Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and United States President
Donald Trump held a 40-minute phone call on Monday evening, shortly
after Iran announced that it would soon respond to Washington’s latest proposal for a nuclear deal.
Following the call, Netanyahu held a a high-level security consultation focused on Iran.
In a sparse readout of the conversation, the Prime Minister’s Office
said the two leaders discussed Washington’s ongoing nuclear talks with
Tehran.
“President Trump told the Prime Minister that the United States has
presented a reasonable proposal to Iran and is expected to receive its
response in the coming days,” said the statement from Netanyahu’s
office.
It added that Trump informed Netanyahu “that he plans to hold another round of talks with Iran over the weekend.”
The statement did not provide any details about what Netanyahu said during the call.
For his part, Trump told reporters at the White House that the
conversation went “very well” and covered a variety of issues, including
the ongoing nuclear talks, adding that US has a meeting with Iran on
Thursday.
Iran’s foreign ministry spokesperson Esmaeil Baghaei later said the
“next round of Iran–US indirect negotiations was being planned for next
Sunday in Muscat,” according to a statement cited by Reuters.
Netanyahu stopped testifying earlier than scheduled in his corruption
trial to hold the call with Trump, which came as Jerusalem and
Washington wait for Hamas’s answer to a Gaza ceasefire and hostage
release deal, and as his ultra-Orthodox coalition partners are
threatening to topple the government if a Haredi enlistment exemption
bill is not passed.
PM said to tell top aides to meet with Witkoff
Netanyahu’s meeting after speaking with Trump included senior
security officials, National Security Minister Itamar Ben Gvir, Finance
Minister Bezalel Smotrich, Defense Minister Israel Katz, Shas leader
Aryeh Deri and Strategic Affairs Minister Ron Dermer, according to
Hebrew media.
Channel 13 later reported that Netanyahu instructed Dermer and Mossad
chief David Barnea to meet US special envoy Steve Witkoff before the
next round of US-Iran nuclear talks.
At the White House, Trump told reporters that the US “is trying to
make a deal [with Iran] so that there’s no destruction and death,”
adding that the Iranians are “tough negotiators.” Asked what’s blocking a
deal, Trump said, “They’re just asking for things that you can’t do,”
pointing to Tehran’s insistence on retaining its uranium-enrichment
capability—something Trump said he won’t permit, even though the latest
US proposal reportedly allows limited, low-level enrichment inside Iran
for a time.
“They have given us their thoughts on the deal, and I said it’s just
not acceptable,” he added, without specifying whether Iran has submitted
its response to the US nuclear deal proposal.
On Friday, Trump asserted that Iran would not be permitted to enrich
uranium as part of an agreement. “They won’t be enriching. If they
enrich, then we’re going to have to do it the other way,” he said,
hinting at a military option if a deal does not pan out, while
reiterating that he prefers a diplomatic solution.
Asked about the stalled hostage talks between Israel and Hamas, Trump
said on Monday they were continuing “and Iran actually is involved,”
without elaborating as to what he meant. Iran, a chief sponsor of Hamas
and other anti-Israel terror groups in the region, to date has not been
known to be a party to the talks.
“We’ll see what’s going to happen with Gaza. We want to get the hostages back,” Trump added.
“A historic window of opportunity”
The call with Trump came as Netanyahu has been meeting in recent days
with Haredi members of his ruling coalition and other senior coalition
figures, linking the current “opportunities and challenges” in Israel’s
security situation with the intense political turmoil he faces, Channel
12 reported Monday evening.
“We are in a dramatic period. There are extraordinary challenges on
the table. This is a historic window of opportunity that will not
return, and therefore, under no circumstances should the foundations of
the government be shaken,” the network quoted the premier as telling
some of the Knesset members during the meetings.
The report added that opposition figures are aware of the
conversations, saying Opposition Leader Yair Lapid learned about them
from MKs he met with to discuss the draft exemption law, and that other
lawmakers reported hearing similar messages. The Prime Minister’s Office
declined to comment on the report, the network said.
Channel 13 separately reported that US Ambassador Mike Huckabee has
been meeting Haredi politicians in an effort to calm the coalition
crisis, stressing that “government stability is important for addressing
the Iranian issue.”
Netanyahu’s circle is aware of the effort, and Huckabee’s office said
only that he is meeting “various figures” and that “the content of
those conversations remains private,” the report said.
“Since I have no doubt that Ambassador Huckabee respects Israel’s
independence and its democracy, I hope and believe that the report that
he is interfering in Israel’s internal politics and trying to help
Netanyahu [deal with] the ultra-Orthodox in the military draft law
crisis are not true. Israel is not a protectorate,” Lapid tweeted in
response to the TV report.
Netanyahu has called for Iran’s enrichment capabilities and nuclear
facilities to be fully dismantled, but assured the White House that
Israel won’t launch an attack on the Islamic Republic’s nuclear sites
unless Trump signals that the ongoing negotiations with Tehran have
failed, Axios reported last week, citing two Israeli officials familiar
with the matter.
In a reportedly stormy phone call between the two leaders late last
month, Trump told Netanyahu not to strike Iran’s nuclear facilities due
to fear that it would blow up Washington’s ongoing talks with Tehran.
Iran’s nuclear program ‘runs wide and deep’
In an interview aired by i24News Monday evening, the head of the
International Atomic Energy Agency, Rafael Grossi, said that Iran has
told him that Israeli strikes on Iranian nuclear facilities may cause it
to pursue nuclear weapons or abandon the Non-Proliferation Treaty.
Grossi said that such a strike by Israel “might have an amalgamating
effect which would make a determination in the part of Iran to go to a
nuclear weapon or to abandon the treaty on non-proliferation. I’m
telling you this because they have told me.”
The IAEA chief commented on the challenges he believes Israel would
face in striking the Islamic Republic’s nuclear sites: “Certainly this
program runs wide and deep. And when I say deep, I know what I’m saying.
So many of these facilities are extremely well protected. This would
require a very, very devastating force to affect it.”
https://www.timesofisrael.com/trump-speaks-with-netanyahu-stresses-us-wants-iran-deal-so-theres-no-destruction-and-death/?