Former Israeli Ambassador to the United Nations Gilad Erdan said Wednesday that he does not believe the U.S.-Israeli conflict with Iran will last six more months, while criticizing Western leaders for focusing on timeline questions that he said play into terrorist objectives.
The comments came as the conflict continues to escalate, with President Trump saying he is not prepared to declare victory against Iran despite describing the U.S. military campaign as having decimated the country on military and economic fronts.
What the Right Is Saying
Senate Republicans rejected the Democratic war powers resolution, voting down the measure to advance toward final passage. The vote blocks efforts to constrain Trump's authority to continue military operations against Iran.
Former Ambassador Erdan, speaking from Israel's perspective, argued that the Western focus on how long the conflict will take plays directly into what he called terrorist objectives.
"That is exactly what the radical Muslims and the terrorists, they want us to do, because they want to extend the war, to lengthen the time of the war," Erdan told NewsNation.
The Trump administration has characterized its military campaign as highly effective, with the president telling reporters he is not prepared to declare victory but emphasizing that Iran has been decimated on military and economic fronts.
What the Left Is Saying
Senate Democrats pushed for congressional action to limit the president's war powers, with Sen. Cory Booker (D-N.J.) leading a measure that would have halted Trump's military strikes against Iran.
"The war has expanded, now impacting at least 15 different countries, from the bases of our European allies to our allies in the region," Booker said on the Senate floor, arguing that the Iran conflict was getting out of hand and beginning to have a sizable negative impact on Americans abroad and at home.
Progressive Democrats and anti-war advocates have also pointed to the resignation of National Counterterrorism Center Director Joe Kent, who said he could not "in good conscience" back the administration's war and did not agree that Iran posed an imminent threat to the United States.
What the Numbers Show
The conflict now spans at least 15 countries, according to Sen. Booker's remarks citing U.S. diplomatic and military assessments. U.S. diplomatic posts and military facilities in the Middle East remain under constant attack, with European ally bases also impacted.
The war powers resolution vote was along party lines, with Senate Republicans successfully blocking the Democratic measure. The Senate Intelligence Committee's recent worldwide threats hearing included testimony on both the military campaign and concerns about domestic terrorism following attacks at a Michigan synagogue and Virginia university.
More than 43,000 Americans have been evacuated from the region in what State Department officials have characterized as a major operational achievement, though the conflict shows no signs of resolution.
The Bottom Line
The differing views on how quickly the Iran conflict can be resolved highlight the challenges of maintaining a unified coalition during extended military campaigns. Erdan and Israeli officials view Iran's nuclear program and regional influence as an existential threat warranting sustained military action, while progressive Democrats argue the conflict has expanded beyond reasonable bounds and risks broader regional instability. What to watch: whether diplomatic discussions emerge as the military campaign continues, and whether Congress pursues additional oversight or war powers measures in the coming weeks.