Site search2 hours agoTom BatemanUS State Department correspondentIsrael's tit-for-tat strikes with
Iran over the weekend, despite US President
Donald Trump's call for Prime Minister
Benjamin Netanyahu to hold fire, threatened to thrust the
Middle East back into another round of direct confrontation between
Tehran and Washington.
Israel bombed sites in
Iran for the first time since a ceasefire in April, after
Iran fired missiles at
Israel, in what
Tehran said was retaliation for Israeli strikes on Lebanon's capital,
Beirut.The current web of fractious alliances and dysfunctional ceasefires shows how dangerously destabilised the region remains, more than three months after the US and
Israel launched their war on
Iran.The escalation also highlights three points about the current trajectory of the war:Trump can't or won't contain his Israeli ally to the extent he publicly proclaims, a point not lost on
Tehran, which aims to prise open any differences between the US and IsraelTehran is prepared to risk retaliation against its own territory in order to link the fates of the US-
Iran war with the one between
Israel and HezbollahTrump's longed-for deal on the nuclear issue is not imminent, as
Iran senses his appetite for risk is currently low and is seeking to extract more from Washington at the negotiating tableAfter
Iran's missile attack on
Israel on Sunday, Trump spoke to several journalists telling one he was "going to call [Netanyahu] right now and tell him not to retaliate".The implication was an Israeli counterattack could jeopardise his perilously fragile diplomacy with
Tehran.Hours later,
Israel attacked
Iran. Trump told the BBC on Monday afternoon that Israeli planes were "already on their way" when he spoke with Netanyahu.In a brief phone call with the BBC, the US president denied the Israeli PM had defied him, saying: "If I tell him to do something, he does it."On the face of it, Trump failed to stop Netanyahu, another escalation in a tense series of exchanges between the two leaders.Last week, Trump reportedly dished out an expletive-laden rant at Netanyahu, calling the Israeli leader "crazy" for wanting to attack
Beirut.Netanyahu said strikes on
Beirut were necessary amid the
Hezbollah threat against northern
Israel.Trump felt his behaviour threatened his own attempt to reach a deal with
Tehran to reopen the
Strait of Hormuz and secure assurances on
Iran's nuclear programme.In an interview with the New York Post last week, Trump said he was perturbed by Netanyahu's "constantly fighting with Lebanon".So did Netanyahu defy Trump with its latest strikes on
Iran?Although that's one prevailing narrative, the answer is almost certainly no.Anadolu via Getty ImagesA pro-government protest in
Tehran on MondayIsrael's subsequent actions suggest Washington at least gave limited consent, but as the president would see it, proceeding with caution and pushing for one round only.As the veteran US negotiator Aaron David Miller told the BBC on Monday morning - Trump gave Netanyahu a "blinking yellow light".As a practical matter,
Israel could not have have attacked
Iran without at least Washington's tacit approval.The US currently has its biggest military buildup in the region since the invasion of Iraq.It has hundreds of military personnel in
Israel liaising with the
Israel Defense Forces (IDF).In this case
Israel would have needed to co-ordinate with US forces in the region over air routes.The IDF briefed Israeli journalists after the strikes there was "full co-ordination" with US Central Command.It said the US military also helped shoot down missiles fired by
Iran at
Israel.By Monday afternoon Washington time, both
Israel and
Iran were signalling the round between them was over.This is where Trump would want things to stand.His messages on Sunday night that he would stop Netanyahu may have been meant for
Tehran's consumption to distance Washington from
Israel's strikes.Or he may have genuinely intended to stop him, but was persuaded otherwise by Netanyahu.While the Israelis will have calculated they could not let
Iran's missile strikes pass without retaliation,
Iran's calculation for launching the strikes here is critical.This was the first time
Iran fired at
Israel in response to an Israeli attack on Lebanon (rather than in direct retaliation for an Israeli strike on
Iran).
Iran was trying to force its point about linking two ceasefires - its own with the US and one that exists in name only between
Israel and
Hezbollah.It was also testing Trump's response.How far would the Americans support an Israeli counterattack on
Iran?Would the Americans join in themselves?The more dispute they can create between the US and
Israel over the future direction of the war, the better as far as
Tehran is concerned.In the end, Trump chose distance - at least in public - continuing to push the diplomacy with
Tehran.Anadolu via Getty ImagesA missile launched from
Iran towards
Israel is seen in the sky on SundayIn an interview with NBC on Sunday, hours before the flare-up, he reiterated his view that a deal with
Iran was "very close".After it, he framed
Israel and
Iran in a similarly dismissive light, saying each had had "their fun" and now it was time for the talks.Iranian leaders appear emboldened by the outcome of the confrontation.President Masoud Pezeshkian suggested
Iran's military strikes on
Israel strengthened its negotiating position with the US.He called "diplomacy and defence" the "two wings of national power"."We have neither abandoned the field nor the negotiating table," he posted on social media.
Iran's economy is under massive pressure, worsened by the US naval blockade of its ports.Its leadership wants at least two things from the negotiations with Washington as a priority.One is access to money, in the form of sanctions relief and the unfreezing of tens of billions of dollars from its oil revenues.The other is to limit Israeli escalation against
Hezbollah in Lebanon, as it sees
Hezbollah as deterring further Israeli strikes against itself.Given the pressures on the US economy from high oil prices caused by
Iran's closure of the
Strait of Hormuz, in a US midterm election year,
Tehran is likely to have sensed that Trump's appetite for risk is currently low (although each further escalation may be pushing his patience).That means
Iran is likely to keep trying to push its two points up the agenda, to try to "front load" sanctions relief and unfreezing assets in the proposed deal with the US, sensing Trump is keener to get an agreement than to return to war.Trump was asked in his interview on Sunday if he would unfreeze any Iranian assets or lift any sanctions upfront as a part of a deal.His answer: "No."That might be one reason there's still no agreement.But the chance remains significant of growing destabilisation in the region potentially pushing the US and
Iran into another round of direct fighting.