Today, Explained - Why Iran attacked Israel
Episode Date: April 15, 2024The Economist’s Gregg Carlstrom explains. Jerusalem-based journalist Noga Tarnopolsky explores whether the unprecedented attack hurts or helps Benjamin Netanyahu. This episode was produced by Avisha...y Artsy and Amanda Lewellyn, edited by Amina Al-Sadi, fact-checked by Laura Bullard and Hady Mawajdeh, engineered by Rob Byers, and hosted by Sean Rameswaram. Transcript at vox.com/todayexplained Support Today, Explained by making a financial contribution to Vox! bit.ly/givepodcasts Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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This weekend, Iran launched more than 300 drones and missiles at Israel.
It was an unprecedented, direct attack on Israel from Iranian soil.
On the other hand, zero people died and not a single drone entered Israeli airspace.
But it really does hint at a broader regional conflict.
Iran launched the drones from not only its territory, but also Iraq, Lebanon, and Yemen.
On the other hand, Saudi Arabia and Jordan joined the United States, the United Kingdom, and Israel in shooting the drones down.
But surely it suggests that this war in Gaza will continue to escalate beyond Gaza.
This is by definition an escalation.
But on the other hand, it's been like 48 hours
and Israel doesn't seem to be doing anything.
If we're being honest, this whole situation feels a little confusing
and we're going to try and help you understand it on Today Explained.
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advisor free of charge. BetMGM operates pursuant to an operating agreement with iGaming Ontario. Today Explained, Sean Ramos from Greg Karlstrom is the Middle East correspondent for leading
magazine The Economist, which means he had a very busy weekend. But before we get into this
past weekend's fireworks, we asked him to remind us how this war in Gaza has spilled out into the
region, because it's worth remembering
there has been a fair amount of activity outside of Palestine.
That would be an understatement, I think, yes.
I mean, if you go sort of clockwise around Israel, you've had near daily rocket fire
from Hezbollah in Lebanon, and then Israeli airstrikes and shelling in Lebanon.
The IDF was also involved in very heavy back and forth fighting with Hezbollah.
You've had intermittent attacks from groups in Syria and then a very heavy campaign of
Israeli airstrikes on Syria. You've had militias in Iraq who have fired
drones at Israel and also attacked American troops in the region.
Cautionary words from President Biden,
who says the U.S. shall respond after Iranian-backed militants
killed three American service personnel
and injured at least 30, all stationed in Jordan.
They are the first to... You have the Houthis in Yemen
who have also fired drones at Israel
and then carried out this quasi-blockade
of the Red Sea by attacking commercial shipping.
These attacks are reckless, dangerous, and they violate international law.
There's been a lot of talk lately about whether or not this could turn into a regional
war, but I think by any metric, it already is a regional war.
It has been for months now, and it's just the question of whether it becomes an even bigger one than it already is.
And it did become a bigger one this weekend.
Can you tell us, of all these regional issues that you just referred to,
which ones were most sort of germane to the lead up of what happened this weekend with Iran?
It was Syria, and there was a proximate cause for it. And then there was a month's long
backdrop to it. So the immediate trigger for what happened this weekend was an airstrike,
an Israeli airstrike on April 1st on Iran's embassy compound in Damascus. Damascus General Mohammad Reza Zahedi was confirmed dead.
He was the commander of the Iranian Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps Quds Brigades.
And it wasn't just the death toll that was significant about that.
It was the choice of target.
It was the fact that Israel bombed a consular building.
But it also wasn't just one airstrike.
It came after months and
months and months of Israeli strikes on Iranian targets. Since October the 7th, it's carried out
an unusually heavy, compared to past years, an unusually heavy campaign of airstrikes against
Iranian targets. And so this was the straw that broke the camel's back, if you will,
but it was part of a much bigger Israeli campaign there.
Now, we're talking Monday morning, 9 a.m. East Coast.
How has Israel responded so far?
It hasn't yet, partly because it can't agree on how to respond.
As world leaders call for restraint, Israel's war cabinet met
without announcing any definite course of action,
but said it would respond at a time and in a manner of its choosing.
