By Eric Vandenbroeck and co-workers
On June 13, Israel
initiated a series of airstrikes and covert operations against Iranian nuclear
sites and military officials. Dubbed Operation Rising Lion, this sophisticated
and multilayered campaign followed days of speculation about an impending assault.
So far, the attacks have damaged Iran’s Natanz and Isfahan nuclear facilities
and killed several Iranian scientists. They have also claimed the lives of
scores of civilians and injured dozens more, razed apartment buildings, and blown up parts of the country’s energy infrastructure.
Israelis, meanwhile, have found themselves rushing to shelters as their cities
come under attack.
Right now, there is
no indication that the fighting will stop. Both Iran and Israel have signaled
that they are willing to keep striking each other. Israel’s defense minister
even promised that “Tehran will burn” if the attacks don’t end. The United States,
meanwhile, has done little to stop the bloodshed. Instead, U.S. President
Donald Trump has sent mixed signals about whether he wants the fighting to
cease. His administration has positioned military assets in the area, and
according to multiple news reports, U.S. forces are helping Israel shoot down
Iranian drones and missiles.
Despite his
equivocations, however, Trump has said he still wants to reach a nuclear deal
with Iran, and Tehran has left the door open to talks - provided
that Israel lets up. The U.S. administration, then, may still have space
to forge an agreement.
Israel says it has
full control over Tehran's skies as both sides continue strikes:
If Trump wants to
avoid a U.S. war with Iran, he should seize it. So far, Israel has inflicted
significant but not total damage on Iran’s nuclear program. Even if the
fighting drags on, it is unlikely to succeed at wiping out all of it. Elements
of Iran’s nuclear program are deeply buried underground, including at the
Fordow enrichment site, and the country’s leadership may now have more of an
incentivize than ever to build the ultimate deterrent. That means if the
fighting stops without a deal, Tehran could well make a run for a nuclear
weapon that only heavy bunker-busting American bombs can seriously delay, at
least in the near term. Even then, to truly assure that the threat has been
curtailed, the United States would need either a presence on the ground or
sustained rounds of military strikes carried out with exhaustive knowledge of
Iran’s nuclear operations. Friday.
A diplomatic
settlement represents the best and most sustainable way for Trump to avoid both
a nuclear Iran and a protracted military entanglement. It may be the only way
to avert an unacceptable outcome.
Crisis Management
Since returning to
office in January 2025, Trump had suggested that he wanted to reach an
agreement with Iran on its nuclear program. Israel has made clear its
preference for a military solution, however, unless Iran completely capitulates
over the program. Israel also made clear that it believed that now was the time
to act. Tehran’s defensive capabilities did not recover after a series of
pinpoint strikes that Israel carried out last October. Iran’s proxies,
including Hezbollah, are still on their knees after months of Israeli attacks.
The Israeli government thus saw a golden opportunity to debilitate its nemesis.
Israel’s current
campaign against Iran is far broader than its previous ones. Approximately 200
Israeli aircraft targeted around 100 sites, including nuclear facilities and
military bases, in the initial wave of strikes last week. Covert operations by
the Mossad targeted Iranian leaders, resulting in the deaths of key figures in
the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps and the prominent nuclear scientists. As
the exchanges between the two countries have grown more severe, and Iran has
retaliated with drones and missiles, both sides have broadened their targets.
Given the breadth of
Israel’s assault, Iranian leaders likely concluded that Israel wants not just
to wipe out their nuclear program but also their regime itself. Although Iran
lacks the capabilities of its enemy—its intelligence is no match for Israel’s,
and its air power is nonexistent - Tehran felt it had no choice but to
retaliate as forcefully as possible. So far, at least in the opening days, this
has largely been confined to a bilateral conflict. But Iran may opt to
externalize its costs - hitting U.S. bases in the region, striking energy
infrastructure in the Gulf, and targeting shipping lanes in the Strait of
Hormuz, for example, which would plunge the region into turmoil. By doing so,
Iranian officials might hope they can get Washington to lean on Israel to stop.
But if the war
expands, Iran and the United States might find themselves fighting directly,
especially if American assets and interests come under fire. In repeated
statements, U.S. officials have warned Tehran against such attacks, lest
American forces, in the words of Trump, “come down on you at levels never seen
before.” Should Iranian attacks or attacks by Iran’s nonstate partners lead to
American casualties, the pressure on the U.S. president to act decisively and
enter the war would increase dramatically.
Even if the United
States avoids fighting in this conflict, absent a deal, it risks getting pulled
into a future one. Israeli military operations over the past year have logged
successes against Hezbollah and against Iran itself, degrading many of its enemies’
air defenses. Still, most estimates suggest that Israel could set Iran’s
nuclear program back only by a few months, or a year at best. It would take
intensive American military might to destroy much of Tehran’s capacity to build
a nuclear weapon. And depending on how Iran has structured its program,
stopping a bomb may require no less than the toppling of the Islamic Republic.
