Tuesday, May 11, 2010

Iran Upset over Yaalon’s Remarks that Israel Can Strike



Tzvi Ben Gedalyahu
A7 News

Former IDF Chief of Staff Moshe Yaalon’s remarks that Israel can strike Iran, and that “offense is the best defense” prompted reactions in Iranian media that an Israeli attack is more theoretical than practical. The Arab world widely covered the remarks of Yaalon, now Minister for Strategic Affairs. “We are already in a military confrontation against Iran,” he told a conference of military experts. "There is no doubt that the technological capabilities, which improved in recent years, have improved range and aerial refueling capabilities, and have brought about a massive improvement in the accuracy of ordnance and intelligence."

Most analysts have questioned whether Israel can do any more than slightly delay the Iranian nuclear program’s apparent aim to build a nuclear warhead that can hit Israel. Most attention has been focused on Iran’s having scattered several nuclear sites throughout the country, buried in deep and reinforced concrete bunkers in mountainous regions.

However, the failed efforts of U.S. President Barack Obama to engage Iran in diplomatic talks or to convince the United Nations Security Council to pass harsh sanctions have left “the military” option as the only alternative to a nuclear Iran.

Yaalon told the Fisher Institute for Air and Space Strategic Studies that Israel is in a proxy war with Iran because of its military and financial aid to the Hizbullah and Hamas terrorist organizations.

"There is no doubt, looking at the overall situation, that we are already in a military confrontation with Iran," he said. "Iran is the main motivator of those attacking us."



Beirut-based policy expert Oussama Safa told the Iranian government-monitored Press TV that Yaalon’s remarks are “diversionary tactics by the Israelis who fear, under a lot of pressure, their military options are shrinking, particularly in Lebanon and in Gaza.”

He added that Yaalon’s remarks were “more of a provocation that I do not think will materialize or has any potential to materialize anytime soon” because an attack is more theoretical than practical, politically and militarily.

American journalist Danny Schechter, who specializes in the areas of human rights and the media, told Press TV, “This is part of a war of words not only directed at Iran but at the United States. Basically, they are trying to pressure the United States first to stop pressuring them on settlements but secondly, to take stronger action to impose stronger sanctions by threatening, you know, kind of a military option…. This is all sort of psychological warfare staged that was going on now with statements of this type. I think we are going to see more of it.”

Schechter also charged that if Iran did not exist, Israel “would need to invent Iran” to divert attention from the Palestinian Authority-Israeli struggle.

Israel is “escalating the rhetoric,” he said, but added, ‘this is, you know as far as I can tell, a road to nowhere. But it is a road that is convenient for Israeli politicians and to some degree for Iranian politicians. Iran likes Israel as an enemy too. You know the more noise that Israel makes, the more the government in Tehran can also respond in kind and needs to prepare defensively and all the rest of it. So in a sense, this war of the words is functional for both sides right now.”

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