Nebraska federal delegation supports defending Israel, even if it means U.S. joins war with Iran
LINCOLN — As President Donald Trump decides whether the U.S. will play a larger role in the decades-long conflict between Israel and Iran, the Nebraska federal delegation says it will support whatever the president decides.
Israel launched an attack last week with aerial attacks in Iran's capital targeting its nuclear and military infrastructure. Since then, Israel and Iran have continued to exchange bomb strikes with no end in sight.
Israel has asked the Trump administration to broaden U.S. involvement in the war to eliminate Iran's nuclear program. The Nebraska federal delegation says they support Trump's handling of the conflict and that Iran can't have a nuclear weapon, though there's no public evidence that Iran is currently building one. U.S. intelligence officials have said Iran could shift toward producing a nuclear weapon.
Unlike other federal lawmakers and some prominent populist pundits, the delegation hasn't joined in the Republican rift between isolationists and the more hawkish wings of the Trump coalition.
Omaha-based 2nd Congressional District Rep. Don Bacon hinted at a preference as he told the Nebraska Examiner, 'It is preferable for us to stay out of the offensive operations over Iran and reduce risk of escalation.'
Bacon said it depends on whether Iran stops its 'nuclear weapons program' and whether Israeli forces can destroy the country's nuclear facilities on their own.
The reason Israeli officials are lobbying for more U.S. involvement is because only the U.S. has the military capacity to destroy more of Iran's nuclear program with its 30,000-pound bombs – often referred to as 'bunker busters.'
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said Thursday that his country has the capability to achieve its goals alone.
'We may have no other choice than to finish the job,' Bacon said. 'A nuclear-armed Iran is a dire threat to America and our allies.'
After days of speculation and conflicting reporting, White House's Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt said Trump would decide over the next two weeks whether the U.S. will strike Iran. Leavitt also told reporters that Iran 'has never been closer to a nuclear weapon.'
'Iran has all that it needs to achieve a nuclear weapon … All they need is a decision from the supreme leader to do that, and it would take a couple of weeks to complete the production of that weapon,' Leavitt said.
In March, the U.S. intelligence community said Iran was not building a nuclear weapon, according to the Director of National Intelligence, Tulsi Gabbard. Trump dismissed her comments this week, saying he doesn't 'care what she thinks' and believes Iran is 'very close to having one.'
U.S. Rep Mike Flood, R-Neb., who represents eastern Nebraska's 1st District, said he supports Trump on this 'significant decision,' because he has access to intel that could help inform America's strategy in the conflict.
'We must ensure that Iran never gets a nuclear weapon,' Flood said.
U.S. Rep. Adrian Smith, who represents Nebraska's largely rural 3rd District, said, 'If Iran's nuclear ambitions were realized, it would be catastrophic for both Israel and the United States.'
Because of recent developments in the conflict, U.S. intelligence officials have said Iran could shift toward producing a nuclear weapon if the U.S. attacked its central nuclear facility or if Israel killed the nation's supreme leader. But it would take months, not days — as Israel's intelligence claims — to make a weapon.
U.S. Sen. Pete Ricketts told Fox News earlier this week that Trump would 'absolutely' have his support to use military action if negotiations failed.
Ricketts also told reporters Wednesday that the decision should be Trump's.
U.S. Sen. Deb Fischer said the U.S. 'must continue to stand strong with Israel as [it works] to ensure that Iran does not acquire a nuclear weapon.'
Even Nebraska Gov. Jim Pillen released a video on social media emphasizing that 'it is imperative for global peace that Iran never possesses a nuclear weapon,' and he had to cancel a scheduled trip to Israel because of the renewed conflict.
The possible threat of an autocrat having access to a weapon of mass destruction could lead to the widening of another foreign war, like the precursor to the invasion of Iraq over two decades ago. The newly established two-week timeline from the White House gives more time for diplomacy as Europe makes a late push to de-escalate the conflict.
'I fully support our defensive operations helping Israelis shoot down Iranian missiles and drones. I also support Israel's actions to prevent Iran from developing nuclear weapons that would threaten all of us. It is preferable for us to stay out of the offensive operations over Iran and reduce risk of escalation. But if it turns out that only our bunker-busting bombs can destroy the deep underground nuclear facilities and that Iran refuses to stop its nuclear weapons program, then we may have no other choice then to finish the job. A nuclear-armed Iran is a dire threat to America and our allies.' – U.S. Rep. Don Bacon, R-Neb.
