Israel News
Daily Alert
Iran Is Hitting Radars that Underpin U.S. Missile Defenses
on March 07, 2026
(Wall Street Journal) Jared Malsin -
Iran has targeted several radar systems in recent days that serve as the eyes of the air defenses in the Middle East, degrading the ability of the U.S. and its allies to track incoming missiles. Iranian strikes using attack drones have hit radar, communications, and air defense systems in Qatar, the UAE, Jordan, Bahrain, Kuwait and Saudi Arabia. A spokesman for U.S. Central Command said the military remained at full combat capability despite the hits. The U.S. has been bolstering its defenses in the region, sending in more equipment and interceptors.
One of the most significant strikes hit the AN/FPS-132 radar system at Qatar's Al-Udeid base. Iran also struck a TPY-2 radar attached to a THAAD battery in Jordan. Satellite images also show damage to three radar domes at Camp Arifjan, a base used by U.S. forces in Kuwait, and damage to a satellite communications system at the headquarters of the U.S. Fifth Fleet in Bahrain. In Saudi Arabia, a satellite image taken on March 1 shows smoke billowing at a radar site at Prince Sultan Air Base.
Iran Struck Advanced U.S. Radar in Qatar
on March 07, 2026
(Ynet News) Lior Ben Ari -
Satellite images from Planet Labs show the damage caused Saturday to the Al-Khor strategic radar site, north of the U.S. Al-Udeid Air Base in Qatar. Military affairs analyst Ron Ben-Yishai said the radar was not completely disabled and work is underway to repair it quickly. The damage to the radar makes it more difficult for Patriot and THAAD missile defense batteries protecting Qatar, Bahrain and Saudi Arabia, shortening their detection time and window for interception.
According to the Institute for National Security Studies data center, the UAE was targeted by 941 drones, 189 ballistic missiles and eight cruise missiles. Iran fired 92 drones and 74 missiles at Bahrain; 41 drones and 112 missiles at Qatar; 36 drones and 13 missiles at Jordan; 178 missiles and 384 drones at Kuwait; and 14 drones and five cruise missiles at Saudi Arabia. Other Iranian targets included Iraqi Kurdistan, Oman and Cyprus.
Russia Is Providing Iran Intelligence to Target U.S. Forces
on March 07, 2026
(Washington Post) Noah Robertson -
Since the war began, Russia has passed to Iran the locations of U.S. military assets, including ships and aircraft, according to three officials familiar with the intelligence. Iran has fired thousands of attack drones and hundreds of missiles at U.S. military positions, embassies, and civilians.
The CIA's station at the U.S. Embassy in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, was struck and destroyed in recent days. Parts of the embassy building have been left "unrecoverable" and must be sealed off, according to an internal State Department assessment. Iran is "making very precise hits on early-warning radars or over-the-horizon radars," said Dara Massicot, an expert at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace. "They're doing this in a very targeted way."
Hizbullah Saw New War with Israel as Inevitable and Rearmed for Months
on March 07, 2026
(Reuters) Laila Bassam -
Hizbullah spent months restocking its arsenal of rockets and drones, using support from Iran and its own weapons factories to prepare for a new war with Israel, six sources said. It had drawn on a monthly budget of $50 million, most of it from Iran and earmarked for fighters' salaries. A foreign official said the group had stationed new rockets and Iranian-made logistical materials in southern Lebanon before the latest war began. Israeli military spokesperson Lt.-Col. Nadav Shoshani said Hizbullah "had a lot of arms left."
Hizbullah launched 60 drones and rockets on March 2 and a similar number the following day. But on March 4, Hizbullah launched more than double that number. ALMA, an Israeli think tank that monitors security on Israel's northern border, said Hizbullah's current arsenal included 25,000 rockets and missiles, most of them short- and medium-range.
Hizbullah has also dispatched fighters from its Radwan force back to southern Lebanon. They had been withdrawn from the area after the 2024 conflict. The group lost 5,000 fighters in the 2024 war.
Iran Weakens Faster than Expected
on March 07, 2026
(Israel Hayom) Danny Zaken -
The joint strike against Iran is reaching its peak with daily attacks by U.S. B-52 strategic bombers alongside the rest of the Israeli-American firepower. The attrition phase is expected to last up to two weeks. Increasing evidence suggests that the Iranian regime is under growing pressure, precisely in line with the Israeli-American strategic plan and even somewhat earlier than expected.
