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.