The Guardian view on Netanyahu’s Iran war: long planned, recklessly pursued – and perilous for all | Editorial

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"Netanyahu's Military Strategy Against Iran Raises Concerns Over Escalation and Legal Norms"

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In late 2020, General Mark Milley, then chairman of the U.S. Joint Chiefs of Staff, advised then-President Donald Trump against military action in Iran, warning that such an attack could lead to war and potential war crimes charges for U.S. officials. Despite pressure from Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, Trump ultimately chose to follow Milley's counsel, avoiding a conflict that could have escalated significantly. Fast forward five years, Netanyahu appears to have initiated the military confrontation with Tehran that he has long sought, operating in an environment where international law seems to be disregarded, particularly after the previous U.S. administration's stance towards the International Criminal Court and its scrutiny of Israeli actions in Gaza. This shift has emboldened Israel to act without the constraints of established legal norms, blurring the lines between self-defense and aggression as it pursues broader military objectives against Iran, including regime change and significant strikes against Iranian infrastructure.

Israel's justification for its military actions rests on the claim that Iran is working towards developing nuclear weapons. However, this assertion raises questions, especially considering that Israel itself is the only undeclared nuclear power in the region and operates outside the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty. The ongoing conflict has resulted in Iranian retaliatory missile strikes, leading to casualties among Israeli civilians and targeting critical energy facilities. Netanyahu's military strategy appears to rely on provocations to either compel Iran into submission or to incite a broader conflict that could involve U.S. intervention. This precarious situation has been exacerbated by Netanyahu's domestic political challenges, as he seeks to consolidate his power amidst potential coalition instability. As tensions rise, the possibility of a wider conflict looms, with concerns about civil unrest in Iran and potential economic repercussions globally. Ultimately, diplomatic dialogue may offer the most viable path towards a resolution, highlighting the imperative of negotiations over military confrontation.

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In late 2020, Gen Mark Milley – then chairman of the US joint chiefs of staff – urged Donald Trump not to attack Iran and to ignore pressure from the Israeli prime minister, Benjamin Netanyahu, who was pushing hard for military action. Mr Trump backed down after the generalwarnedthat attacking Iran would start a war, with the risk of US officials being “tried as war criminals in The Hague”.

Five years on, Israel’s prime minister has thefight with Tehranthat he has spent decades preparing for, bolstered by Mr Trump’s claims thatinternational lawno longer applies. After all, why worry about red lines when The Hague’s already got a warrant out for you and your alliespretendnot to notice? It helps when the US treats the international criminal court like a rogue actor. Mr Trump has even gone after the court’sjudgesand prosecutor for daring to scrutinise “our close ally” Israel over Gaza. Legal norms? Apparently, those are for enemies, not friends.

As the UN charter is typically interpreted, the use of force is allowed against an actual or imminent attack in self-defence – but it must be necessary and proportionate. With Mr Netanyahu’s expanding aims –regime change, strikes onenergyinfrastructure and bombingresidentialareas – the action no longer even pretends to be self-defence. In response, Iran has launched10 wavesof ballistic missiles, killing Israeli civilians and targeting its oil and gas facilities.

Israel justifies its actions by saying Tehran ispreparingto build a nuclear bomb. If true, Israel knows more than both theUS and the UN’s nuclear watchdog. The International Atomic Energy Agency’sfindingof a safeguards breach has political weight, but no legal bite. YetIsrael– still the region’s only nuclear power, undeclared and outside the nuclear non-proliferation treaty – is bombing Iran to stop it from doing what it never admitted to doing itself.

Mr Netanyahu lacks thebunker-busting bombsand bombers needed to seriously damage Iran’s deeply buried nuclear sites. So the strategy may be to hit hard enough to force Iran into submission – or to provoke abacklashbig enough to drag Mr Trump in. Either way, it’s a strategy that relies less on deterrence than on provocation.

Israel’s impunity sets a dangerous precedent, where the strong act as they please and the weak suffer the consequences – convention and law be damned. But Mr Netanyahu may have felt his options were narrowing. Troublingly for him, Iran had signalled unprecedentedconcessionsduring talks with Mr Trump. Whether from weakness or calculation, that opening was real. The prospect of an Iran-US nuclear deal that permitted Tehranlimited uranium enrichmentunder strict monitoring may have been too much for Mr Netanyahu.

Ever the opportunist, the Israeli prime minister seized the moment. Tehran’s allyHezbollahwas neutralised, Iran’s air defences crippled and Iran’s partner Bashar al-Assad had fled Syria – opening a “corridor” for airstrikes. With UScoordination secured, Israel’s military struck. The bonus for Mr Netanyahu was that he received a political domestic boost just as his coalition threatened tounravel.

If the fighting escalates, things could spiral out of control, perhaps with civil war in Iran or aglobal economic shock. Better to trade words than missiles,thinks Tehran. If the US and Iran pursue realistic goals, a verifiable non-proliferationdealis within reach. As ever, jaw‑jaw is better than war-war.

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Source: The Guardian