Lt.-Gen. Aviv Kochavi’s Landmark Speech

By , BESA   February 2, 2021



IDF Chief of Staff Lt. Gen. Aviv Kochavi, image via Wikipedia<
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EXECUTIVE SUMMARY: IDF Chief of General Staff Aviv Kochavi’s January 26 speech conveyed important messages to multiple audiences. The most notable was that the IDF is preparing for action against Iran’s nuclear program even if it has to do it on its own.

On January 26, IDF Chief of General Staff Aviv Kochavi made a speech that addressed crystallizing changes in the regional and global arenas—first and foremost the advent of a new US administration. Kochavi was speaking to a variety of audiences: the Israeli public, the Islamic regime in Tehran, the leaderships of Hamas and Hezbollah, the international arena, and particularly the White House. The implications of his messages vary depending on the audience.

Kochavi’s speech was not an exercise in public relations but a vital component in an intricate web of strategic planning. For Israelis, the speech was a reminder that while the leadership and the public are consumed by the coronavirus crisis and political struggles, grave dangers are gathering on the horizon for which the country must prepare. The swift regional reaction to the speech indicates that this message was widely understood.

In comparison to the handful of formative speeches by Israeli chiefs of staff, notably Moshe Dayan’s 1956 eulogy of Roy Rothberg, Kochavi’s speech was presented in a dispassionate and highly professional fashion. In it, he systematically reviewed the dangers Israel faces on multiple fronts. His warning against returning to the 2015 Iran nuclear deal (JCPOA), accompanied by the demand to build and prepare the IDF’s offensive capability against Iran’s nuclear facilities, was met with anxiety among former senior members of Israel’s defense establishment who had backed the JCPOA. And therein lies the crux of Kochavi’s message: far-reaching changes have taken place since the JCPOA was signed.

Kochavi’s message should prod President Joe Biden’s newly appointed administration, some members of which were deeply involved in shaping the Obama administration’s Middle East policy, to acknowledge and study these changes. It also warns of the folly of remaining entrenched in past misconceptions and seeking to revive discredited policies from the point at which they were abandoned in January 2017. Even if the US administration is headed toward negotiations with Tehran, the IDF’s preparedness for military action will play a useful role.

An equally significant message conveyed by Kochavi was the clarification to the terrorist Hezbollah and Hamas armies that their choice to operate from within the civilian population will not stop the IDF from dealing them a decisive blow. This warning was intended for four specific audiences:

  • Hamas and Hezbollah leaders
  • The international community
  • The residents of Lebanon and Gaza, who find themselves in environments that have become legitimate military targets for attack
  • The Israeli public, which Kochavi has pledged to protect from danger.

The multiplicity of messages and audiences makes the speech a formative strategic/military document worthy of in-depth study.

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This is an edited version of an article published in Israel Today.

Maj. Gen. (res.) Gershon Hacohen is a senior research fellow at the Begin-Sadat Center for Strategic Studies. He served in the IDF for 42 years. He commanded troops in battles with Egypt and Syria. He was formerly a corps commander and commander of the IDF Military Colleges.

February 2, 2021 | 3 Comments »

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  1. NIMITZ HEADING HOME. Appeasement of Iran? Who knows???

    “Aircraft carrier USS Nimitz (CVN-68) is headed to the West Coast after Secretary of Defense Lloyd Austin over the weekend ordered the ship and its strike group back home after almost eight months deployed, two U.S. officials confirmed to USNI News.

    “As of Monday morning, the carrier was operating in U.S. 7th Fleet to the west of India, the officials said. A U.S. Pacific Fleet spokesperson confirmed the strike group was in 7th Fleet but did not provide additional details.

    “If the carrier heads straight back to the U.S., the Nimitz strike group should arrive back home by the end of the month, USNI News understands. As of Monday, the carrier has been deployed for 240 days, according to the USNI News carrier database. That’s the longest deployment since the record-breaking 294-day deployment of USS Abraham Lincoln (CVN-72) last year.

    “The Navy’s oldest carrier and its strike group have spent the last six-months operating mostly in the Middle East as tensions between Iran and the U.S. have simmered with America’s increased military presence since May 2019.

    “The strike group was ordered home by then-Acting Defense Secretary Chris Miller on New Year’s Eve, but the Trump administration quickly reversed that decision in early January following threats from Tehran on the one-year anniversary of the U.S. killing of Iranian military leader Qasem Soleimani…”

    — USN NEWS

  2. Not an easy question: WHOSE SIDE IS ISRAEL ON?

    TEL AVIV: Israel has refused an American request to inspect the new Chinese-built Haifa port that will be operated for the next 25 years by SIPG, a Chinese company. This is being seen in both countries as a test case of Israel’s relationship with China and with the United States.

    https://ussanews.com/News1/2021/02/03/israel-rejects-us-plan-to-inspect-chinese-harbor-at-haifa/

    Please give me a straight answer.

  3. I think I’m not going to tell you anything new you didn’t already know (about).
    A counter-attack on Iran will unleash Hisbollah’s and Gaza’s rockets. Omission will lead to the Iranian bomb. This article is heart-breaking because it shows again that we are alone.