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Tuesday, October 15, 2024

Netanyahu tells U.S. that Israel will strike Iranian military

Netanyahu tells U.S. that Israel will strike Iranian military, not nuclear or oil, targets, officials say

The signal is being seen in Washington as a sign of restraint after concerns that an Israeli strike on oil or nuclear facilities could trigger a wider war.


A U.S. missile defense system called Terminal High Altitude Area Defense, or THAAD, at a
golf course in Seongju, South Korea, on June 7, 2017. (Kim Jun-Beom/Yonhap/AP)

By Shira Rubin
 and 
Ellen Nakashima

TEL AVIV — Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has told the Biden administration he is willing to strike military rather than oil or nuclear facilities in Iran, according to two officials familiar with the matter, suggesting a more limited counterstrike aimed at preventing a full-scale war.


In the two weeks since Iran’s latest missile barrage on Israel, its second direct attack in six months, the Middle East has braced for Israel’s promised response, fearing the two countries’ decades-long shadow war could explode into a head-on military confrontation. It comes at a politically fraught time for Washington, less than a month before the election; President Joe Biden has said publicly he would not support an Israeli strike on nuclear-related sites.


When Biden and Netanyahu spoke Wednesday — their first call in more than seven weeks after months of rising tensions between the two men — the prime minister said he was planning to target military infrastructure in Iran, according to a U.S. official and an official familiar with the matter. Like others in this story, they spoke on the condition of anonymity to discuss sensitive deliberations.


The White House had no immediate comment. The Israeli prime minister’s office said in a statement that “we listen to the opinions of the United States, but we will make our final decisions based on our national interest.”


The retaliatory action would be calibrated to avoid the perception of “political interference in the U.S. elections,” the official familiar with the matter said, signaling Netanyahu’s understanding that the scope of the Israeli strike has the potential to reshape the presidential race.

An Israeli strike on Iranian oil facilities could send energy prices soaring, analysts say, while an attack on the country’s nuclear research program could erase any remaining red lines governing Israel’s conflict with Tehran, triggering further escalation and risking a more direct U.S. military role. Netanyahu’s stated plan to go after military sites instead, as Israel did after Iran’s attack in April, was met with relief in Washington.


Netanyahu was in a “more moderated place” in that discussion than he had previously been, said the U.S. official, describing the call between the two leaders. The apparent softening of the prime minister’s stance factored into Biden’s decision to send a powerful missile defense system to Israel, both officials said.


After that call, the president was more inclined to do it, the U.S. official said.


On Sunday, the Pentagon announced that it was deploying its anti-ballistic Terminal High Altitude Area Defense, or THAAD, battery system to Israel, along with about 100 U.S. military personnel. U.S. officials announced Tuesday that an advance team of personnel and initial components for the system had arrived in Israel the previous day. More personnel and components would continue to arrive in the coming days, they said.


The deployment of the system “underscores the United States’ commitment to the defense of Israel,” the Pentagon said.


The Israeli strike on Iran would be carried out before the U.S. elections on Nov. 5, the official familiar with the matter said, because a lack of action could be interpreted by Iran as a sign of weakness. “It will be one in a series of responses,” she said.


Zohar Palti, a former intelligence director for Israel’s Mossad intelligence agency, said Netanyahu would need to balance Washington’s appeals for moderation with the public demand in Israel for an overwhelming response.

“The Iranians have lost every measure of restraint that they used to have,” he said. “Without the U.S. weapons, Israel cannot fight,” Palti acknowledged. “But it is Israel who takes the risks” and “knows how to do the job.”


On Thursday night, the official familiar with the matter said, Netanyahu convened his security cabinet for three hours to discuss the options on the table, but he did not seek official authorization for the attack from his cabinet — keeping the timing intentionally open-ended.


Within the Israeli defense establishment, there is concern that the strike will not be forceful enough — or public enough — to deter Iran from another direct attack on Israel, or from developing nuclear weapons.

“The Israeli military wants to hit Iran’s military leadership, because it doesn’t hurt the people and it doesn’t erupt the region into a larger war,” said Gayil Talshir, a political scientist at Hebrew University who is in contact with senior members of Israel’s defense establishment. “But that is not how Netanyahu is thinking.”


