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JERUSALEM: Israel braced on Thursday for the possibility of a retaliatory attack after its suspected killing of Iranian generals in Damascus this week, saying it would respond forcefully and signalling it had stiffened its military preparedness.
Israel’s armed forces – stretched by nearly six months of war in the Gaza Strip and on the Lebanese front – announced they were suspending leave for all combat units, a day after they said they were mobilising more troops for air defence units.
The possibility of Iran retaliating for Monday’s presumed Israeli air strike on Iran’s embassy compound in Damascus has raised the spectre of a wider war, though two Iranian sources said Tehran’s response would be calibrated to avoid escalation.
“The State of Israel is prepared for every scenario. We will respond with force to any attempts to attack us,” government spokesperson Raquela Karamson said in a briefing.
Reuters journalists and residents of Israel’s commercial hub Tel Aviv said GPS services had been disrupted, an apparent measure to help ward off guided missiles.
Iran, Israel’s arch-enemy, has sworn revenge for the killing of two of its generals along with five military advisers in an air strike on an Iranian diplomatic compound in the Syrian capital on Monday.
Israel is believed to have carried out the strike, among the most significant yet on Iranian interests in Tehran’s close ally Syria. Israel has neither confirmed nor denied involvement.
Since then, investors have been on edge. The Tel Aviv Stock Exchange’s main TA-125 share index fell another 2.2% on Thursday to extend losses this week to around 4%. The Israeli shekel was 0.6% weaker versus the dollar at a 3.73 rate and government bond prices were down as much as 0.4%.
“In accordance with the situational assessment, it has been decided that leave will be temporarily paused for all IDF (Israel Defence Forces) combat units,” the military said in a statement. “The IDF is at war and the deployment of forces is under continuous assessment according to requirements.”
With Israelis anxious about a possible escalation, the military later issued a statement clarifying that no changes had been made in its guidelines for the home front and that there was no need to gather food, cash or generators.
Israel has been pressing its war on Hamas in Gaza since the Palestinian Islamists led a cross-border killing and kidnapping spree on Oct. 7, and has also been trading fire almost daily with Iran-backed Hezbollah in Lebanon.
Yemen’s Houthi rebels, which are aligned with Tehran, have launched occasional long-range rockets at Israel’s Eilat port.
CAUTIOUS IRAN?
Until now, Iran has avoided directly entering the fray, while supporting allies’ attacks on Israeli and US targets.
The Islamic Republic has several options. It could unleash its heavily armed proxies in Syria and Iraq on US forces, use Hezbollah to hit Israel directly or ramp up its uranium enrichment program, a perceived nuclear bomb-making risk which the United States and its allies have long sought to curb.
But many diplomats and analysts say Iran’s clerical elite does not want any all-out war with Israel or the US that might endanger its grip on power, and would prefer to keep using proxies to carry out selective tactical attacks on its foes.
Such proxy strikes on US forces in the region ceased in February after Washington retaliated for the killing of three US soldiers in Jordan with dozens of air strikes on targets in Syria and Iraq linked to Iran’s Revolutionary Guards Corps and militias it supports.
US officials said at mid-week they had not yet picked up intelligence suggesting Iran-backed groups were looking to target US troops following Monday’s attack.
While mindful that Israeli strikes on regional adversaries can put US soldiers at risk of retaliation, US officials are sympathetic to Israel’s desire to restore deterrence after Oct. 7 and to stop flows of arms and fighters that may threaten it.
One US official, speaking on condition of anonymity, said there was a growing concern Iran would make good on its threats to retaliate, raising the risk of volatile, regional escalation.
“Iran can’t afford not to respond, lest its military presence in the region become unsustainable and signal weakness to its chief regional foe,” Ali Vaez of the International Crisis Group think-tank said on Thursday.
“Iran knows that Israel benefits, especially politically, from expanding the war, and is unlikely to take the bait,” he added, saying Hezbollah or Iran were unlikely to retaliate directly.
Iranian leaders have publicly indicated that Iran, which has deep-seated economic problems wrought in part by US sanctions and took months to put down a recent eruption of popular unrest, wants no big war that could destabilise the country.
Amos Yadlin, a former Israeli intelligence chief, said Iran might choose this Friday – the last in the Holy Muslim month of Ramadan and Iranian Quds (Jerusalem) Day – to respond to the Damascus strike, either directly or through a proxy.
“I will not be surprised if Iran will act tomorrow. Don’t panic. Don’t run to the shelters,” said Yadlin, now at the Kennedy School’s Belfer Center at Harvard University, citing Israel’s aerial defence systems.
“Be tuned for tomorrow and then, depending on the consequences of the attack, it may escalate.”
