Map of the region before and after the Six-Day War (Source: BBC)
*Note: there was a development in this matter after I wrote the post that you may know from recent news. I address it at the end of the blog.
The Israel-Iran war is entering its second week (see last week’s blog). Prospects are cloudy, not only because of the fog of war but also because of electronic contributions on both sides and the almost total inability to predict President Trump’s reactions. Even though, like many others, I have access to certain American, Israeli, and Arab (Al Jazeera) news sources, this does not improve my ability to predict future outcomes. Below is an AI summary (through Microsoft Copilot) of the latest efforts to de-escalate the conflict. There is a good chance that by the time you read this, it will be mostly obsolete:
Efforts to de-escalate the Israel-Iran conflict are underway on multiple diplomatic fronts, though the situation remains highly volatile:
- European Diplomacy: Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi recently met with counterparts from the UK, France, Germany, and the EU in Geneva. These talks, which lasted twice as long as scheduled, aimed to explore a diplomatic resolution. Araghchi expressed Iran’s willingness to continue discussions, though he emphasized that Iran’s defense capabilities are non-negotiable.
- Gulf States’ Mediation: Countries like Saudi Arabia, the UAE, and Qatar are actively engaging both Iran and the U.S. to prevent further escalation. Saudi and Emirati leaders have spoken directly with Iran’s President, and the UAE has also reached out to Russia, which has offered to mediate.
- United Nations Involvement: The UN Security Council convened following Israeli airstrikes on Iran, with widespread calls for de-escalation and diplomacy. The UN’s political affairs chief warned of the regional and global consequences if the conflict continues unchecked.
- S. Position: President Trump has set a two-week window to decide whether the U.S. will join Israel’s offensive. While he has floated the idea of a military strike, the U.S. has also offered Iran a deal allowing a civilian nuclear program under international oversight—an offer still on the table.
Despite these efforts, Iran has stated it will not negotiate while under attack, and Israel appears committed to continuing its military campaign. The diplomatic window is narrow, but not yet closed.
The central issue is the degree of American involvement in helping Israel to destroy critical Iranian nuclear facilities—specifically, the Fordo nuclear enrichment site—and the Iranian reactions to such involvement.
The Iranian Fordo nuclear enrichment site, which also serves as the storage site for the highly enriched uranium, is deep underground. According to publicly available information, Israel doesn’t have the weapons to destroy it. Only the US has such weapons and the means to use them.
The June 13th Israeli attack on Iran was triggered by applying the Begin Doctrine, which was described in last week’s blog. Essentially, it states that Israel will do everything it can to prevent its direct enemies from acquiring nuclear weapon capabilities. This implies a frightening future escalation that could involve Pakistan, which borders Iran and is the only Muslim country with known nuclear weapon capabilities. However, Pakistan’s nuclear capabilities have always been considered in the context of its conflicts with India (also a nuclear weapon-possessing country). In May, Pakistan nominated President Trump for a Nobel Peace Prize based on his involvement in the two countries’ recent conflict, a move that pandered to his ego and was potentially meant to affect his approach to Israel and Iran.
As the previous examples show, one thing should be certain: the results of the Israel-Iran conflict will have a major impact on the Middle East and possibly on the rest of the world. When the future is unpredictable, we usually resort to the certainty of a relevant past. The most relevant past conflict between Israel and its strongest neighbor was the Six-Day War. The map at the top of this blog shows the direct consequence of that war on the Arab countries that surround Israel. The strongest impacts were on the Palestinian populations that resided in the territories that changed hands. One can find details of the background and the evolution of the war through the BBC link below the figure. Not surprisingly, it is a long article. A short paragraph in Wikipedia summarizes the most relevant aspects in terms of the Israeli policy at that time that initiated the Israeli attack on Egypt and Syria that started that war:
In the months prior to the outbreak of the Six-Day War in June 1967, tensions again became dangerously heightened: Israel reiterated its post-1956 position that another Egyptian closure of the Straits of Tiran to Israeli shipping would be a definite casus belli [act of war]. In May 1967, Egyptian president Gamal Abdel Nasser announced that the Straits of Tiran would again be closed to Israeli vessels. He subsequently mobilized the Egyptian military into defensive lines along the border with Israel[37] and ordered the immediate withdrawal of all UNEF personnel.[38][30]
I participated in that war, and I don’t care to cite my experiences here. Since this blog is focused on my personal experiences that are associated with major reality changes, I have written extensively about my Holocaust experiences. One experience, directly connected with the Six-Day War was never mentioned. June 13th refocused my memory on that event.
