An Israeli attack seems “imminent.” Richard Silverstein circulates a leaked “shock and awe” strategy of Benjamin Netanyahu and Ehud Barak to decapitate and paralyze Iran. Alon Ben-Meir, an expert on Middle East politics specializing in peace negotiations between Israel and Arab states, says Israel is not bluffing. Israel may prefer an attack with the USA, but may go alone. Some people believe the nuclear bomb story. Others believe that the purpose is to achieve the vision of Israel as a Jewish state from the Nile to the Euphrates, also promoted by Netanyahu’s late father. The two stories do not exclude each other.

Iran is a Shanghai Cooperation Organization (SCO) observer. An attack will trigger responses from the Russia-China core. What the Israelis may gain in Saudi Sunni support, they may lose in more important parts of the world, in diplomatic and economic relations. The SCO is huge.

There is also the real danger of a world war involving NATO against SCO, with nuclear powers divided 4-4; the USA and Israel are indivisible as they came into being in the same way––by taking somebody else’s land.

Iran’s devastating responses will come before decapitation. However, could those installations be well protected by having alternate systems? Maybe decentralized in 31 separate regions? The Israelis are clever at destructive work, but may be underestimating their enemies. On the other hand, they seem to have no qualms about plunging the region and the world into something far beyond what they suffered themselves.

Israel would be wise to consider an old Jewish proverb: “The best way to get rid of your enemies is to make them your friends.” Bombing Iran would win Israel no true friends, neither in Iran nor in the rest of the world. It would only ignite Iran’s desire to develop nuclear weapons, with full understanding from most of the world.

Of course, the Iranians should prove themselves by opening their nuclear facilities to unimpeded inspections by the International Atomic Energy Agency. But the Israelis should do the same. The double standard, “We have a right to possess nuclear weapons, you don’t” is untenable.

Uri Avnery, in “A Putsch Against War” (May 2012) writes: “In our country we are now seeing a verbal uprising against the elected politicians by a group of current and former army generals, the former foreign intelligence chief (Meir Dagan of Mossad) and the former internal security chief (Yuval Diskin of Shin Beth) who condemn the government’s threat to start a war against Iran, and some of them condemn the government’s failure to negotiate-peace.” Some call anyone who criticizes Israeli policies an “anti-Semite” or a “self-hating Jew.”

Are they all in that category? Who is a better friend when someone walks with a blindfold toward an abyss? He who says, “Go right ahead, you are on the right track,” or he who says, “Stop, turn around, you are in grave danger! Do not turn attention away from Israel’s real crises!! (Peter Binary in “The Crisis of Zionism,” Gershom Gorenberg in “The Unmaking of Israel” 2011).

Rather, the option of a Middle East nuclear-free zone that includes Iran and Israel. Sixty-four percent of Israelis are in favor; as in Iran, provided Israel participates. Negotiate an agreement of that type and there would be a sigh of relief all over. And both countries would be embraced.

The background to the current climate is the 1953 CIA-MI6 coup which ousted Iran’s democratically-elected Prime Minister Dr. Mohammad Mossadegh, and brought in a 25-year dictatorship of Shah Reza Pahlavi. Apologies might go far toward solving the “nuclear crisis,” which will get worse unless something miraculous happens. Such miracles do occur. In the United Kingdom, Margaret Thatcher’s approach was to send more British troops to Northern Ireland, refusing to talk with “terrorists.” Tony Blair did better. He began a dialogue with Sinn Fein, and started withdrawing the British army. Since then, no more IRA bombs in England.

The onus is mainly on the West and on Israel. Or could it be that the whole nuclear issue is only a pretext to pave the way for the dream, an Israel, Zion between those two rivers?

That will never work. Israel can attain a lasting security only through peace with its neighbors, like in a Middle East community of Israel with its five Arab neighbors, Lebanon, Syria, Jordan, Egypt and Palestine; recognized according to international law, with the 1967 borders and some exchanges; Israeli cantons on the West Bank and Palestinian cantons in northwest Israel. A community modeled after the six-state European Economic Community of 1958, one of the most successful peace projects in history, ending centuries of war between member-states.

What stands in the way? Key Israeli and Arab contra-arguments: “Surrounded by hostile Arabs we cannot let them in that close. They overpower us numerically, will push us into the sea,” says one; “The Jews penetrate us economically and run our economies,” says the other. But there are answers. Decisions would have to be made by consensus. Start slowly with a free flow of goods, people, services and ideas; settlement and investment later. Build confidence. Change a relationship badly broken by the Naqba into a peaceful, evolving relationship.

Add an open-ended Conference on Security and Cooperation in West Asia, where all parties are at the table and all issues on the table. Modeled after the 1972-75 Helsinki Conference, which prepared for the end of the Cold War, it could lead to an Organization for Security and Cooperation in West Asia, similar to the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE). It is feasible, with some will.

Better than massive killings only to find no nuclear bomb program in Iran, disproven like the USA in Iraq, and NATO in Afghanistan. With Israel more isolated than ever, licking its considerable wounds. With the West adding a closed Hormuz to its deep economic crisis.  And anti-Semitism rampant.