(Reporting by Maayan Lubell, James Mackenzie and Steven Scheer in Jerusalem, Parisa Hafezi in Dubai, Arshad Mohammad, Phil Stewart, Idrees Ali and Don Durfee in Washington; editing by Sharon Singleton, Angus MacSwan, Toby Chopra and Mark Heinrich)
Israel’s armed forces – stretched by nearly six months of war in the Gaza Strip and on the Lebanese front – announced they were suspending leave for all combat units, a day after they said they were mobilising more troops for air defence units.
The possibility of Iran retaliating for Monday’s presumed Israeli air strike on Iran’s embassy compound in Damascus has raised the spectre of a wider war, though two Iranian sources said Tehran’s response would be calibrated to avoid escalation.
“The State of Israel is prepared for every scenario. We will respond with force to any attempts to attack us,” government spokesperson Raquela Karamson said in a briefing.
Reuters journalists and residents of Israel’s commercial hub Tel Aviv said GPS services had been disrupted, an apparent measure to help ward off guided missiles.
Iran, Israel’s arch-enemy, has sworn revenge for the killing of two of its generals along with five military advisers in an air strike on an Iranian diplomatic compound in the Syrian capital on Monday.
Israel is believed to have carried out the strike, among the most significant yet on Iranian interests in Tehran’s close ally Syria. Israel has neither confirmed nor denied involvement.
Since then, investors have been on edge. The Tel Aviv Stock Exchange’s main TA-125 share index fell another 2.2% on Thursday to extend losses this week to around 4%. The Israeli shekel was 0.6% weaker versus the dollar at a 3.73 rate and government bond prices were down as much as 0.4%.
“In accordance with the situational assessment, it has been decided that leave will be temporarily paused for all IDF (Israel Defence Forces) combat units,” the military said in a statement. “The IDF is at war and the deployment of forces is under continuous assessment according to requirements.”
With Israelis anxious about a possible escalation, the military later issued a statement clarifying that no changes had been made in its guidelines for the home front and that there was no need to gather food, cash or generators.
Israel has been pressing its war on Hamas in Gaza since the Palestinian Islamists led a cross-border killing and kidnapping spree on Oct. 7, and has also been trading fire almost daily with Iran-backed Hezbollah in Lebanon.
Yemen’s Houthi rebels, which are aligned with Tehran, have launched occasional long-range rockets at Israel’s Eilat port.
CAUTIOUS IRAN?
Until now, Iran has avoided directly entering the fray, while supporting allies’ attacks on Israeli and US targets.
The Islamic Republic has several options. It could unleash its heavily armed proxies in Syria and Iraq on US forces, use Hezbollah to hit Israel directly or ramp up its uranium enrichment program, a perceived nuclear bomb-making risk which the United States and its allies have long sought to curb.
But many diplomats and analysts say Iran’s clerical elite does not want any all-out war with Israel or the US that might endanger its grip on power, and would prefer to keep using proxies to carry out selective tactical attacks on its foes.
Such proxy strikes on US forces in the region ceased in February after Washington retaliated for the killing of three US soldiers in Jordan with dozens of air strikes on targets in Syria and Iraq linked to Iran’s Revolutionary Guards Corps and militias it supports.
US officials said at mid-week they had not yet picked up intelligence suggesting Iran-backed groups were looking to target US troops following Monday’s attack.
While mindful that Israeli strikes on regional adversaries can put US soldiers at risk of retaliation, US officials are sympathetic to Israel’s desire to restore deterrence after Oct. 7 and to stop flows of arms and fighters that may threaten it.
One US official, speaking on condition of anonymity, said there was a growing concern Iran would make good on its threats to retaliate, raising the risk of volatile, regional escalation.
“Iran can’t afford not to respond, lest its military presence in the region become unsustainable and signal weakness to its chief regional foe,” Ali Vaez of the International Crisis Group think-tank said on Thursday.
“Iran knows that Israel benefits, especially politically, from expanding the war, and is unlikely to take the bait,” he added, saying Hezbollah or Iran were unlikely to retaliate directly.
Iranian leaders have publicly indicated that Iran, which has deep-seated economic problems wrought in part by US sanctions and took months to put down a recent eruption of popular unrest, wants no big war that could destabilise the country.
Amos Yadlin, a former Israeli intelligence chief, said Iran might choose this Friday – the last in the Holy Muslim month of Ramadan and Iranian Quds (Jerusalem) Day – to respond to the Damascus strike, either directly or through a proxy.
“I will not be surprised if Iran will act tomorrow. Don’t panic. Don’t run to the shelters,” said Yadlin, now at the Kennedy School’s Belfer Center at Harvard University, citing Israel’s aerial defence systems.
“Be tuned for tomorrow and then, depending on the consequences of the attack, it may escalate.”
(Reporting by Maayan Lubell, James Mackenzie and Steven Scheer in Jerusalem, Parisa Hafezi in Dubai, Arshad Mohammad, Phil Stewart, Idrees Ali and Don Durfee in Washington; editing by Sharon Singleton, Angus MacSwan, Toby Chopra and Mark Heinrich)
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