68.5 F
New York

tjvnews.com

Friday, May 16, 2025
CLASSIFIED ADS
LEGAL NOTICE
DONATE
SUBSCRIBE

Trump-Netanyahu Rift Widens as U.S. Moves Forward Without Israel in Middle East Strategy

- Advertisement -

Related Articles

-Advertisement-

Must read

Getting your Trinity Audio player ready...

By: Fern Sidman

A widening political and strategic rift has emerged between President Donald Trump and Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, according to a revealing report that appeared on Israel Hayom. Tensions, once considered mere disagreements between long-time allies, have now evolved into a full-blown breakdown in diplomatic coordination — with sources in President Trump’s inner circle confirming that he is “deeply disappointed” with Netanyahu’s leadership and increasingly unwilling to wait for Israel’s cooperation on key regional initiatives.

As Israel Hayom reported on Thursday, two senior figures close to President Trump disclosed that the prime minister and current president have made a strategic decision: to proceed with critical diplomatic actions in the Middle East — particularly with Gulf states such as Saudi Arabia — without waiting for Israeli involvement. This decision, they emphasized, stems from Trump’s growing frustration with what he sees as Netanyahu’s political hesitancy and failure to take timely steps to support normalization and broader strategic objectives.

“Trump believes Netanyahu is dragging his feet,” one source told Israel Hayom. “The president wants to move forward to secure American interests and is no longer willing to let internal Israeli politics dictate the pace.”

This marks a dramatic shift in Trump’s Middle East policy playbook. During his first term, Trump was widely credited with brokering the historic Abraham Accords — establishing peace agreements between Israel and several Arab nations including the United Arab Emirates, Bahrain, and Morocco. At the time, Netanyahu was a central partner in these breakthroughs. Today, that relationship appears to have soured significantly.

At the core of this diplomatic divergence lies the stalled normalization agreement between Israel and Saudi Arabia — a milestone that Trump has long hoped to deliver. According to the information provided in the Israel Hayom report, Saudi leaders have made clear that any agreement would be contingent upon an end to the war in Gaza and some Israeli gesture toward establishing a Palestinian state, or at the very least, the creation of a diplomatic “horizon” for the Palestinian people.

This demand has placed Netanyahu in an impossible political bind. Domestically, there is staunch resistance to any suggestion of a Palestinian state. Key members of Netanyahu’s coalition and the Israeli electorate view such proposals as a betrayal of national interests. Minister Ron Dermer, who has been deeply involved in crafting potential language that might satisfy Saudi conditions without explicitly endorsing a two-state solution, has reportedly spent weeks searching for formulations palatable to both sides — so far, to no avail.

From Trump’s vantage point, Netanyahu’s inability to deliver a commitment or even a working framework has become a liability. As a result, Trump is said to be pushing ahead with U.S.-Saudi cooperation and a broader strategic vision — with or without Israel, as was indicated in the Israel Hayom report.

Further compounding the discord is the fallout over Netanyahu’s reported efforts to influence U.S. National Security Advisor Mike Waltz on military actions against Iran. According to the information contained in the Israel Hayom report, Trump was enraged upon learning that Netanyahu or his aides may have exerted pressure on Waltz to advance a more aggressive military posture toward Tehran.

Although Netanyahu has insisted that he only spoke with Waltz once, Trump reportedly remains unconvinced — a factor which may have contributed to Waltz’s dismissal from his position and deepened the mistrust between the two leaders.

“The president does not appreciate backchannel pressure,” a source told Israel Hayom. “He felt Netanyahu crossed a line, and that’s not easily forgiven.”

One of the clearest signs of this diplomatic unraveling came last week when the White House announced a ceasefire agreement with the Houthis in Yemen — an arrangement that, as Israel Hayom noted, included indirect implications for Israeli regional security. Yet Israeli officials were neither consulted nor briefed for a full 24 hours after the announcement. Even now, Israeli representatives continue to report a lack of access to updated information from their American counterparts.

To underscore this shift, the Israel Hayom report confirmed that President Trump will not include Israel in his upcoming regional tour, despite visiting multiple Middle Eastern capitals, including Riyadh.

In response to growing signals of strategic distance from Washington, Prime Minister Netanyahu and Defense Minister Israel Katz have begun publicly signaling that Israel is prepared to face regional threats without U.S. support. In response to questions regarding the Houthi threat and Israel’s defensive posture, Netanyahu told his spokesman, “The rule I have established is that Israel will defend itself by its own forces.”

Defense Minister Katz echoed this sentiment, stating Thursday morning: “Israel must be able to defend itself by its own forces against any threat and any enemy. This was true facing many challenges in the past, and will also be true in the future.”

These remarks, Israel Hayom noted, reflect an increasing awareness within Israeli leadership that American backing — long a cornerstone of Israeli defense strategy — may not be a given in the months ahead.

While some analysts have suggested that this may be a temporary cooling of relations, the depth of President Trump’s discontent, as reported by Israel Hayom, suggests something far more consequential. The partnership that once reshaped the Middle East through the Abraham Accords now faces serious fractures. With the U.S. pursuing independent pathways to regional stability and Israeli leaders signaling a readiness to operate without Washington’s support, a strategic divorce may be underway.

As both sides brace for the fallout, what was once an alliance grounded in mutual admiration and aligned interests now appears marked by growing mistrust, miscommunication, and competing visions for the future of the Middle East.

