'Failure': Israel reacts with alarm as emerging US-Iran deal draws criticism
Israeli analysts and hawkish US politicians say
proposed agreement falls far short of war aims and signals weakening Israeli
influence in Washington
By Nadav
Rapaport in
Tel Aviv, Israel
Published date: 25 May 2026
https://www.middleeasteye.net/news/israel-reacts-alarm-emerging-us-iran-deal-draws-criticism
The emerging agreement between the United States and Iran to permanently end the war has been met with
scepticism and growing alarm in Israel.
Reports over the weekend said the deal centres on a
memorandum of understanding establishing a preliminary 60-day ceasefire, which
reportedly does not address Iran’s nuclear programme.
The initial framework is also said to include ending
wars “on all fronts”, including Lebanon.
The reported terms have drawn criticism from US
Democrats, hawkish
Republicans and
Israeli commentators alike.
Amid mounting backlash, Israeli Prime Minister
Benjamin Netanyahu said on Sunday that he had agreed with US President Donald
Trump that “any final agreement with Iran must eliminate the nuclear threat”.
Netanyahu also said Trump had reaffirmed “Israel’s
right to defend itself against threats on every front, including Lebanon”.
Trump, meanwhile, has defended the negotiations on his
Truth Social platform.
“If I make a deal with Iran, it will be a good and
proper one, not like the one made by Obama,” Trump wrote, referring to the 2015
nuclear agreement signed under former president Barack Obama.
“I don’t make bad deals,” he added.
'Failure'
But Israeli journalists and military analysts appeared
unconvinced by the reassurances from either leader, with many portraying the
emerging agreement as a political failure and a strategic climbdown by both the
US and Israel.
Amos Harel, military affairs commentator for
Haaretz, wrote on Monday that a deal would amount to an
American capitulation and reflect Israel’s declining standing within the Trump
administration.
Harel argued that the agreement falls far short of
Netanyahu’s declared objectives when the war began in late February, including
the collapse of the Iranian government and the dismantling of Iran’s nuclear
and ballistic missile programmes.
Danny Citrinowicz, an Iran specialist at the Institute
for National Security Studies (INSS), echoed that assessment, saying the military campaign’s architects “did not
truly understand Iran”.
“The enormous gap between the declarations made at the
beginning of the campaign and the agreement that will likely bring it to an end
illustrates its failure,” Citrinowicz said on Monday.
"This war proved that Benjamin Netanyahu’s
strategy has collapsed.”
Raz Zimmt, also a researcher at INSS, described the proposed agreement as “very problematic” for
Israel and argued that Iran had succeeded in shaping “a new regional order”.
"The one who blinked first was President Trump,
not the Iranians," Zimmt told the 103FM radio programme.
Veteran political columnist Nahum Barnea of Yedioth
Ahronoth wrote on Monday that the emerging deal would represent
a “defeat” for both Israel and the United States.
He wrote that Netanyahu and Trump “never imagined”
that after nearly three months, Iran would be in a better position than it was
before the war.
Barnea added that Israel was now “subject to the
absolute authority of a capricious, hollow, desperate American president” and
argued that while Israel still faces the challenge of confronting Iran,
“Netanyahu is the last person” capable of leading that effort.
Security officials alarmed
The criticism comes amid growing concern in Israel
over what many see as the country’s diminishing influence in Washington.
On Saturday, the New York Times reported that Israel had largely been sidelined from the
ongoing negotiations by the Trump administration.
Meanwhile, Haaretz reported on Sunday that senior Israeli security officials
were alarmed by the direction of the talks and warned that “Israeli interests
were not taken into account throughout the negotiations”.
According to the report, officials expressed
frustration that despite Israel’s joint military campaign against Iran,
Washington had failed to prioritise Israel’s security concerns.
The officials are now said to fear that a US-Iran
agreement could place restrictions on Israel’s future military operations in
Lebanon and Gaza.
Israeli news outlet Ynet also reported that army officials viewed the proposed
agreement as “a bad agreement for Israel” and were deeply disappointed by its
reported terms.
According to the report, the Israeli military had
already been preparing for a renewed campaign against Iran and believed the
agreement would fall short of its strategic objectives, potentially leaving
Iran as a “nuclear threshold state”.
David Bitan, a member of the Knesset from Netanyahu’s
Likud party, acknowledged on Monday that expectations in Israel at the
start of the war had been unrealistically high.
Still, he insisted Israel had achieved significant
gains during the 40-day conflict.
Asked about Iran’s ballistic missile capabilities,
Bitan said Israel would “have to deal with it again and again”, adding that he
believed further rounds of conflict with Iran were likely every two to three
years.
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