Opening
Pandora’s Box: If Israel Strikes Iran, What About Hezbollah?
Hezbollah,
through direct strikes on Israel or terrorist attacks, could
complicate Israel's decision to attack Iran and spark an even greater
regional crisis
J.
Michael Cole
26
April, 2012
As
the day approaches when Israel may decide to launch a preemptive
strike against Iran in order to cripple its nuclear
infrastructure, Israeli
policymakers and their allies abroad would carefully assess how the
Lebanese-based group Hezbollah would react.
Although
Israel is unlikely to launch an attack on Iran prior to the U.S.
Presidential election in November, the government ofPrime
Minister Benjamin Netanyahu is said to be running out of patience and
is becoming more vocal in warning that Iran’s nuclear program could
cross Israel’s so-called “red
line” by
next spring or summer at the latest. Other factors, including the
outcome of the U.S. elections, the outcome of the P5+1- Iran talks
that are expected to follow the U.S. Presidential Election, growing
instability in neighboring Syria, and the outcome of the early
elections that Netanyahu has just called, will all factor into
Israel’s decision on whether to use force against Tehran, and if
so, when.
But
perhaps no single factor, besides Iran’s nuclear program itself,
will be as important in influencing Israel’s strategic assessment
as the realization that attacking Iran risks sparking a war on
several fronts; that is, one that not only invites retaliation from
Iran, but very likely from its regional ally and sometimes proxy,
Hezbollah. With
the debacle of
the 2006 war against the Lebanese group still fresh in Israeli minds,
the possibility that the Shi’a organization would renew hostilities
against the Jewish state through cross-border raids, terrorism, or
rocket attacks against its cities, will have to be part of Israel’s
calculations for any “day after” scenario.
Besides
helping create the “Party of God” on the anvil of the Lebanese
civil war and the Israel Defense Forces (IDF) invasion of Southern
Lebanon in 1982, Iran’s
support for Hezbollah has become multifaceted over the years, and now
includes: military training, arms transfers, intelligence and,
perhaps most crucially, financial support.
Although a fair share of the funding provided by Tehran has gone
towards building schools and hospitals, as well as the provision of
social services in poor Shi’ite neighborhoods in Lebanon, the aid
has also helped the organization’s militant wing. Moreover,
Hezbollah fighters are known to have received extensive training
from, and to be working closely with, the Iranian Revolutionary Guard
Corps (IRGC). While Hezbollah is now a political party competing in
elections and an important social force in long-neglected parts of
Lebanon, and while it has for the most part ceased serving as an
extension of the Islamic Republic, its armed wing’s ability to
inflict pain on Israel remains a powerful bargaining chip, if not an
adequate deterrent against an Israeli attack on Iran. As journalist
Nicholas Blanford wrote in a recent book on
the organization:
“the billions of dollars Iran has spent on Hezbollah since 2000 was not an altruistic gift to help Lebanon defend itself against the possibility of future Israeli aggression … through Hezbollah, Iran has established a bridgehead on Israel’s northern border, enhancing its deterrence posture and expanding its retaliatory options in the event of an attack on the Islamic Republic.”
Indeed,
Hezbollah packs a formidable punch. According
to IDF Deputy Chief of Staff Yair Naveh, Hezbollah today has at least
60,000 rockets and missiles in its arsenal,
or about ten times the number it had during the 34-day war in 2006.
While the organization had few rockets that were capable of hitting
Tel Aviv during that conflict, today it is said to have several
thousands in
its arsenal capable of doing so.
In
addition to the short- and medium-range rockets, Western intelligence
assesses that Hezbollah has acquired a
Syrian version of the Iranian Fateh-110 surface-to-surface missile,
with a range of 200-300km, and may have received Russian-made SA-8
tactical air-defense systems. Hezbollah is also suspected of
possessing a number of Chinese systems that were reverse-engineered
by Iran or Syria, including the Raad anti-ship missile, the Misagh-2
MANPAD, and the B302 rocket, a Syrian version of the Chinese WS-1
multiple-launch rocket system (MLRS). Other rockets in Hezbollah's
arsenal include the Iranian Fajr-3 (42km), Fajr-5 (~70km), and the
Zalzel I/II(125/210km).
In
recent years, Hezbollah has placed medium- and long-range rockets
deeper inside Lebanon and further away from the border with
Israel. According
to Daniel Byman of the Brookings Institution, many of those are
concealed in homes. Such an arsenal, added to geographical proximity,
has led some Israeli security officials to argue that an
attack by Hezbollah would be more
dangerous than
Iranian retaliation following a preemptive strike against Tehran’s
nuclear facilities.
So
far, Hezbollah
Secretary General Sayyed Hassan Nasrallah has revealed little of his
organization’s intentions vis-à-vis Israel should Iran be
attacked,
though he told Lebanese media in September that Iran would lash
out not
only at Israel proper, but also against U.S. military bases across
the region. On the other hand, a senior military advisor to Iran’s
Supreme Leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, recently
said that
Israeli leaders are placing their constituents “a step away from
the grave” because “Hezbollah, will easily respond” if Iran is
attacked. While we can only guess which account is most accurate, and
though it may be tempting to imagine that Hezbollah would instantly
spring into action if Iran was attacked, the group faces constraints
of its own that could limit its options.
