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 <http://www.spacewar.com/nukewars.html> NUKEWARS

Israeli-Palestinian Tensions - Prelude To The War Against Iran



The Israeli-Palestinian standoff is as typical a situation for the region as
is Israel's political infighting or the civil war in the
Palestinian-administered territories. This is a fact of life, just as the
fact that every day the sun rises somewhere near Japan and moves westward.

by Staff Writers
 
<http://www.spacewar.com/reports/Israeli_Palestinian_Tensions_A_Prelude_To_T
he_War_Against_Iran_999.html> Moscow, Russia (RIA Novosti) Aug 20, 2010
Mr. Satanovsky, after a relatively calm summer, today are we again seeing a
resurgence of Israeli-Palestinian tensions in the Middle East, a situation
fraught with all sorts of implications. Would you agree with this?

The Israeli-Palestinian standoff is as typical a situation for the region as
is Israel's political infighting or the civil war in the
Palestinian-administered territories. This is a fact of life, just as the
fact that every day the sun rises somewhere near Japan and moves westward.

A "mop-up operation" was planned in the Gaza Strip for this summer and a
military commandant was appointed. It became apparent that Israel's
withdrawal from the Gaza Strip only provoked a civil war there.

Hamas no longer has the situation under control and, with a big war with
Iran round the corner, Israel needs to mop up the sites where Iranian
missiles are based. After all, the Gaza Strip is in effect a territory
controlled by the Islamic Republic of Iran, ruled from Teheran.

Those mop-up operation plans were eventually thwarted by the Freedom
Flotilla, a brilliantly orchestrated Iranian-Turkish operation the
implementation of which Turkey took upon itself. There's no war, but the
situation has not improved. Temperatures usually drop in the fall, and when
the temperature is lower it's easier to fight, and simpler to manipulate
terrorists.

I expect a serious Iranian-Israeli conflict to break out in the fall. Iran
regards southern Lebanon and the Gaza Strip as two of its most important
footholds.

So the Israeli-Palestinian confrontation is nothing but a prelude to some
dramatic developments around Iran? And you do not exclude a military strike
against Iran?

A war with Iran is still on the Israeli government's agenda and it will stay
there until the Iranian leadership recognizes the state of Israel's right to
exist. There was a time when Iran was one of Israel's close allies, but
today it has become its main and strongest adversary. Turkey used to be one
of Israel's allies as well, but now their relations are going from bad to
worse.

It is impossible to predict with any certainty how events in the region will
unfold. As of today, the likelihood of a military conflict breaking out is
quite high. If the conflict fails to be resolved and the mutual
recriminations continue, this conflict could lead to a nuclear catastrophe,
since Iran will be able to build a nuclear bomb in the foreseeable future.

The George W. Bush Administration and that of the incumbent U.S. president,
Barack Obama, have failed to nip Iran's plans to build nuclear weapons in
the bud.

But should that transpire, Israel will have the means to retaliate, won't
it?

In this context it would be appropriate to cite Golda Meir's remark, that
Israel holds no nuclear bombs, but will use them in case of necessity. In
the event of a nuclear strike Israel will have no option but to retaliate in
kind.

Recently Iran has been waging a proxy war against Israel, using the Arabs as
its intermediaries. The two most recent military campaigns attest to this:
the second Lebanese war and the Cast Lead operation in Gaza. These were
actually Iranian-Israeli wars. Iran always tries to wage its wars on foreign
soil and with minimal losses for itself.

It doesn't care that Arab fighters were killed in these hostilities - the
important thing is that no Iranian lives were lost. today Iran is also at
war with Egypt and
<http://www.spacewar.com/reports/Israeli_Palestinian_Tensions_A_Prelude_To_T
he_War_Against_Iran_999.html> Saudi Arabia.

And in this case Israel is just a pretext for rallying behind Ayatollah
Khamenei, who has proclaimed himself the main challenger to President
Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, whose recent re-election caused turmoil in the Islamic
Republic. But Iran will never take on Saudi Arabia or Egypt in a one-to-one
fight.

The Iranian leadership must understand that the use of nuclear weapons would
be disastrous for their country. We are talking, apart from anything else,
about huge economic and military damage.

Can't the Iranian side foresee all the inevitable horrible consequences of
using nuclear weapons? And would you agree that behind these threats to
carry out a nuclear strike against Israel there is only a political game
aimed at gaining certain benefits?

This looks more like the European interpretation. The modern world put the
era of religious wars behind it when people realized that taking an enemy's
life at the cost of one's own was not worthwhile.

Iran's rulers are all deeply religious. President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad
sincerely believes that those who attack will win and that if they die they
will go straight to Heaven. He's convinced that it will take an apocalyptic
event to wipe the "infidels" off the face of the Earth. In Iran, people's
beliefs are different.

Likewise, we have every reason to wonder whether Nazi Germany was really
aware it was fighting on two fronts and the risks that involved? Those who
unleashed religious wars in Europe also believed in divine intervention,
which would ensure their ultimate victory. Well, such a viewpoint has some
logic to it.

Mr. Satanovsky, thank you for your time and comments.

Interview with Yevgeny Satanovsky, President of the Institute for Middle
Eastern Studies.

 

Source: RIA Novosti <http://en.rian.ru/> 

        

 



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