How Trump
Shifted on Iran Under Pressure From Israel
President
Trump spent the first months of his term holding back Israel’s push for an
assault on Iran’s nuclear program. With the war underway, his posture has
gyrated as he weighs sending in the U.S. military.
June 17,
2025, 12:16 p.m. ET
https://www.nytimes.com/2025/06/17/us/politics/trump-iran-israel-nuclear-talks.html
By the end
of last month, American spy agencies monitoring Israel’s military activities
and discussions among the country’s political leadership had come to a striking
conclusion: Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu was planning for an imminent
attack on Iran’s nuclear program, with or without the participation of the
United States.
Mr.
Netanyahu had spent more than a decade warning that an overwhelming military
assault was necessary before Iran reached the point that it could quickly build
a nuclear weapon. Yet he had always backed down after multiple American
presidents, fearful of the consequences of another conflagration in the Middle
East, told him the United States would not assist in an attack.
But this
time, the American intelligence assessment was that Mr. Netanyahu was preparing
not just a limited strike on the nuclear facilities, but a far more expansive
attack that could imperil the Iranian regime itself — and that he was prepared
to go it alone.
The
intelligence left President Trump facing difficult choices. He had become
invested in a diplomatic push to persuade Iran to give up its nuclear
ambitions, and had already swatted down one attempt by Mr. Netanyahu, in April,
to convince him that the time was right for a military assault on Iran. During
a strained phone call in late May, Mr. Trump again warned the Israeli leader
against a unilateral attack that would short-circuit the diplomacy.
But over the
last several weeks, it became increasingly apparent to Trump administration
officials that they might not be able to stop Mr. Netanyahu this time,
according to interviews with key players in the administration’s deliberations
over how to respond and others familiar with their thinking. At the same time,
Mr. Trump was getting impatient with Iran over the slow pace of negotiations
and beginning to conclude that the talks might go nowhere.
Contrary to
Israeli claims, senior administration officials were unaware of any new
intelligence showing that the Iranians were rushing to build a nuclear bomb — a
move that would justify a pre-emptive strike. But seeing they would most likely
not be able to deter Mr. Netanyahu and were no longer driving events, Mr.
Trump’s advisers weighed alternatives.
At one end
of the spectrum was sitting back and doing nothing and then deciding on next
steps once it became clear how much Iran had been weakened by the attack. At
the other end was joining Israel in the military assault, possibly to the point
of forcing regime change in Iran.
Mr. Trump
chose a middle course, offering Israel as-yet undisclosed support from the U.S.
intelligence community to carry out its attack and then turning up the pressure
on Tehran to give immediate concessions at the negotiating table or face
continued military onslaught.
Five days
after Israel launched its attack, Mr. Trump’s posture continues to gyrate. The
administration at first distanced itself from the strikes, then grew more
publicly supportive as Israel’s initial military success became evident.
Now Mr.
Trump is seriously considering sending American aircraft in to help refuel
Israeli combat jets and to try to take out Iran’s deep-underground nuclear site
at Fordo with 30,000-pound bombs — a step that would mark a stunning turnabout
from his opposition just two months ago to any military action while there was
still a chance of a diplomatic solution.
The story of
what led up to the Israeli strike is one of two leaders in Mr. Trump and Mr.
Netanyahu who share a common goal — preventing Iran from getting a nuclear bomb
— but who are wary of each other’s motives. They speak often in public about
their strong political and personal bonds, and yet the relationship has long
been beset by mistrust.
Interviews
with two dozen officials in the United States, Israel and the Persian Gulf
region show how Mr. Trump vacillated for months over how and whether to contain
Mr. Netanyahu’s impulses as he confronted the first foreign policy crisis of
his second term. It was a situation he faced with a relatively inexperienced
circle of advisers handpicked for loyalty.
This year he
told a political ally that Mr. Netanyahu was trying to drag him into another
Middle East war — the type of war he promised during his presidential campaign
last year he would keep America out of.
But he also
came to believe the Iranians were playing him in the diplomatic negotiations,
much as President Vladimir V. Putin of Russia did as Mr. Trump sought a
cease-fire and peace deal in Ukraine.
And when
Israel chose war, Mr. Trump cycled from skepticism about attaching himself too
closely to Mr. Netanyahu to inching toward joining him in dramatically
escalating the conflict, even bucking the view that there is no immediate
nuclear threat from Iran.
As he rushed
back to Washington from a Group of 7 summit in Canada early on Tuesday morning,
Mr. Trump took issue with an element of public testimony of Tulsi Gabbard, his
director of national intelligence, that the intelligence community did not
believe Iran was actively building nuclear weapons even as it enriches uranium
that could ultimately be used for a nuclear arsenal. “I don’t care what she
said,” Mr. Trump told reporters. “I think they were very close to having them.”
