Netanyahu to discuss with Trump possible military options against Iran - CNN


Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu plans to discuss possible military options against Tehran during his meeting with US President Donald Trump in Washington this week, CNN reported citing two Israeli sources.
Netanyahu intends to present Trump with new intelligence on the Islamic Republic’s military capabilities, the report said citing one of the sources.
“Israel is worried about Iran’s progress in restoring its ballistic missile stockpiles and capabilities to its status before the 12-day war,” the source was quoted as saying.
The Israeli assessment is that without action, Iran could possess 1,800-2,000 ballistic missiles within weeks or months, the report said.

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s hastily advanced trip to Washington this week underscores the rising stakes surrounding renewed diplomacy between Iran and the United States.
Originally scheduled for February 18, the visit was brought forward by a week following fresh indirect talks in Oman that both sides have indicated could resume in the coming days.
Netanyahu is expected to press President Donald Trump to impose firm constraints on Iran’s ballistic-missile program and its support for armed groups in the region. But the urgency of the meeting appears to reflect more than immediate tactical concerns, pointing to a blunter effort by Israel to shape US policy rather than simply align with it.
Trump has repeatedly signaled his preference for a "deal with Iran." But Netanyahu remains wary that negotiations might focus narrowly on the nuclear file and leave unaddressed what he sees as Tehran broader threat ecosystem.
That gap was evident during the previous round of US–Iran talks in the spring of 2025.
While Trump conveyed optimism about diplomatic openings and outlined prospective nuclear proposals, reporting suggested Netanyahu remained unconvinced, ultimately awaiting the expiration of Washington’s 60-day deadline before launching strikes that became the 12-Day War.
Even after US bombers joined strikes on Iran’s Natanz and Fordow nuclear sites, Washington reportedly urged Israel to scale back operations as Israeli forces moved closer to senior figures following the killing of top Revolutionary Guards commanders.
Israeli and Western officials say Iran has since moved to restore damaged ballistic-missile infrastructure, in some cases prioritising missile sites over nuclear facilities. Iranian officials have also publicly pointed to renewed—even enhanced—missile capabilities, reinforcing Israeli concerns about Tehran’s readiness to deploy them in a future confrontation.
It is against that backdrop that Israel has watched recent diplomatic signals from Tehran and Washington with growing unease.
Iran has reintroduced senior figures into the diplomatic arena, including Ali Larijani, a longtime adviser to Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei, who has held consultations alongside the Muscat talks. His reappearance has been read in Israel as a sign that Tehran is seeking to project flexibility while resisting constraints on missiles and regional networks.
Those moves have coincided with messaging from within Trump’s political orbit emphasizing diplomatic opportunity.
Remarks by J.D. Vance, cautioning against escalation and underscoring the potential for a negotiated outcome, have been noted closely in Jerusalem, where officials have long worried that talks could narrow toward the nuclear file alone.
Taken together, these developments appear to have heightened Israeli concern that its core security priorities could be sidelined as diplomatic momentum builds—helping explain Netanyahu’s decision to advance his Washington visit rather than wait.
Netanyahu’s publicly stated red lines, particularly Iran’s arsenal of more than 1,800 ballistic missiles, align not only with Israeli threat assessments but with those of key Arab states.
Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates have borne the costs of Iran’s regional tactics firsthand. Iran-supplied Houthi drones and missiles struck Saudi Aramco’s Abqaiq processing facility in 2019 and later targeted infrastructure near Jeddah in 2022.
Israel’s September 2025 strike on Hamas leaders in Doha strained but did not sever quiet channels with Qatar.
Despite public friction, Persian Gulf states involved in the Abraham Accords and Qatar continued to participate in US-led security discussions in which Israeli intelligence on Iran was reportedly shared, underscoring the resilience of regional threat coordination.
At the same time, Iran’s Arab neighbors have actively sought to contain escalation and, in some cases, helped create the conditions for diplomacy.
While they share Israel’s assessment of the missile and proxy threat, they have often favored de-escalation and engagement as a means of managing it—highlighting a divergence not over the nature of the threat, but over how best to reduce it.
Netanyahu’s visit to Washington reflects an effort to push back against that regional pull toward accommodation, pressing for a harder line on Tehran that addresses Israel’s security concerns. He appears to view Iran’s nuclear latency, missile expansion and regional outreach as a single, interlocking challenge.
Israel’s objective, therefore, is not episodic deterrence but the steady erosion of the capabilities that allow Tehran to sustain an existential threat posture—a logic shaping Netanyahu’s diplomacy in Washington as much as Israel’s readiness to act alone.

