J Street Makes an Attack on Iran
More Likely
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friends to like this.
J Street, which calls itself "pro-Israel
and pro-peace", is now making it more likely that Israel and/or the United
States will have no choice but to take military action against Iran's nuclear
weapons program.
The Israeli government is facing what may be its most daunting existential
challenge since the founding of the State and certainly since the eve of the
1967 War. There are no perfect solutions to the problem posed by Iran's
determination to develop nuclear weapons capable of destroying Israel. It has
become clear that sanctions, coupled with diplomatic efforts, may hurt Iran,
but will never pressure them into giving up their quest for nuclear weapons. It
has also become clear, as President Obama has stated, that containment of a
nuclear Iran is not an option. The only thing that will deter Iran from moving
forward with its nuclear program is a credible threat of military action by the
United States.
The Iranian leaders must come to believe that the United States is really
keeping its military option on the table. If the Iranian mullahs truly believe
that the United States will never allow Iran to develop nuclear weapons, they
may well decide that the pain caused by sanctions is not worth the benefits of
going forward, since they will never be able to achieve their goal.
This is one instance where "saber rattling" and "beating the
drums of war" may actually help to avoid war. But the rattling and the
drumming must be credible in the eyes and ears of those to whom it is
directed—namely the Iranian leaders.
America's commitment to keep the military option on the table must also be
credible to Israel's leaders, who must decide whether to rely on the United
States or whether to risk unilateral military action—and if so, when. If Israel
acts too quickly, it risks alienating its most important ally. If it waits too
long, it risks allowing the Iranians to develop immunity against a successful
Israeli attack. Whatever action or inaction it undertakes involves considerable
and serious potential downsides. In a democracy, such risks must be evaluated
and decided on by elected officials whose job it is to protect the security of
the nation and its citizens. No nation can outsource existential decisions to
even its closest allies. Each nation must determine its own policies based on
its own assessments of risks and benefits.
President Obama has now settled on a policy for the United States. Pursuant
to this policy, the President has assured Israel that if Israel forbears from
attacking Iran, and that if Iran crosses certain thresholds, the United States will
attack and destroy Iran's nuclear weapons program. For this policy to succeed,
both Iran and Israel must believe Obama's conditional "sword
rattling" and "drum beating." They must know that he is speaking
truthfully when he says, "I don't bluff."
Now comes J Street, which is perceived, by both Iranian and Israeli leaders,
as close to the Obama Administration. In its most recent mass emailing, Jeremy
Ben-Ami, J Street's leader, urges his followers to undercut the Obama policy by
demanding that President Obama stop threatening military action against Iran
and that "the drums of war" must be silenced.
Without distinguishing between an Israeli and an American military attack, J
Street mendaciously claims that "top Israeli security experts and former
officials warned about the inefficacy and disastrous consequences of a military
strike against Iran's nuclear facilities" and that "many in the
American and Israeli intelligence and security establishments believe that a
strike on Iran would fail to end Iran's nuclear program and may even accelerate
it…."
While this may be true of a unilateral Israeli strike, it is totally
untrue of an American or joint attack, which many of these
experts acknowledge would wreak havoc on the Iranian nuclear weapons program.
Many of these same experts have explicitly called for the United States to
maintain its military option as a last resort. But J Street, on its website,
expressly "oppose[s] legislation authorizing, encouraging or in other ways
laying the groundwork for the use of military force against Iran." Such
legislation refers exclusively to an American, not an Israeli, attack.
But "laying the groundwork for the use of military force against
Iran" by the United States is precisely what is needed to deter
Iran from going forward with its nuclear weapons program. By credibly laying
such groundwork, the United States reduces the chances that it will actually
need to employ its military option. By undercutting the threat of employing the
military option, J Street increases the likelihood that it will have to be
used.
J Street, in addition to undercutting mainstream Israeli and American policy
toward Iran, has also mischaracterized the views of those it cites in support
of its position, including former Mossad chiefs Meir Dagan and Efraim Halevy.
It cites these two Israeli security experts as opposing an American
strike and an American threat to strike. Both Dagan and Halevy have
repeatedly said, however, that the American military option "must always
be on the table."
J Street should get out of the business of telling Israel how to balance
existential risks regarding the security of its citizens. It should stop
undercutting American policy with regard to Iran. And as an organization that
claims it is both pro-Israel and pro-peace, it should recognize that its
superficial approach to this complex problem is bad for peace, bad for Israel
and bad for American efforts to prevent a nuclear Iran without the need for a
military attack.
If drums and sabers can prevent the need for bombs and rockets, let them
beat and rattle on!
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