Part of the reason they can't agree is they're under a lot of pressure now from both their
Western allies and friendly countries in the Arab world who are worried that if Israel strikes back
against Iran directly, Iran might retaliate and we might be in this tit-for-tat cycle that will lead to that much bigger regional war that everyone is afraid of.
So there's a tremendous amount of pressure on Israel from its allies abroad, at least to
slow down to think about what it's going to do and to not rush into what could be a very rash reprisal.
President Biden says he will convene a meeting of the group of seven leaders today.
On Saturday, he spoke with Israeli Prime Minister Netanyahu
and reaffirmed America's ironclad commitment
to the security of Israel.
A senior administration official tells NBC News
he also urged Netanyahu not to retaliate,
but, quote, take the win.
The Americans and the Brits and the French
and other countries were all very happy to
come to Israel's defense here and act on its behalf defensively.
But they have no interest whatsoever in this turning into a bigger regional conflict that
might draw them in in a more significant way.
Do we have any sense of whether Netanyahu's listening to Joe Biden here or just making the decision Joe Biden
wants on, you know, his own accord? I think it's always fair to doubt that Netanyahu is listening
to Joe Biden. I mean, what we've seen over the past six months since October 7th is just about
everything that Joe Biden has asked Israel to do, whether it's allowing more
humanitarian aid into Gaza, talking about a possible diplomatic process to follow the war.
All of these things that Biden has pushed for, he's been rebuffed. And so we've had months and
months of leaks about how he's frustrated with Netanyahu and he's fed up with the Israeli
government. But that also hasn't translated into action,
into policy change in Washington. So there is a lot of skepticism, I think, that the Israeli
government in this case will listen to the Americans. But at the same time, there are
people within the Israeli government, I think, who recognize that they owe a debt to their allies at
this point, that they would not have been able to shoot down 99% of these Iranian missiles and drones without very significant help from the United States
and from other partners around the world.
Because of that and because they would need American help if they were to retaliate against
Iran and perhaps be attacked again, they would need American help again to defend against
that.
So I think at least in parts of the Israeli government, there is a recognition that they
can't just blunder into a response here, that they do have to consult with their allies before they
do anything. What was the point of this unprecedented drone strike that was essentially
a huge failure? Iran could have surely done something that would have hurt Israel more.
Did it purposely take a sort of benign tack? I think Iran was trying to juggle two different
priorities or two different objectives that ultimately could not be reconciled.
On the one hand, it felt it needed to do something both because of domestic
pressure from hardliners in the government and in the military who demanded a response. And so the
government felt like it needed to appease them and to restore deterrence against Israel, to send a
message to Israel that this attack on the consular building went too far
and couldn't be repeated. So they were trying to do that, but simultaneously they were trying to
do it in such a way that wouldn't automatically trigger a massive Israeli counter-attack and
lead to a big war on Iranian soil, which is something they've always sought to avoid.
And that's why they telegraphed this for two weeks. They made it known that there was going to be some sort of retaliation, and they gave Israel
and its allies time to prepare. And then they began the attack with these very slow-moving drones that
they launched from Iran that took hours and hours and hours before they actually reached Israeli
territory, which gave everyone a heads up that the attack was underway and they needed to scramble
fighter jets and prepare their air defenses.
They were trying to do these two things and ultimately they couldn't reconcile those two
objectives and so they went with this big attack to satisfy a domestic constituency
and try to impose deterrence on Israel, but they telegraphed the big attack which made
it militarily ineffective and I think they ended up, strategically speaking, you know, in the worst of all possible worlds.
Is there any way of knowing whether this is over? Is the chance of an escalation
diminishing by the day?
We don't know. And I think if I've learned one thing over the past six months, it's to be very
careful about predicting the future. But I think more likely than not, I think almost certainly,
Israel is going to respond in some way to this. I find it very hard to imagine that
this Israeli government or any Israeli government would let this go unanswered. What they're going
to do, we really don't know. There's a range of possibilities from responding in kind, attacking directly either Iran's military sites or perhaps
its nuclear facilities. You could do that through covert operations rather than overt airstrikes.
