By Eric Vandenbroeck and co-workers
Three Ways Israel Could Respond
Even though Israel
and its partners say they downed more than 99 percent of the hundreds of drones and missiles that Iran
fired at it over the weekend in a major moment of escalation in the Middle
East, Israeli leaders say they have no choice but to respond.
That was the message
that Israeli Defense Minister Yoav Gallant reportedly conveyed to U.S. Defense
Secretary Lloyd Austin, even as top Biden administration officials—including
the president himself—urged Israel to be careful with its response. Biden also told Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu that
the United States would not participate in or support a direct Israeli strike
on Iran.
In light of that
pressure, Israel has a choice to make. Does it go with a high-risk strike on
Iranian soil, perhaps against its nuclear program or another high-value target?
Or does it try to lower the risk of regional war with a more tailored approach,
such as a cyberattack against Tehran, targeted strikes against Iranian
commanders outside of Iran, or an attack on Iran-backed proxy groups in the
region?
But even as
Netanyahu’s war cabinet calls for a rapid response, experts are urging the
Israelis not to rush into the decision.
“There are the people
who are playing chess, the people who are playing checkers, and the people who
are eating the pieces off the board,” said Jonathan Lord, a former U.S. defense
official, and congressional aide who is now the director of the Middle East
security program at the Center for a New American Security (CNAS), a
Washington-based think tank. “Israel likely has to respond, but there is no
impetus to respond immediately. They don’t need to rush.”
And while we don't
want to double-guess which option Israel will choose these are the three
possibilities.
Option 1: Attack Iran’s Nuclear Program
ran’s nuclear program
has accelerated since the United States pulled out of the nuclear deal nearly six years ago. It’s
not clear that Iran has started building nuclear-capable missiles again, but if
it did decide to build a nuclear weapon, Tehran might be able to field one in as quickly as a few
months, top U.S. officials indicated last year. That makes Iranian nuclear
facilities an attractive target for the Israelis—though one on the high end of
the escalation spectrum.
“If Israel does
respond to Iran, it could be as significant as striking suspected Iranian
nuclear weapons facilities or going after their defense industrial base,” said
Michael Mulroy, a former U.S. defense official. “If they do either or both
successfully, Iran will [have made] a strategic mistake in mounting this
attack.”
That’s a big if. One
of Iran’s biggest nuclear facilities—Natanz—is dug into the side of a mountain
in the Zagros range so deep in the ground that might be impenetrable to even the largest U.S.-made bunker-busting
bomb.
“You could miss,”
Lord said. “You could fail. The only thing worse than Iran being where it
potentially is with its nuclear program is if Israel took a shot to take it out
and it didn’t succeed.”
A direct attack on
Iran’s nuclear program would probably mean the end of the ad hoc
coalition of Arab
states that supported the Israeli missile defense effort against Iran this
weekend. It might also further draw Iranian proxies, such as Lebanon-based
Hezbollah, into even fiercer confrontation with Israel, experts said. And with
the United States already signaling that it won’t support a direct attack on
Iran, the Israelis have to be careful not to go too far to anger their biggest
weapons patron—during an election year for Biden, no less.
“You already are
seeing some tensions and some daylight between the Americans and the Israelis,”
said Bilal Saab, an associate fellow with Chatham House in London and former
U.S. defense official. “So the last thing you want to do right now is lose the
Americans at a very critical and dangerous time.”
Option 2: Target Iranian Commanders, Military, or
Sites Inside or Outside Iran
Israel could strike targets
on Iranian soil that are not directly associated with the country’s nuclear
program. For instance, it could target a high-value military leader such as
Brig. Gen. Amir Ali Hajizadeh, the commander of the Islamic Revolutionary Guard
Corps’ (IRGC) aerospace forces, who masterminded this weekend’s drone and
missile attack.
“You will then be
going after the guy who orchestrated this massive fireworks show,” Lord said.
“He’s always on their minds as a target.”
Israel could also go
after military sites or weapons depots inside the country, or even IRGC
headquarters.
“They will likely
choose to respond directly in Iran, although it is likely that the U.S. will
try to dissuade that action to contain and prevent this from expanding,” said
Mulroy, the former U.S. defense official.
However, it might
whet Israel’s appetite enough to respond with a stepped-up assassination
campaign against IRGC commanders who are outside of Iran, in countries such as
Iraq and Syria. It may even pursue something similar to the strike against
an Iranian consular facility in Syria on April 1 that killed Gen. Mohammad Reza
Zahedi, the IRGC Quds Force commander in Lebanon and Syria, as well as his
deputy and five other officers—the same attack that began the current
escalatory spiral between Israel and Iran.
However, as this
weekend’s retaliatory attacks—as well as the Iranian ballistic missile strikes
against Iraqi military bases housing U.S. troops in January 2020, launched in
response to the U.S. killing of then-IRGC leader Qassem Suleimani—shows that
there is notable escalation risk in Israel going after Iranian military
leaders, whether inside or outside Iran proper.
