Published on Friday, August 13, 2010 by Inter Press Service
Point of Return: Israeli Generals and Intel Officials Oppose Attack on
by Gareth Porter
WASHINGTON - Pro-Israeli journalist Jeffrey Goldberg's article in "The Atlantic" magazine was evidently aimed at showing why the Barack Obama administration should worry that it risks an attack by the government of Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu on Iran in the coming months unless it takes a much more menacing line toward Iran's nuclear programme. [1]
But the article provides new evidence that senior figures in the Israeli intelligence and military leadership oppose such a strike against
Although not reported by Goldberg, Israeli military and intelligence figures began to express their opposition to such rhetoric on
The Goldberg article also reveals extreme Israeli sensitivity to any move by Obama to publicly demand that
Goldberg argues that a likely scenario some months in the future is that Israeli officials will call their
The Israelis would explain that they had "no choice", he writes, because "a nuclear
He claims the "consensus" among present and past Israeli leaders is that the chances are better than 50/50 that
Goldberg is best known for hewing to the neoconservative line in his reporting on Iraq, particularly in his insistence that that Saddam Hussein had extensive ties with al Qaeda.
Goldberg quotes an Israeli official familiar with Netanyahu's thinking as saying, "In World War II, the Jews had no power to stop Hitler from annihilating us. Six million were slaughtered. Today, six million Jews live in
In his interview with Goldberg for this article, however, Netanyahu does not argue that
But
Goldberg reports that other Israeli leaders, including defence minister Ehud Barack, acknowledge the real problem with the possibility of a nuclear Iran is that it would gradually erode Israel's ability to retain its most talented people.
But that problem is mostly self-inflicted. Goldberg concedes that Israeli generals with whom he talked "worry that talk of an 'existential threat' is itself a kind of existential threat to the Zionist project, which was meant to preclude such threats against the Jewish people."
A number of sources told Goldberg, moreover, that Gabi Ashkenazi, the Israeli army chief of staff, doubts "the usefulness of an attack".
Top Israeli intelligence officials and others responsible for policy toward
Security correspondent Ronen Bergman reported in
Farkash and other military intelligence and Mossad officials believe Iran's main motive for seeking a nuclear weapons capability was not to threaten Israel but to "deter U.S. intervention and efforts at regime change", according to Bergman.
The use of blatantly distorted rhetoric about Iran as a threat to Israel - and Israeli intelligence officials' disagreement with it - goes back to the early 1990s, when the Labour Party government in Israel began a campaign to portray Iran's missile and nuclear programmes as an "existential threat" to Israel, as Trita Parsi revealed in his 2007 book "Treacherous Alliance".
An internal Israeli inter-ministerial committee formed in 1994 to make recommendations on dealing with
Ironically, it was Netanyahu who decided to stop using such rhetoric after becoming prime minister the first time in mid-1996. Mossad director of intelligence Uzi Arad convinced him that
Netanyahu even sought Kazakh and Russian mediation between
But he reversed that policy when he became convinced that
That episode suggests that Netanyahu is perfectly capable of grasping the intelligence community's more nuanced analysis of
Netanyahu administration officials used Goldberg to convey the message to the Americans that they didn't believe Obama would launch an attack on Iran, and therefore
But
The knowledge that
Goldberg reports that "several Israeli officials" told him they were worried that
The officials told Goldberg that if Obama were to say, "We know what you're doing. Stop immediately,"
Goldberg alludes only vaguely to the possibility that the threat of an attack on
© 2010 IPS North
URL to article: http://www.commondreams.org/headline/2010/08/13-7
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"The master class has always declared the wars; the subject class has always fought the battles. The master class has had all to gain and nothing to lose, while the subject class has had nothing to gain and everything to lose--especially their lives." Eugene Victor Debs
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