Just because Trump says something, that does not make it true or certain.
His statements are often more like opening gambits in a real estate negotiation than expressions of the settled policy of the United States.
Perhaps Trump is spreading some confusion while he works on another plan. He is said to crave the Nobel peace prize.
Middle East peacemakers, even when they do not ultimately succeed, have a strong track record of winning it.
As the world was digesting his Gaza announcement, he posted on his Truth Social platform his desire for a “verified nuclear peace agreement” with Iran.
The Iranian regime denies it wants nuclear weapons but there has been an open debate in Tehran about whether they are now so threatened that they need the ultimate deterrent.
For many years Netanyahu has wanted the US, with Israeli help, to destroy Iran’s nuclear sites. Doing a deal with Iran was never part of his plan.
During Trump’s first term, Netanyahu waged a long and successful campaign to persuade him to pull the US out of the nuclear deal Barack Obama’s administration signed with Iran.
If Trump wanted to throw the Israeli hard-right something to keep them happy as he makes overtures to the Iranians, he has succeeded.
But he has also created uncertainty and injected more instability into the world’s most turbulent region.
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