George Friedman
For the past several months,
the Israelis have been threatening to attack Iranian nuclear sites as the
United States has pursued a complex policy of avoiding complete opposition to
such strikes while making clear it doesn't feel such strikes are necessary. At
the same time, the United States has carried out maneuvers meant to demonstrate
its ability to prevent the Iranian counter to an attack -- namely blocking the
Strait of Hormuz. While these maneuvers were under way, U.S. Secretary of State
Hillary Clinton said no "redline" exists that once crossed by Iran
would compel an attack on Iran's nuclear facilities. The Israeli government has
long contended that Tehran eventually will reach the point where it will be too
costly for outsiders to stop the Iranian nuclear program.
The Israeli and American
positions are intimately connected, but the precise nature of the connection is
less clear. Israel publicly casts itself as eager to strike Iran but restrained
by the United States, though unable to guarantee it will respect American
wishes if Israel sees an existential threat emanating from Iran. The United
States publicly decries Iran as a threat to Israel and to other countries in
the region, particularly Saudi Arabia, but expresses reservations about
military action out of fears that Iran would respond to a strike by destabilizing
the region and because it does not believe the Iranian nuclear program is as
advanced as the Israelis say it is.
The Israelis and the Americans
publicly hold the same view of Iran. But their public views on how to proceed
diverge. The Israelis have less tolerance for risk than the Americans, who have
less tolerance for the global consequences of an attack. Their disagreement on
the issue pivots around the status of the Iranian nuclear program. All of this
lies on the surface; let us now examine the deeper structure of the issue.
Behind the Rhetoric
From the Iranian point of
view, a nuclear program has been extremely valuable. Having one has brought
Iran prestige in the Islamic world and has given it a level of useful global
political credibility. As with North Korea, having a nuclear program has allowed Iran to sit as an equal with
the five permanent members of the U.N. Security Council plus Germany, creating
a psychological atmosphere in which Iran's willingness merely to talk to the
Americans, British, French, Russians, Chinese and Germans represented a
concession. Though it has positioned the Iranians extremely well politically,
the nuclear program also has triggered sanctions that have caused Iran substantial pain. But Iran has prepared for sanctions
for years, building a range of corporate, banking and security mechanisms to
evade their most devastating impact. Having countries like Russia and China
unwilling to see Iran crushed has helped. Iran can survive sanctions.
While a nuclear program has
given Iran political leverage, actually acquiring nuclear weapons would
increase the risk of military action against Iran. A failed military action would benefit Iran, proving its power. By contrast, a
successful attack that dramatically delayed or destroyed Iran's nuclear
capability would be a serious reversal. The Stuxnet episode,
assuming it was an Israeli or U.S. attempt to undermine Iran's program using
cyberwarfare, is instructive in this regard. Although the United States hailed
Stuxnet as a major success, it hardly stopped the Iranian program, if the
Israelis are to be believed. In that sense, it was a failure.
Using nuclear weapons against
Israel would be catastrophic to Iran. The principle of mutual assured
destruction, which stabilized the U.S.-Soviet balance in the Cold War, would
govern Iran's use of nuclear weapons. If Iran struck Israel, the damage would
be massive, forcing the Iranians to assume that the Israelis and their allies
(specifically, the United States) would launch a massive counterattack on Iran,
annihilating large parts of Iran's population.
It is here that we get to the
heart of the issue. While from a rational perspective the Iranians would be
fools to launch such an attack, the Israeli position is that the Iranians are
not rational actors and that their religious fanaticism makes any attempt to
predict their actions pointless. Thus, the Iranians might well accept the
annihilation of their country in order to destroy Israel in a sort of
megasuicide bombing. The Israelis point to the Iranians' rhetoric as evidence
of their fanaticism. Yet, as we know, political rhetoric is not always
politically predictive. In addition, rhetoric aside, Iran has pursued a
cautious foreign policy, pursuing its ends with cover trather than overt means. It has rarely taken reckless action, engaging
instead in reckless rhetoric.
If the Israelis believe the
Iranians are not deterred by the prospect of mutually assured destruction, then
allowing them to develop nuclear weapons would be irrational. If they do see
the Iranians as rational actors, then shaping the psychological environment in
which Iran acquires nuclear weapons is a critical element of mutually assured
destruction. Herein lies the root of the great Israeli debate that pits the
Netanyahu government, which appears to regard Iran as irrational, against
significant segments of the Israeli military and intelligence communities,
which regard Iran as rational.
Avoiding Attaining a Weapon
Assuming the Iranians are
rational actors, their optimal strategy lies not in acquiring nuclear weapons
and certainly not in using them, but instead in having a credible weapons
development program that permits them to be seen as significant international
actors. Developing weapons without ever producing them gives Iran international
political significance, albeit at the cost of sanctions of debatable impact. At
the same time, it does not force anyone to act against them, thereby permitting
outsiders to avoid incurring the uncertainties and risks of such action.
Up to this point, the Iranians
have not even fielded a device for testing, let alone a deliverable weapon. For
all their activity, either their technical limitations or a political decision
has kept them from actually crossing the obvious redlines and left Israel
trying to define some developmental redline.
Iran's approach has created a
slowly unfolding crisis, reinforced by Israel's slowly rolling response. For
its part, all of Israel's rhetoric -- and periodic threats of imminent attack
-- has been going on for several years, but the Israelis have done little
beyond some covert and cyberattacks to block the Iranian nuclear program. Just as the gap
between Iranian rhetoric and action has been telling, so, too, has the gap
between Israeli rhetoric and reality. Both want to appear more fearsome than
either is actually willing to act.
