A former US official has laid bare a persistent Israeli plea: Benjamin Netanyahu, across decades, has urged successive American presidents to launch military strikes on Iran. Reports reveal that the Israeli prime minister lobbied Bill Clinton, George W Bush, Barack Obama and Joe Biden alike, pressing for action against what Israel has long viewed as an existential nuclear threat. Time and again, Netanyahu piled on the pressure, demanding Washington unleash force to neutralize Tehran’s atomic ambitions.
Yet every one of those presidents demurred, shunning direct confrontation. The calculus was stark: the specter of all-out war engulfing the Middle East, havoc wreaked on the global economy, and oil supplies thrown into chaos. Instead, they clung to diplomacy, with the Iran nuclear deal standing as a cornerstone of that cautious approach—a fragile bulwark against catastrophe, now fraying under fresh strains. This revelation underscores a grim transatlantic rift. Netanyahu’s unyielding drumbeat for war exposes the limits of alliance when survival instincts clash with broader strategic restraint. As tensions simmer anew, the question lingers: will cooler heads prevail, or will the hawks finally prevail?
It’s a story that feels both timeless and urgently now, pulled from the shadows by Ron Dermer, Israel’s former ambassador to Washington and Netanyahu’s longtime strategist. Speaking to the BBC, Dermer confirmed what many suspected: for 30 years, Netanyahu has been the hawk circling the White House, whispering—or shouting—the same urgent message. Strike Iran now, before its nuclear program metastasizes into something unstoppable. Back in the 1990s, as Clinton grappled with the Oslo accords and the Middle East peace process, Netanyahu was already warning of Iran’s centrifuges spinning towards doom. He took his case to Congress, bypassing the Oval Office with dramatic flair, holding up cartoon bombs to illustrate the peril. Bush, fresh from 9/11 and eyeing regime change in Iraq, heard the pleas amid the rubble of that misadventure. Obama, ever the diplomat, inked the 2015 nuclear deal—JCPOA—despite Netanyahu’s fiery UN speech likening it to appeasing Nazis. And Biden, navigating Ukraine and Gaza’s horrors, has faced the same insistent push as Iran’s proxies rain rockets on Israel.
Why the obsession? For Israel, it’s not abstract strategy; it’s the stuff of nightmares etched into national memory. The Holocaust’s shadow looms large, and Iran’s leaders have never shied from genocidal rhetoric. “Death to Israel” isn’t just a chant—it’s policy, paired with a nuclear program that, by Israel’s count, could yield bombs in months. Netanyahu, who has governed longer than any Israeli leader since Ben-Gurion, sees himself as the guardian against annihilation. His pleas aren’t mere politics; they’re rooted in a visceral fear that grips every Israeli parent sending kids to army service, every citizen drilling for missile alerts. When Iranian drones buzzed Tel Aviv last year, or Hezbollah’s rockets scarred the north, that fear hardened into resolve. To them, diplomacy is a delay tactic, buying Tehran time to burrow deeper underground.
But step outside Israel’s borders, and the picture shifts. Those US presidents weren’t callous; they were haunted by the fallout of force. Remember Iraq? The 2003 invasion, sold partly on WMD fears, unleashed a decade of carnage: hundreds of thousands dead, cities in ruins, Isis rising from the ashes. Oil prices spiked, economies buckled, and the US military, stretched thin, paid in blood and treasure. A strike on Iran would dwarf that. Tehran’s facilities are hardened, scattered—think Natanz, Fordow, buried under mountains. Bombing them risks radiological leaks, not to mention retaliation. Iran’s arsenal includes ballistic missiles that could blacken Gulf skies, shut the Strait of Hormuz (where 20% of global oil flows), and ignite proxies from Yemen to Lebanon. Picture the scenes: Lebanese families fleeing barrel bombs anew, Yemeni ports choked, Saudi oil fields aflame. Global markets would seize—petrol at £3 a litre in London, inflation roaring back. And for what? Enrichment levels at 60%, per IAEA reports, but no weapon yet. A strike might set back the program years, but at the cost of radicalizing a generation, cornering moderates in Tehran, and handing Putin and China a propaganda win.
This is where the transatlantic rift bites deepest. America, for all its pro-Israel fealty, has its own skin in the game. It’s not just about votes or donors; it’s the exhaustion of endless wars, the polls screaming “no more Middle East quagmires,” the lessons of Vietnam and Afghanistan. Europe, watching from afar, feels it sharper still. The UK, bound by history and alliance, has echoed Washington’s caution—Theresa May vetoed Trump’s post-Soleimani strikes, Starmer’s Labor urges restraint amid Gaza’s toll. Yet Israel’s pleas tug at old guilt, the Munich ghosts, the failure to act in Rwanda or Srebrenica. Netanyahu exploits that, framing Iran as the new Nazi menace, forcing allies to choose between Jewish safety and regional Armageddon.
Humanize it further, and the tragedy unfolds in faces, not maps. In Tehran, scientists like Mohsen Fakhrizadeh—assassinated in 2020, allegedly by Israel—worked not just for bombs but prestige, a nation’s bid to join the nuclear club amid sanctions’ chokehold. Their families mourn not monsters, but providers. In Tel Aviv cafes, revellers dodge sirens, their laughter defiant but frayed. Gulf migrants in Dubai, scraping by on construction sites, dread the shutdowns that would send them home penniless. And in Washington corridors, officials like Biden’s Jake Sullivan weigh briefings with the weight of history, knowing one wrong call echoes Chamberlain or worse.
Now, as 2026 dawns with Iran’s uranium stockpile swelling and proxy wars flaring, the fragile JCPOA truce unravels. Trump, if he returns, might heed Netanyahu’s call—his first term nearly did, after Soleimani’s killing. Biden’s team clings to talks in Vienna, but deadlines slip. Israel’s recent strikes on Iranian targets signal impatience; Netanyahu’s coalition, laced with ultranationalists, demands action. The UN’s Rafael Grossi warns of breakout capacity; the US intelligence concurs, albeit with caveats.
So, will cooler heads prevail? Diplomacy’s track record is mixed—the deal worked until Trump tore it up, unleashing centrifuges anew. But war’s allure fades under scrutiny. Saudi Arabia, once hawkish, now courts Tehran via China-brokered détente. Even Israel’s Abraham accords pivot to economics, not endless enmity. Netanyahu’s pleas, persistent as desert wind, crash against reality’s rocks: alliances endure not on pleas alone, but shared restraint.
The hawks may yet prevail if a spark ignites—say, an Iranian test, or Hezbollah’s full assault. But for now, the presidents’ demurral holds a grim wisdom. In a world of multiplying threats—climate chaos, AI arms races, Russia’s gambits—picking this fight risks everything. Netanyahu’s decades-long crusade reveals not just Israel’s terror, but the alliance’s fault lines: one nation’s survival versus the many’s precarious peace. As tensions simmer, we must ask not just if Iran can be bombed into submission, but what world we’d inherit from the rubble. Cooler heads, scarred by history, might yet steer us from the brink.


