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JewishPress.com
Defending Israel In An Apocalyptic Time: Elements Of A Successful Nuclear
Targeting Doctrine
By: Louis Rene Beres
July 5, 2006
With steady Iranian nuclearization correctly at the forefront of world
public attention, no country has more to fear than the State of Israel.
Less than half the size of Lake Michigan, Israel fully understands that
the Iranian president’s incessant bluster about wiping the Jewish
State “off the map” is far more than mere posturing. It is,
rather, an unambiguous declaration of criminal intent to commit genocide.
Genocide is a codified crime under international law. To survive into
the future, Israel’s leaders and allies now recognize that Iran’s
explicitly exterminatory intent is being augmented by a developing capacity.
Left to his own devices, free of any preemptive interference with the
Islamic Republic’s planned atomic arsenal of bombs and missiles
(an interference that would certainly be a proper expression of “anticipatory
self defense”), Iran’s president might not be deterred by
any threats of Israeli and/or American retaliation. This possible failure
of nuclear deterrence could be the result of a presumed lack of threat
credibility or even of a willful Iranian indifference to existential harms.
Iran, after all, could conceivably become the individual suicide bomber
in macrocosm, a nuclear-armed state willing to die as a collective martyr.
To be sure, such a prospect is not very likely, but – at the same
time – it is by no means unimaginable.
How should Israel respond to such a dire set of circumstances? One important
part of the answer has to do with core questions of Tel Aviv’s targeting
doctrine. More precisely, Israel’s security from future Iranian
mass-destruction attacks will depend considerably upon the Defense Ministry’s
determined targets and on the precise extent to which these targets have
been openly identified. Contrary to conventional wisdom, it is not enough
that Israel simply have “The Bomb.” Instead, the adequacy
of Israel’s nuclear deterrence and preemption policies will inevitably
depend largely upon the presumed destructiveness of these nuclear weapons,
and on where exactly, these weapons are authoritatively thought to be
directed.
A nuclear war in the Middle East is not out of the question. Indeed, there
are a number of different scenarios that could result in an Israeli use
of nuclear weapons. Israel will need to choose prudently between what
are called “assured destruction” strategies and “nuclear
war-fighting” strategies. Assured destruction strategies are also
sometimes termed “counter-value” strategies or “mutual
assured destruction” (MAD). These are strategies of deterrence/preemption
in which a country primarily targets its strategic weapons on the other
side’s civilian populations and/or on its supporting civilian infrastructures.
Nuclear war-fighting strategies, on the other hand, are called “counterforce”
strategies. These are systems of deterrence/preemption wherein a country
primarily targets its strategic nuclear weapons on the other side’s
major weapon systems and on its supporting military infrastructures.
For nuclear-weapons countries in general, and for Israel in particular,
there are very serious survival implications for choosing one strategy
over the other. It is also possible that a country would opt for some
sort of “mixed” (counter-value/counterforce) strategy. In
the case of Israel, however, any policy that might actually encourage
nuclear war-fighting – any counterforce nuclear doctrines –
should be rejected out-of-hand.
Human psychology has much to do with current world politics. Whichever
deterrence/preemption strategy Israel might choose, what ultimately really
matters is what an enemy country perceives. In strategic matters, the
only pertinent reality is perceived reality; nothing else matters.
In choosing between the two basic strategic alternatives, Israel should
opt for nuclear deterrence/preemption based upon assured destruction.
This seemingly insensitive recommendation will surely elicit opposition
in certain publics, but in fact, it is substantially more humane. Further,
a counter-value targeting doctrine would appear to create an enlarged
risk of losing any nuclear war that might still arise. This is because
counter-value-targeted nuclear weapons would not destroy military targets.
Yet, a counterforce targeting doctrine would be less persuasive as a nuclear
deterrent, especially to societies where leaders would willingly sacrifice
entire armies and military infrastructures as “martyrs.” And
if Israel were to opt for nuclear deterrence/preemption based upon identified
and projected counterforce capabilities, its Arab/Islamic enemies could
feel especially threatened. For many reasons, this condition could then
actually heighten the prospect of WMD-aggression against Israel and of
a subsequent nuclear exchange.
Israel’s decisions on counter-value versus counterforce doctrines
should depend, in part, on prior investigations of: (1) enemy country
inclinations to strike first; and (2) enemy country inclinations to strike
all-at-once or in stages. Should Israeli strategic planners assume that
certain enemy countries that are in process of going nuclear are apt to
strike first and to strike in an unlimited fashion (that is, to fire all
of their nuclear weapons right away), Israeli counterforce-targeted warheads
– used in retaliation – would likely hit only empty silos/launchers.
In such circumstances, Israel’s only rational application of counterforce
doctrine would be to strike first itself. If for whatever reason, Israel
were to reject still available preemption options, there would be no reason
to opt for a counterforce strategy. From the standpoint of persuasive
intra-war deterrence, a counter-value strategy would prove vastly more
appropriate.
Should Israel’s planners assume that the enemy countries going nuclear
are apt to strike first and to strike in a limited fashion – holding
some significant measure of nuclear firepower in reserve for follow-on
strikes – Israeli counterforce-targeted warheads could have some
damage-limiting benefits. Here, counterforce operations could appear to
serve both an Israeli non-nuclear preemption, or should Israel decide
not to preempt, an Israeli retaliatory strike. However, the underlying
assumption here about enemy behavior is implausible.
Should an Israeli first-strike be intentionally limited, perhaps because
it would be coupled with an assurance of no further destruction, in exchange
for an end to hostilities, counterforce operations could seemingly serve
as an Israeli counter-retaliatory strike. This is because Israel’s
attempt at intra-war deterrence could fail, occasioning the need for follow-on
strikes to produce badly needed damage-limitation. Nonetheless, the overall
argument for Israel’s counterforce options is founded upon a complex
illusion. The prospective benefits to Israel of maintaining any counterforce
targeting options are greatly outweighed by the prospective costs.
It is plain that regional nuclear war is a distinct possibility for Israel,
and that adequate preparations now need to be made to prevent such a war.
These preparations will require, immediately, a clear awareness of how
a nuclear war might start in the Middle East and an informed identification
of the best strategic doctrine currently available to Israel. To protect
itself against a nuclearizing Iran, Israel’s very best course is
still to seize the conventional preemption option as soon as possible.
Simultaneously, Israel should reject even any hint of counterforce targeting
doctrine and focus instead upon massive counter-value reprisals.
International law is not a suicide pact. Every state
has the established right to defend itself and its people against aggression,
especially where these attacks would involve mass-destruction weapons.
Israel, now facing a verifiably clear and undisguised risk of genocidal
war from Iran, would assuredly never consider the first use of nuclear
weapons. But should Iranian atomic genocide ever be unleashed against
Israel’s cities, the Islamic Republic’s leaders should understand
fully – and in advance – that Israel would respond with considerably
more than parallel destructiveness.
LOUIS RENE BERES was educated at Princeton (Ph.D., 1971) and is the author
of many books and articles dealing with Israeli nuclear strategy. The
Strategic and Military Affairs columnist for The Jewish Press, he is Chair
of “Project Daniel,” a private advisory group dealing with
the growing Iranian nuclear threat to Israel.
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