What's new

He led IDF intel gathering on Iran, was ignored and fears Israel is now paying the price

.
Iran isn't trying to clear out Syria just so Syria could be free, it couldn't care less, the fact Israel bombs Syria without any Iranian response is a perfect explanation to that fact.
I`m not sure what you`re really on about there.Iran is in syria to ensure the survival of the syrian state and the nation that it represents,pure and simple.By comparison the people [and their various backers including israel] that are trying to destroy both the state and the nation of syria arent even remotely interested in "freedom",indeed one can easily see this from things such as the public slave markets in the areas that they occupied.
And israel for its part is very,very careful about who,what,where it targets when it comes to iranian forces in syria,lest it provoke a response.

Iran is preparing to use Syria as a battlefield against Israel. That's why Iran sends in drones, air defences and anti ship missiles.
Iran has never sent any air defences to syria,indeed it makes no sense to do this unless it was part of an overall rebuilding of the syrians cold war era iad network,the same is also true for ash weapons as well.Drones however have proven to be excellent weapons for targeting jihadi and other types of terrorists operating in syria.
Irans strategy has always been to build up the LOCAL forces so that they themselves can deter potential aggressors and defend themselves it deterrence should fail,with hezbollah being the most famous and successful example of this strategy.
Its pretty clear tho` that iran will also help syria when it comes to rebuilding its military into something more modern,and more formidable,than the rather lackluster cold war era force that it was.

Sending weapons through airplanes is terribly inefficient.
Depends on the size of the transport and the size of the weapon in question.Irans strategy seems to be increasingly one of transferring either whole technologies to enable local indigenous production of more advanced weapons,or supplying small critical components to complete locally produced weapons,basically its the old "teach a man to fish" analogy.

Iran does do that, however it does it through civilian airliners that land in civilian airports, so guess why Israel doesn't shoot them down and instead strikes the trucks carrying them.
Thank you for finally admitting that I was correct,tho I dont know why you then bothered with a whole lot of totally irrelevant wiki links for the rest of your post.
I also find it rather humorous [at best] that you claim that the reason that israel does nothing about the iran-syria air bridge is because its "civilian airliners" in "civilian airports",yet apparently it doesnt seem to care when its civilian merchant marine vessels in civilian ports [like latakia],funny that,eh?:sarcastic:

The so called "Karine A" predated [ie by 9 years] the beginning of the internationally backed terrorist insurgency in syria,and clearly has nothing to do with it.
The so called "victoria affair" happened literally right at the beginning [pretty much the same day in fact] of the internationally backed terrorist insurgency in syria,and clearly has nothing to do with it,unless you`re trying to claim that the iranians are gifted with prescience?.😏
The so called "frankopf affair" predated the internationally backed terrorist insurgency in syria,and clearly has nothing to do with it,not to mention that the israelis themselves claimed that it was intending to then be transhipped to lebanon
Its pretty clear that in these cases these weapons were intended for other parties,ie NOT syria,that iran had no other direct route of transfer to.nice try tho.:sarcastic:

What the hell are you talking about lol, you compare Iran killing innocent European sailors on Israeli owned ships to the damage Israel has done to Iran?
Besides, it didn't even stop Israeli attacks, it just made them worse and more frequent.
You might just find that a lot more third party nationals will be unwilling to sign on to crew zionist owned ships if they realise that by doing so they are potentially putting their own lives at risk.
And neither has attacking iranian shipping [or its nuclear program or its forces in syria],its just increased the costs to israel,both directly and indirectly,as in the above example with the dead "useful idiots"...er..I mean....foreign sailors for instance. :sarcastic:
 
.
And israel for its part is very,very careful about who,what,where it targets when it comes to iranian forces in syria,lest it provoke a response.
What the hell are you talking about lmfao, Israel killed your most important scientist, bombed probably hundreds of Iranians, the fact we bomb you and you don't respond, no matter how "important" the people we bomb are, does not show how strong Iran is at all.

I`m not sure what you`re really on about there.Iran is in syria to ensure the survival of the syrian state and the nation that it represents,pure and simple.
You want us to believe it is out of your love and affection for Syria, or for the interest of using Syria to fight Israel?

Iran has never sent any air defences to syria,indeed it makes no sense to do this unless it was part of an overall rebuilding of the syrians cold war era iad network,the same is also true for ash weapons as well.Drones however have proven to be excellent weapons for targeting jihadi and other types of terrorists operating in syria.
Irans strategy has always been to build up the LOCAL forces so that they themselves can deter potential aggressors and defend themselves it deterrence should fail,with hezbollah being the most famous and successful example of this strategy.
Its pretty clear tho` that iran will also help syria when it comes to rebuilding its military into something more modern,and more formidable,than the rather lackluster cold war era force that it was.
Iran doesn't only arm the Syrians nowadays. Iran arms its own forces that are based in Syria.
Iran's strategy was to f*** countries up and pushing them into wars they had nothing to do with by sending their proxy puppets there like Hezbollah and the Lebanese people that most of them don't want any war.

Thank you for finally admitting that I was correct,tho I dont know why you then bothered with a whole lot of totally irrelevant wiki links for the rest of your post.
I also find it rather humorous [at best] that you claim that the reason that israel does nothing about the iran-syria air bridge is because its "civilian airliners" in "civilian airports",yet apparently it doesnt seem to care when its civilian merchant marine vessels in civilian ports [like latakia],funny that,eh?:sarcastic:
You're not correct in a meaningful manner. Whenever Iran sent something meaningful by air, Israel bombed it, plane included.

You're just uninformed lol.

The so called "victoria affair" happened literally right at the beginning [pretty much the same day in fact] of the internationally backed terrorist insurgency in syria,and clearly has nothing to do with it,unless you`re trying to claim that the iranians are gifted with prescience?.😏
The so called "Karine A" predated [ie by 9 years] the beginning of the internationally backed terrorist insurgency in syria,and clearly has nothing to do with it.
The so called "victoria affair" happened literally right at the beginning [pretty much the same day in fact] of the internationally backed terrorist insurgency in syria,and clearly has nothing to do with it,unless you`re trying to claim that the iranians are gifted with prescience?.😏
The so called "frankopf affair" predated the internationally backed terrorist insurgency in syria,and clearly has nothing to do with it,not to mention that the israelis themselves claimed that it was intending to then be transhipped to lebanon
Its pretty clear that in these cases these weapons were intended for other parties,ie NOT syria,that iran had no other direct route of transfer to.nice try tho.:sarcastic:

How does it matter? It's just to emphasize the fact Iran uses mostly ships and not aircraft, and delivers them to its proxies regardless of whether there's a war or not.
It also disproves the "Iran is only sending weapons to Syria to help it against the rebels and keep the Syrian government" argument you had.


