US Army Chief Dempsey: US, Israel View Iran Threat Very Differently

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us-general-martin-dempseyThe United State and Israel view the Iranian nuclear threat very differently, Gen. Martin Dempsey, the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, said.

In an interview with the National Journal, published Thursday, the US army chief said, “We have to acknowledge that they … see that threat differently than we do. It’s existential to them.”

Dempsey, who visited Israel last week for talks with senior military and political officials, was quoted by the weekly as saying he and the Israelis each argued their positions “aggressively,” but conceded that the close allies simply see the threat – and potentially how soon to act against it – very differently.

“My intervention with them was not to try to persuade them to my thinking or allow them to persuade me to theirs, but rather to acknowledge the complexity and commit to seeking creative solutions, not simple solutions,” he told the National Journal.

In the interview, Dempsey said the army supported the Obama administration’s determination to prevent Iran from developing a nuclear weapon by any means necessary, but cautioned that using force should be a last resort.

“We are determined to prevent them from acquiring that weapon, but that doesn’t mean dropping bombs necessarily,” he said. “I personally believe that we should be in the business of deterring as the first priority,” he said.

However, Dempsey added that Washington was increasing its economic and diplomatic pressure on Tehran while making preparations – if there was no other option – for possible military intervention in the Islamic Republic.
He claimed economic and diplomatic pressure is beginning to show results and it would be “premature” to resort to military force.

“I do think the path we’re on-the economic sanctions and the diplomatic pressure-does seem to me to be having an effect,” Dempsey said. “I just think that it’s premature to be deciding that the economic and diplomatic approach is inadequate.”

He added: “A conflict with Iran would be really destabilizing, and I’m not just talking from the security perspective. It would be economically destabilizing.”

{Ynet.co.il/Matzav.com Newscenter}


2 COMMENTS

  1. We for one, would rather be alive than have economic stability.

    If we are not mistaken, the Iranian leadership has said many times that their intentions were to wipe Israel off the map. Whether one supports the notion of the State of Israel or not, the Persian threat puts six million Yidden at risk. We cannot find any thing that suggests we should not defend the lives of Yidden in the face of a threat.

    Other than the crazy Neturei Karta, we as Yidden simply cant try to explain this threat away by citing Kesubos 111A. Yes we were suppose to be the tenants and not the landlord, but we cannot find anything to support sitting on our hands if the landlord is threatening to exterminate us.

    Persia, by their own hand and that of their proxies have lost their collective minds. We support a pre-emptive strike in an attempt to protect six million Yidden.

    Bad idea, maybe, but we have yet to hear a plan that creates a better result.

  2. It is a shame that people keep reciting
    Kesubos 111A to bash Israel as a sovereign
    country which has a Divine entitlement to
    exist and prosper as any other nation.
    (The aforementioned talmudic section is not
    intended as a definitive “halchic”
    pronouncement against statehood. There is
    no such “halacha” in our Shulchan Aruch.)

    Israel has the right to defend itself.
    Self-defense is in fact codified as “halacha”
    (See Mishnah Berurah Hilchos Shabbos which
    calls for proactive self-defense against
    border incursions.)

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