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Israeli Air Force Holds Massive Drills To Hit ‘Remote’ Targets; Expert Says Iran’s Nuke Facilities On Radar

The secret exercise by the Israeli Air Force (IsAF) over the Cypriot air space with elements of US support suggests Tel Aviv always anticipated Iran to retaliate after it bombed Tehran’s embassy in the Syrian capital of Damascus.

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The Israeli strike on Tehran’s embassy in Damascus killed 12 people, including Mohammed Reza Zahedi, a senior leader in Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC), and six other guard members.

While this is no surprise given how it has long tested Tehran’s red lines, the drills suggest that Israel might have far deeper and long-term goals for which it might be willing to risk a short, sharp, wider regional war.

Other analysts say that Israel aims to limit the impact of the grinding and painful operations inside Gaza that are engaging a lot of Israeli resources by drawing the US into a regional war with Iran. 

And those long-term goals cannot be achieved by merely striking Iranian military targets in response to a retaliation by Tehran but its nuclear facilities.

This is because although Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary doctrine bans the military use of atomic energy, its nuclear enrichment still gives it massive leverage before Western powers and ensures what it believes is its “survival” in a permanently hostile environment led by Israel and the United States. 

US, Israel & Iran’s Nuclear Facilities

Israel, the US, and Western allies say that Iran is enriching uranium to levels of purity that have no civilian use and are bringing it to the threshold of producing a nuclear weapon. 

Israel also has a history of carrying out strikes on enemy nuclear facilities in the past, a famous one being June 1981’s Operation Opera, where it bombed Iraq’s nuclear reactor at Osirak during Saddam Hussein’s regime.

Additionally, it has also practiced air raids on Iranian nuclear facilities in the recent past when tensions were high. 




F-35 - File Image
F-35 – File Image

Iran has a host of nuclear facilities, including research reactors at Bonab, Ramsar, and Tehran; a heavy water reactor and production plant at Arak; a nuclear power station at Bushehr; a Uranium mine at Gachin; a Uranium conversion plant at Isfahan; a uranium enrichment plant at Natanz, Qom; and another underground Uranium enrichment facility at Fordow.  

Recent IsAF Exercises

Reports quoting Israeli military correspondent Doron Kadosh said that the IsAF conducted a drill “simulating the scenario of an Iranian attack…in cooperation with Cyprus and the United States forces.”

“The participants are said to have practiced long-range attacks, playing out the scenario of retaliation against Iran,” reports quoted Kadosh saying on Israeli Army Radio. 

Kadosh wrote: “As part of increasing preparation for Iran’s possible response, which may also be followed by an Israeli response on Iranian soil, in recent days, a joint exercise was carried out with the Cypriot army in the airspace of Cyprus, simulating an air operation and an attack on a remote target.” 

Kadosh also quoted a senior IDF official as saying: “We know and are prepared to act in any arena and maintain independent abilities to act on our own—we don’t rely on anyone.” 

April 11 also saw Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu visiting the Tel Nof Airbase, where he said the country was preparing for challenges on other fronts and to “address Israel’s security needs in defense and offense.”

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