Four out of five Israelis expect a strike by its military on Iran to lead to war with Hamas and Hezbollah, a poll showed yesterday after media speculation about a possible attack on Tehran's nuclear facilities.
Yet despite the widespread assumption that the country would find itself in a war on at least two fronts in Gaza and Lebanon, Israelis are almost evenly divided over whether such a strike should be launched.
The poll came after Thursday's test of a ballistic missile and the military's disclosure that three F16 fighter-bomber squadrons had exercised over Sardinia in the past week. Then yesterday, the Tel Aviv area held a drill to practice dealing with rocket attacks. The military was quick to say the drill had been arranged long before the present welter of media debate about whether the country's political leadership was seeking to ramp up support for a strike designed to damage Iran's nuclear capacity. But the publicity given to the test launch and the recent joint air exercise with Italy has helped renew the debate in Israel over whether a strike on Iran by its military is desirable or likely.
Some analysts have suggested this could be partly designed to increase pressure on the international community to tighten sanctions after next week's International Atomic Energy Authority report on Iran's nuclear programme and its widely perceived efforts to acquire atomic weapons.
Discussion between Britain and Israel over Iran intensified with a visit to Tel Aviv by the Chief of Defence Staff, General Sir David Richards, and the arrival in London of the Israeli Defence Minister, Ehud Barak. Barak saw Richards - who was also holding talks with the Israel Defence Forces (IDF) chief of staff Benny Gantz - before flying to London for a trip which included meetings with Philip Hammond, the Defence Secretary, and William Hague, Foreign Secretary. Officials emphasised that Richards' visit was one of a regular series by British defence chiefs to see their Israeli counterparts and had been arranged many months ago.