IDF 'more ready than ever' to strike  Iran, security official says - http://www.timesofisrael.com/idf-more-ready-than-ever-to-strike-iran-security-official-says/
Though  military option is not likely at this point, army is constantly adapting and  improving for possible attack, Walla reports
The  Israeli military is readier now than it ever has been to carry out a strike on  Iran's nuclear facilities should it be instructed to do so, a senior security  official told Walla news Monday. 
"Every  year that passes, the IDF improves," the unnamed official said. "We never stand  still. The professional level increases. In the coming year we will receive  another submarine, F-35 fighter jets and other platforms. Intelligence is  improving as well," he said.
He  noted that Israel's defensive capabilities against Iranian retaliation were also  constantly improving.
But  the news site noted that the military option had essentially been suspended in  recent years and would not be easily reinstated unless there is a fundamental  change in the political landscape, or a serious development in Iran's alleged  progress towards a nuclear bomb.
A  strike is looking increasingly unlikely following July's nuclear accord between  Iran and world powers - the US, EU, Russia and China.
According  to the Walla report, IDF Chief of Staff Gadi Eizenkot instructed his deputy,  Major General Yair Golan, to reevaluate the military's plans in light of the  accord and adapt them to recent developments.
Israel  has been abuzz in recent days over newly released recordings made by former  prime minister and defense minister Ehud Barak which revealed purported Israeli  deliberations on ultimately abandoned strikes on Iran.
In  the tapes, Barak claims that he and Netanyahu wanted to attack Iran in 2010, but  that the chief of staff at the time Gabi Ashkenazi indicated that there was no  viable plan for such an operation; that they were thwarted in 2011 by the  opposition of fellow ministers Moshe Ya'alon and Yuval Steinitz; and that a  planned 2012 strike was aborted because it happened to coincide with a joint  Israel-US military exercise and Israel did not want to drag the US into the  fray.
Channel  2 said that "anger" at the former defense minister's statements was widespread  among the Israeli leadership, and that numerous senior political and security  officials were also privately intimating that Barak's version of events was not  entirely accurate.
Israel's military response to Iran's  rocket salvo was too short on deterrence - http://www.debka.com/article/24832/Israel's-military-response-to-Iran's-rocket-salvo-was-too-short-on-deterrence-
The  four rockets fired from Syria into Israel's Galilee and Golan Thursday, Aug. 20  were Iran's way of testing how far Israel's government and military leaders were  willing to go militarily in support of their political campaign against a "bad  nuclear deal" in the US congress and Iran's bad intentions in general. Tehran  needed to test the credibility of the warning issued by Prime Minister Binyamin  Netanyahu during his visit to the IDF Northern Command on Aug. 18.
Seen  in that light, Israel's artillery, missile and aerial strikes Thursday night and  Friday against Syrian military targets in the Quneitra district and  contradictory rhetoric were the right reaction. They were confused enough to  leave the Iranians totally at sea, wondering if that was the sum total of  Israel's response to the first unprovoked rocket attack from the Syrian Golan in  42 years.
But  the Iranians chose to voice their thoughts in another arena. Saturday, they  unveiled their new Fateh 313 short-range, surface missile, which is highly  accurate at a range of 500 km. They also displayed new satellite launch engines.  Tehran clearly judged the Israeli response to the rocket attack to be deficient  in strategic value and it stood ready for the next round.
 This  episode exposed the real muddle governing government Israel's policies for Iran  and Syria. Official spokesmen first accused Iran of staging the rocket attack,  then the Palestinian Islamic Jihad - funded and armed by Iran's Al Qods  Brigades.  Israel next leveled its counter-strikes against Syrian military  positions around Quneitra. Why? Because the rockets were fired from territory  controlled by Bashar Assad's army, the spokesmen explained.
But  Assad's army has lost control of large stretches of Syria, and Israel claims  that the Iranians alone call the shots in Damascus these days. Striking Syrian  army positions on the Golan was therefore a pointless exercise.
And  if the real culprits were the Islamic Jihad - hence the Israeli air strike  Friday which claimed to have killed the four-man rocket cell - then why not go  for this terrorist group's primary bases in the Gaza Strip and  Lebanon?
The  Iron Dome batteries deployed last week to protect Ashdod and Beersheba from Gaza  rockets must have sent a strong message to Tehran that Israel prefers to avoid  offensive action and would rather stay on the defensive against its  enemies.
This  Israeli posture has produced four repercussions:
1.   Iran can continue to engineer rocket attacks from Syria against northern Israel  and is in fact free to calibrate their intensity to suit its wider strategy. The  first attack last Thursday deliberately targeted open ground and avoided causing  casualties or major damage. But Iran's finger remains poised over the tuning  button.
2.   The Iranians and their Hezbollah pawns are not losing a moment's sleep over the  damage Israel's counter-attacks inflicted on Assad's army.
3.   Tehran has grounds to presume from the experience of the past seven years that  Israel is highly reluctant to employ military action in support of its campaign  against a nuclear-armed Iran.  This conclusion is a crucial element in  Iran's decisions to continue to pursue diplomatic steps against the US, military  steps against Saudi Arabia and the rest of the Gulf emirates, and, above all,  carry on with its nuclear aspirations undisturbed.
4.   Domestic politics are a major contributor to the Israeli government's muddled  policies. The rocket episode was still not resolved when a bombshell from past  government controversies exploded Friday night.
TV  Channel 2 aired tapes of Ehud Barak, former prime minister and defense minister,  who was recorded as reporting that Israel had stepped back from attacking Iran's  nuclear program three times in the past.
Barak  was heard accusing the incumbent Defense Minister Moshe Ya'alon, and another  minister Yuval Steinitz of voting against an attack in an inner cabinet forum,  while Netanyahu and Barak himself were all for going ahead.
The  tapes were released by two writers of a new book.
Our  political sources suggest that the leak came from a domestic political source  bidding to discredit Ya'alon as too timid for the job. The culprit may even be  Barak himself, who retired from politics last year and may be keen to get his  old job back as defense minister in the Netanyahu government  coalition.
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