The emerging nuclear agreement between Washington and Tehran has sent shockwaves through Jerusalem, where Israeli political and military officials privately concede the deal presents a profound strategic and political challenge for Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu.
According to three senior Israeli officials who spoke on condition of anonymity, the framework expected to be finalised in the coming weeks would effectively legitimise Iran’s enrichment programme while lifting a broad swath of economic sanctions. This, they argue, undercuts the very premise of Israel’s long-standing policy of maximum pressure and military credibility.
“This is not merely a diplomatic setback. It is a fundamental reordering of the regional balance of power,” said a former senior Mossad official with knowledge of the negotiations. “The Prime Minister’s entire security doctrine has been built on the assumption that the international community would never accept a nuclear- capable Iran. That assumption is now obsolete.”
The deal, which has been negotiated indirectly between US and Iranian representatives in Vienna, is understood to include a phased removal of sanctions and a mechanism for Iran to continue enrichment up to 3.67 per cent purity, with strict International Atomic Energy Agency oversight. In return, Tehran would comply with additional protocols and commit to no further advances in centrifuge technology for a period of ten years.
For Mr Netanyahu, the political calculus is exceedingly difficult. His governing coalition, which includes far-right parties that advocate outright military strikes on Iranian nuclear facilities, is already showing signs of strain. A public endorsement of the deal would risk collapsing the government. An outright denunciation, however, could isolate Israel from its most important ally.
“Netanyahu is caught between a rock and a hard place,” said Dr. Yossi Kuperwasser, a former head of the research division in Israeli military intelligence. “If he opposes the deal too aggressively, he risks a public rift with the United States that could damage bilateral relations for years. If he acquiesces, his political base will see it as a betrayal of his life’s work.”
The timing could not be more precarious. With the Biden administration eager to demonstrate a foreign policy success ahead of the 2024 presidential elections, and the Iranian leadership under pressure to deliver economic relief, alignment of interests between Washington and Tehran appears closer than at any point since the 2015 Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action was signed.
Israeli defence officials are particularly alarmed by the potential for the deal to release an estimated $100 billion in frozen Iranian assets, a portion of which they believe will flow to proxy forces in Lebanon, Syria, Yemen and Gaza. “The money will be used to arm Hezbollah with precision-guided missiles and to reinforce Hamas’s tunnel networks,” said a senior Israel Defence Forces officer. “We are looking at a multi-front escalation that dwarfs anything we have faced in the past decade.”
In response to the advance news, Mr Netanyahu has convened an emergency meeting of the security cabinet for tomorrow morning. He is expected to deliver a televised address to the nation later this week, framing the deal as an existential threat and calling for a united opposition in the Knesset.
However, the strategic question remains unanswered: what credible alternative does Israel now have? The window for a unilateral military strike is narrowing as Iran’s nuclear facilities are dispersed and fortified, and any such operation would require overflight rights that no regional state is likely to grant. A covert sabotage campaign, while ongoing, has not succeeded in halting progress.
“Netanyahu has spent a decade warning the world that Iran must not be allowed to become a nuclear threshold state,” said Dr. Kuperwasser. “That threshold is about to be crossed, but not through a military breakout. It is happening through a diplomatic corridor. And Israel, for all its military might, has no means to stop it.”
The crisis comes as Israeli society is already deeply polarised by the government’s proposed judicial overhaul. Some analysts suggest Mr Netanyahu may attempt to leverage external security threats to rally domestic support and postpone legal proceedings against him on corruption charges. Others warn that a failed gamble on the Iran file could mark the beginning of the end of his long political career.








