Newsletter
Newsletter Support JNS

Donald Trump

With international attention focused on Netanyahu’s visit to the US, the coming days are likely to clarify the broader direction of Israel’s strategy.
The Israeli premier said he had also discussed with the president and vice president “the implications and possibilities of the great victory that we achieved over Iran.”
“I think with Iran, the game is still on,” Assaf Orion, a fellow at the Washington Institute for Near East Policy, told JNS. “It’s not ‘Mission Accomplished.’ We can’t go and have beers because this problem is solved.”
“Few leaders have achieved such tangible breakthroughs to peace in such a short time,” the Israeli premier wrote to the Nobel Committee.
The U.S. president has warned that these countries will face an additional 10% tariff, with “no exceptions.”
“We stand side by side, shoulder to shoulder, in the defense of freedom and liberty,” the Israeli president wrote.
U.S. officials reaffirm commitment to securing release of hostages held by Hamas, calling this a “critical window of opportunity.”
Israel is highly coordinated with the United States over its next moves in Gaza, Israeli observers tell JNS.
The invitation “followed the great victory we achieved in ‘Operation Rising Lion’” against Iran, said the Israeli prime minister.
The religious edict urges Muslims to target the U.S. president as an “enemy of Allah” should the United States assassinate Iranian Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei.
The U.S. president rejected the idea that Tehran had relocated its enriched uranium from the sites struck by American planes.
“Israel stands at the front line, but we do not stand alone,” Deputy Foreign Minister Sharren Haskel tells European allies in Bucharest.