Yossi Alpher is an independent security analyst. He is the former director of the Jaffee Center for Strategic Studies at Tel Aviv University, a former senior official with the Mossad, and a former IDF intelligence officer. Views and positions expressed here are those of the writer, and do not necessarily represent APN's views and policy positions.
Q. January 3 came and went, and Iran did not retaliate against the US, Israel or anyone else for the assassination exactly a year earlier of Quds Force leader Qassem Soleimani. Should we feel relieved?
A. Yes, mildly relieved. The non-event of January 3 was a statement that from Iran’s perspective, acts of
war--against the US and/or Israel--are currently not on the agenda. Terrorist provocations by proxy, such as a
major attack on Aden’s airport in Yemen last week and the occasional skirmish on Israel’s northern borders,
perhaps. Protest and mourning demonstrations by Shiite militia in Iraq, definitely. A demonstrative escalation of
nuclear enrichment to a dangerous 20 percent, certainly.
But not acts of war. By exercising restraint on January 3, and for that matter by avoiding any game-changing
response to President Trump’s ‘maximum pressure’ campaign over the past three years, Iran’s Islamist leaders are
signaling that they prefer to wait for the Biden presidency. They hope the Biden administration, in coordination
with the other members of the 5+1 consortium that negotiated the JCPOA nuclear deal in 2015, will act quickly to
renew that deal.
Q. So much for Iranian intentions. But Trump’s? Israel’s?
A. The US deployed an aircraft carrier and a submarine in the Persian Gulf, beefing up the Bahrain-based Fifth
Fleet in anticipation of an Iranian act of retaliation. It flew B-52 strategic bombers to the Gulf from North
Dakota, conspicuously refueling in the air over Tel Aviv. Simultaneously, Israel conspicuously sent a submarine
through the Suez Canal to the Red Sea and its air force went on high alert.
But January 3 came and went. The US B-52s flew home and the American naval reinforcements were on their way out of
the Gulf even before January 3. So this was a non-event that was welcomed in most quarters. The last thing PM
Netanyahu needs is escalation with Iran or its proxies at a time when Israel is locked in a new election cycle
accompanied by a third wave of corona. If the opportunity to assassinate an Iranian nuclear or militia leader or to
bomb Iranian proxy forces in Syria presents itself in the weeks ahead, that might be a different matter.
But beyond that, Netanyahu has good reason to be cautious now. What he might have contemplated against Iran with
Trump’s encouragement a year ago, he would hesitate to do now. He has presumably communicated that caution to
Trump.
Q. Indeed, even without an Iranian retaliatory provocation or excuse, President Trump could opt to attack Iran’s nuclear infrastructure before leaving office on January 20 . . .
A. This, I submit, is the strategic question of the hour. Once January 5 and 6 are behind us, and assuming that
Trump’s effort to sabotage congressional approval of the electoral college vote has failed and Georgia’s runoff
election is over, Trump has two weeks left in the White House to indulge in dangerous magical thinking regarding
both his legacy and the scorched earth he is scheming to leave for Biden.
Would the US military cooperate with a ‘mad man’ operational order to attack Iran emanating from the White House?
On January 4, all ten living former secretaries of defense called clearly on the US military to not allow itself to
be exploited for political reasons. A US attack on Iran in mid-January would almost certainly be a political rather
than a strategic act. Netanyahu, if approached by Trump, should keep this in mind too.
Q. Let’s go back a year. On Trump’s order, the US executed the precision targeted killing of Soleimani, along with the leader of Iraq’s pro-Iranian militias. Iran’s response has been meek: a missile barrage at a US base in Iraq; cyber attacks. So can the January 3, 2020 assassinations by the US be considered a success?
A. Characteristically, Trump appears to have authorized the Soleimani assassination on a whim. He certainly did not
engage in serious strategic thinking, which he is manifestly incapable of. Accordingly, and leaving aside important
moral and ethical issues regarding the targeted killing of such a high-level Iranian official, the Soleimani
assassination was surprisingly a qualified success.
