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WASHINGTON: The US-Iran agreement has placed Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu in one of the most difficult political positions of his career, leaving him squeezed between Washington, Tehran, domestic critics, and an approaching election.

For decades, Netanyahu built his political identity around three interconnected themes: his ability to influence United States policy, his determination to confront Iran, and his reputation as Israel’s ultimate guarantor of security. The emerging agreement has now raised questions about all three.

The deal leaves unresolved several issues Israel has long regarded as vital, including Iran’s ballistic missile programme, its support for regional allies such as Hezbollah, and key aspects of its nuclear activities. At the same time, sanctions relief could provide Tehran with significant economic breathing room.

The New York Times noted that the agreement “omits some of the most important things Israel wanted” and observed that “Israel now finds itself counting the ways that Netanyahu’s grand strategy against Iran has failed”.