Iran’s networked defense strategy is a double-edged sword
Binyamin Netanyahu (left) and Hassan Nasrallah (right).
Credit: DNYUZ
By James M.
Dorsey
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Israel’s killing of Hezbollah leader Hassan Nasrallah has turned Iran’s asymmetric forward defense strategy into a double-edged sword.
The killing came on the heels of the assassination in July in Tehran of Hamas political leader Ismail Haniyeh, multiple body blows to Hezbollah, and the death of a senior Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps commander, Brigadier General Abbas Nilforoushan, in the attack that killed Mr. Nasrallah.
Iranian Supreme Guide Ali Khamenei sent Mr. Niloforoushan to Beirut to warn Mr. Nasrallah of Israel’s plan to kill the Hezbollah leader and urge him to leave Lebanon.
Israel’s weakening of Hezbollah, the world’s best armed, most battle-hardened non-state militia, reduced the group’s value as a cornerstone of Iran’s forward defense, even though Hezbollah retained its ability to attack Israel with missiles and stand its ground in initial face-to-face combat with invading Israeli forces.
Brigadier General Abbas Nilforoushan (left) and Hassan
Nasrallah. Credit: Khamenei.ir
Iran long
avoided exposing Hezbollah to Israel’s wrath because of its core position in
the Islamic Republic’s defense strategy, involving its network of allied
militant militias in Lebanon, Yemen, Palestine, and Iraq.
"I don't
think Iran wants to sacrifice Hezbollah or bring it into the fray. It is the
top of its spear, and Iran wants to preserve it,” said analyst Ali Vaez,
speaking in April as Iran considered its response to an Israeli attack on the
Iranian consulate in Damascus.
As a result,
Iran, despite its verbal bravado and rhetoric, watched with a degree of
trepidation Hezbollah initiate hostilities with Israel a day after Hamas last
year launched its October 7 attack.
Iran
appreciated that the hostilities center-staged its Axis of Resistance, which
groups Syria and Hezbollah, Hamas, Yemen’s Houthis, and Iraqi Shiite militias,
but worried that it put the grouping’s crown jewel at risk.
Israel’s
assault on Hezbollah turned Iran’s fear into a reality.
Hezbollah ground forces. Credit: Business Today
Hezbollah’s
military strength traditionally has been anchored in its ability to confront
Israel on the ground as it did in the 2006 Lebanon war and its missile arsenal, which
included long-range precision-guided missiles.
“The genuine
strength of the Iranian-backed militias in the region has always been more one
of endurance, employing guerrilla warfare tactics over generations. Precisely,
this form of combat led to Israel’s withdrawal from southern
Lebanon in 2000 and,
later, from Gaza in 2005,” said journalist Mohammad Mazhari.
By damaging
the Axis of Resistance’s crown jewel, Israel fueled perceptions that Iranian
resolve had weakened. Shiite Muslim assertions that Iran had failed Hezbollah
compounded the perceptions.
To be sure,
thousands poured into Beirut’s streets in the hours after Mr. Nasrallah’s
killing to mourn his death. They chanted, “Labayka, ya Nasrallah—We are at your
service, Nasrallah.”
Crowds mourn Hassan Nasrallah’s death. Credit: Tasnim
News
However, some
expressed anger at Iran for failing to fully back Hezbollah in its war of
attrition with Israel. “Iran sold us out,” said one man, reflecting a widespread
sentiment among Hezbollah supporters on social media as well as debate in Iran.
“Hezbollah sacrificed itself for Iran,
but Iran will not sacrifice for Hezbollah,” said another. A third charged that "Khamenei has a habit of abandoning his
allies."
Mr. Khamenei initially fueled anti-Iranian sentiment by suggesting that Hezbollah and
Iran’s other non-state allies rather than the Islamic Republic would take
revenge on Israel for Mr. Nasrallah’s killing.
The criticism
paralleled hardline Iranian assertions that Israel would not have gunned down
Mr. Nasrallah and much of his military command if the Islamic Republic had responded
forcefully to Mr. Haniyeh’s assassination.
Blaming newly
installed Iranian President Masoud Pezeshkian’s efforts to rebuild bridges to
the West and achieve a lifting of US sanctions, the hardliners argued that
Iran’s failure to respond painted it as weak in the eyes of Israel and the
Islamic Republic’s partners.
