Archive for March 15, 2012

Netanyahu Makes the Case For Going It Alone Against Iran | TIME.com

March 15, 2012

Netanyahu Makes the Case For Going It Alone Against Iran | Global Spin | TIME.com.

By his own account Israeli prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu went to Washington this month with two goals. One was to continue his 15-year campaign to push Iran’s nuclear program to the top of the world’s agenda.  That mission was accomplished, Netanyahu declared to the Knesset on Wednesday. The other aim was to hear Washington acknowledge that Israel has the right to launch a military operation on its own against Iran if it sees fit. “This position was positively received in the United States, I would even say in the most profound way,” he said.

 

With that, the Israeli premier launched an extended argument for defying American requests for restraint and going ahead with a strike on Iran.  He cited as precedent the  bold calls of three of his predecessors: David Ben-Gurion’s decision to announce independence in 1948 despite the US Secretary of State’s advice to wait; Levi Eshkol’s decision to launch the 1967 Six-Day War despite President Lyndon Johnson’s warning; and Menachem Begin’s 1981 decision to strike Saddam Hussein’s nuclear reactor at Osirak (though Ronald Reagan appeared mostly amused when he heard about that strike, famously remarking “Boys will be boys!”).

“I presented the example I just gave you to my hosts in Washington,” Netanyahu reported, “and I believe that the first goal I set, to strengthen the recognition of Israel’s right to defend itself – I think that goal was achieved.”

Never mind that, by the end of the speech, Netanyahu sounded as though the target of an Israeli attack would be the Gaza Strip, the Palestinian enclave from which militants launched more than 300 missiles over the previous week, many of them supplied by Iran. “Gaza equals Iran,” he said, concluding the speech with the warning: “Sooner or later, Iran’s terror base in Gaza will be uprooted.” Analysts came away from the session persuaded the first target remains Tehran, and debated whether he was indeed serious about going it alone, or merely giving the appearance in order to keep international pressure on Iran.

The liberal Haaretz was alarmed.  ”Netanyahu is preparing Israeli public opinion for a war on Iran,”was the headline on the column of editor Aluf Benn.  Benn quarreled with Netanyahu’s rendering of history, noting that in both 1948 and 1967 the Americans had privately signaled their approval of Israel acting. But the columnist took this as a signal that Netanyahu had gotten a similar wink from President Obama.  He found supporting evidence in a 2,500 word column by the editor of a rival newspaper, Israel Hayom, the free daily owned by fierce Netanyahu (and Newt Gingrich) supporter Sheldon Adelson.  In the piece, Amos Regev argued that the cost in Israeli lives from any Iranian retaliation must be measured against the far more devastating impact of an Iranian nuclear weapon launched at Israel.  The editor also insisted that, whatever was said in Washington, Obama cannot be relied upon to act militarily against Iran down the road if Israel does not soon, before Iran moves more of its nuclear apparatus deep underground. “With or without the Americans, it will be difficult. It will be bold. But it is possible,” Regev wrote.

The question, of course, is whether it will also be effective.  As we reported last month, a senior Israeli commander warned Netanyahu’s inner cabinet in September that the country’s air force could not expect to set back Iran’s nuclear program by more than a matter of months — a year at most. “I informed the Cabinet we have no ability to hit the Iranian nuclear program in a meaningful way,” a senior security official quoted the commander as saying. “If I get the order, I will do it, but we don’t have the ability to hit in a meaningful way.”

Meanwhile, the economic sanctions on Iran bite deeper and deeper. The Financial Times reports that the Islamic Republic’s oil production has dropped to a ten-year low and is still falling.  With its central bank sanctioned and Iran now excluded from the international SWIFT system crucial to international banking, the government has been reduced to accepting Turkish lira and other local currencies (instead of more desirable US Dollars or Euros) for its petroleum. It’ll even take canned goods, or lawn mowers. What have you got?  ”A separate barter arrangement also exists,” the Iranian state press service quoted central banker Mahmoud Bahami as saying. “Iran imports goods from China and India instead of the hard currency and faces no problem in this regard.”

It’s impossible, of course, to know what Netanyahu really intends.  He may not yet know himself.  But in the meantime, the more intent he appears on launching an Israeli strike, the more zealous Europe and others become about applying the coercive economic pressure that might bring force the mullahs to reappraise their relationship with the International Atomic Energy Commission.  Longtime masters of ambiguity, the Iranians may have met their match in Bibi.

