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U.S. and Israeli forces carried out joint strikes on Tehran on February 28. President Trump and Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu have since expressed differing views on how the conflict should end.
Washington ExaminerU.S. and Israeli forces struck Tehran on February 28, marking the first joint military action against the Iranian capital by the two allies. The operation followed months of rising tensions between the countries involved.
Trump criticized Israel’s recent operations against Hezbollah in Lebanon while attending the G7 summit in Evian, France. He stated that the United States was essential to Israel’s security and that no prior president had taken the steps he had.
“Without us, without the United States, there would be no Israel. Without me, there would be no Israel, because no other president was willing to do what I did.”
Trump also expressed frustration with Israel’s handling of the conflict, specifically citing an Israeli strike on a Beirut suburb last weekend. He told Axios he “was so pissed off” by the move and said he told Netanyahu the action showed poor judgment.
A preliminary 60-day ceasefire under discussion would require Israel to withdraw forces from Lebanon. Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu stated Monday that “the struggle has not ended,” signaling continued opposition to a full pullback. Israeli officials described the Beirut strikes as retaliation for rocket fire toward northern Israel.
The attack came close to derailing separate talks between Tehran and Washington. CIA Director Ratcliffe warned President Trump that Iran may not offer nuclear concessions even if a final agreement is reached. Vice President JD Vance is scheduled to travel to Geneva on Friday to sign a memorandum of understanding.
Netanyahu faces reelection in the fall, and his domestic support has declined since the Iran operation began.
indiatoday.intoday.inPresident Trump announced the conclusion of hostilities and an imminent reopening of the Strait of Hormuz after landing in France on June 17, 2026.
Republican voters chose Trump-endorsed nominees for Senate seats in Alabama, Georgia and Oklahoma on Tuesday. In Georgia, the president’s choice for governor lost the run-off to self-funded candidate Rick Jackson.
Al JazeeraBrazil's president told reporters at the G7 summit that the U.S. president should not interfere in Brazil's October presidential election. The statement followed a Supreme Court sentence for a former lawmaker and new U.S. designations of Brazilian criminal groups.