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The Opinion Of An Expert
Reflections of
Comrade Fidel
If I were to be asked who best knows about Israeli thinking, I
would answer that without question it is Jeffrey Goldberg. He is
an indefatigable journalist, capable of having dozens of
meetings to ascertain how some Israeli leader or intellectual
may think.
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He is not neutral, of course; he
is pro-Israeli, no ands ifs or buts. When one of them does not
agree with the policy of that country, that too is not done
halfway.
For my aim, it is important to know the thinking that guides the
main political and military leaders of that State.
I feel that I have the authority to have an opinion because I
have never been anti-Semitic and I share with him a profound
hatred of Nazi-Fascism and the genocide perpetrated against
children, women and men, young or aged Jews against whom Hitler,
the Gestapo and the Nazis took out their hatred against that
people.
For the same reason, I abhor the crimes committed by the fascist
government of Netanyahu which kills children, women and men,
young and old in the Gaza Strip and on the West Bank.
In his illustrated article “The Point of No Return” that will be
printed in The Atlantic journal in September 2010, now available
on the Internet, Jeffrey Goldberg starts his more than 40-page
paper; I am taking the essential ideas from it in order to
enlighten the readers.
“It is possible that at some point in the next 12 months, the
imposition of devastating economic sanctions on the Islamic
Republic of Iran will persuade its leaders to cease their
pursuit of nuclear weapons. […]It is possible, as well, that
“foiling operations” conducted by the intelligence agencies of
Israel, the United States, Great Britain, and other Western
powers— […]—will have hindered Iran’s progress in some
significant way. It is also possible that President Obama, who
has said on more than a few occasions that he finds the prospect
of a nuclear Iran “unacceptable,” will order a military strike
against the country’s main weapons and uranium-enrichment
facilities.”
“I am not engaging in a thought exercise, or a one-man war game,
when I discuss the plausibility and potential consequences of an
Israeli strike on Iran. Israel has twice before successfully
attacked and destroyed an enemy’s nuclear program. In 1981,
Israeli warplanes bombed the Iraqi reactor at Osirak,
halting—forever, as it turned out—Saddam Hussein’s nuclear
ambitions; and in 2007, Israeli planes destroyed a North
Korean–built reactor in Syria. An attack on Iran, then, would be
unprecedented only in scope and complexity.”
“I have been exploring the possibility that such a strike will
eventually occur for more than seven years, […] In the months
since then, I have interviewed roughly 40 current and past
Israeli decision makers about a military strike, as well as many
American and Arab officials. In most of these interviews, I have
asked a simple question: what is the percentage chance that
Israel will attack the Iranian nuclear program in the near
future? Not everyone would answer this question, but a consensus
emerged that there is a better than 50 percent chance that
Israel will launch a strike by next July. […] But I tested the
consensus by speaking to multiple sources both in and out of
government, and of different political parties. Citing the
extraordinary sensitivity of the subject, most spoke only
reluctantly, and on condition of anonymity. […]The reasoning
offered by Israeli decision makers was uncomplicated: Iran is,
at most, one to three years away from having a breakout nuclear
capability […]and the most crucial component of Israeli
national-security doctrine, a tenet that dates back to the 1960s
[…]is that no regional adversary should be allowed to achieve
nuclear parity with the reborn and still-besieged Jewish state.”
“In our conversation before his swearing-in, Netanyahu would not
frame the issue in terms of nuclear parity— […]Instead, he
framed the Iranian program as a threat not only to Israel but to
all of Western civilization.”
“‘…When the wide-eyed believer gets hold of the reins of power
and the weapons of mass death, then the world should start
worrying, and that’s what is happening in Iran.”’
“In our conversation, Netanyahu refused to discuss his timetable
for action, or even whether he was considering military
preemption of the Iranian nuclear program. […]Netanyahu’s belief
is that Iran is not Israel’s problem alone; it is the world’s
problem, and the world, led by the United States, is duty-bound
to grapple with it. But Netanyahu does not place great faith in
sanctions—not the relatively weak sanctions against Iran
recently passed by the United Nations Security Council, nor the
more rigorous ones being put in place by the U.S. and its
European allies.”
“But, based on my conversations with Israeli decision-makers,
this period of forbearance, in which Netanyahu waits to see if
the West’s nonmilitary methods can stop Iran, will come to an
end this December.”