You might just find that a lot more third party nationals will be unwilling to sign on to crew zionist owned ships if they realise that by doing so they are potentially putting their own lives at risk.
And neither has attacking iranian shipping [or its nuclear program or its forces in syria],its just increased the costs to israel,both directly and indirectly,as in the above example with the dead "useful idiots"...er..I mean....foreign sailors for instance. :sarcastic:
How did it increase the cost to Israel? Has Iran ever done any substantial damage to Israel in the last 10 years?
 
.
Flavius Josephus in "peri haloseos" says that in Syria "the cities were divided into two camps", the civil war in Syria began in 66 after Menahem - "no lord but the Lord" - cut the throat of the high priest Ananus the younger son of Ananus the elder, and the sons of the Sadducee priestly aristocracy killed Menahem "after subjecting him to many torments" and turned the tide of this agrarian mutiny by attacking Syrian villages.

The great Mesopotamian pedestal of the Temple in the city-Temple in "the land of Canaan" is a silent witness of "the events that took place among us" (66-70)

"The events that occurred between us" were three:

(1) the civil war in Syria
(2) the war against the Romans and
(3) the civil war between "the people of the land" (Perea, Galilea, Idumea) against the ruling class in the city-Temple

The incredible thing is that with some violent Russian (1917-) and Polish emigrants supported by the 'new empire of the Romans' AKA AngloEmpire 1.0 and AngloEmpire 2.0 (1945-) we are back to square one in this old movie that began in Persian times.

"Our colonial project" (Jabotinsky)

Two hundred years from now, and in the unlikely event that this beautiful planet and suffering world still exists, historians will see "our colonial project" as the most colossal historical nonsense.
 
.
I`d recommend everyone here at the iran defence forum to give this a read,its basically someone at the heart of the zionist intelligence establishment giving a rather blunt account of the blunders that israel,and by extension the west as well,made when it came to dealing with iran,as well as their combined lack of realistic options,be they political or military,if the west fails to return to the jcpoa.
I think a better title for this would`ve been:
"The zionist who told the truth"

A big thanks+thumbs up to Pataramesh for the link to this :enjoy:

He led IDF intel gathering on Iran, was ignored and fears Israel is now paying the price

Danny Citrinowicz, ex-head of Military Intelligence research, says politicians’ inability to adopt a nuanced approach led to ‘colossal’ policy failure, sped up Tehran’s nuke effort
https://www.timesofisrael.com/he-led-idf-intel-gathering-on-iran-was-ignored-and-fears-israel-is-now-paying-price/
By Jacob Magid

WASHINGTON — Several months after the 2013 election of former Iranian president Hassan Rouhani, Aviv Kohavi submitted a position paper to then-prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu in which he pointed to a significant, strategic shift underway in the Islamic Republic.
Kohavi, who currently serves as IDF chief of staff, was the head of the Military Intelligence unit at the time, and he relayed his assessment that Iran was becoming more moderate and willing to negotiate an agreement with world powers that would enshrine restrictions on its nuclear program.
Advertisement


Days after receiving the report, Netanyahu went to New York for his annual speech before the UN General Assembly.
There, he appeared to dismiss Kohavi’s stance, declaring that “when it comes to Iran’s nuclear weapons program, the only difference between them is this: [Rouhani’s hardline predecessor Mahmoud] Ahmadinejad was a wolf in wolf’s clothing and Rouhani is a wolf in sheep’s clothing – a wolf who thinks he can pull the wool over the eyes of the international community.”
Danny Citrinowicz was part of the team that supplied Kohavi with the intelligence that led him to stake a position on Iran that went against the grain of longstanding policy in Jerusalem.
As head of the Iran branch in the Military Intelligence’s Research and Analysis Division, Citrinowicz was charged with analyzing the strategic intents of the regime in Tehran. This was from 2013 to 2016 during the leadup and the immediate aftermath of the signing of the multilateral nuclear deal known as the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action.

F140225HP10-640x400.jpg

Military Intelligence chief Aviv Kohavi attends a Knesset Foreign Affairs and Defense Committee meeting on February 25, 2014. (Hadas Parush/Flash 90)

Citrinowicz was subsequently dispatched to Washington, where he served as the Military Intelligence deputy attaché to the US, coordinating intel sharing with American counterparts for three years during which Netanyahu pushed then-US president Donald Trump to vacate the JCPOA.
In an interview with The Times of Israel, Citrinowicz characterized Jerusalem’s policy on Iran as a “failure,” and lamented his government’s decision to ignore the shift taking place in the Islamic Republic that he and his colleagues had identified. By encouraging the Trump administration to withdraw from the deal and to impose “maximum pressure” sanctions against Tehran, Israel helped dramatically weaken a more moderate force and blunt the impact of that shift, the retired major argued.
Now, Citrinowicz fears that Israel and Iran are on a “collision course,” with Tehran as emboldened and aggressive as ever. Unlike Rouhani, Iran’s newly elected president Ebrahim Raisi does not prioritize a return to the nuclear deal and believes Tehran can withstand US sanctions thanks to growing alliances with Russia and China, the ex-senior intelligence analyst argued.
As world powers returned to Vienna this week for a seventh round of talks aimed at reviving the JCPOA, Citrinowicz maintained that the only way the sides will succeed is if the US is willing to compromise significantly.
And while Israel’s leaders continue to warn negotiating powers that it is not party to whatever agreement they reach and that it reserves the right to act on its own if necessary, Citrinowicz said that Jerusalem’s ability to influence the talks in Vienna is negligible.
“Iran will only change its strategy if it feels like the regime is in real jeopardy,” Citrinowicz said. “And they believe that the only country capable of really threatening them is the US, not Israel.”
He was dismissive of previous attacks attributed to Israel on Iran’s nuclear program, arguing that they at best delayed Tehran’s efforts and at worst led the regime to double down in its effort, craftily evading inspections in the process.
The former head of research at the Military Intelligence Directorate also warned that a more significant strike from either Israel or the US would lead to a regional war, which would include retaliation on Israel’s northern border from Hezbollah.