In April, after a U.S.-led military coalition helped Israel intercept hundreds of Iranian drones and missiles — a large but well-choreographed attack — Israel responded with a pinpoint strike on an air base in Isfahan, in central Iran. Israeli officials mostly kept quiet after the attack, with the exception of far-right National Security Minister Itamar Ben Gvir, who posted on social media that the response was “lame!”

On Oct. 1, after successful Israeli operations against Iran and its proxies, including the assassination of Hezbollah leader Hasan Nasrallah, Tehran fired nearly 200 ballistic missiles at Israel — this time without warning — killing a Palestinian man in the West Bank and hitting at least two military installations. Amir Saeid Iravani, Iran’s ambassador to the United Nations, said the attack was meant to “restore balance and deterrence.”

“When we responded last time, they didn’t get the message,” Palti said. “So the alternative now is between restraint or retaliation, and the answer is obvious.”


But Israel is already fighting on multiple fronts. Late last month, thousands of Israeli troops invaded southern Lebanon for the first time in nearly two decades and, last week, the military unleashed yet another punishing offensive in northern Gaza. When it comes to Tehran, figures close to Netanyahu’s team have signaled strategic patience.


“Just as we waited with [Hezbollah in] Lebanon, and with [Hamas in Gaza] in the south, now I think we will have to wait with Iran,” Natan Eshel, an adviser to the Netanyahu family, said in a leaked message to Israeli media Sunday. “We will get to the same point in the north, we will finish it, and then get to Iran, which is not going anywhere.”


On timing, too, Netanyahu appeared to be taking cues from Washington: The United States is “giving Israel and the Netanyahu government a bear hug, but for Hezbollah,” said a former senior Israeli defense official who is familiar with current security discussions. “It is sending THAAD and promising all kinds of weapons that we need to finish off Hezbollah, saying that we can deal with Iran later.”


While the White House has pushed unsuccessfully for a cease-fire in Gaza for months, leading to mounting friction between Netanyahu and Biden, it has so far given full backing to Israel’s ground operations in Lebanon, even amid a growing international outcry over the civilian toll of the war and Israeli clashes with U.N. peacekeepers tasked with monitoring the border zone.


As part of consultations with the United States, the official familiar with the matter said, Israel has told Washington it intends to wrap up operations in Lebanon in the coming weeks.




Netanyahu’s increased coordination with Washington comes after high-profile strikes carried out without advance warning to Israel’s closest ally — including a strike on Iranian commanders near a diplomatic facility in Damascus, Syria, and the assassination of Hamas leader Ismail Haniyeh in Tehran — which surprised and angered U.S. officials.


While Netanyahu would continue to consult with U.S. officials on Israel’s looming strike against Iran, he would not wait for a green light from Washington, said an Israeli official close to the prime minister.

“The person who will decide on the Israeli response to Iran will be [Netanyahu],” he said.


Hovering over the final decision are the complex, and interrelated, political dynamics in Washington and Tehran. Talshir, the political analyst, said Netanyahu’s team was alarmed by the recent election of Iran’s reformist president Masoud Pezeshkian, who has signaled an openness to reviving nuclear talks with the West. If Vice President Kamala Harris is elected, Netanyahu thinks the nuclear deal will be back on the table, she said, “and so now is a strategic moment to undermine this.”


Prominent Israeli political figures, including former prime minister Naftali Bennett, continue to push for a direct attack on Iran’s nuclear facilities. Anything less, he said, risked sacrificing the momentum Israel has gained from its wars in Lebanon and Gaza.


“Iran’s proxies Hezbollah and Hamas both have drastically diminished capabilities,” he said. “Israel has all the justification it could ever have. We have the ability. We have a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity.”⍐

Monday, October 14, 2024

இலங்கையில் 'இயற்கை அனர்த்தம்'- ஒரு இலட்சத்துக்கும் மேற்பட்டோர் பாதிப்பு.

 


Climate & the will to adapt

15 Oct 2024  The Morning Editorial

Climate change is back in the spotlight these days, and science is painting a scary picture of what’s in store for the future. While Sri Lanka finds herself rearranging her order of polity and managing an economic crisis, one could hardly blame Sri Lankans for being focused on anything but nature at present. 

