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martes, 9 de junio de 2026
Pro-Israel voices win out, kill bill to stop US-Israel military integration
Rep. Khanna took the 'America First' approach against
Section 224, but he was outnumbered by those who played down its dangers and
implications
Jun 04, 2026
https://responsiblestatecraft.org/us-israel-military-congress/?mc_cid=0b390e72a4&mc_eid=944feb3e1c
A House committee summarily struck down an amendment
to strip a measure from the massive annual defense policy bill that would provide Israel “a higher level of military-industrial
integration" with the U.S. than Washington has "with any other
country in the world.”
Pro-Israel voices on the House Armed Services
Committee argued that reports about Section 224 — that Congress was trying to
integrate U.S. and Israeli military systems as a way to entrench aid without
proper oversight — were disingenuous and wrong.
In fact, members claimed that these were “existing
initiatives” and that Section 224 “actually improves oversight and
accountability of these programs by designating a single official responsible
for them,” according to Chairman Mike Rogers, (R-Ala.)
Not quite true, said the Quincy Institute’s Ben
Freeman, who broke the initial story of Section 224 for RS last week. “Members of
Congress supporting the proposal laid out caricatures of critiques against
Section 224. And when they did actually talk about the provision itself they
spread half-truths and outright inaccuracies about how far this provision will
go to integrate the U.S. and Israeli defense sectors.”
According to Freeman, as reported in these pages,
Section 224 would lay the groundwork for:
…bilateral research and development, co-production of
weapons, joint ventures, licensing agreements, and seemingly every manner of
U.S.-Israeli military-industrial complex cooperation. The U.S. and Israel
already work together heavily on missile defense, but this provision would
greatly expand coordination to seemingly every area of defense tech, including
AI, quantum, autonomous systems, directed energy, cyber, biotech, and many
more. It also proposes “network integration” and “data fusion.” In other words,
the U.S. military’s data could soon be the Israeli military’s data.
Critically, it would shift the annual $3.8 billion the
U.S. now gives Israel (a 10-year memorandum of understanding soon up for
renewal) to these programs and partnerships, i.e. “co-production” and other
“fusion” deep inside Pentagon procurement and acquisitions process, where
sunlight is rare and often fleeting. A perfect solution — which is, by the
way, endorsed by
Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu — given the dwindling American support for
Israel’s wars and U.S. military assistance for them.
In his remarks on Section 224, Khanna spoke
vociferously against what he saw as a blank check at a time when a majority of
Americans say they do
not want to send more military aid to Israel.
“The American people are tired of the arrogance and
insolence of Prime Minister Netanyahu telling America what we should do. The
entire country of Israel has a GDP that is less than a single town in my
district, yet somehow Netanyahu thinks he could tell the American people what
we should do,” he charged.
“I am for Team America. I am for the interests of this
country, and I believe that's what Donald Trump ran on. That includes American
interests against any foreign country,” Khanna said. “We should have American
sovereignty and make it clear that we strike 224. If we want to give aid to
Israel, if we want to sell them weapons, that should be a vote for the entire
Congress.”
Unfortunately for Khanna, the majority on the
committee did not agree. According to several members, not only is Israel the
only friend we have in the region, it helped us create new
technologies and capabilities, and we would only benefit from the deeper
military ties.
“This is a win-win relationship. We have Silicon
Valley, Israel has Tel Aviv, and it's like Silicon Valley number two. We have
gained so much technology advantages from our partnership with Israel, and vice
versa,” declared Rep. Don Bacon (R-Neb). “They gain as well, and this is what
we're trying to do, is create that synergy. They support our foreign policy,
they've been the most supportive of us in the U.N. They're the only democracy
in Middle East, and so I'll oppose the amendment.”
Rep. Ronny Jackson (R-Texas) warned that American
national security would be at risk if such synergy didn't occur. After “the bad
actors” of the world go after Israel they will then “exercise their free will
against us," he charged.
