When Israel Leaves its
Calling Card
by Ted Snider Posted on April 19, 2021
https://original.antiwar.com/Ted_Snider/2021/04/18/when-israel-leaves-its-calling-card/
On March 4, 2021, Israeli
Defense Minister Benny Gantz very publicly told Fox News that the "Israeli
military is updating plans to strike Iranian nuclear sites and is prepared to
act independently." He added that "If the world stops them before,
it’s very much good. But if not, we must stand independently and we must defend
ourselves by ourselves.”
Gantz seems to be announcing
that if the U.S. participated in discussions with Iran and the rest of the P5+1
to open the possibility of returning to the JCPOA nuclear agreement with Iran,
then, the world has missed its opportunity to "stop them," Israel
would "strike Iranian nuclear sites."
The US did return to the
JCPOA negotiations. And on April 11, Israel detonated an explosion in Iran’s
Natanz civilian nuclear facility. The Atomic Energy Organization of Iran
described the act of sabotage as a "small explosion." The explosion
destroyed the power supply that runs the centrifuges that enrich uranium.
Reports suggest that an explosive device was smuggled into the Natanz facility
and detonated remotely.
There is nothing new about
Israel sabotaging Iran’s Natanz facility. The Flame and Stuxnet viruses that
wiped out 20% of Iran’s nuclear centrifuges were joint operations of the CIA,
NSA, and Israel’s unit 8200. The July 3, 2020 explosion at Natanz also seems to
have been carried out by Israel.
What is new this time is
that Israel left its calling card. Israel always stays hidden: they never
publicly claim responsibility for their attacks on Iran. This time Israel made
sure everyone knew. General Aviv Kochavi, chief of staff of the Israeli
army, said that "the
Israeli military’s "operations in the Middle East are not hidden from the
eyes of the enemy."
Multiple Israeli media
outlets have quoted intelligence sources who attribute the attack to the
Mossad. Israel’s public radio broadcaster Kan cited intelligence sources as
saying that Mossad carried out the
attack. The Jerusalem Post turned up the echo
chamber, repeating that the Mossad "was reportedly behind the attack on
Natanz." Both American and Israeli officials confirmed to The New
York Times that Israel had a role in the attack.
The United States made its
first appearance at the Vienna talks on the Iran nuclear deal on April 6. The
same day, right on cue, Israel attacked an Iranian military vessel in the Red
Sea. The ship broke into flames and smoke when a mine that had been attached to
it exploded.
Like Israel blowing up the
Natanz facility, there is nothing new in Israel blowing up Iranian ship. Though
this may be the first time Israel has attacked a military vessel, since late
2019, Israel has attacked at
least a dozen commercial ships carrying Iranian oil.
But, again, a new pattern
emerges. What is new this time is that Israel left its calling card. The
New York Times reports that "an
American official said the Israelis had notified the United States that its
forces had struck the vessel at about 7:30 a.m. local time."
Why are the normally
clandestine Israelis leaving calling cards since the start of the reborn JCPOA
negotiations? Because it is not nuclear facilities and military ships that are
being sabotaged. It is American diplomacy that would bring Iran out of international
isolation. Israel is not sabotaging Iran. Israel is sabotaging the U.S.
Iran seldom publicizes
Israeli acts of sabotage. And there’s a reason. If they made the attacks public
and did nothing, they would look impotent; if they made the attacks public and
retaliated, the world would see the Iranian retaliation and not the Israeli
provocation, and the US would be forced to further isolate Iran and abort
diplomacy. That’s what Israel is trying to provoke; that’s what Iran is trying
to avoid. That’s what Iranian foreign minister Javad Zarif was explaining when
he said that the Israelis
"want to take revenge because of our progress in the way to lift
sanctions…We will not fall into their trap."
Iran wasn’t falling into
the trap. So, Israel started leaving its calling card by informing the US and
the world of their responsibility for the attacks. "Once Israeli officials
are quoted, it requires the Iranians to take revenge," former head of the
Mossad Danny Yatom said Monday on an Israeli Army-run radio station. Now
if Iran lets the attacks go, they looked weak; if Iran retaliates, they looked
like the aggressor, like terrorists. If the US lets Israel get away with it –
which they consistently have – it either embarrasses the US and shows they’ll
let Israel do what they want, or it makes the US look complicit in Iran’s eyes.
Either way, it weakens renewed Iranian and American efforts at diplomacy.
Because Israel brazenly
carried out the attack while US Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin was in Israel,
it is hard for the US to claim they didn’t know about it. So, when Austin stood
beside Netanyahu in front of reporters and continued to promise
America’s support for Israel’s qualitative military edge, the Israeli design is
that it will look complicity to Iran and sabotage the talks. In an April 12 media
availability, when asked about what he would say to Netanyahu
after the Israeli attack, Austin refused to mention Iran and said only that he
is in Israel "to reassure the leadership of our commitment as a…strategic
partner, only worsening that diplomacy damaging perception.
Israel is leaving its
calling card to provoke Iran into self-damaging retaliation and to cast the US
as complicit in attacks on Iran. The first threatens America’s willingness to
engage in diplomacy with Iran; the second threatens Iran’s willingness to
engage in diplomacy with America.
Israel is leaving its
calling card in an attempt to sabotage America’s attempt to re-engage in
diplomacy with Iran.
Ted Snider has a graduate degree
in philosophy and writes on analyzing patterns in US foreign policy and
history.
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