National
Review Online
Friday,
October 13, 2023
There’s still
much that we don’t know about the Hamas massacre. But what we do know
is as outrageous as it is unsurprising: Iran is also responsible.
The
Islamic dictatorship has armed, funded to the tune of tens of millions of
dollars, and otherwise assisted Hamas over many years. That is a universally
recognized fact, acknowledged by the U.S. State Department and by the regime
itself. Now, at least 25 American citizens are dead: murdered, brutally, by
Iran’s terrorist force on the Gaza Strip. Others have been taken hostage.
America must now respond: to restore deterrence, neutralize the Iranian terror
threat, and prevent further carnage.
The
latest report on Iran’s involvement, via the Wall
Street Journal,
says that U.S. intelligence analysts believe that while the regime knew about
Hamas’s plan to carry out attacks against Israel, it was not briefed on their
timing or scope. That follows another report from the paper quoting Hezbollah
and Hamas leaders as saying that Iran was so deeply involved in the planning
that its foreign minister took part in coordinating meetings in Lebanon and
ultimately gave the green light for the operation to move forward.
The Washington
Post reported Monday that intelligence sources believe the attack
“bore hallmarks of Iranian support” including training, funding, logistical
support, and technical assistance in manufacturing weapons from Iran’s Islamic
Revolutionary Guard Corps and Hezbollah.
But the
Biden administration and the Israeli government have avoided linking Tehran too
directly to the terrorist plot. The line out of the White House, pushed by
national-security adviser Jake Sullivan, is that Iran is “complicit” but that
the U.S. does not have evidence of a direct Iranian hand in the plots.
Whatever
the exact nature of Iran’s complicity, it’s undeniable that without Tehran’s
support, Hamas would not have been capable of carrying out this attack as it
did. There’s also no doubt about the regime’s frankly eliminationist intent, as
indicated by its financing and arming of Hamas — and the Ayatollah Khamenei’s
comments as his proxies executed Israelis along the border with Gaza.
“God
willing, the cancer of the usurper Zionist regime will be eradicated at the
hands of the Palestinian people and the Resistance forces throughout the
region,” he wrote on Twitter as the attacks unfolded. More recently, he
has denied any Iranian role, while cheering on the terrorists from the
sidelines: “Of course, the entire Islamic world is obliged to support the
Palestinians, and God willing they will support them,” he said this week, while
he issued a denial that Iran was involved at all.
At the
end of the day, the buck stops with Tehran, whether the country’s leadership
coordinated Hamas’s planning and approved the killings, was briefed on some
aspects of it, or just funded the terrorist group with the understanding that
it would one day carry out attacks of this nature.
An
appropriate U.S. response starts with reversing Team Biden’s Iran rapprochement
program, officially firing Iran envoy Rob Malley (who is currently suspended
and facing investigation), and putting an immediate end to sanctions-relief
efforts.
The
Biden administration appears to have responded to congressional pressure, with
officials reportedly briefing lawmakers Thursday that the $6 billion in frozen
assets it released to a Qatar-controlled account for Iran’s use as part of the
recent hostage deal would remain frozen.
But
there are billions more in funds that the administration has allowed to go to
Iran, including a recent waiver to unfreeze $10 billion previously held by
Iraq, and an easing up of oil sanctions. All of that needs to be undone, to the
extent possible, and Congress needs to increase its pressure on the White House
to that end.
Above
all else, America needs to reestablish the deterrence that has eroded for three
years now. President Biden sounded some helpful notes in his remarks on
Tuesday, telling other actors thinking of taking advantage of the situation
that they should not. Sending a carrier strike group to the Mediterranean was
also the right move. Biden must also return to the Trump-era policy that held
Iran directly responsible for its proxies’ attacks on Americans. The drone
strike that killed Qasem Soleimani demonstrated that policy in action; it
humbled Tehran and put a limit on its foreign misadventures, at least for a
while.
As
Washington moves to counter Iran’s terrorism, it must be keenly aware that
Tehran’s other proxies are already threatening retaliation against Israel for its
operations against Hamas targets in Gaza. Hezbollah and the IRGC’s Quds Force
are already known to operate within the U.S. Hamas has also called for its
supporters across the world to take to the streets on Friday.
Hamas
and Iran inflicted unspeakable evil on Israel last week. But if America doesn’t
get the next part right, the worst might be yet to come.
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