Amid intensifying conflict with Iran, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu convened a high-level war cabinet meeting at military headquarters in Tel Aviv. The closed-door session included the defense minister, army chief, and Mossad leadership to assess operational progress and outline next-phase strategy. The meeting comes as U.S. President Donald Trump declared that Iran’s military command structure has been severely degraded and projected a possible five-week timeline for achieving core objectives. Military analysts suggest the timeframe may reflect both battlefield calculations and domestic political realities in the United States. After prolonged wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, American public appetite for extended overseas conflict remains limited. Recent polling indicates modest support for direct confrontation with Iran, increasing pressure on Washington to define a swift and decisive endgame. Strategically, Israel’s focus appears centered on neutralizing missile stockpiles and disrupting networks linked to the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps. However, sustaining high-intensity exchanges risks regional spillover, energy market volatility, and growing civilian costs, complicating any fixed conflict timeline.