But killing a
high-value target might also allow Israel to bide its time, Lord said, perhaps
for weeks or months. And although Netanyahu might not have the support of the
Biden administration for such an attack, it could be enough to send a deterrent
signal to Iran without tipping over the apple cart with Washington.
“The IDF [Israel
Defense Forces] likes a victory, but the IDF doesn’t like a defensive victory,”
said Frank McKenzie, a retired U.S. Marine general who led U.S. Central Command
from 2019 until 2022, during an event put on by the Jewish Institute for National
Security of America on Monday.
Still, there’s a risk
of operational failure in attacking a leader such as Hajizadeh or an IRGC
facility. It might have to take place at night—and after this weekend’s
attacks, many Iranian military leaders are probably in hiding.
“Iran, right now, is
at a high level of alert,” McKenzie added. “Leaders will be in bunkers.”
And the pressure from
the Americans and other countries to play it cool also might dissuade a quick
response.
“The fact that we
were so proactive and quick in going through the United Nations Security
Council, the fact that [Biden] placed a phone call immediately with the Israeli
prime minister to tell him that we do not support retaliation—those two factors
should reduce the chances of a more aggressive Israeli strike against Iran
right now,” Saab said.
Option 3: Strike Iranian Proxies or Launch a
Cyberattack on Iran
If Israeli leaders
are concerned about escalating tensions with Iran, they might choose a
lower-end response: Targeting Iranian proxies in the Middle East or engaging in
cyberattacks against Iran—and trying to show that they’re the big man on campus
in the region in the process.
Another humiliation
in the region—after barely any Iranian drones or missiles succeeded in hitting
Israeli soil over the weekend—could cause another hit to Tehran’s international
credibility.
“You’ve just really
embarrassed these guys infinitely. Israel is stronger today. Iran is weaker,”
McKenzie said. “If you’ve got to do something, whatever I did would be
something that was designed to further heighten your technological superiority
over Iran. Choose something that is embarrassing.”
Hezbollah is Iran’s
closest and most important proxy group in the region. Israel has already been
carrying out tit-for-tat
strikes against the
militant group in Lebanon over the past six months, but it could choose to launch
a much more intensive military campaign against Hezbollah.
However, that carries
risks of its own for Israel. Since the Hamas attack on Israel on Oct. 7, 2023,
Hezbollah has tried to avoid being drawn into a full-blown war with Israel, but
as Daniel Byman writes for Foreign Policy, “Should
Hezbollah decide to engage in all-out war, it would be a dramatic escalation:
Hezbollah’s 100,000-plus rocket arsenal dwarfs that of Hamas, and its fighters are
well-trained and battle-hardened.” The group would no doubt suffer major losses, but
so too could Israel.
Still, after the
Iranians took a historic step by striking Israel directly from their
soil—something that Tehran has never done
before—Netanyahu may be facing
considerable pressure from hard-liners in his war cabinet for a stronger
response.
“If you do that right
now and it is deemed to be insufficient, that could be perceived as weakness,”
said Lord, the CNAS expert.
Iran’s Response
Iran expended a lot
of weapons in Saturday night’s attacks against Israel. It fired more than 100
medium-range ballistic missiles, more than 30 land-attack cruise missiles, and
more than 150 one-way attack drones toward Israel, according to a senior U.S.
military official.
And McKenzie, the
former U.S. Central Command chief, said that Iran had to bring those
missiles—special variants with enough range to attack Israel—out of storage,
depleting a good chunk of its arsenal for a possible regional war.
“This was maximum
effort,” McKenzie added. “They expended the vast majority of their ballistic
missiles used to attack Israel.”
But a key challenge
for Iran in responding to the Israelis with firepower of its own is its lack of
missile launchers. McKenzie said that the Iranians have only about 300 missile
launchers to do these kinds of attacks, creating a major bottleneck if Tehran
ever wants to conduct a significant salvo across the region.
Israel also has the
benefit of being far away—its borders are more than 1,100 miles away from
some of the missile launch points used by Iran this weekend. “There isn’t an
imminent threat of Iran going back and doing this again on Wednesday,” Lord
said.
The Iranians,
however, might have plenty of ability to snuff out an Israeli attack in
the form of high-tech Russian-made air and missile defenses. “They’re in no way
going to compete with fifth-generation fighter aircraft from the Israelis,”
said Saab, the Chatham House fellow. “But the air defense system that they have
is no joke. It’s not the Syrian air defense network.”
But on both sides,
the fear of the worst case scenario is likely leading leaders to pull their
punches.
“What did the
Iranians think would happen if they’d killed 500 Israelis, and [blew up] F-35s,
and maybe hit a synagogue?” McKenzie said. “I know what the Israeli response
would have been. And they had
to believe that, too.”
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