Axios reported, citing Israeli officials, that Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu directly asked the White House whether secret negotiations with Iran were occurring. The question followed the New York Times report of an Iranian intelligence approach to the CIA. The White House answer, as confirmed by CNN, was no.
The question is not new. Netanyahu spent 2013 to 2015 publicly opposing the Obama administration's negotiations with Iran — talks that began in secret through an Omani backchannel before becoming public as the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA). His March 2015 address to the US Congress, delivered without White House coordination, was constructed on the premise that Washington was negotiating a deal that endangered Israeli security without Israeli consent. The fear of exclusion from US-Iran diplomacy is a fixed element of Israeli strategic calculation across governments and prime ministers; Netanyahu's personal history with it makes the reflex faster, not different in kind.
That he felt the need to ask — in the middle of a joint military operation where Israeli and American aircraft are striking the same target sets — suggests the coordination between Washington and Jerusalem has limits that shared cockpits do not erase. Israel is a co-belligerent whose equities in this conflict extend beyond the immediate campaign: the status of Iran's nuclear programme, the future of Hezbollah's military capacity , and the post-conflict security architecture of The Gulf all depend on what terms, if any, eventually end the fighting. Any US-Iran channel that operated without Israeli input on these questions would replay the JCPOA dynamic under far higher stakes.
The political geometry constrains Washington in both directions. Opening talks without Israeli knowledge risks fracturing the Coalition prosecuting the war. But the Israeli veto over US diplomacy — implicit in Netanyahu's query — also narrows Washington's options for ending it. President Trump explicitly rejected ground troops and nation-building ; if the military campaign is self-limiting, the exit must eventually be diplomatic. Who sits at that table, and who has a veto over its composition, may matter as much as the fighting itself.