“Only one thing is clear,” writes Dan Margalit elsewhere in Israel Hayom: “If there is any real chance of getting Iran to stop its nuclear development without the use of Israeli and/or American and/or European force, it is based on the ability of Netanyahu and his ministers to create a credible atmosphere, to prove that their warnings are not merely hot air.

US denies sending warning to Iran via Russia

March 15, 2012

US denies sending warning to Ira… JPost – Iranian Threat – News.

By REUTERS
03/15/2012 19:50
State department says Hillary Clinton did not ask Russia to warn Iran that nuke negotiations were its “last chance.”

US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton
By REUTERS/Jonathan Ernst

WASHINGTON – The United States denied on Thursday a Russian media report that Secretary of State Hillary Clinton had asked Russia to warn Iran that it was facing its “last chance” to resolve the dispute over its nuclear program diplomatically.

“The secretary did not send a warning to the Iranians through (Russian) Foreign Minister (Sergei) Lavrov,” State Department spokeswoman Victoria Nuland told reporters when asked about a report on Wednesday in the Moscow daily Kommersant.

Asked if Clinton had used the word “last” in talks with Lavrov on Monday, Nuland replied: “She didn’t use that adjective in her meeting.”

The well-connected Russian newspaper quoted a Russian diplomatic source as saying the United States had asked Russia to warn Iran’s leadership that forthcoming talks with six world powers over its nuclear program would be Tehran’s “last chance.”

The United States, Britain, France, Russia, China and Germany accepted an offer last week from Tehran for new talks on Iran’s nuclear energy program, which the West fears is a front to create a nuclear weapon.

Iran, which denies seeking nuclear weapons, offered to bring unspecified “new initiatives” to the table.

“The Americans are insisting that it (the meeting) is the last chance for Tehran,” Kommersant said. “Such a position, the source told Kommersant, was stated by Hillary Clinton at talks with Sergei Lavrov. She also asked her Russian colleague to pass on this message to Iranian authorities, with whom Washington does not have any links.”

Russian Foreign Ministry spokesman Alexander Lukashevich said he could neither confirm nor deny the information published in Kommersant. He did not elaborate.

Top Israel official: Move to cut Iran from SWIFT network is ‘mortal blow’ to Tehran

March 15, 2012

Top Israel official: Move to cut Iran from SWIFT network is ‘mortal blow’ to Tehran – Haaretz Daily Newspaper | Israel News.

Comment comes after world’s largest financial transfer system announced it would disconnect Iranian banks targeted by EU nuclear sanctions; Netanyahu reportedly discussed the move in recent meeting with Obama, Canada PM.

By Barak Ravid

A top Israeli official congratulated a decision by the world’s largest financial money transfer network to cut off Iranian banks targeted by EU sanctions from the system, saying that the move represented a “mortal blow” to the Iranian regime.

Earlier Thursday, the Society for Worldwide Interbank Financial Telecommunication (SWIFT) indicated that those financial institutions hit by EU measures would be removed from the network as of Saturday, March 17.

Benjamin Netanyahu and Barack Obama - Reuters Prime Minister Netanyahu and President Obama.
Photo by: Reuters

The move is an unprecedented measure that will effectively prevent Iranian institutions from electronically transferring global funds.

“The new European Council decision, as confirmed by the Belgian Treasury, prohibits companies such as SWIFT to continue to provide specialized financial messaging services to EU-sanctioned Iranian banks,” the statement said, adding that “SWIFT is incorporated under Belgian law and has to comply with this decision as confirmed by its home country government.”

In a response to the SWIFT statement, a top Israeli official lauded the planned measure, saying that it “represented a mortal blow to the Iranian regime.”

An Israeli official indicated that Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu raised the issue of disconnecting the Iranian banks from the SWIFT system during his recent conversations with U.S. President Barack Obama as well as with Canadian Prime Minister Stephen Harper.

According to the official, Netanyahu told Obama that “we need SWIFT swiftly.”

In response to SWIFT’s Thursday announcement, the Prime Minister’s Office released a statement later in the day, saying that “prime minister Netanyahu congratulated SWIFT for its decision to cut the Iranian banks from the system.”