“The Netanyahu government is already intensifying its analytic
efforts not just on Iran, but on a subject many Israelis have
difficulty understanding: President Obama. The Israelis are
struggling to answer what is for them the most pressing
question: are there any circumstances under which President
Obama would deploy force to stop Iran from going nuclear?
Everything depends on the answer. ”
“Iran demands the urgent attention of the entire international
community, and in particular the United States, with its
unparalleled ability to project military force. This is the
position of many moderate Arab leaders as well. A few weeks ago,
in uncommonly direct remarks, the ambassador of the United Arab
Emirates to the United States, Yousef al-Otaiba, told me—
[…]that his country would support a military strike on Iran’s
nuclear facilities. […] he said. “Small, rich, vulnerable
countries in the region do not want to be the ones who stick
their finger in the big bully’s eye, if nobody’s going to come
to their support.”
“Several Arab leaders have suggested that America’s standing in
the Middle East depends on its willingness to confront Iran.
They argue self-interestedly that an aerial attack on a handful
of Iranian facilities would not be as complicated or as messy
as, say, invading Iraq. “This is not a discussion about the
invasion of Iran,” one Arab foreign minister told me. “We are
hoping for the pinpoint striking of several dangerous
facilities. America could do this very easily.”
“Barack Obama has said any number of times that he would find a
nuclear Iran “unacceptable.” […]A nuclear Iran would be a
game-changing situation, not just in the Middle East, but around
the world. Whatever remains of our nuclear nonproliferation
framework, I think, would begin to disintegrate. You would have
countries in the Middle East who would see the potential need to
also obtain nuclear weapons.”
“But the Israelis are doubtful that a man who positioned himself
as the antithesis of George W. Bush, author of invasions of both
Afghanistan and Iraq, would launch a preemptive attack on a
Muslim nation.”
“We all watched his speech in Cairo,” a senior Israeli official
told me, referring to the June 2009 speech in which Obama
attempted to reset relations with Muslims by stressing American
cooperativeness and respect for Islam. “We don’t believe that he
is the sort of person who would launch a daring strike on Iran.
We are afraid he would see a policy of containing a nuclear Iran
rather than attacking it.”
““Bush was two years ago, but the Iranian program was the same
and the intent was the same,” the Israeli official told me. “So
I don’t personally expect Obama to be more Bush than Bush.”
“If the Israelis reach the firm conclusion that Obama will not,
under any circumstances, launch a strike on Iran, then the
countdown will begin for a unilateral Israeli attack.
“a strike on Iran, Israeli intelligence officials believe, could
provoke all-out retaliation by Iran’s Lebanese subsidiary,
Hezbollah, which now possesses, by most intelligence estimates,
as many as 45,000 rockets—at least three times as many as it had
in the summer of 2006, during the last round of fighting between
the group and Israel.)
“…Netanyahu is not unique in his understanding of this
challenge; several of the prime ministers who preceded him cast
Iran’s threat in similarly existential terms. […]“He has a deep
sense of his role in Jewish history,” Michael Oren, Israel’s
ambassador to the United States, told me.”
Jeffrey Goldberg goes on for several pages to tell the story of
Netanyahu’s father, Ben-Zion, whom he considers to be the most
outstanding historian in the world on the subject of the Spanish
Inquisition and other important merits, and who recently
celebrated his 100th birthday.
“Benjamin Netanyahu is not known in most quarters for his
pliability on matters concerning Palestinians, though he has
been trying lately to meet at least some of Barack Obama’s
demands that he move the peace process forward.”
At the end of this part of his article, Goldberg carries on with
the analysis of the complex situation. At times he is rather
tough analyzing a 2001commentary by the former president of
Iran, Hashemi-Rafsanjani, in which he is certainly speaking
about a bomb that would destroy Israel; a threat that was
criticized even by the left-wing forces that are Netanyahu’s
enemies.
“The challenges posed by a nuclear Iran are more subtle than a
direct attack, Netanyahu told me. […] ‘Iran’s militant proxies
would be able to fire rockets and engage in other terror
activities while enjoying a nuclear umbrella. […]Instead of
being a local event, however painful, it becomes a global one.
Second, this development would embolden Islamic militants far
and wide, on many continents, who would believe that this is a
providential sign, that this fanaticism is on the ultimate road
to triumph..”
““You’d create a great sea change in the balance of power in our
area,” he went on.
