The Moral Logic Behind the Strikes on Iran

Iranians and Israelis standing together in solidarity
Iranians and Israelis standing together in solidarity

Why the current attacks on Iran are illegal under international law but justifiable under Just War Theory. Read on to find out the moral logic of the strikes on Iran.

The Legal Frame: Why the Strikes Look Unlawful

International law is deliberately narrow. It allows force only when the UN Security Council authorises it or when a state is acting in self‑defence after an armed attack. Neither condition applies here. Iran had not launched a direct attack on US or Israeli territory, and no Security Council resolution was ever going to pass with Russia and China holding vetoes.

The Charter also prohibits regime change by force. Targeting political leadership crosses into the territory of the crime of aggression. On the legal ledger, the strikes are difficult to defend.

But legality is not the same as morality. And when a regime uses diplomacy as a shield, exports violence through proxies, and pursues long‑term existential goals, the moral analysis shifts.

Why Legality Isn’t the Whole Story

Just War Theory asks whether force is morally necessary to prevent grave harm. It evaluates intention, proportionality, last resort, and the nature of the threat. When applied to Iran, these criteria lead to a very different conclusion from the one international law reaches.

Iran’s post‑1979 regime is not a conventional authoritarian state. It is a revolutionary theocracy whose ideology mandates hostility toward Israel, the United States, and the West. This is not rhetorical theatre. It is written into the constitution, embedded in the IRGC’s mandate, and expressed through decades of proxy warfare.

The aggression is not episodic. It is structural.

A Regime Built for Exporting Conflict

Iran’s leadership has spent 45 years building a network of armed proxies—Hezbollah, Hamas, PIJ, Iraqi militias, Syrian militias, the Houthis—designed to encircle Israel and pressure the United States. These groups are not independent actors. They are instruments of Iranian strategy.

Alongside this, Iran has pursued a nuclear program marked by concealment, sanitised sites, undeclared facilities, and cooperation only when cornered. The IAEA’s reports over two decades show a consistent pattern: Iran advances its program when it can, slows it when pressured, and never fully discloses what it is doing.

Diplomacy becomes a tool for delay, not resolution. And every US election cycle offers a fresh opportunity to reset negotiations, stall for time, and wait for a more favourable administration.

This is not the behaviour of a state seeking coexistence. It is the behaviour of a state preparing for a future confrontation.

The Slow‑Burn Strategy

One of the most compelling interpretations of Iran’s behaviour is that it is pursuing a long‑term, slow‑burn strategy aimed at eventually confronting Israel and the United States on its own terms. That means avoiding premature war, building asymmetric capabilities, exploiting diplomatic cycles, and using negotiations to buy time.

A central pillar of this strategy is the pursuit of nuclear capability. Nuclear weapons function in geopolitics the way a queen functions on a chessboard: they change the entire geometry of the game. States with nuclear weapons are treated differently by the great powers. They gain immunity from regime‑threatening retaliation, freedom to escalate through proxies, and leverage to coerce neighbours.

Once a regime acquires a nuclear deterrent, removing it becomes exponentially harder.

Iran understands this. Its nuclear program is not a sprint; it is a deliberate crawl toward a position where it can no longer be coerced, contained, or confronted. Its restraint is not evidence of moderation. It is evidence of patience.

A regime that wants to survive in the short term but win in the long term behaves exactly like this: calibrated escalation, proxy warfare, nuclear hedging, and ideological consistency across generations.

If this interpretation is correct, the threat is existential even if not immediate.

How Just War Theory Responds to a Threat Like This

Just War Theory distinguishes between preventive war (not allowed) and pre‑emptive action (allowed when a real, advancing threat will soon become irreversible). A slow‑burn existential threat fits the second category when intentions are clear, the threat is growing, diplomacy is being used as deception, and waiting will make defence impossible.

Iran’s behaviour meets those conditions. Its ideology is explicitly hostile. Its proxies wage continuous low‑intensity war. Its nuclear program advances in the shadows. Its diplomacy is a stalling tactic timed to US election cycles. And its long‑term strategy appears aimed at a moment when it can fight from a position of strength.

Under these circumstances, the moral case for action becomes stronger than the legal one.

Does This Justify Regime Change?