One outcome has been several approaches by Iran's political leadership to Washington requesting discussions about a ceasefire, with Turkey serving as the primary mediator. Arab diplomatic sources say the Americans have presented terms of surrender that Iran is still unwilling to accept. Moreover, the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps opposes any dialogue with the Americans.
Two IDF Soldiers Killed in Hizbullah Ambush in Southern Lebanon
on March 07, 2026
(Jerusalem Post) Yonah Jeremy Bob -
The IDF announced on Sunday that two soldiers were killed by a Hizbullah ambush in southern Lebanon. One soldier was Sgt.-Maj. Maher Khatar, 38, of the Combat Engineering Corps, from the Druze town of Majdal Shams.
Hizbullah Increases Rocket Fire on Israel
on March 07, 2026
(Times of Israel) Emanuel Fabian -
On Saturday, Hizbullah launched dozens of rockets and drones from Lebanon at Haifa and Kiryat Shmona in northern Israel, with no reports of injuries. Rocket sirens sounded across the Galilee and the Golan Heights. A Hizbullah drone crashed in the parking lot of the Galilee Medical Center in Nahariya. A civil defense squad for a nearby community shot down another Hizbullah drone with their firearms.
On Friday, several anti-tank guided missiles were fired at IDF soldiers, wounding two. Minutes later, the Hizbullah cell that carried out the attack was targeted in a strike. 13 IDF soldiers have been wounded in attacks by Hizbullah since Monday.
Israel and the U.S. Begin to Target Iran's Military Industry
on March 07, 2026
(Ynet News) Elisha Ben Kimon -
Israel and the U.S. have begun to target Iran's military industry. The objective in the case of ballistic missiles is to strike the entire process: from manufacturing plants to missile storage depots, to the launchers themselves, as well as the commanders and soldiers who ultimately operate them.
Intensity of Iranian Missile Fire Continues to Drop
on March 07, 2026
(Jerusalem Post) Yonah Jeremy Bob -
IDF sources said that Saturday saw a continued drop in the number of missiles fired at Israel to below 15, possibly close to 10, from a rate of 100 on the first day of the war and 20-25 in recent days. The IDF said it had destroyed 75% of Iran's missile launchers. Nevertheless, there was a spike in Iranian ballistic missile threat sirens on Saturday, sending millions of Israelis into their safe rooms and bomb shelters throughout the day.
IDF sources hope to reduce missile fire sufficiently that Iran no longer succeeds at causing casualties, more similar to Yemen Houthi missile attacks. Meanwhile, Hizbullah has launched over 160 rockets and 42 drones at Israel.
Third U.S. Aircraft Carrier Heads to Middle East
on March 07, 2026
(Ynet News) Ron Ben-Yishai -
According to reports on Saturday, the USS George H.W. Bush aircraft carrier has begun sailing toward the Middle East from the U.S. east coast with its carrier strike group, which includes three guided-missile destroyers. The USS Gerald R. Ford strike group, which had been in the eastern Mediterranean, passed through the Suez Canal into the Red Sea on Thursday. It is already participating in operations related to the war with Iran, together with the USS Abraham Lincoln strike group which is closer to Iran.
The System Khamenei Built Ended Up Killing Him
on March 07, 2026
(Jerusalem Report) Aviram Bellaishe -
Since 1989, Iran's Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei constructed a governing architecture with one purpose: no one could replace him, and no one could make a consequential decision without him. The Revolutionary Guards became an economic and military empire with its own institutional interest. Any meaningful nuclear concession required consent from bodies he had deliberately designed to be incapable of conceding.
You build institutions that cannot capitulate because you trust no one. Then, when capitulation is the only path to survival, those institutions cannot act. There is a difference between being unwilling to concede and being structurally incapable of it.
In February 2026, U.S. Envoy Steve Witkoff met through an Omani intermediary with Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi. According to Israel's Channel 12, Witkoff reported that Iran's proposal was "bullshit designed to buy time." He was not describing a bridgeable gap.
Trump set a deadline of 10-15 days. It passed Feb. 26 without a strike. Khamenei thought Trump wanted a deal more than a confrontation. He had watched every American president since Carter arrive loud and leave with a compromise. Trump himself pulled back from a strike in 2019 with planes already airborne. The expired deadline and continued talks told him there was still time.
Surrender on American terms would have destroyed everything Khamenei had built. Death in an American-Israeli airstrike is exactly the story he spent his life constructing.
The writer, vice president of the Jerusalem Center for Security and Foreign Affairs, served in senior government positions for 27 years.
