Israeli war cabinet divided over response to Iran attack

Disagreements surface over the timing and scale of retaliation following Iran's strike, raising tensions within government ranks.

The war cabinet met in Tel Aviv on Sunday to discuss a response to Tehran. / Photo: AA
AA

The war cabinet met in Tel Aviv on Sunday to discuss a response to Tehran. / Photo: AA

Disagreements have arisen among members of Israel’s war cabinet over the scale and timing of an attack on Iran.

Following Iran's unprecedented retaliatory strike directed at Israeli soil on Saturday, the differences surfaced during Sunday's meeting of the war cabinet at the Ministry of Defence headquarters in Tel Aviv, according to Israeli media.

“There is consensus on the necessity of responding to the Iranian attack, but disagreements revolve around the scale and timing of the response, without ignoring US and international pressure,” Israel’s Channel 12 reported.

Earlier on Sunday, the Israeli public broadcaster KAN said the response to the Iranian attack “was canceled at the last minute” after a phone call between Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and US President Joe Biden.

It suggested that “the security apparatus in Israel still supports a response to the Iranian attack, but not necessarily immediately.”

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Israel's Channel 12 reported that war cabinet members Benny Gantz and Gadi Eisenkot proposed Saturday “an immediate response to the attack, but the proposal was rejected.”

The broadcaster noted that “some within the war cabinet believe that the equation should be 'eye for an eye' in a short and immediate round (of confrontation), while others believe that waiting and planning carefully to deliver a strong response is necessary.”

The war cabinet convened Sunday at the Defence Ministry headquarters in Tel Aviv to weigh a response to Tehran.

The security council authorised Netanyahu, Defence Minister Yoav Gallant, and Gantz to determine how Israel will respond to Iran's attack, which was in retaliation for an April 1 strike on the Iranian consulate in Damascus, Syria that killed seven members of Iran’s Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC), including two generals.

Gantz said in a televised statement that "we will make Iran exact the price" when the time is right.

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