WhatsApp-Image-2021-11-24-at-2.41.48-PM.jpeg

Danny Citrinowicz is interviewed on i24 News in 2021. (Screen capture/Courtesy)

Having peeled off his IDF uniform, Citrinowicz now works as a senior researcher at Reichmann University in Herzliya. No longer gagged by military protocol, Citrinowicz is using his new platform to inject a different perspective into Israel’s discourse on Iran.
“We need a realistic approach,” Citrinowicz said flatly. “I understand the importance of sounding tough and constantly saying ‘Iran is bad, Iran is bad,’ but when you are constantly shouting unrealistic demands then you won’t be considered to be someone that can really contribute to the international debate.”
“Israel is still thinking in terms of zero enrichment [of uranium] in Iran,” he continued. “That’s like talking of achieving a COVID infection rate of zero. It’s no longer relevant.”
Citrinowicz spoke about the frustrations of regularly being overruled by the political echelon, which from Netanyahu to his successor Naftali Bennett has “projected our own way of thinking onto the enemy.”
“One of our biggest problems is that we do not understand Iran,” he said. “What’s worse, we make incorrect working assumptions about Iranian goals and strategy based on very shaky knowledge that rests primarily on our understanding of Iran’s activities in the region.”
Citrinowicz explained that there is no single body that directs Tehran’s proxies in Iraq and Syria and the regime’s goals domestically are not the same as its goals abroad.
“Iran can be active in the region while being passive with its nuclear program at home and visa versa,” he maintained.
“This miscalculation is likely what will lead to a conflict between the two countries,” Citrinowicz warned.

000_9C33UY-640x400.jpg

Israel’s outgoing prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu shakes hands with his successor, incoming Prime Minister Naftali Bennett, after a special session to vote on a new government at the Knesset in Jerusalem, on June 13, 2021. (Emmanuel Dunand / AFP)

The following is a transcript of the interview, which was conducted in English and Hebrew. It has been edited for brevity and clarity.

The Times of Israel: What was your job as head of the Iran branch in the Military Intelligence Directorate?
Danny Citrinowicz: I was in charge of analyzing Iran’s strategic intents, from nuclear to regional activities. I was writing reports and making recommendations. But essentially, I was trying to assess the actions of the “red side” — whether Iran wanted to acquire a nuclear bomb and what it planned to do in Syria. This was from 2013 to 2016 during the negotiations leading up to the JCPOA. We were asking ourselves whether there was going to be an agreement and what kind of agreement would be reached. What were Iran’s red lines?
Then in Washington, I was the liaison officer for the [Military] Intelligence [Directorate] and was responsible for enhancing cooperation between Israeli and American intelligence officials.

What was the Israeli position at the time?
It goes without saying that the position was no discussion with Iran whatsoever. No acceptance of the JCPOA. But there were people within the Israeli system that really challenged the position from the military side. IDF chief of staff Gadi Eisenkot said that while JCPOA is not the ultimate agreement, and that it has its flaws, at the end of the day it also has advantages — the biggest one being that it enabled the IDF to focus more on the immediate threats of Hezbollah and Hamas.
The agreement — with all of its flaws — rolled back the Iran nuclear program significantly, more than any other clandestine activity that was aimed at doing the same. Those clandestine activities may have suspended or delayed the program a little bit, but nothing at the level of the JCPOA.

Was this your feeling at the time as well?
Yes, it was. When you’re in the army though, you can make your voice heard but at the end of the day it’s a political decision, and the political decision was no JCPOA, no acceptance of the agreement. You can challenge that, you can write memos about it, but at the end of the day, this was the policy under Netanyahu.

F180102FFF64-640x400.jpg

IDF Chief of Staff Gadi Eisenkot speaks at a conference at the Interdisciplinary Center in Herzliya on January 2, 2018. (FLASH90)

You mentioned Eisenkot. Were you senior enough to also voice reservations?
In the army, people understood the importance of the agreement, so for me, it was easy to present that opinion. But that wasn’t the issue. Even Lt. Gen. Eisenkot thought this way, and the policy didn’t change. Because for Netanyahu, Iran is something deeper than just a threat. For him, it’s like fighting the new Nazis. So you can raise your reservations, but it won’t help.

Eisenkot wasn’t raising those reservations publicly though, right?
Not publicly, but at the end of the day, people knew. It was leaked. Years earlier, as the JCPOA negotiations were ongoing, Kohavi as head of the [Military] Intelligence wrote a position paper to the policymakers highlighting a shift taking place in Iran with the election of Rouhani. Iran was becoming more moderate and more willing to negotiate a nuclear deal. It was becoming more moderate in terms of its nuclear ambitions.
The JCPOA was a unique event, and the changes in Iran were important in helping achieve this agreement. What Kohavi wrote actually came true. There was a change in Iran — a change that led to the JCPOA — but Netanyahu adopted a policy — one that both in hindsight and at the time I thought was the wrong policy — that pushed the US to get out of the agreement without any alternative strategy. I don’t know what Netanyahu expected, but the Iranians pushed through all of the obstacles, and all the problems that they had and now they are pushing forward in the enrichment, going further in violating restrictions than I could have ever imagined that they would.

Couldn’t one argue that the “alternative strategy” was the maximum pressure campaign?
Yes, but it was a catastrophe. It was very naive to think that they could force the regime to choose between its survival and its nuclear program. Because backing down from its nuclear ambitions means losing its independence, in a way.

Why is that?
Iran sees itself as a superpower, and as such, is entitled to enrich uranium as other superpowers do. It’s also a source of pride and nationalism. There is a belief that we are like the other superpowers and have the technological capabilities to push enrichment forward. There is a consensus on this matter within the Iranian population, so even if the regime changes, even if the person that comes after [Supreme Leader Ayatollah] Khamenei is more moderate, he will never abandon Iranian nuclear ambitions.
The way Israel looked at Iran has always been very black and white. The belief was that the Iranians want to obtain nuclear weapons. Period.
This had to do with the Iranian opposition’s 2010 to 2013 exposure of nuclear activity at sites in Natanz and Fordo from Iran’s previous attempt to build a nuclear bomb between [1989] and 2003, known as the Amad Project.
Israeli intelligence concluded then that it was misled by the Iranians, that you can’t trust them whatsoever, and that they were just trying to drag out the [JCPOA] negotiations, all while they were making progress toward a bomb.
The change that Rouhani brought in 2013 was that Iran actually became interested in reaching an agreement. The [JCPOA] discussions in Oman started before Rouhani, but Rouhani was the true generator, who understood that in order to create some sort of gesture to the West, he needed an agreement. That if you want to save the [Iranian] revolution and receive much-needed [economic stimulus], you have to reach an agreement. This is what was identified by Kohavi and others.