For Mr.
Netanyahu, the last several months brought to an end years of trying to cajole
the United States into backing or at least tolerating his long-held desire to
deal Iran’s nuclear program a crippling blow. He appears to have judged,
correctly, that Mr. Trump would ultimately come around, if only grudgingly.
Beyond the
lives lost and destruction wrought, the crisis has also laid bare schisms
within Mr. Trump’s party between those inclined to reflexively defend Israel,
America’s closest ally in the region, and those determined to keep the United
States from getting further mired in the Middle East’s cycle of violence.
In the
middle was Mr. Trump, determined to block Iran’s path to a bomb and caught
between cultivating his own image of strength and the potential strategic and
political consequences of acting aggressively against Iran.
Asked for
comment, a White House spokesman pointed to public comments made by Mr. Trump
about not allowing Iran to obtain a nuclear weapon.
‘I Think We
Might Have to Help Him’
When Mr.
Trump met with his top advisers at the wooded presidential retreat of Camp
David late on Sunday, June 8, to review the fast-evolving situation, the C.I.A.
director, John Ratcliffe, provided a blunt assessment.
It was
highly likely, he said, that Israel would soon strike Iran, with or without the
United States, according to two people familiar with the briefing, who spoke on
the condition of anonymity to describe a confidential discussion.
The
president sat at the head of the table in a rustic conference room inside
Laurel Lodge. There were no slides, only maps prepared by the chairman of the
Joint Chiefs of Staff, Gen. Dan Caine. For two and a half hours, he and Mr.
Ratcliffe described their expectation of an imminent Israeli attack. Ms.
Gabbard was on National Guard duty that weekend and was not included in the
meeting.
Mr. Trump’s
advisers had been preparing for this moment. In late May, they had seen
intelligence that made them concerned that Israel was going to move ahead with
a major assault on Iran, regardless of what the president was trying to achieve
diplomatically with Tehran.
Based on
that intelligence, Vice President JD Vance and Marco Rubio, in his joint role
as secretary of state and national security adviser, encouraged an effort to
give the president a range of options so he could make quick decisions if
necessary about the scope of American involvement.
Mr.
Ratcliffe’s intelligence-gathering efforts went into overdrive. And in the two
weeks leading up to the Camp David meeting, Mr. Trump’s top advisers met
multiple times to get on the same page about what the menu of potential options
might be.
The day
after the Camp David meeting, Monday, June 9, Mr. Trump got on the phone with
Mr. Netanyahu. The Israeli leader was unequivocal: The mission was a go.
Mr.
Netanyahu laid out his intentions at a high level, according to three people
with knowledge of the call. He made clear that Israel had forces on the ground
inside Iran.
Mr. Trump
was impressed by the ingenuity of the Israeli military planning. He made no
commitments, but after he got off the call, he told advisers, “I think we might
have to help him.”
Still, the
president was torn over what to do next, and quizzed advisers throughout the
week. He had wanted to manage Iran on his own terms, not Mr. Netanyahu’s, and
he had professed confidence in his deal-making abilities. But he had come to
believe that the Iranians were stringing him along.
Unlike some
in the anti-interventionist wing of his party, Mr. Trump was never of the view
that America could live with, and contain, an Iran with a nuclear bomb. He
shared Mr. Netanyahu’s view that Iran was an existential threat to Israel. Mr.
Netanyahu, he told aides, was going to do what was necessary to protect his
country.
The
Diplomatic Route
Israel had
begun preparing in December for an attack on Iran, after the decimation of
Hezbollah, an Iranian proxy, and the collapse of the Assad regime in Syria,
opening up airspace for a bombing campaign.
Mr.
Netanyahu made his first visit of the second Trump term to the White House on
Feb. 4. He presented a gold-plated pager to Mr. Trump and a silver-plated pager
to Mr. Vance — the same devices the Israelis had secretly packed with
explosives and sold to unwitting Hezbollah operatives who would later be maimed
and killed in a devastating remote-control attack on the Iran-backed Lebanese
group. (Mr. Trump later told an ally he was disturbed by the gift.)
Mr.
Netanyahu gave Mr. Trump a presentation about Iran in the Oval Office, walking
him through images of the country’s various nuclear sites.
Israeli
intelligence showed that Iran was making cruder and faster efforts to get to a
nuclear weapon, and the weaker the Iranians got, the closer they moved to the
bomb. In terms of the enrichment of uranium, Iran was days away from where it
needed to be, but there were other components it required to complete the
weapon.
The Israelis
made an additional argument to Mr. Trump: If you want diplomacy to succeed you
have to prepare for a strike, so there is real force behind the negotiations.
Privately, they fretted that Mr. Trump would take what they viewed as an
inadequate deal with Iran, similar to the 2015 deal negotiated by President
Barack Obama, and that he would then declare mission accomplished. Mr.