“Other Israeli leaders believe that the mere threat of a nuclear
attack by Iran—combined with the chronic menacing of Israel’s
cities by the rocket forces of Hamas and Hezbollah—will
progressively undermine the country’s ability to retain its most
creative and productive citizens.. […] ‘The real test for us is
to make Israel such an attractive place, such a cutting-edge
place in human society, education, culture, science, quality of
life, that even American Jewish young people want to come here.”
“Patriotism in Israel runs very high, according to numerous
polls, and it seemed unlikely to me that mere fear of Iran could
drive Israel’s Jews to seek shelter elsewhere. But one leading
proponent of an Israeli attack on Iran’s nuclear facilities,
Ephraim Sneh, a former general and former deputy defense
minister, is convinced that if Iran crossed the nuclear
threshold, the very idea of Israel would be endangered. “These
people are good citizens, and brave citizens, but the dynamics
of life are such that if someone has a scholarship for two years
at an American university and the university offers him a third
year, the parents will say, ‘Go ahead, remain there,’” Sneh told
me when I met with him in his office outside of Tel Aviv not
long ago. “If someone finishes a Ph.D. and they are offered a
job in America, they might stay there. It will not be that
people are running to the airport, […]The bottom line is that we
would have an accelerated brain drain. And an Israel that is not
based on entrepreneurship, that is not based on excellence, will
not be the Israel of today.”
“One Monday evening in early summer, I sat in the office of the
decidedly non-goyishe Rahm Emanuel, the White House chief of
staff, and listened to several National Security Council
officials he had gathered at his conference table explain—in so
many words—why the Jewish state should trust the non-Jewish
president of the United States to stop Iran from crossing the
nuclear threshold. ”
“One of those at the table, Ben Rhodes, a deputy
national-security adviser who served as the lead author of the
recent “National Security Strategy for the United States” as
well as of the president’s conciliatory Cairo speech, suggested
that Iran’s nuclear program was a clear threat to American
security, and that the Obama administration responds to
national-security threats in the manner of other
administrations. “We are coordinating a multifaceted strategy to
increase pressure on Iran, but that doesn’t mean we’ve removed
any option from the table,” Rhodes said. “This president has
shown again and again that when he believes it is necessary to
use force to protect American national-security interests, he
has done so. We’re not going to address hypotheticals about when
and if we would use military force, but I think we’ve made it
clear that we aren’t removing the option of force from any
situation in which our national security is affected.”
“…Emanuel, whose default state is exasperation […](A former Bush
administration official told me that his president faced the
opposite problem: Bush, bogged down by two wars and believing
that Iran wasn’t that close to crossing the nuclear threshold,
opposed the use of force against Iran’s program, and made his
view clear, “but no one believed him).”
“At one point, I put forward the idea that for abundantly
obvious reasons, few people would believe Barack Obama would
open up a third front in the greater Middle East. One of the
officials responded heatedly, “What have we done that would
allow you to reach the conclusion that we think that a nuclear
Iran would represent a tolerable situation?”
“Obama administration officials, particularly in the Pentagon,
have several times signaled unhappiness at the possibility of
military preemption. In April, the undersecretary of defense for
policy, Michele Flournoy, told reporters that military force
against Iran was “off the table in the near term.” She later
backtracked, but Admiral Michael Mullen, the chairman of the
Joint Chiefs of Staff, has also criticized the idea of attacking
Iran. […]“In an area that’s so unstable right now, we just don’t
need more of that.”
“…President Obama has by no means ruled out counterproliferation
by force.. […]Gary Samore, the National Security Council
official who oversees the administration’s counterproliferation
agenda, told me that the Israelis agree with American
assessments that Iran’s uranium-enrichment program is plagued
with problems.”
“‘…we can measure, based on the IAEA reports, that the Iranians
are not doing well,” Samore said. “The particular centrifuge
machines they’re running are based on an inferior technology.
They are running into some technical difficulties, partly
because of the work we’ve done to deny them access to foreign
components. When they make the parts themselves, they are making
parts that don’t have quality control.”
“Dennis Ross, the former Middle East peace negotiator who is
currently a senior National Security Council official, said
during the meeting that he believes the Israelis now understand
that American-instigated measures have slowed Iran’s progress,
and that the administration is working to convince the
Israelis—and other parties in the region—that the sanctions
strategy “has a chance of working.”
“The president has said he hasn’t taken any options off the
table, but let’s take a look at why we think this strategy could
work,” […]Last June, when they hadn’t responded to our bilateral
outreach, the president said that we would take stock by
September.”
