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Here’s how Israel can respond to Iran’s attack and keep its defensive alliance together

The Jewish state has many serious options open to it which need not escalate the conflict

April 17, 2024 10:12
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Hossein Salami, commander-in-chief of the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps d(Photo by HOSSEIN BERIS/Middle East Images/AFP via Getty Images)
3 min read

Israel must respond to the unprecedented attack launched by Iran on Saturday. This is the first time since the 1979 Islamic Revolution that the Islamic Republic’s leaders have initiated such an operation from Iranian territory targeting the Jewish state. The retaliation should be large enough to deter but targeted smartly for alliance management purposes. One way for Israel to thread the needle is for it to spearhead airstrikes on Iran’s defence industries, which have been arming Russia in its war against Ukraine.

In the hours after Tehran launched Operation True Promise on 13 April, the Commander-in-Chief of the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) Hossein Salami proclaimed that “we have adopted a new equation with the Zionist entity, which is to respond to any aggression from its side directly from Iranian territory.” This has been the most significant statement emanating from the Islamic Republic since the conclusion of its drone and missile swarm against Israel. It is evidence that Iranian military planners view Operation True Promise as setting a new deterrence equation with Israel—that if left without a response would make the country more vulnerable. This is why Israel is obligated to make the costs of such an Iranian operation outweigh its benefits. It cannot become the new normal.

13 April was not “a win”, as the Biden administration has been portraying it. There is a difference between the significant defensive achievement that Israel, along with its allies and partners, scored and the movement of power in the Middle East. Iran felt emboldened enough to remove its trademark veil of plausible deniability —morphing from a modus operandi of grey zone warfare via proxies and partners into direct combat. It also changed the rules of the game by using Iranian territory as a base of attack against Israel. Before 13 April, Iranian decision makers had only produced videos and made bombastic statements in threatening to directly deploy its arsenal of terror against Israel. But last Saturday it made good on those fantasies, which served as a win in terms of propaganda, psychological warfare and on the battlefield.

Israel has many options to choose from in terms of targets and modes of attack. It has a formidable capability not only kinetically but also in cyberspace. It could combine both in its response, alongside covert action. Israeli leaders may eye the missile and drone bases in Iran from which it attacked the Jewish state. There is history here. In March 2022 public reporting suggested that an aerial operation by Israel destroyed hundreds of drones at an Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) base near Kermanshah in Mahidasht.