Starting with my first blog (April 22, 2012), I described my background and its impacts on how I view the changing reality. Others have labeled me as a “Holocaust survivor” and I identify as one. Per definition, I am a member of the last generation that carries this label. However, there is another label that fits my background, of which I am not the last generation. In fact, I share that label with my son: “pre-war baby” defined (by AI through Google) in the following way:
A “pre-war baby” generally refers to a child born or conceived before a significant war, most commonly World War II. This term is also sometimes used more broadly to describe those born before a major historical conflict. In the context of World War II, “pre-war” often refers to the period before 1945.
My son was born in Israel 10 months before the start of the Six-Day War (June 5, 1967). At that time, my wife and I were doctoral students in Israel. During the war, I was in the army and my wife shifted her doctoral research to something that could be useful in the war effort (battery development). My mother well remembered her experiences in Warsaw, a few months after my birth and during the six years that followed, and decided to try to change the scenarios. She contacted a friend from Bergen-Belsen, who at the time lived in Switzerland, and asked her permission to send my son to them. The friend agreed. My mother got permission from my wife, and my son was soon on his way. My son was accepted by the Swiss family, which has its own rich history, as a “refugee.” In few days, when the results of the war became clearer, his label changed from “refugee” to “tourist.”
I will finish this blog with excerpts from a recent Time Magazine special report on the Middle East (A New Middle East Is Unfolding Before Our Eyes) that will help us understand some past developments and prepare us for future developments:
It might be difficult to discern through the black clouds billowing from bomb craters in Tehran, but Iran has spent most of the 21st century as the region’s rising power.
Until recently, things had really been going its way. In Iraq, the U.S. toppled Saddam Hussein, then departed, having turned Iran’s largest and most dangerous neighbor from an enemy to a vassal even before Tehran’s militias rescued Baghdad from ISIS, and then stayed. The forces Iran sent to Syria did double duty, rescuing the Assad regime while opening an arms pipeline to Hezbollah, the Iran-backed militia fighting beside them. Based in Lebanon, Hezbollah was the crown jewel in the “Axis of Resistance” that Iran had arrayed against Israel.
For the Islamic Republic of Iran, it still does. Removal of the Jewish state from “Islamic lands” is core to the ideology of the 1979 Islamic Revolution, which casts Iran in the unlikely role of leader of the Muslim world. America is the Great Satan, but for Iran’s proxies in Baghdad, Lebanon, and Yemen, Israel is the target. So on the eve of Oct. 7, 2023, the leaders of Hamas, the only prominent Palestinian node in the axis, had reason to assume that after breaching Israeli defenses on the Gaza Strip and pouring into Israel by the thousands, they would not be fighting alone for long.
But the axis of resistance barely resisted at all. Hezbollah launched a few missiles a day toward Israel when the “Zionist entity” was most vulnerable. Iran’s leaders had scanned the battlefield, and, seeing an opponent backed not only by U.S. arms and intelligence, but also a nuclear arsenal, remembered why they were investing in one of their own: survival. In the words of Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini, creator of the theocratic system that governs Iran, “The preservation of the system is the highest priority.” Solidarity with the Palestinians was laudable, but there’s also such a thing as self-interest.
The fact is, most of the Arab world had made some accommodation or other with Israel. Egypt and Jordan, which share borders with Israel, signed peace treaties with it after suffering repeated military defeats at its hands. The Gulf states aligned with Israel in large part out of a shared enmity for Iran. As home to Islam’s dominant Sunni branch, the kingdoms know Iran not only as radical, but as the nominal leaders of the minority Shi‘ite branch, and thus a rival. Saudi Arabia, custodian of Islam’s holy sites, has its own claim to leadership of the world’s Muslims.
As autocratic states, the Gulf kingdoms were also eager clients for an Israeli tech sector that had grown out of its military. Surveillance, not least of millions of Palestinians under occupation (and obliged to use Israeli phone systems), generated startups like the spyware firm NSO Group, which soon found clients in the Arab regimes. One, the United Arab Emirates, was the first nation to cement diplomatic ties with Israel under the Abraham Accords, the signal diplomatic achievement of the first Trump Administration. Three other Arab states followed, and the Saudis keep signaling their intention to do the same once the situation in Gaza permits.
A day before this blog was shipped to my editor, Sonya, a major, though not unexpected development took place: the US entered the war. The key development was that the US bombarded the Fordo nuclear site (mentioned above) with bombs that only the US possesses, and this bombardment constitutes the first test of this weapon in a combat situation. Below are two independent references to these developments:
Reuters: Trump says Iran’s key nuclear sites ‘obliterated’ by US airstrikes
NYT: Trump Claims Success After Bombing Key Iran Nuclear Sites
A ceasefire was declared on the day before posting. Next week’s blog will focus some of the war consequences and on the question of whether this constitutes the beginning of the first nuclear war following the bombardment of Hiroshima and Nagasaki in 1945.