Netanyahu told Mr. Trump that the Iranians would be able to rebuild their air
defenses that were destroyed during an Israeli attack in October, adding to the
urgency.
After his
election in November, Mr. Trump had named a close friend, Steve Witkoff, as his
Middle East envoy, and gave him the job of trying to reach a deal with Iran.
Mr. Trump, elected on a platform that promised to avoid military entanglements
abroad, seemed to relish the idea of coming to a diplomatic resolution.
From the
beginning of the administration, the Iranians were putting out feelers from a
handful of countries to open a diplomatic path with the new administration.
Then Mr. Trump made his own dramatic move: He sent a letter to Iran’s supreme
leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei.
In early
March, visitors to the Oval Office or guests on Air Force One were regaled by
Mr. Trump about his “beautiful letter” to the ayatollah. One visitor treated to
a live rendition recalled the letter’s basic message as: I don’t want war. I
don’t want to blow you off the map. I want a deal.
Mr. Trump
knew he was wading into dangerous political territory. More than perhaps any
other subject, the Israel-Iran issue splits Mr. Trump’s coalition, pitting an
anti-interventionist faction, led by media figures like the influential podcast
host Tucker Carlson, against anti-Iran conservatives like the radio host Mark
Levin.
But inside
the administration, despite much hype about disagreements between “Iran hawks”
and “doves,” ideological divisions were far less important than they were in
Mr. Trump’s first term, when officials like Defense Secretary Jim Mattis and
Secretary of State Rex Tillerson viewed the president as reckless and in need
of being restrained from his impulses.
This time,
nobody on Mr. Trump’s senior team played anything like that role. The new team
generally supported Mr. Trump’s instincts and worked to carry them out. There
were differences of opinion, to be sure, but few if any heated showdowns over
Iran policy.
Mr. Rubio
and Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth were always deferential to the president’s
views, even if Mr. Hegseth, who has a close relationship with Mr. Netanyahu,
was more trusting of the Israelis than some of his colleagues.
Mr. Vance
warned repeatedly about the prospect of the United States getting entangled in
a regime change war, but even those on the team who had historically supported
a more muscular stance against Iran backed Mr. Witkoff’s diplomacy. Mr. Trump’s
tough-on-Iran national security adviser at the time, Mike Waltz, nonetheless
had a close working relationship with the more dovish Mr. Witkoff.
On the
intelligence side, Mr. Ratcliffe delivered information without weighing in on
one side or the other. And while everyone knew that Ms. Gabbard was as
anti-interventionist as they come, she rarely pushed that view on the
president.
In April,
the Trump team began a series of negotiations in Oman, with the U.S. side of
the talks led by Mr. Witkoff, along with Michael Anton, the director of policy
planning at the State Department. By the end of May, the Trump team had
delivered a written proposal to the Iranians.
It called
for Iran to ultimately stop all enrichment of uranium and proposed the creation
of a regional consortium to produce nuclear power that would potentially
involve Iran, the United States and other Gulf states like Saudi Arabia and the
United Arab Emirates.
Keeping
Military Options
Even as Mr.
Trump pursued a diplomatic solution, he seemed persuaded by one thing the
Israelis had said to him: having credible military options would give him a
stronger hand in negotiations with Iran.
Options for
taking out Iran’s nuclear sites already existed inside the Pentagon, but after
taking office in January the president authorized U.S. Central Command to
coordinate with the Israelis on further refining and developing them.
By the
middle of February, in coordination with the Israelis, Gen. Michael Erik
Kurilla, the head of Central Command, had developed three main options. The
first and most minimal was U.S. refueling and intelligence support for an
Israeli mission. The second was Israeli and American joint strikes. The third
was a U.S.-led mission with Israel in a supporting role. It would have involved
American B-1 and B-2 bombers, carrier aircraft and cruise missiles launched
from submarines.
There was
also a fourth option, quickly discarded, that included, in addition to
large-scale U.S. strikes, an Israeli commando raid with air support from
American Osprey helicopters or other aircraft options.
But as Mr.
Witkoff pursued negotiations with Tehran, mediated by Oman, the Israelis grew
impatient.
Mr.
Netanyahu made a quick visit to Mr. Trump at the White House in April. Among
other requests, he asked for the American bunker-buster bomb to destroy the
underground nuclear site at Fordo.
Mr. Trump,
intent at the time on giving diplomacy a chance, was unpersuaded and in the
days after the meeting, his team made a full-court press to stop the Israelis
from launching pre-emptive strikes against Iran. The message from Mr. Trump’s
team was blunt: You cannot just go and do this on your own. There are too many
implications for us. These were tense conversations, but Mr. Trump’s advisers
thought the Israelis had absorbed their message.
