Trump 'can influence pace, scale and political boundaries of Israeli action', analyst says
AI Summary
Iran launched missile attacks on Israel in retaliation for Israeli strikes on Lebanese targets; Israel responded with airstrikes on Iran despite US President Trump's plea for restraint. Iran's military subsequently announced an end to operations but warned it would resume attacks if Israel continued targeting Lebanon, breaking a ceasefire that had been in effect since April.
Progressive: Progressive-leaning outlets emphasize escalation risk and Trump's apparent loss of control, framing Israel's defiance of his restrain plea as a challenge to his stated authority and warning the exchange threatens to drag the Middle East into a broader regional war.
Moderate: Centrist outlets report the military exchange factually, noting Trump's calls for both sides to show restraint and return to negotiations, Iran's conditional ceasefire announcement with warnings of harsher retaliation if attacks continue, and the breakdown of the April truce.
Speaking with FRANCE 24's Monte Francis, Negah Angha, Visiting Fellow at King’s College London and Former Senior Advisor at the National Ssecurity Council under the Biden administration, says that US President Donald Trump "is wanting to signal to Iran that he can deliver Israel if Tehran signs a deal" adding that "Trump can influence the pace, the scale and just the overall political boundaries of Israeli action, especially when Israeli PM Netanyahu needs Washington's backing". ...