Incoming IAF chief: Iran is our top concern

Incoming IAF chief: Iran is our top concern – Israel News, Ynetnews.

Maj.-Gen. Amir Eshel said in rare speech last month that nuclear Iran would trigger arms race in Middle East, and should be addressed strategically before all other conflicts

Yoav Zitun
"אנחנו לוקחים סיכונים בגדה המערבית לקידום הפלסטינים" (צילום: רוני אביב, במחנה)

Eshel: Iran’s above all else (Photo: Roni Aviv, Bamahane)

The escalating public discourse over the possibility of a strike on Iran‘s nuclear facilities has put a magnifying glass on incoming IAF Chief Major-General Amir Eshel‘s stance on the issue.

Eshel, whose IAF appointment was announced Monday, seldom expresses his opinion publically – all the more so since becoming the head of the IDF‘s Plans and Policy Directorate in 2008.

But in a rare speech made last month at the Jerusalem Center for Public affairs, Eshel stressed that while the decision to launch an airstrike on the Islamic Republic is left up to the political echelon, Iran is Israel‘s primary concern.

“Iran is above everything, and it must be taken into account, strategically, before the others,” he said. “A nuclear Iran would cause a mighty change in the region. It would trigger an arms race in the Middle East. I’m sure that other nations in the region will attempt to obtain such weapons as well.

“It could create a situation that leads to a global nuclear jungle,” he added. “This is not an official assessment, but the first lesson that leaders in the Middle East learned from the Arab Spring is that they should obtain nuclear weapons … Who would have dared to question (Gaddafi) or Saddam Hussein if they had atom weapons?”

Eshel raised the concern that a nuclear Iran could embolden terror groups that operate with the Islamic Republic’s backing, including Hamas and Hezbollah – a development that would restrict the IDF in Gaza and Lebanon.

Iran precedes Israeli-Palestinian conflict?

He argued that the Iranian issue even trumps Israel’s conflict with the Palestinians, saying that an agreement with the PA won’t bring peace to the region.

“Even if Israel and the Palestinians sign a peace accord tomorrow, it won’t solve the other problems or the Iranian issue,” he said. “An agreement with them won’t create a paradise in the Middle East. I don’t belittle the issue, but if (the agreement) isn’t based on solid security arrangements, it won’t last.”

Eshel noted that as per the government’s order, the IDF supports the Palestinian apparatuses in the West Bank.

“We take many risks in order to help the Palestinians build better lives with a better economy,” he said. “But if we make a mistake here, there won’t be a second chance. This is why we are so determined (to reach an accord), because we already tried in 1993 and in 2000.”

In his speech, Eshel accused the regime in Tehran of running a terrorist state.

“Everyday Iran is fighting everyone, not only through terror but also through economic means,” he said.

Eshel voiced pessimism regarding the outcomes of the turmoil in the surrounding countries, noting that “our estimation that the revolutions would be taken over by other movements have come true.”

“If the economic issues aren’t addressed, a downturn is inevitable,” he said. “The Muslim Brotherhood’s influence in Egypt could spread to the region, including Jordan, Syria and the Palestinian Authority.”

He warned that Syria’s chemical and biological weapons could fall into the hands of terror groups, noting that the country’s air force armament poses a challenge to the IAF.

“Syria has invested over $2 billion in its air force over the past two years,” he said. “We haven’t seen anything like it in the past two decades. They invested great funds in order to undermine our aerial superiority.”

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4 Comments on “Incoming IAF chief: Iran is our top concern”

  1. incaunipocrit's avatar incaunipocrit Says:

    Reblogged this on MOTEK.

  2. incaunipocrit's avatar incaunipocrit Says:

    Reblogged this on The Blogspaper.


  3. The article states “Eshel raised the concern that a nuclear Iran could embolden terror groups that operate with the Islamic Republic’s backing, including Hamas and Hezbollah – a development that would restrict the IDF in Gaza and Lebanon.”

    I do not understand how Israel’s leaders keep undermining our own case. The problem is that if Iran gets the bomb there is a non negligible likelihood that that they WILL USE IT despite the consequences of retaliation from Israel. The crux of the problem is that Iran cannot be deterred. Shia eschatology, the belief in the end of days and the wish to trigger the return of the Hidden 12th Imam, the Mahdi, takes precedence over catastrophic loss of life on the Iranian side. This and not what would happen in Gaza is what Israeli leaders should concentrate their attention to. This is not the opinion of some crazy conspiracy theorists but the opinion of leading western scholars of Islam like Professor Bernard Lewis of Princeton University and Professor Raphael Israeli of Hebrew University. Reza Kahliil, the ex CIA operative who spent 10 years under cover among the Revolutionary Guards shares this view. Some will say that Reza Kahlili is a self proclaimed spy but if this were so and he were a fraud then the former CIA director James Woolsey would not have shared the platform with him at the National Press Club. See MAD is Dead http://www.madisdead.blogspot.com

    So Amir Eshel words would be equivalent to a passenger on a Boeing 777 who had just observed that the left engine has caught fire worrying whether he would in the crowd find a free taxi from the airport

  4. Luis's avatar Luis Says:

    Completely agree with Mladen. Such a regime, once it gets the bomb, will be unstoppable. No deterrence will work, either.
    So, we have to take them down hard this time for little trouble from them in the future to be in store.


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