US officials’ post-South Pars claims of ongoing coordination between Trump’s and Netanyahu’s forces were accurate in the general sense but misleading in their specific application to the gas field episode. Yes, the two militaries coordinate on targets — that is established and real. No, that coordination did not produce joint authorization for the South Pars strike — that is also established and real. The gap between these two true statements is precisely the space in which the South Pars episode occurred and in which the alliance’s communication problems are most visible.
Claiming coordination while also noting American non-endorsement of the Netanyahu-ordered strike requires careful language that distinguishes between general coordination practices and specific decision authorization. US officials managed this distinction imperfectly — producing statements that reassured allies about the partnership’s functionality while simultaneously raising questions about who had actually authorized what. The imprecision was not entirely innocent: it served the goal of projecting alliance unity while also allowing for distancing from a specific decision.
The reality that coordination confirmed does not contradict is that Netanyahu’s targeting decisions can diverge from Trump’s preferences within a coordinated framework. Coordination means the two parties share information and discuss targeting; it does not mean Israel submits targeting decisions for Trump’s approval. South Pars was a Netanyahu decision, made within a general framework of coordination, that Trump had not specifically endorsed. Both “coordination is ongoing” and “Trump did not authorize this strike” are true simultaneously.
Director of National Intelligence Gabbard’s confirmation of different objectives between Trump and Netanyahu provides the most honest framing of what the coordination language obscures. Two partners with different objectives will coordinate on some targets and diverge on others. South Pars was a divergence point — a Netanyahu-identified target that serves Israeli objectives but not American ones, struck within a coordinated partnership but without Trump authorization.