The conflict in the Middle East seems poised for dangerous escalation  - Gript (2024)

If Israeli media and public comment is any indication, an early response to the Iranian drone and missile attacks appears likely.

This will have consequences perhaps even beyond those that have followed from the Hamas attack on Israel last October, and Israel’s subsequent war on Gaza.

The conflict in the Middle East seems poised for dangerous escalation - Gript (1)

War cabinet said to favor hitting back at Iran but divided over when and how | The Times of Israel

The Iranian attacks followed the Israeli airstrike on the Iranian consulate in Damascus on April 1st , as well as previous Israeli attacks which were designed, they claimed, to take out the Iranian capacity to launch drone and missile assaults.

The attacks at the weekend and the nature and extent of the Hamas incursion in October suggest that Israel’s much vaunted intelligence network may not be as efficient as it would like people to imagine.

Others have claimed that such lapses conveniently provide the rationale for direct and more extensive military engagement. Which – those people say – can now be used to potentially extend what some claim is already a disproportionate military response currently underway in Gaza as a compensation for the failure to either identify or neutralise the Iranian threat.

The Iranian attack was certainly extensive. They launched 185 drones, 110 ballistic missiles and 36 Cruise missiles. From a military perspective it was almost a complete failure with over 99% of the missiles intercepted, destroyed, or simply failing to reach their target.

But the Iranian gambit was only a failure if the aim was to inflict physical and human damage within Israel. It will not have been a failure if it succeeds in creating a wider confrontation, which is what the Iranian regime most likely desires. Hamas and Hezbollah have undoubtedly been catspaws to this end.

If it does lead to wider conflict involving others then they have their counterparts within Israel. Just, as some would argue, the Hamas leaders who decided to launch the October attacks on Israel knew that this would elicit a large-scale Israeli retaliation because there are people in the Israeli leadership who would also love to have a major confrontation.

Thankfully, as far as can be discerned, none of the major powers who either side might hope to draw in appear to be anything but alarmed over such a prospect. The Russians appear to be happy with the manner in which their Ukrainian venture is proceeding and the Chinese are calling for the UN to take the lead in calming the situation.

This morning Israel is planning some sort of response and the expectation is that the war cabinet will agree on what that might be over the course of today. When it comes it is almost certain to be of a scale and nature that will inflict significant new losses of life, including those of civilians in much greater numbers than any caused by the Iranian venture.

One response, as is being discussed openly, might not be an actual attack on Iran but rather centre on an Israeli assault on the city of Rafah in the south of Gaza. Rafah, it is claimed by some, houses the bulk of any remaining effective Hamas operators. The problem with that is there are more than one million people living in the city of whom an opinion writer for the Hayom news outlet admits “at least some of whom are innocent.”

Not, of course, that this ought to present any sort of a barrier to the Israeli Defence Forces launching an “all out invasion” to take out the “murderous scoundrels.”

The other issue is that Rafah is right on the border with Egypt and is the site of the only direct crossing between Egypt and Gaza. Its population has been massively bloated by successive waves of people fleeing the bombings in the rest of Gaza. Previous Israeli governments have been conscious of the need to avoid embroiling and destabilising Egypt. Not this one, perhaps.

The consequence of any direct attack will be that these people have the choice of staying to be bombed again, or attempting to enter Egypt. The Egyptians currently host some 9 million persons claiming refugee status. Hundreds of thousands of them are Palestinians, and the Egyptians are also wary of the allies of Hamas in the Muslim Brotherhood who represent a constant threat and do not want to take in any more.

None of this appears to bother people at leading levels in Israel. There have been apparently sober public discussions, involving even the current Finance Minister Bezalel Smotrich, about reducing the population of Gaza from around 2 million to between 100,000 and 200,000.

Assuming they don’t plan to kill all of those people, where are they going to go? Apart from the fact they really ought not be forced to go anywhere. This is where they live and where their families and ancestors have lived, forever.

They can’t go to the wealthy medievalist Islamic states with whom Israeli has basically cordial relations like Saudi Arabia, because they refuse to take them. Nor can they go to those countries closer like Jordan and Lebanon and Syria because they, like Egypt, have more than their share – and in any event Israel would prefer that they move further away. To Europe for instance.

Back to the current crisis. Attempting to prevent an attack on Rafah has been one of the focuses of American efforts. It is noticeable that some of the current Israeli press and other commentary is dismissive of this American caution. Walter E. Brock of Hayom is pleased that Netanyahu’s apparent designs on Rafah would be “co*cking a snook” at Biden, and indeed the US in general which hasn’t had a real war for too long anyway.

So basically, in the eyes of many in the Israeli elite and their allies in the US itself, the Americans ought to allow the IDF to bomb Rafah into oblivion – or launch an attack on Iran which, some hope, the Americans would either feel obliged to join or be forced to join in order to prevent an even worse catastrophe.

Even the more moderate elements clearly regard an attack on Rafah as a plausible alternative to firing missiles at Tehran. Some with a military background also openly regard it as a means to embroil the United States directly. In the Jerusalem Post, reserve Major-General Yaakov Amidror believes that the Iranian attack means that “now is the time to use our international credit.”

Surely if we have learned anything from the past 30 years, it might be that, bad and all as the Islamic regimes and the leftist military Arab regimes were – the latter including Libya, Iraq and Syria – perhaps it might have been best to leave them as they were. Once they do not bother anyone else of course. Which is where the problem lies. Containment rather than regime change.