“The term
#StrategicPatience is nothing but a lie. The reality is that we are weaker than our enemy, and instead of addressing our
deficiency and striving to become stronger, we boasted and bluffed. Now, it’s
time to put those words and bravado to the test, but we have nothing to show
and have fallen silent,” tweeted Mohammad Hamid Sesanijad, who describes
himself as an avowed supporter of the Islamic revolution dedicated to the
destruction of Israel.
Iran vowed
revenge for the Haniyeh killing but failed to enact its threat to give Gaza
ceasefire negotiations a chance, avoid being blamed for their potential
breakdown, and ensure that the Islamic Republic remained on the fringe of the
Middle East fray.
With its
credibility on the line, Iran bit the bullet by launching almost 200 missiles
at Israel. At the same time, it sought to avoid civilian casualties by giving
the United States and Russia advance notice of the attack and targeting
military and intelligence sites.
Major General Mohammad Baqeri. Credit: SANA
Furthermore,
defying Israeli threats that it would not allow Beirut’s Rafic Hariri
International Airport to be used for anything but civilian traffic, Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi landed aboard an Iranian government
aircraft.
Last week,
Lebanon refused to allow an Iranian aircraft
to enter its airspace
after Israel threatened to use force if it landed.
Major General
Mohammad Baqeri, the chief of staff of the Iranian Armed Forces, insisted, “We targeted
military and intelligence sites in Israel and deliberately refrained from
hitting economic and industrial locations.”
“However, if
Israel retaliates, our response will be more forceful,” Mr. Baqeri added.
Israeli
analysts cite fragments of missiles that hit a
school and a restaurant
as evidence that Iran targeted civilian objectives.
It was not
clear whether the fragments stemmed from missiles intercepted by Israel’s air
defense that dropped randomly or whether they belonged to a missile that
targeted the site where the fragments landed.
Middle East
scholar Lina Khatib suggested Iran calibrated its response to Israeli actions as
“an attempt at saving face while
avoiding provoking an Israeli attack
on Iran’s vital resources.”
In doing so,
Iran made Israel the judge of whether it succeeds. Iran could come to regret a
move that puts Israel in the driver’s seat.
Israel
retains the notion that force is the only thing its Middle Eastern neighbours
understand, even if, often excessive, Israeli force has reduced rather than
enhanced opportunities to resolve conflicts through negotiations.
That is as
true for Israeli perceptions of the Lebanese as it is for Israeli views of
Palestinians.
An American
diplomat working on Lebanon in the 1980s quoted a senior Israeli official as telling
him during the 1982 Israeli invasion of Lebanon, The Lebanese “are almost all
mountain freeholders. They are and have always been resistant to authority,
even their own higher authorities. They are and have always been armed to the
teeth. And most of all, they like killing people."
The Israeli
official was speaking as Hezbollah was founded with Iranian assistance in
response to the Israeli invasion and Shiite grievances rooted in Lebanon’s
complex political arrangements that are based on an outdated pre-state 1932
census.
Binyamin Netanyahu’s vision of the Middle East. Credit:
GPO
Some analysts
believe Iran’s missile attack gives Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu the
opening to escalate developments into an all-out war with Iran that would
reshape the Middle East in his mould.
Hardliners
have pushed for Israeli retaliatory strikes at Iran’s nuclear and/or oil
facilities.
“Israel has
now its greatest opportunity in 50 years to change the face of the Middle East,” former Israeli Prime Minister
Naftali Bennett wrote on X.
Reuel Marc
Gerecht, a former CIA officer and senior fellow at the hardline,
Washington-based Foundation for the Defense of Democracies. asserted that an
Israeli failure to respond by attacking Iran’s nuclear facilities amounted to Israeli acceptance of Iran
as a nuclear power.
More moderate
voices as well as Iran hope President Joe Biden will convince Mr. Netanyahu to
limit Israel's response to a symbolic military action.
Mr. Biden
fears that the Israeli prime minister could exploit the final stretch to the
November 5 US presidential election to drag the United States into a Middle
East war when US politicians are least likely to stand up to Israel.
International
affairs scholar Vali Nasr suggested Iran may be miscalculating.
“Tehran is likely overestimating
Washington’s willingness and ability to prevent such a war… As Iran gets locked into a
tit-for-tat escalation, US sympathies will lie with Israel, and if Washington
intervenes, it will be to prevent Iran from responding to Israel,” Mr. Nasr
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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