Just War Theory allows regime change only when two demanding thresholds are met: the regime itself must be the instrument of aggression, and removing it must be necessary to prevent catastrophic harm.
Iran’s regime is not simply aggressive; it is built for aggression. Its ideology, institutions, and foreign policy are inseparable from its hostility toward Israel and the West. And if the regime is indeed pursuing a long‑term strategy aimed at eventual confrontation—anchored by a future nuclear deterrent—then waiting may simply allow the threat to mature into something irreversible.

In that reading, removing the regime is not imperial overreach. It is pre‑emptive defence against a danger that cannot be neutralised any other way.

Key Takeaway

International law and Just War Theory do not always point in the same direction. Legally, the recent strikes on Iran are difficult to justify. Morally, the case is far stronger. When a regime is ideologically committed to long‑term existential harm, uses proxies to wage continuous war, pursues nuclear capability as the queen on the geopolitical chessboard, and treats diplomacy as a stalling tactic timed to US election cycles, the moral obligation may shift from restraint to action. The uncomfortable truth is that the law may forbid what morality requires.

Israel’s new strategic reality: The China-Iran alliance

Melissa Chen
Melissa Chen

For years, Israel treated China as a distant economic partner — a country that bought our tech, invested in our infrastructure, and stayed politely out of our regional wars.

Melissa Chen’s conversation with Haviv Rettig Gur makes one thing painfully clear:
China is not a bystander. It is now one of the central enablers of the forces trying to destroy Israel.

This isn’t theory. It’s happening in real time — in Iran’s oil fields, in Gaza’s tunnels, in the UN Security Council, and even in the TikTok feeds of Western teenagers.

1. China Is the Financial Lifeline of the Iranian Regime

Iran’s ability to survive sanctions, suppress dissent, and fund its terror network depends overwhelmingly on Beijing.

From the interview:

“It literally buys more than 80% of Iran’s total oil exports… and does all the work necessary to bypass American sanctions.”

China buys Iranian oil at deep discounts, but in such massive quantities that it keeps the regime solvent. That money becomes:

  • Ballistic missiles for Hezbollah
  • Drones for Russia
  • Cash for Hamas
  • Salaries for the Basij and IRGC
  • Subsidies that prevent the Iranian public from toppling the regime

China isn’t just a customer. It is Iran’s strategic depth.

2. Chinese Technology Is Embedded in the Iran–Israel Conflict

Iran’s battlefield is increasingly powered by Chinese systems:

  • Chinese radar and air‑defence platforms
  • Chinese cyber tools
  • Chinese satellite navigation (BeiDou)
  • Chinese AI‑driven surveillance
  • Chinese electronic warfare used to block communications

As Chen notes:

“Iran has essentially co‑opted the Chinese technology and repression apparatus.”

When Israeli pilots fly over Iran, they are not only facing Iranian systems — they are facing Chinese engineering.

3. China’s Pro‑Palestinian Posture Isn’t Moral — It’s Strategic

China’s behaviour after October 7 was a mask‑slipping moment. While the world condemned Hamas, Beijing:

  • Refused to call the massacre terrorism
  • Called for “restraint on all sides”
  • Blocked every US‑backed resolution condemning Hamas
  • Amplified Palestinian messaging that mirrors CCP propaganda

Why? Because the Palestinian cause is a strategic asset in China’s long game.

The 2049 Project: China’s Imperial Horizon

China has a declared goal: by 2049, the 100th anniversary of the PRC, it intends to be the unchallenged global hegemon.

To get there, China must:

  • Undermine US alliances
  • Build influence in the Arab and Muslim world
  • Present itself as the champion of “anti‑imperialist” struggles
  • Weaken Western legitimacy
  • Create a sino‑centric world order

The Palestinian issue is a perfect tool for all of these aims.

The Chessboard: How China Uses the Conflict

Chen puts it bluntly:

“In order to do that, it has to make these moves on the chessboard.”

Supporting the Palestinians allows China to:

  • Court Arab states
  • Undercut US influence
  • Frame Israel as an American proxy
  • Insert CCP narratives into Arab media
  • Keep the Middle East unstable enough to distract the US from Asia

When the USS Abraham Lincoln left the Pacific for the Persian Gulf, China got exactly what it wanted:
American attention pulled away from Taiwan.

