I voted for Trump 3 times, but I'm also firmly on Israel's side here. They don't need our permission to attack Iran after being attacked -- yet again -- by Hezbolleh.
Let's put Iran out of its misery. A "deal" we've waited weeks for can only be a bad one for Israel and for America.
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From The Times of Israel today, 6-8-26
Trump seeks to tie Netanyahu’s hands, as the partnership that went to war 100 days ago collapses.
Telling Israel it had better not respond to an Iranian missile attack, the US president — desperate for a deal with the devilish Tehran regime — presented the PM with a stark dilemma
By David Horovitz
One hundred days after they went to war together to thwart Iran’s rogue nuclear weapons program, radically degrade its ballistic missile industry, end its support for the Hezbollah and Hamas terror armies, and create the conditions for the fall of the regime, the US-Israel alliance against the Islamic Republic on Sunday reached its nadir.
With its north battered relentlessly by Hezbollah in recent weeks, Israel resorted to a largely symbolic strike on the terror group’s Dahiyeh stronghold in Beirut, reportedly without telling the disapproving Trump administration ahead of time that it was doing so.
And, as it had warned it would, Iran responded by firing about 10 missiles at northern Israel — again sending that sector of the country rushing to bomb shelters, though causing no injuries or damage.
But as Israel prepared to “respond forcefully” against Iran, in the words of an unnamed senior Israeli official, US President Donald Trump ordered it to think again.
Before he had even spoken to Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, his partner of 100 days ago, the president was telling his favorite Israeli journalist, Barak Ravid, that Israel had better not hit back: “I am going to call Bibi right now and tell him not to retaliate,” Trump vouchsafed. “Each of them had their fun. Israel had its strike and Iran had its strike. We don’t need another one.”
Trump has repeatedly denied claims that Netanyahu dragged him and the United States into the war. But he has made it increasingly clear that he is desperate to end the inadequately planned campaign, even with none of the declared US-Israeli goals achieved. He’s still insisting that he is holding out for terms that will ensure the regime never gets nuclear weapons, but there’s no guarantee of that in the leaked drafts of the memorandum of understanding he’s been working toward. And his overriding priority is to get the Strait of Hormuz reliably open again and alleviate the global energy chaos that Tehran has proved so adept at creating.
Even as Iran was firing on the north, Trump was asserting for the umpteenth time that he is days away from a deal with the manifestly obdurate and duplicitous regime: “I would say an agreement would be signed on Monday, Tuesday or Wednesday of this coming week,” the US president claimed. “And now this takes place,” he groused.
Trump’s “don’t retaliate” demand left Netanyahu with a stark choice. He could indeed surrender to the presidential diktat and hold his fire, destroying more of Israel’s deterrent capability against a gloating, triumphant Tehran, rendering Israel weak in the eyes of the region, sorely undermining its foundational independence, and enfeebling himself politically a few months before elections. Or he could defy the US president and embark on what would almost certainly turn into an escalating war with Iran in which Israel could find itself quite alone.
But as Israel prepared to “respond forcefully” against Iran, in the words of an unnamed senior Israeli official, US President Donald Trump ordered it to think again.
In another of his Sunday interviews, with the Financial Times, Trump said that if he couldn’t reach a deal with Tehran, he might either “go in and take care of the rest of the place that we didn’t take care of militarily,” or maintain the current blockade.
But he was certain about one thing: Netanyahu would have to accept any deal he agreed with the regime. “He won’t have any choice,” Trump said of Netanyahu. “I call the shots. I call all the shots.”
Not in Iran, he doesn’t.
















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