Rep. Adam Smith (D-Wash.) took the line that the
reports about Section 224 were overblown. “It's not a new framework at all. We
have three existing programs right now where we do military cooperation with
Israel to develop technologies. Those programs already exist," he said.
"This amendment ... suggests some other areas
where maybe we should look at opportunities, and as the chairman noted, we had
somebody now appointed to coordinate those programs.”
He said he, too, was “frustrated with Netanyahu’s
leadership” and Israel's support for a “war with Iran that has strengthened Iran and weakened our
position,” but he disagrees that Section 224 “is Congress just bowing to what
Netanyahu wants — this is to our benefit.” In fact, such sharing should occur
with Ukraine, too, he added.
Rep. Sara Jacobs (D-Calif.) was the only other member
who spoke out in favor of Khanna’s amendment, pointing out that current laws
prohibit transfers of weapons to countries committing war crimes and violating
international law, but Section 224 makes no such provisions, and takes
oversight away, despite what some of her colleagues were arguing on Thursday.
She raised the issue of Israeli-owned Pegasus
spyware, which was
blacklisted for its use against Americans. “Two administrations from both
parties left it on that list, and that same company is right now trying to buy its way
into the American market, fusing
our defense and technology sectors together permanently,” she said.
A proposal “with no conditions in the exact area where
we have already been burned (Section 224) is reckless on its own terms, and it
would do it through a must-pass bill with almost no oversight and with none of
the human rights conditions that govern the rest of security assistance,"
Jacobs added.
Next steps: Rep. Thomas Massie (R-Ky.) says he will
work with Khanna to strip the language from the final House NDAA. If the parade
of voices that insist Israel must have this relationship with the U.S. military
is any indication, it will be a hard road ahead.
lunes, 8 de junio de 2026
Expanding the Abraham Accords Would Help Netanyahu, Not America
The agreements were flawed from the start.
Jun 4, 2026
Whether President Donald Trump believed his
persistently fallacious claims about the Iran War, or simply expected his
supporters to believe them, is unclear. In any case, most Americans recognize
that his campaign—illegal aggression that misfired badly, failing to break the
Tehran regime while disrupting global energy markets and destabilizing the
Middle East—has been a disaster.
Indeed, Iran proved what many had long suspected, that
it could block the Strait of Hormuz and thereby hold its U.S.-backed neighbors
and much of the industrialized world hostage. The president’s maximalist
demands exceed his minimalist achievements, frustrating his attempt to
negotiate an end to the conflict. Unhelpful is his choice of chief negotiators,
Jared Kushner and Steve Witkoff, who are not only beholden to Israel, but also
ignorant of Iran, nuclear issues, and diplomacy. Thus, despite Trump’s repeated
claims that Tehran’s surrender is near, the conflict, and resulting economic
damage, continue.
Yet rather than drop his demand that the new, more
nationalistic and hardline Iranian leadership welcome him as a de facto conqueror,
Trump has continued to issue maximalist demands, effectively sustaining the
conflict. Last week he expanded his ambitions even further, suggesting that he
would make peace only if a gaggle of Muslim states recognized Israel. “If they
don’t sign to join Abraham Accords, I’m not sure we should make the deal,” he
said. In addition to the Gulf kingdoms, which he had long pressured to
legitimize Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s extremist government, he
named Pakistan, Egypt, Jordan, and Turkey (even though the latter three already
recognize Israel). Nothing was expected of Israel, which would continue to
receive U.S. arms and money to occupy Palestinian lands and kill Palestinian
and other Arab civilians.
His latest expostulations were not well received.
He believes that “those countries owe it to us,” but they feel
very differently. Jon Alterman of the Center for Strategic and International
Studies argued that the Gulf states are disappointed in Washington
and especially the administration: “While they’re careful not to say it
explicitly, they feel the United States was very motivated to protect Israel
and not very motivated to protect them.” Apparently, they only just noticed
what has long been obvious. To some of them, Israel’s murderous campaign to
dominate the region looks at least as dangerous as Iran’s ambitions.
