Barack Obama isn't the only world leader
issuing threats that he won't execute.
By BRET STEPHENS
WSJ, GLOBAL VIEW, April 29, 2013
Until not long ago, Israelis
remained prudently coy about whether they would strike Iran's nuclear
facilities. More recently, prominent Israelis have voiced doubts about whether
Israel can strike those facilities, at least in any way that would make a
lasting difference to Tehran's bid to acquire nuclear weapons.
Essentially, they're saying
it's all a bluff.
The transition marks another
decline in the quality of the Jewish state's deterrence. This would be bad news
in better circumstances. Considering the way the Obama administration is acting
with respect to Syria, it's much worse than that.
That's because President Obama
has now made it clear that, when it comes to rogue regimes and weapons of mass
destruction, he's exactly the bluffer he promised he wasn't. He warned
repeatedly that the use by Bashar Assad's regime of chemical weapons against the
Syrian people was a red line, a game changer, a thing "we will not tolerate."
And he responded to the regime's use of chemical weapons by doing nothing. This
is supposed to be the guy who has Israel's back and will never allow Iran to get
a nuclear weapon?
What's Fuhgeddaboudit in
Yiddish?
That's a lesson that needs to
sink in fast with Israeli decision makers. Israel has justified reservations
about taking anything except covert or surgical action against Iran and Syria.
Among those reservations: the limits of its military capability; its
vulnerability to counterstrikes; its diplomatic isolation; the displeasure of
the Obama administration.
Above all, Israelis have shied
away from action on the theory that Mr. Obama's red lines were real, even if he
drew them further down field than Israel would like. What's the point of rushing
to do something yourself at great immediate risk, when you can wait for someone
else to do it, at much less risk to them or to you, a little later?
Sound logic, one flaw: There
is no someone else. Israelis are now watching how the administration reacts when
a rogue regime crosses the president's red lines. It calls for a U.N.
investigation to corroborate the findings of Western intelligence agencies. It
justifies the exercise in the name of international consensus. It emphasizes the
need to avoid the mistakes of the Iraq war.
That's the path the
administration is traveling in the Syrian chemical-weapons case, and things will
only get worse. As the Assad regime realizes it can use these weapons without
international penalty, it will unleash them again. Sooner or later it will
figure out that the more widely it uses them, the quicker it can kill enemies at
home and deter enemies abroad. A twofer. The administration will go from arguing
that it's too soon to intervene in Syria, to arguing that it's too late.
What Israel gets from this is
a chemical-weapons free-fire zone on its Syrian border, along with the growing
likelihood that the weapons will reach Hezbollah's hands along its Lebanese
border. On the plus side, Israel also gets an arms deal from the administration.
But the deal consists of selling Israel stuff it already has or doesn't
particularly need, like aerial tankers and V-22 tilt-rotor aircraft, while
withholding stuff it doesn't have and dearly needs, like large bunker-busters
and the means of delivering them.
Meanwhile, Israel faces an
Iran that, according to former military intelligence chief Amos Yadlin, has
already crossed the nuclear red line Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu
drew at the U.N.'s General Assembly last September. Did Mr. Netanyahu draw that
line as a means of warning Iran, or of goading the U.S. to act?
If it was the latter, it was a
bad bet. Mr. Obama will treat evidence of Iran's impending nuclearization the
way he has looked at Syria's use of chemical weapons, demanding a standard of
proof that will be impossible to meet until it is too late to do much about it.
And as in Syria, the longer he searches for proof, the tougher the military
options will become.
If it was the former, however,
then Israel had better be prepared to act. Soon. A threat that cannot be
executed should never be issued. It invites contempt from friend and foe alike.
If Mr. Netanyahu really has been bluffing all along, he'll go down as the man
who made Ehud Olmert look good.
Israel's military planners
have now had more than a decade to plan an attack on Iran. Let's assume their
capabilities are better than advertised. (Can a country that can come up with
Iron Dome be incapable of producing the required bunker busters?) Let's assume
also there's a known-unknown in this plan, an element of surprise that will take
even the most hardened war-gamers by surprise.
It had better work. Because
Israel cannot live with a nuclear Iran. Because Israel should know by now that
this American administration will not be coming to its rescue. Because the
purpose of a Jewish state is never having to rely for survival on the kindness
of others, even ones so charming and solicitous as Barack Obama.
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