Book: Netanyahu Called on Trump to Attack Iran
WASHINGTON (Dispatches) -- Redacted quotes in a new book by former Pentagon chief Mark Esper suggest that former prime minister of the occupying regime of Israel Benjamin Netanyahu called on U.S. President Donald Trump to take direct military action against Iran’s nuclear program.
In the book, A Sacred Oath: Memoirs of a Secretary of Defense During Extraordinary Times, Esper notes that Trump seemed firm in his commitment not to enter a war with Iran, the Haaretz newspaper reported on Tuesday.
Several sections of the book have been redacted by the Pentagon, and Esper is currently suing the Pentagon over this, charging that “significant text is being improperly withheld from publication … under the guise of classification”.
Following the redacted quote, Esper writes: “Netanyahu would say this to me when I met with him, so I was confident he was telling Trump the same thing.”
“In my view, that seemed like a big bet to take, especially when there wasn’t a pressing need to take it anytime soon,” Esper writes.
He goes on to cite Israeli media reports and Zionist war officials saying that Iran was still two years away from assembling a nuclear weapon. A fatwa by Leader of the Islamic Revolution Ayatollah Seyyed Ali Khamenei forbids Iran from pursuing any nuclear weapons program.
While the quote has been redacted to make it unclear as to whether Netanyahu had indeed suggested to Trump that the U.S. militarily attack Iran’s nuclear program, Esper’s book comes at the same time as another upcoming book by journalists Susan Glasser and Peter Baker that makes the same claim.
According to the two journalists, Netanyahu implored the Trump administration to attack Iran from the moment it was clear that the election results had gone against Trump. General Mark Milley, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, is quoted as saying: “If you do this, you’re gonna have a fucking war.”
Esper’s book chronicles his tenure in the Trump administration, which saw tensions between the U.S. and Iran reach near boiling point several times, most notably with the January 2020 assassination of Iranian General Qassem Soleimani, who led Iran’s Quds Force.
Media reported on several excerpts of Esper’s book released earlier this week, in which he wrote that Trump had been vying to strike an Iranian official.
The desire to do so was linked to political gain, according to the book, with Esper believing that Trump’s team wanted news that could be used to aid his 2020 reelection bid.
In addition to making a strong line against Iran a key part of his administration’s foreign policy, the former president used it as a platform for his failed bid at winning the White House for a second term.
Esper wrote that Milley told him that Robert O’Brien, Trump’s national security adviser, had called