• Why Iran’s retaliatory attack against Israel was not a 'failure'

    From NefeshBarYochai@void@invalid.noy to talk.politics.misc,soc.culture.usa,talk.politics.guns,alt.religion.christian.roman-catholic,comp.misc on Mon Apr 15 19:00:39 2024
    From Newsgroup: comp.misc

    Shortly after Iran’s retaliatory strike on Israel concluded seemingly
    without incident, the full-throated proclamations of Israel’s
    defensive feats followed. Israeli military spokesperson Daniel Hagari
    said that Iran’s retaliation had “failed” after 99% of the launched
    missiles and drones were intercepted by Israeli air defense systems.
    U.S. President Biden hailed Israel’s “remarkable capacity” to defend
    against such “unprecedented attacks,” sending a message to Iran that
    it “cannot effectively threaten the security of Israel.”

    Israeli military analyst Amos Harel added more meat to these
    statements, regarding the “incredible operational capabilities” of the
    Israeli Air Force and its allies to have averted an ostensible
    disaster by preventing the targeting of key military bases. He even
    goes so far as to say that “one can assume that Tehran is extremely disappointed,” because the intention of the attack, according to
    Harel, was to showcase its capabilities by hitting military targets
    like Netavim Air Base:

    “It appears that the Iranians planned to destroy the base and the
    advanced F-35 fighter jets stationed there, which are the crown jewel
    of American aid to Israel. Iran failed completely.”

    Such assessments are mistaken on two counts: first, they confuse (or intentionally obfuscate) Iran’s intentions behind the attack, and
    second, they incorrectly interpret the attack’s results.

    The first point is fairly uncontroversial. Virtually no one but
    Israeli talking heads believes that Iran launched the attack with the
    objective of widening the confrontation. Iran’s constant preparation
    of the international community by vociferously declaring its
    intentions a week in advance and promising the U.S. that its attack
    would be “under control” and conducted in a way that “avoids
    escalation” confirms that Iran was displaying considerable restraint
    in its strikes. Even Arab detractors of Iran mocked the attacks as an
    impotent exercise in political and military “theater.”

    The second point though has been less talked about because
    interpreting the attack’s results has been filtered through the
    various propaganda prisms of different actors. It’s fairly obvious why
    Israelis like Harel — who for the past six months has inflected his
    military analysis with journalistic psy-ops directed at his fellow
    Israelis — would want to inflate Israeli military achievements. After
    declining confidence in the army’s ability to protect its citizens
    following October 7, Israel has made a point of projecting an image of impregnability in the face of regional aggressors.

    Several activists and military and political analysts have offered a
    different interpretation of the results.

    Avaaz campaign director Fadi Quran posted on X that “the scale of
    Iran’s attack, the diversity of locations it targeted, and weapons it
    used, forced Israel to uncover the majority of anti-missile
    technologies the US and it have across the region.”

    “The Iranians did not use any weapons Israel didn’t know it had, it
    just used a lot of them,” Quran added. “But the Iranians likely now
    have almost a full map of what Israel’s missile defence system looks
    like, as well as where in Jordan and the Gulf the US has
    installations.”

    According to Quran, what this means is that Iran can now “reverse
    engineer” the intelligence it gathered, while Israel and the U.S.
    “will have to re-design away from their current model,” making the the
    cost of the “success” in stopping the attack very high.

    “Anyone assuming this is just theatrics is missing the context of how militaries assess strategy versus tactics,” Quran elaborated,
    emphasizing that gathering intelligence is a key component of long
    wars of attrition, which is a model that Iran prefers to all-out war.

    Beirut-based military analyst and Al-Mayadeen contributor Ali Jezzini
    offered a similar analysis of the Iranian strikes, arguing that they
    were “very successful” and that more missiles likely hit their target
    than Israel has been letting on.

    This seems to have been corroborated by video evidence recorded by
    Palestinians in the case of the Netivim military base, showing several
    missiles apparently hitting their targets, although there has been no confirmation of the extent of the damage

    “The cost of this night’s interceptions certainly exceeds a billion
    dollars between the Americans and the Israelis,” Jezzini added, a
    claim that seems to be echoed by Israeli sources.

    Jezzini said that in the context of a full-scale war, Israel would not
    be able to keep up this level of air defense for more than a few days
    before missiles started to overwhelm Israel’s defense capabilities.

    Political analyst Sari Orabi echoed this analysis on his Telegram
    channel, arguing that the “success” of Israel in intercepting Iranian
    missiles is “conditional upon the presence of regional layers of
    protection provided by the United States,” which exposes Israel’s
    reliance on its network of allies and forces it to give away its
    various defensive positions.

    Orabi added that the Iranian intention behind the strike was
    “extremely cautious” and “sought to create a new deterrence stance
    that does not evolve into war,” which creates a new precedent for
    Iranian action that increases the regional cost of continuing
    belligerent action toward Iran.

    The Biden administration has also made this cost clear to Israel,
    reportedly telling Netanyahu that the U.S. would not back an Israeli counterattack and that Israel should “take the win.”

    In this context, Iran has consciously and delicately raised the stakes
    of a wider confrontation, further straining U.S.-Israeli relations and
    creating renewed pressure to diffuse regional tensions. Possibly, it
    might also lead to pressure to end the genocidal war on Gaza.

    https://mondoweiss.net/2024/04/why-irans-retaliatory-attack-against-israel-was-not-a-failure/


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