Israel believes Iran war could last months, testing U.S. resolve

Israel believes Iran war could last months, testing U.S. resolve


U.S. and Israeli officials are privately casting doubt on projections from the Trump administration that the war with Iran could end within a matter of weeks โ€” instead warning that a months-long campaign may be required to destroy the countryโ€™s ballistic missile capabilities and install a pliant government, multiple sources told The Times.

The prospect of extended combat creates political risks and uncertainties for President Trump, whose penchant for dramatic, short-term military operations has suddenly given way to a full-scale assault on the Islamic Republic, shocking a MAGA base that for years supported his calls to end forever wars in the Middle East.

One Israeli official told The Times โ€” despite internal guidance among Israeli officials to adhere to the U.S. presidentโ€™s stated time frame โ€” that the war โ€œdefinitely could be longerโ€ than the four-week window that Trump repeatedly offered to reporters.

A U.S. official said that in private conversations, top administration officials presume the campaign will require a longer runway now that remnants of Iranโ€™s government have chosen to resist rather than acquiesce to Washington.

Protracted war was always a possibility. Trump was presented with U.S. intelligence assessments gaming out the potential conflict that emphasized how highly unpredictable the results of an attack would be โ€” an analysis the intelligence community believes has borne out on the ground in the chaotic early days of the conflict.

A longer conflict could create diplomatic space between Trump and Israelโ€™s prime minister, Benjamin Netanyahu, who has advocated for the overthrow of the Islamic Republic for over 30 years.

The Israeli leader has succeeded in convincing Trump to take military actions in Iran that American presidents have rejected for decades, from bombing its nuclear facilities to assassinating its leadership, including Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, who was killed in an opening strike over the weekend.

Goal of a change of government fades

Yet, mere days into the war, White House officials have all but ceased references to a democratic spring that could sweep Iranโ€™s government aside.

A set of four U.S. goals for the mission no longer calls for changing the regime itself. Still, Netanyahuโ€™s government remains keen on replacing the government, and the nationโ€™s longest-serving premier sees the current war as his best opportunity to do so, one official said.

Speaking with reporters Tuesday, Trump rejected reports that the Israelis had convinced him to launch the attack.

โ€œNo, I might have forced their hand,โ€ Trump said. โ€œBased on the way the negotiations were going, I think they were going to attack first, and I didnโ€™t want that to happen. So if anything, I might have forced Israelโ€™s hand, but Israel was ready, and we were ready, and weโ€™ve had a very, very powerful impact because virtually everything they have had been knocked out.โ€

In a series of interviews this week, Trump said he had been given projections of a four- or five-week war, while noting he is prepared to go longer if necessary.

Michael Rubin, a former Pentagon official who is Iran expert at the American Enterprise Institute, said that projecting a deadline to the conflict at its start would be a strategic mistake for the Trump administration, as it would in effect give Iranโ€™s remaining leadership an end date to wait out the fighting.

โ€œSuccessive presidents have shown that America has strategic attention deficit disorder,โ€ Rubin said. โ€œIf that was the case in Iraq and Afghanistan, itโ€™s especially true under Trump. He imposed a ceasefire on Gaza that let Hamas survive to fight another day; they still havenโ€™t disarmed.โ€

The duration of the war will depend, in part, on Iranโ€™s ability to resist and defend its remaining capabilities โ€” but also on the presidentโ€™s willingness to accept an outcome that leaves the Islamic Republic in place.

That decision has not yet been made by Trump, who has vacillated between calls for a democratic uprising across Iran โ€” and U.S. military options to support resistance groups inside the country โ€” as opposed to a shorter campaign that cripples Iranโ€™s political leadership and Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps.

โ€œI can go long and take over the whole thing, or end it in two or three days and tell the Iranians, โ€˜See you again in a few years if you start rebuilding,โ€™โ€ Trump told Axios.

One of Israelโ€™s primary goals is to effectively eliminate the countryโ€™s ballistic missile program, and progress on that score is ahead of schedule, another source familiar with the operation said. โ€œThings are going very well at the moment,โ€ the source added. โ€œGreat pace.โ€

An Israeli military source noted to The Times that the stated goal of the mission is to significantly degrade, but not necessarily destroy, Iranโ€™s ballistic missile capabilities, a goal the source said could be accomplished within Trumpโ€™s preferred time frame.

โ€œIsrael was quite unhappy Trump ordered the [June 2025] 12-day war ended when it did,โ€ said Patrick Clawson, director of the Iran program at the Washington Institute for Near East Policy. He said he expected the current war would โ€œtake timeโ€ to comprehensively set back Iranโ€™s ballistic missile capabilities, after a series of Israeli missions in 2024 against the missile program failed to set them back by more than a matter of months.

โ€œSome Israelis think before the recent strikes, Iranian production was fully restored,โ€ Clawson said. โ€œSo a really comprehensive attack on Iranian missiles is an important Israeli objective.โ€

The Maduro model

But no one inside the Islamic Republic system has emerged so far to serve in a supplicant role to Trump in the way that Delcy Rodrรญguez has stepped in as acting president of Venezuela, after U.S. forces captured that countryโ€™s strongman president, Nicolรกs Maduro, in an audacious overnight raid in January.

Since then, the Stars and Stripes have flown alongside the Venezuelan tricolor at government buildings in Caracas, where senior Trump administration officials have been welcomed to discuss lucrative opportunities in Venezuelaโ€™s oil industry.

Trump is now looking for an Iranian counterpart to Rodrรญguez, he said Tuesday, suggesting he is willing to keep the Islamic Republic in place despite encouraging its citizens to rise up against their government.

โ€œMost of the people we had in mind are dead,โ€ Trump said in the Oval Office. โ€œWe had some in mind from that group that is dead. And now we have another group. They may be dead also. Pretty soon weโ€™re not gonna know anybody.โ€

โ€œI mean, Venezuela was so incredible because we did the attack and we kept the government totally intact,โ€ he added.

Dennis Ross, a veteran diplomat on the Israeli-Palestinian conflict who served in the George H.W. Bush, Clinton and Obama administrations, expressed doubt that Trump would be willing to proceed with a months-long campaign, regardless of Israelโ€™s aspirational objectives.

โ€œI believe President Trump doesnโ€™t define clear objectives so he can decide to end the war at a time of his choosing, and declare the objective at that point, announcing we have achieved what we sought to do,โ€ said Ross, noting that finding a figurehead in Iran as he did in Venezuela was always โ€œa long shot.โ€

โ€œUnilaterally, he could declare we made the regime pay a price for killing its citizens, and we have weakened Iran to the point that it is not any longer a threat to its neighbors,โ€ Ross added. โ€œHe could then say, if Iran continues the war, we will hit them even harder.โ€

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