The Indian Express (Delhi Edition)

After the three killings

The targeted killings of top Hamas and Hezbollah leaders have increased the possibilit­y of all- out war in West Asia to perhaps its highest level since the October 7 attacks on Israel. What could Iran do now?

- Shubhajit Roy

HAMAS KILLED around 1,200 Israelis and took 250 hostage on October 7, 2023, and Israel’s response with air strikes and ground operations is estimated to have killed more than 40,0 00 people in Gaza so far. But all these deaths — including those of thousands of Palestinia­n women and children — could ultimately prove less consequent­ial than those of three individual­s, news of whose killings became known this week.

Fuad Shukr, a top Hezbollah commander, was killed in Lebanon’s capital Beirut in an Israeli airstrike on July 30. Israel has said Shukr was behind a rocket attack on Israelicon­trolled Golan Heights that killed 12 young people over last weekend.

On July 31, Ismail Haniyeh, head of the political bureau of Hamas and the Qatarbased public face of the group, was killed in Tehran where he was attending the inaugurati­on of the new reformist President Masoud Pezeshkian.

Mohammed Deif, the storied Hamas commander who planned the October 7 attacks, was reported to have been killed in an Israeli strike in Gaza on July 13.

A show of Israeli intent

These targeted killings are seen as a huge victory for Israel, which had vowed revenge for the October 7 attacks, a catastroph­ic failure of its intelligen­ce, operations, and response mechanisms. Its Swords of Iron mili tar y of fensive i n Gaza had the twin objectives of destroying Hamas and freeing the hostages.

By killing Haniyeh and Deif, Israel can claim to have substantia­lly achieved the target of neutralisi­ng Hamas. The message for Hamas’ surviving top military leader in Gaza, Yahya Sinwar, would be that Israel has the intent and capability to decapitate the militant group at a time and place of its choosing.

Much was said and written on the failures of Mossad after the October 7 humiliatio­n — the successful strikes is a step towards salvaging the reputation­al damage that Israel suffered.

A message for Iran

But the killings could have consequenc­es for all of West Asia. By targeting the leaders of Hezbollah and Hamas — both groups are part of the ‘ Axis of Resistance’ sponsored by Iran — Israel has redrawn the red lines of the conflict in West Asia. The possibilit­y of allout war in the region is perhaps the highest now since the October 7 attacks.

Israel had demonstrat­ed its willingnes­s to push harder when it attacked Iranian military officials in an Iranian diplomatic premises in Syria’s capital Damascus in April. Tehran retaliated with a massive aerial attack against Israel that could, however, do only limited damage. Israel then conducted an air strike against Iran — again, with no major casualties.

These events in April signalled Iran’s intent to respond if its military officials were targeted. Israel took the message — Haniyeh was killed while he was inside a building in Tehran, but no Iranian military personnel were harmed in the highly targeted hit.

What it did though, was to expose the vulnerabil­ities of Iran’s intelligen­ce and security establishm­ent in much the same way as the Hamas attack had exposed and embarrasse­d the Israelis. Worse, Haniyeh was killed as Tehran hosted foreign leaders and representa­tives for the inaugurati­on of its new President.

To target Haniyeh in Qatar, an ally of the United States, would have had complicate­d consequenc­es for Israel. By killing him under the nose of the Iran Revolution­ary Guards Corps in Tehran, Israel has sent the message that Iran’s security umbrella cannot protect the leaders of Hamas.

The killing of Fuad Shukr in Hezbollah’s stronghold of Beirut delivers a similar message. The military capabiliti­es of the Iranian proxy in Lebanon across Israel’s northern border are in fact more formidable than those of Hamas.

Options before Tehran

While the three targeted assassinat­ions and Israel’s ruthless military response in Gaza is intended to re- establish its deterrence against Iran and its proxies, Tehran cannot be expected to take it lying down. Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei and President Pezeshkian have vowed revenge. Khamenei attended Haniyeh’s funeral in Tehran, and Qatar’s Emir Sheikh Tamim Bin Ahmad Al Thani sat in front during the last rites in Doha, where the body was brought.

There are three scenarios on the possible

Iranian response.

FIRST, Iran could consider picking targets on Israeli soil and carry out a repeat of the aerial attacks of April.

SECOND, it could coordinate with its partners in the ‘ Axis of Resistance’ — the three Hs, Hamas, Hezbollah, and the Houthis — to conduct coordinate­d attacks on Israeli targets.

THIRD, it might target Israeli officials in third countries, perhaps after waiting for some time.

The view from India

All these three potential options for Iran present concerns for India. The first two scenarios carry the risk of combustion into a broader regional conflict, adversely impacting the safety of Indian citizens in West Asia, and India’s energy security.

About 9 million Indian nationals live and work in the region — these are usually people who are the sole breadwinne­rs for their families, and the largest source of remittance­s to India. And about two- thirds of India’s crude oil and natural gas imports come from the West Asian region — an outbreak of hostilitie­s will directly impact the price of crude oil.

The third scenario is one with which India is already familiar — the wife of an Israeli diplomat was attacked in New Delhi in 2012 — and which presents a difficult diplomatic challenge.

India has so far made no statements on the volatile situation — New Delhi, which has friends across the region, does not want to get drawn into regional rivalries. It has iss ue d t ravel advisories f or I s rael and Lebanon, and Indian airlines have avoided flying in the region.

Other countries in the region have launched efforts to de- escalate the situation. The Saudi, Qatari, and Omani foreign ministers have been in touch with their Iranian counterpar­ts.

The assassinat­ions have almost certainly derailed ongoing efforts for a deal on hostages and ceasefire in Gaza. The conflict has been prolonged further, and Israel’s Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, who has been facing tough questions on his leadership, has got some time.

But the immediate diplomatic challenge is to avert full- scale war in the region. Much will depend on how Khamenei and Pezeshkian think and respond to the situation.

 ?? Office of the Iranian Supreme Leader/ WANA handout via Reuters ?? Ayatollah Ali Khamenei meets with Ismail Haniyeh of Hamas in Tehran on July 30, the day before his assassinat­ion.
Office of the Iranian Supreme Leader/ WANA handout via Reuters Ayatollah Ali Khamenei meets with Ismail Haniyeh of Hamas in Tehran on July 30, the day before his assassinat­ion.
 ?? ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India