Analysis
In a war
with no winners, Netanyahu looks like the biggest loser
Peter
Beaumont
Senior
international correspondent
As Iran
and US agree fragile ceasefire, Israel’s conflict has turned out to be a bust
and, say opponents, ‘a political disaster’
Wed 8 Apr
2026 15.48 BST
https://www.theguardian.com/world/2026/apr/08/war-with-no-winners-netanyahu-israel-iran-us-ceasefire
In a war
where there have been no winners, Israel’s prime minister looks set to be the
biggest loser entering a fragile and vague ceasefire with Iran.
After
years of Benjamin Netanyahu’s threats against Iran, his stunts at the UN’s
general assembly, the dodgy dossiers endlessly wafted under the noses of the
world’s media, and diplomatic pressure on successive US presidents to agree to
a war against Iran, Israel’s conflict has turned out to be a bust.
The US
intelligence community’s verdict that Israeli predictions of regime change and
revolution in Iran were “farcical” turned out to be correct. The Israeli
assessment that the war would last at best a handful of days, at worst a
handful of weeks, was woefully wide of the mark.
Even two
days ago, according to Israel’s Channel 12, Netanyahu was pushing Donald Trump
not to agree to a ceasefire. For a day, the US president issued his genocidal
warnings to Tehran and then buckled, by some accounts sidelining Israel in his
deliberations.
“There
has never been a political disaster like this in our entire history. Israel was
not even close to the table when decisions were made concerning the core of our
national security,” Israel’s main opposition leader, Yair Lapid, wrote on X.
“The army
carried out everything that was asked of it, and the public showed remarkable
resilience, but Netanyahu failed politically, failed strategically, and did not
achieve any of the goals he himself set. It will take us years to repair the
political and strategic damage that Netanyahu caused due to arrogance,
negligence, and lack of strategic planning.”
‘Netanyahu
failed politically, failed strategically, and did not achieve any of the goals
he himself set,’ said Yair Lapid (left). Photograph: Jack Guez/AFP/Getty Images
The head
of the leftwing Democrats party, Yair Golan, also called the ceasefire a
“strategic failure” by Netanyahu.
“He
promised a historic victory and security for generations, and in practice, we
got one of the most severe strategic failures Israel has ever known,” Golan
said on X. “It’s a total failure that endangers Israel’s security for years to
come.”
The
reality is that Netanyahu gambled everything on his war and in his failure to
secure the fall of the theocratic regime, the seizure of Tehran’s stockpile of
highly enriched uranium, or meaningful state degradation, Israel’s global
standing – already massively tarnished by its actions in Gaza, where it has
been accused of committing a genocide – has been damaged.
On the
security side, despite Trump’s claims, the power of the Islamic Revolutionary
Guards Corps has been strengthened as Tehran – for now, at least – has achieved
its primary aim of simply surviving a month-long onslaught by two of the
world’s largest military powers.
The
attacks have left a wounded but still intact regime, with significant military
assets, which is likely to pursue rapid rearmament as it seeks opportunities to
retaliate.
Netanyahu’s
insistence on continuing attacks in southern Lebanon also appears hubristic,
given that Israel’s declared intention to carve out a new security zone puts
its forces in direct conflict on the ground with Hezbollah fighters who have
historically proved adept at fighting on their own terrain.
Seen in
this context, Israel’s horrific and unwarned-of mass airstrikes on Lebanon seem
like a punitive act of displacement, having been thwarted in Iran.
The
fallout in terms of public opinion and diplomacy is likely to be even more
serious for Netanyahu and Israel. In America, in particular, a political
consensus dating back to the 1960s is visibly crumbling. Israel’s role in
pushing Trump to war in Iran has been assailed by both progressives and Maga’s
far right, while support for Israel more broadly is at historic lows even among
Jewish voters.
‘We got
one of the most severe strategic failures Israel has ever known,’ said Yair
Golan, the leader of the leftwing Democrats. Photograph: Quique
Kierszenbaum/The Guardian
Then
there is the domestic fallout for Netanyahu in an election year in Israel. Far
from transforming Israel’s security situation, he will come out of the war
having achieved none of his main promised aims.
Notwithstanding
Netanyahu’s well-documented cynicism in broadcasting his usually temporary
achievements, it will be apparent to Israelis that far from having removed what
he has long described as an “existential” threat to Israel, the conditions
remain largely unchanged.
The
Iranian supreme leader Ali Khamenei may be dead, but his hardline son has
succeeded him. Instead of closing the page on Iran’s nuclear programme,
Tehran’s 10-point plan that Trump said was a workable basis for negotiations
appears to include acceptance of Iran’s right to enrich uranium – although
Trump denied this was part of the deal.
For now,
at least, the terms of US-Iranian talks point to something closer to the
framework of Barack Obama’s international nuclear deal – which Netanyahu worked
so hard to sabotage and Trump pulled out of – than a new reality.
For some,
like Haaretz’s military affairs correspondent Amos Harel, failure was baked in
to Netanyahu’s war plans. “Many of the weaknesses shared by the current US
administration and Israel’s system under Netanyahu came into view: a tendency
to gamble based on unfounded wishful thinking, shallow and half-baked plans,
disregard for experts, or the aggressive use of pressure to make them align
their views with the wishes of the political leadership,” Harel said.
It will
be clear to Israelis, too, that the conflict that has unfolded over the past
month was a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity to conduct a campaign at this scale
with full US backing. Other flare-ups may occur but the chance of such
sustained hostilities repeating seems remote.
Trump
balked at the point of most dangerous escalation including over the question of
deploying ground troops, hugely unpopular in the US among voters in part
because of the extreme cost, and highly damaging to the global economy.
It will
not have been lost on some that having secured his long-sought war – and seen
it fail – Netanyahu is unlikely to get a redo with US backing.
Given
that has been an obsessive political selling point of the Israeli prime
minister for years, one may ask: what now is the point of him?
“This is
now the fourth time in a row – in Gaza, once in Lebanon and twice in Iran –
that his boasts of total victory and the removal of existential threats have
been exposed as empty promises,” wrote Harel.

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