The
president was concerned that Israel would strike out on its own or scuttle his
diplomacy if Mr. Netanyahu did not like where his deal was heading. The Trump
team also worried about what would happen if Israel launched strikes against
Iran but failed to destroy all of its nuclear facilities.
But planning
in Israel went ahead, driven in part by concern that Iran was rapidly building
up its store of ballistic missiles that could be used for retaliatory attacks.
Soon, U.S. intelligence agencies had amassed enough information to present it
to Mr. Trump. The briefings got the president’s attention, and became the
backdrop to the tense phone call in late May, during which Mr. Trump vented his
unhappiness at Mr. Netanyahu.
Patience
With Diplomacy Wears Thin
By that
point, Mr. Vance was telling associates that he was worried about a potential
regime change war, which he considered a dangerous escalation that could spiral
out of control.
Mr. Vance
had come to view a conflict between Israel and Iran as inevitable. The vice
president was open to the possibility of supporting a targeted Israeli strike,
but his concerns that it would grow into a more drawn-out war increased as the
likely date of a strike approached, according to two people with knowledge of
his thinking.
He turned
his attention toward trying to keep America out of the conflict as much as
possible beyond intelligence sharing. He worked closely with Mr. Trump’s inner
circle, including Mr. Rubio, Mr. Hegseth and Susie Wiles, the White House chief
of staff, to figure out contingency plans to protect American personnel in the
region.
As May
turned to June, Mr. Witkoff told colleagues that the United States and Iran
were on the brink of a deal. But on Wednesday, June 4, Mr. Khamenei rejected
the U.S. proposal. Mr. Trump was beginning to feel as if the Iranians were not
serious about a deal, advisers said.
That same
day, Mr. Levin, the conservative radio host, met with Mr. Trump and several of
his advisers in the dining room adjoining the Oval Office. He had been an
influential force in presenting an anti-Iran view to the president. The
conversation with Mr. Levin appeared to have made an impression on the
president, advisers said.
After that
meeting, Mr. Trump told aides he wanted to give the deal talks a bit more of a
chance. But his patience was wearing thin.
That Friday,
his team scheduled a Sunday meeting in the privacy of Camp David.
A Rapid
Change in Posture
Publicly,
Mr. Trump was still stressing the importance of giving diplomacy a chance. And
while doing so was not intended to deceive the Iranians about the immediacy of
a potential attack from Israel, the possibility that it might keep Iran from
going on heightened alert was a welcome side effect, a U.S. official involved
in the discussions said.
But last
Wednesday, there was no indication of any negotiated breakthrough, and by that
point Mr. Trump’s inner circle knew the attack would start the next day.
In some
private conversations, Mr. Trump questioned the wisdom of the Israeli decision
to attack. “I don’t know about Bibi,” he told one associate, adding that he had
warned him against the strikes.
Mr. Trump
joined his national security team in the White House Situation Room on Thursday
evening as the first wave of strikes was unfolding, and was still keeping his
options open. Earlier that day he was telling advisers and allies that he still
wanted to get a deal with Iran.
The first
official statement from the administration after the strikes came not from Mr.
Trump but from Mr. Rubio, who distanced the United States from the Israeli
campaign and made no mention of standing by an ally, even though the U.S.
intelligence community was already providing support.
But as the
night wore on and the Israelis landed a spectacular series of precision strikes
against Iranian military leaders and strategic sites, Mr. Trump began to change
his mind about his public posture.
When he woke
on Friday morning, his favorite TV channel, Fox News, was broadcasting
wall-to-wall imagery of what it was portraying as Israel’s military genius. And
Mr. Trump could not resist claiming some credit for himself.
In phone
calls with reporters, Mr. Trump began hinting that he had played a bigger
behind-the-scenes role in the war than people realized. Privately, he told some
confidants that he was now leaning toward a more serious escalation: going
along with Israel’s earlier request that the United States deliver powerful
bunker-busting bombs to destroy Iran’s nuclear facility at Fordo.
As recently
as Monday, Mr. Trump held out the possibility that Mr. Witkoff or even Mr.
Vance could meet with Iranian officials to seek a negotiated deal. But as Mr.
Trump abruptly left the Group of 7 summit in Canada to rush back to Washington,
there was little indication that the conflict would be brought to a quick end
through diplomacy.
Helene
Cooper, Julian E. Barnes and Eric Schmitt contributed reporting.
Jonathan
Swan is a White House reporter for The Times, covering the administration of
Donald J. Trump. Contact him securely on Signal: @jonathan.941
Maggie
Haberman is a White House correspondent for The Times, reporting on President
Trump.
Mark
Mazzetti is an investigative reporter based in Washington, D.C., focusing on
national security, intelligence, and foreign affairs. He has written a book
about the C.I.A.
Ronen
Bergman is a staff writer for The New York Times Magazine, based in Tel Aviv.
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