Joints of view >> Send letters to: letters@thejewishnews.com Contributing Editor Editorial Stymie Iraq! Israel can't dally on stronger homeland security. I s Israel, a nation of 7.8 million people, ready for war with Iran, 25 million strong? The answer is an unequivocal no. So says the guy who chairs the Knesset subcom- mittee on Israel's national security. He should know. "The home front is not ready:' Zeev Bielski told former Jerusalem Report Editor Eetta Prince-Gibson in an interview released March 6 by JTA, the New York-based Jewish news service. "We have made improvements over the situation since the Second Lebanon War, when the home front was completely unprepared, but the situation is not good:' That's an indictment of Israel's porous defense against missile and rocket fire. American Jews should weigh in unceasingly. At least Israel readily admits the defensive shortfall in Prince-Gibson's sobering analysis following the American Israel Public Affairs Committee (AIPAC) policy conference in Washington. Iran and the global danger it would possess should it acquire nuclear weapons capability was topic No. 1 on the AIPAC agenda, considered by 200 Detroiters among the record 13,000 delegates. Concern has sharpened as security analysts evalu- ate Iran's potential counter to an Israeli attack on a Tehran-run nuclear weapons site. The response could well take the form of Iran and its rogue proxies Hamas, which rules the Gaza Strip, and Hezbollah, which is based in Lebanon, peppering Israel with missiles and rockets, and even chemical or biological weapons, while also authorizing terrorism against Israeli, Jewish and Western targets worldwide. Higher Stakes With both President Barack Obama and Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu threaten- ing war in their AIPAC remarks if economic, energy and other tough U.S. and international sanctions don't halt Iran's nuclear weapons quest, the burden clearly falls on Israel's missile defense systems to be top-of-the-line. Are they? We've heard about the impressive high-percentage yield of Israel's three Iron Dome installations, built with the assistance of a $205 million grant from the Obama administration. They continue to intercept short-range missiles fired from the Gaza Strip into Israel's Negev towns. Still, estimates peg Israel's oper- ational need at 12 domes. The Israeli David's Sling, developed to bring down medium-range missiles, isn't expected to be avail- able until next year. Israel's Arrow, a $1 billion system designed in collaboration with the U.S. to topple Iran's hundreds-strong Shehab-3 missiles, which potentially have longer range, has not been com- bat tested. The Arrow also could shield Israel from Hezbollah's arsenal of 40,000 missiles and rockets; many are sophisticated, long-range weapons that can reach almost any part of Israel, according to the JTA report. 48 March 29 • 2012 3N "The home front is not ready." - Knesset member Zeev Blelski Make no mistake about it: Some of the missiles and rockets launched by Iran and its henchmen would reach Israeli population centers although Israeli defense systems as they now stand certainly would limit the damage. Disturbing Sight Lines In the event of war with Iran, Israel should be ready for prolonged attacks, even months — a scenario that could stifle Israeli commerce and everyday life. "Israel's major cities have never come under attack:' Yiftah Shapir of Tel Aviv University's Institute for National Security Studies told JTA. "This will be a very different and difficult experience for Israeli civil- ians." Given Israel's stretched budget as the drumbeat of war on multiple fronts has intensified, it's not surprising to learn that Israel's home-front preparedness is sorely lacking even while the Jewish state's mili- tary forces are unparalleled in the Middle East. Other troubling Bielski home-front findings: •About 1.7 million Israelis aren't in range of a reinforced room that can with- stand rocket and missile fire despite a 1992 law requiring all new residential construction to have such access. •About 40 percent of Israelis don't have gas masks, an obvious necessity to stave off a chemical or bio- logical attack. The state is holding 1 million masks in storage, to be distributed once a state of emergency is declared, but 2 million people would still be left without a mask. Bielski said it would cost $330 million to properly equip everyone — and reasserted it's the govern- ment's responsibility to do so. Interestingly, JTA quoted Defense Minister Ehud Barak saying on Army Radio last December that Israel could dramatically limit casualties of war if Israelis just stay home if actual warheads start flying. Being Prepared Iran may consider terrorist attacks such as the bomb- ings that destroyed the Israeli Embassy in Buenos Aires in 1992 and the AMIA Jewish community cen- ter in the Argentina capital two years later, the JTA report indicated. The two attacks killed 114 people. At issue is the vigor of Iran's might. Stymie Iraq! on page 49 Jews Can't Ignore Farrakhan's Vitriol A s so-called preachers go, the hate-monger Louis Farrakhan is captivating among his legions of followers – the absurdity of his anti-Semitic rants notwithstanding. Fair-minded people reject his outra- geousness. But he commands "respect" Louis among a lot of impressionable black Farrakhan Muslims in particular. That's both daunt- ing and dangerous. The Nation of Islam leader plied his anti-Jewish/anti- Zionist rant at his organization's 82nd annual Saviors' Day celebration in Chicago. It would be easy to ignore the hate-driven event. But when Farrakhan once more tells tens of thousands of supporters that Jews control America's public corridors and that Zionists are trying to push America into war with Iran, ignorance is not bliss. It's important that Jews know what this divisive bigot has to say – a powerhouse of prejudice who has branded Judaism a "gutter religion" and declared that Jews are the "worst enemy" of blacks. The Nation of Islam's "The Secret Relationship of Blacks and Jews" – a two-volume "historical" paperback – is long on conspiracy theories about Jews and Israel and about Jewish control of gov- ernment, finance, communication and Hollywood. In his March 4 address, Farrakhan asserted: "I'm not anti-Semitic. I'm just telling the truth." The Anti- Defamation League has a different take, saying Farrakhan has turned his message and his organization's mission "into a wide-ranging campaign to demonize and scape- goat Jews." On Iran, Farrakhan said: "I advise white and black America, Hispanic and Asian America, why would you send your children to die in a war engineered by Zionists who love Israel more than they love the United States of America? Don't send these children to war for the sake of Israel." He sidesteps the reality that a nuclear arms- equipped Iran would present an international crisis for the civilized world, not just Israel or the U.S. Farrakhan argued that President Obama has relented to every Israeli request yet Israelis are still not happy. Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu would be surprised to learn about that given Obama's intransigence on settlements, borders and other key issues of the Israeli- Palestinian conflict. Saviors' Day included a study session that bore the name of the "historical" paperback volumes and that claimed Jewish exploitation of blacks during the trans- Atlantic slave trade caused deep and lasting reper- cussions for African Americans. The Nation of Islam's "historical research department" wrote and published the book set. If that's a reputable department, research has hit a new low. Yes, some Jews unfortunately were involved in the slave trade. But most Jews of the time were abolitionists and supported Abraham Lincoln. Later, many Jews became champions of the Civil Rights Movement. Farrakhan has a constitutional right to rant on Saviors' Day. But to not drill into his rhetoric is to effectively allow his invective to seriously damage the fragile relationships with blacks that Jews have fought hard to build. ❑