Thursday, April 17, 2025

Netanyahu does not deny that Trump nixed strike on Iran


Netanyahu does not deny that Trump nixed strike on Iran


The Prime Minister's Office responded on Thursday to a report by The New York Times that US President Donald Trump stopped an Israeli plan to strike Iran's nuclear facilities.

"Prime Minister Netanyahu has been leading the global campaign against the Iranian nuclear program for over a decade, even when there were those who belittled the threat and called it a 'political spin' and the Prime Minister 'paranoid.' The Prime Minister led countless overt and covert actions in the campaign against Iran's nuclear program; thanks to them, Iran does not have a nuclear arsenal," the Prime Minister's Office wrote in a statement.

It added: "The actions set Iran's nuclear program back by a decade, and that's thanks to the Prime Minister's insistence to stand up against the opposition from within and out to his aggressive policy against Iran. As the Prime Minister declared more than once: Israel will not allow Iran to obtain nuclear weapons."

According to the New York Times report, Israeli military officials had developed and prepared plans for a potential assault on Iran’s nuclear infrastructure as early as May, but the operation was recently halted after US President Donald Trump opted to prioritize diplomacy with Tehran.

Sources familiar with the sensitive military deliberations said the proposed Israeli strike aimed to delay Iran’s nuclear program by a year or more. The effort, however, hinged on extensive US involvement, both to ensure the mission’s success and to defend against Iranian retaliation.

Preparations for a potential conflict had already been underway, according to The New York Times. US Central Command, under Gen. Michael Kurilla, deployed significant military assets to the region, including aircraft carriers, missile defense systems, and stealth bombers capable of targeting Iran’s underground facilities. While these assets were partly intended for countering Houthi attacks in Yemen, officials acknowledged their dual-use potential in a broader Iran conflict.

Despite this military buildup, high-level voices within the Trump administration expressed growing skepticism about the feasibility and consequences of an Israeli-led attack. Director of National Intelligence Tulsi Gabbard presented intelligence suggesting such an operation could spiral into a broader regional war, an outcome the White House was determined to avoid.

The report also stated that, as of now, Washington’s position remains unchanged: negotiations first, military action only if talks collapse.


1 comment:

Anonymous said...

US hesitancy to take on Iran with a decisive military strike continues going back to 1979. Nixing and Israeli strike as well conforms to Ezekiel 38.