Up to quite
recently, Arab autocrats promoted an anti-Israel marriage of convenience that
generally fared poorly when things got hot.
Today the autocrats are severely weakened and alternative governance is
rising throughout the Middle East. The
marriage of convenience is effectively nonexistent today.
Instead we have
the noisy threat of rogue players and that includes Iran. Whereas solving Israel’s security situation
meant many players, today it means only solving Iran. It is now becoming clear that no one else
cares particularly and in fact they seriously wish to get on with
business. That essentially also includes
the Palestinians.
I also think
that the Israeli reality is now so large and in fact so promising that the
Arabs can no longer resist the natural attraction. Better, the fixes are generally obvious to
anyone and have even become minor.
Israel has what it set out to acquire which is both strategic and
tactical security in the Sunni world.
Thus the ongoing
Sunni Shite conflict simply ensures that Iran remains isolated.
Israel's New
Strategic Position
TUESDAY, DECEMBER 3, 2013 -
By George Friedman
Israel has expressed serious concerns over the preliminary U.S.-Iranian agreement, which in theory will lift sanctions levied against
Tehran and end its nuclear program. That was to be expected. Less obvious is
why the Israeli government is concerned and how it will change Israel's
strategic position.
Israel's current strategic position is excellent.
After two years of stress, its peace treaty with Egypt remains in place. Syria is in a state of civil war that remains
insoluble. Some sort of terrorist threat might originate there, but no
strategic threat is possible. In Lebanon, Hezbollah does not seem inclined to
wage another war with Israel, and while the group's missile capacity has grown,
Israel appears able to contain the threat they pose without creating a
strategic threat to Israeli national interests. The Jordanian regime, which is
aligned with Israel, probably will withstand the pressure put on it by its
political opponents.
In other words, the situation that has existed
since the Camp David Accords were signed remains in place. Israel's
frontiers are secure from conventional military attack. In addition, the
Palestinians are divided among themselves, and while ineffective, intermittent
rocket attacks from Gaza are likely, there is no Intifada underway in the West
Bank.
Therefore, Israel faces no existential threats, save
one: the possibility that Iran will develop a nuclear weapon and a delivery
system and use it to destroy Israel before it or the United States can prevent
it from doing so. Clearly, a nuclear strike on Tel Aviv would be catastrophic
for Israel. Its ability to tolerate that threat, regardless of how improbable
it may be, is a pressing concern for Israel.
In this context, Iran's nuclear program supersedes
all of Israel's other security priorities. Israeli officials believe their
allies, particularly those in the United States, should share this view. As a
strategic principle, this is understandable. But it is unclear how Israel
intends to apply it. It is also unclear how its application will affect
relations with the United States, without which it cannot cope with the Iranian
threat.
Israel understands that however satisfactory its
current circumstances are, those circumstances are mercurial and to some extent
unpredictable. Israel may not rely heavily on the United States under these
circumstances, but these circumstances may not be permanent. There are plenty
of scenarios in which Israel would not be able to manage security threats
without American assistance. Thus, Israel has an overriding interest in
maintaining its relationship with the United States and in ensuring Iran never
becomes a nuclear state. So any sense that the United States is moving away
from its commitment to Israel, or that it is moving in a direction where it
might permit an Iranian nuclear weapon, is a crisis. Israel's response to the
Iran talks -- profound unhappiness without outright condemnation -- has to be
understood in this context, and the assumptions behind it have to be examined.
More than Uranium
Iran does not appear to have a deliverable nuclear
weapon at this point. Refining uranium is a necessary but completely
insufficient step in developing a weapon. A nuclear weapon is much more than
uranium. It is a set of complex technologies, not the least of which are
advanced electrical systems and sensors that, given the amount of time the
Iranians have needed just to develop not-quite-enough enriched uranium, seems
beyond them. Iran simply does not have sufficient fuel to produce a device.
