US warned Iran of Israel's plan to kill its top negotiators, Araghchi and Ghalibaf, as Washington sought a deal
As the Trump administration pursued a high-stakes deal with Iran to end the war that began in late February, senior Washington officials feared Israel planned
As the Trump administration pursued a high-stakes deal with Iran to end the war that began in late February, senior Washington officials feared Israel planned to kill Tehran's top negotiators. Citing current and former officials, the Washington Post reported that the US strongly opposed killing Tehran's Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi and Parliamentary Speaker Mohammad Bagher Ghalibaf, and took the unusual step this spring of using intermediaries to warn Tehran that Israel was planning to assassinate them. A US official told WaPo, “You kill those folks, and you’re killing the pragmatists.” Another added that back in March, when the Trump administration began exploring diplomatic ways to end the war in Iran, several US officials told Israeli counterparts not to continue killing Tehran's political leadership. US-Israel's strained ties According to the report, Washington's decision to intervene and warn Tehran that its top negotiators could be killed highlighted the already-straining ties between the US and Israel and the Trump administration's restricted influence over the Israeli government.
Aaron David Miller, a former State Department official who has advised both Republican and Democratic administrations, told the publication that, "It shows the divergence of war aims between the US and Israel and the fundamental determination on the part of Israel’s prime minister to undermine any negotiation that the US might conclude." The ties between Israel and the United States have been strained ever since the war began on 28 February. Many Iranian political and military leaders, including the country's former Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, were killed. Also Read | Ayatollah Ali Khamenei's funeral to be held on July 9 in Mashhad At the beginning of the joint operation, the two allies shared a common goal of regime change in Iran; however, they quickly parted ways after US officials concluded that Tehran's military and clerical establishment would continue to maintain their grip on power, according to the Washington Post.
According to US officials, cracks between the two allies started to emerge in March after Israel killed Iran's top national security official, Ali Larijani. Citing an official, the report said, "The turning point wasn’t the assassination of the supreme leader, it was the assassination of Larijani." He added, "The U.S. was looking for an Iranian official to deal with, and all of a sudden, he was gone.” Donald Trump slammed Israel's assassination campaign Earlier in March this year, US President Donald Trump publicly admitted that Israel's assassination campaign was creating hindrances to negotiating with the regime. Speaking to reporters at the time, he said, "You know it’s a little tough," and added, "They’ve wiped out everybody. I don’t want them to be killed.’’ The Iranian parliamentary speaker was nearly killed this year as well when Israel targeted a meeting of senior officials of the Islamic Republic in an underground bunker.