In fact, the so-called Abraham Accords, long touted as
a major achievement from Trump’s first term, are a pious fraud. Though depicted
as a kind of peace deal, they have nothing to do with peace, since none of the
participants—so far Bahrain, Kazakhstan, Morocco, and the United Arab Emirates
(Sudan signed on but fell into civil war before ratifying the agreement)—have
been at war with Israel.
Nor has the lack of Israeli embassies across the
Persian Gulf and North Africa prevented any nation from engaging in
back-channel security cooperation. To the contrary, fear of Iran proved to be a
powerful glue, linking nations publicly at odds. Several Arab states, including
Saudi Arabia, which has long been expected to join, have collaborated
informally with Israel on the basis of a shared antagonism to the Islamic
Republic. Kuwait and Qatar have also not been on the verge of conflict with
Israel. Ironically, forcing relations into the open would likely increase
domestic public opposition to Israeli ties within these Arab countries, given
the Netanyahu government’s recent depredations.
Thus, Trump’s purposes were not peace, but something
much more sinister. The first was to effectively force Arab states to drop
their commitment to a Palestinian state. In 2002, members of the Arab
League adopted the Arab Peace Initiative. Proposed by Riyadh, the measure offered recognition
to Israel in exchange for Israeli withdrawal from the West Bank and Gaza. The
Abraham Accords require the former while dropping the latter demand, leaving
Palestinians akin to Helots in ancient Sparta.
Of course, professed concern by Arab elites over
Palestinians living under a violent and brutal occupation is often pro
forma. However, public opinion forces even the most cynical authoritarians
in such nations to act as if they care about the victims of Israel’s
increasingly repressive policy. For instance, Saudi Arabia’s Crown Prince
Mohammed bin Salman, who not only murders but dismembers his critics, explained
that 95 percent of his people opposed accepting Israel. Trump expects Riyadh
and other states to abandon even the pretense that Palestinians are human
beings who deserve the same respect as others.
Moreover, expanding the Abraham Accords would act as a
Hail Mary political pass to Netanyahu, who faces a difficult reelection
campaign. It would both offer a dramatic success to the Israeli prime minister
and act as a de facto endorsement by the American president. Indeed, Trump
appears to believe his ability to shift votes is as great in Israel as in U.S.
primary contests.
Even Arab governments that were willing to covertly
cooperate with Israel in the past are reluctant to do so today, let alone
publicly embrace the radical and violent ethno-religious coalition that
controls Israel. The Netanyahu government is ostentatiously seeking regional
hegemony, devastating Gaza, the West Bank, and Lebanon, striking Hamas figures
in Qatar, an American ally, and wrecking Iran. Joining the Abraham Accords
would be seen as an endorsement of such activities or, even worse, submission to
Israel.
The only good news is that Trump was bluffing. Despite
his dictatorial tone, he apparently has moved on, presumably realizing that
none of the governments will comply. They see little benefit in risking public
unrest to fulfill Trump’s fantasies. Indeed, prolonging the war to pressure
disparate Muslim states to embrace Israel could risk the survival of the Gulf
states, which would almost certainly find their energy facilities and other
civilian operations, such as desalination plants, under fire by Iran. Moreover,
continued international instability and higher energy prices would fuel
antagonism toward the administration. Despite his claim to be indifferent to
the upcoming midterm elections, Trump presumably is more concerned about his
future than that of Netanyahu.
Nevertheless, merely raising the issue increased
uncertainty about his intentions, thereby undermining the administration’s
efforts to end the war. His bizarre demand further erodes confidence in
Washington, and especially the White House. Expanding the Abraham Accords
provides no meaningful benefit to America. Instead of working to enhance
Netanyahu’s prestige, Trump should focus on ending his disastrous war on Iran.