AP_19176499709699-1024x640.jpg

In this April 9, 2018 photo, Iranian President Hassan Rouhani listens to explanations on new nuclear achievements at a ceremony to mark ‘National Nuclear Day,’ in Tehran, Iran. (Iranian Presidency Office via AP)

And the reason that change in Iran didn’t hold was because of the maximum pressure campaign?
The first thing that the Iranians got from the negotiations was the right to enrich (to 3.5%). Of course, Iran really suffered as a result of the sanctions ahead of the JCPOA, but the breakthrough in the discussions only happened when the American side acknowledged the Iranian right to enrich. That was extremely important because if it wasn’t on the table, then the supreme leader probably would have ended the discussions.
While the sanctions played a role under Obama, during Trump they were a hopeless cause. Because (a) you didn’t have Russian support, (b) you didn’t have Chinese support, and (c) the Iranians already knew how to cope with the maximum pressure campaign. They already established a well-oiled system to bypass the sanctions. I’m not saying that they’re not suffering as a result of the sanctions. Together with COVID and the infrastructure problems they have, they are indeed suffering. But I think they now believe that they can withstand this pressure and can keep their heads above water by opening new markets in Asia and by working with the Chinese. As a result, the maximum pressure campaign has made no difference.

People tend to talk about how the US exited from the agreement and then Iran moved forward with [uranium] enrichment. This is what happened. But one other important side effect was that Rouhani was tremendously weakened. In the 2017 election against Raisi, Rouhani won in a landslide. Why? Because he promised the Iranian public that they would see tangible earnings from the JCPOA. But then Trump decided to leave the agreement, and this significantly weakened Rouhani, not only in the eyes of the Iranian population but also in the eyes of the supreme leader.
We can say a lot of bad things about Iran, but they kept their part of the agreement.
Everything started going haywire when Trump left the agreement. Initially, Rouhani tried not to violate the deal. He took only very limited steps. But when he became so weakened and understood that nothing would change, he decided to break every restriction that had been placed on the regime.

Would that possibly be giving the US too much credit for what’s happening in Iran? Or is it really playing that big of a role?
I think [the US withdrawal] was extremely important. Rouhani brought a significant change in Iran. He was a person from within that thought about the ways to save the Iranian Revolution. That was really important to him. I agree that people tend to exaggerate the US role in world events, but regarding the JCPOA, it had such a negative effect.

You mentioned the system Iran has put in place in order to cope with the sanctions. So what interest does Iran now have to return to the nuclear deal if it has seen that it can withstand economic pressure?
That’s a good question. Unlike Rouhani, Raisi doesn’t think that his first goal is to return to the JCPOA. He understands the importance of the JCPOA but believes that even if there is no return, he can cope with the backlash through the economy of resistance, and together with China, withstand the pressure.

AP21169213344157-640x400.jpg

Ebrahim Raisi, a candidate in Iran’s presidential elections, waves to the media after casting his vote at a polling station in Tehran, Iran, June 18, 2021 (AP Photo/Ebrahim Noroozi)

So if the US is willing to compromise on a lot, he wouldn’t mind returning to the deal, but only if it will be on Iran’s terms. That’s why a return to the JCPOA will require the US to compromise, and a lot.

What does US compromise look like?
No extension of the agreement past its current terms. No discussion of other issues like restrictions on Iran’s precision missile program or on Iranian malign activity in the region. The US will have to give some sort of assurance to the Iranians that it will not withdraw from the agreement in the future. This will be very difficult to give because it won’t be a treaty.
The Iranians will probably have to dismantle or dilute all enrichment progress they have made since after the JCPOA was signed. But this would not be a big deal for Iran because they are getting close to the end of the agreement’s restrictions anyways. But the US will have to lift all sanctions, not only nuclear ones. If not, Iran will feel it can withstand the pressure.

You say the Americans are going to have to show much more flexibility than they are currently showing in order for the deal to be revived. On what specific areas will they have to show flexibility?
I estimate that the Americans will be willing to take the “first step,” i.e., remove at least some of the sanctions as a show of good faith even before Iran does anything in the nuclear field. In addition, the US waived including additional issues in the talks that were not in the agreement. Moreover, it will have to commit to not interfering, and even encourage countries to invest in Iran, namely the Gulf states.

Sounds like the US has no leverage here.
The US is in a very tough spot. I don’t think that they have a Plan B. You can speak about Plan B as being more sanctions because they won’t actually attack Iran. But which kind of sanctions [can you levy against Iran] without China? They are desperate right now and don’t really want to impose any new sanctions because doing so will make it more difficult for Iran to return to the agreement.

Was there anything the Biden administration could have done differently?
In hindsight, I think they could have exploited Rouhani to return immediately to the agreements with no discussion whatsoever while he still had time left in office [in August]. I’m not sure this could’ve been doable because it took time for the new American administration to [get its bearings].
At this point, it’s irrelevant though. Now, they’re facing a much more extreme regime that thinks it can withstand the pressure. There will not be any, what we call “longer and stronger agreement” because if the US continues adopting this approach, there won’t be any agreement whatsoever.

AP21333660283269-e1638211296202-640x400.jpg

US President Joe Biden speaks about the COVID-19 Omicron variant, in the Roosevelt Room of the White House, November 29, 2021, in Washington, as Dr. Anthony Fauci, director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, listens. (AP Photo/ Evan Vucci)

But “longer and stronger” referred to the subsequent agreement that the Biden administration is hoping to sign after it returns to the JCPOA.
That won’t happen. The supreme leader will not accept that in a million years.
The supreme leader really felt that he was fooled by Rouhani and that the deal that he agreed to in 2015 was a significant compromise. We tend not to see it that way, but from the Iranian perspective, this was the case. So the idea of convincing him to make additional compromises is out of the question.
The supreme leader is also much stronger today than he was when the agreement was signed. Back then, all of the cards were in Rouhani’s favor. Now things have changed. The negotiators are not Zarif. And Raisi, of course, is not Rouhani. So the US will have to work very hard just to convince them to return to the existing deal.

