Ghassan Charbel
Editor-in-Chief of Asharq Al-Awsat newspaper
TT

Gaza Timing and Iranian Timing

If a journalist digs into the recent memory of the Middle East, he fails to find beautiful or optimistic events. Those are completely absent or rare. Road signs are burdened with wars, collapses, assassinations, militias, poverty, deception and suicidal tendencies. They also bear the marks of ancient cities that had lost their spirit, role, and youth, some of whom jumped into the “death boats.”

Yesterday, we realized that six months have passed since the beginning of the Al-Aqsa Flood. Tomorrow, we will remember the anniversary of an American armored vehicle uprooting the statue of Saddam Hussein from Al-Firdous Square in Baghdad. The overthrow of Saddam Hussein’s regime left a bold mark on the region.

The fall of the Iraqi wall contributed to the birth of the current scenes. Iranian influence was allowed to flow into the region from Baghdad to Gaza. General Qassem Soleimani was permitted to put into effect the Iranian constitution clause that pertains to “exporting the revolution”.
This helped him establish “small parallel armies” that today participate in different ways in the current open conflict in the region. We will not delve further into the past years. We already know that the toll is painful.

Six months have passed since the start of the “Flood” and Benjamin Netanyahu’s war on it. The toll is horrific. In none of the Middle East conflicts, have we witnessed such intensity of killing, such systemic approach and ingenuity. May God forgive artificial intelligence for some egregious crimes...

The numbers are so cruel. In Gaza, 34,000 people were killed, two-thirds of whom were women and children, in addition to 90,000 wounded. Famine knocks on tent doors and threatens 600,000 children. In Israel, 1,500 people have died, including 600 soldiers, while 200,000 were displaced from their homes.

The economic losses are enormous in Israel. The cost of rebuilding Gaza exceeds all estimates. Netanyahu returned the Gaza Strip to the “stone age,” trying to write off “Hamas” and Gaza together.

Six full months. The conscience of the world was late in waking up. This is something usual. But in recent weeks, the blood of Gaza’s children has been able to drip onto the walls of consciences and decision-making centers, especially in the West.

Scenes of the Nakba infiltrated parties and universities and occupied the screens. There has been increasing talk of double standards and the moral downfall of the West. The division appeared clearly in societies, warning of a widening gap between the components. The new facts forced the American administration to move from stressing that the war should not expand to demanding that it stop, instead of just allowing the entry of aid.

Sympathy for Israel has become an obvious burden. There has been increasing conviction in the West that any permanent ceasefire must be accompanied by a firm commitment to open the political horizon to a solution that provides for the establishment of an independent Palestinian state. Living with war turned into a kind of participation in it. Silence has become costly to the image, interests, and electoral campaigns as well.

In parallel, Israeli confusion escalated at home. The unrealistic slogans by Netanyahu demanding complete victory, the uprooting of Hamas, and engineering the next day in Gaza has been revealed. Israeli voices have risen to warn that Netanyahu’s stay will be a severe punishment for the Israelis themselves.

The security establishment participated in questioning Netanyahu’s method of managing the war and its slogans, which pushed the Hebrew state to the verge of actual international isolation. In this context came the “angry” telephone call between Biden and Netanyahu. In the same context, demands mounted to halt supplying weapons and ammunition to Israel or to slow down their delivery. Despite internal and external pressure, Netanyahu resisted any attempt to achieve a truce that could hinder the resumption of the war.

Iran did not rush to turn the Al-Aqsa Flood into an opportunity for the “big strike” that was being discussed in the offices of the leaders of the resistance axis. It chose not to engage in a large-scale war, which the United States quickly cautioned of and supported its warning by sending fleets.

Iran chose limited wars of distraction across the Lebanon front, Houthi drones and missiles in the Red Sea, and occasional statements by some Iraqi factions about striking targets in Israel. The Iranian calculation may have been based on an old decision to avoid any direct conflict with the United States, in addition to the fact that the state of disintegration in Syria and Lebanon makes any engagement in a wide war disastrous in every sense of the word.

Iran maintained “strategic patience” when Israel attacked its military shipments in Syria and targeted a number of Revolutionary Guard officers. It announced that it would respond “at the appropriate time and place,” but preferred to respond through its allies and under the umbrella of not causing a widespread war.

On April 1, Netanyahu took the game to the ugliest stage. He authorized the destruction of the Iranian consulate in Damascus. The senior commander of the IRGC, Brigadier General Mohammad Reza Zahedi, and six officers with active roles were killed. The location of the attack, its outcome, and its timing are all factors that made it extremely dangerous. Senior Iranian officials, led by the Supreme Leader, pledged to revenge and make Israel “regret” its action. If the world had lived since the start of the Flood operation on the timing of the Gaza tragedy, after the attack on the consulate, it moved to Iranian time.

Last week, the countries of the Middle East, along with the major capitals, were preoccupied with one question: Where will Iran respond? This question dominated screens and social media, accompanied by many parallel speculations.

Will we witness the fall of missiles and drones launched explicitly from Iranian territory to attack targets in Israel? If that is true, what will be the size of the strike? What will be the Israeli response to it? Will we see Israeli aircraft attacking targets in Iranian territory? What about Iranian nuclear facilities? Will America participate in intercepting Iranian missiles? What will the next day be like? Can America stay out of a direct Israeli-Iranian confrontation?

It is obvious that we are in the most dangerous phase of the conflict that began six months ago. Netanyahu decided to shuffle the cards on the verge of expanding the conflict. Any direct Israeli-Iranian clash will plunge the Gaza war into a war over the boundaries of roles and spheres of influence in the region. In this war, the new alignment will not be in favor of Gaza. Moving from Gaza timing to Iranian timing may result in a 'flood' that's difficult to contain.