According to current and former U.S. officials, Israel may have been plotting to kill top Iranian negotiators in order to keep Washington in their war.
The U.S. was concerned that the Jewish State was mulling the assassinations of Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi and speaker of the Parliament Mohammad Bagher Ghalibaf.
During the springtime negotiations between Washington and Tehran, American officials had to take steps to protect their Iranian counterparts.
“Fearful that an Israeli assassination effort would doom the negotiations, the United States, according to some of the officials, went so far as to ask other countries in the region to warn Iran about the possibility Israel could target the two officials,” The New York Times said Thursday. “U.S. officials acknowledged that during the intense phase of the war, Mr. Araghchi and Mr. Ghalibaf, as senior government officials, could have been legitimate targets for Israel, which was intent on toppling Iran’s hard-line government. But after the negotiations started in earnest in April, American officials believed that any attempt to kill the Iranian leaders would end the talks and reignite the fighting.”
The killing of top officials has been a cornerstone of the conflict. On its opening day joint U.S./Israeli strikes killed Ayatollah Ali Khamenei and other top officials.
“While U.S. strikes focused on Iran’s navy and missile forces, Israel prioritized targeting the leadership in the early phase of the war, intent on killing as many high-ranking officials as it could,” The New York Times said.
Based on Israel’s actions, it appears that their goal was always to hinder any hope of peace.
“That included killing potentially more pragmatic leaders that the Trump administration had hoped to negotiate with, such as Ali Larijani, Iran’s top national security official, and Kamal Kharazi, a former Iranian foreign minister. Both men were involved in the negotiations with the United States when they were killed in Israeli airstrikes,” The New York Times said.
Alex Jones Live reported how Israel dragged the U.S. into war. In May Trump admitted that the U.S. went to war with Iran for Israel, as well as for the Gulf state allies.
“We’re doing it to help Israel, and to help Saudi Arabia, and to help Qatar and UAE, and you know, Kuwait, and other countries, Bahrain,” Trump said.
The State Department has already confirmed the U.S. went to war for Israel.
“…the United States decided to act against the regime in collective self-defense of Israel,” the State Department said April 21.
Jews across the world share the fear of peace.
American Jewish leaders became concerned that Trump is going to end the Iran war. Israeli Jews have begun to lash out at the President’s Jewish negotiators, Jared Kushner and Steve Witkoff, over criticism that their work may bring peace to a war which Israel dragged the U.S. into.
The New York Times chronicled Israel’s push for endless war:
The initial two-week cease-fire in April was met with grudging Israeli official support and broad public concern in Israel that the United States was ending the war too early. Rather than being driven from power, the theocratic government of Iran had become even more hard-line and Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guards Corps had only consolidated its control over the country.
Mr. Araghchi and Mr. Ghalibaf have been the key officials negotiating with various countries in the region to reach a cease-fire and then a more lasting peace with the United States. In June, the United States and Iran reached a framework agreement that sought to open the Strait of Hormuz and set the outline for follow-on talks on Tehran’s nuclear program.
Officials and commentators in Israel viewed the initial agreement as a disaster, because it did not accomplish their country’s war aims of forcing regime change, destroying Iran’s proxy forces and seriously damaging its missile program. Israeli officials also worried the agreement would put billions of dollars into Iran, allowing it to quickly rebuild after the war and without meaningfully restricting its nuclear ambitions.
5 Responses
That man is insane.
lol, jews in space , with friggin lazer beams, lol
The HR Block caricature was created by sexual relations between Netanyahu and Miriam Adelson, while Trump watched and played with his less than 3 inch long penis.
LOL
Again