Have Questions or Comments?
Leave us some feedback and we'll reply back!

    Your Name (required)

    Your Email (required)

    Phone Number)

    In Reference to

    Your Message


    WHEN TO ATTACK IRAN

    I. A Time for War
    Early morning last
    Friday, Israel attacked
    Iran in a multi-pronged
    effort that was wildly
    successful in its initial
    stages and we pray will
    continue to succeed.
    Koheles (3:6) notwithstanding, there is never
    a good time for war. We hope and pray for
    a time when there will be no war. But when
    war is necessary, presumably there should
    be no time constraints to it. However, the
    halachah is otherwise, as we will see. If the
    Israeli Defense Forces were run completely
    according to halachah, which they currently
    are not, would a Friday morning have been a
    halachically appropriate time to attack?
    The Gemara (Shabbos 19a) quotes a baraisa
    which says: “One may not lay siege to the
    gentiles’ cities fewer than three days before
    Shabbos. If they already began, they need
    not stop. And so Shammai would say: ‘[And
    you should build a siege against the city that
    is waging war with you] until it falls’ (Deut.
    20:20), even on Shabbos.” According to this
    view, we may not begin a battle within three
    days before Shabbos. Rashi (Deut. 20:19)
    quotes the Sifrei which says that this rule is
    derived from the preceding verse, “If you
    besiege a city many days to wage war against

    it to capture it….” The plural word “days”
    (yamim) implies two days. The additional
    word “many” (rabim) implies more than
    two days, namely three days. Rav David
    Segal (known as the Taz) explains that you
    wage war “until it falls,” even on Shabbos,
    only if the war started at least three days
    earlier (Divrei David, ad loc.). However,
    most commentators agree with Rav Eliyahu
    Mizrachi (commentary, ad loc.) that this is a
    rabbinical rule.
    II. Three Days Before Shabbos
    Commentators offer different reasons for this
    rule of starting a battle only three or more
    days before Shabbos. Rav Yitzchak Alfasi
    (Rif, Shabbos 7b) explains that it takes three
    days to calm down from an attack and enjoy
    Shabbos. Rav Zerachiah Ha-Levi (Ha-Ma’or
    Ha-Katan, ad loc., 7a) explains that if within
    three days before Shabbos you put yourself
    in a position in which you will have to violate
    Shabbos, it is as if you are intentionally
    violating Shabbos. Later commentators
    accept one or the other explanations.
    However, the first approach requires more
    elaboration. It assumes that a battle will take
    only one day and then the soldiers rest and
    calm down until Shabbos. Is that always, or
    even usually, the case? We will return to this
    question below.

    Rambam seems to contradict

    himself about this three-day-
    before-Shabbos rule. In two

    places in Mishneh Torah (Hilchos
    Shabbos 2:25, 30:13), Rambam
    writes that we may not lay siege
    to a city within three days before
    Shabbos. He explicitly adopts
    Rav Alfasi’s explanation, that this
    rule is to allow soldiers to call
    down in time for Shabbos (30:13).
    Rambam distinguishes between
    laying a siege and fighting a
    battle. You may not lay a siege
    within three days before Shabbos
    but you may fight a battle any day
    of the week. However, elsewhere Rambam
    omits the three-days-before-Shabbos rule:
    ”One may lay siege to the gentiles’ cities and
    one may engage in battle with them every
    day, even on Shabbos, as it says, ‘until it falls’
    (Deut. 20:20), even on Shabbos. This applies
    to both a mitzvah war and a permissible war.”
    (Mishneh Torah, Hilchos Melachim 6:11)
    III. Two Approaches
    Why doesn’t Rambam mention the limitation
    of three days before Shabbos in Hilchos
    Melachim? There are two main approaches
    to answering this question. Rav Yosef Karo
    (16th cen., Israel) asserts that the text must
    be mistaken and therefore he amends it
    to: “One may lay siege to the gentiles’
    cities three days before Shabbos” (Kessef
    Mishneh, Hilchos Shabbos 2:25). Later
    commentators explain that according to this
    approach, the key distinction is whether
    the army is laying a siege or engaging in
    battle. A siege requires an initial effort to
    surround a city and then a lengthy period
    of waiting and holding the siege. An army
    should lay a siege at least three days before
    Shabbos so that the siege will be complete
    and soldiers will have time to calm down
    by Shabbos. In contrast, a battle lasts a long
    time. Therefore, it does not matter on which

    day it begins. Only a siege has the three-
    day-before-Shabbos rule.