You could try to do it covertly, carry out cyber attacks on critical infrastructure in Iran,
or you could attack outside of Iran. You could strike Iranian targets in places like Syria, which is what precipitated this all to begin with. So
there's a menu of options and what Israel is going to choose. I tend to think they will be on the
less extreme end of that menu, in large part because of this international pressure that
they're under, but exactly what they're going to do or when they're going to do it, we're really not sure.
But in the meantime, the United States thinks Israel should take the win,
and Israel might be taking the win. Is it a win for Benjamin Netanyahu?
I think it is in some ways, and that might sound paradoxical because this is a politician who has
for many, many years cast
himself as Mr. Security. And now in the past six months, he's presided over both the worst
massacre in Israeli history and then the first Iranian attack ever on Israel, the first time
Israel has been attacked by any state since 1991. So on its face, it doesn't seem like it helps him,
but I think it does in two ways. One of them is internationally, diplomatically.
If you think about the conversation that we were all having two weeks ago, it was about
Gaza.
There was a huge amount of international outrage and growing diplomatic pressure on Israel,
and that has all been set aside.
Now, everyone is talking about Iran.
Everyone rushed to Israel's defense over the
weekend, and so it's pushed the Palestinians down the agenda. It's taken some of the diplomatic
pressure off of Netanyahu. And then at the same time, it also prolongs this state of conflict,
which for him, he hopes, will further postpone the point when Israel might have early elections,
which look like they're going to end
with him being voted out of office. So the longer this state of war around the region drags on,
the longer Israel is under threat, the more likely it is that he'll be able to remain in power. Greg Karlstrom, Economist.com.
More on how Netanyahu somehow hasn't yet lost his job when we're back on Today Explained.
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I'm Noga Tarnofolsky. I'm a journalist. I'm based in Jerusalem for a very long time.
You know, the guest in the first half of our show, he theorized that this was a win for Israel, and thus a win for Netanyahu, but that, you know,
he still had to contend with the fact that he's deeply unpopular in Israel. Would you agree with
that assessment? No, I wouldn't, actually. Despite my affection and respect for Greg. Because I think it's a much more nuanced or striated situation.
I think it's important to remember that Iran is declaring victory, and they have reasons to.
Iran just launched 300 murderous projectiles at Israel. Their projectiles overflew the Israeli parliament.
They overflew the Dome of the Rock, one of the most holy sites in Islam. This is not a failed
experiment by Iran. This is an Iran resurgent. This is an Iran asserting itself as a regional
power. Even though they launched over 300 drones, and I think there were literally zero casualties,
you view this as a success for Iran?
I mean, nothing in the current situation is pure success or pure failure. I think that this
Iranian move is a historic move for them. I think they're very proud of it. I don't think we should diminish that. They have, Iran basically by itself has developed suicide drones, ballistic missiles, and cruise
missiles that they can launch from half a world away and aim pretty accurately at the state of
Israel. And yeah, I think they wanted to show the world they could do that, and I think that was a big success for them. I think it is an important success for Israel in the respect that Israel was able to defend itself.
And that's not a minor thing after the huge failure in defending itself on October 7th.
Part of the reason Israeli citizens felt such terror over the last few days is because they've learned the hard way that they
may not actually have the protections of a state. And so the Israeli state was also resurgent.
The army was, people felt defended. It's very, very important in this context to say
that Israel's success is not at all purely military. It is military, but mostly it's
diplomatic. You know, there's a very wide swath of human and political activity that's in the
area between diplomacy and military. And in this case, Israeli allies, whether overt or hidden,
including Saudi Arabia, including other nations in the Arab world that don't have relations with Israel, including Jordan and Egypt, that are the countries that have peace agreements, the United States, obviously, Great Britain, Cyprus, Greece, all of these countries participated in a vast operation to thwart the Iranian
attack, and that succeeded. And that's a very big deal.
And what about for Netanyahu? Was this a win for Netanyahu, in your opinion? Or
was this another setback? Because as you said, Israelis have felt insecure after October 7th. But after this weekend's events, maybe they feel a bit more secure.
I think this was a compound failure for Netanyahu.
Netanyahu, for as long as Iran has been threatening Israel, which is more than 30 years,
Netanyahu, who today is 74, has been out there in the world beating this drum about how Iran is going to attack Israel.
