Israel's current response plan seems to be to get the UK, France and other countries still trying to revive the nuclear deal to drop it and reimpose all the sanctions they dropped on Iran's nuclear programme back in 2016. That would be a very big win for Israel. If they comply, Israel will limit its response to a series of attacks on Hezbollah in Lebanon and will not hit Iran directly.
This seems to be the preferred plan floated by Netanyahu, over the ultra-hardliners in their camp who want to completely destroy Iran's military in response, or at least take out their nuclear and missile programmes. The US, which already dropped the nuclear deal under Trump and hasn't rushed to reinstate it under Biden, already seems on board and is floating a big package of new sanctions later this week.
This sounds weaksauce, but the Iranian economy is fairly exposed to sanctions, with current rampant inflation of 40% being caused by lack of access to global markets due to the existing US sanctions regime. Europe beefing that up considerably will cause real issues for Iran's economy and none of its other partners, especially Russia, can really bail it out.
This plan isn't final and it sounds like the hardliner argument that Iran went all-out in its attack and achieved Jack S is becoming more accepted in Jerusalem, with the implication that if Israel hit them hard, they wouldn't be able to do much back in return. Other analysts are considerably less sanguine about that, citing Hezbollah's short-range missile arsenal as capable of causing immense damage in the north. There's also real concern about Iranian ground forces (which are not degraded at all at the moment and considerably unlikely to be in Israeli air strikes) rolling across Iraq into Syria to threaten Israel. However, without good air cover - Iran's air force is poor - or good AA defences - Iran's antiair network is pretty crap and Russian attempts to upgrade it with systems that can't handle Ukrainian drones or missiles most of the time are not going to be giving Tehran huge confidence - such a force would be pummelled into oblivion from the sky.
If this wasn't Iran's best shot and it could fire many more missiles much more quickly, then things could get very existential very quickly (faced with hundreds of incoming missiles with not enough air defence to deal with them, Netanyahu might feel the need to flip the switch marked "JERICHO 3" and we wake up the next day in an incredibly different world to the one we went to sleep in).
This post has been edited by Werthead: 16 April 2024 - 08:59 PM