News
Analysis
Once
Again, Israel Leaves Trump in the Dark as It Conducts a Military Attack
President
Trump said he was “very unhappy about the way that went down.”
Erica L.
Green
By Erica
L. Green
Erica L.
Green covers the White House. She reported from Washington.
https://www.nytimes.com/2025/09/09/us/politics/israel-trump-gaza-qatar-bombing.html
Sept. 9,
2025
President
Trump said on Tuesday that he found out about Israel’s airstrike in Qatar from
the United States military, rather than Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, whom
he often describes as both a friend and his strongest ally in the Middle East.
It was a
familiar surprise. In June, Israel launched a 12-day war with Iran with minimal
notice, initially drawing a rebuke from Washington until Mr. Trump decided to
join in on what he saw as a winning campaign.
Mr.
Netanyahu has made use of his relationship with Mr. Trump to exercise bold
attacks like the one on Hamas leadership on Tuesday, often using American
weapons with little or no notice to Washington. And each time, he has learned
that Mr. Trump and his administration will grumble about it as they did on
Tuesday, but ultimately decide to let it pass unpunished.
On
Tuesday afternoon, Mr. Trump emphasized that the Israelis had left the United
States in the dark again. “I was very unhappy about it — very unhappy about
every aspect,” he said. “We’ve got to get the hostages back. But I was very
unhappy about the way that went down.”
He said
he would release a full statement about how he learned about the attack on
Wednesday.
In a
social media post earlier in the day, he tried to distance himself from the
attack, while both chastising and praising Mr. Netanyahu for carrying it out.
“This was
a decision made by Prime Minister Netanyahu, it was not a decision made by me,”
Mr. Trump wrote. “Unilaterally bombing inside Qatar, a Sovereign Nation and
close Ally of the United States, that is working very hard and bravely taking
risks with us to broker Peace, does not advance Israel or America’s goals.”
He added:
“However, eliminating Hamas, who have profited off the misery of those living
in Gaza, is a worthy goal.”
Hamas
said the Israeli strike had failed to kill senior officials in the group,
without specifying whether they had sustained injuries.
Mr. Trump
said he felt “very badly about the location of the attack,” in Qatar, a U.S.
ally that has been a critical mediator in peace negotiations between Israel and
Hamas.
He said
the United States had tried to notify Qatar of the strikes, but that it was
“too late to stop the attack.” Still, he said, he assured Sheikh Mohammed bin
Abdulrahman Al Thani, the prime minister of Qatar, “that such a thing will not
happen again on their soil.”
The
episode underscored the haphazard approach Mr. Trump has taken on the war in
Gaza, one of the many conflicts around the world he has endeavored to end.
After Mr. Trump won the election, he told Mr. Netanyahu that he wanted the war
in Gaza to end before he returned to the White House. But since taking office,
Mr. Trump’s strategy has been far less demanding, marked by missed deadlines,
vague threats and contradictory statements about how Israel should achieve its
goals of eliminating the threat of Hamas.
The
dynamic, foreign policy experts say, has given Mr. Netanyahu largely a free
hand to continue carrying out a war that has drawn global outrage, claims of
genocide and a catastrophic humanitarian disaster.
“There
really hasn’t been a strategy that I can discern other than ‘whatever Israel
wants, whatever Netanyahu wants,’” said Khaled Elgindy, visiting scholar at
Georgetown University’s Center for Contemporary Arab Studies.
The U.S.
government has historically walked a tightrope in its support of Israel during
its conflicts in the region, Mr. Elgindy noted, especially under former
President Joseph R. Biden Jr., a self-described Zionist who had a decades-long
personal relationship with Mr. Netanyahu. But even he came around to condemn
“indiscriminate bombings,” and the loss of “too many civilians,” and at one
point withheld arms as he warned Israel against an incursion into densely
populated areas.
“Biden
had some, mostly rhetorical, red lines, but Trump has none,” Mr. Elgindy added.
The
president’s press secretary, Karoline Leavitt, dodged questions about whether
Mr. Trump was upset with Mr. Netanyahu, or whether there would be any
consequences for the strikes. Asked whether Mr. Trump would issue a directive
to Israel on future strikes, Ms. Leavitt said the president believed the strike
was “an opportunity for peace.”
Mr. Trump
said on social media that during his conversation with Mr. Netanyahu, “the
Prime Minister told me that he wants to make Peace.”
But the
attack came as Hamas officials were meeting to discuss a cease-fire proposal
backed by Mr. Trump, which he had urged them to take in a third “final warning”
on Sunday. And it came on a day that Israeli military ordered the total
evacuation of Gaza City in preparation for a full-scale invasion of an area
where hundreds of thousands have fled to from other war-torn cities.
Some
experts expressed skepticism that the United States had no prior warning about
the attack, considering the country also has a military presence in Qatar.
Steven A.
Cook, senior fellow for Middle East and Africa Studies at the Council on
Foreign Relations, said he believed “the strong possibility that there was a
lot more coordination here than the White House currently wants us to know,” or
that Israel gave the United States “plausible deniability.”
“The
Israelis also have a pattern of ‘better to apologize than ask for permission,’”
he said.
Hamas led
the Oct. 7, 2023, attack on Israel that killed about 1,200 people and set off
the war in Gaza. The conflict has killed more than 60,000 Palestinians,
including thousands of children, according to Gazan health officials. (Those
figures do not distinguish between civilians and combatants.)
Mr. Trump
has mostly remained focused on demanding the hostages held by Hamas be
released. “I want ALL of the Hostages, and bodies of the dead, released, and
this War to END, NOW!” Mr. Trump wrote in his social media post on Tuesday.
But in a
rare split with Mr. Netanyahu, Mr. Trump acknowledged in July that Palestinians
were starving, after Mr. Netanyahu cast doubt on the reports as Israel drew
global rebuke for blocking food deliveries into Gaza and causing famine in the
enclave.
Last
month, Mr. Trump declined to say whether he supported Israel’s re-occupation of
Gaza, indicating only that the United States would get more involved in getting
more food delivered. “As far as the rest of it,” he added, “I really can’t say
— that’s going to be pretty much up to Israel.”
He also
said that he has told Mr. Netanyahu that the war must end, because of the
“hunger” and “pure death,” and that it would come to a “conclusive ending” in
two to three weeks.
John E.
Herbst, a former diplomat in the region and current senior director of the
Atlantic Council’s Eurasia Center, said Mr. Trump’s response to the crisis was
emblematic of how he has approached every turn of the war since taking office.
“Trump
being idiosyncratic and never quite predictable, he reacts to the latest turn
of events,” Mr. Herbst said. “He’s right now in a ‘Bibi, do what you want’
phase, which is not necessarily where he’ll be tomorrow.”
David E.
Sanger contributed reporting.
Erica L.
Green is a White House correspondent for The Times, covering President Trump
and his administration.


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