Trump "not happy" with Israel's handling of Hezbollah conflict in Lebanon, worried about Iran deal
AI Summary
Following the signing of a peace agreement between the United States and Iran on June 15, 2026, Israel erupted in criticism, with government officials and military leaders warning that the accord inadequately addresses Iranian weapons programs and proxy operations. Prime Minister Netanyahu faces intense political pressure across the domestic spectrum while pledging continued operations in Lebanon and announcing his candidacy for upcoming elections, though his diplomatic standing appears damaged. The accord has revealed strategic disagreements between Washington and Tel Aviv over regional priorities.
Progressive: Progressive-leaning outlets stress that Trump negotiated the accord without Israeli input, framing it as evidence that the American president privileges his own strategic calculations over coordinated allied policy.
Moderate: Centrist outlets describe the accord as creating a twin political and security crisis for Netanyahu, with cross-spectrum Israeli opposition rooted in unresolved Iranian threats and doubts about the Prime Minister's diplomatic effectiveness.
Conservative: Conservative-leaning outlets characterize the accord as compromising Israeli security by leaving Iranian ballistic and proxy threats unresolved, depicting Netanyahu as diplomatically outmaneuvered and Israel's position as weakened.
Israel is under increased scrutiny after President Trump criticized Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's handling of the conflict against the Iran-backed Hezbollah militant group in Lebanon.
CBS News' Imtiaz Tyab and Olivia Rinaldi report. ...
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