Faced with Diplomatic Impotence, War Against Iran Is Legitimate
on March 07, 2026
(Israel Hayom) Amb. Freddy Eytan -
When rogue states like Iran or terrorist organizations such as Hizbullah or Hamas sow terror, blatantly disregard signed agreements, and pursue their nuclear program, international law is rendered irrelevant and sidelined by force of arms, the only means to impose the diplomatic agenda.
How can we admit and tolerate that for more than five decades the Islamic revolution has been responsible for the majority of acts of terror and terrorist attacks around the world and that its spiritual leader has the blood of many innocent people, women, children and old people on his hands?
Western powers have tried several approaches to negotiate with the Iranian regime, including appeasement, negotiations, and sanctions. Yet the Iranian government has not been deterred or convinced to end its nuclear program, whose primary objective is the destruction of the Jewish state.
French President Macron rushed to convene the Security Council, citing the risks of renewed conflict, instead of showing solidarity with the American fight against the Axis of Evil. Macron remained completely silent on the victims of Iranian ballistic missiles targeting the Israeli civilian population, some of whom are French citizens.
During this war, we observe that the residents of Tehran can move about freely on foot and by car, aware that Israeli strikes are precise and surgical, unlike their missiles launched indiscriminately against innocent people, that only target the civilian population.
The writer, a researcher at the Jerusalem Center for Security and Foreign Affairs, is a former Foreign Ministry senior adviser who was Israel's first ambassador to the Islamic Republic of Mauritania.
Operation Against Iran Is Pinnacle of U.S.-Israel Cooperation
on March 07, 2026
(Jerusalem Report) Col. (res.) Eran Lerman -
There are those in America and elsewhere who have tried to tar the U.S. military operations in Iran in 2025 and 2026 as instigated on behalf of Israel. But, in fact, the challenge posed by Iran's nuclear proliferation efforts is as much a threat to America's interests and to global stability as it is to Israel's survival.
The American military has learned to appreciate what Israel has to offer. In ground combat, Israeli battle-tested solutions to mines and IEDs have saved many lives and limbs. Israel has also shared the technology and battle experience of its state-of-the-art missile defense systems. Above all, in the age of the global war against Islamist totalitarianism, intelligence-sharing with Israel became almost indispensable.
Another important element was the Abraham Accords, which enabled the U.S. to shed its concerns about bringing its key Arab clients under the same strategic roof with Israel. In operational terms, this led to the creation of a CENTCOM-coordinated capacity to detect and intercept drone and cruise missiles and ballistic missile attacks from Iran or from the Houthis in Yemen.
The writer, vice president of the Jerusalem Institute for Strategy and Security, held senior posts in IDF Military Intelligence for over 20 years.
The U.S. and Israel Reshape the Middle East
on March 07, 2026
(Jerusalem Post) Maj.-Gen. (ret.) Amos Yadlin -
Operation Roaring Lion, aka Epic Fury, marks a strategic inflection point, repositioning Israel as a preferred U.S. security partner - willing and capable to share operational risk and defense burdens alongside Washington.
Israel's targeted strikes on Iran underscore a clear disparity in military capabilities, with Israel enjoying a decisive edge in air power, technology, intelligence, and the ability to integrate these elements into a single operational system. There are very few countries able to combine precise intelligence with real-time strike capabilities the way Israel does, hitting targets 1,800 km. away with pinpoint accuracy.
Toppling a regime by airstrikes is extremely difficult, particularly given that the Islamic Republic has demonstrated that it can mobilize significant loyal forces to fight with considerable brutality. Still, a successful campaign that strikes at Iran's political, religious, and military leadership and strips it of key military capabilities could force it to focus on its own survival at the expense of its destabilizing activities in the region.
This is a just war, launched in the wake of the massacre of tens of thousands of protesters in Iran - a massacre met with relative silence in the West - and against the backdrop of Iran's refusal to curb its nuclear and missile programs.
The writer, a former chief of Israeli military intelligence, served for a decade as executive director of Israel's Institute for National Security Studies.
Can the Iranian Regime Survive?
on March 07, 2026
(Wall Street Journal) Walter Russell Mead -
The Iranian mullahs built a regional power network on the twin foundations of unbending rejection of Israel's existence and unyielding opposition to American power. Yet the mullahs overreached, and since Oct. 7 they have watched one stronghold after another fall to Israeli counterattacks boosted by American support. Now the surviving mullahs and officers of the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps cower in bunkers, afraid of their own cellphones.
