Israeli attack on Iran may rely less on surprise, more on force

THE DAILY STAR :: News :: Middle East :: Israeli attack on Iran may rely less on surprise, more o

OCCUPIED JERUSALEM: Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s cancellation of a security Cabinet session on Iran following a media leak last week laid bare a conundrum long troubling Israeli strategists: Could they count on any element of surprise in a war on their arch-foe? Possibly not. Years of public speculation, much of it stoked by official statements in Israel and abroad, about the likelihood and timing of such a conflict have afforded the Iranians plenty of notice to fortify their threatened nuclear facilities and prepare retaliation.

Given the difficulties Israel’s jets would face in reaching and returning from distant Iran, losing the option of mounting sneak attacks may seem to have put paid to the very idea of an attack launched without its ally the U.S.

Yet experts are not rushing to rule that out. Some believe Israel is still capable of achieving a modicum of surprise, and that in any case it might hope a combination of stealth, blunt force and, perhaps, hitherto untested innovations can deliver victory.

Israel, whose technologically advanced military has a history of successful derring-do, might place less importance on catching Iran completely off-guard and instead strike openly and with combined forces, causing disarray among the defenders in hope of delivering enough damage to a select number of targets.

“The probability of achieving surprise is low, but I think the Israelis will count on their technical competence in defense suppression to allow them in,” said Walter Boyne, an ex-U.S. air force officer and a writer on aviation history.

He predicted the Israelis would mesh air raids with a swarm of strikes by ground and naval units, a view echoed by Lynette Nusbacher, senior lecturer in war studies at Britain’s Royal Military Academy Sandhurst. She suggested Israel could also incorporate cyber-attacks to blind Iran as an assault began.

“There is no question that Israel can achieve tactical surprise if required,” Nusbacher said, differentiating the short-term shock from Iran’s long readiness for an attack.

Israel and its Western allies believe Iran is covertly seeking means to build nuclear weapons, a claim Iran denies. U.S. President Barack Obama says he hopes sanctions and diplomacy will deflect Iranian policy. But Netanyahu and other Israeli leaders have made clear they might soon resort to force.

Nusbacher indicated that pinpoint intelligence and planning might also help Israel overcome Iran’s anticipation and counter-measures.

Israeli military planners chafe at their civilian compatriots’ freewheeling and jittery discourse about a possible confrontation, worried that the Iranians could glean key warnings.

If they do contemplate a solo surprise attack, they may also be concerned that the United States could also be tipped off about a strike early enough to insist its Israeli ally stand down.

There were no such problems in 1981, when a squadron of Israeli fighter-bombers took off from the then-occupied Sinai desert to destroy Iraq’s atomic reactor, nor in 2007, when Israel launched a similar sortie against Syria out of the blue.

By contrast, experts think Israel would need to dispatch many scores of jets and support aircraft against Iran, and possibly fire ballistic missiles, all difficult to hide from the public.

Though a media blackout would be allowed under Israeli emergency laws, such sudden and sweeping censorship would be so unprecedented as to telegraph what was meant to go unpublished – and in any event may prove impracticable in today’s wired world.

Nonetheless, some other measures could limit exposure, such as choice of timing. The war on Palestinians in the Gaza Strip was launched on Dec. 27, 2008, deep in the Western holiday season and on a Saturday morning, the Jewish sabbath, when Israel’s own media pare coverage to a minimum and newsrooms are barely staffed.

Israel is also trying to restrict the circle of those in the know. The number of those privy to the details of Iran planning in the military and government has been kept very small, a depth of secrecy akin to that surrounding Israel’s own nuclear program, which is assumed to include the region’s only atomic arms.

Netanyahu would be legally required to gain security Cabinet approval for an attack on Iran. But after a newspaper reported Wednesday that ministers on the panel had been presented with conflicting intelligence assessments about Iran, a leak that angered Netanyahu, at least one senior leader, Foreign Minister Avigdor Lieberman, called for the 14-member security Cabinet to be shrunk to ensure more discretion.

Israel may even go so far as to temporarily misdirect its own populace, away from talk of imminent attack.

Days before the Gaza blitz, Defense Minister Ehud Barak made an unannounced live appearance on a top-rated TV satire show, where he took a roasting with good humor and made sure to give every impression that starting a war could not be further from his mind.

In another deliberate feint intended to wrongfoot the gossips, Israeli generals summoned officers from garrisons around Gaza to a weekend retreat, with their families, at a countryside spa. All but the most senior of those invited commanders were then surprised to be woken up, that Saturday morning, and sent back to base for combat within hours.

A senior Israeli official told Reuters such ruses were a legitimate tactic for military planners dealing with a democratic society. “Such things are kosher,” he said, “when you have a free press and free speech.”

And while certainly not advocating the kind of extensive public discussion seen lately in Israel on the prospects for a conflict, the same official saw a counter-intuitive benefit in that such perpetual talk might erode Iran’s level of alertness. “The more you brace to defend yourself, the more tired you get – or you make the mistake of writing off the threat as a bluff,” he said.

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu shakes hands with German Foreign Minister Guido Westerwelle during their meeting at his office in Jerusalem on September 9, 2012. Westerwelle said, during his visit to Israel, that a nuclear-armed Iran was "not an option" as he called on Tehran to hold "substantial negotiations" over its controversial atomic programme. AFP PHOTO/ABIR SULTAN/POOL
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu shakes hands with German Foreign Minister Guido Westerwelle during their meeting at his office in Jerusalem on September 9, 2012. Westerwelle said, during his visit to Israel, that a nuclear-armed Iran was “not an option” as he called on Tehran to hold “substantial negotiations” over its controversial atomic programme. AFP PHOTO/ABIR SULTAN/POOL
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4 Comments on “Israeli attack on Iran may rely less on surprise, more on force”

  1. Luis's avatar Luis Says:

    Excellent article.
    ” Israel is still capable of achieving a modicum of surprise, and that in any case it might hope a combination of stealth, blunt force and, perhaps, hitherto untested innovations can deliver victory.”

    That is saying it all. The use of a cyber first strike, followed by a massive well directed rain of Jericho III missiles over the relevant sites, the use of the stealth israeli bombers in conjunction with ground commandos forces, all these and more will check mate the iranian military forces, will achieve tactical surprise and a decisive military victory.
    And all this might happen in the eve of Netanyahu visit to Washington.

    • Zachary Smith's avatar Zachary Smith Says:

      It is indeed an excellent article. I’ve no doubt whatever that Israel can make some extremely hard strikes against a great many Iranian targets.

      IMO the events afterwards will follow the pattern of the Japanese attack against the US base at Pearl Harbor. Overwhelming tactical victory leading to an equally overwhelming strategic defeat.

      • Luis's avatar Luis Says:

        The Japanese attack on Pearl Harbour was a l o c a l attack while the israeli operation is been designed at a grand scale war.

        There is no place for comparison between these two situations.
        By the way, do you know what the japanese task force had missed in that day ?

  2. Lion of Zion's avatar Lion of Zion Says:

    Like Gideon and his force the IDF will break the iranian military…..And Israel will rejoice and give thanks to her God ….


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