By John Podhoretz
Friday, June 13, 2025
Zionism, under assault as never before since October 7 as
an idea and a doctrine, legitimized itself as a crucial part of the history of
the human race this day.
Not that it needed legitimizing, but let’s put it this
way: The Zionist “experiment” is no longer an experiment. Israel is now a
reality. It will endure, as the Jewish people have endured. The meaning of the
attack on Iran is unmistakable. Israel will not allow itself to be wiped off
the earth, and it will not allow the Jewish people to cower in terror at their
future. And it will thrive, as successful nations that defend themselves from
evil and prevail in the wake of it always thrive.
Consider: Israel has gone from being one of the poorest
countries on this earth to one of the richest over the course of its nearly 80
years of existence. It is all but alone among the advanced societies to be
replenishing and reproducing itself with a birthrate more than double that of
Western Europe. Israel sees a future and is building that future, and one of
the ways it is ensuring that future is by eliminating the threats to its
future.
The Zionist visionaries of the 19th and early 20th
centuries, from Herzl to Jabotinsky, had different understandings of what a
Jewish state could be. But that the Jewish State would end up economically and
militarily and culturally and existentially strong they did not doubt. In his
utopian 1903 novel, Alteneueland—Old-New Land—Herzl’s characters
disappear for 20 years on a sea journey from Haifa and then return to a Haifa
in a newly constituted Jewish state, where they are told: “Jewish children used
to be pale, weak, timid. Now look at them!…We took our children out of damp
cellars and hovels, and brought them into the sunlight. Plants cannot thrive
without sun. No more can human beings. Plants can be saved by transplantation
into congenial soil. Human beings as well. This is how it happened!”
The Israel Herzl envisioned in Alteneueland bears
no resemblance to the Israel that now exists or has ever existed—it is the
dream of a secular European with Fabian tendencies—but the idea that Jews would
thrive in sunlight has been borne out in spectacular fashion. “Our own people,
the pariah nation, realized that its salvation lay within itself…and threw
themselves into the national enterprise of restoration.” Its salvation lay
within itself. The Jews, a people powerless and defenseless for nearly two
millennia, spent their first two decades in their own country building up a
military that came as a complete shock and surprise to the Arab nations
determined to cause its demise. Brought into the sunlight, and faced with the
necessity of finding their salvation in themselves, the Jews of Israel turned
into a military power by sheer force of will and determination and triumphed in
the Six Day War, which took place 58 years ago this week.
That was the work of a generation, the first generation
of Sabras. The attack on Iran is also the work of a generation. This
multi-pronged, multifaceted war of salvation is the result of two decades of
planning and execution. We’ve seen bits and pieces of it along the way—the
penetration of Iranian computer systems with the Stuxnet virus, the elimination
of nuclear scientists designing the systems intended to destroy the Jewish
people, and their daring seizure of the entirety of the Iranian nuclear program’s
paper trail. But even with those signs of Israel’s startling ability to
penetrate the Islamic Republic’s hard shell, the world was shocked and dazzled
last year when Israel took out Iran’s air defenses using military means no one
even knew existed before.
And even with that display of remarkable
ingenuity, the sheer scale of the first night’s sorties and attacks leaves one
breathless with wonder. The elimination of Iran’s senior military officials
(through on-the-ground intelligence) coupled with attacks on ballistic missile
platforms and factories and the evident destruction of the nuclear site at
Natanz pretty much all at once not only reveals Israel’s complete penetration
of Iran’s society at every level, but also the fact that it could only have
happened with decades of preparation.
Twenty-four years ago, Iran’s president, the Ayatollah
Rafsanjani—a supposed “moderate”—spoke these words only months after September
11 made the world aware of the mass-murdering nature of the Islamist threat to
the West: “If one day, the Islamic world is also equipped with weapons like
those that Israel possesses now, then the imperialists’ strategy will reach a
standstill because the use of even one nuclear bomb inside Israel will destroy
everything. However, it will only harm the Islamic world.” In other words,
damage might be done outside Israel if there were to be a nuclear exchange, but
that would be worth it, because Israel would cease to exist.
In 2005, Rafsanjani was succeeded by Mahmoud Ahmadinejad,
who began to make even more explicit what Rafsanjani had implied: “Thanks to
people’s wishes and God’s will, the trend for the existence of the Zionist
regime is downwards….The Zionist regime will be wiped out soon.” For decades,
Iranian mullahs and leaders had chanted “Death to America” and “Death to
Israel,” but this was something different. Iran’s nuclear ambitions were real
and the purpose of going nuclear was millenarian and apocalyptic and aimed at
the Jews.
In the days, weeks, months, and years to come, we will
learn some, if not all, of what Israel determined it needed to do to slow down,
halt, and destroy Iran’s apocalyptic ambitions. The nature of the operation, or
operations, is likely to dwarf any such military/intelligence effort ever
before seen on this earth. And it happened because it had to happen. Because
Israel is real. Because Israel is a nation of 9 million and was not going to
allow itself to be destroyed.
More important, the execution of this plan followed
Israel’s greatest military and intelligence failure—the failure to keep track
of Hamas’s evildoing, under the assumption that Israel had had Hamas contained
and without the ability to strike catastrophically. Perhaps we can surmise that
Israel’s desire to believe it had neutralized the Hamas threat using
missile and rocket defenses had something to do with the depth of focus and the
amount of energy its leaders were expending to watch and plan and develop
weaponry and countermeasures against Iran. Perhaps they just didn’t have (as we
say these days) enough “bandwidth” for both.
But the catastrophe of October 7 also revealed just how
determined Iran was to put its plan to destroy Israel into action, and thereby
triggered Israel’s own ultimate countermeasures—the war in Gaza, the
destruction of Hezbollah in Lebanon, the elimination of Iran’s air defenses,
and now the determination to rid the world of Iran’s nuclear sites, its
ambitions for nuclearization, and perhaps even the destruction of the Iranian
regime.
One stands mute at the audacity of the planning and the
magnificence (thus far) of the execution. And one wonders, yet again, if what
is happening here is once more a sign not just of Israel finding its own
salvation in Jewish self-rule–but of God’s providence.
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