China has a bloody history and a current record of totalitarian servitude worse than any of them. It also guarantees the survival of the retro Stalinist regime in Pyongyang. Is there any sane person in the leadership of a western power who believes that it might be a good idea to attempt to engineer a war with China or North Korea?

Or that if there was a Taiwanese or South Korean Netanyahu that such a “courageous” co*ck a snooker ought to be encouraged to engage in provocations with that intent? There is a line between defence and aggression fuelled by lunacy. We are dangerously close to that line being crossed, if it has not already been.

The interests of Europeans, as in the peoples of Europe rather than the technocrats of the EU, are in protecting themselves from external threats. It does not help if that threat is potentially exacerbated by the actions of those who are ostensibly their allies. This could be a decisive week.

The conflict in the Middle East seems poised for dangerous escalation  - Gript (2024)

FAQs

What is the conflict in the Middle East? ›

List of conflicts
DateConflictLocation
20172017 Iraqi–Kurdish conflictIraq
2017–Iraqi insurgency (2017–present)Iraq
2023–Israel–Hamas warIsrael West Bank Gaza Strip
2023–Israel–Hezbollah conflict (2023–present)Israel Lebanon
98 more rows

Why are there so many wars in the Middle East? ›

The Middle East has been the most volatile part of the world since the mid-20th century, with multiple conflicts among disparate rivals. Some erupted over domestic disputes, others over regional competition, with spillover drawing in major world powers.

Who is Israel at war with? ›

The Israeli–Palestinian conflict is an ongoing military and political conflict about land and self-determination within the territory of the former Mandatory Palestine.

How does the Gaza war affect the economy of Egypt? ›

If the conflict in Gaza lasts up to six months (until 7 April 2024), Egypt's GDP is projected to decrease by 1.6% (ESCWA/UNDP 23/02/2024). Real GDP growth is projected to decline from 3.8% in 2023 to 3% in 2024 (IMF 31/01/2024).

How is the conflict resolved in the end? ›

Man is resolved when the two parties come to some sort of agreement. Maybe the main character and whoever the conflict was with decide to go with one person's idea or the other person. Maybe they decide to compromise. They come to some sort of agreement and their conflict is resolved.

How does the Middle East conflict affect the economy? ›

The report looks at the economic impact of the conflict in the Middle East on the region. Economic activity in Gaza has come to a near standstill. The GDP of the Gaza strip dropped by 86% in last quarter of 2023. The West Bank has plunged into a recession, with simultaneous public and private sector crises.

Are we going to war with the Middle East? ›

The United States does not seek conflict with Iran or in the broader Middle East. But as President Biden has made clear, we will not hesitate to defend our people and hold responsible all those who harm Americans, at a time and a place of our choosing.

Who is Saudi Arabia at war with right now? ›

The Houthi–Saudi Arabian conflict is an ongoing armed conflict between the Royal Saudi Armed Forces and Iran-backed Yemeni Houthi forces that has been taking place in the Arabian Peninsula, including the southern Saudi regions of Asir, ji*zan, and Najran, and northern Yemeni governorates of Saada, Al Jawf, and Hajjah, ...

How are people affected by conflict? ›

Studies have shown that conflict situations cause more mortality and disability than any major disease. War destroys communities and families and often disrupts the development of the social and economic fabric of nations.

Does KFC support Israel? ›

The company says it is nonpolitical and denies supporting the Israeli military or government.

Who is the closest ally to Israel? ›

Israel's close friendship with the United States has been a linchpin of its foreign policy since the establishment of the state. Until the Iranian Revolution and the fall of the Pahlavi dynasty in 1979, Israel and Iran maintained close ties.

Is the US an ally to Israel? ›

Israel is designated by the United States as a major non-NATO ally, the only country in the Middle East other than Egypt to have this designation.

Does Egypt support Israel or Palestine? ›

Nevertheless, Egypt was one of the first countries to support the Palestinian Declaration of Independence and officially recognized Palestine on 15 November 1988. During the 2023 Israel–Hamas war in Gaza, Egypt has provided significant humanitarian aid to the Palestinians through the Rafah border crossing.

Does Egypt still claim Gaza? ›

Israel controls the Gaza Strip's northern borders, as well as its territorial waters and airspace. Egypt controls Gaza Strip's southern border, under an agreement between it and Israel.

What is Israel's main source of income? ›

The most important economic sectors are technology, manufacturing, and diamond polishing and cutting. In 2022, Israel's GDP amounted to 501.4 billion U.S. dollars, and, according to estimates, it will increase to 611.8 billion U.S. dollars by 2026.

What is the Middle East conflict in Call of Duty? ›

The Middle-Eastern Conflict consisted of a series of wars from 2011 to 2016 with roots as far back as World War II. The first conflict encountered was the Khaled Al-Asad crisis. Warfare in the Middle East was prominent during Call of Duty 4: Modern Warfare and Call of Duty: Modern Warfare 2.

Is the US going to war in the Middle East? ›

The United States does not seek conflict with Iran or in the broader Middle East. But as President Biden has made clear, we will not hesitate to defend our people and hold responsible all those who harm Americans, at a time and a place of our choosing.

What was the conflict in the Middle East in the 1970s? ›

The war began on 6 October 1973, when the Arab coalition jointly launched a surprise attack against Israel on the Jewish holy day of Yom Kippur, which had occurred during the 10th day of the Islamic holy month of Ramadan in that year.

What is the Middle East explained? ›

The most common but exclusive definition of the Middle East at the time of writing extends to Egypt in the West, Iran in the East, the Arabian Peninsula in the South and Turkey in the North (although occasionally Turkey and, more rarely, Egypt are omitted).

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