Israel's room to respond militarily has been restricted in an unprecedented manner. And its international credibility, which it will need on the day Iran violates the agreement, has collapsedZvi Bar'el01:08 AM • June 17 2026 IDTIs U.S. President Donald Trump the one who threw Israel under the bus (which he was driving)? Or was it Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, who decided that this was the surest way to commit diplomatic suicide? Loading...Click the alert icon to follow topics:IranIsrael - U.S.Benjamin NetanyahuDonald TrumpCommentsLoading...In the NewsIn the News: Israel-Iran Live UpdatesU.S.-Iran DealIsrael Buffer ZonesTrump-NetanyahuStanding TogetherTel Aviv PrideFIFAHaQuizHaaretz PodcastAmericans and Israelis Each Think the Other Country Is Calling the ShotsIsrael Must Choose Life, Not the SettlementsAustralia Investigates Israeli Sexual Assault Allegations by Flotilla ActivistsBe'er Sheva Cancels Arab-Hebrew Book Fair After Pressure From Right-wing NGOReport: U.S.-Iran Deal Includes Pledge to End All Sanctions on TehranRemembering and rebuilding two years laterICYMIHumiliated by Trump on the Iran Front, Netanyahu May Set the Middle East AblazeTrump Just Dropped a Megaton Bomb on Netanyahu's Re-election Campaign'Once-in-a-lifetime Discovery': 1,700-year-old Roman Busts Found in IsraelWhy Does the Jewish State Keep Deporting Diaspora Jews?Trump and Netanyahu Hurtling Toward a Rupture That Could Shock U.S.-Israel TiesThe Fake Gaza Charity Linked to the Anti-left Disinformation Campaign in France
Who drove Israel's diplomatic suicide bus: Trump or Netanyahu? | Opinion
Israel's Room to Respond Militarily Has Been Restricted in an Unprecedented Manner. And Its International Credibility, Which It Will Need on the Day Iran Violates the Agreement, Has Collapsed














