U.S. proposed 'joint military planning' with Israel on Iran
The Biden administration proposed to Israel a few weeks ago the idea of engaging in joint military planning concerning Iran, three U.S. and Israeli officials told Axios.
U.S. officials say the proposal is unprecedented and could significantly upgrade U.S.-Israeli military cooperation.
Israeli officials have so far treated the proposal with suspicion, fearing it is an attempt to “tie Israel's hands” from taking action against Iran — especially its nuclear facilities — if the U.S. objects.
A U.S. official stressed that the proposal is "not about planning any kind of joint U.S.-Israeli strike against Iran’s nuclear program."
U.S. officials said the proposal came up during recent visits to Israel by chair of the Joint Chiefs of Staff Gen. Mark Milley, Secretary of Defense Lloyd Austin, and CENTCOM commander Gen. Erik Kurilla.
Israel didn’t reject the idea but asked for clarifications regarding what “joint military planning” actually means in practice, including whether this process stays in the realm of intelligence and scenarios or extends into the realm of joint operations, a senior Israeli official said.
A U.S. official said the proposal was meant as a reassurance of U.S. military backing to Israel and wasn’t meant in any way to tie Israel’s hands.
The U.S. official added that such joint planning means that each side shares its plans for different contingencies and both sides can discuss ways to better deal with different scenarios that could develop regarding Iran’s activities in the region.