Their missile and drone attacks on countries ranging from Cyprus and Turkey to Saudi Arabia, Qatar and the UAE have broadened the American-led coalition. The number of Iranian missiles launched every day is declining.
The writer, a fellow at the Hudson Institute, is Professor of Strategy and Statecraft at the University of Florida.
Israel Emerges as the Surprising Protector of the Sunni World Against the Axis of Evil
on March 07, 2026
(Israel Hayom) Amb. Dror Eydar -
One of the most sensational consequences of the current war is the Iranian attack on Saudi Arabia, Abu Dhabi, and other Sunni targets, shattering the cooperation Iran built with the Sunni world. This pushes Sunni nations against the wall, forcing them to take a clear and overt stand against the regime in Tehran.
From the perspective of Sunni Islam, the Iranian attack on Saudi Arabia is a sacrilege. Saudi Arabia is the beating heart of Sunni Islam, and an attack on its soil is perceived as an assault on the entire "Ummah."
For years, Iran marketed to the Sunni world the "Unity of Muslims" centered around Jerusalem and the war for its liberation, despite the Shiites having no religious connection to Jerusalem. The Dome of the Rock and Al-Aqsa Mosque were built towards the end of the seventh century CE by the Umayyad Caliph Abd al-Malik ibn Marwan - the sworn enemy of the Shia.
The bombardment of Muslim countries by Iran showed that Iran never really intended to liberate Al-Aqsa, but rather sought to rule the Sunni world. Thus, in a historical irony, Israel is seen as the defender of Sunni Islam against Shiite extremism.
The writer is a former Israeli ambassador to Italy.
Why America Stands with Israel Against Iran
on March 07, 2026
(Jerusalem Post) Gila Gamliel -
Many Americans are asking, "Why are we involved in this fight against Iran?" The honest answer is because the threat never stopped at Israel, and it never would have. Before the war, Iranian officials spoke openly and proudly about possessing uranium enriched to 60% that was enough for 11 nuclear bombs, which would endanger the U.S. itself. Today, when Iran fires toward Cyprus, Turkey, the UAE, Saudi Arabia, and Bahrain, it is attacking U.S. partners.
For the Iranian government, a deal is not a deal, a word is not a word. There is only one path: domination and the imposition of radical Islam on the Free World at any cost. This is a war of prevention. A necessary stand against a future that would have reached American cities if ignored. It is a fight to stop global terror networks, dismantle the planners of mass murder, and prevent a regime that openly calls for America's destruction from acquiring nuclear weapons.
The writer is Israel's Minister of Innovation, Science and Technology.
Dismantling the Iranian Tiger with Remarkable Ease
on March 07, 2026
(Jerusalem Post) Ben Caspit -
The phrase "historic days" feels too small for the moment Israel is experiencing. Veterans of the Iranian threat are struggling to believe what is unfolding. After three decades of worst-case scenarios, of fear over Iranian power, the many-armed octopus of proxies, thousands of ballistic missiles, the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps, the Quds Force, and underground nuclear facilities, Israel and the U.S. now appear to be dismantling that Iranian tiger with remarkable ease.
What once seemed a regional superpower now appears hollow and decaying. There is reason to hope that U.S. President Donald Trump will not waver, and that the extraordinary resolve now coming out of Washington will hold in the face of rising oil prices, domestic criticism, pressure from Gulf states, or some unforeseen military setback.
The writer is a veteran Israeli journalist.
Iran's Revolutionary Guards Are Hiding in Hospitals, as Hamas Did
on March 07, 2026
(Media Line-Jerusalem Post) Omid Habibinia -
After a week of American and Israeli strikes, Emily Blout, an Iran specialist at the Pentagon, told Media Line: "Dispersal of the IRGC into these unusual locations, including hospitals and schools, is a core part of their strategy for survival. And the strategy actually makes sense. By decentralizing command into local autonomous units and by dispersing munitions across the country, the IRGC aims to maintain control even though its central leadership is eliminated. But hiding in places, especially in hospitals, is a page out of the Hamas playbook."
Many IRGC forces are now exhausted and left without secure bases or headquarters. Even their makeshift cover locations, such as sports stadiums, have come under attack. An Iranian military officer told the Media Line that the tactic of wearing down and rendering the Islamic Republic's military and security apparatus effectively homeless has begun to work and it is unlikely they will be able to sustain this condition for the coming weeks.
