Major-General Amir Eshel, in his first television interview in the three years since he took command of the Israeli Air Force, told Israel's Channel 10 yesterday that an Iran with a nuclear capability "would have grave significance for the whole of Middle East, and not just for Israel".
When asked why the Israeli air force had not been ordered to strike at Iranian nuclear installations in the way that it destroyed Iraq's nuclear reactor at Osiraq in 1981 and, according to foreign reports, a Syrian reactor in 2007, Eshel said that Israel "has a range of tools" for grappling with threats.
"I have to prepare a capability so that if a decision is taken, we have the genuine capacity to get the job done. That's our role," he added.
The TV report said that Israel has invested "immense resources" in preparing for a possible strike on Iran.
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"The Israeli Air Force has been building the capacity to attack Iran for more than a decade," it emphasised.
Talking about Israeli concerns regarding Russia-made S-300 air defence system, which Moscow has indicated that it may supply to Iran, Eshel said its deployment would present "a significant challenge" but one that the Israeli air force could successfully overcome.
Israel's air force had been "developing our capabilities, our technology and methodology" for some time to meet the challenge, the Air Force chief added.