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Maj. Gen. (res.) Gershon Hacohen

Maj. Gen. (res.) Gershon Hacohen is a senior research fellow at the Begin-Sadat Center for Strategic Studies.

New threats require new defense concepts

The accumulation of threats Israel faces and the fact that they can now emerge on multiple fronts simultaneously require both the IDF and the homefront to brace for the unexpected. 

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and IDF Chief of Staff Lt. Gen. Aviv Kochavi have recently made it clear that addressing the threats Israel faces requires an urgent response. Some castigated them for sparking unnecessary anxiety, and while it is true that none of the current threats are new, they are all directed by Iran, making for a particularly volatile mix.

Unfortunately, a scenario by which Israel will face war on its northern and southern borders simultaneously is not far-fetched.

The waning American dominance in the Middle East has many implications on shaping the regional reality: Wars can erupt faster and – in the absence of a world power to restrain the parties involved – last longer. This change is not just the result of a shift in White House policy. It also reflects the change in the nature of the battlefield.

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Thus, for example, the introduction of advanced weapons in the Persian Gulf and the Middle East has undermined American military superiority. Recent publications by the US Department of Defense show that the Americans have realized how fast military technology and advanced weapons systems can become available on the private market – and certainly for the Iranians.

For example, Iran's strike on oil facilities in Saudi Arabia last month involved using cruise missiles and drones, guided by advanced intelligence processing technologies, which enabled them to defeat Saudi radars.

The Houthis, Iran's proxy in Yemen, have long been operating drones and cruise missiles. This is, in fact, a new balance of power that intensifies the Iranian influence in Iraq, Syria, Yemen, and Lebanon. This trend also threatens Jordan's stability.

Another component of this systemic change lies in the military buildup in Hezbollah in Lebanon and Hamas in the Gaza Strip.

While still defined as terrorist groups, in reality, these are military organizations. Kochavi calls them "terrorist armies" and indeed they are organized as armed forces with battalions, brigades, advanced weapons systems, and budgets afforded by their Iranian patrons, who supply them with increasingly advanced offensive capabilities.

Should war break out, this strategic change will be expressed in the challenge of defending the civilian homefront. GOC Homefront Command Maj. Gen. Tamir Yadai recently detailed the components of this new challenge, stating that "although the evolving threat to the homefront is known to the IDF, the cumulative change in the threat has not been defined."

One of the biggest challenges, he said, transcends the threat to civilian lives and strategic infrastructure and involves the fact that Hezbollah and Hamas are trying to move the fighting to Israeli soil.

The accumulation of threats and the fact that they can now be coordinated means at least part of the threat has evolved from quantitative to qualitative. Meeting this challenge requires proper organization on Israel's part with respect to the IDF's force buildup, as currently, it will struggle to address a multi-sector war.

This challenge mandates the IDF develops new operational concepts but the homefront must also prepare to deal with these new, and very real, threats.

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