He's the only one who can defend Israel.
He's Mr. Security. arena, and the 16 years now that he has led Israel, Iran has gained the ability to have
weapons that threaten Israel in the Gaza Strip, in Lebanon, in Syria, and has advanced its own
weapons development to an extent that is almost inconceivable. Iran is basically a nuclear nation today,
and this has all happened under Netanyahu's watch.
Can you remind us how he's doing with the Israeli public right now?
What's his popularity like?
His popularity is at about or under 20%,
which is very, very low.
Whenever I mention this statistic in the last few days,
I like to take a step back and remember
that Netanyahu is one of these leaders who's been tolerated
and he's been respected, he's been, you know, kind of okay,
but he has not been a popular leader in a very long time.
The last time I think we can say he kind of conclusively won an Israeli vote of confidence
was almost 10 years ago.
You know, in 2018, his government collapsed when his defense minister left him over his Gaza policy.
Following the two days of rocket fire in the south, many ministers, Knesset members and
civilians alike are today criticizing the Israeli government's willingness to end
hostilities with the terror groups in Gaza.
In fact, in protest against what he called a capitulation to terror, Defense Minister
Abigdor Lieberman has today resigned from his post.
Then failed to win re-election.
The seasons may change, but the question for Israeli voters remains the same.
Deweiser former Prime Minister Benjamin Bibi Netanyahu
is vying for a return to power,
campaigning across the country in his now infamous bulletproof Bibi bus.
He could never win. He won the last one barely by the skin of his teeth.
And he did so by joining forces with people who had never been able
to penetrate Israeli politics before. So, you know, the Proud Boys, the Israeli version of the KKK,
these are who he brought in in order to help float him in politics. So he's not a popular
leader to begin with. I think I should add, he's widely viewed as having someone who is mishandled and is mishandling the current war.
There are protests. There is an uprising.
There's waning support at home and around the world.
Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer, the highest ranking Jewish elected official in the United States,
and a huge supporter of Israel, has called for a new election.
He has been too willing to tolerate the civilian toll in Gaza,
which is pushing support for Israel worldwide to historic lows. Israel cannot survive
if it becomes a pariah.
Other Democrats are calling for Netanyahu to step down.
What does it eventually take?
What eventually makes it happen, if anything?
Israelis have taken to the streets to demand that Netanyahu go.
He has a narrow coalition of 64 out of 120 parliamentary votes.
You know, in theory, you could say five people drop out
and he'd lose a vote of no confidence, right, in a parliamentary system. That's true. But he's surrounded by sycophants, extremists. Their only avenue to power new elections. He is so scared of this prospect that he has said several times in recent weeks
that if Israel is forced into new elections,
and I quote,
it'll be a victory for Hamas.
The calls for elections now during a war
right before a victory
would paralyze Israel for at least a half a year.
It would paralyze the negotiation
for the release of
our hostages, and it would end the war before its objectives are completed. The first one to
benefit from this would be Hamas. Israelis feel that new elections would be a victory for them.
And just in closing, you don't think this historic, unprecedented drone strike on Israel shifted Netanyahu's fortunes in either direction, or do you?
My impression is that it has not shifted anything.
And, you know, it's a really important question that you ask, because what you're really asking is, in what way is this guy still relevant?
Who's running the country?
If an Iranian suicide drone strike, something that Israelis have feared for 30 years,
finally materializes, and even then they're not reacting to him,
in what way does he even count?
But he has chosen to be absent,
and he has chosen to let his minor ministers make these extremist statements and then hide behind the decisions of his war cabinet so he's put himself in a situation
where he's on the one hand hated and on the other hand irrelevant but still in power you know the
guy is on trial for very serious corruption charges,
and I think almost all of his decisions,
as weird as they may seem to the public that needs a leader,
can be understood through the prism of his need to just remain in power.
Noga Tarnopolsky is a freelance journalist based in Jerusalem.
Our program today was produced by Abishai Artsy and Amanda Llewellyn.
We were edited by Amina Al-Assadi, fact-checked by Laura Bullard and Harima Wagdi,
and mixed by Rob Byers.
This is Today Explained. Thank you.