The Israeli government makes the same argument.
But what other option do you have? Assuming you’re the US, you definitely don’t want confrontation with Iran, especially when you’re trying to pivot to Asia. If there’s no agreement, they’ll try to impose more sanctions to convince the Iranians to come back to the table, but they’re not going to forgo the diplomatic routes because this is the only way that they can get Iran back in the agreement.

You don’t think the US — in the case of a return to the JCPOA — could convince the world powers to reimpose sanctions on Iran, rather than allowing the deal’s sunsets to kick in?
Not China and Russia. I don’t see that happening. They would only follow the US down this route if Iran made severe violations of the deal.

Then what’s the Russian and Chinese interest in having a deal at all?
They want to block Iran from reaching a nuclear bomb, but they aren’t interested in doing the US’s bidding. They feel that the US put them in this problem by leaving the deal, so now the US has to be the one to fix it. Remember that China and Iran just signed a strategic pact. So can you see China going against its new strategic ally because the US asked? I doubt it.

000_9866HE-640x400.jpg

Abbas Araghchi, political deputy at the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Iran, leaving the ‘Grand Hotel Wien’ after the closed-door nuclear talks in Vienna on April 16, 2021, where diplomats of the EU, China, Russia and Iran hold their talks. (JOE KLAMAR / AFP)

So what is the Israeli position right now?
I think it’s unclear because you can hear Defense Minister Gantz talking about the importance of the JCPOA. You can hear Maj. Gen. Kelman talking about the diplomatic route. And you hear Bennett talking against the JCPOA. So I don’t really know what the stance is. But it’s kind of irrelevant because Israel’s ability to influence the negotiation is slim to none.

Why is that the case?
Israel is still thinking in terms of zero enrichment [of uranium] in Iran. That’s like talking about achieving a COVID infection rate of zero. It’s no longer relevant, but Israel still is adopting this position.

Do you see Israel ever amending its position?
Israel is caught in a policy toward Iran in which no one has the political maneuverability to think differently, and I don’t see anyone changing this because then they don’t want to be considered a “lefty.”

On the one hand, you say that there’s no political space for an Israeli leader to take a different position. On the other hand, you’re saying that it’s hard to figure out where the current government stands as Gantz is talking about the value of the deal. So which is it? Is there a difference between the current government and the previous one?
Well, you hear Gantz talking differently, but at the end of the day, I don’t see some sort of strategic shift with this new government.

Couldn’t one argue that the leader of Israel doesn’t have the luxury of taking anything but the most conservative approach toward Iran given the belief that it represents an existential threat?
You can make a lot of arguments, but at the end of the day, I unfortunately don’t see anyone in the upper echelons of Israel really changing the policy. Maybe they’ll think differently behind closed doors, but publicly they can’t afford to be seen as someone that is like Chamberlain in 1938. That’s how deep this thinking goes in Israel.


Hitler-and-Chamberlain-1-e1579518711870-640x400.png

Illustrative: Neville Chamberlain, left, and Hitler sealing the Munich pact in September 1938. (Public Domain)


I was going to ask you what you think Israel should do now, but you seem to believe that it doesn’t matter what it does.
It doesn’t matter. Look, you see that Israel’s threatening to use force. But I think it’s irrelevant. Because bombing Iran now [wouldn’t prevent it from reaching a bomb]. As for sanctions, you need the international community [which Israel doesn’t have]. Israel can [take certain actions], but I doubt that it will have an effect. In the past when the Mossad (reportedly) targeted the nuclear facility in Natanz, it played into Iran’s hands because Iran then challenged and limited inspections there.
At the end of the day, there is no one silver bullet that will solve the Iranian issue. And it’s been proven that when Israel did carry out some attacks, it may have stalled or delayed Iran, but it didn’t solve the problem strategically.

Doesn’t the Mossad try and argue, through leaks in the media, that those Iranian scientists it targets cannot simply be replaced?
They claim that. But the Iranian program is too vast that no one person really holds all the information.

Do you think Kohavi’s position has changed at all? Because today he seems rather hawkish on Iran now that he is IDF chief of staff.
Yes. Look at what he said in opposition to returning to the JCPOA earlier this year.

Right. So how do you explain the shift?
Listen, the good thing about my work is that I deal with the “red side,” not the “blue side,” so I don’t know [chuckles]. Some of these things can happen because of his position or his ambition, I don’t know. I don’t think it was the right position to take, but I’m not in a place to challenge him because I don’t know what led to it. Maybe it was planned. I don’t know.
The bottom line is that Israel has to adopt a realistic approach. I understand the importance of being a right-winger who’s constantly saying “Iran is bad, Iran is bad.” I understand the need for that. But when you are constantly shouting unrealistic demands, then you won’t be considered to be someone who can really contribute to the international debate.


063_1041857700-640x400.jpg

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu holds up a placard showing a suspected Iranian atomic site while delivering a speech at the United Nations during the United Nations General Assembly on September 27, 2018, in New York City. (Stephanie Keith/Getty Images/AFP)

Is that what it felt like to be working at the Israeli Embassy in Washington when it was being run by former ambassador Ron Dermer, a Netanyahu confidant?
I don’t want to speak about that. I have things to say, but not for [publication].

Is there something you’d be able to share more generally about your time in Washington, where it seems that you once again held a position at odds with the one the government was adopting?
When you’re a soldier, it doesn’t matter because you will always present the official government position.

At no point does it matter? You eventually stepped down. Was that the reason?
Well, even before I left for the States, the army told me that I was going to retire afterward. But when I finished my posting there, they told me that they had changed their mind and wanted me to stay on. At that point, I told them I preferred to retire, partially because I wanted to say what I truly believed. You could do this behind closed doors, but you could never override the decision on the outside because you’re still a soldier, and I accepted that.
I felt it was important for me to move on and write things publicly that I truly believe, without having to worry about any constraints that I might have. I’m saying now what I’ve believed, not for the past day or two, but since I’ve started dealing with the Iranian issue.
I now have the ability to add some sense to the discussion. It’s not only me, and there are others in Israel doing this, but I think these are important things that need to be said — that we need to be realistic and that some of the declarations being made are not realistic.

