أخبار عالمية تقدم إشارات واضحة حول ما يهم في المستقبل

EN

-

Middle East, إيران

Trump-Netanyahu call leak hands Iran a propaganda win!

Facebook
LinkedIn
X
Facebook
1- The Axios leak about a tense call between President Trump and Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu was not just a window into a private dispute between Washington and Jerusalem. 2-It landed at a sensitive moment, shortly after Iran threatened to suspend negotiations with the United States over Israel’s escalation in Lebanon. That timing gave Tehran the message it wanted: Iran applies pressure, Washington reacts, and Israel steps back from striking Beirut. 3-According to Axios, Trump sharply rebuked Netanyahu over Israel’s conduct in Lebanon and moved to stop a planned Israeli strike on targets in Beirut. The report said Trump feared the escalation could derail ongoing talks with Iran.

 

Details

• Axios reported that Trump called Netanyahu “crazy” and accused him of escalating too far in Lebanon.

• The report said Trump warned that a Beirut strike would deepen Israel’s international isolation and weaken prospects for a deal with Iran.

• After the call, Trump wrote that talks with Iran were continuing “at a rapid pace,” a message that appeared aimed at Tehran and markets alike.

• Netanyahu said Israel would continue operations in southern Lebanon and could still strike Beirut if Hezbollah kept attacking Israel.

• Politically, the leak helps Iran’s narrative by linking Tehran’s threat to suspend talks with Trump’s move to restrain Israel.

• Conservative commentator Mark Levin called the leak a “violation of federal law” and said it provided support to the Iranian regime and Hezbollah.

• Levin argued that Tehran would read the leak as proof that Washington is weak and desperate to save a deal, even if that means leaning on Israel.

Behind the leak

The real value of the leak is not Trump’s language. It is the political message created by publishing the call now.

Iran can now frame the sequence simply: Tehran threatened to walk away over Lebanon, Washington pressured Netanyahu, and Israel backed away from Beirut.

That does not prove Axios intended to help Iran. It does not prove the leakers had that motive. But the timing and substance of the report gave Tehran a powerful propaganda asset at a delicate negotiating moment.

What to watch

The real test is on the ground. If Beirut stays out of the strike zone and U.S.-Iran talks continue, Iran’s claim that its Lebanon card can influence Washington will only get stronger.

Sources:

What to read next

iraq, Middle East

-

Iraq’s militias bend to the storm: Disarmament or repositioning?

iran, Middle East

-

Rubio says Hormuz must open first as Iran deal remains uncertain.

iran, Middle East

-

IRGC cleric calls for wartime updates as Mojtaba Khamenei stays out of sight.

Art & Culture

-

Dua Lipa and Callum Turner Marry in Quiet London Ceremony as Sicily Celebrations Loom!

Middle East, إيران

-

Trump-Netanyahu call leak hands Iran a propaganda win!

iran, Middle East

-

Trump says Iran talks are ‘very boring’ and claims he does not care if they collapse