Speaking earlier Thursday, SWIFT CEO Lázaro Campos said that the EU decision to sanction Iranian banks forced “SWIFT to take action,” adding, “Disconnecting banks is an extraordinary and unprecedented step for SWIFT. It is a direct result of international and multilateral action to intensify financial sanctions against Iran.”

Iran promises Hamas support during Zahar visit

March 15, 2012

Iran promises Hamas support during Zahar v… JPost – Middle East.

By JPOST.COM STAFF
03/15/2012 17:34
Iranian Foreign Minister Salehi says Iran “fully” backs Palestinians in meeting with Hamas leader Mahmoud Zahar, says he is “confident the Palestinians will win the struggle.”

Iranian FM Ali Akbar Salehi
By REUTERS

Hamas leader Mahmoud Zahar was in Iran Thursday, meeting with leaders to gather support following a weekend of military exchanges with Israel, Iranian state-run news agency IRNA reported.

Zahar met with Iranian Foreign Minister Ali Akbar Salehi, according to the report, who expressed his full support for the Palestinian cause and condemned the “dastard atrocities of the Zionist regime.”

Salehi told Zahar that the recent Israeli air strikes in Gaza were a sign of Israel’s weakness.

“We are quite confident that the Palestinians will win the struggle,” Salahi said.

According to IRNA, Zahar praised and thanked Iran for its support.

On Monday, Hezbollah secretary-general Hassan Nasrallah met with a Hamas delegation headed by Musa Abu Marzouk, Arab media reported Wednesday.

Discussing the recent violence in Gaza and southern Israel, according to the report, both sides agreed that “the Israeli enemy bears full responsibility…the situation aims at putting more pressure on the resistance… this forces preparations for any new war staged by Israel.”

On Wednesday, Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu said Iran is the primary actor responsible for escalations in the Gaza Strip. “Gaza is Iran,” the prime minister told a special Knesset session in which he was obligated to speak.

Connecting the recent round of violence in Gaza and the Iranian nuclear threat, Netanyahu said he is not prepared to accept a situation in which the country, which backs terrorist groups, becomes a nuclear power.

Rocket attacks on Israel renewed on Thursday after IAF warplanes targeted a rocket launching site and a smuggling tunnel in the southern Gaza Strip overnight Wednesday. Palestinians did not report casualties in those strikes.

The IAF attacks were in response to two Grad-model Katyusha rockets that terrorists in Gaza fired towards Beersheba.

Ya’akov Katz contributed to this report.

Most of Israel security cabinet backs Iran strike

March 15, 2012

Most of Israel security cabinet backs Iran strike: report – Money – Zawya.

JERUSALEM, Mar 15, 2012 (AFP) – A majority of Israel’s security cabinet now supports an attack on Iran in a bid to end its nuclear programme, an Israeli newspaper reported on Thursday, citing political sources it did not identify.

Writing in the Maariv daily, influential columnist Ben Caspit said most of the 14-member security cabinet was now leaning in favour of a pre-emptive strike on Iran’s nuclear facilities, a move which he said was supported by both Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and Defence Minister Ehud Barak.

“According to the most recent assessments, at this point eight ministers tend to support Netanyahu and Barak’s position, while six object to it,” Caspit wrote.

“It should be noted that the security cabinet has yet to hold a decisive meeting on the issue and the assessments are based on secret talks being held between the prime minister and his ministers, one at a time.”

 

Caspit noted that Netanyahu has convened neither his security cabinet, nor the more intimate Forum of Eight — a consultative body of his closest ministers — since returning from talks about Iran with US President Barack Obama.

“The longer the silence from Netanyahu and Barak’s direction continues, the more concerned the opponents of an attack on Iran become,” Caspit said.

 

Ynet news website reported on Thursday that the members of Netanyahu’s inner circle had expressed resentment about his lack of consultation with them in recent weeks.

They said they had not been briefed on either Iran or on the recent violence in and around Gaza.

“Some of the ministers feel that they are being used as a rubber stamp,” a cabinet member told Ynet.

“We weren’t briefed on the situation in Gaza even once. Netanyahu apparently feels confident enough to make all the decisions by himself, or with Barak, without including any of the other ministers.”

Sources close to Netanyahu confirmed that neither the security cabinet nor the Forum of Eight had been convened recently, Ynet said, but added that Netanyahu “consults with the relevant people constantly.”