The Great Irony: China Is Now an Imperial Power Itself

China claims to oppose imperialism. Yet it now practices:

  • Debt‑trap colonialism through the Belt and Road Initiative
  • Resource extraction in Africa and Latin America
  • Military expansion in the South China Sea
  • Cultural domination in Tibet and Xinjiang
  • Surveillance exports to dictatorships

As Chen observes:

“What it is is actually a form of neo‑colonialism… just not in a very overt way.”

China’s anti‑imperialist rhetoric is not a principle. It is a propaganda tool masking its own imperial ambitions — and the Palestinian cause is one of its most effective instruments.

4. Why China Is Actively Promoting Anti‑Semitism

This is one of the most disturbing parts of the interview — and one of the least understood.

Chen explains that the flood of anti‑Semitic content on TikTok and other platforms is not organic. It is part of a deliberate strategy drawn from the PLA doctrine of “unrestricted warfare.”

“Anti‑Semitic content is part of an informational war.”
“The battlefield is not Gaza. The battlefield is the hearts and minds of young people in the West.”

China uses:

  • TikTok’s algorithm
  • Bot farms
  • State media in Arabic and English
  • Paid activist networks
  • CCP‑aligned NGOs

Why target Jews?

Because anti‑Semitism is a high‑yield wedge:

  • It fractures Western societies
  • It weakens support for Israel
  • It delegitimises the US‑Israel alliance
  • It radicalises young people against Western institutions
  • It fuels chaos — which China sees as strategic advantage

China doesn’t need to love Hamas. It only needs the West to tear itself apart.

5. Israel’s China Bet Has Backfired

For a decade, Israel courted China — ports, tech, agriculture, infrastructure. Netanyahu even called the relationship “a marriage made in heaven.”

October 7 ended that illusion.

China has shown:

  • It will not condemn Hamas
  • It will not support Israel’s right to self‑defence
  • It will protect Iran at every turn
  • It will use the Palestinian issue to weaken the West
  • It will amplify anti‑Semitism to destabilise democracies

Israel is now facing a strategic reality it did not prepare for.

Why This Matters

Israel’s security environment is no longer defined by Iran alone. It is shaped by a China–Iran axis that:

  • Funds Iran
  • Arms Iran
  • Protects Iran diplomatically
  • Enables Iran technologically
  • Amplifies anti‑Semitism to weaken Israel’s allies

This is not a regional problem. It is a global realignment — and Israel is on the front line.

Israel must now:

  • Reduce technological exposure to China
  • Limit Chinese access to critical infrastructure
  • Coordinate closely with the US on export controls
  • Harden itself against information warfare
  • Recognise that China’s rise is not neutral — it is adversarial

The era of hedging is over. The era of strategic clarity has begun.

Key Takeaways

  • China is Iran’s economic lifeline, buying over 80% of its oil and enabling sanctions evasion.
  • Chinese technology is embedded in Iran’s military and cyber capabilities, directly affecting Israel’s battlefield.
  • China’s support for the Palestinians is strategic, tied to its 2049 goal of replacing the US‑led world order.
  • China is actively promoting anti‑Semitism as part of an information‑warfare strategy to destabilise Western societies.
  • Israel’s decade‑long bet on China has backfired, and a new strategic posture is urgently needed.

About Melissa Chen

Melissa Chen is a Singaporean‑born journalist, commentator, and human‑rights advocate known for her work on free speech, civil liberties, and the global battle of ideas. She is the Managing Director of Ideas Beyond Borders, a nonprofit dedicated to translating and disseminating pro‑liberty works into Arabic, Farsi, and Kurdish to expand access to censored ideas. A former New York Editor of Spectator USA, Chen frequently appears across podcasts, conferences, and media platforms, offering analysis on authoritarianism, censorship, and the cultural forces shaping open societies.