However, turning a blind eye to climate change and the resultant adverse weather events is not something we ‘islanders’ can afford to do. This, while international organisation and the global intelligencia point to worsening impacts of global warming. For some time now, science has demanded that the world achieve net zero carbon emissions by 2050. While that may be a lofty goal for nations such as Sri Lanka, given that we will likely bear the brunt of the impact, Sri Lankan can’t afford to lose focus on this issue.  

With five days of strong rains, Sri Lanka’s flood prone regions are once again affected. This has become an annual ‘event’ and despite cost in lives, property damage, and economic impacts the weather brings each year, only few State entities take the issue seriously. It has been observed that only the local government agencies, the Ceylon Electricity Board and Irrigation Department, the armed forces and to some degree specialised agencies like the ‘Disaster Management Centre’ have taken note and have action plans in place. It is tragic that the larger state apparatus and the law-making community have not come up with a concrete action plan or a national strategy (one that’s not changed every few years, or with each new subject matter minister) to address the issue, build resilience and reduce the impact of such annual adverse weather incidents.

As a small island, Sri Lanka is highly vulnerable to the adverse effects of climate change. Around 50% of the county’s 22 million citizens live in low-lying coastal areas, most are at major risk of the future increase in the sea level.

Sri Lanka records losses reaching hundreds of million dollars each year due to climate-related disasters. As such, is it not prudent for a country and Government that is now fixated on economic stability and growth to ensure that Sri Lanka formulate a well-debated and research-based national policy on climate change and combatting its ill effects? However, this needs the topic to be elevated to ‘centre stage’ of Sri Lanka’s political discourse. Therefore, why not do such now, when Sri Lanka is in a transitional stage – politically speaking? Given the transition in Sri Lankan polity, this may be a good opportunity to see bipartisan support for a national policy. One that everyone can get on board.

However, while we need broad consensus on such matters, the national response to climate change should be kept out of ‘politics’. The policy itself should be drafted by subject matter experts, with wide stakeholder consultations (both state and non-state entities). Perhaps the time is right for an independent climate change-related institution to lead the discourse about it, and to help the Government to develop a national policy framework. Such a framework should address the full spectrum of issues of climate change – from resilience, preparedness, adaptability and to response. We need to draft a policy which will transcend one or two governments, and perhaps be one which can be effective for the next 15 to 30 years. Sri Lanka has benefited from long-term projects before. Therefore, there’s no reason why we can’t do it again.

In doing so, Sri Lanka will have to face the challenge of investing in research, a long-standing shortcoming of governance. However, investing in research is not something that can be put off anymore. We need a lot of planning. Sri Lanka has already been a country that led the way in responding to the climate over the last two millennia, where kings built hundreds of village tanks and reservoirs, and that was a response to drought. We have this intricate network of irrigation systems across the country, which have given us resilience to climate change. Therefore, we must do so again⍐. 

தினப்பொறி17- பொதுக்கட்டமைப்பு தற்போது இல்லை சிதறிவிட்டது-நிலாந்தன்

 


More than 100 Lankan peacekeepers under fire in Lebanon war


More than 100 Lankan peacekeepers under fire in Lebanon war

UNIFIL in stand-off with Israel over demand for withdrawal, as two Lankan soldiers are wounded

By Dilushi Wijesinghe and Mimi Alphonsus

The United Nations Interim Force (UNIFIL) command centre in Naqoura, Southern Lebanon, which was attacked from air and ground by the Israeli Defence Forces (IDF) on Friday, injuring two Sri Lankan soldiers serving at the base, is facing a standoff with Israeli authorities over a demand they should move from the border area where they are stationed.

The Israeli Defence Forces (IDF) are demanding the UN Peacekeepers withdraw from the base, claiming Hezbollah cadres are firing at advancing ground forces from its surroundings. UNIFIL is refusing to vacate the base. The base was attacked twice in 48 hours.

UNIFIL spokesman Andrea Tenenti told AFP news service Israel had asked UNIFIL to withdraw from positions “five kilometres (three miles) from the ‘Blue Line’ separating both Israel and Lebanon, but the peacekeepers have refused to do so. There are 125 Sri Lankan soldiers billeted at the command centre under the UN flag as the Israeli army made incursions into Lebanon over the week. UNIFIL has some 9,500 troops from various nationalities and is tasked with monitoring a ceasefire that ended a 33-day war in 2006 between Israel and Hezbollah.