Any America First policy should begin with disengaging politically and
especially militarily from the Middle East.
domingo, 7 de junio de 2026
Visual data reveals extent of systematic Israeli white phosphorus attacks on south Lebanon: Report
Lebanon's Ministry of Environment has formally accused
the Israeli military of committing 'an act of ecocide,' resulting in an
estimated $25 billion in damages
JUN 7, 2026
A report by The New York Times (NYT) published on 6 June gathers thorough documentation
that the Israeli military has repeatedly deployed white phosphorus over
populated areas in southern Lebanon during its ongoing war and invasion of the
country.
Visual evidence collected by NYT, including verified
social media footage and news coverage, shows distinctive smoke trails and
airbursts over cities like Nabatieh and Tyre, as well as smaller towns like
Qlayaa, Khiam, and Yohmor, with incidents documented as recently as May
2026.
While the Israeli military maintains that its use of
these munitions is intended for smoke screens and complies with international
law, human rights experts assert that deploying such an indiscriminate
incendiary substance in civilian-heavy areas violates the laws of war.
The body of evidence gathered by numerous
international observers and human rights groups is extensive and corroborates
these findings.
Amnesty International’s Crisis Evidence Lab and Human Rights Watch (HRW) have verified dozens of videos and photos showing
the airbursting of US-made M825A1 artillery shells.
These shells are designed to release 116 burning felt
wedges that can be detonated high in the air and drift over a radius of up to
250 meters, causing widespread fires on the ground.
In Yohmor, HRW geolocated eight images from March 2026
showing these munitions exploding over residential neighborhoods, directly
resulting in fires in homes and vehicles.
Similar evidence from Dhayra in October 2023 includes
testimony from residents and doctors who treated nine civilians for suffocation
and respiratory damage caused by the "garlic-like" smoke.
Independent researchers have now documented over 200
uses of the substance in Lebanon since October 2023, which the Lebanese
government reports have caused more than 600 fires.
This pattern of use extends far beyond recent events
in Lebanon; Israel has a long history of deploying white phosphorus in the
region, including during the 1982 and 2006 wars in Lebanon, extensively in Gaza
in 2009, and throughout its ongoing genocidal campaign since 2023.
Amnesty International documented the use of white
phosphorus artillery shells in densely populated civilian areas in Gaza shortly
after the launch of the war on 7 October, 2023; this deployment directly
violated a 2013 pledge by the Israeli military to phase out the use of the
incendiary substance in populated areas.
The humanitarian risks of these munitions are
devastating because white phosphorus causes horrific, deep-tissue burns that
can reach the bone and may reignite if exposed to oxygen after treatment.
Beyond the immediate physical trauma, the substance
poses long-term environmental hazards by contaminating soil and water,
necessitating specialized cleanup operations before farmers can safely return
to their land.
Due to the indiscriminate nature of these illegal
weapons, rights groups continue to call for an immediate halt to their use in
residential areas.
Lebanon's Ministry of Environment formally accused the Israeli military of committing “an act of
ecocide,” back in April 2026, citing a National Council for Scientific Research
report that details $25 billion in damages, including the destruction of
thousands of hectares of forest and orchards alongside extreme phosphorus soil
contamination in strikes conducted between 2023 and 2024.
sábado, 6 de junio de 2026
Negative views of Israel soar across 36 countries since Iran war, survey finds
Pew found a marked increase in unfavourable views of
Israel, with nearly every country surveyed hosting majorities with negative
views
By MEE staff
Published date: 5 June 2026
Negative views of both Israel and Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu
have soared since last year across Europe, Asia, the Middle East, and Latin
America, according to a new poll from Pew Research Center.
Out of 36 countries, majorities in 32 of them have
either a very unfavourable or somewhat unfavourable view of Israel, with only
respondents in India, Ghana, Nigeria and Kenya holding a favourable view of the
country.
