Iran, Donald Trump and Benjamin Netanyahu
Digest more
The U.S. and Israel launched a series of coordinated attacks on Iran early Saturday, killing Iranian Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei and other top officials. Trump has since said the military campaign was projected to last four or five weeks, but that it could go “far longer.”
Last Monday, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu called President Trump with a stunning tip: Iran's supreme leader and his top advisers were all set to meet at one location in Tehran on Saturday morning.
President Trump and Israel's Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu will meet Wednesday. The meeting comes at a critical moment for negotiations between the U.S. and Iran.
Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu will fly to Washington this week to meet with US President Donald Trump on Iran, his office announces. The meeting will take place on Wednesday, as the US and Iran appear set for a second round of nuclear talks.
Donald Trump met behind closed doors Wednesday with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, the latest world leader to meet with the president this year without facing a torrent of reporters’ shouted questions. Rather than bring in journalists, Trump ...
Trump says he ‘insisted’ to Netanyahu that US talks with Iran continue as Israel wants them expanded
President Donald Trump met privately with Israel Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu on Wednesday and says he pushed Israel to back continued U.S. talks with Iran on a nuclear deal.
President Donald Trump demanded a pardon for Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu so he can fully focus on the current war with Iran. The post Trump Demands Netanyahu Pardon as He Slams Israeli President as a ‘Disgrace’ first appeared on Mediaite.
FILE PHOTO: U.S. President Donald Trump and Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu hold a press conference after meeting at Trump’s Mar-a-Lago club in Palm Beach, Florida, U.S., December 29, 2025. REUTERS/Jonathan Ernst/File Photo Feb 11 (Reuters ...
President Trump’s embrace of military action in Iran was spurred by an Israeli leader determined to end diplomatic negotiations. Few of the president’s advisers voiced opposition.