About 10,000 peacekeepers from 50 countries are stationed in Lebanon,
alongside around 800 civilian staff

Five UN Blue-Helmets have been wounded so far. One of the two injured Sri Lankan soldiers underwent surgery on his neck and is recovering.

Friday’s attack on the UNIFIL headquarters drew global condemnation on Israel. US President Joe Biden yesterday said that he is “absolutely, positively” asking the Israeli military to stop targeting UN peacekeepers. Irish President Michael Higgins, whose country’s troops are part of the mission, said the Israeli demand for the entire UNIFIL to withdraw from Lebanon was “outrageous”.

In Colombo, the Foreign Ministry praised its brave soldiers serving under the UN flag and “strongly condemned” the attack and said that “Sri Lanka upholds the obligations to ensure the safety and security of UN personnel and the inviolability of UN premises at all times.”

Hours after UN peacekeepers were targeted, an Israeli airstrike killed two Lebanese soldiers, which Lebanese Prime Minister Najib Mikati said could be a potential war crime as Israel is escalating its war campaign in the West Asian region.

Army Media Spokesman Rasika Kumara told the Sunday Times one of the injured Sri Lankan peacekeepers is undergoing treatment at the UN base hospital itself, while the other was admitted to the Jabal Amel Hospital located about 20 km from the base for a minor surgical procedure.

“This morning the force commander and his contingent commander also visited him,” said Maj. Gen. Kumara, assuring that the wounded peacekeepers were out of danger.

“The target was not the UN base. It was a shrapnel that came from an air strike. They cannot differentiate it because air strikes, ground assaults, and artillery assaults were launched simultaneously. They suspect it is an air strike, not on the base but on the Naquora village,” Maj. Gen. Kumara said. “The peacekeepers were at a guard post in the bunker when the attack took place about 100-150 metres away.”

According to a UNIFIL statement, however, this was the second explosion to affect the UN base at Naquora in 48 hours. “Today [October 11], several T-walls at our UN position 1-31, near the Blue Line in Labbouneh, fell when an IDF caterpillar hit the perimeter and IDF tanks moved in the proximity of the UN position,” the UNIFIL statement said.

“This is a serious development, and UNFIL reiterates that the safety and security of UN personnel and property must be guaranteed and that the inviolability of UN premises must be respected at all times.”

The Sri Lankan embassy is in close contact with UNIFIL and monitoring the situation. Sri Lankan peacekeepers, including the two injured, are under the care of UNIFIL, said Ambassador Kapila Jayaweera from Lebanon.

According to Lebanon’s official National News Agency, an Israeli Merkava tank targeted one of UNIFIL’s observation towers on the main road connecting Tyre to Naqoura, in front of a Lebanese Army checkpoint, injuring the Sri Lankan contingent stationed there.

It said Israeli artillery fired a shell that struck the main entrance of the UNIFIL command centre in Naqoura, causing damage to the site.

Israel has mounted massive airstrikes across Lebanon against what it claims are Hezbollah targets since Sept. 23, killing at least 1,351 people, injuring over 3,800 others, and displacing more than 1.2 million people⍐.

Sunday Times  October 13, 2024

இஸ்ரேலிய படைக் கலங்களோடு அமெரிக்காவின் `THAAD` இணைதல் எவ்வளவு முக்கியத்துவம் வாய்ந்தது?

A drill reloading and unloading missiles in a Terminal High Altitude Area Defense (THAAD)
system trainer at Andersen Air Force Base, Guam. (Photo: ABACA via Reuters)


How Significant Is the US’ THAAD Deployment to Israel?

Something big is coming, and whatever it is, there’s now a heightened chance that the US will become directly involved.

The Pentagon confirmed that it’ll dispatch nearly 100 troops to Israel to operate one of its premier air defense systems, the Terminal High Altitude Area Defense (THAAD), of which it only has seven in total. This comes ahead of Israel’s expected retaliation to Iran’s latest missile strike on the first of the month that it carried out to restore deterrence after the assassination of Hamas chief Ismail Haniyeh in Tehran and Hezbollah chief Sayyed Hassan Nasrallah in Beirut. Here’s what this latest US move signifies:

The US’ THAAD deployment to Israel is a worrying step because it suggests that, that something big is coming, and whatever it is, there’s now a heightened chance that the US will become directly involved.