Like what?
Like saying things such as, “Israel can protect itself by itself.” Yes, theoretically, it’s true. But let’s assume that we attack Iran. We’ll subsequently find ourselves in a war on our northern border. Do you think that we can wage this war alone without help from the Americans? I doubt it.
So yes, we can say for political reasons that “we’ll defend ourselves by ourselves,” but practically it’s not accurate. It’s not like we can do whatever we want. To say, ‘We’ll always reserve the right to act independently’ — yeah, I agree with that too, but do you think we could act independently without our biggest ally? It doesn’t work like that. It’s too complex.

3840x2160a-2-1024x640.jpeg

Iran’s President Hassan Rouhani, right, is shown new centrifuges and listens to head of the Atomic Energy Organization of Iran Ali Akbar Salehi, while visiting an exhibition of Iran’s new nuclear achievements in Tehran, Iran, April 10, 2021. (Iranian Presidency Office via AFP)

Was it frustrating feeling like your views weren’t getting through to the decision-makers?
Yes, it was frustrating, but I tried to focus on describing what was happening on the “red side,” hoping that it would influence the decision-makers, and I thought that influencing the military’s position was extremely important.
When Kohavi tells the cabinet that there is real change taking place in Iran and when Eisenkot tells the cabinet that the agreement wasn’t entirely bad, I think that’s extremely important.

Israeli officials often argue that Iran has no problem abiding by the deal because once it sunsets it’ll be allowed to rush toward a bomb and have the added benefit of extra funds, thanks to the sanctions relief.
This is a lie. Yes, there are sunset clauses. But even after most of the restrictions are lifted, Iran will still have to face a very intense inspection regime. They will not be able to easily to divert any sort of material [to use for a bomb].
The inspections are not only allowing us to understand what’s happening at their nuclear sites, but they also are acting as a deterrent. Nobody is giving Iran a green light [to enrich uranium after the deal sunsets].

You insist that the agreement doesn’t actually give Iran a green light to enrich uranium once sunset clauses kick in because inspections remain, but what would prevent Iran from blocking those inspectors from entering their nuclear sites?
If Iran blocks the entry of inspectors, it will simply play into the hands of Israel because then the international community will find it difficult to sit idly by. The inability to verify what is happening at the Iranian nuclear sites will be one of the significant catalysts for a dramatic exacerbation of pressure on Iran. A large part of the restrictions on the nuclear agreement will indeed be removed in the coming years, but the supervision that deters Iran and warns against the developing enriched material will be maintained for another 25 years.

So what, then, were the flaws of the agreement?
There were two main flaws: One was that the sunset clauses were very limited. Instead of 15 years, they could have insisted on 50 years. I’m not sure that the Iranians would have agreed, but they could have played with the numbers. The other flaw was allowing Iran to continue with its research and development. Once the US left the agreement, they were able to advance very quickly toward nuclear capabilities because of the research and development they did during the agreement itself.

000_9TL3EQ-640x400.jpg

The Coburg Palais, the venue of the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA) revival talks, in Vienna on November 29, 2021. (VLADIMIR SIMICEK / AFP)

Can you speculate what would happen if the sides fail to revive the JCPOA?
If there is no deal — meaning that the talks hit a standstill — this won’t happen in a week or two. It will be back and forth in Vienna like we had in Geneva [ahead of the 2015 deal]. It will take some time, but let’s assume that eventually, the US side says, ‘Enough. There’s not going to be any agreement,’ or the Iranian side says the same. What likely happens next is that the Iranians continue enriching uranium, while being careful not to cross any important threshold, like the 90% enrichment. They will aggressively block any attempt to thwart their efforts, will work with China to continue bypassing sanctions, and work with countries in Asia and Africa in order to build some sort of alternative coalition.



Meanwhile, the US will be forced to impose new sanctions, but these sanctions will still be designed not to kill any future possibility of returning back to the negotiation table. If this does not happen eventually, then there will be probably some sort of a snapback of sanctions, but I think that they will try to avoid that. The Americans are faced with only bad options right now.

How does your experience in the US inform the way that you look at this issue?
I think that Biden has two problems. The first is in Iran, as he faces a different regime that is much more hawkish, etc. But he is also facing a problem from the domestic side because he’s invested so much to push his economic plans through that he’s using up all of his political capital. Assuming that he’s able to get some sort of deal, even if it’s not a treaty, he needs to get some sort of approval from his own party and because the deal will be not be the “longer and stronger” one that many are calling for, he might find that even on the Democratic side, there will be those who will be reluctant to support it.


There’s no possibility, in the absence of an agreement, of a static period of bubbling tension that doesn’t boil over?
I think that Israel and Iran are on a collision course. The Tanf base attack is a major deal. You had militias backed by Iran attacking Americans in Syria in response to what they claimed was an Israeli attack on their forces. There was the attack on the Mercer Street ship. This shows how irritated the Iranian side is with the Americans. Something in their calculus changed. They are becoming increasingly more aggressive, unlike in the past.
Iran will try and show that no matter what is going on on the nuclear side, nobody can challenge it on the regional side. It will be very important for them to emphasize that. They have become very emboldened and are further entrenching themselves in Syria as Israel tries to combat those efforts. We might find ourselves, because of the new Iranian leadership, in some sort of confrontation. We must understand this, because things are changing in Iran and moving very fast.

WhatsApp-Image-2021-11-24-at-2.36.17-PM-640x400.jpeg

Israel Military Intelligence representative in Washington Danny Citrinowicz at the US Air Force Base in Pensacola, Florida in 2018. (Courtesy)

So there’s nothing Israel can do at this point?
No. And it’s obvious what Israel is trying to do — trying to signal the possibility of a military strike and trying to threaten Iran, saying that we can defend ourselves with our own capabilities and trying to expose Iran’s malign activities in the region, like the UAVs, etc. I understand what they’re trying to do, but I suspect that its impact will be very limited.
Iran will only change its strategy if, and only if, it feels like the regime is in real jeopardy. And the Iranians believe that the only country capable of really threatening them is the US, not Israel. The only thing threats from Israel will do is push us toward some sort of confrontation.
Unlike Israel’s strike on the nuclear plants in Iraq or in Syria, a strike on Iran would be different not only because it has multiple fortified enrichment bases and compounds, rather than singular reactors. One other important difference is the fact that the Iranians are going to retaliate. It will be an opening for an escalation that might lead to an all-out war.
The Americans are not going to attack Iran either because doing so would also spark a regional war. Remember what happened in January before Trump ended his tenure and there were all of these discussions that were later published in the press about Trump wanting to bomb Iran and [US Joint Chiefs of Staff chairman Gen. Mark] Milley telling him that it would lead to war. The Americans are not stupid.