Nor it does not have a demonstrated ability to turn
that device into a functioning weapon. A weapon needs to be engineered to
extreme tolerances, become rugged enough to function on delivery and be compact
enough to be delivered. To be delivered, its must be mounted on a very reliable
missile or aircraft. Iran has neither reliable missiles nor aircraft with the
necessary range to attack Israel. The idea that the Iranians will use the next
six months for a secret rush to complete the weapon simply isn't the way it
works.
Before there is a weapon there must be a test.
Nations do not even think of deploying nuclear weapons without extensive
underground tests -- not to see if they have uranium but to test that the more
complex systems work. That is why they can't secretly develop a weapon: They
themselves won't know they have a workable weapon without a test. In all
likelihood, the first test would fail, as such things do. Attempting their
first test in an operational attack would result not only in failure but also
in retaliation.
Of course, there are other strategies for delivering
a weapon if it were built. One is the use of a ship to deliver it to the
Israeli coast. Though this is possible, the Israelis operate an extremely
efficient maritime interdiction system, and the United States monitors Iranian
ports. The probability is low that a ship would go unnoticed. Having a nuclear
weapon captured or detonated elsewhere would infuriate everyone in the eastern
Mediterranean, invite an Israeli counterstrike and waste a weapon
Otherwise, Iran theoretically could drive a nuclear
weapon into Israel by road. But these weapons are not small. There is such a
thing as a suitcase bomb, but that is a misleading name; it is substantially
larger than a suitcase, and it is also the most difficult sort of device to
build. Because of its size, it is not particularly rugged. You don't just toss
it into the trunk, drive 1,500 miles across customs checkpoints and set it off.
There are many ways you can be captured -- particularly crossing into Israel --
and many ways to break the bomb, which require heavy maintenance. Lastly, even
assuming Iran's acquisition of a nuclear weapon, its use against Israel would
kill as many Muslims -- among them Shia -- as Israelis, an action tantamount to
geopolitical suicide for Tehran.
A Tempered
Response
One of the reasons Israel has not attempted an
airstrike, and one of the reasons the United States has refused to consider it,
is that Iran's prospects for developing a nuclear weapon are still remote. Another reason is difficulty. Israel's air force is too far removed and too
small to carry out simultaneous strikes on multiple facilities. If the Israelis
forward-deployed to other countries, the Iranians would spot them. The Israelis
can't be certain which sites are real and which are decoys. The Iranians have
had years to harden their facilities, so normal ordnance likely would be
inadequate. Even more serious is the fact that battle damage assessment --
judging whether the site has been destroyed -- would be prohibitively
difficult.
For these reasons, the attack could not simply be
carried out from the air. It would require special operations forces on the
ground to try to determine the effects. That could result in casualties and
prisoners, if it could be done at all. And at that the Israelis can only be
certain that they have destroyed all the sites they knew about, not the ones
that their intelligence didn't know about. Some will dismiss this as
overestimating Iranian capabilities. This frequently comes from those most
afraid that Tehran can build a nuclear weapon and a delivery system. If it
could do the latter, it could harden sites and throw off intelligence gathering.
The United States would be able to mount a much more robust attack than the
Israelis, but it is unclear whether it would be robust enough. And in any case,
all the other problems -- the reliability of intelligence, determining whether
the site were destroyed -- would still apply.
But ultimately, the real reason Israel has not
attacked Iran's nuclear sites is that the Iranians are so far from having a
weapon. If they were closer, the Israelis would have attacked regardless of the
difficulty. The Americans, on the other hand, saw an opportunity in the fact
that there are no weapons yet and that the sanctions were hurting the Iranians.
Knowing that they were not in a hurry to complete and knowing that they were
hurting economically, the Iranians likewise saw an opportunity to better their
position.
