“There will be no better option” The details of Trump '%Nanyah 48 hours before Iran's attack are discovered

Less than 48 hours before the launch of the US-Israel attack on Iran, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu held a telephone conversation with President Donald Trump, trying to explain the reasons for the launch of a complex and distant war of the very nature Trump had once openly opposed during the campaign, writes exclusively [...]
Both Trump and Netanyahu, earlier that week, based on intelligence information, knew that Iranian Supreme Leader, ayatollah Ali Khamenei, and his closest associates would meet soon at his Tehran-based complex, thus becoming a possible target of a so-called “decapitional attack”, a blow to the top of political and military leadership.
Netanyahu, determined to carry out the decades-long operation, told Trump that perhaps there would never again be a better chance for the elimination of Khamene dealt with and revenge for previous Iranian efforts at the Trump assassination, including an alleged 2024.
As Reuters recalls, the US Department of Justice had charged a Pakistani citizen with attempting to recruit US people to kill Donald Trump in retaliation for the elimination of Iranian General Qassem Solejmani.
At the moment of the conversation Trump had approved in principle the military operation against Iran, but had not yet decided when and under what US conditions would be directly involved.
The US Army had been gathering forces in the region for weeks, so many in administration believed it was only a matter of time when the president would give the green light.
Reuters failed to determine how much Netanyah's argument affected Trump's final decision, but the conversation posed a recent effort to convince him.
According to sources, that very conversation together with the assessment that “potential directory” for the elimination of the Iranian leader was closing down was one of the key factors that prompted Trump to launch Operation “on February 27th. Epic Fury”
Netanyahu, according to Reuters, argued that Trump could enter history by eliminating Iranian leadership, which the West yet many Iranians have long considered hostile. He even suggested that Iranians could go out on the streets and overthrow the theocratic regime that ruled since 1979 and considered one of the sources of global instability.
The first bombs fell on the morning of 28 February. That same evening Trump announced that Khamene was dead.
As Reuters recalls, Netanyahu himself dismissed claims that Israel “had attracted the US to war”, calling it a false “”.
“Does anyone really think anyone can tell President Trump what to do?”, the Israeli prime minister said.
Trump publicly stressed that the decision to start the war was exclusively his.
However, Reuters sources suggest that even though Netanyahu did not necessarily force Trump into war, his arguments included emphasising the possibility of eliminating a leader who allegedly stood behind attempts at the Trump assassination were very convincing.