In recent months speculation has been rising about the possibility of an Israeli attack on Iran’s nuclear programme, which the Jewish state and much of the international community believe masks a weapons drive.

Iran denies the charges, saying the programme is for civil power generation and medical purposes only.

The United States has said it opposes an attack for now, calling for time to allow tough new sanctions against Tehran to bite.

Difficult. Daring. Doable.

March 15, 2012

Israel Hayom | Difficult. Daring. Doable

Never underestimate the capabilities of the IDF. It has achieved the impossible before • If it took Iran 20 years to get their nuclear program to where it is today, who is to say it can recover in a year? Yes, we can strike Iran. And yes, we can succeed.

Amos Regev
We shouldn’t be arrogant, but we shouldn’t underestimate our own capabilities either.

|

Photo credit: Raphael Ben Ari

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Netanyahu is preparing Israeli public opinion for a war on Iran

March 15, 2012

Netanyahu is preparing Israeli public opinion for a war on Iran – Haaretz Daily Newspaper | Israel News.

In response to Netanyahu’s AIPAC speech, Haaretz’s editor-in-chief says that what looks like a preparation for war, acts like a preparation for war, and quacks like a preparation for war, is a preparation for war.

By Aluf Benn

Since his return from Washington, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has mainly been preoccupied with one thing: Preparing public opinion for war against Iran.

Netanyahu and Barak - IDF Spokesperson Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and Defense Minister Ehud Barak at the IDF air base in Hatzerim.
Photo by: IDF Spokesperson

Netanyahu is attempting to convince the Israeli public that the Iranian threat is a tangible and existential one, and that there is only one effective way to stop it and prevent a “second Holocaust”: An Israeli military attack on Iran’s nuclear infrastructure, which is buried deep underground.

In his speech before the Knesset on Wednesday, Netanyahu urged his colleagues to reject claims that Israel is too weak to go it alone in a war against a regional power such as Iran and therefore needs to rely on the United States, which has much greater military capabilities, to do the job and remove the threat.

According to polls published last week, this is the position of most of the Israeli public, which supports a U.S. strike on Iran, but is wary of sending the IDF to the task without the backing of the friendly superpower.

Netanyahu presented three examples in which his predecessors broke the American directive and made crucial decisions regarding the future of Israel: the declaration of independence in 1948, starting the Six Day War in 1967 and the bombing of the nuclear reactor in Iraq in 1981.

The lesson was clear: Just as David Ben-Gurion, Levi Eshkol and Menachem Begin said “no” to the White House, Netanyahu also needs not be alarmed by President Obama’s opposition to an attack on Iran. Netanyahu believes that, as in the previous incidents, the U.S. may grumble at first, but will then quickly adopt the Israeli position and provide Israel with support and backing in the international community.

If Netanyahu had submitted his speech as a term paper to his father the history professor, he would have received a very poor grade. In 1948, the U.S. State Department, headed by George Marshall, opposed the declaration of independence and supported a United Nations trusteeship for Palestine. But President Truman had other considerations.

Like Obama today, Truman was also a democratic president contending for his reelection, who needed the support of the Jewish voters and donors. Under those circumstances, Truman rejected Marshall’s advice, and listened to his political adviser Clark Clifford, who pressured him to recognize the Zionist state. And indeed, Truman sent a telegram with an official recognition of Israel just 11 minutes after Ben-Gurion finished reading the Scroll of Independence. The U.S. opposition to the recognition of Israel was halted at the desk of the president, who repelled the explanations by the Secretary of State and the “Arabists” in his office.

In 1967, the official U.S. position called on Israel to hold back and refrain from going to war, but a different message was passing through the secret channels: go “bomb Nasser,” reported Levi Eshkol’s envoys to Washington, Meir Amit and Avraham Harman. This message tipped the scales in favor of going to war. In 1981, Begin did not bother asking the Americans their opinion before attacking Iraq, but lulled them to sleep and launched a surprise attack.

In these past incidents, Israel acted against the U.S. position formally, but made sure that the Americans will accept the results of the action and support it in retrospect. And indeed, the U.S. recognized Israel in 1948, allowed it to control the territories annexed in 1967, and made do with weak condemnations of the attack on the Iraq nuclear reactor in 1981.