But did Iran really retaliate against the previous assassinations and attacks?
In the case of [Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps commander Qassem] Soleimani, they fired missiles at the Ayn Al Asad base, trying to kill American soldiers, and they continued pushing their Shiite militias. The response also has not concluded. Khamenei’s dream is to get the US out of Iraq entirely as revenge for the assassination, which is why we’re seeing the continued activity of the Shiite militias against American forces there.
But you cannot compare the assassination of Soleimani by the US to an Israeli attack on Iranian nuclear sites. One of the reasons Hezbollah is so powerful is to bolster Iranian deterrence from such an attack. This is one of the reasons [the group] exists. Therefore, a public attack on Iran will require a response from the [Lebanese] organization. In light of the deep connection between Iran and Hezbollah, can Israel risk assuming that there won’t be a response to its attack on Iran? The answer is no.

01-02-2020-Soleimani-640x400.jpg

Iranian President Hassan Rouhani, second from left, shakes hands with Iranian Quds Force commander Qassem Soleimani in Tehran, Iran, September 15, 2015. (Pool/Iranian Presidency Press Office/Anadolu Agency/Getty Images)

You’ve characterized the Israeli policy on Iran as a failure, but given the fact that you’ve also argued that Israel has no ability to really influence Iran, why was it a failure?
It’s a failure because I think we could have influenced the [2015] agreement with a more realistic approach. It is a failure because when we carry out preliminary attacks, it only encouraged the regime to put obstacles in front of inspections that are critical to deterring Iran from transforming its civilian nuclear program to a military one. It’s a failure because we pushed the US side to leave the agreement when there are no other options. At the end of the day, the US is 10,000-15,000 kilometers away from Iran. We are 2,000 kilometers from Iran. We’re the ones stuck with the problem.
The bottom line is that Israel has never been in a worse place against Iran.

Former Mossad chief Yossi Cohen says otherwise.
The actions that Israel took when he was head of the Mossad did not help. At the end of the day, they only led Iran to accelerate its efforts. When you carry out a strike when the program is at its earlier stages, you delay the project by half a year. But when you strike a program that is more advanced, you’re only able to delay by a week.
In 2009 and 2010 a country in the Middle East — according to foreign media reports — was responsible for taking out a number of Iranian nuclear scientists. Did this prevent Iran from reaching 10,000 centrifuges? No, it didn’t. You’ll tell me that it delayed [the progress]. But delayed until when? The Iranians are looking two or three years ahead. We have all of these impressive tactical successes that were used to push the US to leave the agreement, but what did we get from that?

AP_18159423787030-1024x640.jpg

Iranian protesters burn Israeli and US flags in their annual anti-Israeli Al-Quds, Jerusalem, Day rally in Tehran, Iran, June 8, 2018. (AP/Ebrahim Noroozi)


When you look at Israel’s policy vis a vis Iran and what Israel tried to do to prevent a nuclear program, you see a colossal failure.

So now even the military and intelligence worlds in Israel don’t understand the Iranians?
Correct! I think they don’t understand this. They don’t understand the nuances. Iran is not a monolith. [Former hardline Parliament Speaker Ali] Larijani is not like Raisi. And I’m sorry, but they don’t wake up in the morning and think about how to destroy Israel. It doesn’t work like that in Iran. But we’re imprisoned [by the politics of this all], and everything gets mixed up.
In Israel, when the Iranian president is moderate, they tell you that he’s weak and a puppet. When the president is an extremist, they say that he decides everything and eats cake after ordering people to their deaths. It’s a basic misunderstanding of the Iranian system.
Because at the end of the day it’s not just about pushing them back, further from a bomb, but also strengthening those in the regime who believed in the agreement. Now, we’ve found ourselves in a catastrophe, which could lead to war.

How do you respond to those who say that you’ve done so much to study and understand the other side that you’re believing Iran’s talking points when they are actually excuses. Maybe you’ve lost the perspective necessary to be able to take a step back and really challenge Iran.
I’m doing what everyone needs to be doing and that is understanding how Iran thinks, rather than projecting our own way of thinking onto the enemy. One of the main problems in our research of Iran is that we do not understand Iran.
What’s worse, we make incorrect working assumptions about Iranian goals and strategy based on very shaky knowledge that rests primarily on our understanding of Iran’s activities in the region.


No single body is responsible for Iranian proxies in Iraq and Syria, and the regime’s goals abroad are not the same as its goals at home. It can be active in the region while being passive with its nuclear program at home and vice versa. This miscalculation is likely what will lead to a conflict between the two countries.

I saw the “blue side.” I saw the “red side.” And I think that through the adoption of a failed policy, we’ve put ourselves in a situation with Iran that is the direst that it’s ever been.

Not attacking 15 years ago was a big cost for them.

Back when Iran had small amount of Shahab-3's (long enough to reach Israel) and little in terms of precision capability. The longer they wait the more costly it becomes, and it's likely that they do not see an attack as viable anymore.
 
.
Not attacking 15 years ago was a big cost for them.

Back when Iran had small amount of Shahab-3's (long enough to reach Israel) and little in terms of precision capability. The longer they wait the more costly it becomes, and it's likely that they do not see an attack as viable anymore.
I quite agree,they`ve obviously left it far,far too late,but I dont think that even then [2000s] there was any real appetite for risking a war with iran,I think the hope among the zionists was that the "useful idiots"...er...I mean the usa,would do it for them,however once the occupations of both iraq and afghanistan quickly began to turn into bloody open ended quagmires,that it was clear that the us would not easily be able to escape from,it was pretty obvious that at that point the us simply had neither the military resources nor the political will to credibly threaten iran with invasion,quite the opposite in fact,as it was now iran that was threatening,and inflicting casualties,on the us occupation forces. :sarcastic:
At this point I think its pretty clear that military action is off the table.I think that any doubts that irans enemies might have once had about either its retaliatory capabilities or its willingness to use them,ultimately went up in smoke along with parts of ayn al asad.
From the looks of it,the wests plan B appears to be just to continue with plan A.
 
