Details of Israel’s recent limited retaliatory strike against Iran‘s antiaircraft missile batteries at Isfahan are still sketchy. But nonetheless, we can draw some conclusions.
Israel’s small volley
of missiles hit their intended targets, to the point of zeroing in on
the very launchers designed to stop such incoming ordnance. The target
was near the Natanz enrichment facility. That proximity was by design.
Israel showed Iran it could take out the very antimissile battery designed to thwart an attack on its nearby nuclear facility.
The
larger message sent to the world was that Israel could send a
retaliatory barrage at Iranian nuclear sites with reasonable assurances
that the incoming attacks could not be stopped.
By comparison, Iran’s earlier attack on Israel was much greater and
more indiscriminate. It was also a huge flop, with an estimated 99% of
the more than 320 drones, cruise missiles, and ballistic missiles
failing to hit their planned targets.
Moreover, it was reported
that more than 50% of Iran’s roughly 115 to 120 ballistic missiles
failed at launch or malfunctioned in flight.
Collate these facts,
and it presents a disturbing corrective to Iran’s nonstop boasts of
soon possessing a nuclear arsenal that will obliterate the Jewish state.
Consider further the following nightmarish scenarios: Were Iranian
nuclear-tipped missiles ever launched at Israel, they could pass over,
in addition to Syria and Iraq,
either Saudi Arabia, Jordan, the West Bank, Gaza, or all four. In the
cases of Jordan and Saudi Arabia, such trajectories would constitute an
act of war, especially considering that some of Iran’s recent aerial
barrages were intercepted and destroyed over Arab territory well before
they reached Israel.
Iran’s strike prompted Arab nations, the U.S., the U.K., and
France to work in concert to destroy almost all of Iran’s drones. For
Iran, that is a premonition of the sort of sophisticated aerial
opposition it might face if it ever decided to stage a nuclear version.
Even
if half of Iran’s ballistic missiles did launch successfully, only a
handful apparently neared their intended targets—in sharp contrast to
Israel’s successful attack on Iranian missile batteries. Is it thus
conceivable that any Iranian nuclear-tipped missile launched toward
Israel might pose as great a threat to Iran itself or its neighbors as
to Israel?
And even if such missiles made it into the air and
even if they successfully traversed Arab airspace, there is still an
overwhelming chance they would be neutralized before detonating above
Israel.
Any such launch would warrant an immediate Israeli
response. And the incoming bombs and missiles would likely have a 100%
certainty of evading Iran’s countermeasures and hitting their targets.
Now
that the soil of both Iran and Israel is no longer sacred and immune
from attack, the mystique of the Iranian nuclear threat has dissipated.
It
should be harder for the theocracy in Tehran to shake down Western
governments for hostage bribes, sanctions relief, and Iran-deal
giveaways on the implied threat of Iran’s successfully nuking the Jewish
state.
The new reality is that Iran has goaded an Israel that
has numerous nuclear weapons and dozens of nuclear-tipped missiles in
hardened silos and on submarines. Tehran has zero ability to stop any of
these missiles or sophisticated fifth-generation Israeli aircraft armed
with nuclear bombs and missiles.
Iran must now fear that if it
launched two or three nuclear missiles, there would be overwhelming odds
that they would either fail at launch, go awry in the air, implode
inside Iran, be taken down over Arab territory by Israel’s allies, or be
knocked down by Israel’s tripartite antimissile defense system.
Add
it all up and Iran’s attack on Israel seems a historic blunder. It
showed the world the impotence of an Iranian aerial assault at the very
time Iran threatens to go nuclear. It revealed that an incompetent Iran
may be as much a threat to itself as to its enemies. It opened up a new
chapter in which Iran’s own soil, thanks to its attack on Israel, is no
longer off limits to any Western power.
Its failure to stop a
much smaller Israel response, coupled with the overwhelming success of
Israel and its allies in stopping a much larger Iranian attack, reminds
the Iranian autocracy that its shrill rhetoric is designed to mask its
impotence and to hide its own vulnerabilities from its enemies.
And the long-suffering Iranian people?
The
truth will come out that Iran’s own theocracy hit the Israeli homeland
with negligible results and earned a successful, though merely
demonstrative, Israeli response in return.
So Iranians will learn their homeland is now vulnerable and, for the future, no longer off-limits.
And
Iranians will conclude that Israel has more effective allies than Iran
and that their own ballistic missiles may be more suicidal than
homicidal.
As a result, they may conclude that the real enemies
of the Iranian nation are not the Jewish people of Israel after all, but
their own unhinged Islamist theocrats.
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