That being the case, then Netanyahu is hinting that in his Washington visit, he received Obama’s tacit approval for an Israeli attack against Iran – under the guise of opposition. Obama will speak out against it but act for it, just as the past U.S. administrations speak against the settlements in the territories but allow their expansion. And in this manner Netanyahu summarized the visit: “I presented before my hosts the examples that I just noted before you, and I believe that the first objective that I presented – to fortify the recognition of Israel’s right to defend itself – I think that objective has been achieved.”

This morning, the editor-in-chief of the Israel Hayom newspaper, Amos Regev, published on his front page an enthusiastic op-ed in support of a war against Iran. Regev writes what Netanyahu cannot say in his speeches: that we cannot rely on Obama – who wasn’t even a mechanic in the armored corps – but only on ourselves. “Difficult, daring, but possible,” Regev promised. We need not be alarmed by the Iranian response: the arrow would take down the Shahab missiles, and Hezbollah and Hamas would hesitate about entering a war. The damage would be reminiscent of the Iraqi scuds in the 1991 Gulf War – unpleasant, but definitely not too bad. The analysts are weak, but the soldiers and the residents of the Home Front have motivation. So onward, to battle!

To use Netanyahu’s “duck allegory”, what looks like a preparation for war, acts like a preparation for war, and quacks like a preparation for war, is a preparation for war, and not just a “bluff” or a diversion tactic. Until his trip to Washington, Netanyahu and his supporters in the media refrained from such explicit wording and made do with hints. But since he’s been back, Netanyahu has issued an emergency call-up for himself and the Israeli public.

Gantz to visit US in 1st visit as IDF chief

March 15, 2012

Gantz to visit US in 1st visit as IDF chief – JPost – Defense.

03/15/2012 13:44
Gantz to meet with US Joint Chiefs Chair Dempsey on the heels of Netanyahu and Obama’s meeting on the Iranian nuclear threat.

IDF Chief of General Staff Benny Gantz [file]
By Ronen Zvulun / Reuters

IDF Chief of Staff Lt.-Gen. Benny Gantz will leave Thursday night for the United States and Canada for talks aimed at increasing coordination regarding Iran.

Gantz was originally scheduled to leave for the US earlier in the week and to speak at the Friends of the IDF gala dinner in New York. He decided to postpone the visit due to the continued rocket fire from the Gaza Strip into southern Israel.

Gantz will open his trip in Canada, where he will meet with Chief of the Defense Staff Gen. Walt Natynczyk and Defense Minister Peter MacKay.

Gantz will then head to Washington where he will meet next week with US Chairman of the Joint Chiefs Gen. Martin Dempsey as well as with other senior Pentagon and administration officials.

It will be Gantz’s first trip to the US since his appointment as IDF chief of staff last February. Between 2007 and 2009, Gantz served as the IDF attaché to the US and Canada.

Gantz’s visit comes on the heels of Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu’s meeting in Washington DC last week with US President Barack Obama which focused on the Iranian nuclear threat.

Media reports have speculated that Netanyahu and Obama discussed possible US military assistance to Israel ahead of a potential IDF strike against Iran’s nuclear facilities.

Defense sources said that Gantz’s visit will be a continuation of those talks aimed at increasing US-Israeli military cooperation in light of the growing threats Israel faces in the region.

Turkey says 1,000 Syrians fled in last 24 hours

March 15, 2012

Turkey says 1,000 Syrians fled in last 24 … JPost – Middle East.

 

By REUTERS

 

03/15/2012 15:58
Syria’s government offensive in northwest sharply increases flow of refugees to Turkey; Numbers of refugees expected to grow.

Turks protest Syria in Istanbul.

By REUTERS/Osman Orsal

GUVECCI, Turkey – A government offensive in Syria’s northwest has sharply increased the flow of refugees into Turkey, with about 1,000 crossing in the last 24 hours, Turkish officials said on Thursday.

The numbers fleeing were expected to grow further as long as fighting continued around the town of Idlib, close to the Turkish border, one Turkish official said; but he declined to say how many more Turkey was expecting.

Turkey is wary of any military interventions in Syria, fearing a broader civil war could spill over its borders; but it has signaled that a tide of refugees is one of the factors that could trigger efforts to establish a ‘safe zone’ inside Syria.

