Why Israel Now Eyes Iran’s Missiles Over Nukes Ahead Of Netanyahu-Trump Talks
Radio Farda-Dec23rd2025
By Kian Sharifi
- Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu will meet US President Donald Trump on December 29 to push for action against Iran’s ballistic missile program.
- Israel sees missiles as a more urgent threat than Iran’s weakened nuclear program, warning they could overwhelm defenses and enable proxy wars.
- Iran insists its missile program is defensive and non-negotiable, while the US and Israel seek limits on missile range and production.
As Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu prepares to meet US President Donald Trump in Florida on December 29, the agenda centers on Iran — with a twist.
Israel is laser-focused on Iran’s ballistic missile program, which it views as the most urgent existential threat after the US-Israeli strikes severely damaged Iran’s nuclear infrastructure during a 12-day aerial campaign in June.
This shift highlights a growing US-Israel divergence. Trump has repeatedly described Iran’s nuclear threat as “obliterated,” crediting wartime bombings of sites in Isfahan, Fordow, and Natanz. Israel agrees the program is set back by a year or two.
However, it warns that missiles — which Iran is working to amass — could soon overwhelm defenses, as demonstrated when 36 out of 550 missiles struck Israeli soil in June, causing widespread damage.
Missiles As ‘Immediate’ Priority
Israeli officials, speaking to NBC News and Axios, describe Iran’s missile ramp-up as “more pressing” than its nuclear program.
Israel says the Islamic Revolutionary Guards Corps (IRGC) has carried out drills and has warned Washington that Tehran might use the exercises as cover for surprise attacks.
This comes amid contradictory reports in Iran over whether missile tests are actually taking place. Iranian media, including the IRGC-affiliated Fars news agency, reported on December 22 that the armed forces were conducting drills, with users on social media sharing videos and footage of contrails in the skies over central and western Iran. However, the state broadcaster swiftly denied the reports, citing an unnamed “informed source” who insisted the contrails were from “high‑altitude aircraft” and claimed that no exercises were underway.
Israel Defense Forces (IDF) chief Eyal Zamir hinted at readiness for new strikes against Iran “wherever required,” prioritizing production lines that Israel fears could churn out 3,000 missiles annually.
Netanyahu plans to present Trump with strike options — Israeli-led, joint, or US-backed — arguing missiles enable proxy wars via Hezbollah and Houthis while shielding Iran’s nuclear revival.
Farzin Nadimi, a senior fellow at The Washington Institute, told RFE/RL’s Radio Farda that Israel is pressing the United States to reclassify missiles as weapons of mass destruction.
“Israel is trying to shift this view, using the recent war’s experience to convince the United States that Iran’s missile capabilities are as existentially threatening as its nuclear ones,” Nadimi said.
He noted US reluctance, viewing nukes as the core danger, now degraded, but added, “From Israel’s standpoint, these should count as weapons of mass destruction for its people.”
Nadimi warned that total missile destruction could force a doctrinal pivot in Tehran.
“If Israel fully destroys Iran’s offensive missile capabilities… it would either have to surrender or make a fundamental doctrinal shift,” he said, adding that Iran’s technical path to nuclear warheads remains feasible in a secure lab using 90-percent enriched uranium stocks.
Read more on original:
https://www.rferl.org/a/iran-missiles-netanyahu-trump-meeting-israel/33630044.html


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