He said the repeated bombardment of the leader's residence and the cover sites used for the deployment of IRGC forces indicates an effort to crush the organizational structure of these forces. That would facilitate defections from the ranks of the IRGC, the Basij, and other repressive bodies. One week after the outbreak of war, the IRGC has lost its commander and nearly all of its field commanders. It is said that at least 800 of its members have been killed.
What Life Is Like Under Fire in Dubai
on March 07, 2026
(Telegraph-UK) Isabel Oakeshott -
It is now almost a week since Iran's Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps began hurling drones and missiles at its Gulf neighbors, targeting the United Arab Emirates. On the beach, I see swimmers and sunbathers. People are out jogging and walking the dog. But the flotilla of pleasure boats looping around Dubai's dazzling stretch of coastline has stopped. Dubai is still moving, but it is quiet.
Early Sunday morning my two daughters and I were startled from sleep by a piercing emergency alert, warning on our phones to "seek immediate shelter" from incoming missiles. Three floors underground, in the residents' car park, there was no sense of panic: just bewilderment at the sudden turn of events.
On Sunday, we woke to distant booms: the sound of a barrage of drones and missiles being intercepted by the UAE's Terminal High Altitude Area Defense (THAAD) system. It is a sound that has continued off and on all week. Unnerving as it is, we now know that the explosions are the sound of the population being protected.
To date, the UAE Ministry of Defense has neutralized 92-95% of everything headed our way, including over 1,000 drones and 190 ballistic missiles. Property damage is minimal. Almost nobody has been hurt. Downstairs in the car park, there are now rows of comfy chairs, bottled water, cartons of orange juice and boxes of dates. As we wait for the all-clear, fast-food delivery drivers on mopeds buzz in and out.
Hizbullah's Escalation Puts Jerusalem and Beirut on the Same Side
on March 07, 2026
(Ha'aretz) Zvi Bar'el -
Hizbullah's decision to "join the fray" has reopened the Lebanese front with full force. Once again, tens of thousands of residents of south Lebanon have been forced to evacuate their homes and move north of the Litani River.
On Monday, Lebanese Prime Minister Nawaf Salam announced that Hizbullah's military activity is illegal and forbidden. He ordered the Lebanese army to prevent any fire from Lebanese territory toward Israel and to arrest anyone attempting to initiate such an attack.
Public criticism of Hizbullah's actions is emerging among its Shi'ite support base, and Shi'ite political frameworks opposing it have begun to appear. Now, with the continued stability of the Iranian regime itself under threat, Hizbullah must reassess. Will it continue serving as the spearhead of Iran's "ring of fire" strategy to ease pressure on Tehran, or shift course and seek a political path that could at least ensure its survival?
Hizbullah's attacks inside Israel do not reduce the scale of the IDF's and the U.S. military's operations against Iran, and its Iranian funding sources have dwindled. Even now, Hizbullah is far from meeting the compensation expectations of Shi'ite residents of south Lebanon whose homes were damaged, further eroding its public support. Inside Lebanon, Hizbullah now faces a determined government backed by a parliamentary majority and growing public support, one that denies it any military legitimacy.
How China's Enormous Bet on Iran Failed
on March 07, 2026
(Washington Post) Miles Yu -
For more than a decade, Beijing has worked quietly and methodically to turn Iran into the keystone of its Middle East strategy. That strategy has now collapsed. Iran stood out as the most aggressive and strategically valuable pillar of a China-centered alignment of anti-U.S. states. The Chinese Communist Party's investment in Iran has been monumental.
In March 2021, China and Iran signed a comprehensive strategic partnership, which included Beijing pledging $400 billion in long-term infrastructure and energy investments under its Belt and Road Initiative. In 2023, Iran was welcomed into the Shanghai Cooperation Organization. China became the dominant buyer of Iranian oil, purchasing 90% of Iran's oil exports - only 12% of China's total oil imports, but crucial to Iran's economic survival.
In political terms, Iran provided a forward base for China inside a region historically shaped by American power. By backing militant proxies, Tehran has kept the Middle East in constant crisis. A U.S. absorbed in managing Iran would have fewer resources and less strategic focus to devote to countering China's ambitions in the Indo-Pacific.
The current war has not only devastated Iran's nuclear infrastructure and its conventional long-range missile and drone capabilities, it has changed the strategic equation overnight. The coordinated U.S. and Israeli military campaigns have decimated Iran's military-industrial backbone and weapons stockpile. Iran's ability to wield nuclear brinkmanship as a shield for regional aggression was dramatically reduced.
