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- <text id=90TT2635>
- <link 91TT0117>
- <link 90TT2893>
- <title>
- Oct. 08, 1990: Fear And Loathing In Israel
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1990
- Oct. 08, 1990 Do We Care About Our Kids?
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- THE GULF, Page 34
- Fear and Loathing in Israel
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>Fingered for an Iraqi first strike, Jerusalem steps up its
- defenses and hopes for a war that would crush Saddam
- </p>
- <p>By Jon D. Hull/Jerusalem--Reported by Ron Ben-Yishai/Tel
- Aviv, with other bureaus
- </p>
- <p> Israeli military officials fear only one thing more than a
- surprise Iraqi attack: a diplomatic solution to the Persian Gulf
- crisis that would leave Saddam Hussein and his war machine
- intact.
- </p>
- <p> Sound coldhearted? Not as Israeli analysts see it. If Iraq
- dares to attack Israel now, Saddam Hussein will face the
- devastating wrath of both Israel and the U.S.-led forces massed
- in the region. But if Saddam survives and U.S. troops eventually
- depart, the analysts are convinced, Israel will one day have to
- fight alone against Baghdad. By then, Saddam may also have
- nuclear weapons at his disposal.
- </p>
- <p> Saddam's threat last week to fire the first shot--and to
- target Israel in the bargain--convinced Jerusalem that a
- showdown may come in a matter of weeks. In fact, an Israeli
- intelligence evaluation concluded that war was "highly probable"
- and warned that Israel would probably be dragged into the
- conflict.
- </p>
- <p> After Saddam's threat, the Israeli military command--which is all too aware that Iraqi missiles are only five minutes
- from Tel Aviv--quickly put its forces on an even higher state
- of alert. Said Prime Minister Yitzhak Shamir: "We are preparing
- to forestall the threat, prevent it and if, heaven forbid, he
- does in fact attack, to retaliate."
- </p>
- <p> Considering that Israel's own military doctrine stresses
- swift pre-emptive action against any imminent threat, it would
- seem that Israeli warplanes are long overdue in the skies above
- Baghdad. But Israel remains under intense pressure from
- Washington to avoid any action that might offend the Arab
- alliance deployed against Iraq.
- </p>
- <p> Israeli officials have followed Washington's directives
- with unprecedented restraint, knowing that any military move
- against Baghdad on their part would turn Saddam into a hero of
- the Arab masses, paint Israel as the aggressor and perhaps force
- several Arab allies now in the U.S. camp over to Saddam's side,
- or at least to the sidelines. Following a series of war games
- held by the general staff in an underground command bunker in
- the central part of the country, Israel's brass concluded that
- for now, the consequences of an Iraqi attack on Israel would be
- less severe than the political and military fallout from a first
- strike on Iraq.
- </p>
- <p> That assessment could quickly change. But in the meantime,
- Israel remains in a rather unnerving defensive posture. Air
- defenses along the Jordan Valley have been strengthened with
- additional batteries of Hawk surface-to-air missiles, and an
- increased number of Israeli interceptors are kept aloft 24 hours
- a day.
- </p>
- <p> Israel is also relying on its ability to detect, with the
- help of U.S. satellites, any Iraqi preparations for a missile
- launch. Once Baghdad begins placing its missiles on launchers,
- Israel and the U.S. expect to have five or six hours to
- coordinate a response before the missiles can be fired. To keep
- Israel out of the fray, Washington may volunteer to take out the
- missiles, but Shamir will require some convincing. Says Defense
- Minister Moshe Arens: "Nobody will do the job for us. We can do
- it, and we should do it on our own."
- </p>
- <p> Granted, but Israel is gambling nonetheless. Although Arens
- has boasted that "we are in a position to knock out of the air
- any Iraqi plane that may be coming our way," his country's air
- defenses are largely helpless against Iraqi missiles. And even
- though some Israeli officials believe Saddam may indeed have
- managed to equip those missiles with primitive chemical warheads--contrary to Arens' assertion a few weeks ago--the
- government still refuses to issue gas masks to the civilian
- population.
- </p>
- <p> Israeli intelligence concedes that it cannot be absolutely
- certain of detecting Iraqi missile preparations in advance. As a
- precaution, civil defense officials are bracing for a worst-case
- scenario in which 20 to 30 missiles hit the populated coastal
- region, causing thousands of casualties, before Israel can
- cripple Saddam's war machine.
- </p>
- <p> Doomsayers prophesy that Jerusalem would respond to Iraqi
- gas with an A-bomb. In fact, even in this situation, an Israeli
- nuclear retaliation would be extremely unlikely. Those weapons
- are reserved for the dark hours when the nation's existence is
- at stake; despite Saddam's apocalyptic rhetoric, Iraq is
- militarily incapable of destroying Israel. Moreover, Israeli
- generals are confident that their conventional weapons can both
- paralyze Baghdad and stop dead any Iraq troop movements into
- Jordan.
- </p>
- <p> Ironically, Israel's options have been limited by the U.S.
- presence in the gulf. For example, one Israeli plan--drawn up
- before the Iraqi invasion of Kuwait--is believed to call for
- waves of warplanes to knock out several dozen Iraqi military
- targets, including chemical, biological and nuclear
- installations. Now, say Israeli officials with some remorse,
- that plan may no longer be viable because it would interfere
- with U.S. strategy. Instead, Israel is preparing a series of
- more limited responses gauged according to the severity of any
- Iraqi strike against Israel, and officials admit that any move
- by Jerusalem short of urgent defensive action would have to be
- cleared with the U.S.
- </p>
- <p> Saddam knows that any attack on Israel will bring a
- crushing response, whether by Israeli or U.S. forces. In fact,
- it can be argued that Saddam dare not attack Israel alone
- because a crippling counterstrike by the Israelis would
- completely undercut his pose in the Arab world as the one leader
- capable of smoting Israel, even if the attack did not literally
- kill him.
- </p>
- <p> But Saddam may be able to drag Israel into the conflict
- without risking military retaliation. Well-placed sources say
- Iraqi agents in Jordan are preparing to destabilize King
- Hussein's regime, which could prompt intervention by Israel and
- Syria while diverting the world's attention. Among the targets
- already identified: U.S. Ambassador Roger Harrison. Says an
- Israeli military official: "Creating havoc in Jordan would serve
- Saddam Hussein's interests well. It might even bring Israel,
- Syria and even the Saudis to send troops to the Jordanian
- border."
- </p>
- <p> As billions of dollars in U.S. weapons pour into Arab
- arsenals and Israel's role as a strategic ally appears
- diminished, many in Shamir's government are beginning to suspect
- that the new order emerging in the Middle East may not be
- entirely to their liking, even if Saddam is eliminated.
- Hard-liners are especially concerned that a triumphant U.S. may
- decide to compensate its Arab allies by pressuring Israel into
- peace talks with the Palestinians.
- </p>
- <p> Those anxieties are well founded. If American blood is shed
- in a war against Israel's most dangerous foe--albeit for
- distinct U.S. interests--Israel will have a difficult time
- explaining its own reluctance to make political sacrifices that
- could promote peace in the region.
- </p>
- <table>
- <tblhdr><cell><cell>ISRAEL<cell>IRAQ
- <row><cell type=a>Total armed forces<cell type=i>170,000<cell type=i>1,000,000
- <row><cell>Reserves<cell>430,000<cell>850,000
- <row><cell>Tanks<cell>3,800<cell>5,500
- <row><cell>Artillery<cell>1,300<cell>3,500
- <row><cell>Aircraft<cell>635<cell>510
- <row><cell>Attack helicopters<cell>77<cell>160
- </table>
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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