In little more than a
year, the prime minister has managed to move the Iran nuclear issue to
the top of the international agenda, to toughen sanctions, and in an
extraordinary move, to push U.S. President Barack Obama to strengthen
American policy so that preventing Iran from acquiring nuclear weapons
became the focus, rather than just containing Iran and its nuclear
program.
Indeed, if you throw in
Republican challenger Mitt Romney's unwillingness to accept Iran even
having the capacity to produce a nuke, Netanyahu's record is even
better.
Aaron David Miller
But Israel's policy is
approaching a point of diminishing returns. By stressing red lines it
can't or won't enforce, Netanyahu threatens to overplay his hand,
irritate a close ally and undermine Israel's own credibility. And here's
why.
Club Red Line: Who else is going to join?
The logic of getting a
great many countries to sign on to some new line in the sand on paper
might make sense. Since Israel can't or won't (yet) enforce its own new
red line -- Iran is moving to enrich higher levels of uranium -- it will
require others to join it to be effective.
But this is a club few
seem ready to join. Indeed, Israel's most important ally seems very
reluctant to get locked into trip wires or red lines that might commit
it to what Obama seems determined to try to avoid -- a military strike
against Iran's nuclear sites.
In fact, the cruel
reality from Netanyahu's perspective is that with the exception of
Israel's government, which sees a putative military strike as a war of
necessity, everyone else -- without exception -- sees it as a war of
discretion.
Iran has no weapon. It
hasn't tested one and doesn't have enough fissile material to produce
one. Nobody is ready for Iraq War redux, least of all an American
president who is running on extricating America from costly and
unpredictable wars, not getting the United States into new ones.
Undermining Deterrence
The more Israel talks
about red lines, green lights and military options without actually
acting, the more its credibility and deterrent capacity is undermined.
Once a day and twice on Sunday, Israeli politicians are either talking
or leaking why Israel is going to strike Iran. These war scares are
becoming something of a joke, truly. One Israeli source told me that he
was getting so tired of this Cry Wolf line that Israel ought to just hit
the Iranians and get it over with already.
You can only imagine the
chuckling going on in Teheran. This past spring a war scare prompted a
parade of senior U.S. officials to run to Israel to reassure their
counterparts, then it was the "October surprise" scare that Israel would
strike before the November elections. And now the prime minister has
stated in his U.N. General Assembly speech
that it wouldn't be until next spring, or at most by next summer, at
current enrichment rates, that Iran will have finished the medium
enrichment of nuclear fuel and move on to the final state, all but
implying that Israel would probably not act until next year.
You have to wonder why
anyone would lay down red lines publicly if he can't credibly enforce
them nor expect others to? If red lines are to deter war not facilitate
it as the prime minister says, then Teheran would have to stop enriching
uranium out of fear of an Israeli strike. But given the reality that
Iran knows Israel is bluffing, figures it can absorb and even exploit an
Israeli strike, and the U.S. and the international community don't want
war, where's the urgency? In this case, there's very little reason for
the mullahs to worry.
Angering the President
Even without Iran to
complicate it, the relationship between Obama and Netanyahu is among the
most dysfunctional in the history of the U.S.-Israel story. There's
little sense of confidence and trust and a pronounced sense that each
would like to close his eyes and make a wish that the other would
disappear.
Netanyahu thinks Obama
is bloodless and cold when it comes to understanding Israel's fears and
its security challenges; Obama thinks Netanyahu is a conman who thinks
only of himself with little sense of respect or sensitivity for American
interests. Indeed, one of the reasons Obama doesn't want to endorse
Netanyahu's red lines is that it will make it harder for the Iranians to
cut a deal, and that is still Obama's preferred option.
The Iranian nuclear
issue has actually made the relationship between the two leaders worse.
By appearing to jam the president politically by questioning Obama's
refusal publicly to accept red lines a month before an election,
Netanyahu -- with a good deal of help from Romney -- has thrown the
nuclear issue into the middle of the campaign.
Only the interminably
obtuse believe that Netanyahu wouldn't prefer his friend Romney to be
the next president. The president's much publicized phone call today
with Netanyahu (these calls are never touted this far in advance) may
help to keep matters from getting worse.
But the Netanyahu-Obama
relationship could easily deteriorate, particularly if the president
believes as he must that Netanyahu wants his rival to win. The only
thing worse for Netanyahu than a re-elected Obama is an angry re-elected
Obama.
The smart play for
Netanyahu would be to stop talking about Iran publicly at home and
abroad, desist from creating the impression that he's pressing the
president before the elections and start a quiet dialogue with the
United States about how best to handle the period ahead.
He should explore what
assurances the Obama Administration is prepared to give Israel and other
American allies in the Gulf and give the United States three months to
get through the elections and the immediate aftermath of the vote.
This might actually
create a greater sense of confidence that Netanyahu was giving the
Americans the benefit of the doubt and build up some currency in the
bank which Israel will need if in fact it does decide it must go it
alone against Iran in the spring. Another several months will not
matter. Indeed, as former Israeli Military Intelligence Chief Amos Yadlin has said, the zone of immunity may be much less important than the zone of trust between the two allies.
Whether through
negotiations, diplomacy or war, the Americans and Israelis will need one
another to deal with the Iranian nuclear threat. Red lines aren't the
answer -- lines of trust and communication between two allies are.
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