Mideast analysts are busy trying to divine the meaning behind Israeli Defense Minister and former Prime Minister Ehud Barak’s announcement that he will retire from politics.
“[Barak] has been the architect of the options vis-a-vis Iran,” former Ambassador and NBC Middle East diplomacy analyst Dennis Ross said told Andrea Mitchell on Monday. “He has been the one who basically has outlined why it has to be dealt with.” Ross suggested that the timing of Barak’s announcement could imply that he doesn’t see military action against Iran–-a focal point of his agenda–-in Israel’s near future.
“It would be surprising if it was going to happen soon that, facing one of Israel’s most momentous decisions in its history, he would want to take a back seat,” NBC’s Martin Fletcher told Andrea Mitchell Monday from Tel Aviv.
Barak’s decision comes after a week of fighting between Israel and Hamas was stemmed by an Egyptian-brokered cease-fire. Former National Security Adviser Stephen Hadley suggested that the cease-fire has empowered Iran. “[It is] viewed by many as proof that Israel only makes concessions in the face of threats of violence, which is very much out of the Iranian playbook.”