 

balance of natureDonate

10 COMMENTS

  1. President Trump is entirely military and diplomatically betraying Israel. The absurd excuse reported here is a childish “fit of pique” over the PM’s “back channel” communications with Mike Waltz. This sounds like a fabricated nonsense fig leaf to cover Trump’s calculated betrayal. There is a contrived cover story about disagreements among his “advisors”, but it is clear that Trump is willing to repeat Obama‘s war on Israel. The primary existential danger to Israel is a nuclear-armed Iran. Trump is reportedly using corrupted Witkoff to absurdly “rely” on Iran’s “assurances” to permit it clear path to nuclear weapons.

  2. It has become clear President Trump is at best an unreliable ally. Netanyahu is contending with domestic and foreign enemies of Israel. Together these create truly existential threats to Israel. And in his arrogance Trump is signaling to everyone he is stabbing Israel in the back. Israel is left with no choice but to do what it must to survive.

  3. At the end of the day Israel cannot allow itself to become a vassal state to America.
    . . . .
    Again, the primary existential danger to Israel is a nuclear-armed Iran. Trump is using Witkoff as his foil to threaten Israel‘s existence. Aside from that lackey, it is not publicly disclosed which members of Trump’s government are the most dangerous to Israel’s survival.

    At the moment, virtually every previously existing security alliance is betrayed. Israel has no remaining allies in America.

    (American Jews are hostile to Israel and its security and have exported their anti-Israel agents to Israel itself. American Jews are no longer safe in America.)

  4. Employing anonymous “sources” for such consequential topics is a neat trick to stir up trouble. It’s a form of lazy coverage that enables slant to hide in plain sight by cloaking itself in authority.

  5. The drama is heating up. But, one thing that has to be remembered is that Trump is President of the United States and it is possible for the USA and Israel to have different goals, even if for the most part, they are parallel. We haven’t yet seen the end game of the ridiculous “negotiations” with Iran but it’s a stretch to believe that with the number of genuinely, inarguable pro-Israel individuals in important and relevant positions in the Republican Party in general and the Trump Administration in particular, that Iran will in the end have a nuclear program that includes the possibility of the atom bomb. As far as Saudi Arabia is concerned, that’s were Israel and Trump have significant distance between them. Trump does not perceive of a Saudi bellicosity toward Israel and doesn’t care whether or not it “recognizes” Israel. Sure, he can be wrong and sure the King could be overthrown and that could change, but Trump is willing to take that chance in order to line Saudi Arabia up as an ironclad ally of America. That’s his goal. The place where Israel is in most concrete jeopardy is in the Trump Administration being interested…probably too interested…in getting a release of the American hostages and placing pressure on Israel to make a deal with Hamas to make that happen. Still,he

    any such pressure is most likely exaggerated in the media and in the commentators’ analyses. The fact remains that Israel had been far too lax in dealing with its enemies for too long and is currently paying a high price for it. But, Israel appears to finally recognize the vigor that must be exerted to defeat Hamas and even the very important American President shouldn’t get in the way and Israel should withstand the pressure. Trump can hardly chance looking like Biden 2.0.

  6. The drama is heating up. But, one thing that has to be remembered is that Trump is President of the United States and it is possible for the USA and Israel to have different goals, even if for the most part, they are parallel. We haven’t yet seen the end game of the ridiculous “negotiations” with Iran but it’s a stretch to believe that with the number of genuinely, inarguable pro-Israel individuals in important and relevant positions in the Republican Party in general and the Trump Administration in particular, that Iran will in the end have a nuclear program that includes the possibility of the atom bomb. As far as Saudi Arabia is concerned, that’s were Israel and Trump have significant distance between them. Trump does not perceive of a Saudi bellicosity toward Israel and doesn’t care whether or not it “recognizes” Israel. Sure, he can be wrong and sure the King could be overthrown and that could change, but Trump is willing to take that chance in order to line Saudi Arabia up as an ironclad ally of America. That’s his goal. The place where Israel is in most concrete jeopardy is in the Trump Administration being interested…probably too interested…in getting a release of the American hostages and placing pressure on Israel to make a deal with Hamas to make that happen. Still, any such pressure is most likely exaggerated in the media and in the commentators’ analyses. The fact remains that Israel had been far too lax in dealing with its enemies for too long and is currently paying a high price for it. But, Israel appears to finally recognize the vigor that must be exerted to defeat Hamas and even the very important American President shouldn’t get in the way and Israel should withstand the pressure. Trump can hardly chance looking like Biden 2.0.

  7. I ought to add that regarding the Houthis, from a strictly American standpoint, Trump seems to have achieved the goal of freeing up maritime commerce from their uncivilized assaults. Sure, he might well have done the right thing and included an end to their missiles assaulting Israel, but Israel is left to address that on its own. It will have to. Trump is an egotist and achieving what he did feeds that need in him. Israel has to understand that it’s a terribly tough world and even a President as helpful and Trump is, is not perfect.

  8. For now, I am more willing to trust in the bona fides of Ambassador Huckabee, a proven supporter of Israel, who has vouched for President Trump’s devotion to Israel, than I am an anonymous sourced newspaper article from people whose agenda is unknown.

  9. If the Saudis want the war to end in Gaza – do it for them. Ship the Arabs out of Gaza one way or another and the war in Gaza is over.

  10. I agree with Stuart Kaufman.
    But all this time I knew that as much as we loved Trump (and I surely did), I also knew that we (Jews and Israel) cannot rely on him 100%. He has his own agenda. I am Canadian and look what his tariff war is doing to us. Yet I agree that he must look after Americans first.

    But his ego does get in the way, far too often. If he was a mensch, he’d tell Riyadh to forget about a state called Palestine. NOT gonna happen.

LEAVE A REPLY

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here

Latest article

- Advertisement -