Trump says will urge Netanyahu not to retaliate against Iranian missiles
The US president says a final deal with Iran is 'very close' and does not want the current situation to derail it.
"NETANYAHU" · 총 520건
필터 보기현재 지수
50.3
0 = 부정 우세
50 = 중립
100 = 긍정 우세
최근 7일 기준 88,573건을 분석한 결과, 뉴스 심리지수는 50.2(균형)입니다. 긍정 4,553건(5.1%)·중립 81,814건(92.4%)·부정 2,206건(2.5%)이며, 중립 비중이 뚜렷하게 높습니다. 성향 지수는 종합 18.8(중도 균형)입니다.
The US president says a final deal with Iran is 'very close' and does not want the current situation to derail it.
US President Donald Trump said he would call Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu to ask him not to respond to the missiles Iran fired at Israel on Sunday, in an effort to prevent a new escalation and salvage a deal with Tehran that he considers "very close." It was Iran's first direct attack since the ceasefire reached on April 8.
Iran has fired missiles at Israel in the first such attack since April's ceasefire, after Israeli raids on Beirut's suburbs. Trump says he will urge Netanyahu not to retaliate as talks hang in the balance.
Iran fired at least 10 missiles at Israel on Sunday, hours after the Israeli Defense Forces launched its own attack on a Hezbollah command center in Beirut.
The attack comes after Hezbollah struck Israel's military with fighter drones, according to Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's office.
Israel relata ataques com mísseis no Irã Após os ataques israelenses à capital do Líbano, Beirute, o Irã lançou uma série de mísseis em direção ao território israelense neste domingo (7). "Uma nova saraivada de mísseis foi lançada contra o Estado de Israel. Uma nova saraivada de mísseis foi lançada contra o Estado de Israel. As Forças de Defesa de Israel reiteram e enfatizam a proibição de publicar ou compartilhar imagens e localizações dos impactos", diz uma mensagem de Israel postada no Telegram. ✅ Siga o canal de notícias internacionais do g1 no WhatsApp Até o momento, não há registros de que algum dos projéteis tenha atingido o solo. Imagens nas redes sociais mostram interceptações do sistema Domo de Ferro nos céus controlados por Israel. O gabinete do primeiro-ministro, Benjamin Netanyahu, disse que contra-atacará a retaliação do Irã. Fachada de prédio destruída em um subúrbio de Beirute, no Líbano, após bombardeio de Israel na região, em 7 de junho de 2026. Mohamed Azakir/ Reuters Bases dos EUA se tornam alvos O ataque israelense, que rompeu uma trégua no Líbano, atingiu prédios em um subúrbio de Beirute que Israel disse abrigar terroristas do Hezbollah que planejavam um ataque. O Irã disse que as 19 bases que os EUA têm no Oriente Médio voltaram a ser "alvos legítimos" — os EUA têm bases militares em países da região como Emirados Árabes Unidos, Omã, Arábia Saudita, Iraque e Egito (veja no mapa abaixo). A ameaça também foi estendida a ativos israelenses na região . O anúncio foi feito pelo principal negociador do Irã nas conversas com os EUA, Mohammad Qalibaf, que também é presidente do Parlamento iraniano e uma das figuras centrais de poder no país. "Eles não estão comprometidos com um cessar-fogo nem acreditam no diálogo e, por meio do bloqueio naval e da violação dos acordos relativos ao Líbano, demonstraram que só entendem a linguagem do poder", disse Qalibaf em uma publicação em suas redes sociais. Mapa mostra as bases militares dos EUA no Oriente Médio. Kayan Albertin/Arte g1 Desafio a Trump Marcelo Lins analisa pressão de Trump a Netanyahu para cessar-fogo no Líbano O ataque de Israel ao Líbano também foi um desafio ao presidente dos Estados Unidos, Donald Trump, que garantiu na semana passada que Israel não voltaria a bombardear o Líbano. As desavenças entre os aliados EUA e Israel por conta do Líbano geraram inclusive uma discussão entre Trump e o primeiro-ministro israelense, Benjamin Netanyahu. O presidente dos EUA confirmou ter chamado Netanayhu de "completamente louco" por conta dos ataques de Israel no Líbano e criticou as incursões. Trump se referia aos constantes ataques que Israel tem feito ao vizinho Líbano em meio ao cessar-fogo em vigor no conflito do Oriente Médio. O Paquistão, que media as negociações, e o Irã insistem em que o Líbano estava contemplado na trégua, enquanto EUA e Israel insistem que apenas ataques em território iraniano e nos países do Golfo Pérsico. Além disso, na semana passada, o presidente norte-americano afirmou que Israel e o grupo terrorista Hezbollah concordaram em fazer uma trégua nos ataques no Líbano e no norte do território israelense. Israel luta no Líbano contra o Hezbollah, o grupo terrorista libanês que é financiado pelo Irã e faz constantes ataques no norte de Israel. Agora no g1
At the start of a government meeting on Sunday, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu also discussed the Gaza Strip, announcing that Israel currently holds 60% of its territory, and "will soon reach 70%.
