It would be a mistake to dismiss nuclear threats
coming out of Tehran as mere saber-rattling, given its
stated intention and increasingly overt attempts to
annihilate Israel, even at its own potential peril.
Israelis enjoying themselves on the slopes of the
Mount Hermon ski resort in the Golan Heights were
startled on Sunday afternoon to witness an Iranian
missile heading their way. Had it not been
intercepted by the Iron Dome missile-defense system,
many innocent vacationers, as well as residents in
the area, would have been killed.
The surface-to-surface projectile, fired by the
Revolutionary Guards Corps Quds Force in Syria, did
not cause the skiers to pack up their gear and run
for shelter and hot chocolate, however. After
filming the scene on phones and helmet cams, they
picked up where they left off. For most Israelis,
the rain of enemy rockets is not nearly as novel as
mounds of fresh snow.
Disappointment was high, then, when the Israel
Defense Forces announced that the popular site,
adjacent to the Syrian and Lebanese borders, would
be closed on Monday. The IDF was already planning
the retaliatory strikes that it carried out late
Sunday night against Iranian bases and soldiers
stationed near Damascus—a mere 30 miles from Mount
Hermon.
On Tuesday morning, the IDF reopened the ski
resort to the public, just as a joint U.S.-Israel
test of the advanced Arrow 3 missile defense
system—designed to intercept long-range ballistic
missiles—was executed successfully off the
Mediterranean coast.
The temporary quiet on the frosty northern border
was interrupted by a sharp flare-up in the literally
and figuratively blazing south. Following yet
another violent Palestinian protest at the Gaza
border–during which an Israeli officer was shot, and
two terrorists were apprehended crossing the fence
into Israel—Israeli Air Force fighter jets bombed a
Hamas training camp.
Across the ocean in New York, the U.N. Security
Council was conducting business as usual, holding a
“special session on the Middle East” for the purpose
of castigating Israel. Israeli Ambassador to the
United Nations Danny Danon tried to remind
participants that the real danger to the region lies
elsewhere. And that the Jewish state is bearing the
brunt.
“The Iranian regime’s obsession with Israel is
not just well-known,” said Danon. “It is expensive.
Seven billion dollars annually are directed toward
the never-ending attempts to destroy Israel. Follow
the bloody trail of money starting in Tehran, and
you will arrive at the terror tunnels in Lebanon and
Gaza and the weapons warehouses in Syria. It is now
trying to infiltrate Judea and Samaria.”
Danon continued: “With the help of Saleh
Al-Arouri, Hamas’s deputy political chief, and Saeed
Izadi, the head of the Palestinian branch of the
Iranian Quds Force, Iran is trying to turn Judea and
Samaria into a fourth military front against Israel.
The world’s silence allows Iran to continue with its
operations and aggression to undermine stability in
the Middle East.”
Meanwhile, the Iranian regime—weakened by
restored U.S. sanctions and the massive unrest of
its subjugated populace—is boasting about its
military prowess. This is par for the course in
Tehran, particularly as the ruling mullahs are
marking the 40th anniversary of the Islamic
Revolution, which ousted Shah Reza Pahlavi and
ushered in Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini’s reign of
terror.
In an interview with Iranian state TV on Tuesday,
Ali Akbar Salehi, head of the Atomic Energy
Organization of Iran, went as far as to flaunt the
regime’s nuclear achievements, thanks in large
measure to the Joint Comprehensive Plan of
Action—the nuclear deal signed with world powers in
2015—which, he said, “marinated” Iran’s right to
enrich uranium.
The only drawback he mentioned was the fact that
“for Europeans, a centrifuge takes eight years from
designing to become operational, while the process
takes us 10 years.”
Salehi then announced that he would be traveling
at the end of the month to Ardakan “to oversee the
transport of 30 tons of yellowcake produced … there
to [the Uranium Conversion Facility at] Isfahan,
[which] means that the Ardakan site has become
operational.”
It would be a grave mistake to dismiss Salehi’s
words as mere saber-rattling, given the Iranian
regime’s stated intention and increasingly overt
attempts to annihilate Israel, even at its own
potential peril. Rather than looking the other way,
at best—or, worse, condemning Israel at
international forums—the world should be thanking
the Jewish state for doing its dirty work. The
inevitable war against Iran should have been fought
by America decades ago. Today, it is up to the IDF.
When the snow melts on Mount Hermon, we Israelis
will be back in shorts and sandals, heading for the
polls this spring to elect the next Knesset. The
only question at this point is whether we will be
doing so in bomb shelters.
Ruthie
Blum is an Israel-based journalist and author
of “To Hell in a Handbasket: Carter, Obama, and the ‘Arab
Spring.’ ”