The survey was conducted between 8 February and 13 May
of this year. The US-Israel war on Iran started on 28 February and has had an
impact on countries across the world, in part likely due to the economic impact
of the closure of the Strait of Hormuz, where around 20 percent of the global
oil supply passes through.
Pew reported that across 36 countries, a median of 67
percent of adults held an unfavourable view of Israel, with just 25 percent
holding a favourable view.
Turkey, Pakistan, Malaysia, Indonesia, Japan, the West
Bank and occupied East Jerusalem had the highest percentage of unfavourable
views of Israel, with Turkey at 97 percent and Japan at 83 percent.
In the Anglophone world, specifically the US, Canada,
Australia and the UK, all had majorities that held unfavourable views of Israel
at 60, 65, 79, and 69 percent respectively.
All ten countries surveyed in Europe also held
generally unfavourable views of Israel, with Sweden and Spain topping out at 78
percent each and Hungary with the most favourable views of Israel, but still
carrying a majority, 54 percent, who held unfavourable views.
Israel's war on Gaza and subsequent genocide has led
to a global hardening of views against the country over the past three years.
But the war on Iran appears to have triggered a strong response across the
world, with significant year-on-year spikes in unfavourable views of Israel.
Israel's actions in Gaza, deemed a genocide by leading
scholars, human rights organisations and political leaders, resulted in the
death of at least 73,000 Palestinians since 7 October 2023. Its bombardment of
the Gaza Strip has either destroyed or damaged 81 percent of structures in the
enclave, with an estimated $18.5bn in damages according to the United Nations.
Effects of war on Iran
Some of the fallout from the genocide was visible in
Pew's survey last year, but since then there has been another spike, likely
connected to the war in Iran.
Nigeria, where 47 percent have favourable views of
Israel, saw a nine percent increase in unfavourable views of Israel. South
Korea had the largest jump in unfavourable views, marking a ten percent
jump.
Germany, Italy, Argentina, Poland, the UK, and
the US all recorded between a seven and nine percent jump in unfavourable
views.
Pew showed that people on the left of the political
spectrum tended to hold more negative views of Israel than their counterparts
on the right. The ideological gap was widest in the US, where 83 percent of
liberals held negative views and just 37 percent of conservatives held negative
views.
That ideological gap is more prevalent in high-income
countries but does not necessarily hold true in middle-income countries,
according to the survey's authors.
Only two countries, the Philippines and Kenya, had
confidence in Israeli Prime Minister Netanyahu "to do the right thing
regarding world affairs". Majorities of respondents in every other country
had no confidence at all or little confidence in Netanyahu.
The same leap in unfavourable views of Israel was
reflected in respondents' views of Netanyahu, with prominent increases in
people losing confidence in Netanyahu's leadership over the past year.
viernes, 5 de junio de 2026
US-Israel integration is far from 'America First'
We cannot outsource components of our national
security to nations that do not share our interests and that is exactly what
this proposed scheme would do
Jun 03, 2026
https://responsiblestatecraft.org/us-israel-integration/
The war against Iran may have resulted in some tactical victories
for Israel and the United States on the battlefield, but
Israel is not winning American public opinion and neither are those American
leaders who ardently support it.
This dwindling
popularity could
put in jeopardy the $3.8 billion that Israel receives in U.S. military aid each
year. And that $3.8 billion is not all we provide to Israel — we also
offer invaluable
diplomatic cover on the world stage, in addition to direct U.S. military support during specific crises. Separately, the war in
Iran has mostly benefited Israel’s regional agenda and has cost the U.S.
taxpayer more than an estimated $50
billion so far.
Because of these factors, most Americans are growing
wary of the support we give to Israel.
To get ahead of the changing sentiments, Israel and
their American allies, like U.S. Ambassador to Israel Mike Huckabee, are
attempting to rebrand the aid we give to Israel each year. Rather than the
annual Memorandum of Understanding (MOU) outlays, anything we give Tel Aviv
will be “based on trade," according to Huckabee. The goal of this shift
is to undermine the notion that Israel is dependent on American hand-outs and
that the U.S. taxpayer is footing the bill for the horrific scenes coming out
of Gaza and Lebanon. There is, of course, a major catch.
