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Israel may have done the world an incalculable service – but do not expect many thank-yous

The paradox of preemption is that the very success of such an operation conceals the scale of the danger it prevented

June 13, 2025 09:30
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Smoke rises from a location targeted in Israel's wave of strikes on Tehran, Iran, on early morning of June 13, 2025. (Imaghe: Getty)
3 min read

The world may never fully grasp the magnitude of the debt it owes to Israel if it succeeds in neutralising Iran’s nuclear threat. That is the paradox of preemption: its very success conceals the scale of the danger it prevented. In taking decisive action against a regime armed with ballistic missiles capable of delivering nuclear warheads not only to Israel and the region but to Europe and, in time, the US, the Jewish state is shouldering a burden that should never have fallen on it alone.

In what Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu described in the early hours of Friday morning as “only the beginning”, some 200 Israeli fighter jets took part in attacks on nuclear and military facilities, as well as on senior figures within Iran’s military and nuclear programmes. The strikes, expected to continue for days, represent a bold and high-stakes attempt to dismantle Iran’s nuclear capabilities before they become irreversible. Early reports suggest significant successes – and at a critical moment.

Just two days earlier, US Secretary of Defence Pete Hegseth delivered a chilling assessment before Congress that received far too little attention. Asked whether Iran was attempting to build a nuclear weapon, he replied: “There are plenty of indications that they have been moving their way towards something that would look a lot like a nuclear weapon.” That warning came on the heels of a damning IAEA report revealing that Iran now possesses enough enriched uranium to produce nine nuclear bombs if further refined. Tehran is not only accelerating enrichment but concealing nuclear activities and systematically obstructing inspectors. The findings were so serious they triggered an unprecedented vote of censure by the IAEA Board of Governors.

Israel’s offensive followed exhaustive diplomatic efforts and clear warnings. President Trump had given Iran 60 days to negotiate a peaceful resolution. Tehran refused to budge. On day 61, the missiles flew. While Secretary of State Marco Rubio maintained that the US was not directly involved, it is inconceivable that a mission of this scale occurred without deep coordination with Washington. Trump has already pledged to defend Israel in the event of retaliation, while pointedly leaving the door open to diplomacy. Having now witnessed both Israel’s operational reach and America’s backing, the regime’s leadership may finally grasp that the cost of continuing its nuclear pursuit could be its own survival – and return to talks.