WASHINGTON — As relations between President Barack Obama and Benjamin Netanyahu hit a new low over the Israeli prime minister's planned speech to Congress and a looming deadline for a nuclear deal with Iran, there are growing signs it could damage the broader US-Israeli alliance. Already there has been some fraying of the usually strong relationship amid the frosty personal ties between the two leaders and a deepening divide over the Iran talks, which Israel fears will allow its arch foe to develop an atom bomb. US officials are fuming over what they see as an affront by Netanyahu over Obama's Iran diplomacy ahead of an end-of-March deadline for a framework nuclear agreement. Israeli officials and hardline US supporters are just as adamant in defending Netanyahu's right to take center-stage in Washington on Tuesday to sound the alarm over the possible deal. US and Israeli officials insist that key areas of cooperation from counter-terrorism to intelligence to cyber security have been unaffected and will remain so. But the rift — shaping up as the worst in decades between the allies due to its partisan nature — could have a real impact in some areas, making it harder for Israel to press concerns directly with senior US officials, for example. As one former US official put it: “Sure, when Netanyahu calls the White House, Obama will answer. But how fast will he be about responding (to a crisis)?“ US officials last month even went as far as accusing the Israeli government of leaking information to the Israeli media to undermine Iran negotiations and took the unusual step of limiting further sharing of sensitive details about the talks. The rift is considered potentially far-reaching because it marks a dramatic departure from Israel's long tradition of carefully navigating between Republicans and Democrats. A US official, speaking on condition of anonymity, said the “politicized” nature of Netanyahu's visit threatens “what undergirds the strength of the relationship,” though he said there was shared interest in keeping the alliance strong. People on both sides, including current and former officials, US lawmakers, independent experts and Washington lobbyists, expressed concern about a broader fallout on ties. At the same time many of them point to the two countries' history of being able to “compartmentalize” diplomatic disputes to preserve cooperation on other shared priorities. There are ways that Obama, whose aides see an Iran nuclear deal as a potential signature achievement for a foreign policy legacy short on major successes, could make his displeasure felt in the final two years of his presidency. Israelis have long fretted over the possibility that Washington might not be as diligent about shielding Israel at the United Nations and other international organizations. — Reuters