The Iranian strategy has been
to maintain ambiguity on the status of its program, while making it appear that
the program is capable of sudden success -- without ever achieving that
success. The Israeli strategy has been to appear constantly on the verge of
attack without ever attacking and to use the United States as its reason for
withholding attacks, along with the studied ambiguity of the Iranian program.
The United States, for its part, has been content playing the role of holding
Israel back from an attack that Israel doesn't seem to want to launch. The
United States sees the crumbling of Iran's position in Syria as a major Iranian reversal and is content to see this play out alongside sanctions.
Underlying Israel's hesitancy
about whether it will attack has been the question of whether it can pull off
an attack. This is not a political question, but a military and technical one.
Iran, after all, has been preparing for an attack on its nuclear facilities
since their inception. Some scoff at Iranian preparations for attack. These are
the same people who are most alarmed by supposed Iranian acumen in developing
nuclear weapons. If a country can develop nuclear weapons, there is no reason
it can't develop hardened and dispersed sites and create enough ambiguity to
deprive Israeli and U.S. intelligence of confidence in their ability to
determine what is where. I am reminded of the raid on Son Tay during the
Vietnam War. The United States mounted an effort to rescue U.S. prisoners of
war in North Vietnam only to discover that its intelligence on where the POWs
were located was completely wrong. Any politician deciding whether to attack
Iran would have Son Tay and a hundred other intelligence failures chasing
around their brains, especially since a failed attack on Iran would be far
worse than no attack.
Dispersed sites reduce
Israel's ability to strike hard at a target and to acquire a battle damage
assessment that would tell Israel three things: first, whether the target had
been destroyed when it was buried under rock and concrete; second, whether the
target contained what Israel thought it contained; and third, whether the
strike had missed a backup site that replicated the one it destroyed. Assuming
the Israelis figured out that another attack was needed, could their air force
mount a second air campaign lasting days or weeks? They have a small air force
and the distances involved are great.
Meanwhile, deploying special
operations forces to so many targets so close to Tehran and so far from Iran's
borders would be risky, to say the least. Some sort of exotic attack, for
example one using nuclear weapons to generate electromagnetic pulses to paralyze the region, is conceivable -- but given the size of
the Tel Aviv-Jerusalem-Haifa triangle, it is hard to imagine Israel wanting to
set such a precedent. If the Israelis have managed to develop a new weapons
technology unknown to anyone, all conventional analyses are off. But if the
Israelis had an ultrasecret miracle weapon, postponing its use might compromise
its secrecy. I suspect that if they had such a weapon, they would have used it
by now.
The battlefield challenges
posed by the Iranians are daunting, and a strike becomes even less appealing
considering that the Iranians have not yet detonated a device and are far from
a weapon. The Americans emphasize these points, but they are happy to use the
Israeli threats to build pressure on the Iranians. The United States wants to
undermine Iranian credibility in the region by making Iran seem vulnerable. The
twin forces of Israeli rhetoric and sanctions help make Iran look embattled.
The reversal in Syria enhances this sense. Naval maneuvers in the Strait of
Hormuz add to the sense that the United States is prepared to neutralize Iranian counters to an Israeli
airstrike, making the threat Israel poses and the weakness of Iran appear
larger.
When we step back and view the
picture as a whole, we see Iran using its nuclear program for political reasons
but being meticulous not to make itself appear unambiguously close to success.
We see the Israelis talking as if they were threatened but acting as if they
were in no rush to address the supposed threat. And we see the Americans acting
as if they are restraining Israel, paradoxically appearing to be Iran's
protector even though they are using the Israeli threat to increase Iranian
insecurity. For their part, the Russians initially supported Iran in a bid
to bog down theUnited States in another Middle East crisis. But given Iran's reversal in
Syria, the Russians are clearly reconsidering their Middle East strategy and
even whether they actually have a strategy in the first place. Meanwhile, the Chinese want to continue buying Iranian oil unnoticed.
It is the U.S.-Israeli byplay
that is most fascinating. On the surface, Israel is driving U.S. policy. On
closer examination, the reverse is true. Israel has bluffed an attack for years
and never acted. Perhaps now it will act, but the risks of failure are
substantial. If Israel really wants to act, this is not obvious. Speeches by
politicians do not constitute clear guidelines. If the Israelis want to get the
United States to participate in the attack, rhetoric won't work. Washington
wants to proceed by increasing pressure to isolate Iran. Simply getting rid of
a nuclear program not clearly intended to produce a device is not U.S. policy.
Containing Iran without being drawn into a war is. To this end, Israeli
rhetoric is useful.
Rather than seeing Netanyahu
as trying to force the United States into an attack, it is more useful to see
Netanyahu's rhetoric as valuable to U.S. strategy. Israel and the United States
remain geopolitically aligned. Israel's bellicosity is not meant to signal an
imminent attack, but to support the U.S. agenda of isolating and maintaining
pressure on Iran. That would indicate more speeches from Netanyahu and greater
fear of war. But speeches and emotions aside, intensifying psychological
pressure on Iran is more likely than war.
George Friedman, Stratfor,
September 11, 2012
"War
and Bluff: Iran, Israel and the United States is republished with
permission of Stratfor."
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