'We must be clear-eyed about the threat posed by Iran and adversaries globally and on the home front … I am grateful President Trump and negotiators from his administration have been robustly engaged in neutralizing Iran's nuclear program and Iran's funding for its allied enemies of Israel. If Iran's nuclear ambitions were realized, it would be catastrophic for both Israel and the United States, who their leaders have sworn to destroy.' – U.S. Rep. Adrian Smith, R-Neb., from a recent column
'I support President Trump as he weighs this significant decision. He has access to intel that will help inform America's strategy — we must ensure that Iran never gets a nuclear weapon.' — U.S. Rep. Mike Flood, R-Neb.
'As President Trump weighs all options on the table, we must continue to stand strong with Israel as they work to ensure that Iran does not acquire a nuclear weapon.' — U.S. Sen. Deb Fischer, R-Neb.
'We cannot allow Iran to have an enrichment program or to be able to get a nuclear bomb and Iran was just using the same old tactics of delaying the peace talks,' — U.S. Sen. Pete Ricketts, R-Neb.
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When it comes to that conflict, however, Trump appears to be engaged in exactly the kind of irresolute policy that many (wrongly) suspected he was pursuing with Iran. On May 28, Trump was asked by a reporter whether Russian dictator Vladimir Putin wants to end the war. He replied: 'I can't tell you that, but I'll let you know in about two weeks. … We're going to find out whether or not he's tapping us along or not, and if he is, we'll respond a little bit differently.' More than a month later, Trump isn't doing anything differently even as Russia shows no sign of ending its aggression. Every week seems to bring fresh reports of Russian airstrikes on Ukrainian cities that are described as the largest since the war began. Over the weekend, Russia fired 537 aerial weapons, including 60 missiles, at Ukraine, primarily at civilian targets. Some Ukrainians are now going to sleep with whistles around their necks to make it easier to find them if they are buried under rubble by a Russian attack. Trump has repeatedly insisted that, if he had been president in 2022, Putin would never have invaded Ukraine. But since Trump returned to office this year, Putin's attacks have surged — and Trump hasn't done anything about it. Russia's summer offensive appears stalled, despite the country's large numerical advantage in troops, but Ukrainian cities are suffering more damage from Russian drone and missile strikes amid fears that Ukrainian air defenses are being depleted. In April, Trump beseeched Putin: 'Vladimir, STOP!' Vladimir hasn't stopped, yet Trump does not appear to be applying pressure to back up his words. Instead, at the Group of Seven summit in Canada recently, Trump complained about Russia's expulsion from the group. 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Two other possible courses of action would be more effective and produce less collateral damage: providing Ukraine with badly needed air defense ammunition and other munitions while pressuring European countries to release to Ukraine the $300 billion in frozen Russian assets. Ukraine already produces about 40 percent of the weapons it uses on the front lines. With that influx of Russian funds, Ukraine could dramatically expand defense production and become more self-sufficient with weapons. That would send a strong signal to Putin that he might as well make a deal, because he is never going to achieve his objective of turning Ukraine into a Kremlin satrapy. Of even greater immediate impact would be additional deliveries of Patriot air defense interceptors. 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He has hinted that he might step back from the frustrating peace talks, which would mean allowing Putin to wage war without repercussions. Trump has even compared the two sides to 'two young children fighting like crazy': 'Sometimes you're better off letting them fight for a while and then pulling them apart.' Such comments suggest Trump is guilty of moral myopia about the war in Ukraine — quite a contrast to the moral clarity he displayed about the Iranian nuclear program. Ukraine and Russia are not toddlers squabbling on the playground over inconsequential stakes. Ukraine is a pro-Western democracy that is the victim of an unprovoked war of aggression launched by an anti-American dictator. There is no moral equivalence between the sides; the war is as pure an example of good vs. evil as the modern world has seen. If Russia wins, all of Europe will be endangered, and other aggressors such as China will be emboldened. 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