    Rav Moshe Lifschitz (16th cen., Russia)
    takes a different approach (Lechem
    Mishneh, Hilchos Melachim 6:11). He

    argues that Rambam mentions the three-
    day-before-Shabbos rule in Hilkos Shabbos

    and therefore does not need to repeat it.
    The key distinction for Rambam is between
    a mitzvah war (milchemes mitzvah) and
    a permissible war (milchemes reshus). A
    permissible war, whether a siege or a battle,
    must be started at least three days before
    Shabbos. A mitzvah war may begin on any
    day of the week, even Shabbos.
    Rav Yitzchak Ben Sheishes Prefet (Rivash,
    15th cen., Spain-Algeria) seems to follow
    an approach similar to Rav Lifschitz’s
    explanation of Rambam’s view. He applies
    the three-day-before-Shabbos rule only to
    a permissible war (Responsa Rivash, no.

    101). Rav Ya’akov Ben Asher (14th cen.,
    Spain) writes likewise (Tur, Orach Chaim
    249). In contrast, Rav David Ibn Zimra
    (Radbaz, 16th cen., Egypt) seems to take an
    approach similar to Rav Karo’s explanation
    of Rambam’s view. He does not distinguish
    between a mitzvah war and a permissible war
    (Responsa Radbaz, vol. 4, no. 77). However,
    rather than amending Rambam’s text, Radbaz
    suggests that Rambam is discussing holding
    a siege, not laying it. You may hold the siege
    any day of the week, even Shabbos. But you
    only lay the siege at least three days before
    Shabbos.
    IV. Attacking Iran
    Rav Shlomo Goren (20th cen., Israel) follows
    Rav Yosef Karo’s approach, that a siege must
    be laid at least three days before Shabbos
    but a war may be started any day of the
    week (Meishiv Milchamah, vol. 1, part 1,
    no. 2). Rav Eliezer Waldenburg takes this
    approach, as well (20th cen., Israel; Hilchos
    Medinah, vol. 2, part 10, ch. 3, par. 11). Rav
    Nachum Rabinovitch does also (Melumedei
    Milchamah, no. 36). According to these
    authorities, you may attack any day of the
    week. Since the attack on Iran is a battle and
    not a siege, the three-days-before-Shabbos
    rule does not apply.
    However, Rav Rabinovitch’s colleague, Rav
    Yitzchak Shilat, adopts the approach of Rav
    Lifschitz and not Rav Karo. Rav Shilat has
    not only retranslated and published many
    of Rambam’s writings, he also published
    an edition of Mishneh Torah titled Rambam
    Meduyak (Jerusalem, 2021), which is based
    on the best Egyptian, Syrian and Israeli
    manuscripts. In his recently published
    Medinah, Halachah Ve-Kavanos Ha-Torah
    (Jerusalem, 2023), Rav Shilat says that there
    is no textual basis for Rav Yosef Karo’s
    emendation (pp. 300-305). Instead, he
    accepts the distinction between a mitzvah war
    and a permissible war. Rav Yitzchak Herzog
    (20th cen., Israel) rules likewise (Heichal
    Yitzchak, Orach Chaim 37:3). The question
    then becomes whether invading Iran is a
    mitzvah war or a permissible war. Given that
    Iran has threatened to annihilate Israel and is
    attempting to build the capability to do so,
    this would qualify as a defensive mitzvah war
    which may be started any day of the week.