Fate of Middle East hangs in the balance as
Israel mulls its next steps
Julian
Borger
in
Washington
Joe Biden is believed to have urged restraint, and
Tehran deems the matter ‘concluded’ but ultimately Israel’s response lies in
the hands of three prickly rivals in its war cabinet
Sun 14 Apr
2024 05.53 BST
The
prospect of a major regional war in the Middle East hangs in the balance on
Sunday morning, when Benjamin Netanyahu’s war cabinet is due to meet to decide
Israel’s response to Iran’s drone and missile attack.
Netanyahu’s
ministers voted in the middle of the night to delegate that decision to the
tiny war cabinet, comprising Netanyahu, defence minister Yoav Gallant and Benny
Gantz, a Netanyahu opponent who joined the government as minister without
portfolio after the Hamas 7 October attack, which began the spiral of violence
that has brought Israel and Iran to the brink of war.
These three
prickly rivals will decide the next step, with the fate of the region now
resting in their hands.
In the
nervous hours leading up to the war cabinet meeting, Netanyahu and Biden spoke
by phone for 25 minutes, during which, according to some reports in the Israeli
media, the US president urged restraint.
Biden
issued a statement minutes after the call in which he gave no explicit advice
to Netanyahu but he noted that with US help, “nearly all of the incoming drones
and missiles” had been brought down.
That
“remarkable” defensive capacity, Biden argued, was by itself “a clear message
to its foes that they cannot effectively threaten the security of Israel”.
As of early
Sunday morning, the only reported casualty from the aerial onslaught was a
10-year-old boy in Israel’s southern desert, from the country’s most
marginalised community, the Bedouins. A southern military base was lightly
damaged.
In the
run-up to the expected Iranian assault, US officials had hypothesised just such
an outcome: that Iranian projectiles would fall in the desert and not cause
significant casualties. In that case, the officials predicted, Washington would
urge strongly against a rash Israeli response.
Iran is
clearly hoping for such a muted response. In a message delivered through its
mission at the UN, Tehran suggested hopefully that in the wake of its
retaliation: “The matter can be deemed concluded.”
Both Biden
and the Iranians are well aware that Netanyahu would ideally like to destroy
Iran’s nuclear facilities, which he has long seen as an existential threat to
Israel. Reducing them to rubble would be very hard without US help, but it is
possible that he and other Israeli hawks could try seize this opportunity to
deliver that ambition.
NBC News
reported on Saturday night that some top administration officials are
“concerned Israel could do something quickly in response to Iran’s attacks
without thinking through potential fallout afterward”.
The report
said Biden had privately expressed concern that Netanyahu is “trying to drag
the US more deeply into a broader conflict”, citing three people familiar with
the president’s comments.
Administration
officials are well aware that Netanyahu has an incentive to keep hostilities
going, as it fends off the collapse of his coalition and new elections.
While the
damage to Israel was minimal, Israeli officials could argue that was no thanks
to Tehran, but to the reliability of Israeli air defence and its allies, most
notably the US, the UK and Jordan. Jordan risked being lambasted in the Arab
world for intercepting some of the Iranian drones as they crossed its airspace.
That joint
action, prepared in the week before the Iranian attack, almost certainly saved
lives and may have fended off a wider war. It could also serve as a reminder of
Israel’s dependence on the US to keep Israelis safe.
In the
short term, Washington can draw comfort from a few signs any Israeli response
will not at least be immediate. Israel has called for a UN security council
session on the attack, which will happen at 4pm New York time on Sunday. It
would be surprising if a counter-attack was launched before that session.
Another
possible sign that the response could be muted was Gallant’s conversation with
his US counterpart, Lloyd Austin, after the attacks. According to the Israeli
defence ministry, Gallant “emphasised that the defence establishment is
prepared for any further attempts to attack the state of Israel”. His comments
made no mention of Israel striking back.
A third
positive sign in the early hours of Sunday was a reassurance from an Israeli
official cited by the New York Times that “Israel’s response would be
coordinated with its allies”.
Washington
is likely to remind Israel in the coming hours and days of its gains from
having withstood Iran’s fury, largely unscathed.
The attack
has for now distracted global attention from Israel’s conduct of the war in
Gaza. Furthermore, the Iranian attack is also likely to dispel murmurs in the
US Congress about curbing weapons supplies to Israel because of Gaza. Now such
restrictions can be cast by Israel’s supporters as leaving America’s leading
ally in the Middle East defenceless in the face of the proven Iranian threat.


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