Could Israel’s attacks on Hezbollah open the way to a strike on Iran’s nuclear facilities?
As Israel’s strikes in Lebanon increase, the question of its strategic intentions become more pressing.
Could Israel’s attacks on Hezbollah open the way to a strike on Iran’s nuclear facilities?
The government of Prime
Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has chosen to escalate the conflict with Hezbollah
on its northern border, even though there is no resolution to the war with
Hamas in Gaza, and at a time when violence in the West Bank, including from Israeli
settlers, is rising.
Why is Israel doing this?
Most explanations point to tactical objectives, dealing with individual threats
as they emerge. There is no indication of an underlying strategy for securing
peace.
Instead, some analysts
worry that Israel’s intention may be to create conditions for an attack on
Iran’s nuclear facilities.
Weakening Hezbollah
Israeli ministers justify
the attacks on Lebanon by invoking an urgent desire to address the situation in
northern Israel. Around 60,000 Israelis have been
displaced from their homes in the border region, due to Hezbollah rocket
attacks as well as their fears of an invasion and abductions like those of 7
October.
It is possible to take
this explanation at face value, to some extent. Political pressure to resolve
the problem of the displaced residents of the north has been rising within
Israel, even if the issue is far less visible to those outside the country. It
is growing in intensity as the first anniversary of 7 October approaches.
Ministers say that it is ‘intolerable’ for a country to be forced to surrender
the use of its land like this.
Yet it is hard to see how the residents of northern Israel could be confident enough to return to their homes without military action to drive Hezbollah forces a considerable way back from the border.
Military commanders talk
with confidence of a quick incursion to push back Hezbollah. But such plans do
not always remain neat, as Israel’s previous moves into southern Lebanon have
shown.
Last week’s dramatic
exploding pager attacks in Lebanon and Syria, which saw key Hezbollah
commanders killed and wounded, will have destroyed much of the group’s
communications.
But its forces remain
embedded in villages near the border and an Israeli military operation into
Lebanon will be no easy matter. Missile strikes alone are unlikely to secure
the territory and will provoke Hezbollah missiles in return – as is now happening.
Political calculations
Beyond the wish to
degrade Hezbollah, other commentators suggest that short-term political factors
may lie behind the attacks. Netanyahu remains under pressure from court cases
for corruption. A state of perpetual conflict is convenient for him, many think,
allowing him to continue in power and keep demands to give testimony at bay.
The sense of enemies on
all sides also gives the more extreme members of his cabinet – particularly
Finance Minister Bezalel Smotrich and National Security Minister Itamar
Ben-Gvir – cover to push ahead with the expansion of settlements and roads in
the occupied Palestinian territories of the West Bank.
Finance Minister Bezalel
Smotrich…has authorized the public funding of 70 illegal outposts.
Since 7 October, Israel’s
cabinet has authorized a rapid expansion of these settlements, which are illegal under international law. It
has approved five new settlements, while more than 25 new outposts have been
established, according to the Settlement Watch group of Peace Now, an Israeli NGO. Smotrich
has authorized the public funding of 70 illegal outposts, connecting them to
water, electricity and paving roads.
On Sunday, during a
discussion with Chatham House at the Labour Party conference, UK Foreign
Secretary David Lammy said that the UK was talking with the EU about the
possibility of sanctions against Smotrich and Ben-Gvir.
It would be controversial
for the UK and EU, supporters of Israel, to sanction
ministers of a democratically elected government. But their concern is that
Israel is using the war in Gaza and now with Hezbollah to distract
international attention from its incursions into the West Bank.
Attacking Iran
But there may be a wider
strategic intention behind Israel’s new attacks: moving directly against Iran,
the leader of the so-called ‘Axis of Resistance’ which includes Hezbollah,
Hamas and the Houthis in Yemen.
Israel has long petitioned US
administrations to carry out strikes against Iranian nuclear facilities or
support an Israeli attack – only to receive a chilly response.
Since US President Donald
Trump pulled the US out of the JPCOA, the pact under which Tehran agreed to
restrain its nuclear programme, Iran has made itself essentially a threshold
nuclear weapon state.
Israel has long
petitioned US administrations to carry out strikes against Iranian nuclear
facilities or support an Israeli attack – only to receive a chilly response
from Washington.
On Sunday Isaac Herzog,
Israel’s president, described Iran as an ‘empire of evil’. Speaking to Sky
television, he said that his country’s forces would ‘remove any threats that are existential to the state
of Israel ’. From Herzog, a moderate who is no great
supporter of Netanyahu, this was strikingly emphatic talk.
For countries working to
avoid a regional war, the concern is that Israel’s government may be using the
Lebanon attacks as a way to create the option of a future attack on Iran’s
nuclear facilities.
Israel might decide to strike
regardless of the US election outcome, hoping for support from Trump…but
willing to tolerate censure from a Harris administration.
By taking out Hezbollah communications through the
exploding pagers, Israel has weakened the group’s coherence as a fighting force
and could choose to further degrade the group, through an attack into Lebanon
or otherwise. Israel may hope that by neutralizing Hezbollah sufficiently in
the coming months, it can act against Iran without the need to worry about its
northern border.
Image — An
Israeli strike on the southern Lebanese village of Odaisseh near the border
with Israel on September 18, 2024. (Photo by RABIH DAHER/AFP via Getty Images)
Article 2nd half
Analysts are concerned
that Israel might decide to strike regardless of the US election outcome,
hoping for support from a Trump presidency but willing to tolerate censure from
a Harris administration if necessary.
However, such a strategy
would be extremely risky. Escalating conflict to the north – or east – will not
bring Israel a resolution to the conflict in Gaza.
Talks with Hamas on a
ceasefire and hostage release deal are not progressing well, Western officials
suggest. Each side has recently added new conditions: Israel wants to retain
control of the ‘Philedelphi corridor’ along the Gaza-Egypt border, and Hamas
wants additional prisoner releases from Israeli jails.
Without a ceasefire, and then agreement on a
pathway to a state for Palestinians, Israel risks losing ever more
international support. What is more, by expanding the conflict it will have no
way to access the diplomatic prize that still dangles in front of it:
normalized relations with Saudi Arabia, and through that, help from its
neighbours in containing the threat from Iran.
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