Tuesday, August 14, 2012
Israel Plans for Iran Strike as Citizens Say Government
SeriousDozens of Israelis crowded in front of a storefront at a Jerusalem shopping mall yesterday to
pick up new gas masks, part of civil defense preparations in case the military strikes Iran and the Islamic Republic or its allies retaliate.
“Our leaders seem to have gotten very hawkish in their speeches and this time it seems they mean what they say,” said Yoram Lands, 68, a professor of
business administration, who was picking up new masks for himself and his wife at a distribution center in the mall.
Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu told visiting U.S. Defense Secretary Leon Panetta on Aug. 1 that time “is running out” for a peaceful solution to Iran’s
atomic program. The Tel Aviv-based Haaretz newspaper reported Aug. 10 that Netanyahu and Defense Minister Ehud Barak are considering bombing Iran’s nuclear
facilities before U.S. elections on Nov. 6. Netanyahu spokesman Mark Regev said government policy is not to comment on media speculation.
“It seems that Netanyahu and Barak are making a special effort now to prepare the Israeli public for an attack on Iran,” said Shlomo Brom, a former
commander of the army’s Strategic Planning Division, who said that any strike could come within the next six months. In the past, rhetoric was directed at
pushing the international community to take stronger action against Iran, said Brom, a senior research fellow at the Institute for National Security Studies
at Tel Aviv University.
New System
While Israeli leaders repeatedly have said that they could strike Iran’s facilities, the words are now being accompanied by civil defense measures,
including a new system that uses text messages to alert the public to missile attacks, wider distribution of gas masks and the appointment of a new Home
Front Defense minister. The threats also come as nuclear talks between Iran and world powers have stalled and increased sanctions have so far failed to stop
Iran’s atomic progress.
Concern that the Israeli moves may herald a possible strike helped weaken the shekel to its lowest value in almost 15 months this week, sent government
benchmark bond yields climbing and pushed the Tel Aviv Stock Market to a three-week low on Aug. 13. The Bloomberg Israel-US Equity Index of the most-traded
Israeli companies in New York sank the most in three months, making the benchmark gauge the cheapest in two years relative to the Standard & Poor’s 500.
“With the headlines and saber-rattling we’ve had the last week, there is a higher risk premium, so it’s logical you see the currency weaken,” said
Jonathan Katz, a Jerusalem-based economist for HSBC Holdings Plc.
Destabilizing Region
U.S. officials, concerned that a conflict could destabilize the region and send oil prices soaring, have been urging caution. Panetta told reporters
yesterday that the “window is still open” to resolve the dispute through diplomacy and that he thinks Israel hasn’t made a decision “at this time” to
attack Iranian nuclear sites.
“From our point of view, the window is still open to try to work toward a diplomatic solution,” he said during a briefing at the Pentagon outside
Washington.
David Rothkopf, a visiting scholar at the Washington-based Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, said it is “extremely unlikely Israel could do
anything without a regional ally or the cooperation of the U.S.”
Iranian officials have dismissed the threats of an attack.
“We don’t think any of the officials in this illegitimate regime wants to do something as illogical as this,” Ramin Mehmanparast, Iran’s Foreign Ministry
spokesman, told reporters at a Tehran press conference yesterday. Iran says its nuclear program aims to produce electricity for a growing population.
Tougher Sanctions
Amid earlier Israeli threats, the U.S. and its European allies passed tougher sanctions against Iran that have been taking a toll on the country’s economy.
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