1. Israel Is Probably Planning Something Big

Rumors have abounded about what exactly Israel is planning, but it’s probably something big and will provoke at least proportional retaliation from Iran, hence why the self-professed Jewish State requested that the US deploy one of its few THAADs to help defend it afterwards. THAAD specializes in intercepting ballistic missiles so it can be intuited that Israel and the US expect Iran to respond through these means. THAAD only carries 48 interceptors, however, so it could be overwhelmed if there’s a saturation strike.  

2. The Iron Dome Needs All The Help It Can Get

Many observers assessed that Iran’s latest missile strike exposed the limits of Israel’s famous Iron Dome. The footage that they saw and Israel’s panicked reaction afterwards in trying to cover up the damage, including by detaining Grayzone journalist Jeremy Loffredo and then investigating him for “aiding the enemy in a time of war” by reporting on it, leave little doubt that this is the case. Accordingly, the Iron Dome needs all the help it can get, hence why Israel requested that the US deploy THAAD to assist.

3. The US Risks Getting Caught In Mission Creep

Biden previously promised that “No US boots will be on the ground” in the West Asian conflict zone, yet he just went back on his word after his administration approved this latest deployment. The US thus risks getting caught in mission creep since hawkish policymakers might now argue that it’s worth scaling this deployment in pursuit of perceived national interests after this psychological line was just crossed. They might not succeed, and this could be all that’s sent, but more deployments also can’t be ruled out either.

4. The THAAD Team Is An Escalation Tripwire

Building upon the above, the THAAD team is an escalation tripwire since any harm that might befall them while attempting to intercept Iran’s expected retaliation to Israel’s presumably forthcoming attack could serve as the pretext for the US to strike Iran and/or deploy more troops to the conflict zone. While this move is being sold to the public as “defending Israel” and “deterring Iran”, policymakers nonetheless keenly understand what’s really at stake, yet they’re downplaying the dangers to avoid public outcry.

5. Israel-US Ties Remain Strong Despite Problems

And finally, the US’ THAAD deployment shows that inter-state ties remain strong despite the well-known Bibi-Biden rivalry, which saw Biden endorse Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer’s call for regime change against Bibi last spring. Whether one attributes this to the US’ permanent military, intelligence, and diplomatic bureaucracies (“deep state”) still appreciating their perceived mutual geostrategic interests or to the power of the Israel lobby, the point is that it testifies to the resilience of their ties.

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The US’ THAAD deployment to Israel is a worrying step because it suggests that, that something big is coming, and whatever it is, there’s now a heightened chance that the US will become directly involved. Whether its role remains defensive or evolves into an offensive one remains to be seen, but this team of nearly 100 operators essentially serves as an escalation tripwire. Hawkish policymakers want a larger war, and it’ll take self-restraint on Iran’s side and a little bit of luck to avoid that worst-case scenario.

Birds Not Bombs: Let’s Fight for a World of Peace, Not War 

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இஸ்ரேலுக்கு அமெரிக்காவின் THAAD வரிசைப்படுத்தல் எவ்வளவு முக்கியத்துவம் வாய்ந்தது?

ஏதோ பெரிய விஷயம் வரப்போகிறது, அது எதுவாக இருந்தாலும், அமெரிக்கா நேரடியாக ஈடுபடுவதற்கான வாய்ப்பு  அதிகமாக உள்ளது.

By Andrew Korybko              Tamil Translation Google         Global Research, October 14, 2024                                                 

பென்டகன் அதன் முதன்மையான வான் பாதுகாப்பு அமைப்புகளில் ஒன்றான டெர்மினல் ஹை ஆல்டிடியூட் ஏரியா டிஃபென்ஸ் -Terminal High Altitude Area Defense(THAAD) ஐ இயக்க கிட்டத்தட்ட 100 துருப்புக்களை இஸ்ரேலுக்கு அனுப்புவதாக உறுதிப்படுத்தியது , அதில் மொத்தம் ஏழு மட்டுமே உள்ளது . தெஹ்ரானில் ஹமாஸ் தலைவர் இஸ்மாயில் ஹனியே மற்றும் பெய்ரூட்டில் ஹிஸ்புல்லா தலைவர் சையத் ஹசன் நஸ்ரல்லா ஆகியோர் படுகொலை செய்யப்பட்டதைத் தொடர்ந்து தடுப்பை மீட்டெடுப்பதற்காக ஈரானின் சமீபத்திய ஏவுகணைத் தாக்குதலுக்கு இஸ்ரேல் எதிர்பார்க்கும் பதிலடிக்கு முன்னதாக இது வந்துள்ளது . இந்த சமீபத்திய அமெரிக்க நடவடிக்கை எதைக் குறிக்கிறது:

1. இஸ்ரேல் ஒருவேளை ஏதோ பெரிதாகத் திட்டமிடுகிறது

இஸ்ரேல் சரியாக என்ன திட்டமிடுகிறது என்பது பற்றிய வதந்திகள் ஏராளமாக உள்ளன, ஆனால் அது ஒருவேளை பெரியதாக இருக்கலாம் மற்றும் ஈரானிடம் இருந்து குறைந்தபட்சம் விகிதாசார பதிலடியைத் தூண்டும், எனவே யூத அரசு என்று தன்னம்பிக்கை கொண்ட யூத அரசு அமெரிக்கா தனது சில THAAD களில் ஒன்றைப் பயன்படுத்தக் கோரியது. THAAD பாலிஸ்டிக் ஏவுகணைகளை இடைமறிப்பதில் நிபுணத்துவம் பெற்றுள்ளது, எனவே இஸ்ரேலும் அமெரிக்காவும் ஈரான் இந்த வழிமுறைகளின் மூலம் பதிலளிப்பதை எதிர்பார்க்கின்றன என்பதை உள்வாங்கலாம். THAAD 48 இன்டர்செப்டர்களை மட்டுமே கொண்டு செல்கிறது , இருப்பினும், ஒரு செறிவூட்டல் வேலைநிறுத்தம் ஏற்பட்டால் அது அதிகமாகிவிடும்.  

2. இரும்புக் குவிமாடத்திற்கு அது பெறக்கூடிய அனைத்து உதவிகளும் தேவை

ஈரானின் சமீபத்திய ஏவுகணை தாக்குதல் இஸ்ரேலின் புகழ்பெற்ற இரும்புக் குவிமாடத்தின் எல்லைகளை அம்பலப்படுத்தியதாக பல பார்வையாளர்கள் மதிப்பிட்டுள்ளனர். அவர்கள் பார்த்த காட்சிகள் மற்றும் இஸ்ரேலின் பீதியடைந்த எதிர்வினை, சேதத்தை மறைக்க முயன்றது, கிரேசோன் பத்திரிகையாளர் ஜெர்மி லோஃப்ரெடோவை காவலில் வைத்தது மற்றும் பின்னர் "போர் சமயத்தில் எதிரிக்கு உதவியதற்காக" அவரை விசாரணை செய்ததன் மூலம் அது பற்றி புகாரளித்தது, இது சந்தேகத்திற்கு இடமின்றி உள்ளது. என்பது வழக்கு. அதன்படி, அயர்ன் டோமுக்கு அது பெறக்கூடிய அனைத்து உதவிகளும் தேவை, எனவே இஸ்ரேல் அமெரிக்காவிடம் THAAD ஐ உதவிக்கு அனுப்புமாறு கோரியது.

3. மிஷன் க்ரீப்பில் அமெரிக்காவின் அபாயங்கள் சிக்குகின்றன

மேற்கு ஆசிய மோதல் மண்டலத்தில் " அமெரிக்க பூட்ஸ் எதுவும் தரையில் இருக்காது " என்று பிடன் முன்னர் உறுதியளித்தார் , ஆனால் அவரது நிர்வாகம் இந்த சமீபத்திய வரிசைப்படுத்தலுக்கு ஒப்புதல் அளித்த பிறகு அவர் தனது வார்த்தைக்கு திரும்பினார். இந்த உளவியல் எல்லையைத் தாண்டிய பிறகு, தேசிய நலன்களைப் பின்தொடர்வதில் இந்த வரிசைப்படுத்தலை அளவிடுவது மதிப்புக்குரியது என்று பருந்து கொள்கை வகுப்பாளர்கள் இப்போது வாதிடுவதால், அமெரிக்கா மிஷன் க்ரீப்பில் சிக்கிக்கொள்ளும் அபாயம் உள்ளது. அவை வெற்றியடையாமல் போகலாம், அனுப்பப்பட்டவை இதுவாக இருக்கலாம், ஆனால் அதிகமான வரிசைப்படுத்தல்களையும் நிராகரிக்க முடியாது.

