THE IRANIAN DRONE by melanie phillips
Did Iran yesterday
openly launch its war of extermination against Israel? The sequence of events,
according to former IDF spokesman Lt Cl Peter Lerner,
was this. Yesterday morning an Iranian drone, an advanced model with stealth
capabilities, penetrated into Israel through the border from Jordan. It was
intercepted after about a minute and a half in Israeli territory by an IDF
attack helicopter.
In the immediate
aftermath, the Israel Air Force conducted a targeted strike and destroyed the
mobile command vehicle that guided the drone. On its way home, an Israeli F16
fighter jet was downed by massive Syrian anti-aircraft fire. Following this,
the IAF conducted a widespread strike against 12 targets in Syria, including
three aerial defence batteries and four Iranian positionsWidespread media
misreporting of these events constituted the usual combination of lazy
incompetence and malice. Outlets including the New York Times, CNN, the Guardian and BBC Newsfalsely
implied that Israel was the aggressor; only by carefully reading these stories
could the true sequence of events be discerned.
The Guardian
claimed Israel had launched a “large-scale air raid in Syria after one of its
F-16 fighters crashed while under Syrian anti-aircraft fire”. Like the BBC, it
acknowledged this raid was in response to the Iranian drone attack only in the
third paragraph while CNN relegated it to paragraph five. And the ineffably
vicious New York Times headlined its story: “Israel Strikes Iran in Syria and
Loses a Jet”. Nice, eh?
The significance of
the Iranian drone sortie isn’t clear. Clearly, Iran intended it as a
provocation and knew it would generate a condign Israeli response. But to what
end did it dispatch it? Did Iran simply want to beat its chest and demonstrate
how easy it was to attack Israel? Did it want to test out how Israel would
react? Did it under-estimate Israel’s response? For its part, Israel displayed
the awesome precision of its intelligence not just about Syrian but Iranian
positions which it says were concealed. Nevertheless, the fact that Syria was
able to down an Israeli fighter was a blow to Israel and a shot in the arm for
Syria and Iran.
The immediate
support shown to Israel by the US, which declared robustly that Israel had
every right to defend itself, was obviously welcome. Nevertheless, there is surely
something very wrong about this situation which everyone – including the US –
appears to accept as normal. Iran is a fanatical Islamic regime driven by the
genocidal aim of exterminating Israel. It has repeatedly announced this to the
world, accompanied by deranged and obsessive Holocaust denial and anti-Jewish
calumnies. There can be no doubt about its implacable intention to realise this
infernal goal.
In Lebanon its
proxy army, Hezbollah, has embedded within the civilian population upwards of
150,000 missiles pointing at Israel. In Syria, Iran’s support of Assad has
enabled it to reach Israel’s border. In Gaza, Iran is embedding itself through
Hamas. Since the debacle of the 2003 war in Iraq, launched with the aim of
preventing Saddam Hussein from obtaining or developing weapons of mass
destruction, the west appears to have decided that pre-emptive strikes are off
the table for ever. This means Israel has to act like a sitting duck, waiting
for Iran to attack it before it can do anything to defend itself. Even the
drone is being said in some quarters not to have represented a real attack. In
other words, Israel has to wait for its citizens to be killed (how many??)
before it is entitled to take any military action (and even then, what’s the
betting it would still be presented as the aggressor? Quite).
The film The
Darkest Hour has gained deserved plaudits for Gary Oldman’s
outstanding performance as Winston Churchill. Audiences are being educated –
some for the first time – in the dismal reality of 1930s British appeasement,
despite Hitler’s invasion of Czechoslovakia, and the way in which Churchill’s
all-too accurate warnings about Hitler’s intentions were ignored while
Churchill was depicted instead as an extremist warmonger. If he had been
listened to earlier, maybe Hitler could have been stopped and countless
millions of lives saved.
Israel’s position
today is analogous to Hitler having positioned 150,000 missile batteries in,
say, Ireland, all pointing at Britain; and then advancing into France and reaching
the Normandy coast, all the while steadily embedding his forces in the Channel
Islands. Britain finally went to war when Hitler invaded Poland. Even in
appeasement Britain, no-one suggested it should have waited until the Nazis
reached the French coast before it decided to fight them. Had it do so, Britain
along with Europe would now be a Nazi dictatorship. Yet people expect Israel to
sit on its hands while genocidal fanatics intent on its destruction encircle it
unimpeded.
Just as with
Hitler’s intentions in the 1930s, the Iranian regime’s implacable intention to
exterminate Israel has been ignored, downplayed or denied. Now the significance
of the Iranian drone is being downplayed, mischaracterised or denied. No
civilised country wants war, and Israel will do everything it can to avoid an
all-out conflict. But Iran is already at war with Israel – a war Iran has
initiated. The question today is whether the strength and accuracy of Israel’s
response to the drone will deter Iran from further aggression.
There will be a far
greater chance of averting all-out war if Britain and Europe finally come to
their senses and start holding Iran’s feet to the fire rather than seeking to
sanitise, excuse and reward it at every opportunity. The answer to the
question, however, depends on what Iran was intending when it dispatched its
drone into Israel. From the information that has so far been made public, it is
impossible to tell. We must hope Israel itself knows the answer, and that it
will do accordingly whatever it needs to do. Western nations may disapprove;
but in the past when Jews faced extermination, these western nations chose to
look the other way. And when today Israelis are murdered by Arab or Islamic
fanatics these western nations still look the other away or, worse still, blame
Israel for its own victimisation. These nations may afford themselves the
luxury of setting the value of Jewish lives at zero. But the State of Israel
was founded on the principle “never again”; and if needs be it will also say,
just as the defiant British soldier declared in the famous David Low cartoon in
that darkest hour: “Very well, alone”.
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