Netanyahu takes a gamble on American support for Israel with the war
against Iran
[March 03, 2026]
By TIA GOLDENBERG
Throughout his political career, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin
Netanyahu has steered his country along two pillars of foreign policy:
an ironclad partnership with the United States and a relentless
diplomatic and covert battle against the rulers of the Islamic Republic
of Iran.
Now, with Israel and the U.S. in a joint war against Iran’s leadership,
those two strategic paths risk clashing with each other. By enlisting
the U.S. in what he views as Israel’s existential battle against Iran,
Netanyahu is taking a gamble that could open up the relationship to the
strain of a war with far-reaching consequences.
To be sure, persuading U.S. President Donald Trump to join the war was a
coup for Netanyahu and highlights the strong ties between the two
leaders. If they are successful, they could quickly realize their shared
goal of toppling the Iranian government and spare the region a
protracted conflict.
But if the war drags on, the two allies' ties could again be tested.
“A large part of the American public will view it as the Israeli tail
wagging the American dog and that it is dragging the United States to a
war in the Middle East that isn’t theirs,” said Ofer Shelah, a research
fellow at the Institute for National Security Studies, a Tel Aviv,
Israel-based think tank. The drop in public support that might unleash
“will be very harmful for Israel in the medium and long term,” he said.
But, he added, in a nod to the Israeli leader's political ambitions:
“Netanyahu is not interested in the medium and long term.”

US public opinion has been evolving
For Netanyahu, successfully persuading Trump to strike Iran together is
the apex of decades of proximity between the Israeli leader and
Washington. Netanyahu, Israel's longest-serving leader, speaks flawless
English after having spent part of his youth in the U.S. and has always
portrayed himself as Israel's bridge to America.
Although he boasts about his tight relationships with multiple American
presidents and members of Congress, Netanyahu over the past two years
has seen support for Israel among the American public drop. According to
Gallup polling, American sympathies in the Middle East have shifted
dramatically toward the Palestinians.
That shift in sentiment has been driven in large part by Democrats. But
some Republicans, and even Trump's own backers, have been more outspoken
against the diplomatic and financial support the U.S. has continued to
grant Israel throughout the past two and a half years, when it has been
embroiled in a war on multiple fronts sparked by Hamas' Oct. 7, 2023,
attacks. The devastating images from the war in Gaza deepened Israel's
international isolation.
With a new war against Iran — the second in less than a year — Netanyahu
is tackling an enemy that he and many Israelis view as an existential
threat, citing its support for anti-Israeli militias across the region,
its ballistic missile arsenal, and its nuclear program. He has led the
crusade against Iran on the world stage for much of his career.
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People walk past buildings damaged during a strike on a police
station during ongoing, joint U.S.-Israeli military attacks in
Tehran, Iran, Monday, March 2, 2026. (AP Photo/Vahid Salemi)

Netanyahu said Sunday in a statement that the U.S. involvement
“allows us to do what I have been hoping to do for 40 years — to
deliver a crushing blow to the terror regime.” Netanyahu’s office
did not immediately respond to an Associated Press request for
comment.
The conflict could spiral
Days into the war, Israel and the U.S. military appear to be working
hand in glove to strike targets — from the initial attack that
killed top Iranian leaders, including Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali
Khamenei, to assaults that allowed the forces free rein in Iranian
skies.
But the conflict has already set off aftershocks that could
reverberate in the American heartland. At least six U.S. troops have
been killed. Travel was disrupted across the region, leaving
hundreds of thousands of travelers stranded. Oil prices surged,
raising the prospect of costlier gasoline for U.S. drivers as well
as increased prices for other goods at a time when people have been
stung by a rising cost of living.
Questions remain about the direction and aim of the war. It's
unclear whether the air power will be enough to topple Iran's
leadership, who or what should replace that leadership, and what
role Israel or the U.S. will have in either. Every day presents new
potential land mines.
“Many people will blame Israel if things go badly wrong,” wrote
Nadav Eyal, a commentator with the Israeli Yediot Ahronoth daily
newspaper. “Israel cannot afford to lose the American public’s
support under any circumstances. That is more important than
striking any individual military facility.”
Still, Aaron David Miller, who served as an adviser on Middle East
issues to Democratic and Republican administrations over two
decades, said that Netanyahu has little to lose from the war.
With elections scheduled for the fall, Netanyahu can use the war in
Iran to divert attention away from the failures of the Oct. 7, 2023,
attacks, the worst in Israel's history. Instead, Netanyahu can set
himself up as a brave wartime leader who fulfilled a pledge he has
made much of his life to confront Iran.

He can say he did so with support from the American president, who
Miller said can pull the breaks on the war whenever he pleases.
“If Trump feels as if it’s going south, he’ll find a way to
de-escalate,” he said, “and his good friend Benjamin Netanyahu will
follow.”
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