About Haviv Rettig Gur

Haviv Rettig Gur is an Israeli journalist and senior political analyst at The Times of Israel, known for his deeply researched reporting on Israeli society, Jewish identity, and the evolving relationship between Israel and the Diaspora. Born in Jerusalem and raised partly in the United States, he served as a combat medic in the IDF before studying history and Jewish thought at the Hebrew University. His earlier career included years as the Jewish world correspondent for The Jerusalem Post and later as spokesman for the Jewish Agency. Gur’s work is widely respected for its clarity, historical grounding, and ability to illuminate the forces shaping contemporary Jewish life.

Why New Zealand Should Not Stay Silent on Iran’s Uprising

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

14 JANUARY 2026

New Zealand often sees itself as a small, principled nation—one that stands for human dignity, democratic freedoms, and the rule of law. Yet in the past two weeks, as Iranians have once again taken to the streets demanding basic rights, every major political party in Aotearoa has remained silent. Not a single new statement. Not a single expression of solidarity. Not even a brief acknowledgement of the courage and suffering of ordinary Iranians.

Some might argue that New Zealand has no leverage. That we are too small, too distant, too economically disconnected from Iran to make any difference. But that argument misunderstands both the nature of Iran’s regime and the role a country like ours can play in the international system. Silence is not neutrality. Silence is a choice. And in this case, it is the wrong one.

Iran’s Internal Repression and Regional Aggression Are the Same Problem

The world often treats Iran’s domestic uprisings as a moral issue and its nuclear programme or regional interventions as geopolitical issues. But these are not separate stories. They are two expressions of the same underlying reality: the nature of the Iranian regime itself.

A government that crushes dissent at home does not behave responsibly abroad. The same security apparatus that beats protesters in Tehran also arms and directs proxy militias across the Middle East. The same leadership that executes political prisoners also supplies weapons, training, and funding to groups operating in Lebanon, Syria, Iraq, and Gaza.

Many analysts have noted that the Gaza war cannot be understood in isolation. Hamas and Hezbollah did not emerge in a vacuum. They have long been instruments through which Iran projects power, disrupts regional stability, and asserts hegemony. Their actions—whether in Gaza, southern Lebanon, or Syria—reflect strategic decisions made in Tehran.

In that sense, the Gaza conflict is not merely a local tragedy. It is a symptom of a much larger system of coercion and violence that begins with the Iranian regime’s treatment of its own people. When a state uses brutality as its primary tool of governance, that brutality inevitably spills across borders.

New Zealand’s Voice Matters More Than We Think

It is true that New Zealand cannot force Iran to change course. We cannot dictate the outcome of its internal struggles or its regional ambitions. But influence is not the same as control, and moral clarity is not the same as interference. New Zealand has tools—real ones.

1. We have a vote at the United Nations

Our vote carries weight precisely because we are seen as independent, principled, and not driven by great‑power agendas. When New Zealand speaks at the UN, other countries listen—not because we are powerful, but because we are trusted.

2. We can help shape international norms

Small states often play outsized roles in human‑rights debates, nuclear non‑proliferation discussions, and multilateral diplomacy. New Zealand has a long history of doing exactly that—from opposing apartheid to championing nuclear‑free principles.

3. We can encourage like‑minded countries to act

Diplomacy is not a solo sport. When smaller democracies coordinate, they can shift the tone of international conversations. A statement from Wellington can help embolden statements from Ottawa, Oslo, Dublin, or Canberra.

4. We can stand with oppressed people even when we cannot rescue them

Solidarity is not symbolic. For people risking their lives in the streets of Tehran, Shiraz, or Mashhad, knowing that the world is watching can be a lifeline. Silence, by contrast, is a gift to their oppressors.

Silence Sends the Wrong Message

When New Zealand says nothing, it communicates something—whether we intend it or not. It suggests that Iran’s internal repression is someone else’s problem. That the suffering of ordinary Iranians is not worth political attention. That we only speak when larger powers tell us it is safe to do so. That our values are negotiable.

That is not who we claim to be. Aotearoa has always aspired to be a nation that stands for justice, peace, and human dignity. Those principles do not stop at our borders. They do not depend on whether we have trade ties or military alliances. They do not require us to be powerful—only to be principled.

A Call for Moral Consistency

If New Zealand can speak loudly about Gaza—and we have—then we can also speak about the forces that helped shape that conflict. If we can condemn violence against civilians in one part of the Middle East, we can condemn violence against civilians in another. If we believe in human rights, then we believe in them universally.