From the American point of view, the nuclear program
was not the most pressing issue, even though Washington knew it had to be
stopped. What the Americans wanted was an understanding with the Iranians,
whereby their role in the region would be balanced against those of other
countries, particularly Saudi Arabia, the Arabian emirates and to some extent
Israel. As I've argued, the United States is still interested in what happens
in the region, but it does not want to continue to use force there. Washington
wants to have multiple relations with regional actors, not just Israel and
Saudi Arabia.
Israel's response to the U.S.-Iran talks should be
understood in this way. The Israelis tempered their response initially because
they knew the status of Iran's nuclear program. Even though a weapon is still a
grave concern, it is a much longer-term problem than the Israelis admit
publicly. (Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has tried hard to convince
the United States otherwise, the United States isn't biting.) Since an attack
has every chance of failing, the Israelis recognize that these negotiations are
the most likely way to eliminate the weapons, and that if the negotiations
fail, no one will be in a more dangerous position for trying. Six months won't
make a difference.
The Israelis could not simply applaud the process
because there is, in fact, a strategic threat to Israel embedded in the talks.
Israel has a strategic dependency on the United States. Israel has never been
comfortable with Washington's relationship with Saudi Arabia, but there was
nothing the Israelis could do about it, so they accommodated it. But they
understand that the outcome of these talks, if successful, means more than the
exchange of a nuclear program for eased sanctions; it means the beginning of a
strategic alignment with Iran.
In fact, the United States was aligned with Iran
until 1979. As Richard Nixon's China initiative shows, ideology can relent to
geopolitical reality. On the simplest level, Iran needs investment, and
American companies want to invest. On the more complex level, Iran needs to be
certain that Iraq is friendly to its interests and that neither Russia nor
Turkey can threaten it in the long run. Only the United States can ensure that.
For their part, the Americans want a stronger Iran to contain Saudi support for
Sunni insurgents, compel Turkey to shape its policy more narrowly, and remind
Russia that the Caucasus, and particularly Azerbaijan, have no threat from the
south and can concentrate on the north. The United States is trying to create a
multipolar region to facilitate a balance-of-power strategy in place of
American power.
Israel in 10
Years
I began by pointing out how secure Israel is
currently. Looking down the road 10 years, Israel cannot assume that this
strategic configuration will remain in place. Egypt's future is uncertain. The
emergence of a hostile Egyptian government is not inconceivable. Syria, like
Lebanon, appears to be fragmented. What will come of this is unclear. And
whether in 10 years the Hashemite Kingdom of Jordan will remain Hashemite or
become a Palestinian state is worthy of contemplation. None have military power
now, but then Egypt went from disaster in 1967 to a very capable force in 1973.
They had a Soviet patron. They might have another patron in 10 years.
Right now, Israel does not need the United States,
nor American aid, which means much less to them now than it did in 1973. They
need it as a symbol of American commitment and will continue to need it. But
the real Israeli fear is that the United States is moving away from direct
intervention to a more subtle form of manipulation. That represents a threat to
Israel if Israel ever needs direct intervention rather than manipulation. But
more immediately, it threatens Israel because the more relationships the United
States has in the region, the less significant Israel is to Washington's
strategy. If the United States maintains this relationship with Saudi Arabia,
Turkey and others, Israel becomes not the anchor of U.S. policy but one of many
considerations. This is Israel's real fear in these negotiations.
In the end, Israel is a small and weak power. Its
power has been magnified by the weakness of its neighbors. That weakness is not
permanent, and the American relationship has changed in many ways since 1948.
Another shift seems to be underway. The Israelis used to be able to depend on
massive wellsprings of support in the U.S. public and Congress. In recent
years, this support has become less passionate, though it has not dried up
completely. What Israel has lost is twofold. First, it has lost control of America's
regional strategy. Second, it has lost control of America's political process.
Netanyahu hates the U.S.-Iran talks not because of nuclear weapons but because
of the strategic shift of the United States. But his response must remain
measured because Israel has less influence in the United States than it once did.
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