.
Not attacking 15 years ago was a big cost for them.

Back when Iran had small amount of Shahab-3's (long enough to reach Israel) and little in terms of precision capability. The longer they wait the more costly it becomes, and it's likely that they do not see an attack as viable anymore.
15 years ago Iran posed no existential threat to Israel. Iran did not possess PGM missiles, neither did Hezbollah. There was no real basis for Israel to act against Iran. After Ahmadinejad, they saw a danger coming from Iran and they started to act.
 
.
That strategic depth we "lack" is more than covered up by our defenses, amount of infrastructure, your trash tier missile reliability, the fact Iran doesn't have enough ballistic missiles that could reach Israel that could pose anything close to an existential threat and the fact Israel is going to absolutely destroy Iran if it chooses to fire them.

You're the terrorists launching terrorist attacks everywhere.

You've been vowing for the annihalation of Israel for 40 years, you haven't done shit. We have killed your most important military personnel, bombed your forces in Syria and Lebanon on a weekly basis for the last 10 years, yet you have done nothing
Our trash missiles, drones and cruise missiles have demonstrated a pin point accuracy in all missions they deployed for from hitting american terrorist troops bases in Iraq or their proxy aka isis position in Syria or in taking out half of the Saudis oil production in one shot ...

13981019153409876193712210.jpg13981019153457220193712310.jpg13981019153530642193712410.jpg13981019153556751193712510.jpgVipin Narang.jpg1399011313101879420035384.jpgIMG_20170624_142906.jpg

And if Iranian missiles are not a threat then tell your leaders to not talk about them and STFU.

On vowing for the annihilation of israel ... we have liberated Lebanon and have armed Palestinian to defend themselves and I can assure you next war would be devastating .. for a regime that at first were a bunch of terrorist groups which later were reshaped as an army such a defeats would mean an end because it ain't no longer functional ... your plan was to take away Syria from Iran but in return Iran has built up its presence in Golan height:
2.jpg
So technically what you have done has zero output as your attempts in Iraqi Kurdistan brought to a defeat by Iran too ... what we all have seen is in every conformation between 2 it was Iran that has imposed its own will on the other side and remain the same in the future ...
 
.
Our trash missiles, drones and cruise missiles have demonstrated a pin point accuracy in all missions they deployed for from hitting american terrorist troops bases in Iraq or their proxy aka isis position in Syria or in taking out half of the Saudis oil production in one shot ...

View attachment 800040View attachment 800041View attachment 800042View attachment 800043View attachment 800044View attachment 800047View attachment 800048

And if Iranian missiles are not a threat then tell your leaders to not talk about them and STFU.

On vowing for the annihilation of israel ... we have liberated Lebanon and have armed Palestinian to defend themselves and I can assure you next war would be devastating .. for a regime that at first were a bunch of terrorist groups which later were reshaped as an army such a defeats would mean an end because it ain't no longer functional ... your plan was to take away Syria from Iran but in return Iran has built up its presence in Golan height:
View attachment 800055
So technically what you have done has zero output as your attempts in Iraqi Kurdistan brought to a defeat by Iran too ... what we all have seen is in every conformation between 2 it was Iran that has imposed its own will on the other side and remain the same in the future ...
Yes, they hit very precisely as long as they don't malfunction and crash kilometers away from their target, like they do in 40% of the time they're used as shown in Iraq.

"Liberated Lebanon" lmfao, majority of Lebanese hate Hezbollah, you just hold them hostage.
Lebanon is a poor nation just because of Hezbollah and Iran, and was dragged into wars it shouldn't have been involved in just because of them.
 
.
Yes, they hit very precisely as long as they don't malfunction and crash kilometers away from their target, like they do in 40% of the time they're used as shown in Iraq.

"Liberated Lebanon" lmfao, majority of Lebanese hate Hezbollah, you just hold them hostage.
Lebanon is a poor nation just because of Hezbollah and Iran, and was dragged into wars it shouldn't have been involved in just because of them.
and you guys still have problem differentiating between warhead and body of missiles.
they are simply two different thing.
 
.
Yes, they hit very precisely as long as they don't malfunction and crash kilometers away from their target, like they do in 40% of the time they're used as shown in Iraq.

"Liberated Lebanon" lmfao, majority of Lebanese hate Hezbollah, you just hold them hostage.
Lebanon is a poor nation just because of Hezbollah and Iran, and was dragged into wars it shouldn't have been involved in just because of them.
As I said if Iranian missiles are not a threat then tell your leaders to not talk about them all time mind their business and STFU.
And facts don't care about your claims:

And if majority of Lebanese hate Hezbollah then why this hesitation? attacked them and destroy them once for all ... but you don't ... probably your leaders know things you don't ...
Lebanon has been dragged into war 2 times :
1982 occupied by isreal ... ended by isreali troops being kicked out in 2000 by Hezbollah ...
2006 invaded by isreal under fantasy of removal of Hezbollah in a week : ended by UNSCR passed by american after 33 days to save isreal face ... only victory you got in that war was destruction of Lebanon instruction and attacking residential areas ...
Other one which Lebanon was not directly involved was Syria that Hezbollah saved the country from threats of isis.
 
. .
Yes, they hit very precisely as long as they don't malfunction and crash kilometers away from their target, like they do in 40% of the time they're used as shown in Iraq.
You are shown satellite photos of the effectiveness of Iranian missile. Their accuracy is top notch. Proof is on the sat images, go look at it and stop trolling, Jew.
 
. . .
thats why Israel is so concerned about them, I guess....
Israel is concerned Iran will mount a nuke on them, then whether they miss by few kilometers would matter less.
You are shown satellite photos of the effectiveness of Iranian missile. Their accuracy is top notch. Proof is on the sat images, go look at it and stop trolling, Jew.
Satellite images show a few precise hits, what they don't show are the missiles that didn't even get near the airport.
 
.

Latest posts

Country Latest Posts

Back
Top Bottom