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53165


Date: March 08, 2024 at 20:20:59
From: akira, [DNS_Address]
Subject: Will US troops be drawn into the Israel-Gaza war?

URL: https://responsiblestatecraft.org/us-israel-war/


OCT 12, 2023

Will US troops be drawn into the Israel-Gaza war?

A former CIA counterterror analyst says the chances of direct American
involvement are ‘higher than most people realize.’

CONNOR ECHOLS

It’s now been five days since Hamas staged the most ambitious attack in its
history. The Palestinian militants broke through the fence dividing Gaza from
Israel and managed to hold territory for several days, killing at least 1200
civilians and Israeli military personnel along the way.

Israel has responded with a devastating attack on Gaza, killing at least 1100
civilians and Hamas fighters in days of airstrikes that are a likely prelude for a
ground invasion, the first since 2014.

Tel Aviv’s response has received emphatic support from the United States,
which has greenlit emergency weapons shipments, moved an aircraft carrier
strike group into the eastern Mediterranean, and pledged logistical and
intelligence support for Israel as it tries to recover more than 100 hostages
taken back into Gaza by Hamas, some of whom are American citizens.
Washington has also warned Hamas allies — including Iran and Hezbollah —
against entering the fight.

While President Joe Biden has not yet sent troops to join the conflict, the
possibility that the United States will wind up at war in the Middle East is now
“higher than most people realize,” according to Michael DiMino, a researcher
at Defense Priorities who worked as a counterterrorism analyst at the CIA
during multiple regional crises.

“Once that box is opened — even if due to accident or miscalculation — it
can't easily be closed,” DiMino argued. “I don't think this Administration
wants to get embroiled in a new Middle East hot war for a number of reasons,
but sometimes intent isn't enough to prevent things from spiraling out of
control.”

RS spoke with DiMino to understand if and how the United States can
prevent that spiral of escalation. The following conversation has been edited
for length and clarity.

RS: You've said that the risk of direct U.S. involvement in this war is higher
than most people realize. Can you start by explaining why? What are analysts
missing?

DiMino: Having spent time working crises in the region, whether it was the
Turkish incursion into Syria, or the war in Yemen, or the aftermath of the
Soleimani strike, what people miss is that as soon as we start surging forces
to the region — naval forces, air assets — as soon as that stuff starts to
happen, the playbook for policymakers necessarily has to widen on
contingency planning. And that involves direct U.S. involvement in some
cases. Also, people are missing the sheer number of variables of things that
can happen. Just because the U.S. may have a stated intention to avoid
deeper conflict or just because Hezbollah has not committed forces beyond
the border, just because the intention is there does not mean that
miscalculation, missed signals, and events on the ground can't just force
chains of events into action.

One thing I would give an example of is the question of unity of command.
We can't talk about groups like Hezbollah as these monolithic organizations.
They may receive orders not to do something, and you're relying on local
command and control nodes to make sure that you don't have a rogue cell of
Hezbollah guys that decide to go into Israel or decide to carry out another
set of attacks or widen the front in other places. There's all sorts of unity of
command issues that can really pressure policymakers into widening the
conflict.

The Israelis have said that opening a significant additional front would be
grounds for U.S. involvement. Even if we don't think that Hezbollah senior
leadership is supportive of that, you have to rely on 1000s of fighters and
local commanders understanding those priorities as well. Even if we feel
confident that the U.S. doesn't want to go further, or we feel confident that
certain governments in the region are being at least somewhat restrained in
how they're responding to this, I don't think that's enough. From a military
and intelligence perspective, I don't think people appreciate the sheer
number of variables that go into a very hot, minute-by-minute crisis like this.

RS: What might the big fear of escalation be here? Is this fear that there'll be
a potential war with Iran? Why should Americans be concerned about the
potential for direct U.S. intervention?

DiMino: As soon as we make commitments to our partners and allies, and
then those commitments get tested, it really pressures policymakers into a
shoebox where they feel like in order not to lose U.S. credibility or deterrence
capability, we have to respond. I'm not saying it's necessarily likely, but I'm
saying it is possible that if we promise to Israel that we will get involved
kinetically should Hezbollah decide to commit its forces, and then Hezbollah
does so, and then we start conducting strikes in Lebanon, then [the situation
could spiral].

At that point, I wouldn't be surprised if U.S. forces in Iraq and in Syria became
targets of Shia militia groups in those countries, and then I think there would
be pressure from Israel to try to support limited action against Iran.
Obviously, that would be a disaster for all parties involved, not least the
United States. I don't think that this administration wants to do that, but I do
think once these events start to roll together and the decision matrices and
the timelines that those decisions have to be made on get narrower and
narrower, that these kinds of things can happen.

I was working in the government during our last couple of rounds of
escalation with Iran, and I would say that even in a span of a couple of hours,
during those previous crises, we came very, very, very close to a new kind of
kinetic involvement in the Middle East. Seeing how quickly those decisions
were made and how little time policymakers really have to consider a lot of
this, I do think that, even if it's a minimal risk, it's one that we should take
seriously and that we should steel ourselves against. We should be holding
our policymakers to account to ensure that any kind of involvement that we
do provide in the Israel-Hamas context to Israel or other regional partners,
that we're doing so with a mind to de-escalate.

RS: The White House has pointedly avoided calling for a ceasefire or de-
escalation, and even deleted statements to that effect that had been tweeted
out. Do you think that's a wise strategy? How do you think those
conversations in public might differ from ones in private between U.S. and
Israeli officials?