Iran’s uprising is not just a domestic matter. It is part of a wider pattern of repression and aggression that affects the entire region and, ultimately, global stability. The people of Iran are not asking New Zealand to solve their problems. They are asking the world not to look away.

We should not.

NZ FRIENDS OF ISRAEL ASSOCIATION INC
BOX 37 363
CHRISTCHURCH
NEW ZEALAND
contact@nzfoi.org
027 433 9745

 

 

Leighton Smith interview of Iran Expert Behnam Taleblu

Behnam Ben Taleblu

In case you missed our briefing with Iran expert Behnam Ben Taleblu, here is an interview with Leighton Smith on NewsTalk ZB:

Behnam Ben Taleblu is a senior fellow at FDD where he focuses on Iranian security and political issues. Behnam previously served as a research fellow and senior Iran analyst at FDD. Prior to his time at FDD, Behnam worked on non-proliferation issues at an arms control think-tank in Washington. Leveraging his subject-matter expertise and native Farsi skills, Behnam has closely tracked a wide range of Iran-related topics including: nuclear non-proliferation, ballistic missiles, sanctions, the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps, the foreign and security policy of the Islamic Republic, and internal Iranian politics. Frequently called upon to brief journalists, congressional staff, and other Washington-audiences, Behnam has also testified before the U.S. Congress and Canadian Parliament.
 
His analysis has been quoted in The Washington Post, The Wall Street Journal, Reuters, Fox News, The Associated Press, and Agence France-Presse, among others. Additionally, he has contributed to or co-authored articles for Foreign Affairs, Foreign Policy, Fox News, The Hill, War on the Rocks, The National Interest, and U.S. News & World Report. Behnam has appeared on a variety of broadcast programs, including BBC News, Fox News, CBS Interactive, C-SPAN, and Defense News. Behnam earned his MA in International Relations from The University of Chicago, and his BA in International Affairs and Middle East Studies from The George Washington University’s Elliott School of International Affairs.

Why are embassies supposed to be inviolable?

The Economist reviews the diplomatic immunity of Embassies following Ecuador’s raid on a Mexican Embassy to arrest someone who had been granted asylum.

In their discussion they say:

“There are exceptions to inviolability under international law, too. The Vienna Convention only refers to the responsibilities of the host state, but says nothing about a third-party attack. Also, under the laws of armed conflict, embassies lose their protections if they are used for military purposes. That may mean that the recent strike on Iran’s consulate in Damascus was legal; a spokesperson for the Israel Defence Forces called the annexe that was destroyed a “military building […] disguised as a civilian building”. Iran may try to claim, falsely, that the same is true of Israeli embassies, and that attacks on them would be similarly justified.”

Source: Why are embassies supposed to be inviolable? (economist.com)

Israeli Prime Minister Naftali Bennett: World powers must ‘wake up’ on Iran nuke deal | Stuff

Naftali Bennett

Israeli Prime Minister Naftali Bennett on Sunday opened his first Cabinet meeting since swearing in his new coalition government last week with a condemnation of the new Iranian president.

He said Iran’s presidential election was a sign for world powers to “wake up” before returning to a nuclear agreement with Tehran.

Iran’s hard-line judiciary chief, Ebrahim Raisi, was elected Saturday with 62 per cent of the vote amid a historically low voter turnout.

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Mills-Mojab spread’s Iran’s disinformation about Israel | Stuff

Centrifuges used for enriching uranium at the Iran Natanz facility

Stuff ran an opinion piece written by Donna Mills-Mojab today. It is an example of Iranian propaganda. It weaves a narrative that makes Iran seem like it is doing no wrong. Her article makes no mention of:

  • Iran’s sponsorship of terrorist organisations such as Hamas, Hezbollah, Islamic Jihad, and the PFLP.
  • Iran’s terrorist activities in Albania, Bahrain, India, Israel, Iraq, Kenya, Argentina, Thailand, France and Denmark.
  • Iran’s military units operating in Syria and Iraq
  • Iran signed the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty way back in 1970. Under the treaty, Iran agreed to not develop nuclear weapons, disclose all nuclear technology activities, and allow the International Atomic Energy Agency full access to check and monitor Iran’s compliance. Iran’s non-compliance and intentional deceit under the treaty have been well-documented.

