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How a decades-long campaign by Israel’s prime minister finally found its willing partner — and ignited the Middle East For more than two decades, Benjamin Netanyahu harbored a vision: a joint American-Israeli military campaign that would dismantle Iran’s nuclear program, cripple its military, and trigger the collapse of the Islamic Republic. He pitched it to
How a decades-long campaign by Israel’s prime minister finally found its willing partner — and ignited the Middle East
For more than two decades, Benjamin Netanyahu harbored a vision: a joint American-Israeli military campaign that would dismantle Iran’s nuclear program, cripple its military, and trigger the collapse of the Islamic Republic. He pitched it to one American president after another. Each said no. Then came Donald Trump — and the map of the Middle East changed forever.
The story of Netanyahu’s war, now unfolding in real time, is not just a tale of geopolitics. It is the story of a single leader’s extraordinary persistence, the presidents who resisted him, and the one who did not.
The Rejected Pitch: Three Presidents, Three Refusals
Former US Secretary of State John Kerry pulled back the curtain during an appearance on The Late Show with Stephen Colbert, recalling that Netanyahu had, over the years, urged multiple American administrations to consider military action against Iran — and each time, the proposal was turned down. “Obama said no. Bush said no. President Biden said no. I mean, I was part of those conversations,” Kerry said. The Statesman
Kerry indicated that the refusal from each administration stemmed from a shared view that diplomatic avenues had not been fully explored before considering military options. He also rejected Netanyahu’s projections about political upheaval in Iran, noting that predictions of internal revolt or a shift in power did not come to pass — casting doubt on the core assumptions used to justify potential military action. The Statesman
Kerry also cited a New York Times report detailing Netanyahu’s procedure for convincing Trump to strike Iran, describing it as a “basically four-point pitch” — killing the leadership, inciting regime change, destroying the military, and more. The Jerusalem Post
The Situation Room: Netanyahu’s Final Sales Pitch

On February 11, 2026, Netanyahu stood in the White House Situation Room and presented Trump with a video montage and intelligence outlining the plan. His team argued that Iran’s ballistic missile program could be disabled within weeks, that Tehran would be too weakened to close the Strait of Hormuz, and that retaliatory actions against American interests in the region would likely be limited. The Jerusalem Post
American officials broke Netanyahu’s proposal down into four parts: killing Supreme Leader Khamenei, decimating Iran’s ability to threaten its neighbors, triggering a popular uprising in Iran, and ultimately installing a secular leader to govern the country. Trump was most interested in the first two objectives, saying regime change would be “their problem.” The Jerusalem Post
According to the New York Times, Trump’s reported response to the pitch was simply: “Sounds good to me.” The Statesman
What three presidents had declined for over twenty years, the fourth accepted in a single Situation Room session.
The War That Followed
On February 28, 2026, the United States and Israel launched large-scale strikes against Iran under Operation Epic Fury and Israel’s campaign Roaring Lion. Trump confirmed the strikes, saying the US military had “begun major combat operations in Iran” to eliminate “imminent threats from the Iranian regime,” while Netanyahu stated that Israel acted to remove “the existential threat posed by the terrorist regime in Iran.” AJC
The attacks also followed the failure of indirect nuclear negotiations in February, during which Iran had reportedly been willing to make concessions. After 40 days of sustained combat, a ceasefire took effect on April 8, 2026. House of Commons Library
The conflict came at a significant cost. US interests in Saudi Arabia, the UAE, Qatar, Bahrain, and Kuwait were all targeted by Iranian counter-strikes throughout the conflict, killing 13 US military service members. The Jerusalem Post Global energy markets were shaken, with Iran moving to restrict access through the Strait of Hormuz — precisely the scenario that the Chairman of the Joint Chiefs had repeatedly warned about in the Situation Room.
The Doubts — and the Fallout
Not everyone in Trump’s inner circle was swept along by the optimism. According to Axios, Vice President JD Vance held a tense exchange with Netanyahu, questioning overly optimistic assumptions about the conflict. A US official told the outlet: “Before the war, Bibi really sold it to the president as being easy, as regime change being a lot likelier than it was. And the VP was clear-eyed about some of those statements.” The Statesman
The war also reignited the fierce public debate over US presidents and their relationship with Netanyahu’s ambitions. Critics pointed to Kerry’s revelation as evidence of a dangerous pattern: that one president’s willingness to abandon diplomatic caution could undo decades of bipartisan restraint in a single meeting.
Kerry argued that Trump had walked away from the prior Iran nuclear agreement “not for substantive reasons, but because President Obama did it,” leaving a diplomatic vacuum that made military confrontation more likely. “What we wound up with is a situation where they now believe you can’t trust the United States,” Kerry said. The Jerusalem Post
What Comes Next
Netanyahu has already raised the possibility of a “round two” of strikes with Trump, citing concerns that Iran is rebuilding its ballistic missile production and nuclear enrichment program. Trump said that if Iran tries to rebuild its nuclear program, the US will destroy it again — though he also expressed a preference for a new nuclear deal with Tehran. Axios
The story of Netanyahu’s war is, in many ways, still being written. But the central question it raises is as old as the rejections of Bush, Obama, and Biden: when a president says yes to a war that three others refused, who bears responsibility for what comes next?
History — and the ceasefire holding tenuously in the spring of 2026 — may yet provide its own answer.