DiMino: Behind closed doors, there are going to be calls between U.S. and
Israeli officials that I'm sure are centered around saying, "Look, we need you
guys to mitigate civilian casualties to the extent that you can." And I think the
wheels are already turning on discussions of what the off ramps are here. A
lot of this, though, hinges on what we see in the next couple of days. It
seems like everybody is waiting with bated breath on whether or not we see
an incursion into Gaza. The administration could be cautiously optimistic
that, as this new Israeli war cabinet gets put together, maybe some more
moderate voices are added to the room that have military and intelligence
backgrounds, that they could blunt any more aggressive policy options that
would make it harder to de-escalate. The administration is probably working
on those relationships right now. I think, though, that the effort is going to be
mostly done in private, and it's mostly going to be with an eye to try to
mitigate civilian casualties and hopefully have U.S. eyes on whatever kind of
planning is going on on the Israeli side.

RS: Does the public appearance of being in lockstep with Israel's decisions
raise the possibility of escalation with groups like Hezbollah and Iran that
might be inclined to see that as a sign of more direct involvement? If there's
no distance between the U.S. and Israel, you can see how they might
respond to that.

DiMino: To a certain extent, some of these groups are always going to see
the U.S. and Israel as very closely tied. I'm not sure that steps by the
administration in one way or the other would necessarily assuage groups like
that. I do think, though, what would be helpful is a little bit stronger signaling
to the rest of the region that we do want to de-escalate and that we're willing
to work with anybody to do that. At the end of the day, though, decisions by
terrorists on the ground are going to be driven by their own organizations
and their own ideologies. I don't think there's some statement that any one
person can make right now that would necessarily influence to the point
where certain decisions that were going to get made aren't made. I think we
need to do our best to signal, though, that we want de-escalation in very,
very subtle ways. There's been some of that, but we could do more. There's
just not much of an appetite for it right now, obviously, given how emotionally
charged the situation is on all sides. It's been terrible to witness all of this,
and especially at a time when I do think there were some hopes to maybe
move the region forward.

To some extent, that shows the folly of previous efforts that have been made
in the past several presidential administrations. The Abraham Accords left
out the issue of Israel-Palestine, and I think that's a massive mistake. That
was largely done because people thought that that's the thorniest issue, that
we could set it aside and solve 80% of the rest of the equation, but it doesn't
work that way. This conflict is so central to the region, and you can't really
address any kind of long-term political arrangements in the Gulf or in the
Middle East without also addressing it.

I know we may be a long ways away from this, but I'm hoping that, through all
of this, there may be a renewed understanding that this issue is central to the
Middle East. We can't just close our eyes and look away from it. We do need
to try to come to a solution that is in the best interest of everybody in the
long term. For the U.S. especially, we want to ultimately have a responsible
foreign policy that does less in the Middle East. To the extent that we can
have reasonable engagement with the Saudis, the Israelis, the Iranians, the
Emiratis, whoever else, that's in America's best interest in the long term.

Connor Echols
Connor Echols is a reporter for Responsible Statecraft. He was previously an
associate editor at the Nonzero Foundation, where he co-wrote a weekly
foreign policy newsletter. Echols received his bachelor’s degree from
Northwestern University, where he studied journalism and Middle East and
North African Studies.


Responses:
[53167] [53172] [53192]


53167


Date: March 08, 2024 at 20:28:15
From: akira, [DNS_Address]
Subject: risk of mission creep is very serious concern w/Biden's floating pier

URL: Biden’s State of the Union Showcased a President in Denial


Branko Marcetic
Mike DiMino explains why "the risk of mission creep is a very serious
concern" with Biden's floating pier idea.

Mike DiMino
As I told Branko Marcetic here in Jacobin, Biden's Gaza pier proposal
presents a false dilemma on how to best increase aid to Palestinian civilians.

It is dangerous, irresponsible, and could lead to U.S. troops getting directly
involved in the war.

Rather than a false choice between air drops and naval causeways, increased
U.S. diplomatic pressure on Tel Aviv and Cairo to allow in more aid is the most
straightforward way to improve humanitarian conditions on the ground.


Responses:
[53172] [53192]


53172


Date: March 09, 2024 at 06:02:18
From: shatterbrain, [DNS_Address]
Subject: Re: risk of mission creep is very serious concern w/Biden's floating...


Whenever the Gaffemaster in Chief sez that somtin will NOT
happen.....it eventually DOES happen. U.S. troops there
will become sitting ducks.


Responses:
[53192]


53192


Date: March 09, 2024 at 16:58:50
From: akira, [DNS_Address]
Subject: Concerned Veterans for America (CVA) on Friday responds to Biden...

URL: https://cv4a.org/news-media/cva-on-plan-to-build-port-in-gaza-risks-american-lives-escalating-conflict/?utm_source=CVA+Social&utm_medium=TWITTER&linkId=352367798


maybe Biden could entice Ukraine's Azov battalion to do build it instead.

CVA ON PLAN TO BUILD PORT IN GAZA: RISKS AMERICAN LIVES,
ESCALATING CONFLICT
By Concerned Veterans for America
03.08.24

ARLINGTON, Va. – Concerned Veterans for America (CVA) on Friday
responded to President Biden’s State of the Union announcement of an
“emergency mission” to Gaza, increasing America’s direct involvement in the
conflict and risking American lives.

In a statement, CVA Executive Director Russ Duerstine urged caution:

“Near the end of last night’s State of the Union address, President
Biden informed Congress and the American public the U.S. military would
construct a ‘temporary pier’ in Gaza to facilitate the distribution of aid.

By any definition, this would represent a major undertaking in a war zone. It
will risk the lives of U.S. service members and, should harm befall them, an
escalating conflict. But it will not resolve the underlying crisis. The United
States should avoid being drawn into another conflict in the Middle East.
After decades of open-ended missions in the region, it’s time to learn from
past mistakes and focus military resources on the protection of vital
American interests.”


Responses:
None


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