China had bet on a confident, defiant and nuclear-ambitious Iran. Instead, it is left with a battered partner whose utility has sharply diminished. The lesson is unmistakable. Grand strategy built on vulnerable and tyrannical proxies carries inherent risk.
The writer is a senior fellow and director of the China Center at the Hudson Institute.
Is Tiny Israel Pulling Mighty America's Strings?
on March 07, 2026
(Spiked-UK) Brendan O'Neill -
One doesn't know whether to laugh or cry at all those online saying, "I ain't dying for Israel." Guys, calm down. No one's asking you to fight for anything. Israel isn't in need of you.
Yet this tells us something important about what passes for "anti-imperialism" these days, which is that it is obsessed, to a feverish degree, with the Jewish state. They're convinced that the tiny Jewish nation, the size of Wales, is the cause of every war and the source of every ill. And now it even has its beady eyes on their precious lives. Behold the anti-imperialism of fools.
The war in Iran has unleashed yet another round of frothing Israelophobia. It feels even more unhinged than the wild hate for the Jewish state that flooded our streets and institutions during the Gaza War. This is a dangerous moment, calling for calm heads and cool analysis. But instead we see the old, wheezing sickness of Jew-baiting in the mask of anti-imperialism. This hatred on the home front requires our urgent attention.
Israel's Secret Weapon
on March 07, 2026
(Jerusalem Post) Col. (ret.) Adi Bershadsky -
The human element of the Israel Defense Forces (IDF) is our true secret weapon. Technology is only a force multiplier; it is the spirit behind it that gives it power. Both men and women, in regular service and the reserves, are determined, committed, and deeply patriotic. Nowhere else do 18-year-olds routinely take on life-risking missions as a national duty.
In moments of crisis, volunteers emerge everywhere, caring for displaced families and assisting soldiers at the front and on the home front. An entire nation mobilizes. Israel's air defense units operate around the clock, with nearly half of the soldiers being women.
Since Oct. 7, Israel has been living through two years of continuous war, painful losses, thousands of wounded, families shattered, and entire communities displaced. Yet Israeli society's resilience has become even more visible.
Citizens follow life-saving instructions, adapt to emergency conditions, support the war effort, and continue to function as a society, even under constant threat. The Israeli public understands that defending the country is not only the army's responsibility; it is a collective national effort.
International Law Is Becoming a Suicide Pact for Western Democracies
on March 07, 2026
(Telegraph-UK) Prof. Gerald M. Steinberg -
Former head of Human Rights Watch Kenneth Roth argued in the Guardian on March 1 that joint American-Israeli strikes against the Tehran regime constitute an illegal "act of aggression." He claims that, according to the law of armed conflict, the use of force is illegitimate unless it responds to an attack that has already occurred and is acknowledged by the UN Security Council.
His simple theory is dangerously removed from the real world. Roth condemns the U.S.-Israeli decision as though it was taken totally out of the blue, and not a necessary response to aggression. He conveniently omits the central fact that, for decades, the Islamic Republic has been waging a violent war against the U.S. (the Big Satan), Israel (the Little Satan), and many of its Arab neighbors.
The regime's fingerprints are on the missile arsenals targeting Israeli cities, on proxy terror militias embedded across Lebanon, Iraq, and Yemen, and on terror plots around the world. When an adversary arms, funds, and directs forces committed to the destruction of a neighboring state - and increasingly to the intimidation of the West - this is not peace. It is war.
The moral and legal question is whether, in the real world, states have the right - indeed the obligation - to defend their citizens against a fanatical regime that clearly proclaims its intentions to wipe out its opponents and builds rockets and centrifuges for making nuclear weapons for doing this.
Iran's own forces and proxies have launched or facilitated hundreds of lethal strikes against Israeli civilians in recent years. No international law or principle of justice requires a nation to absorb such heinous attacks while waiting for some UN body to authorize defensive action. Article 51 of the UN Charter affirms the inherent right of self-defense.
A regime that calls for the elimination of another UN member state cannot reasonably expect that state (i.e., Israel) to treat its march toward nuclear capability as a routine matter of sovereign discretion. In a world of precision missiles and nuclear breakout timelines measured in weeks, not years, waiting for the mass slaughter of a mushroom cloud is not prudence; it is abdication.
The war against Iranian tyranny is not the result of lust for conflict in Washington or Jerusalem. It comes because Tehran has made the status quo untenable.
The writer is founder and president of NGO Monitor and professor emeritus of political studies at Bar-Ilan University.



