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After the ‘mother of all wars', I found regret and celebration on the streets of Beersheba

After the ‘mother of all wars', I found regret and celebration on the streets of Beersheba

The Agea day ago

Beersheba: When trouble strikes, Rafael Aronov runs towards it.
During the October 7 attacks of 2023, the Israeli special forces police officer travelled to Ofakim, near the Gaza border, to fight off Hamas militants who had stormed into Israel and murdered civilians. When an Iranian missile struck a hospital in his home town of Beersheba last week, he served as a first responder, helping to evacuate injured patients.
On Tuesday morning, the war between Israel and Iran came into Aronov's own home when the walls of his apartment building started shaking as he and his wife, Lior, sheltered in their bedroom. An Iranian missile had directly struck an apartment building just a few hundred metres away, killing four of his neighbours and shattering the windows of his apartment.
The hit on Beersheba was one of the most damaging since Israel and Iran began trading fire 12 days earlier and the last to pierce Israel's air defences before a ceasefire deal took effect.
As he cleans up the broken glass from his apartment building, Aronov expresses mixed emotions about the truce. Part of him wishes that Israel had tried to overthrow Iran's theocratic regime and redraw the political map in the Middle East, not just weaken Tehran's military capabilities. 'The job is not done,' says the professional mixed martial arts fighter, who is nicknamed 'The Cop' because of his police work. 'Yet on the other hand, 28 people have died and that's a high price.' Among the Israelis who died on Tuesday: Eitan Zacks, an 18-year-old off-duty soldier; his mother, Michal; and his girlfriend, Noa, as they sheltered in their safe room.
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Like the vast majority of Israelis, Aronov has been an enthusiastic supporter of Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's decision to target Iranian nuclear enrichment and weapons manufacturing facilities. Polls show about eight in 10 Jewish Israelis backed the decision to attack Iran, which is loathed for supporting proxy groups targeting Israel including Hamas, Hezbollah and the Houthis.
'This is the most justified war somebody can have,' Aronov says. 'If Iran had a nuclear weapon it would be a threat to the entire world.'
He continues: 'The problem with the ceasefire is that in a few years we know this will all happen again. I hope the regime in Iran falls; that would be for the good of both people.'

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He's still alive – seemingly with 400kg of uranium. What will Iran's supreme leader do next?

The second objective – degrading Iran's military – looks to have been a roaring tactical success, although both the Iranians and Israelis will keep the details of the destruction secret. But it is clear Iran's military has taken a mauling. But the first and most important objective – and the only one shared by the United States – is shrouded in uncertainty. No one seems to know how badly the bombing damaged Iran's enrichment and processing facilities. No one seems to know the location of Iran's 400 kilograms of 60 per cent-enriched uranium – enough for almost a dozen bombs. And nor is it clear that all Iran's nuclear facilities were even known to the Israelis. 'I'm sure they have a hidden place somewhere with some hundreds, if not thousands, of centrifuges, and they have material all there in several places all over Iran,' Sima Shine, a former head of Mossad, Israel's overseas intelligence service, told the London Telegraph. 'They cannot do anything now, tomorrow, but in the future, they have all the capabilities [to build a bomb].' More important of all is political calculus. 'I told you so' For years, hardline Iranian commanders have urged Khamenei to stop procrastinating and just build a damned bomb. No other deterrent, they argued, could protect the regime from American or Israeli attack. Until now, Khamenei has resisted those calls, instead hoping that just the ability to build a bomb could provide a deterrent while avoiding the costs of actually doing so. With the 12-day war proving that theory useless, the weaponeers will now feel vindicated and will push their views even harder in Tehran. 'It's exactly the kind of debate that [they will] have at the Supreme National Security Council in Iran, and the supreme leader will have to decide about it,' says Citrinowicz. 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'They cannot do anything now, tomorrow, but in the future, they have all the capabilities [to build a bomb].' More important of all is political calculus. 'I told you so' For years, hardline Iranian commanders have urged Khamenei to stop procrastinating and just build a damned bomb. No other deterrent, they argued, could protect the regime from American or Israeli attack. Until now, Khamenei has resisted those calls, instead hoping that just the ability to build a bomb could provide a deterrent while avoiding the costs of actually doing so. With the 12-day war proving that theory useless, the weaponeers will now feel vindicated and will push their views even harder in Tehran. 'It's exactly the kind of debate that [they will] have at the Supreme National Security Council in Iran, and the supreme leader will have to decide about it,' says Citrinowicz. 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Specifically, it provided the technology for the Syrian reactor at Al Kibar that Israel destroyed in 2007. It is the only country known to have done so, says Citrinowicz, making it the logical candidate for the Iranians to approach, especially given both countries' alliance with Russia in Ukraine. Rule nothing out But there is a big problem. All of this would depend on the Iranian nuclear programme remaining so secret that neither Israel nor America could discover it and destroy it. Given the level of intelligence penetration Iran suffered over the past two weeks, there is no guarantee of that. Loading 'I'm not saying this is going to happen, but I'm saying that we have to look outside the box. We have to be ready for the unexpected,' says Citrinowicz. 'Everything that we knew about Iran changed dramatically after our attack. In this situation right now, we cannot rule out anything.' The Telegraph, London

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