Israeli
Officials Said U.S. Was Told about South Pars Attack
President
Trump first said the United States “knew nothing” about an attack on the gas
field in Iran, which sent global oil and gas prices soaring. He then said he
cautioned Israel against it.
Isabel
Kershner
By Isabel
Kershner
Reporting
from Jerusalem
https://www.nytimes.com/2026/03/19/world/middleeast/israel-iran-south-pars-gas-field-trump.html
March 19,
2026
Updated
12:56 p.m. ET
An
Israeli strike on Iran’s South Pars gas field was coordinated with the Trump
administration in advance, according to three Israeli officials, despite
President Trump’s initial assertion in a social media post that the United
States “knew nothing about” it.
“The
United States knew nothing about this particular attack,” Mr. Trump wrote in
the social media post late Wednesday, saying that Israel had “violently lashed
out.”
A day
later, Mr. Trump appeared to have changed course.
Speaking
to reporters Thursday at the White House, Mr. Trump implied that he had spoken
about the strike ahead of time with Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu of
Israel.
”I told
him don’t do that,” Mr. Trump said. He went on to say, “we’re independent. We
get along great. It’s coordinated.”
Israel
has not commented publicly on the attack, carried out on Wednesday, or on Mr.
Trump’s effort later Wednesday to distance the United States from it.
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Three
Israeli officials briefed on the South Pars strike said on Thursday that the
United States was informed before the attack. They spoke on the condition of
anonymity because of the sensitive diplomacy.
Mr. Trump
added in his social media post that Qatar, a U.S. ally, “was in no way, shape
or form, involved with it,” nor “had any idea that it was going to happen.”
The South
Pars gas field is shared between Qatar and Iran. Hours after Wednesday’s attack
on South Pars, natural gas facilities in Qatar were hit by strikes. Qatar
blamed Iran.
The
attacks were the latest in a series of escalating strikes on energy
infrastructure that have sent global oil and gas prices soaring. South Pars is
part of the largest gas field in the world. Qatar is the world’s third-largest
exporter of liquefied natural gas.
The war
began on Feb. 28 when Israel and the United States jointly attacked Iran.
Israeli
analysts said the strike on South Pars may have been intended to warn Iran to
stop effectively blocking the Strait of Hormuz, a major transit route for
global oil. Since Iran uses most of its natural gas domestically, the strike
could have been meant to signal to the regime that Israel could do much more to
disable Iran than it has so far.
“The
strike attempted to send a broad signal to whoever is in charge in Iran — and
that is very unclear — that Israel can paralyze the whole electricity network
in the country,” said Ehud Yaari, an Israel-based fellow of the Washington
Institute for Near East Policy.
“If you
stop the electricity supply,” he said, “in many ways you stop the country.”
Mr. Yaari
added that the coordination between the United States and Israel was so close
and coordinated over the course of this war that it was implausible Israel
would carry out such a strike without Washington being informed beforehand.
Mr. Trump
said in his posta “relatively small section” of the facility had been hit. He
said that “NO MORE ATTACKS WILL BE MADE BY ISRAEL” on the South Pars field.
But, he
added, if Iran was to “unwisely” attack Qatar’s natural gas facilities again,
the United States would “massively blow up” the entire South Pars gas field
“with or without the help or consent of Israel.” Iran vowed to retaliate for
the Israeli strike on South Pars, saying it would attack oil and gas targets
throughout the Gulf.
On
Thursday, an Iranian military spokesman, Ebrahim Zolfaghari, said Iran had
struck energy facilities “considered part of U.S. interests.”
In a
statement published by state media, he warned that if Iran’s energy sites were
targeted again, retaliatory strikes would continue until the “complete
destruction” of the energy infrastructure of the United States and its allies
in the region. He did not specifically refer to the South Pars strike.
Israel
insists that it is aligned with Washington on all targets in the war that the
two countries are jointly waging against Iran.
David
Sanger contributed reporting.
Isabel
Kershner, a senior correspondent for The Times in Jerusalem, has been reporting
on Israeli and Palestinian affairs since 1990.

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