Instead, it lays down a smokescreen of false information which should be corrected here:

  • There is no evidence that Israel has nuclear weapons. No independent observer has ever sighted an Israeli nuclear weapon, nor is there any evidence of any Israeli nuclear weapons tests. Unlike North Korea, India, and Pakistan. Nuclear weapons tests can’t be seismologically hidden. The vibrations literally reverberate around the world.
  • Any relaxation of economic sanctions against Iran has only accelerated efforts to arm Israel’s enemies, Hamas and Hezbollah.
  • That Israel’s existence is a form of colonialism when it is clearly an UN-mandated humanitarian initiative to restore Israel as a Jewish homeland, borne out of the Holocaust, which demonstrated that Jews must have a safe haven from endemic anti-Semitism.
  • Mills-Mojab claims Israel’s occupation of Palestinian lands is illegal. Actually, Israel’s presence there is the result of an unsuccessful Arab invasion of these territories and their illegal attempt to extinguish a fledgling member of the UN. Now, these lands are disputed and claimed by people who have created a state where no state existed before, to give their claim a false veil of legitimacy.

Iran has demonstrated that it does not act in good faith. Which leaves Israel deeply skeptical of a successful diplomatic outcome. What good is a treaty when it’s highly likely that Iran does not intend to comply with it?

Uranium 235 enrichment to less than 20% is suitable for commercial power generation. Anything beyond that sends a clear signal of Iran’s intentions.

Read Mills-Mojab’s article.

Washington attempts to quell Israel’s maritime shadow war with Iran | Israel Hayom

The Sabiti, an Iranian state owned tanker ablaze near Jeddah in late 2019, after a suspected rocket attack. No one has claimed responsibility for the attack.

Recent reports suggest that the United States is disturbed by aspects of the Israeli-Iranian shadow war raging across the region – in this case, at sea. It seems reasonable to conclude that Washington is trying to lower tensions it fears can spoil attempts to negotiate a new nuclear agreement with Tehran.

American sources told The Wall Street Journal in recent days that since 2019, Israel allegedly attacked 12 ships illegally carrying Iranian oil to Syria, using weapons such as limpet mines to damage the vessels.

The report came amid signs of a possible escalation between Israel and Iran on the seas, suggesting that the information was designed to send a signal to Israel to cool down the alleged maritime operations.

It also surfaced at about the time Iran accused Israel of attacking an Iranian container ship in the eastern Mediterranean Sea last week named the Shahr e Kord, causing a fire.

That attack came days after Israel said Iran was behind an attack on an Israeli-owned cargo ship, the MV Helios Ray, in the Gulf of Oman.

Israel’s alleged covert campaign at sea is part of a much larger campaign, dubbed by the defense establishment as the “campaign between the wars,” designed to prevent the radical Iranian axis from building up its military and terrorist power in the region but to do so without crossing the threshold of regional war.

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The Iran-Israel War is here | WSJ

Israeli F-35 fighters

Israel and Iran are at war. Israeli strikes this week in southern Syria, western Iraq and eastern Lebanon—and possibly even Beirut—confirm it.

This war is a very 21st-century affair. For now it involves only small circles among the Israeli and Iranian populations. Parts of the air force, intelligence services and probably special forces are active on the Israeli side. The Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps, its expeditionary Quds Force and proxy politico-military organizations in Iraq, Syria and Lebanon are engaged on behalf of Iran.

The war marks a hinge point in Middle Eastern geopolitics. For the past decade and a half, the region has been engaged mainly with internal strife: civil wars, insurgencies and mass protests. These are now largely spent, leaving a broken landscape along the northern route from Iran to Israel.

The three “states” in between—Iraq, Syria and Lebanon—are fragmented, partly collapsed and thoroughly penetrated by neighboring powers. Their official state structures have lost the attribute that alone, according to German sociologist Max Weber, guarantees sovereignty: “monopoly on the legitimate use of physical force.” These nations’ territory has become the theater of the Iran-Israel war.