For
one, both
the Hezbollah leadership and the Iranian government would have to
consider that an all-out attack by Hezbollah against Israeli would
have deadly consequences for the organization and Lebanese state.
In other words, if its militants were to unleash thousands of rockets
and missiles against Israel, the IDF would conceivably respond with
overwhelming force, triggering a war from which the Shi’a
organization might not be able to recuperate. The Israeli military
learned several valuable lessons from its misadventure in 2006, and
we can expect that IDF forces will be far better prepared in the next
war than they were last time.
For
its part, even if the 2006 war bolstered its credentials as a
resistance force across the greater Middle East, Hezbollah suffered a
serious credibility blow at home for the systematic damage the war
caused to Lebanon’s infrastructure.
Nasrallah himself subsequently admitted his organization had
miscalculated and that had he known of the IDF’s response
beforehand, he likely would have called off the cross-border raids
that sparked the war. In other words, Israel’s deterrent
credibility this time around, added to Hezbollah’s need to act
responsibly to ensure the welfare of ordinary Lebanese (what Blanford
terms Hezbollah’s increasingly “Lebanocentric attitudes”),
could persuade it against launching an all-out retaliation against
Israel.
This
underscores the central dilemma Hezbollah has faced in recent times:
namely, its need to honor its commitments to the Islamic Republic
without jeopardizing the crucial support it enjoys among its
coalition partners and constituents in Lebanon.
In
the context of responding to an Israeli attack on Iran, this dilemma
could push Nasrallah towards the option that comports an element of
deniability: terrorism. Rather
than launch military strikes against Israel proper, Hezbollah, acting
on its own or in cooperation with the IRGC, could decide to launch
attacks against Israeli or American interests abroad, such as
embassies, cultural centers, and so on. While the point of origin of
a rocket can easily be traced, the intelligence work that is required
to identify the individuals or organizations behind a terror attack
can take months and will often times yield inconclusive results, thus
making it more difficult politically for Israel to retaliate.
Consequently, while
placating the Islamic Republic by attacking Israeli interest,
Hezbollah would mitigate the risks of overwhelming retaliation
against its positions within Lebanon.
The group’s military wing, the Islamic Resistance, may have lost
its terror master, Imad
Mugniyeh,
in a 2008 car bombing (presumably the work of Israeli
intelligence), but there is little doubt it retains the ability to
orchestrate devastating attacks worldwide, such as the bombing of
the Buenos Aires Jewish community’s AMIA building in July 1994, in
which 85 people were killed and more than 300 injured.
Some
analysts have also speculated that Hezbollah could ramp up its
militant activities outside Lebanon to destabilize the region and
thereby complicate Israel’s plans to derail the Iranian nuclear
program — a sort of preemptive move by Iran to nix Israel’s own
preemptive attack.
The ongoing uprising against Bashar al-Assad’s regime in Syria, an
ally of Iran and Hezbollah, is proving both a threat and opportunity
for the organization. A longtime backer of Hezbollah, Syria’s
al-Assad regime has served as an arms conduit to the organization and
propped it up politically within Lebanon, even after Syrian troops
were forced to withdraw from
Lebanon in 2005 amid political backlash from Lebanese citizens and
demands from the UN following the assassination of Lebanese Prime
Minister Rafik Hariri in February of that year.
Because
it is drawn largely from the Alawite sect, al-Assad’s regime, like
Iran and Hezbollah, believes it is threatened by Sunni Muslims,
including the rebel groups that are seeking to overthrow it. The
war in Syria is quickly becoming internationalized, with Damascus and
Tehran claiming that Israel, the U.S., Saudi Arabia, Qatar and Turkey
are actively aiding the rebels. Indeed,
the regional and extra-regional ramifications of the uprising in
Syria have been underscored by the ongoing exchange of mortar fire
between Turkey and Syria over the past week.
Despite
Hezbollah’s continued denials, there are strong reasons to believe
that Hezbollah fighters are on the ground in Syria, to some degree or
another. Moreover,
Iran and Hezbollah do not want to see their Syrian ally fall and be
replaced by a Sunni-led government or complete chaos. At the same
time, the possibility that Syria could spiral out of control and
spark a regional war could also convince Israel that the timing is
not right to launch a preemptive strike against Iran, though delaying
this attack would give Iran more time to make further advances on its
nuclear program. In
other words, Iran and Hezbollah could regard instability in Syria as
a useful sideshow to prevent an attack by Israel, and thus could
decide to add fuel to the flames of conflict there.
The
challenges posed by the Iranian nuclear program are numerous, with
many of the different nodes being interrelated. The problem is made
all the more intractable by an increasingly volatile region that is
sharply divided along sectarian lines.Hezbollah
is but one of the many players involved, but should it choose to do
so, it has the capacity to inflict great harm on Israel. As
such, any future plans by Israel cannot afford to not take
the organization into account. And while several factors would
militate against Hezbollah directly retaliating against Israel,
Hezbollah has a number of other options — including intensifying
the proxy war in Syria or conducting asymmetric attacks against
Israeli interests in third party countries— by which it
can complicate
Israel’s choices before the
Jewish state launches operations against Iran, or inflict pain should
such a course of action be adopted.

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