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April 15, 2024 [View in browser]( Welcome back! Senior correspondent Zack Beauchamp is back today â to break down the news over the weekend about Iran's retaliatory attack against Israel. âCaroline Houck, senior editor of news [missiles seen over tel aviv] Mostafa Alkharouf/Anadolu via Getty Images Iranâs retaliatory attack on Israel, explained When [Iran]( launched [a large retaliatory drone and missile assault on Israel]( on Saturday night, it [raised fears]( that the Middle East was on the precipice of a regional war. But by Sunday morning, the situation looked far less dire. Iran had telegraphed elements of its attack and its willingness to end the two-week period of hostilities there. And assisted by the United States and its Arab neighbors, [Israel]( shot down [99 percent of the drones and missiles]( heading in its direction. Those strikes that got through did not kill anyone, doing [minor damage to a military base]( and [injuring a child](. If this sounds like an Israeli victory, thatâs because it was. Two weeks earlier, Israel escalated its several-year-old [assassination campaign against top Iranian security figures]( by killing a senior Iranian general at the countryâs embassy in Syria â a brazen move given that states generally treat embassies as militarily out-of-bounds. Iranian Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei billed Tehranâs response as â[punishment](â for that attack, but the failure to do significant harm illustrated that Israel is fairly well shielded from Iranâs vaunted drone and missile fleet. Iran âhad to realize that any strike on Israel would benefit Israelâs end game far more than Iranâs. That they chose to attack anyway shows one again that strategy is always the victim of emotion,â [writes Afshon Ostovar](, an expert on the Iranian military at the Naval Postgraduate School. Israel hit Iran in an especially harsh way and more or less got away with it. But this does not mean things are stable between Israel and Iran. Far from it. The immediate question is whether Israelâs leadership understands when to leave well enough alone. Prime Minister [Benjamin Netanyahu]( has proven himself reckless during the [Gaza]( war and depends on some exceptionally extreme governing partners to stay in power. The United States is trying to restrain him â with [President Joe Biden]( reportedly telling Netanyahu to â[take the win](â â but itâs unclear if he will. And even if Israel chooses restraint for now this episode may have permanently raised the risk of a wider war between Jerusalem and Tehran. [An Iranian pro-government supporter holds up a picture of slain Gen. Qassem Soleimani at Palestine Square in Tehran, on April 14, 2024 in front of an anti-Israel sign] Hossein Beris / Middle East Images/AFP via Getty Images What was Iran thinking? When news of Iranâs attack broke Saturday night, a former US military officer who studies Iran texted me skeptically. âNone of these drones get through,â he correctly predicted. Iran had indeed chosen a curious strategy. Tehran had been telegraphing a response targeting Israeli territory for weeks, giving Israel and its allies plenty of time to prepare. The drones it chose to launch were slow-moving, taking hours to reach Israeli airspace and passing over neighboring countries (notably Jordan) that shot them down. Fears that Iran would overwhelm Israelâs air defenses with [fast-moving missiles proved largely unfounded](. There are two basic ways to think about Iranâs intent in light of this failure. Itâs entirely possible that Iran miscalculated. In this scenario, Iran attempted to do real damage to Israel and simply failed to appreciate its enemiesâ capabilities. Leading [military analysts]( and [defense reporters]( see this interpretation as consistent with the structure of Iranâs strike, particularly its use of ballistic missiles and targeting of a military base in Israelâs south. But itâs also possible Iran didnât intend to do serious damage to Israel. In this second scenario, Tehran merely aimed for a symbolic strike so it wasnât seen as backing down after Israel struck its embassy. Thereâs precedent for this. After the United States [killed Qassem Soleimani](, the leader of Iranâs elite Revolutionary Guard Quds Force, in 2020, Iranâs military retaliation was limited to [firing missiles at a US airbase]( â a response successfully calibrated not to force the United States to retaliate further. Indeed, Iran is publicly signaling a similar intent: An official government account [tweeted that]( âthe matter can be deemed concludedâ even before the first drone reached Israeli airspace. Thatâs as close to publicly saying âthis is a fake attackâ as it gets in international relations. If Iran wasnât intending serious damage, then the attack wasnât as obviously