That is why Israeli officials are more explicitly sounding the call for regime
change. Yet they have paid little heed to what would replace the current
system. In the absence of a viable, united, and organized
alternative inside or outside Iran, the fall of the Islamic Republic might send
the country into a period of civil strife, or lead to
a military dictatorship determined to obtain nuclear deterrence.
For an American
president who has sought to position himself as a peacemaker rather than a
belligerent, the present situation ought to be ringing loud alarm bells. Many
of Trump’s constituents oppose renewed U.S. military involvement in the Middle
East. A massive war would also cause oil prices to spike, further burdening
American consumers struggling with inflation. Oil prices are already rising.
Trump will thus benefit if the fighting stops, and
suffer if it expands.
The Art of the Deal
Right now, Trump
seems to hope that the combination of growing economic and military harm to
Iran will force the government into agreeing to dismantle its nuclear program.
But an all-or-nothing offer from the United States is unlikely to resonate with
a regime that has rejected such terms for more than two decades, including in
five rounds of negotiations with Trump’s administration. The only thing Iranian
leaders view as more perilous for their self-preservation than the suffering
wrought by Israeli bombs is surrendering to American terms. Instead, the
current onslaught will probably prompt Iran to keep responding with aggression
until it can have at least a semblance of an acceptable off-ramp.
To avoid the
worst-case scenarios, Trump will therefore need to take a different approach.
He must first persuade Iran that he is not just a front for Israeli Prime
Minister Benjamin Netanyahu by pressing Israel to stop fighting. To do so, he
could threaten to suspend weapons aid to Israel. This is the most crucial
source of leverage that Washington has; it would be extremely difficult for
Israel to carry out military campaigns without it. Previous U.S. presidents,
including Joe Biden, have been reluctant to use it. (Biden refused to wield
such threats to pressure Israel to allow more humanitarian aid into Gaza.) But
now, American lives and Trump's legacy may be at stake. The president might
diverge from his predecessor if he decides that U.S. interests require
containing rather than fueling the deepening crisis.
Trump will also need
to cajole Iran. Outgunned by Israel and, at least for now, with
degraded nuclear leverage, Tehran is probably open to returning to the table to
save its neck. More importantly, it needs to save face. The White House should
warn Tehran that further escalation could result in American casualties and
suck the United States into the conflict. Yet it should also offer Iran a
reasonable nuclear deal that includes significant and sustainable sanctions
relief. Trump could, for example, promise to roll back nuclear-related U.S. sanctions
and end the primary U.S. trade embargo if Iran wraps its uranium enrichment
program into a multinational consortium with Saudi Arabia for that purpose, as
Tehran expressed an openness to doing before Israel’s attacks. Such a
consortium would provide fuel for nuclear reactors across the region while
depriving Iran of the fissile material it could use for a weapon.
There is precedent
for this kind of American pressure. In 1982, U.S. President Ronald Reagan
twisted Israel’s arm to end its bombing of Beirut. In 1988, he intervened in
the Iran-Iraq War, playing an essential role in persuading Tehran to accept a
cease-fire. Such a course will not be easy for Trump. It would require the
president to commit to difficult diplomacy while staring down fierce opposition
in Washington from politicians and interest groups who see Israel’s campaign as
an overdue comeuppance for one of the United States’ most bitter adversaries.
But if Trump is
committed to a nuclear-free Iran, his best bet is to get the Iranians and
Israelis to stop the war and bring Tehran back to the negotiating table.
Without a deal, Iran’s frightened government seems more likely than not to
sprint for nuclear weapons as conditions allow. Then Trump would either have to accept a nuclear Iran or join another Israeli
assault on the country, risking precisely the kind of catastrophic Middle East
entanglement he promised to avoid.
The deadly conflict
between Israel and Iran has entered its fourth day, with both sides widening
their attacks. Overnight, Iran struck an Israeli oil refinery and damaged part of the power grid. In Israel, explosions were seen and residential
buildings were hit.
Casualties are
mounting. In Israel, 24
people have been killed since hostilities began. In Iran, 224 people have been
killed. Tehran residents are attempting to flee the
capital in search of
safety.
Two US officials told
CNN that President Donald Trump rejected an
Israeli plan to
kill Iran’s Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei. Israeli Prime Minister
Benjamin Netanyahu denied reports of such a plan.
Israel’s operation
against Iran is expected to take “weeks, not days” and is moving forward with
implicit US approval, according to White House and Israeli officials. Trump
acknowledged that US involvement in the conflict is a possibility.
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