The United States on Tuesday imposed fresh sanctions targeting individuals, companies and vessels accused of supporting Iran-backed Hezbollah of Lebanon, the Treasury Department said.
The Office of Foreign Assets Control (OFAC) added two individuals and five entities to its Specially Designated Nationals (SDN) list under counterterrorism authorities, citing their alleged links to Hezbollah’s financial and commercial networks.
Among those designated was Russian national Andrey Viktorovich Borisov and Lebanese national Mohamed Nayef Maged who is linked to Al-Qard al-Hassan Association, a financial institution affiliated with Hezbollah that the United States has previously designated for facilitating the group’s financial activities.
In addition to the two individuals, OFAC designated several companies across multiple jurisdictions that it said are tied to Hezbollah.
Brilliance Maritime Ventures S.A., registered in Panama in 2023, was added to the SDN list for its alleged links to Hezbollah. The designation also covers the bulk carrier BRILLIANCE, a Panama-flagged vessel built in 1999 and linked to the company.
In Lebanon, JOOD SARL, also known as “JUD,” was designated. The company, established in 2025 and registered in Chiyah, Baabda, is listed as operating in the wholesale trade of jewelry, watches and precious metals. OFAC said it is linked to Hezbollah.
Two Turkey-based firms were also sanctioned: Platinum Group International Dis Ticaret Limited Sirketi, registered in Istanbul in 2024, and Sea Surf Shipping Limited, based in Tuzla, Istanbul. Both were identified as subject to secondary sanctions for their alleged connections to Hezbollah.
The designation of Sea Surf Shipping Limited was accompanied by the listing of the general cargo vessel LARA, flagged in St. Kitts & Nevis and built in 2000, which OFAC said is linked to the company.
Iran's top security official Ali Larijani on Tuesday referred to Israeli Prime Minister Netanyahu's visit to Washington DC and called on Americans to "think wisely" and "remain alert to the destructive role of the Zionists."
Netanyahu says Iran will top the agenda of his trip.

Bulldozers moved piles of bodies of those killed in the Gohardasht district of Karaj during the January crackdown on nationwide protests, in what witnesses describe as a deliberate attempt to instill fear after corpses were stacked in public squares.
A resident of Gohardasht told Iran International that on the nights of January 8 and 9, large numbers of armed forces were lying in ambush in alleyways as heavy gunfire echoed through the area.
According to the witness, teenagers struck in the head and face by pellet rounds sought refuge inside residential buildings. The resident said at least 16 people were killed in the alley where he lives, adding that security forces also fired at the doors of apartment buildings.
Another eyewitness said that around a nearby hospital, injured women with severe facial wounds were seen seeking help. On Dariush Street, he said, a DShK heavy machine gun was deployed and crowds were sprayed with gunfire.
He said that at the First Square of Gohardasht, bodies were piled on top of each other to create an atmosphere of terror before being moved away with bulldozers.
The witness said the bodies were collected around midnight on January 8, but freezing temperatures left congealed blood visible on the ground. The following night, January 9, the killings intensified, he added.
A Iranian lawmaker said Iran had informed the United States ahead of negotiations that talks would be restricted to the nuclear issue.
“Before holding negotiations with the Americans, we told them that we are only willing to negotiate on the nuclear matter,” Esmail Kowsari told the Tehran-based Didban Iran website on Tuesday.
Kowsari, a member of parliament’s national security and foreign policy committee, stressed that Tehran would not accept eliminating enrichment under any deal.
“We will by no means accept zero enrichment, and even if an agreement is reached, it will be solely on the nuclear issue,” the IRGC general-turned-lawmaker said.
Kowsari also voiced pessimism about the talks’ prospects.
“I am not optimistic about the negotiations between Iran and the United States yielding results,” he said.