The regime in Tehran favors the destruction of the Jewish state, but this is a longstanding aim, dating to the 1979 Islamic Revolution and before it, in the minds of the revolutionaries. What’s brought it to the fore is that Iran has emerged in the past half decade as the prime beneficiary of the collapse of the Iraqi, Syrian and Lebanese states. This has substantially increased its capacity to menace Israel, which has noticed and responded.

Iran’s Revolutionary Guard has no peer in the Middle East—and perhaps beyond—in the practice of irregular warfare. Its proxies today dominate Lebanon (Hezbollah), constitute the single strongest politico-military force in Iraq (Popular Mobilization Units, or PMU), and maintain an independent, powerful military infrastructure in Syria, in partial cooperation with the Assad regime and Russia. This nexus, against which Israel is currently engaged, brings Iran de facto control over much of the land from the Iraq-Iran border to the Mediterranean and to the Syrian and Lebanese borders with Israel.

Iran treats this entire area as a single operational space, moving its assets around at will without excessive concern for the notional sovereignty of the governments in Baghdad, Beirut and Damascus. Lebanese Hezbollah trains PMU fighters in Iraq. Iraqi Shiite militias are deployed at crucial and sensitive points on the Iraqi-Syrian border, such as al-Qa’im and Mayadeen. Revolutionary Guard and Hezbollah personnel operate in southwest Syria, close to the Golan Heights.

Israeli attacks in recent days suggest that Israel, too, has begun to act according to these definitions and in response to them. If Iran will not restrict its actions to Syria, neither will Israel.

There is a crucial difference between the Israeli and Iranian positions in this conflict. Iran’s involvement in Iraq, Syria and Lebanon is deep, long-term and proactive. Tehran seeks the transformation of these areas into Iranian satrapies, and it has made considerable advances toward its goal. Israel’s involvement is entirely reactive, pushing back against Iranian domination and destroying the missile caches that bring it within Iran’s range. Israel has no interest in the internal political arrangements of Lebanon, Syria or Iraq, except insofar as these constitute a danger to Israel itself.

This imbalance defines the conflict. Iran creates political organizations, penetrates state structures, and seeks to make itself an unchallengeable presence in all three countries. Israel has been wary of entering the mire of factional politics in neighboring countries since its failed intervention in Lebanon leading up to the 1982 war. Jerusalem instead uses its superior intelligence and conventional military capabilities to neutralize the military and paramilitary fruits of the Iranian project whenever they appear to be forming into a concrete threat.

Israel is largely alone in this fight. The U.S. is certainly aware of Israel’s actions against Iran and may tacitly support them. Yet the Trump administration shows no signs of wishing to play an active part in the military challenge to Iranian infrastructure-building across the Middle East. This White House favors ramping up economic pressure on Tehran, but both its occupant and his voter base are wary in the extreme of new military commitments in the Middle East.

Saudi Arabia is targeted by the Ansar Allah, or Houthi, movement, another Iranian proxy closely assisted by the Revolutionary Guard. The Saudis’ interests are partly aligned with Israel’s, but Saudi Arabia is a fragile country, requiring the protection of its allies rather than constituting an asset for them.

So it is war between Israel and Iran, prosecuted over the ruins of Iraq, Lebanon and Syria. But it won’t necessarily stay that way. A single kinetic and successful Iranian response to Israel’s airstrikes could rapidly precipitate an escalation to a much broader contest. State-to-state conflict has returned to the Middle East.

Mr. Spyer is director of the Middle East Center for Reporting and Analysis and a research fellow at the Jerusalem Institute for Strategy and Security and at the Middle East Forum. He is author of “Days of the Fall: A Reporter’s Journey in the Syria and Iraq Wars.”

Source

Joe Biden is already carving out a different Middle East policy from Trump — and even Obama | Stuff

US President, Joe Biden

The Biden administration hasn’t wasted time in making a significant shift in US policy toward the Middle East.

Over the past week, the US has launched reprisal strikes against Iranian targets in Syria and released damning intelligence overtly linking the crown prince of Saudi Arabia to the assassination of journalist Jamal Khashoggi.

Biden’s decision to launch strikes against Iran-backed militias in Syria showcases what has been described by the US political scientist Joseph Nye as “smart power”. This is when hard power is employed alongside soft power in a carefully calculated way to affect a diplomatic outcome.

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