It removed from the scene the strategic mastermind of Iran’s hegemonic expansion westward into Iraq, Syria and, via
Hezbollah proxy, Lebanon. That effort has not ended, but it has been significantly weakened over the past year. The
elimination of Soleimani together with the leader of Iraq’s Shiite militias, Abu Mahdi al-Muhandis, provided
breathing room to Iraq’s moderate new prime minister, Mustafa al-Kadhimi, to come to grips with the forces of
anarchy there. Note, though, that the Soleimani assassination has weakened but not deterred. Iran appears as
determined as ever to project power in Israel’s direction, even if it has yet to find and deploy someone with
Soleimani’s command skills and charisma. Soleimani’s lackluster successor at the helm of the Quds Force, Esmail
Qaani, has over the past year visited his troops in Iraq at least six times and in Syria at least three times.
Q. Now fast forward. What reality will Biden inherit if Trump does something truly extreme in the Iran arena prior to January 20? Alternatively, what will Biden’s options look like if we get to January 20 uneventfully?
A. The first contingency is difficult to predict insofar as we do not know what Trump’s ‘January surprise’ might
be. If the US attack is massive, e.g., bombing Iran’s known nuclear installations, all bets are off. There might be
no Iran nuclear project for Biden’s team to discuss, but there would certainly be an extremely aggressive and angry
Iran for the entire world to deal with. And it would be bent on renewing its nuclear program with no holds
barred.
Assuming something of a lesser order of destruction, though, it seems safe to posit that Iran would seek to avoid
retaliating directly against US military forces, except those in Iraq, or against American civilians through a
terror attack. It would seek revenge but not escalation.
Beyond the territory of Iraq, Tehran would stick to the realm of cyber attack and/or instruct Hezbollah to execute
a relatively limited rocket attack on northern Israel that the latter would respond to without escalating a
conflict. It might launch another anonymous hi-tech drone and cruise missile attack on Saudi oil installations as
it did against Abqaiq and Khurais in September 2019, just to vent its anger and demonstrate its capabilities. It
has already threatened Israel and the US with a “sharp and painful” response.
But this is business as usual in the Iran arena. It draws on Tehran’s proven capacity to deploy throughout the
region what the authoritative (and friendly) Conflicts Forum threateningly calls Iran’s conventional ‘swarm’ and
‘smart’ ant’s hive of micro weapons. This model more or less corresponds with Iran’s responses to provocative
assassinations or attacks during the past two years. And if nothing happens prior to January 20? Biden is committed
to renewing discussion of a new JCPOA, but his strategic-planning team has indicated a demand to expand that pact
to include Iran’s missile arsenal, its behavior in Syria, and extension of the timetables for sunset clauses. The
incoming administration demands that Iran reverse all the steps toward nuclear expansion that it has taken under
(and against) Trump.
Here Biden appears to enjoy at least a degree of support from the three European signatories to the JCPOA, Germany,
France and the UK. They are “deeply worried” about Iran’s current nuclear expansion plans. Israel and the Gulf
Arabs are also already weighing in with demands for an enhanced set of restrictions on Iran’s nuclear and other
capabilities. Unlike before 2015 when the Obama administration was negotiating the JCPOA, Biden today confronts an
overtly united and coordinated Arab-Israel strategic lobbying front regarding Iran.
In sharp contrast, Iran demands to simply go back to the 2015 version of the JCPOA, sunset clauses and all. So in
the best case from Biden’s standpoint, renewed talks with Iran will be lengthy and difficult. In any event, Iran’s
June 2021 elections and Biden’s need to deal with the legacy of Trump’s disastrous and lethal mismanagement of the
corona crisis are likely to delay serious US-Iran contacts for a while. All this, assuming we get through the next
two weeks or so and arrive unscathed to January 20.
For previous editions of Hard Questions, Tough Answers, go to the Index Page.