4. THAAD குழு என்பது ஒரு விரிவாக்கப் பயணம்

மேற்கூறியவற்றின் அடிப்படையில், THAAD குழு ஒரு விரிவாக்கப் பயணமாகும், ஏனெனில் இஸ்ரேலின் மறைமுகமாக வரவிருக்கும் தாக்குதலுக்கு ஈரானின் எதிர்பார்க்கப்படும் பதிலடியை இடைமறிக்க முயற்சிக்கும் போது அவர்களுக்கு ஏற்படக்கூடிய எந்தவொரு தீங்கும் அமெரிக்காவிற்கு ஈரானைத் தாக்க மற்றும்/அல்லது அதிக துருப்புக்களை அனுப்புவதற்கான சாக்குப்போக்காக இருக்கலாம். மோதல் மண்டலம். இந்த நடவடிக்கை "இஸ்ரேலைப் பாதுகாப்பது" மற்றும் "ஈரானைத் தடுப்பது" என்று பொதுமக்களுக்கு விற்கப்பட்டாலும், கொள்கை வகுப்பாளர்கள் உண்மையில் ஆபத்தில் இருப்பதைக் கூர்மையாகப் புரிந்துகொள்கிறார்கள், இருப்பினும் அவர்கள் பொதுமக்களின் கூக்குரலைத் தவிர்ப்பதற்காக ஆபத்துக்களை குறைத்து மதிப்பிடுகின்றனர்.

5. பிரச்சனைகள் இருந்தாலும் இஸ்ரேல்-அமெரிக்க உறவுகள் வலுவாக உள்ளன

இறுதியாக, அமெரிக்காவின் THAAD வரிசைப்படுத்தல் நன்கு அறியப்பட்ட பிபி-பிடென் போட்டி இருந்தபோதிலும் மாநிலங்களுக்கு இடையேயான உறவுகள் வலுவாக இருப்பதைக் காட்டுகிறது, கடந்த வசந்த காலத்தில் பீபிக்கு எதிரான ஆட்சி மாற்றத்திற்கான செனட் பெரும்பான்மைத் தலைவர் சக் ஷூமரின் அழைப்புக்கு பிடென் ஒப்புதல் அளித்தார் . அமெரிக்காவின் நிரந்தர இராணுவம், உளவுத்துறை மற்றும் இராஜதந்திர அதிகாரத்துவங்கள் (“ஆழமான அரசு”) இன்னும் அவர்கள் உணரும் பரஸ்பர புவிசார் மூலோபாய நலன்களை அல்லது இஸ்ரேல் லாபியின் சக்தியைப் பாராட்டுவது இதற்குக் காரணம் என்று ஒருவர் கூறினாலும், அது அவர்களின் உறவுகளின் பின்னடைவுக்கு சாட்சியமளிப்பதாகும். .

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இஸ்ரேலுக்கு அமெரிக்காவின் THAAD வரிசைப்படுத்தல் ஒரு கவலைக்குரிய படியாகும், ஏனென்றால் அது ஏதோ பெரியதாக வரப்போகிறது என்று அறிவுறுத்துகிறது, அது எதுவாக இருந்தாலும், அமெரிக்கா நேரடியாக ஈடுபடுவதற்கான அதிக வாய்ப்பு உள்ளது. அதன் பங்கு தற்காப்புடன் இருக்கிறதா அல்லது தாக்குதலாக மாறுகிறதா என்பதைப் பார்க்க வேண்டும், ஆனால் கிட்டத்தட்ட 100 ஆபரேட்டர்களைக் கொண்ட இந்த குழு அடிப்படையில் ஒரு விரிவாக்க ட்ரிப்வைராக செயல்படுகிறது. ஹாக்கிஷ் கொள்கை வகுப்பாளர்கள் ஒரு பெரிய போரை விரும்புகிறார்கள், மேலும் அந்த மோசமான சூழ்நிலையைத் தவிர்ப்பதற்கு ஈரானின் தரப்பில் சுய கட்டுப்பாடு மற்றும் அதிர்ஷ்டம் சிறிது தேவைப்படும்⍐.

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