The following is an excerpt of the article:
President Trump announced his military has attacked three
Iranian nuclear sites in the early hours on Sunday.
Trump also said Netanyahu and he had worked like “perhaps no
team has ever worked before”. Those laudatory comments represent a stark
contrast from the far more crude language that Trump used for the Israeli
leader just four years ago, and their public tension over Iran less than a
month ago.
In his televised address on Sunday, during the early morning
hours in the Middle East, Trump thanked and congratulated Netanyahu.
“I want to thank and congratulate Prime Minister Bibi Netanyahu,” he said,
referring to a name the Israeli PM is widely known by.
“We worked as a team like perhaps no team has ever worked
before, and we’ve gone a long way to erasing this horrible threat to Israel,”
Trump claimed, referring to Iran’s nuclear facilities.
However, Israel remains the only country in the Middle East
with a nuclear arsenal, though it has never officially acknowledged it.
The US strikes follow ten days of Israeli missile attacks
against Iran, including on its nuclear facilities. Israel did not have the
bombs needed to damage or destroy Iran’s most fortified nuclear site in Fordow,
buried deep inside a mountain. The US using its bunker-buster bombs, hit
Fordow as well as the facilities in Natanz and Isfahan on Sunday.
Trump’s decision to align himself with Netanyahu in bringing
the US into the war with Iran has split his “Make America Great Again” (MAGA)
support base.
The chief of the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA)
has publicly said it does not believe that Iran was building a nuclear weapon,
an assessment shared by US intelligence agencies, which also drew the same
conclusion earlier this year.
However, Trump has in recent days said his hand-picked spy
chief, Tulsi Gabbard, and the intelligence community’s assessment were “wrong”.
Trump did best service to Netanyahu in first term
Trump
recognized Jerusalem (al-Quds) as Israel’s capital and moved the US embassy
there from Tel Aviv, a long-sought symbolic victory for Netanyahu. Trump
appointed an ambassador who was ideologically aligned with Israel’s settler
movement, David Friedman, in May 2017.
In March 2019, the US president also recognized Israeli
sovereignty over the occupied Golan Heights, becoming the only world leader to
back Israel’s annexation of the region that is recognized internationally as a
part of Syria.
In September 2020, Trump hosted the signing of the Abraham
Accords, which led to normalization of relations between Israel and four Arab
states – Bahrain, the United Arab Emirates, Morocco, and Sudan.
Trump formally withdrew the US from the Joint Comprehensive
Plan of Action (JCPOA) — commonly known as the Iran nuclear deal — in May 2018,
through a presidential proclamation that reinstated US sanctions against Iran.
This marked a major shift from the previous US policy of
implementing the JCPOA in January 2016 to limit Iran’s nuclear program in
exchange for sanctions relief. Trump declared the deal “defective at its core”.
However, in a December 2021 Axios interview with Israeli
journalist Barak Ravid, Trump revealed that his relationship with Netanyahu
deteriorated after the Israeli PM publicly congratulated incoming President Joe
Biden on his 2020 election victory — a loss that Trump has refused to accept.
“The
first person that congratulated [Biden] was Bibi Netanyahu, the man that I did
more for than any other person I dealt with. Bibi could have stayed quiet. He
has made a terrible mistake,” Trump said, referring to Netanyahu by his
nickname. “And not only did he congratulate him, he did it on tape.” “F***
him,” Trump said, expressing his anger.
Trump rallies behind Netanyahu’s genocidal campaign against Palestinians.
While the incoming Trump administration initially claimed to broker a ceasefire
in the Gaza Strip, with some observers noting that he may rein in the Israeli
military campaign, it soon rallied behind Netanyahu’s continuing genocidal
campaign against the Palestinian people.
In
a joint news conference in February this year, Trump wildly proposed
that the US should “take over” the Gaza Strip, redevelop it, and relocate
Palestinians, a plan that Netanyahu publicly endorsed as “nothing wrong”.
Netanyahu also said he was “committed to US President
Trump’s plan for the creation of a different Gaza”. The US approved US$2.5 billion
worth of arms sales to Israel, including bombs and drones.
In
March, Israel resumed major air attacks in Gaza after negotiations over the
release of captives collapsed. The White House confirmed that Israel had
consulted Trump before the attacks.
Trump’s position has seesawed from alignment with Netanyahu
to his own distinct positions. During April 12 to June 13, 2025 the US led
back-channel nuclear negotiations with Iran, mediated by Oman.
In May, during his Persian Gulf tour Trump stated that the
US was in “very serious negotiations” with Iran and “getting very close” to a
nuclear deal, signaling openness to diplomacy.
On May
28, Trump said he told Netanyahu to hold off on any strike against Iran to give
his administration more time to push for a new nuclear deal. He told reporters
at the White House that he relayed to Netanyahu a strike “would be
inappropriate to do right now because we’re very close to a solution”.
In
June, the IAEA claimed Iran had not been transparent enough in its nuclear
program, and that elements of its approach were in violation of the country’s
safeguards agreement with the International Atomic Energy Agency. The US began
evacuating its regional embassies. Tensions surged as Trump stated that
diplomacy was stalling and hinted at serious consequences, if no deal was
reached.
On June 13, Israel launched massive air strikes on
Iranian nuclear and military sites, killing nuclear scientists, scholars, and
top military commanders.
In the
initial US reaction to Israeli attacks on Iran, Marco Rubio, the secretary of
state, called the strikes “unilateral” and claimed Washington was “not involved
in strikes against Iran and our top priority is protecting American forces in
the region”.
The US-Iran talks over a nuclear deal were suspended. Trump
admitted that he was aware of Israel’s plans to attack Iran.
On June 19, Trump, after nearly a week of Israel’s war
against Iran, signaled support for Israel’s military campaign.
On June 21, Trump ordered US air strikes on Fordow,
Natanz, and Isfahan nuclear facilities, coordinating with Israel.
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