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Israel

Israel must prepare for Iranian ‘thousand cuts’ war

'Resistance' entails mobilising proxy forces such as Palestinian Islamic Jihad and Hezbollah

August 25, 2022 11:50
Lapid F220724MISPOOL03
Prime Minister Yair Lapid leads a cabinet meeting at the Prime Minister's office in Jerusalem on July 24, 2022. Photo by Marc Israel Sellem/POOL ***POOL PICTURE, EDITORIAL USE ONLY/NO SALES, PLEASE CREDIT THE PHOTOGRAPHER AS WRITTEN - MARC ISRAEL SELLEM/POOL*** *** Local Caption *** ישיבת ממשלה ראש הממשלה יעיר לפיד פגישה קבינט
3 min read

As Israel slouches toward fresh elections, the possibility of Western countries returning to some kind of Iran deal, based on the 2015 Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action, looms over the next two months of campaigning.

The US, Britain, France and Germany are discussing methods of returning to the 2015 deal, even as Iran continues to enrich uranium and uses its proxies to wreak havoc across the Middle East.

While the US and its Western partners say they are concerned about Iran’s destabilising activities, Israel has much more to lose from Tehran’s genocidal threats. Tehran believes that while Israel possesses technological superiority, that political chaos may be Jerusalem’s undoing.

At the same time as the nuclear deal talks grind on, Iran has laid out a multi-pronged strategy to pressure Israel ahead of the elections.

It is a strategy Iran’s regime has honed over the last decade. The head of the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps, Hossein Salami, gave an interview this month to regime media in Iran detailing the regional anti-Israel strategy that Iran has cooked up.

In Iran’s view this is a multi-pronged “resistance” against Israel that entails mobilising proxy forces such as Palestinian Islamic Jihad and Hezbollah to confront Israel and create a kind of maximum pressure against Jerusalem.

Iran has bankrolled Hamas and PIJ for years and helped arm them with an expansive arsenal of long- range rockets. In recent years this support has increased to provide advice on use of drones and precision-guided munitions.

The recent interview by Salami reveals that Iran is aware of Israel’s technological superiority on the battlefield. Israel has improved its air defences, such as the Iron Dome system, and is working on adding lasers to Iron Dome so that Israel can reduce the cost of confronting missile salvos.

Knowing this, Iran has pivoted from trying to overwhelm Israel’s defences with masses of rockets, to using a strategy of lots of little threats to keep Israel distracted.

For instance, last year as Israel was still staggering from one governing coalition to another, Iran encouraged a crisis in Jerusalem that led to a 10-day war between Israel and Hamas. This year, within a month of Israel’s Knesset disbanding in favour of new elections, Iran again mobilised its proxies in Gaza to create a short conflict.

One war timed to coincide with an election process might be coincidence; a second a year later, combined with Iran’s IRGC laying out its strategy in an interview, belies a plan.