Israël heeft vanmiddag nieuwe luchtaanvallen uitgevoerd op de zuidelijke buitenwijken van de Libanese hoofdstad Beiroet. Volgens Libanese staatsmedia zijn daarbij zeker twee mensen omgekomen. Volgens een gezamenlijke verklaring van de Israëlische premier Netanyahu en defensieminister Katz waren de aanvallen gericht op een "terroristisch commandocentrum" van Hezbollah. De aanvallen zouden een reactie zijn op projectielen die eerder vandaag door Hezbollah vanuit Libanon op het noorden van Israël zouden zijn afgevuurd. Het Israëlische leger claimt de lanceerinstallaties waarmee die raketten werden afgevuurd te hebben ontmanteld. In Beiroet zouden door de Israëlische aanvallen minstens drie explosies zijn gehoord. Twee doden, elf gewonden Libanese media melden dat zeker twee gebouwen zijn geraakt en minstens twee mensen zijn gedood. Er zouden ook elf gewonden zijn. Daarnaast werden aanvallen gemeld in de Zuid-Libanese stad Tyrus, waar Israël eerder vandaag een evacuatiebevel voor uitgaf. De aanvallen komen op een gevoelig moment. Sinds donderdag geldt een nieuw staakt-het-vuren tussen Israël en Libanon, na Amerikaanse bemiddeling. Dat akkoord staat alweer onder hevige druk. Gisteren kwamen bij een Israëlische aanval op een Libanees legervoertuig meerdere militairen om het leven. De strijd tussen Israël en Hezbollah in Libanon is een van de belangrijkste punten in de onderhandelingen tussen de Verenigde Staten en Iran over een einde aan de oorlog in Iran, die vandaag precies honderd dagen geleden begon. Teheran heeft bij herhaling gezegd dat een einde aan de Israëlische aanvallen in Libanon een integraal onderdeel is van een eventueel vredesakkoord. De Amerikaanse president probeerde de afgelopen dagen juist te voorkomen dat de strijd in Libanon de onderhandelingen met Iran zou ondermijnen. Volgens nieuwssite Axios, die zich baseert op twee bronnen, viel hij vijf dagen geleden in een telefoongesprek flink uit tegen Netanyahu, toen Israël dreigde de aanvallen op de zuidelijke buitenwijken van Beiroet te hervatten. Begin deze week verkondigde Trump nog dat Israël niet zou oprukken naar Beiroet en dat Hezbollah zou stoppen met aanvallen. Trump: Libanon geen onderdeel Iran-deal Des te opvallender is dat Trump in een vandaag gepubliceerd interview met NBC - dat vrijdag al werd opgenomen - zegt dat Libanon wat hem betreft geen onderdeel hoeft te zijn van een kortetermijnakkoord met Iran. Ook herhaalt hij, zoals hij al vaker deed, "heel dicht bij" een akkoord met Teheran te zijn. Verder zei Trump niet van plan te zijn om Iraanse tegoeden vrij te geven of sancties op te heffen voordat een deal met Teheran is gesloten. Volgens Trump zijn zulke stappen pas daarna aan de orde, als Iran zich aan de afspraken houdt. De president meldde ook dat de VS het hoogverrijkte uranium van Iran zal verwijderen en vernietigen als er een akkoord komt. Dat kan volgens hem met medewerking van Teheran, maar desnoods ook zonder. Amerikaanse troepen blijven voorlopig in de regio "tot de zaak is afgerond", aldus Trump.
Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and Defense Minister Israel Katz said that the military struck terrorist headquarters because of Hezbollah fire toward Israeli territory.
A statement from Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's office said the strikes were in retaliation for the Hezbollah militant group firing toward northern Israel earlier.
Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's office said the strikes were in retaliation for the Hezbollah firing toward northern Israel earlier.
Israel and Hamas resumed Egypt-, Qatar-, United States-, and Turkey-mediated indirect talks on settling the situation in the Gaza Strip on October 6, 2025
BEIRUT (AP) — Israel struck southern Beirut suburbs on Sunday just days after a fragile ceasefire agreement in Washington went into effect. Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said the strikes were in retaliation for the Hezbollah militant group firing towards northern Israel earlier. Hezbollah did not immediately claim responsibility for those strikes. Israel has struck […]
The office of Benjamin Netanyahu said he had ‘held a situational assessment and is monitoring the deadly shooting attack’.