“Ross […]the sanctions Iran now faces may affect the regime’s
thinking. “The sanctions are going to cut across the board. They
are taking place in the context of Iranian mismanagement—the
Iranians are going to have to cut [food and fuel] subsidies;
they already have public alienation; they have division in the
elites, and between the elites and the rest of the country.”
“One question no administration official seems eager to answer
is this: what will the United States do if sanctions fail?
Several Arab officials complained to me that the Obama
administration has not communicated its intentions to them, even
generally.”
“Obama’s voters like it when the administration shows that it
doesn’t want to fight Iran, but this is not a domestic political
issue,” the foreign minister said. “Iran will continue on this
reckless path, unless the administration starts to speak
unreasonably. The best way to avoid striking Iran is to make
Iran think that the U.S. is about to strike Iran. We have to
know the president’s intentions on this matter. We are his
allies.” (According to two administration sources, this issue
caused tension between President Obama and his recently
dismissed director of national intelligence, Admiral Dennis
Blair. According to these sources, Blair, who was said to put
great emphasis on the Iranian threat, told the president that
America’s Arab allies needed more reassurance. Obama reportedly
did not appreciate the advice.)”
“In Israel, of course, officials expend enormous amounts of
energy to understand President Obama, despite the assurances
they have received from Emanuel, Ross, and others.”
“Not long ago, the chief of Israeli military intelligence, Major
General Amos Yadlin, paid a secret visit to Chicago to meet with
Lester Crown, the billionaire whose family owns a significant
portion of General Dynamics, the military contractor. Crown […]
‘“I share with the Israelis the feeling that we certainly have
the military capability and that we have to have the will to use
it. The rise of Iran is not in the best interest of the U.S.'”
““I support the president,” Crown said. “But I wish
[administration officials] were a little more outgoing in the
way they have talked. I would feel more comfortable if I knew
that they had the will to use military force, as a last resort.
You cannot threaten someone as a bluff. There has to be a will
to do it.”
“Several officials even asked if I considered Obama to be an
anti-Semite. I answered this question by quoting Abner Mikva,
the former congressman, federal judge, and mentor to Obama, who
famously said in 2008, “I think when this is all over, people
are going to say that Barack Obama is the first Jewish
president.” I explained that Obama has been saturated with the
work of Jewish writers, legal scholars, and thinkers, and that a
large number of his friends, supporters, and aides are Jewish.
But philo-Semitism does not necessarily equal sympathy for
Netanyahu’s Likud Party—certainly not among American Jews, who
are, like the president they voted for in overwhelming numbers,
generally supportive of a two-state solution, and dubious about
Jewish settlement of the West Bank.”
“Rahm Emanuel suggested that the administration is trying to
thread a needle: providing “unshakeable” support for Israel;
protecting it from the consequences of an Iranian nuclear bomb;
but pushing it toward compromise with the Palestinians. […] he
past six Israeli prime ministers—including Netanyahu, who during
his first term in the late 1990s, to his father’s chagrin,
compromised with the Palestinians—to buttress his case. “Rabin,
Peres, Netanyahu, Barak, Sharon, Olmert—every one of them
pursued some form of a negotiated settlement, which would have
been in Israel’s own strategic interest,” he said. “There have
been plenty of other threats while successive Israeli
governments have pursued a peace process.”
“…Israel should consider carefully whether a military strike
would be worth the trouble it would unleash. “I’m not sure that
given the time line, whatever the time line is, that whatever
they did, they wouldn’t stop” the nuclear program, he said.
“They would be postponing.”
“It was then that I realized that, on some subjects, the
Israelis and Americans are still talking past each other.”
“IN MY CONVERSATIONS with former Israeli air-force generals and
strategists, the prevalent tone was cautious. Many people I
interviewed were ready, on condition of anonymity, to say why an
attack on Iran’s nuclear sites would be difficult for Israel.
And some Israeli generals, like their American colleagues,
questioned the very idea of an attack. “Our time would be better
spent lobbying Barack Obama to do this, rather than trying this
ourselves,” one general told me. “We are very good at this kind
of operation, but it is a big stretch for us. The Americans can
do this with a minimum of difficulty, by comparison. This is too
big for us.”
“These planes would have to return home quickly, in part because
Israeli intelligence believes that Iran would immediately order
Hezbollah to fire rockets at Israeli cities, and Israeli
air-force resources would be needed to hunt Hezbollah rocket
teams.”
“…in the event of a unilateral Israeli strike on Iran, his
mission would be to combat Hezbollah rocket forces. […]to keep
Hezbollah in reserve until Iran can cross the nuclear threshold.