a failure â but it still looks like a kind of strategic defeat. Iranâs ineffectual response sends a signal that Israel can attack Iranian interests with relative impunity because it is outclassed by Israel and its allies. [ In this handout photo provided by the White House, US President Joe Biden meets with members of the National Security team regarding the unfolding missile attacks on Israel from Iran, on April 13, 2024] Adam Schultz/The White House via Getty Images How things could calm down â or get worse With Iranâs retaliation largely a dud, Israel is in a stronger position than it was before it hit the Damascus embassy. Israel conducted arguably its most politically risky assassination of an Iranian military commander yet â one that [could have triggered an outright war](. And it emerged not just unscathed, but having demonstrated that its homeland appears safe from direct Iranian assault in the immediate future. The mass Iranian assault also seems to have galvanized [Israelâs Republican supporters in Congress](, where an aid package has been held up for months as part of the fight over support for Ukraine. But if Israel responds aggressively to Iranâs attack, all bets are off. Any major retaliation would force an Iranian response, potentially leading to an escalatory cycle that ends in a full-scale war. This would certainly pull in Iranâs regional proxies, most notably Hezbollah in Lebanon, and would result in tremendous amounts of death. Even if this disaster is averted, an Israeli response would infuriate the American government â which both played a critical role in intercepting Iranâs missile barrage and are [strongly opposing any future Israeli retaliation](. Israeli escalation would snatch strategic defeat from the jaws of victory. Yet Israelâs government is reportedly considering it anyway. A source told [reporter Ronen Bergman]( that âif the [internal government] talks were broadcast live on YouTube, youâd have 4 million people clamoring at Ben Gurion airport trying to get out of here.â Prior to October 7, Netanyahu had a reputation for being cautious about using force. But since the [Hamas]( attack, he has been astonishingly aggressive â embracing a maximalist, open-ended campaign in Gaza that has [killed tens of thousands of Palestinians while putting Israel on the road to strategic defeat](. The cooler heads in Israel seem to recognize reality. When war cabinet member [Benny Gantz vowed]( that âthis event isnât over yet,â he also said that âwe will build a regional coalition and we will make Iran pay the price at a time and in a manner that we chooseâ â framing that at least implies that Israel isnât planning imminent unilateral action. So Israel might yet get out of this mess without a major disaster. Yet experts also warn that this attack might have longer-term destabilizing ramifications. âEven if Israel chooses not to retaliate now, we are not quite back to where we were before. Status quo has changed with the precedent of a large-scale Iranian attack on Israel,â [writes Thomas Juneau](, a Middle East scholar at the University of Ottawa, who predicted âa higher baseline of tension and violenceâ going forward. A [post-attack statement from Hossein Salami](, the leader of Iranâs Revolutionary Guard, supports Juneauâs analysis. Salami said Iran has âdecided to create a new equationâ with Israel, one where any Israeli attack against Iranian personnel anywhere will be met with direct attacks by Iran on Israel. Previously, Israel had managed to conduct strikes on Iranian interests in places like Syria without direct retaliation â which carries greater risks of escalation to out-and-out war. On Saturday night, the term âWorld War IIIâ began trending on Twitter/X. Itâs safe to say at this point that these fears were overblown. But the Middle East remains a powder keg â one thatâs slightly more stuffed with gunpowder than it was before. â[Zack Beauchamp, senior correspondent]( [Listen]( America at war, now in theaters The new movie Civil War delivers a sensational story about political polarization spilling into mass violence. If that seems reckless, itâs what apocalyptic films have done forever. [Listen now]( TAX DAY TIPS - Tips for first-time filers: âShould you hire someone to help? Whatâs your filing status? And more questions on US taxes, answered.â [[Vox](]
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- A reminder that many people can file for free: Here are four programs itâs worth checking to see if you qualify to use. [[Vox](] [tax forms] Lori Van Buren/Albany Times Union via Getty Images AROUND THE WORLD - Well, thatâs demoralizing: A new study of 19 countries found that voters in eight of them preferred âa strong leader who doesnât have to bother with parliament or elections.â [[AP](]
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