The catch is Section 224, cleverly buried deep in the
massive National Defense Authorization Act (NDAA), which is
entitled “United States-Israel Defense
Technology Cooperation Initiative.” This initiative transitions the traditional aid
relationship into a deeper partnership between the U.S. and Israel in many
aspects of technological research and development and defense production, and
would also give Israel unprecedented access to U.S. technology development and
"data fusion."
Section 224, which has been literally
endorsed by Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, essentially transforms Israel from a top U.S. aid
recipient to a full member of the U.S. defense and intelligence apparatus.
When it comes to counterintelligence and strategic
messaging, the Section 224 initiative is far more damaging to U.S. national
security than the previous arrangement. By embedding Israel in the production
of critical defense technologies, we are creating access and control mechanisms
for a nation that has drastically different goals than America does.
We should instead keep the development of key
technologies restricted to Americans only. The dangers of allowing any other
nation to access our sensitive military technologies are obvious, including the
fact that back doors and spyware can be installed that will most certainly be
used by the Israelis to influence U.S. policy.
From a strategic messaging perspective, Section 224 is
a nightmare for the Trump administration and any lawmaker who supports it. Sentiment in
America is turning against Israel, and Section 224 will not help quell the
prevailing narrative that Israel has too much influence on the American
government.
A more troubling aspect of this scheme is that it
allows Israeli manufacturers to operate production facilities in the U.S. with
an American partner. This stands in contrast to the standard way America
provides military support to nations; historically the weapons that the U.S.
provides in arms packages are all made in the U.S. by American manufacturers.
Section 224 will give Israel the ability to actually create jobs in America.
This is a powerful talking point that will give Israel leverage with many members
of congress and the American public.
Sure, Israeli defense companies and subcontractors
currently operate in the U.S. — however they still must compete with American
companies, and lack the access to the U.S. government that American defense
companies enjoy. Section 224 would turn that on its head as US.-Israel would be
co-producing weapons systems, giving Israeli companies an unprecedented edge
inside the Pentagon.
The idea of Israel creating American jobs by
manufacturing military technologies in the U.S. may sound positive on its face.
After all, who doesn’t want more American jobs? But this argument is built on
the same fallacy that is used to justify the $3.8 billion in military aid that
we currently give to Israel: that the aid is mostly spent on American weapons
systems, so it’s not actually aid but an investment in American industry, as
the pro-Israel lobby claims.
First, the idea that we need to give billions to a
foreign country to manufacture American weapons systems is ridiculous.
Supporters of Israel like Ambassador Huckabee like to say that the $3.8 billion
we give to Israel goes back into the American economy. This assumes that we
need to give a foreign nation money to fund our defense industry. This is
nonsense, We should instead invest the $3.8 billion directly on weapon systems
for our own inventories or sell them to nations that don’t need to pay for it
with American aid money.
Second, the majority of the profits from the defense
sector don’t go into creating American jobs or back into American communities,
they go to the CEO’s profits and stock buy backs. This has been an issue
that President
Trump himself has raised.
Moreover, how have Israel’s actions in Iran, Gaza, or
Lebanon made America safer and more prosperous? Some of the intelligence we get
from the Israelis can be useful, but our increasing over-reliance on it has
caused our own capabilities to atrophy.
We are a sovereign nation. We cannot outsource
components of our national security to nations that do not share our interests;
they will put their own interests first every time. No other government
prioritizes the needs of a different country before its own, because that would
be foolish. Israel can still be a decent partner, so long as we are clear-eyed
about the differences between our two countries and act accordingly.
We must put America’s needs first.
jueves, 4 de junio de 2026
Why Trump May Actually Have Told Netanyahu ‘Everybody Hates You!’
by Trita
Parsi | Jun
4, 2026 |
Reprinted with permission from Trita Parsi’s Substack.