“…Hezbollah ‘“lost a lot of his men. […] That is one reason we
have had four years of quiet. What has changed in four years is
that Hezbollah has increased its missile capability, but we have
increased our capabilities as well.” He concluded by saying, in
reference to a potential Israeli strike on Iran, “Our readiness
means that Israel has freedom of action.”
“America, too, would look complicit in an Israeli attack, even
if it had not been forewarned. The assumption—often, but not
always, correct—that Israel acts only with the approval of the
United States is a feature of life in the Middle East, and it is
one the Israelis say they are taking into account. I spoke with
several Israeli officials who are grappling with this question,
among others: what if American intelligence learns about Israeli
intentions hours before the scheduled launch of an attack? “It
is a nightmare for us,” one of these officials told me. “What if
President Obama calls up Bibi and says, ‘We know what you’re
doing. Stop immediately.’ Do we stop? We might have to. A
decision has been made that we can’t lie to the Americans about
our plans. We don’t want to inform them beforehand. This is for
their sake and for ours. So what do we do? These are the hard
questions.”
“Many Israelis think the Iranians are building Auschwitz. We
have to let them know that we have destroyed Auschwitz, or we
have to let them know that we tried and failed.”
“There are, of course, Israeli leaders who believe that
attacking Iran is too risky. […]“We don’t want politicians to
put us in a bad position because of the word Shoah,” one general
said.”
“After staring at the photograph of the Israeli air-force
flyover of Auschwitz more than a dozen different times in more
than a dozen different offices, I came to see the contradiction
at its core. If the Jewish physicists who created Israel’s
nuclear arsenal could somehow have ripped a hole in the
space-time continuum and sent a squadron of fighters back to
1942,…”
“Benjamin Netanyahu feels, for reasons of national security,
that if sanctions fail, he will be forced to take action. But an
Israeli attack on Iran’s nuclear facilities, successful or not,
may cause Iran to redouble its efforts—this time with a measure
of international sympathy—to create a nuclear arsenal. And it
could cause chaos for America in the Middle East. […]Peres sees
the Iranian nuclear program as potentially catastrophic, […]When
I asked if he believed in a military option, he said, “Why
should I declare something like that?”
“Based on months of interviews, I have come to believe that the
administration knows it is a near-certainty that Israel will act
against Iran soon if nothing or no one else stops the nuclear
program; […]Earlier this year, I agreed with those, including
many Israelis, Arabs—and Iranians—who believe there is no chance
that Obama would ever resort to force to stop Iran; I still
don’t believe there is a great chance he will take military
action in the near future—for one thing, the Pentagon is notably
unenthusiastic about the idea. But Obama is clearly seized by
the issue. […]Denis McDonough, the chief of staff of the
National Security Council, told me, “What you see in Iran is the
intersection of a number of leading priorities of the president,
who sees a serious threat to the global nonproliferation regime,
a threat of cascading nuclear activities in a volatile region,
and a threat to a close friend of the United States, Israel. I
think you see the several streams coming together, which
accounts for why it is so important to us.”
“When I asked Peres what he thought of Netanyahu’s effort to
make Israel’s case to the Obama administration, he responded
[…]his country should know its place, and that it was up to the
American president, and only the American president, to decide
in the end how best to safeguard the future of the West. The
story was about his mentor, David Ben-Gurion.
““Shortly after John F. Kennedy was elected president,
Ben-Gurion met him at the Waldorf-Astoria” in New York, Peres
told me. “After the meeting, Kennedy accompanied Ben-Gurion to
the elevator and said, ‘Mr. Prime Minister, I want to tell you,
I was elected because of your people, so what can I do for you
in return?’ Ben-Gurion was insulted by the question. He said,
‘What you can do is be a great president of the United States.
You must understand that to have a great president of the United
States is a great event.’”
“Peres went on to explain what he saw as Israel’s true interest.
“We don’t want to win over the president,” he said. “We want the
president to win.”
“Jeffrey Goldberg”
“Jeffrey Mark Goldberg is an American-Israeli journalist. He is
one of the writers and staff journalists on The Atlantic
journal. Previously he worked for The New Yorker. Goldberg
mainly writes on international subjects, preferring the Middle
East and Africa. Some have called him the most influential
journalist-blogger on matters dealing with Israel.”
Fidel Castro Ruz
August 25, 2010
6:18 p.m.
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