At least one person was killed and five others wounded in multiple shooting attacks in Israel on Sunday, authorities said, with one of the perpetrators killed. Israel’s emergency service Magen David Adom said a man about 35 years old had died of gunshot wounds. The service also “provided medical treatment and evacuated to hospitals five injured people, including two in serious condition and three in moderate condition, with penetrating injuries to their bodies”, it added. Police said they had located a vehicle suspected of involvement and killed a suspect believed to be responsible near the town of Kokhav Yair, a few kilometres away from the occupied West Bank. Rescuers said attacks also took place in the nearby towns of Tzur Natan and Tzur Yitzhak. Israel’s military told AFP that one perpetrator had been killed and searches were ongoing for a second. The office of Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said he had “held a situational assessment and is monitoring the deadly shooting attack”. Far-right National Security Minister Itamar Ben Gvir wrote on X that “if the terrorist is caught alive — he will be executed”. He was referring to a recently approved Israeli law that imposes the death penalty on Palestinians convicted by military courts of terror charges for deadly anti-Israeli attacks. “Jewish blood is not cheap. Whoever murders a Jew will see the hangman’s noose,” Ben Gvir said.
The enormous costs of Israel’s multi-front war and Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s determination to turn his country into a “super-Sparta” of the Middle East are driving up the defence budget and raising fears of cutbacks in education and healthcare. The total cost of the series of interconnected regional conflicts that began with Hamas’s attack on Israel on October 7, 2023 stood at 405 billion shekels ($138bn) as of late April, according to the governor of the Bank of Israel, Amir Yaron. “That’s a huge figure, more than 17 per cent of GDP,” he said during a recent economic conference in Herzliya, north of Tel Aviv. Just the military campaign against Iran, which began with a wave of US-Israeli strikes on February 28, incurred an additional cost of 35bn shekels ($12bn) for the state up until a ceasefire took effect on April 8, according to an initial estimate by the finance ministry. Following the adoption of the 2026 budget in late March, the government noted the defence ministry’s budget had more than doubled since October 2023. To support the war effort, the government borrowed heavily on international markets in 2024 and 2025. It has reached the point where public debt now accounts for more than 69pc of GDP, compared to 60pc before the war, according to the Treasury. Taxes and social security contributions have also increased. ‘Trauma economy’ Israelis are “paying twice” for the war, said Esteban Klor, an economics professor at Jerusalem’s Hebrew University. The first cost, he told AFP, is via the decline in government social spending and reduced investment in public services resulting from several successive “across-the-board” budget cuts, even as “we are… increasing the debt”. “Education will suffer, the quality of infrastructure will decline, as will the performance of the healthcare system,” he said. The second cost is to economic growth, though this has been less visible as the Israeli economy quickly overcame the initial shock of the war. GDP had returned to its 2022 level by 2024 and is continuing to grow at an enviable rate. But the ongoing mobilisation of tens of thousands of reservists since October 2023 is also taking a toll. “Since… many of our workers are in the army rather than at their jobs, this affects production,” Klor explained. According to a survey published on June 1 by the Israel Democracy Institute (IDI) think tank, 31pc of respondents said they had experienced a decline in their wages or income since October 7, 2023. The phenomenon is hitting the self-employed and lowest-income workers the hardest. At the Herzliya conference, the deputy head of budgets at the finance ministry, Tamar Levy-Boneh, warned against a “trauma economy” — in which the sense of shock and failure from October 7 leads the military to constantly demand more funding to ensure the country’s security. “The security establishment must learn to meet its needs in a way that does not undermine the standard of living and must assume its share of responsibility,” Levy-Boneh said. ‘Super-Sparta’ But Netanyahu advocates the opposite view. In September 2025, he said Israel had no choice but to become a “super-Sparta”, a reference to the ancient Greek city-state devoted entirely to war. As divergences emerge between Netanyahu and US President Donald Trump regarding Israel’s offensive against Hezbollah in Lebanon and how to end the war with Iran, the Israeli premier is pushing for greater self-sufficiency. Under his vision, Israel would gradually wean itself off its reliance on the massive military aid it receives from the United States. He confirmed as such on May 3, vowing to invest 350bn shekels over the next decade in the national defence industry to ensure “overwhelming aerial superiority”. Economics professor Klor warned that the defence budget could exceed 10pc of GDP and called for a swift return to a “more reasonable” level. Israel is one of the developed countries where inequality is most glaring, and the dragging war is not helping. According to the latest available study by the Israeli National Insurance Institute, the proportion of children living below the poverty line rose from 27.6pc to 28pc between 2023 and 2024.
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu “is monitoring the deadly shooting attack along the seam line.”
A coalition run like a mafia, based on fear, personal loyalty, and proof of allegiance, cannot properly serve the public interest because its first priority is protecting the leader, not the country.
JERUSALEM, June 7 — The enormous costs of Israel’s multi-front war and Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu&rsq...
Netanyahu has long portrayed himself as being uniquely adept in dealing with Trump.