University’s S. Rajaratnam School of
International Studies, and the author of the syndicated column and podcast, The Turbulent World with James M. Dorsey.
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