Officials have said that the other red line for Turkey would be if Syrian President Bashar Assad’s forces began massacres in Syrian cities. Turkey has said it would not take unilateral action and any initiative should come from the Arab League.

“There has been an increase in those fleeing from Syria to our country,” Turkish Foreign Ministry spokesman Selcuk Unal told a news conference. “Yesterday, the number of people who had come was 13,700. This morning, the number is 14,700. This shows the seriousness of the situation in Syria.” Among those who had fled was a general, the seventh top ranking Syrian officer to have defected to Turkey, Unal said.

A steady stream of refugees slips silently through gaps in the barbed wire fence that divides the two countries before settling down to rest on the Turkish side after their perilous journey through the hills dodging landmines and the Syrian army.

In response Turkey is to open a new refugee camp near the southern town of Kilis next month to host a further 10,000 Syrians, and work has begun on a camp near the eastern end of the border at Ceylanpinar for 20,000 people, the official said. That would bring the total capacity for Syrian refugees to some 45,000.

The Turkish government is now at the forefront of efforts to pressure Assad into stepping down or into agreeing to a negotiated end to the conflict.

Three rockets fired at Be’er Sheva on seventh day of Israel-Gaza violence – Haaretz Daily Newspaper | Israel News

March 15, 2012

Three rockets fired at Be’er Sheva on seventh day of Israel-Gaza violence – Haaretz Daily Newspaper | Israel News.

IDF strikes Gaza overnight after Palestinian militants fire three Grad rockets at Be’er Sheva and Ofakim, violating an Israeli-Palestinian truce; school canceled in southern Israel.

By Gili Cohen and Yanir Yagna

Palestinian militants fired three Grad rockets toward the southern Israeli city of Be’er Sheva on Thursday morning, after the Israel Air Force launched several strikes on the Gaza Strip overnight.

Early Thursday, a Gaza rocket landed near Netivot in southern Israel and shortly afterward, three Grad rockets were fired toward Be’er Sheva. Two of them were intercepted by the Iron Dome anti-missile system.

Gaza after Israeli air strike - AFP - March 14, 2012 Palestinian fire fighters extinguish a fire at a Gaza building following an Israeli air strike, March 14, 2012.
Photo by: AFP

Islamic Jihad has denied any involvement in Thursday’s rocket fire.

Despite an Egyptian-brokered cease-fire between the sides which went into effect early Tuesday morning, Palestinian militant groups continued to fire rockets sporadically into Israel on Tuesday and Wednesday.

Five cities in southern Israel – Be’er Sheva, Ashdod, Ashkelon, Kiryat Malakhi and Gan Yavneh – decided to cancel school on Thursday.

On Wednesday night, three Grad rockets were fired toward Be’er Sheva and Ofakim in southern Israel. Two were intercepted by an Iron Dome anti-missile battery, while the third landed in an open area near Ofakim. There were no casualties or damage to property, altough several suffered from shock.

In response, Israel carried out two air strikes on militant targets in Gaza early Thursday morning, according to the IDF Spokesman.

No Palestinian organization had claimed responsibility for the rockets, but the IDF believes they were launched by one of Gaza’s small, radical Islamist factions. All of the factions’ leaders committed to the truce in talks with Egyptian mediators.

Defense officials said they believe Hamas is not interested in a resumption of violence, and will therefore try to restrain smaller factions. However, they stressed that Israel will continue to carry out targeted killings of terrorists if it receives intelligence warnings of a planned attack.

Earlier on Wednesday, Palestinians fired a mortar shell at the western Negev, but it apparently fell short and landed in the Gaza Strip.

“There’s no magic solution to rockets,” GOC Southern Command Tal Russo said on Wednesday during a visit to a high school in Omer. “There won’t be a complete solution even if we embark on another round of fighting.”

Speaking before the rockets were fired at Be’er Sheva, Russo added, “I don’t know how long the quiet will hold. But if they violate the quiet, we have many tools. In this round, we didn’t use all the tools at our disposal. There could be situations in which a larger operation is needed.”

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu was supposed to leave for Paris and Madrid on Wednesday, where he was meant to discuss Iran’s nuclear program with French President Nicolas Sarkozy and the new Spanish prime minister, Mariano Rajoy.

However, despite the cease-fire declaration, Netanyahu canceled the trip due to the “security situation in southern Israel” – raising the question of whether he expects another round of fighting to erupt.