“You’re fucking crazy. You’d be in prison if it
weren’t for me. I’m saving your ass. Everybody hates you now. Everybody hates
Israel because of this.”
According to Axios, this is what Donald Trump said to Israeli Prime
Minister Benjamin Netanyahu in “an expletive-laden call” earlier today.
Trump also accused Netanyahu of ingratitude since
Trump had helped keep Netanyahu out of jail. At the heart of the matter was
Trump’s frustration with Netanyahu not caving to his demands to cease bombing
Lebanon, as Israel’s aggression risked jeopardizing Trump’s diplomacy with
Iran.
The story has understandably been met with
considerable skepticism. After all, there is a long and well-documented pattern
of American presidents privately expressing anger and frustration with Israeli
prime ministers while publicly standing shoulder-to-shoulder with them and
continuing to support their policies.
Take Joe Biden as an example. In late December
2023, Axios reported that Biden’s frustration with Benjamin Netanyahu
had become so intense that he abruptly ended a phone call with the Israeli
leader, reportedly concluding the exchange with the terse remark: “This
conversation is over.” Yet in practice, Biden remained firmly aligned with
Israel’s conduct of the war in Gaza.
Two months later, NBC News reported that Biden had repeatedly referred to Netanyahu
as an “asshole” in private conversations with aides and donors. But even as he
vented his exasperation behind closed doors, Biden continued to arm Israel
lavishly and shield it from mounting diplomatic and political pressure at the
United Nations. The gap between private frustration and public policy could
hardly have been more striking.
According to Bob Woodward’s 2024 book War, Biden’s frustrations became
intensely personal
during the Rafah dispute and Biden told an associate: “That son of a bitch,
Bibi Netanyahu, he’s a bad guy. He’s a bad f***ing guy.” No policy change
followed.
There are plenty of other examples.
There are, however, a few important counterexamples –
particularly from Trump’s second term – that suggest the Axios story is not
entirely implausible. (Indeed, the report would have been far more difficult to
believe had Axios claimed that Trump told Netanyahu, “Everybody loves you.”)
On June 24, 2025, after Israel and Iran had agreed to
a ceasefire following their twelve-day war, Israel almost immediately violated
the agreement, infuriating Trump. Before boarding Marine One on the South Lawn
of the White House, Trump delivered an unusually blunt and public
rebuke, declaring that
Israel and Iran “don’t know what the f*** they’re doing” and adding that he was
“really unhappy with Israel.”
The outburst was not merely rhetorical. Trump
reportedly intervened directly with Netanyahu, after which Israel halted its
planned escalation and the ceasefire held for several months. Ironically,
however, Trump himself would restart the conflict in February 2026, after
sustained pressure from Israel and its supporters in Washington.
Another notable episode came after Israel bombed the
Qatari capital, Doha, killing a Qatari security guard and jeopardizing Qatar’s
role as a key mediator in the Gaza negotiations. In an extraordinary and
arguably unprecedented move, Trump arranged a phone call from the Oval Office
and had Netanyahu apologize directly to the Qatari Emir.
When Netanyahu later denied that he had apologized,
the White House responded by releasing a photograph from the Oval Office showing Trump holding the
phone while Netanyahu appeared to be reading from a prepared script. A Qatari
diplomat was also present in the room, observing the apology as it unfolded.
The only comparable example that comes to mind is from
2013, when Barack Obama pressed Netanyahu to
apologize to Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdoğan over the Mavi Marmara flotilla raid. Even then,
however, the apology took place privately. By contrast, the Qatar episode was
so unusually public that the White House itself effectively documented
Netanyahu’s compliance.
None of this, of course, proves that the Axios story
is true, but it suggests that it may not be as implausible as some may
otherwise believe. What is also plausible, however, is that Trump will once
again fail to sustain the pressure and, by that, allow for Netanyahu’s
potential retreat to prove temporary.